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Spire Motorsports OnlyBulls Green Flag 150 Race Report

Connor Mosack – Driver, No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet Silverado RST

START: 1ST
FINISH: 13TH
OWNER POINTS: 2ND

Connor Mosack, driver of the No. 7 Friends of Jaclyn/RoaringPines Motorclub Chevrolet Silverado RST, battled the demanding street circuit in St. Petersburg, Fla., to bring home to a 13th place finish in his first race of the 2026 season with Sprie Motorsports.

In the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series’ first race on a street course, Mosack started from the pole position after Friday’s qualifying session was cancelled due to weather and controlled the early portion of Stage 1 before settling into second on Lap 7. With a focus on fuel conservation and minor overheating concerns in traffic, the team elected to stay out at the stage break after finishing the first stage in the runner-up position to gain nine stage points.

After beginning the second stage on the front row, Mosack remained inside the top five before contact on Lap 34 caused damage to the hood and left side of his Chevy. The No. 7 team made multiple pit stops for tires, fuel, and repairs, including an additional stop due to a fueling issue, leaving Mosack scored 29th at the conclusion of the stage.

In the third and final Stage, Mosack methodically worked his way forward despite lingering front-end damage. Smart pit strategy under caution allowed the No. 7 to climb back into the top 15 in the closing laps and Mosack capped off a resilient effort with a 13th-place finish on the streets of St. Pete.

Connor’s Post-Race Comments
“We had a pretty solid and fast Friends of Jaclyn/RoaringPines Motorclub Chevrolet Silverado. We led early on and just needed a little bit of short run speed, but long run, we were really good and just kind of took our time. We decided to stay out at the end of the stage, save fuel and keep our track position. Everyone else’s strategy didn’t really help us. With everybody taking tires we slowly faded back and it was gonna be tough to recover our track position. And then we had some contact with the wall that caused some pretty good damage, and obviously weren’t quite as fast after that. We were able to come back through the field a fair amount and then I just didn’t really have any speed left at the end, but we ended up 13th. We had a fast truck, we just need to execute a little bit better and I am looking forward to the next one.”

James Hinchcliffe – Driver, No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet Silverado RST

START: 3RD
FINISH: 10TH
OWNER POINTS: 8TH

Making his first-ever NASCAR start, veteran racer James Hinchcliffe drove the No. 77 Delaware Life Chevrolet Silverado RST from 25th to 10th in the final 15 laps of Saturday’s inaugural OnlyBulls Green Flag 150 NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series event at the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg.

The 39-year-old driver got one lap of practice in during Friday’s session before rain washed out the remainder of practice and qualifying, forcing the starting lineup to be set per the NASCAR rulebook. Hinchliffe started Saturday’s 80-lap race in third, but fell back to 11th after a competitor overdrove a corner and made contact with the No. 77 Delaware Life Chevrolet. The incident caused damage to the right-side of the Spire Motorsports entry, but “Jimmy Hinch” mustered through to the end of the stage maintaining the 11th spot.

After pit stops at the stage break that included damage repair, Hinchcliffe lined up 11th to start Stage 2 and gained three positions on the first lap back under green. After locking up the brakes into a corner and spinning, he fell back outside of the top 10 and rejoined the field in the 23rd position. Hinchcliffe would gain just one spot before the green-white-checkered ended the stage.

In the first six laps of the final stage, the Canadian driver advanced three spots to 17th before the next yellow flag was displayed. Veteran crew chief Chad Walter summoned his driver to pit road to top off with Sunoco Fuel, setting the No. 77 team up to make it to the end of the event on fuel, while other teams elected to stay out. Following another caution period, Hinchcliffe was scored 25th with 20 laps remaining and gained 10 spots over the following 10 laps. He entered the top 10 with five laps remaining and maintained his position until the field took the checkered flag to earn a hard-fought top-10 finish in his NASCAR debut.

James’ Post-Race Comments
“I had one lap of experience around here in a truck going into the race, but I learned an awful lot in those 80 laps. The first 40, I learned that I was drinking from a fire hose, to use a Ryan Hunter Ray expression. We had to learn a couple lessons the hard way. We had to figure out these tires and figure out how to race some of these guys. By the third stage, I felt really good in my Delaware Life Silverado, even with a little bit of damage, and that thing was humming along. I wish I could start the race over knowing what I knew at the start of the Final Stage, but at the end of the day, just super thankful to Spire and Delaware Life for the opportunity. I’m really happy I was able to get up there and salvage a top-10 finish after going to the back a couple times.”

Up Next…
The NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series will return to action March 20 at the historic Darlington (S.C.) Raceway. The Buckle Up South Carolina 200 will be televised live on FS1 at 7:30 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time (EDT).

The fourth of 25 points-paying races on the CRAFTSMAN Truck Series calendar will be broadcast live on the NASCAR Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

To stay up-to-date on all the latest news and exclusive content, follow Spire Motorsports on Facebook, X and Instagram, and visit Spire-Motorsports.com.

About Spire Motorsports …
Spire Motorsports fields full-time entries in the NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series and Interstate Batteries High Limit Racing.

The team, co-owned by longtime NASCAR industry executive Jeff Dickerson and TWG Motorsports CEO Dan Towriss, earned its inaugural NASCAR Cup Series victory in its first full season of competition when Justin Haley took the checkered flag in the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona (Fla.) International Speedway on July 7, 2019. Less than three years later, William Byron drove Spire Motorsports’ No. 7 Chevrolet Silverado to its inaugural NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series win on April 7, 2022, at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway. The team’s most recent win came on Feb. 21, 2026, when Kyle Busch took the checkered flag in the Fr8 Racing 208 at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

In 2026, Spire Motorsports will campaign the Nos. 7, 71 and 77 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1s in the NASCAR Cup Series and the Nos. 7 and 77 Chevrolet Silverado RSTs in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series. The Mooresville, N.C., organization will also field the No. 77 410 sprint car in Interstate Batteries High Limit Racing competition.

