What’s Happening?
Throughout the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series season, teams will release exciting new sponsorship collaborations and refreshed looks for long-time…
NASCAR’s future at Iowa Speedway appears to be hanging in the balance after two years at the 0.875-mile oval. Dale Earnhardt Jr. was ahead of the curve as he made his feelings clear on the venue last year, while Kevin Harvick has now laid into NextGen cars after the most recent race.
Following his win at the Iowa Corn 350 Powered by Ethanol on Sunday, which saw him stave off late fuel concerns, Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron weighed in on the track’s future, suggesting that while he loves the area, it may be time for the track to be given some fresh asphalt if it’s to return.
“They should probably see it through now. The track’s starting to age pretty quickly,” the 27-year-old commented. “Probably be good if you repave the top now, at least repave the straightaways…
“It’s kind of like our strategy today, once you kind of committed to it, you got to see it through. I’m not sure where it goes from here, but we’re going to keep hopefully coming here, and it was awesome today.
“The fans, the facility is so clean and nice, and I love this area. Quickly becoming one of my favorite Cup destinations. It was already that in the Xfinity and Trucks, but it’s becoming that in Cup as well.”
Iowa is a track where Byron has enjoyed consistent success over the years, finishing second in the Cup Series in 2024, while winning there in the Xfinity, Craftsman Truck, and K&N Pro Series.
In fact, his ties to the 19-year-old facility go back to his teenage years, honing his driving skills on iRacing. “The funny story, back story with this place and kind of Pocono ropes into that as well, is when I was a kid, I was the iRacing schedule would always line up with the racetracks in the summer, and that’s when I’d have the most time to iRace was in the summer,” he explained.
“So I would race this track a ton on iRacing. So I feel like that’s why it’s been a good track for me is I just have thousands of laps kind of in my head of how the rhythm of this place goes and even with repaves and everything, I feel like I just spend so much time as a 14-year-old, 13-year-old, just racing on iRacing on Iowa and Pocono.
“So I feel like those tracks in the summer, it honestly lines up pretty good. Those are usually our fastest tracks.”
DON’T MISS:
Whether or not Iowa will return in 2026 remains to be seen, with the NASCAR schedule still in the works. However, according to The Des Moines Register, a fan was told in late July by NASCAR spokesperson Matt Humphrey that it would come as a surprise if it did not return next season.
“The 2026 NASCAR schedule is still in development, but we look forward to sharing the finalized details,” Humphrey told the outlet in a statement.
Aside from Iowa, the 2026 schedule appears to be taking shape, with Mexico City and the Chicago street course both dropped, per The Athletic, while Chicagoland Speedway is set to return. San Diego’s Naval Base Coronado has also been announced as the host of a new street race, with the event set to help celebrate the Navy’s 250th anniversary.
Enea Bastianini has offered insight into why he struggled to such an extent during a wretched first season on KTM’s MotoGP bike in 2025.
Bastianini moved to Tech3 this year on a factory-spec bike, partnering Maverick Vinales in an all-new line-up at KTM’s secondary squad.
But from his first test with the Austrian marque in Valencia 2024, it was clear that the RC16 was not playing to his strength – and a crash in which he completely wrecked his bike only reinforced that impression.
Problems persisted when the season kicked off in March, leaving Bastianini in the shadows of his new team-mate Vinales, who impressed with his adaptation to the RC16. Across the opening 10 rounds and before Vinales broke his shoulder at the Sachsenring, Bastianini managed just 42 points compared to 69 for the former.
There was a ray of hope that the Italian had turned around his campaign when he qualified fourth in Hungary and followed that up with a podium in Barcelona, but it ultimately amounted to little more than a brief respite.
He eventually ended the season a distant 14th in the standings, scoring just over a third of the points Pedro Acosta accumulated on the factory KTM (112 points vs 307).
It was a far cry from the heights Bastianini reached just last season, when he guided his works Ducati GP24 to two victories and seven other grand prix podiums.
Enea Bastianini, Red Bull KTM Tech 3
Photo by: Shameem Fahath / Motorsport Network
In fact, this was easily the worst season of his MotoGP career; even in his rookie season in 2021, he managed to finish 11th in the championship and score 102 points from 18 rounds at a time when there were no sprint races.
Bastianini makes no secret in explaining how steep his learning curve proved after switching manufacturers for the first time in MotoGP.
“I think the adaptation to the bike this year has been very complicated for me, starting from the first test when I jumped,” he said. “It’s not been a shock, but very close to a shock because the bike was very different from the other one.