ARCA Menards Series West at Kevin Harvick’s Kern Raceway: Oil Workers 150

Presented by West Coast Stock Car Motorsports Hall of Fame Post-Race Notes

  • Mason Massey (No. 19 Brunt Boots/Mongoose Power Solutions Chevrolet) scored his first career ARCA Menards Series West win in his first career series start in Saturday’s Oil Workers 150 Presented by West Coast Stock Car Motorsports Hall of Fame at Kevin Harvick’s Kern Raceway. Massey took the lead on a restart with 14 laps to go and held off a hungry field through one more restart in regulation and two overtime restarts to take the victory.
  • The win is the 101st in series history for the Bill McAnally Racing team.
  • Eric Nascimento, Jr. (No. 4 Impact Transportation / RJ’s Paintshop Toyota) capitalized on a couple of wild overtime restarts, jumping from outside the top five at the end of regulation to finish second. It matches his best career finish at All-American Speedway in 2024.
  • Taylor Mayhew (No. 17 MMI Services Chevrolet) finished third in his ARCA Menards Series West debut. Mayhew ran as high as second and restarted on the front row for the final two restarts before being nosed out by Nascimento at the finish.
  • Reigning series champion Trevor Huddleston (No. 50 High Point Racing / Racecar Factory Ford) finished fourth; he had won the previous two ARCA Menards Series West races at the track.
  • Two-time series champion Sean Hingorani (No. 13 Central Coast Cabinets Toyota) finished fifth after leading the first 136 laps; he was pushed up the racetrack by Massey on the lap 136 restart and then ping-ponged by several others over the course of the final 10 laps.
  • Hailie Deegan (No. 16 NAPA Auto Parts/Monster Energy Chevrolet) finished sixth in her first standalone ARCA Menards Series West start since 2019.
  • Joey Iest (No. 88 Shockwave Marine Suspension Seating Systems Ford) finished seventh after fading late in the race. Iest ran as high as third in the middle stages of the race.
  • Jade Avedisian (No. 70 Mobil 1 Toyota) finished eighth after scoring her first career Sioux Chief PowerPEX Pole Award in qualifying earlier in the day.
  • Gavin Ray (No. 7 Component West Toyota) finished ninth, and Cole Denton (No. 71 Jan’s Towing Ford) finished tenth in his ARCA Menards Series West debut.
  • Reigning ARCA Menards Series West Bounty Rookie of the Year Robbie Kennealy (No. 1 Jan’s Towing Ford) finished 20th, dropping out at the midway point with transmission issues.
  • The race was slowed eight times by caution, including one that sent the race into its second overtime attempt.
  • Sean Hingorani led a race-high 136 laps; Mason Massey led the final 31, including 17 in overtime.
  • The ARCA Menards Series West returns action in the General Tire 150 at Phoenix Raceway, a combination race with the ARCA Menards Series, at 6 pm ET / 4 pm MT on Thursday, March 5. The race will be televised live on FS1 and on select affiliates of the MRN Racing network nationwide. The race can also be heard on MRN.com and on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90. ARCARacing.com will have live timing & scoring data from all on-track activity. Please follow @ARCA_Racing on X (formerly Twitter) for up-to-the-minute updates.

About ARCA  

The Automobile Racing Club of America (ARCA), founded in 1953 by John and Mildred Marcum in Toledo, Ohio, and acquired by NASCAR in April 2018, is the leading grassroots stock car sanctioning body in the United States. Bridging the gap between NASCAR’s top three national touring series and weekly and regional tour racing all across the country, the organization to sanctions over 100 races per year in the ARCA Menards Series, ARCA Menards Series East, ARCA Menards Series West, ASA STARS National Tour, ASA CRA Super Series, ASA Midwest Tour, ASA Southern Super Series plus weekly racing at Toledo and Flat Rock Speedways. For more information about ARCA visit , or follow ARCA on Facebook (@ARCARacing) and Twitter (@ARCA_Racing).  

About Menards 

A family-owned and run company started in 1958, Menards is recognized as the retail home center leader of the Midwest with 236 stores in 15 states.  Menards is truly a one-stop shop for all of your home improvement needs featuring a full-service lumberyard and everything you need to plan a renovation or build a home, garage, cabin, shed, deck, fence or post frame building.  You’ll find a large selection of lumber, roofing, siding, construction blocks, trusses, doors and windows, plus cabinets, appliances, countertops, flooring, lighting, paint, plumbing supplies and more.  To complete the job, Menards has quality hand tools, power tools, fasteners, electrical tools plus storage options and supplies for everyone from the weekend warrior to the pro! 

   

Menards has what you need to complete your outdoor projects and keep your yard in tip-top shape including mowers, trimmers, blowers, pressure washers and more, plus a beautiful garden center stocked with plants, shrubs, trees, landscaping tools, grass seed, fertilizer options, outdoor décor and patio furniture.  Menards also has everyday essentials like health & beauty products, housewares, pet and wildlife supplies, automotive items and even groceries.  And at Christmas, an Enchanted Forest display area with impressive trees, lighting, decorations, ornaments, inflatables and more.  

Menards is known for friendly Customer Service and as the place to “Save Big Money” with low prices every day, and sales too!  For more information, please visit Menards.com to learn about our store locations, offerings and services. 

Shane van Gisbergen dominates for first O’Reilly victory at COTA

Photo by Jake Daugherty at COTA for SpeedwayMedia.com

Shane van Gisbergen conquered Circuit of the Americas (COTA) for the first time in his illustrious racing career on Saturday, February 28. He scored a dominant NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series victory in the Focused Health 250.

The three-time Supercars champion from Auckland, New Zealand, led five times for a race-high 31 of 65 scheduled laps. He started alongside teammate and pole-sitter Connor Zilisch on the front row. But he quickly assumed the lead through the circuit’s first turn. From having his pit strategies executed to his advantage and spending most of the race at the front, van Gisbergen capitalized on a bold move by Sam Mayer. The move ended up taking a majority of the front-runners off the course in the first turn to go from sixth to first. From there, van Gisbergen fended off Austin Hill to claim his first checkered flag in the 2026 NASCAR campaign at COTA.

On-track qualifying to determine the starting lineup occurred on Friday, February 27. Connor Zilisch secured the pole position with a pole-winning lap of 88.398 mph in 97.740 seconds. Joining Zilisch on the front row was teammate van Gisbergen, after a qualifying lap at 88.209 mph in 97.949 seconds.

Before the event, Austin J. Hill and Parker Retzlaff dropped to the rear of the field due to engine changes to their respective entries. 

When the green flag waved and the event at COTA commenced, the field fanned out. They navigated through a brief uphill climb followed by a steep left-hand turn in Turn 1. Among those who fanned out were van Gisbergen and Austin Hill. They both pinned pole-sitter Connor Zilisch through a three-wide battle through the first turn. Van Gisbergen then managed to muscle ahead of both Zilisch and Hill to lead through the Esses, a series of right- and left-hand turns from Turns 2 to 6A.

Van Gisbergen continued to lead the packed field for the remaining turns. Starting from a left-hand turn of Turn 6B to the final right-hand turn of Turn 20, he led the first lap over Zilisch while Hill, Justin Allgaier, Carson Kvapil, and Brandon Jones trailed in the top six, respectively.

Over the next five laps, van Gisbergen retained a steady advantage over teammate Zilisch and led by 0.090 seconds at the fifth lap mark. Not long after, Zilisch navigated his way atop the leaderboard for the first time after overtaking van Gisbergen entering the first turn. He then proceeded to lead the next lap at COTA. Behind, Austin Hill trailed by three seconds in third place while Allgaier and Sam Mayer occupied the remaining top-five spots. Jones, Kvapil, newcomer Brent Crews, Jesse Love, and Corey Day followed, completing the top-10.

Amid the battles at the front, Jeremy Clements plummeted to the tail end of the 38-car field after spinning through the Esses and the gravel trap within Turn 5.

Through the first 10-scheduled laps, Zilisch, who has led since the sixth lap, continued to lead by seven-tenths of a second over teammate van Gisbergen. Third-place Austin Hill retained third place by nearly five seconds. Allgaier retained fourth place as he trailed the leader by more than six seconds. Mayer continued to race in fifth place while trailing by seven seconds. Jones, Crews, Love, Kvapil, and Day all remained in the top 10. Sheldon Creed, Sammy Smith, Austin Green, Anthony Alfredo, Rajah Caruth, Taylor Gray, Ross Chastain, William Sawalich, Josh Bilicki, and Alex Labbe were mired in the top 20, respectively.

On Lap 16, Sammy Smith surrendered 13th place to pit under green. Crews, Creed, Taylor Gray, Chastain, Harrison Burton, Dean Thompson, Nick Sanchez, Blaine Perkins, and Preston Pardus all pitted during the next lap. Leaders Zilisch and van Gisbergen, both pitted on Lap 18 just before pit road became inaccessible as the first stage period concluded. Amid the pit stops, Austin Hill cycled into the lead.

When the first stage period concluded on Lap 20, Austin Hill cruised to his third stage victory of the 2026 season. Mayer settled in second ahead of Allgaier, Jones, Love, Kvapil, Day, Austin Green, and Caruth, while van Gisbergen fended off Zilisch to settle in 10th place. By then, all but one of the 38 starters were scored on the lead lap.

Under the event’s first stage break period, a majority of the field led by Austin Hill, who was among many who did not pit prior to the first stage’s conclusion, pitted while the rest led by van Gisbergen and Zilisch, who were among those who pitted prior to the first stage’s conclusion, remained on the track.

The second stage period started on Lap 24 as Zilisch and van Gisbergen occupied the front row. At the start, the field fanned out while racing uphill entering the first turn. At the front, Brent Crews went beneath both van Gisbergen and Zilisch, challenging for the lead through the first turn. Sammy Smith tried to make his way beneath the trio that briefly went off the course amid a four-wide move. However, Crews muscled ahead with the lead and proceeded to lead through the Esses. 

While Crews continued to lead from Turns 6A and 6B before he navigated his way from Turns 12 to 19, the field behind fanned out as multiple competitors bumped and raced competitively against one another, even forcing others off course, to gain spots. Meanwhile, Crews proceeded to lead the next lap over Smith, Zilisch, and van Gisbergen. With Crews leading the lap after, Zilisch and van Gisbergen moved up to second and third, respectively, while Smith dropped to fourth in front of Sheldon Creed.

At the Lap 30 mark, van Gisbergen, who assumed the lead from Crews two laps earlier, was leading by half a second over Sammy Smith, with Mayer, Austin Hill, and Crews trailing in the top five. By then, Love, Zilisch, Chastain, Harrison Burton, and Sanchez were racing in the top 10 ahead of Kvapil, Taylor Gray, and Dean Thompson, while Creed, who was sent for a spin by Crews through Turns 16 and 17, was mired in 14th place.

Four laps later, the caution flew due to Baltazar Leguizamon sliding as he entered the first turn and plowing against the tire barriers hard on the right side. During the caution period, nearly the entire field, led by van Gisbergen, opted to pit. The rest, which included Kvapil, Jones, Ryan Sieg, Jeb Burton, Ryan Ellis, and Preston Pardus, remained on the track.

As the field restarted with only two laps remaining in the second stage period, Kvapil fended off the field through the uphill climb to the first turn while Mayer, Jones, Allgaier, Ryan Sieg, Jeb Burton and van Gisbergen pursued. Kvapil continued to lead from the Esses to Turn 13 until Mayer used the outside lane to duel and overtake Kvapil before entering Turn 14. With Allgaier joining the battle for the top spot, Mayer retained it as the field cycled back to the frontstretch to complete the next lap.

When the second stage period concluded on Lap 40, Mayer fended off Allgaier to capture his first stage victory of the 2026 season. Kvapil, Love, van Gisbergen, Austin Hill, Sammy Smith, Brandon Jones, Chastain, and Ryan Sieg settled in the top 10, respectively, while Crews and Zilisch were mired in 11th and 29th, respectively. 

During the event’s second stage break period, select names like Allgaier, Kvapil, Jones, Ryan Sieg, Jeb Burton, Clements, Dean Thompson, Ryan Ellis, Lavar Scott, Nick Sanchez and Zilisch pitted while the rest led by Mayer remained on the track.

With 21 laps remaining, the final stage period commenced as Mayer and Love occupied the front row. At the start, the duo dueled for the lead in front of the field leading up to the first turn until Mayer muscled ahead before navigating through the Esses. With the lead still in his grasp, Mayer proceeded to lead from Turn 6B to Turn 18. It was during the latest turn that van Gisbergen capitalized on Love’s challenge to Mayer for the lead to overtake both with a bold three-wide move before entering Turn 19. With the lead back in his possession, van Gisbergen led the next lap. Meanwhile, Mayer was being pressured by Love, Sammy Smith, and Austin Hill for the runner-up spot. 

Down to the final 15 laps of the event, van Gisbergen, who led since reassuming the lead five laps earlier, was leading by nine-tenths of a second over Love while Sammy Smith, Austin Hill, Crews, Mayer, Day, Gray, Sawalich and Kvapil were racing in the top 10 ahead of Chastain, Austin Green, Allgaier, Caruth, Zilisch, Harrison Burton, Creed, Poole, Sanchez and Perkins, respectively. 

Five laps later, van Gisbergen stretched his lead to nearly two seconds over Love as Smith, Austin Hill, and Crews continued to trail in the top five, respectively. Meanwhile, Allgaier, who pitted under green with 14 laps remaining due to a flat right-front tire, was mired in 32nd place.