“When it’s like this, you have every weekend to work, to change something. Also [despite] this, we were competitive on Sundays.
“Last year, at the end of the season, I was fast in the sprints and I was always on top. I knew how it would be and what the approach of the weekend was, but you have to be clear. This year, the situation was not clear to me.”
For much of 2025, Bastianini found himself on the back foot early in the weekend, struggling with his feeling on the bike on Fridays. While there was often clear progress overnight and into Sunday, he was frequently left with too much ground to make up.
At Valencia, for instance, the 27-year-old toiled near the back in practice and qualified only 20th. Yet his race pace was strong, allowing him to climb steadily through the field to finish a solid 10th.
Enea Bastianini, Red Bull KTM Tech 3
Photo by: Gold and Goose Photography / LAT Images / via Getty Images
“Friday complicated, Saturday a bit less and Sunday in the race we are competitive. This happened many times. I think [it happened] every weekend, from just two or three weekends apart,” he highlighted the trend.
Bastianini’s improved pace in race trim was partly down to his increased confidence on medium tyres, which are preferred during longer grands prix. With Michelin’s soft rubber, he suffered from a phenomenon called the ‘rear pushing the front’, which had a detrimental impact on his cornering ability.
“We are also competitive in the race because I find the confidence to be fast with the medium tyre,” he explained. “When we put a soft on the rear, the bike gives me the opposite; no confidence and I can’t push.
“[With the soft tyre], the rear pushes me out in every corner and it’s also much more complicated to turn. With the medium, it’s much better for me to slide with the rear, I’m much more confident. Lap by lap in the race, I’m much more confident. This has happened every time.”
Bastianini was pinning his hopes on the post-season Valencia test to find a breakthrough and head to the winter break on a positive note, but after trying a variety of components in a condensed schedule, he left Spain without the answers he had been seeking.
“I still haven’t cleared up all my doubts about certain things,” he conceded. “We also tested two quite different bikes. The new bike had a different chassis and a few other slightly different things. But I still haven’t really understood the pros and cons of both. The only thing I’ve understood is that the seat is much more ergonomic, anyway.
“But hey, I’m happier to have wrapped up 2025.”
Enea Bastianini, Red Bull KTM Tech 3
Photo by: Gold and Goose Photography / LAT Images / via Getty Images
Bastianini knows that the first pre-season test of 2025 will be important for him as he heads into the second and final year of his KTM contract.
“More than confidence, I’m leaving knowing what awaits me next year. I finished 17th [in the test], and quite far back. So I wanted to finish a bit higher up the standings, to end on a high note. But we couldn’t work on the set-up.
“Therefore, Sepang will be a crucial test for me: I’ll have to work very hard and try to make the most of the three days we have.”
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For nearly 150 years, the Benedictine values of hospitality, community and excellence have shaped Belmont Abbey College. Today, they’re also forming young professionals in a field few would associate with a small Catholic liberal-arts college: the motorsports industry.
At a campus better known for its monastery and Great Books academic core, students now study motorsport marketing, event management, and organizational theory. They learn the business of racing while being grounded in a Catholic vision of the human person, all within sight of Charlotte, North Carolina’s booming motorsports economy.
That unlikely blend didn’t happen by accident.
“It started around 70 years ago,” said Trey Cunningham, chair of the Sport and Motorsport Management Department. A local Belmont man, Howard Augustine “Humpy” Wheeler, was Belmont Abbey’s first lay employee and football coach. His son, also named Humpy Wheeler, later became a legendary NASCAR promoter and served on Belmont Abbey’s board of trustees.
According to Cunningham, Wheeler Jr. approached then-president William Thierfelder in the early 2000s with a simple concern: The industry needed people who understood both racing and business. “He was having trouble finding people who had business acumen as well as a passion for motorsports,” Cunningham said. This suggestion led to Belmont Abbey’s first “Racing Management” class in 2007, an unexpected campus hit.
The next year brought a business concentration. A few years after that, more classes were added. And roughly 12 years ago, Belmont Abbey launched one of the first undergraduate motorsport-management degrees in the country. Today, the program enrolls around 65 undergraduates and, as of this fall, 20 students in its new Master of Arts program.
For students like senior James Sicree of Pennsylvania, the program was a lifeline at a moment when his plans were faltering. Assuming he would never attend college, he had trained as an apprentice mechanic in high school, worked in a body shop and became involved in the drift scene.

“I was kind of stuck in my hometown,” he recalled. His father, from a large Catholic family, mentioned Belmont Abbey’s program almost in passing. Sicree ignored it at first, then reconsidered during a difficult gap year.
“One day I thought, ‘I’ll give this a shot,’” he said. A campus visit and meeting with Quinn Beekwilder, assistant professor and coordinator for the program, sealed his decision. “I looked at the campus and really liked it. I thought I could make this work, and then it just grew on me.”
Senior Michael O’Brien’s path was quieter, but just as decisive. From North Carolina, he arrived intending to major in business management. “I saw that there was a motorsports management program and said, ‘Hey, that looks pretty cool,’” he remembered. Two introductory classes later, he was hooked. “I did not regret switching my major at all.”

Both students told the Register that the program’s strength is its hands-on approach. They travel to major races in cities such as Daytona, Nashville, Tampa, St. Petersburg and Atlanta; volunteer at local events; and receive one-on-one professional feedback in small classroom settings. O’Brien’s senior seminar is taught by Mo Murray, CEO of Ligier Automotive North America. “He’ll take 20 minutes out of class to talk through what each of us could do better,” O’Brien shared. “It’s very helpful.”
These experiences are intentionally paired with conversations about professional ethics and Benedictine values, both in the classroom and on the road. “We have these discussions with students before we go out so that they live it and learn it in real time,” Cunningham said.

Because Belmont Abbey is merely minutes away from NASCAR teams, agencies and tracks, students and alumni have formed a visible presence across the industry.
Justin Swilling, a 2015 graduate, grew up attending NASCAR races in Georgia. He noticed early on that the sport required far more than drivers and mechanics. “I would go to the races and would just see how many different people it took to move the sport forward,” he told the Register.
Now in NASCAR’s marketing services department, Swilling manages relationships with race teams and drivers and serves as project lead for the 2026 NASCAR Clash exhibition event. He credits his college years for giving him the access and experience he needed.
“At any point you could be on campus and, within a 20-minute drive, be at a NASCAR racetrack or at the NASCAR Charlotte office or at a race team,” he said. According to Swilling, guest speakers, professors, internships and alumni connections “were really next to none.”
Belmont Abbey’s alumni network now stretches across the motorsports world. Students are encouraged to contact organizations directly, arrange meetings and volunteer at events. Swilling’s own department now hosts a summer internship and continues to welcome Belmont Abbey students for job-shadowing opportunities.
For alumnus Michael Laheta, the school’s influence extended far beyond professional ties. When he worked in Charlotte after graduation in 2012, he regularly saw Belmont Abbey alumni and professors at daily Mass in Uptown. “You would continue to have relationships with these people and meet up with them after work or for coffee,” he said. “That depth of relationships is obviously a testament to the college.”
In addition to working in brand partnerships for FloSports, Laheta now teaches “Revenue Generation in Motorsports” for Belmont Abbey’s online graduate program. His liberal-arts education, he said, gave him the adaptability his career demanded. “The world of business is changing so fast with technology and AI,” he noted. “More than learning any particular skill, it’s that ability to take whatever is coming next and put it through the filter that Belmont Abbey helps you build.”
He learned that lesson in an unexpected way. Though never drawn to theater, he enrolled in “Theater Appreciation” as a freshman to fulfill an arts credit. He now calls it the most “useful class” of his career. “I had to learn how to be comfortable with being uncomfortable,” he shared. “Now when I’m in a boardroom with a Fortune 500 executive, it’s not as uncomfortable as it may have been if I didn’t take that class.”

The cultural environment of the South also shapes the program’s students. Most races begin with prayer, typically led by a Protestant minister. For Sicree, that context sharpened his Catholic identity. “You have to kind of stand out as a Catholic,” he shared. “You can’t really be lukewarm. If you tell people you’re Catholic, you have to own up to it.”
He sees motorsports as a promising industry for a deeper Christian presence. Modern safety advances mean the sport is no longer the daredevil world it once was. “It consists more of being entertainers and using that entertainment to the glory of God,” he said.
His own internship with NASCAR Racing Experience has already shown him how powerful the human element of the sport can be. He travels to tracks around the country, helping guests buckle into retired race cars. One ride-along participant left a lasting impression.
“He told me, ‘I’ve wanted to do this for a while. I have stage-four cancer, and it’s terminal,’” Sicree recalled. “It was something his kids bought him. It’s really cool to be part of something that helps people’s dreams come true like that.”
The motorsports economy surrounding Charlotte is enormous. More than 90% of NASCAR teams are headquartered there, and its tracks and attractions draw millions. Laheta witnessed that impact firsthand while working at the NASCAR Hall of Fame, a major driver of tourism for both NASCAR enthusiasts and newcomers to the sport alike.