Then a lap later, the caution flew when Sage Karam, who was dealing with a broken left-front suspension, stalled in the grass. During the caution period, nearly the entire field led by van Gisbergen pitted while the rest led by Sanchez, JJ Yeley, Preston Pardus, and Allgaier remained on the track. Following the pit stops, Smith exited pit road first ahead of Mayer, Love, van Gisbergen, and Austin Hill.

The start of the next restart, with five laps remaining, featured an early three-wide formation between Allgaier, Sanchez, and Sammy Smith, with the trio battling for the lead in front of Mayer, Love, and van Gisbergen through the uphill climb to Turn 1. As the field fanned out to four lanes, Mayer gained a brief advantage before he over-drove the first turn along with a multitude of front-runners. This allowed van Gisbergen to sneak his way through with the lead, and Hill also overtook Mayer for the runner-up spot through the Esses. As the field jostled for late spots, van Gisbergen proceeded to lead from Turn 6B to 20, where he led the next lap while Hill, Mayer, Smith, and Day tried to keep pace with van Gisbergen.

A lap later, Mayer crashed into the tire barriers in Turn 6A, and he collected Kvapil and Rajah Caruth. Behind Mayer’s incident, a handful of competitors, including Harrison Burton, Ryan Ellis, and Clements, wrecked through the Esses. Then, with three laps remaining, Day turned Zilisch, who rallied to move into the top five, spinning through the Esses as he hit the wall and emerged with front-end damage. Amid all of the incidents, the race continued to remain under green. Van Gisbergen was leading by more than a second over Hill, with Smith, Day, and Love in the top five.

When the white flag waved, and the final lap started, van Gisbergen remained in the lead by more than a second over Hill. Despite Hill’s last-lap attempt to reel in van Gisbergen, the latter did not miss his mark and smoothly navigated his way through the circuit’s turns and small straightaways before cycling through the frontstretch and claiming the checkered flag by seven-tenths of a second.

With the victory, van Gisbergen achieved his fifth career win in the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series division, all of which have occurred on road course/street course events, and his second driving the No. 9 Chevrolet Camaro entry for JR Motorsports. In addition to recording the first victory of the year for JR Motorsports, van Gisbergen became the fifth competitor to win at COTA in the O’Reilly division. 

Van Gisbergen’s O’Reilly COTA victory was a momentous boost for the New Zealander as he sets his sights on winning Sunday’s Cup Series event in Austin from 13th place.

Photo by Jake Daugherty for SpeedwayMedia.com.

“Yeah, [it was] good to finally execute,” van Gisbergen said on the frontstretch on the CW Network. “We had an awesome day. Thank you to Safety Culture, JR Motorsports. Pit crew was awesome. The strategy worked out well. I wonder what was going to happen on that last restart, and I kind of sucked [Mayer] in, and he took everyone out for me. That was cool. What an awesome day. Good to finally win here and hopefully, we can have a good day tomorrow.”

Austin Hill settled in the runner-up spot at COTA for a third time while Sammy Smith settled in third place for his second top-five result of the 2026 season. Jesse Love and Corey Day finished fourth and fifth, respectively, as both achieved their second top-five results of this season. 

Brent Crews achieved a strong sixth-place result in his O’Reilly debut, while William Sawalich, Justin Allgaier, Ross Chastain, and Brennan Poole completed the top 10. Notably, Sam Mayer ended up in 14th place following his late incident with the tire barriers in Turn 6A, while Connor Zilisch, who was displeased with Corey Day over the contact that sent Zilisch spinning, fell back to 21st place.

There were 16 lead changes for eight different leaders. The event featured four cautions for 12 laps. In addition, 33 of 38 starters finished on the lead lap.

Following the third event of the 2026 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series season, Austin Hill continues to lead the standings by 28 points over teammate Jesse Love, 39 over Justin Allgaier, 48 over Sheldon Creed, and 59 over Carson Kvapil.

Results:

1. Shane van Gisbergen, 31 laps led
2. Austin Hill, four laps led, Stage 1 winner
3. Sammy Smith
4. Jesse Love
5. Corey Day
6. Brent Crews, five laps led
7. William Sawalich
8. Justin Allgaier, one lap led
9. Ross Chastain
10. Brennan Poole
11. Sheldon Creed
12. Taylor Gray
13. Alex Labbe
14. Sam Mayer, eight laps led, Stage 2 winner
15. Brandon Jones
16. Ryan Sieg
17. Blaine Perkins
18. Jeb Burton
19. Carson Kvapil, two laps led
20. Patrick Staropoli
21. Connor Zilisch, 13 laps led
22. Lavar Scott
23. Anthony Alfredo
24. Kyle Sieg
25. Nick Sanchez, one lap led
26. Dean Thompson
27. Preston Pardus
28. JJ Yele
29. Harrison Burton
30. Parker Retzlaff 
31. Rajah Caruth
32. Jeremy Clements
33. Austin Green
34. Ryan Ellis, one lap down
35. Sage Karam – OUT, Suspension
36. Josh Bilicki – OUT, Suspension
37. Baltazar Leguizamon – OUT, Accident
38. Austin J. Hill – OUT, Suspension

Next on the 2026 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series schedule is the GOVX 200 at Phoenix Raceway in Avondale, Arizona. The event is scheduled to occur next Saturday, March 7, and air at 7:30 p.m. ET on the CW Network, MRN Radio and SiriusXM.

TEAM CHEVY INDYCAR SATURDAY QUALIFYING REPORT – McLaughlin grabs St. Pete pole

CHEVROLET IN THE NTT INDYCAR SERIES
Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg
1.8-mile, 14-turn St. Petersburg street circuit
St. Petersburg, Florida
Saturday Qualifying Report
February 28, 2026

ST. PETERSBURG, FL (February 28, 2026) For the second straight and the third time in five years, Scott McLaughlin in the No. 3 DEX Team Penske Chevrolet will start the season-opening race, the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, from the pole position. The Kiwi’s lap of 60.5426 seconds (107.032 mph) over the 1.8-mile, 14-turn St. Petersburg street circuit led his 13th career pole. Team Penske has won 11 of the 15 poles at St. Pete and now has 158 and 106 poles all-time and since the introduction of the 2.2L Twin-Turbo V6 in 2012.

McLaughlin barely escaped the first group of the first segment of qualifying and was joined by Pato O’Ward in the No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet in advancing to the Fast 12. McLaughlin’s new teammate, David Malukas, in the No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet, led the second group of the first segment, and Christian Lundgaard in the No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet also advanced.

McLaughlin led the Fast 12, with Malukas also advancing to the Firestone Fast Six in a group that had all 12 drivers separated by less than half a second.