In 2025 alone, motorsports contributed $3.2 billion in total economic output to North Carolina, supporting nearly 19,800 jobs and generating $1.35 billion in wages and benefits, according to a recent study by Performance Racing Industry. PRI also found that the industry generated $707.02 million in total economic output and $267.05 million in wages and benefits in Mecklenburg County, where Charlotte is located. Graduates entering the field are stepping into a thriving industry where their skills and ethical grounding can make a tangible difference.
Belmont Abbey envisions its contribution’s growth. Students like O’Brien are interviewing for internships in supply-chain operations and administrative roles. Sicree hopes more Catholic colleges will notice what is possible. “The motorsports industry has a very limited amount of Christian presence in it,” he noted. “The fact that we’re a Catholic liberal-arts college with this whole major really stands out.”
For Cunningham, the program’s mission is simple: Help students find a path into a field they love and shape that field through their character. He sees Belmont Abbey as an example of how Catholic institutions can embrace new industries without losing their identity.
“We do a lot on top of the classroom,” he said. “It makes a huge impact on the development of the overall student.” And as the industry continues to grow, those students and graduates will bring not only skill and passion, but also the ethical and professional grounding their education instilled.
The 2026 NASCAR Cup Series season is here, and with that comes a flurry of new paint schemes for fan favorite NASCAR teams like Hendrick Motorsports. Here are all the new looks HMS will have during the 2026 season.
What’s Happening?
Throughout the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series season, teams will release exciting new sponsorship collaborations and refreshed looks for long-time…
Sponsors:
While more paint schemes will roll off the floor for Larson as the season draws near, to the surprise of a few, Larson will once again pilot the Ricky Hendrick-inspired Hendrickcars.com No. 5 in 2026.
Sponsors:
HMS was quick to roll out some new looks for Chase Elliott ahead of the 2026 season, with NASCAR’s most popular driver now piloting a new take on his 2025 Kelly Blue Book look, a white based NAPA Auto Parts scheme, and a dark new look for his Amazon Prime Video ride.
Sponsors:
Much like his HMS teammates, William Byron is getting some refreshed looks for 2026 alongside some updates to his 2025 schemes. His new paint includes a minimalistic paint scheme for HP and a fiery look for Raptor, which ditches the brand’s green coloring for a brighter look.
Sponsors:
Alex Bowman may not have the most paint schemes in a given season, but he and sponsor Ally always come through with a new look each season. This year is no different, with Ally bringing back the blue accents to the No. 48.
This article will be updated as new paint schemes drop in the lead-up to the 2026 season.
The Daytona 500 twin qualifying races, which were commonly known as the Daytona Duels, have received a massive title change ahead of the beginning of the 2026 season. The iconic race kept its name for multiple decades and was a highly revered destination for drivers to win. However, now, following a fallout with the common sponsors such as Gatorade, Budweiser, and Can-Am, the sport has decided to change the name completely.
NASCAR is currently going through a difficult phase financially and losing the trust of many people in the sport. The 23XI-FRM charter lawsuit was definitely one of the more challenging moments for the sport in recent times. Since the case revealed many shocking things about the leadership of NASCAR, some sponsors feel obliged to take a step back and rethink their sponsorship options.
In a shocking turn of events, the common sponsors of the Daytona Duels have refused to pay the asking fee to include their name in the titles as the sport looked for other options. NASCAR did not publicly announce the news; rather, they slyly changed the name and revealed it on the 2026 Daytona 500 flyer. The new name is now set to be America 250 Florida Duels at Daytona.
It will certainly be a bit mouthful for the people who are used to the old and short name of the Daytona Duels. Amid the sport losing core audiences because of its money-hungry business model, this name change will definitely upset many old fans. The 2026 season might also reportedly witness changes to the playoff format. This change is being seen as a positive change by many people, and it will be very exciting to witness what the sport has in store next.
NASCAR NEWS: WITHOUT A SPONSOR FOR THE DAYTONA DUELS, NASCAR FORCED TO CHANGE NAME https://t.co/Qz6NcAsOAL For decades, Daytona 500 twin qualifying races, also known as the Daytona Duels, have been sponsored by brands like Gatorade, Budweiser, and Can-Am. Now, without a sponsor…
— AutoRacing1.com (@AutoRacing1) December 28, 2025
The President of Daytona International Speedway, Frank Kelleher, is in favor of the change despite many old fans seemingly against the renaming of the iconic race. Kelleher pointed out how historic Daytona actually is and the depth it holds in the hearts and minds of many people in NASCAR. He boldly claimed that winning the Daytona 500 was the pinnacle of NASCAR, something that every driver wants to achieve.