Chevrolet pole stats

McLaughlin’s pole is the 246th earned pole, all-time, for Chevrolet
McLaughlin’s pole is the 142nd earned pole, since the introduction of the 2.2L Twin-Turbo V6 in 2012, for Chevrolet
McLaughlin’s pole is the 12th earned pole with Chevrolet for Scott McLaughlin, all-time and since the introduction of the 2.2L Twin-Turbo, tying for 8th all-time list and 4th since the introduction of the 2.2L Twin-Turbo V6
McLaughlin’s pole is the 157th earned pole with Chevrolet for Team Penske all-time, tops all time
McLaughlin’s pole is the 105th earned pole with Chevrolet for Team Penske., since the introduction of the 2.2L Twin-Turbo V6 in 2012, for Chevrolet, tops all time
McLaughlin’s pole is the 11th pole on the Streets of St. Petersburg for Chevrolet – with all of them coming from Team Penske

Lundgaard is quick in pre-qualifying practice

Before qualifying, the Team Chevy drivers and teams had just over an hour to find more speed before setting the grid for Sunday’s Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg. Matching Friday, the practice consisted of one 40-minute session for all drivers and two 12-minute sessions, with the field split. The 1.8-mile, 14-turn St. Petersburg street circuit was still damp from heavy overnight rains as the 40-minute portion of practice got underway.

Rinus VeeKay in the No. 76 Juncos Hollinger Chevrolet set the quickest lap during the full field running, turning a lap at 61.9918 seconds. He was joined in the top eight by Christian Lundgaard in the No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, Alexander Rossi in the No. 20 ECR Java House Chevrolet, Josef Newgarden in the No. 2 Astemo Team Penske Chevrolet, Pato O’Ward in the No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, and Nolan Siegel in the No. 6 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet.

Friday’s quickest driver, Scott McLaughlin in the No. 3 DEX Team Penske Chevrolet, was the second-quickest in the first group, with O’Ward and VeeKay also in the top five. O’Ward’s teammate, Christian Lundgaard, in the No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, was the quickest of the second group, and the quickest overall in practice with a lap of 61.6157 seconds.

Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg Qualifying Results

What They’re Saying:

Scott McLaughlin, No. 3 DEX Team Penske Chevrolet qualified: on pole

“We said to ourselves, if we had the pace to go for pole, we’re going to go for it. So we put tires on and went after it. A couple of guys didn’t obviously, but, you know, best spot to start from. I love St. Pete. It’s great to great to be back here in Florida I think everyone’s enjoying the, the warmth and, yeah, just great. Glad for everyone at Dex as well.

“It’s going be a lot of different strategies. Everyone’s trying to figure out the tire and stuff like that, you know? But we put ourselves in the front and hopefully we keep it.”

David Malukas, No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet qualified: 5th

“We needed that. We needed that. I mean, After that first qualifying run there, I was trying so hard, and the car felt so good. I made a mistake on the first lap, so on the second run, I said okay, here we go, put it together, and I just knew we were going to make this fast six. We decided to go with used reds for the fast six and save the new ones for the race. It seems like it is going to be red dominant. Hopely that strategy works out and we can go for P1.”

Pato O’Ward, No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet qualified: 8th

“I think we missed the track evolution there a little bit, and our balance fell off from the perfect window. The car definitely didn’t have more in it, and it’s about where we have been today – sitting in eighth and flirting with the final transfer. I’m very happy with the car on primary tires. The soft tires have just been more difficult, as it’s been for us in the past. We need to dive into that and see what’s going on because I do think the car was capable of being a bit higher up.”

Christian Lundgaard, No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet qualified: 12th

“It was a bit of a disappointing Qualifying. We were expecting more after after our P1 and P2 results. I think it was a question in my mind if we had what it really took on the Firestone Red tires. Just judging off of P1, we didn’t really seem to be there on the alternates. It’s frustrating but at the end of the day, points are scored tomorrow, so we’ll keep our heads down and figure out the strategy for the race.”

Christian Rasmussen, No. 21 ECR Splenda Stevia Chevrolet qualified: 14th

“We took a gamble with the two sets of reds. We fell on the back foot after not really getting a proper feel in Practice 2. We had an imbalance on the first run and did what we could to try and mitigate that for the second run. It was just limited on what we could do. We went fairly aggressive and it still wasn’t enough. We’ll see what we can do to move forward tomorrow.”

Santino Ferrucci, No. 14 HOMES FOR OUR TROOPS Chevrolet qualified: 17th

“We unloaded pretty good because the car was decent. We just were a little too free on both runs. Not too much we could do, but we definitely didn’t take a big enough stab at it, either. So, a lot of work to do for tomorrow, but other than that, everything else going in the right direction.”

Rinus VeeKay, No. 76 Juncos Hollinger Chevrolet qualified: 19th

“Tough qualifying. Started in the blacks really good. We’re p3 at the moment. Then when we put the reds on, just never really turned them on. Never really got that, that grip that the reds are supposed to give. So, that was tough. I mean, it’s very tight out there. Miss transferring by two-tenths. It’s definitely in there if we would have got that that grip that we needed. But, yeah, overall, I think still a very positive weekend. We’ve got a lot of pace. That’s what matters in a race. So, excited for that. And, yeah, we’ll make sure we address what went wrong on the red tires in qualifying. I’m very confident in this in this team and, and all the guys on the 76 crew.”

Sting Ray Robb, No. 77 Juncos Hollinger – Goodheart Chevrolet qualified: 20th

“Today was pretty good. I think that our qualifying performance was, okay. We are two-tenths from transferring, which hindsight, the field is just so tight. There’s no room for error. Little things make make a big difference around this place, but really proud of the team, the Goodheart crew. They worked hard to get the car in a good spot for for qualifying, and I think that we’ll have a competitive race car tomorrow. It seems like both cars are in a very similar position. We’re looking for the same things, and so that should give us a good direction for what we want going in the race.”

Nolan Siegel, No. 6 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet qualified: 22nd

“I was feeling really good about our chances to transfer today, but we didn’t get a lap in Q1. That’s racing, but it’s very disappointing after our No. 6 NTT DATA Arrow McLaren Chevrolet crew put so much work into getting this race car into proper form. We’re going to focus on moving forward tomorrow.”

Josef Newgarden, No. 2 Astemo Team Penske Chevrolet qualified: 23rd

“Not ideal. We hit a lot of traffic when we came out and I didn’t want to hold anybody up, and that’s what bit us. The sequencing was all off. It felt good on blacks. We’ve been struggling with brakes all weekend and I felt like we got on top of that, finally. The car was really good, it was just unfortunate not to put something together there. The team will fight tomorrow.”

Caio Collet, No. 4 COMBITRANS AMAZONA Chevrolet qualified: 24th

“It goes by quick– the session. Definitely the step from blacks to reds was something that I really underestimated. I didn’t really use the grip that I had available there. I really under drove the red tires. But it’s a lesson learned. We’ll just keep our heads down and focus on the work for tomorrow, it seems it’s going to be a long race, 100 laps, so we can move forward. I think we have a decent car. I’m looking forward to the first race tomorrow.”

Alexander Rossi, No. 20 ECR Java House Chevrolet qualified: 25th

“That was a very difficult qualifying session and a tough way to start the season. We are at a bit of a loss after we had a strong Practice 2. We have a lot of work to do tomorrow but we will be ready.”

NTT INDYCAR SERIES News Conference
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Scott McLaughlin
Post-Qualifying Press Conference

THE MODERATOR: Joined by Scott McLaughlin, the driver of the No. 3 DEX Team Penske Chevrolet with back-to-back NTT P1 awards here on the Streets of St. Pete, his third all-told here in St. Petersburg, 12th career pole in his INDYCAR Series history.

Congratulations. Something about this track, eh?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yep. Maybe I need to move to Florida. I don’t know what it is. I love this place. Great way to start our year.

We did this last year, and I proceeded to have the worst year of my life. I’m just focused on execution tomorrow and the rest of the season. This is one little step. Just really proud of the execution because I felt like we nearly actually missed Q1. We were right on the buffer there, and the car was terrible. It was nice to tune it up and get it right and then it become one of my favorite cars I’ve had around here.

It’s a testament to Raul and the camaraderie that we’ve built already and the understanding for each other, and that can only grow from here.

Q. What kind of adjustments did you make?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: We were firing springs in the thing and front wing changes and everything. We threw the kitchen sink at it between Q1 and Q2, made it a little bit better through Q2, scraped into the Fast Six, and then it was just a matter of executing for the Fast Six and have some fun with house money we like to call it, so it was fun.

Q. Scott, I wanted to go back to the practice in the morning. We had this heavy rain yesterday night. Did you feel any big difference when you had practice in the morning with the grip level?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, grip level was definitely lower, lower than what we tend to expect here Friday to Saturday morning. So that was a challenge in itself.

But I was very happy with my car on Friday. It’s handy when you come to a street circuit and you’ve had a decent P1, and that sort of gave me a little bit of confidence heading into qualifying that we knew where we wanted to be. We obviously missed the window when qualifying started, but we knew where to tune or had an idea where to tune to for Q2.

Q. I hope this will not happen, but everything can be possible with the weather. Did you have a conversation with your team about having a rain race tomorrow?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: If it rains, it’s the same for everyone. I love the rain. I’m from New Zealand, and it rains half the time there. I think it’s something that I’ve grown up with. I’ve always looked at it, like I said, it’s the same for everyone.

You’ve just got to go out there and try and tune the car to the best of your ability and drive it as fast as you can.

Q. Yesterday when we were doing the media bullpen you had talked about execution, like everything is all about execution. You keep saying that word today. I’m curious how you reel yourself in because we know you can get pretty excited in the car. How do you reel yourself in or how do you feel that and know you’ve got to tame it back to execute?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I know I’m 32, but I guess you could say it’s maturity a little bit, INDYCAR maturity, knowing how long the season is. One sort of pole — it’s quite easy to be 20th next week at Phoenix. It’s INDYCAR racing.

Enjoy the highs, but work hard because it’s so close that people are going to be coming for us tomorrow, and we know how good the 10 car has been and how good everyone else has been for so many years.

For me, I’m just going out there, I’m trying to enjoy driving the car like a little kid again, just doing what I love and telling Raul what I want from the car and what will make me go faster, and we’re doing that.

I didn’t feel good at Q1. I said, I need this, this and this to go faster. He gave me it, and it was about sort of mixing the old potion together and sending it, and it was nice.

Q. When you have the turnover on top of the timing stand, the spotter we talked about yesterday, how reinvigorating is this to you to come out of the gate like this?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, it’s definitely a refresh. All the guys that I lost are some of my best friends, but they’ve gone on to cooler things for their careers, and I can only wish them well, and now I’ve got guys that can do just the same job, if not better.

I felt like me and TC, it was our first qualifying session together, and I was telling him in spots to stop talking. We’re sort of warming up to each other a little bit, and it was fun.

But yeah, there’s still a lot of — I think there’s a lot of things that we can work on as a group together, but this is a great start.

Q. Speaking of TC, do you get excited when you think of the prospect of the race because that’s a guy who’s been a master here at coming up with the right strategy to keep you up front, so when you think of possibilities of tomorrow, how excited do you get?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, I’m excited because we’ve got a great car. I think it’s nice to have a guy that you know that’s got the history of choosing the right calls and whatnot, but I’ve also had plenty of those guys on my stand before and won here with Kyle Moyer, who was unreal in that department, too.

The first thing you need is car speed, and for me to make the right moves at the right time, no mistakes, and hopefully we can have a day like we did in 2022.

Q. I know you’re focused on your effort, but to throw a bouquet at Dale Coyne Racing, I don’t know if anybody expected the rookie Dennis Hauger to be third and Grosjean in his first race back to be in the Fast Six, so how impressed are you by what they did?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I was very impressed. This is INDYCAR. It’s competitive. That’s what makes the sport so awesome is the fact that a lower budget team, whatever you want to call it – I’m sure they don’t like me saying that – but at the end of the day it’s well known, and they’re killing it. That was a great effort. I was certainly surprised to see both of them in the Fast Six, but they’ve made some acquisitions over the off-season and got a couple guys that have been pretty deeply entrenched into the sport, as we all know, and been okay.

Q. Curious about the progress you feel Team Penske has made on its street course package, especially with three before the 500 and one directly after?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I’m skeptical to go, yeah, we’ve found — I think for me, it’s going to be waiting until Long Beach. Long Beach was our worst street circuit, I thought personally and I think as a team and probably the biggest gap we had to the Andrettis and maybe the Hondas in some ways.

This is nice, but we know we’re fast here. It’s just a matter of executing — sorry I keep using that word but you’re going to get used to it. Yeah, I’m not counting my chickens before they hatch. It’s okay right now.

Q. How much of a point of emphasis was the street course package over the off-season?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: The whole package was, yeah. We need to be better.

Q. Before you’d been on the track, you mentioned that you expected the tire deg to be similar to the 2024 race. Now that you’ve been on both compounds, is that your opinion still?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: I’m not sure. I don’t think so. Yeah, I think it’s going to be worse than we think. But I think it’s going to be good enough that you have to run on them long enough, but I think there is a cliff there. But we’ll find out tomorrow morning.