Bubba Wallace recently won at the Daytona 500 and was extremely overjoyed at winning such an iconic race. Frank Kelleher continued that winning a NASCAR championship was certainly a milestone, but winning at Daytona was a completely different level of achievement for many. Kelleher highlighted that opening and closing races at Daytona make the racing destination all the more exciting.
Winning the DAYTONA 500 is the pinnacle of our sport – the race every driver wants most, A championship is a career milestone, but the DAYTONA 500 stands alone. Opening the season with the DAYTONA 500 and closing the regular season with one last shot to race into the NASCAR Playoffs keeps The World Center of Racing at the heart of sport’s biggest moments.
Frank Kelleher said, as reported by autoracing1.
The 2026 season will witness many changes to NASCAR, as 23XI and FRM will also regain their charter status. The coming season seems action-packed with exciting changes as many drivers hope to remain competitive from the get-go. Despite the uncertainty behind the name change right now, the love for Daytona will remain the same, and fans will show up in the same numbers as before and root for their favorite drivers to win.
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BMW has been racing motorcycles longer than cars, and started winning championships on two wheels in the mid-Twenties. Now, 100 years later, BMW Motorrad Motorsport is still winning titles and had a very successful 2025. Overall, BMW Motorrad teams and riders had 411 podium finishes with 169 wins in 2025. BMW won the FIM World Superbike championship and wrapped up 12 additional titles with customer teams and riders.
In the FIM Superbike World Championship (WorldSBK), factory rider Toprak Ratzgatlioglu won the World Championship for a second consecutive year with a BMW M 1000 RR and the RoKiT BMW Motorrad WorldSBK team.
“Toprak’s successful title defense in WorldSBK will remain unforgettable, with no fewer than 21 wins in 36 races,” said Head of BMW Motorrad Motorsport Sven Blusch. “In the FIM Endurance World Championship, we were also on course for the title in a dramatic finale until just minutes before the finish, before a technical issue prevented this potentially historic success for the BMW Motorrad World Endurance Team. But next year we will have another chance to become world champions in endurance racing as well.”

Toprak Ratzgatlioglu won his second consecutive FIM Superbike World Championship.
BMW Motorrad customer teams had great success around the world with the M 1000 RR, winning 12 titles, including two here in the U.S. Cameron Beaubier won the MotoAmerica Superbike championship with Tytlers Cycle Racing, and Andrew Lee won the MotoAmerica Superstock championship with the Orange Cat Racing team. “The BMW M 1000 RR is one of the best bikes in international racing—and this season once again showed that our customers can rely on it in championships around the globe,” said Uwe Geyer, Head of BMW Motorrad Customer Racing. “We are proud to be able to provide private teams and riders with such a strong package.”

Davey Todd on his way to a win on the streets of Macau.
BMW Motorrad Motorsport was also victorious in some of the most prestigious standalone road races in 2025. Davey Todd and Michael Dunlop finished one-two in the Isle of Mann Tourist Trophy, and Todd also won three of the five races that make up the North West 200, while Dunlop won the other two. Todd also won the Macau Motorcyle Grand Prix, with BMW riders Peter Hickman and Erno Kostamo finishing second and third to make it a BMW podium sweep. “All these successes fill us with great pride,” said Sven Blusch. “They prove that the BMW M 1000 RR is a true winning motorcycle and that our global BMW Motorrad Motorsport family is stronger than ever.”
—David Haueter
[Photos courtesy BMW]
The International Hot Rod Association (IHRA) has acquired the historic motorsports facility in Millington, Tennessee, previously known as Memphis International Raceway, as of December 23, 2025. Opened in the late 1980s, it has a storied history in American motorsports, having hosted major drag racing events and was once sanctioned by IHRA itself. The acquisition aims to revitalize the facility as a multi-use destination for drag racing, stock car events, and community engagement, reflecting IHRA’s commitment to the region and its economic potential. Local officials praise the acquisition, highlighting its positive impact on tourism and local businesses.
By the Numbers
State of Play
What’s Next
IHRA will announce updates and improvements as revitalization efforts commence, with a focus on reestablishing the facility as a premier racing destination. Future schedules and programming details will be shared shortly.
Bottom Line
This acquisition not only honors the legacy of Memphis Motorsports Park but also positions it for renewed success within the motorsports community, fostering economic growth and community engagement for years to come.
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