Q. How much is that going to change the race, to have to run on two sets of the alternates?

SCOTT McLAUGHLIN: Yeah, you have to be good on both compounds. Thankfully my car has been pretty similar balance-wise on both compounds. I don’t know on tire deg, but I know certainly when I go out on used reds that it’s certainly a loss, in some ways, but I think we can make do with it.

Tune-In Guide

Sunday

NTT INDYCAR SERIES Warm Up – 9am (ET)/8am (CT)/7am (MT)/6am (PT) – FS1/ INDYCAR Radio Network/SIRIUSXM 218
Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg (100 laps) – noon (ET)/11am (CT)/10am (MT)/9am (PT) – FOX/INDYCAR Radio Network/SIRIUSXM 218

Chevrolet history on the Streets of St. Petersburg

Wins – 9

2024 – Pato O’Ward – Arrow McLaren

2022 – Scott McLaughlin – Team Penske

2020 – Josef Newgarden – Team Penske

2019 – Josef Newgarden – Team Penske

2016 – Juan Montoya – Team Penske

2015 – Juan Montoya – Team Penske

2014 – Will Power – Team Penske

2013 – James Hinchcliffe – Team Penske

2012 – Helio Castroneves – Team Penske

Poles – 10

2025 – Scott McLaughlin – Team Penske

2024 – Josef Newgarden – Team Penske

2022 – Scott McLaughlin – Team Penske

2020 – Will Power – Team Penske

2019 – Will Power – Team Penske

2017 – Will Power – Team Penske

2016 – Will Power – Team Penske

2015 – Will Power – Team Penske

2013 – Will Power – Team Penske

2012 – Will Power – Team Penske

Podiums: 25

Chevrolet driver podiums on the Streets of St. Petersburg: Will Power (5), Josef Newgarden (4), Helio Castroneves (3), Pato O’Ward (3), Simon Pagenaud (3), Juan Montoya (2), Marco Andretti (1), James Hinchcliffe (1), Ryan Hunter-Reay (1), Tony Kanaan (1), Scott McLaughlin (1)

Chevrolet team podiums on the Streets of St. Petersburg: Team Penske (18), Andretti Global (3), Arrow McLaren (3), Chip Ganassi Racing (1)

Laps Led: 754

Chevrolet driver laps led on the Streets of St. Petersburg: Will Power (213), Scott McLaughlin (127), Josef Newgarden (83), Helio Castroneves (73), Juan Montoya (71), Simon Pagenaud (64), James Hinchcliffe (26), Christian Lundgaard (23), Pato O’Ward (23), Oriol Servia (16), Rinus VeeKay (13), Ryan Briscoe (9), Jordan King (5), Tomas Enge (4), JR Hildebrand (3), Mike Conway (1)

Chevrolet team laps led on the Streets of St. Petersburg: Team Penske (640), Arrow McLaren (46), Andretti Global (26), ECR (19), Dreyer & Reinbold Racing (16), Panther Racing (7)

Manufacturer History on the Streets Of St. Petersburg

Wins (with competition)

9 – Chevrolet (2024, 2022, 2020, 2019, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012)

6 – Honda (2025, 2023, 2021, 2018, 2017, 2005)

Poles (with competition)

10 – Chevrolet (2025, 2024, 2023, 2020, 2019, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2013, 2012)

5 – Honda (2023, 2021, 2018, 2014, 2005)

Historical Chevrolet in the INDYCAR SERIES information

INDYCAR SERIES Manufacturer Championships (since 1979)
Chevrolet-Powered Wins in the Twin-Turbo 2.2L V6 Era (2012-present)
Chevrolet-Powered Wins – All-Time

About General Motors

General Motors (NYSE:GM) is driving the future of transportation, leveraging advanced technology to build safer, smarter, and lower emission cars, trucks, and SUVs. GM’s Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, and GMC brands offer a broad portfolio of innovative gasoline-powered vehicles and the industry’s widest range of EVs, as we move to an all-electric future.

GM Motorsports, including the Cadillac Formula 1® Team develops and proves advanced technologies in the most demanding environments, accelerating innovation in performance, safety, efficiency, and electrification for its production vehicles. Cadillac Racing is one of the leading manufacturers in the IMSA and FIA World Endurance Championships (WEC). Chevrolet competes in single seaters in the US INDYCAR series, and in NASCAR with multiple team partners and drivers. Corvette customer teams compete in GT series across the globe including IMSA and WEC. Learn more at GM.com.

RCR NOAPS Race Recap: Circuit of The Americas

Jesse Love and the No. 2 Whelen Chevrolet Team Put Forth Consistent Effort to Earn Top-Five Result at Circuit of The Americas

Finish: 4th
Start: 11th
Points: 2nd

“I felt like Connor Zilisch for the first five laps of a run and thought we were better than Shane (van Gisbergen) on the fire off of Stage 3, but then he just does his witchcraft and doesn’t slow down at all. I kind of lost leverage there on the last restart, but at the end of the day, in these races you can be upset with whoever you want, but you have to put yourself in a position to have that control over their decisions or you don’t. And unfortunately having to restart fourth at the end was probably the worst thing for me and I was opened up to typical stack-ups at the end. I’m a little bummed out with how the day ended because I thought we were good enough to run second or maybe could have beat SVG on a short run or if he slipped up. I’m still really proud of our group. My pit crew overcame some adversity and I’m proud of all the guys on this No. 2 Whelen team. Very few people know how much effort I put into my craft of road racing and to see it almost bear fruit today is exciting for me.” -Jesse Love

Austin Hill and the No. 21 Bennett Transportation & Logistics Chevrolet Team Capture Stage 1 Win and Runner-Up Finish at Circuit of The Americas

Finish: 2nd
Start: 3rd
Points: 1st

“I honestly had so much fun today. These road courses are a blast, and our Bennett Transportation & Logistics Chevrolet was fast all day. I made a lot of mistakes out there but that’s going to happen on these road courses. We were able to get 10 points with the Stage 1 win and then we struggled a little bit in Stage 2 with just trying to figure out what we needed to be better. At the beginning of Stage 3, I didn’t have the greatest restart, but we were able to drive back up to fourth before the caution brought the field back together. On the last restart I did a good job of staying far left. As soon as they all went into Turn 1, I knew they would slide up and I filed in second. Then I had to go to work on SVG. He’s just so good during the first three laps of a run and can get away. I was struggling with front turn for the first two or three laps, which let him get a gap and manage from there. Hats off to those guys. I’ll take a second and move on.” -Austin Hill

Cameo to Curtain Call: Van Gisbergen Wins NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series Focused Health 250

Shane van Gisbergen celebrates with his JR Motorsports teammates after winning Saturday’s NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series Focused Health 250 at Circuit of The Americas in Austin, Texas. Photo credit: Harold Hinson Photography.
  • NASCAR Cup Series driver Shane van Gisbergen takes JR Motorsports to Victory Lane for his fifth career O’Reilly Auto Parts Series win and first at NASCAR at COTA.
  • 17-year-old Brent Crews has strong series debut with a sixth-place finish for Joe Gibbs Racing.

AUSTIN, Texas (Feb. 28, 2026) – Shane van Gisbergen made a cameo appearance in the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series on Saturday at Circuit of The Americas and turned it into a show-stealing victory.

The fulltime NASCAR Cup Series driver for Trackhouse Racing joined JR Motorsports as a NASCAR at COTA weekend road-course ace and played the part to perfection, dominating the Focused Health 250. Van Gisbergen led a race-high 31 of the 65 laps en route to a 0.780 of a second victory over runner-up Austin Hill of Richard Childress Racing.

Sammy Smith of JR Motorsports, Jesse Love of Richard Childress Racing and Corey Day of Hendrick Motorsports rounded out the top five, respectively. Seventeen-year-old Brent Crews made his O’Reilly Auto Parts Series debut with Joe Gibbs Racing and turned in a strong performance with a sixth-place finish.

For van Gisbergen, it was his fifth career series victory, all of which have come on road or street courses, and first NASCAR national series win at COTA. Van Gisbergen will look for the weekend sweep when he starts 13th in Sunday’s marquee event, the DuraMAX Texas Grand Prix Powered by RelaDyne (2:30 p.m. CT, TV: FOX, Radio: PRN, SiriusXM).

“I learned a lot today and tried some different techniques, and I hope it will help tomorrow,” van Gisbergen said. “I was driving as fast as I could … I think Connor (Zilisch) was definitely faster when he caught me early on and then he kind of went off in the first stage. Yeah, I was experimenting, trying all kinds of stuff, but it was all for a good intention. I wasn’t really playing around, but it’s good when you have a car like that and you’re in a position like that and can experiment and learn a lot.”

Connor Zilisch, his Trackhouse Racing rookie teammate and weekend mate with JR Motorsports, started on the pole and was looking to win the Focused Health 250 for the second consecutive year. Van Gisbergen, who started second, gave notice that he would be one of his primary threats by stealing the point from Zilisch for the opening five laps. Zilisch rebounded to lead the next 12 laps, but it was Hill who would take the first stage while van Gisbergen was 10th.

Sam Mayer of the Haas Factory Team edged out Crews for second-stage honors while van Gisbergen moved into position for the final stint by taking fifth. He shined in that final stage, leading 18 of the 25 laps with the only cause for concern coming on a restart on Lap 61 following a caution.

While the majority of the field pitted, Nick Sanchez of AM Racing and Justin Allgaier of JR Motorsports stayed out and led the field to the restart. Smith, who restarted third, pushed his way into the lead heading into the Turn 1 left-hander, but carried too much speed and was forced to go wide on the exit. Meanwhile, van Gisbergen, who restarted sixth, deftly moved inside and came out of the first turn with the lead and never looked back.

In IMSA action, Wyatt Brichacek of Toney Driver Development dominated the weekend, winning both P3 class races from the pole and leading every lap of both 45-minute timed races. Westin Workman of RAFA Racing duplicated the feat in the GSX class with a pair of poles and wins and leading every lap.

Up Next: The weekend culminates with Sunday’s DuraMAX Texas Grand Prix Powered by RelaDyne NASCAR Cup Series race beginning at 2:30 p.m. (TV: FOX, HBO max; Radio: PRN, SiriusXM).

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Keep track of all things NASCAR at COTA by following on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram (@NASCARatCOTA). Keep up with all the latest information on the NASCAR at COTA website and mobile app.

McLaughlin Starts Penske Rebound With St. Pete Pole

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026) – Scott McLaughlin helped Team Penske put memories of a tough 2025 NTT INDYCAR SERIES season into the rearview mirror Saturday by starting 2026 with the NTT P1 Award for the Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg.

New Zealand native McLaughlin earned his 12th career pole and third in the last five years on this 14-turn, 1.8-mile temporary street circuit, leading the Firestone Fast Six with a best lap of 1 minute, .5426 of a second in the No. 3 DEX Team Penske Chevrolet.

SEE: Qualifying Results

Team Penske underwent a turbulent 2025 season, marked by the dismissal of three team executives after an illegal modification of a part was discovered before the Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge. The team won just two races, with McLaughlin being shut out of Victory Lane for the first time since his rookie season in 2021.

“Raul (Prados), my new engineer, gave me a great car,” McLaughlin said. “But we have a lot of experience here with a great car, as well.

“Just really pumped. Everybody knows the slog we went through last year, so to start on this note is fantastic. Bloody good, bloody good.”

Another driver on the comeback trail, 2022 Indianapolis 500 winner Marcus Ericsson, will join McLaughlin on the front row of the 100-lap race Sunday (noon ET, FOX, FOX One, FOX Deportes, FOX Sports app, INDYCAR Radio, Powered by OnlyBulls) after his best lap of 1:00.5621 in the No. 28 Delaware Life Honda of Andretti Global. Ericsson has finished 15th and 20th in the standings in his first two seasons, respectively, with Andretti Global after three consecutive sixth-place finishes from 2021-23 with Chip Ganassi Racing.

Rookie Dennis Hauger led arguably one of the best performances in the history of Dale Coyne Racing by qualifying a stunning third, leading both DCR cars in the Firestone Fast Six for the first time since 2022. 2025 INDY NXT by Firestone champion Hauger’s best lap was 1:00.5743 in the No. 19 Ault Block Chain Honda as he became the first driver to make the Firestone Fast Six in their series debut since Christian Lundgaard in 2021.

Reigning and four-time NTT INDYCAR SERIES champion Alex Palou will defend his 2025 St. Petersburg victory from the fourth starting position after a best lap of 1:00.6842 in the No. 10 DHL Chip Ganassi Racing Honda.

David Malukas continued a strong debut weekend with Team Penske as one of the team’s two drivers in the Firestone Fast Six. Malukas, who replaced two-time series champion Will Power this offseason at Penske, qualified fifth at 1:00.7638 in the No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet.

Romain Grosjean marked his return to the NTT INDYCAR SERIES after a one-year hiatus and his return to Dale Coyne Racing after his 2021 series debut with the team by rounding out the top six at 1:01.3462 in the No. 18 BMax Honda.

Last year’s runner-up in the standings, Pato O’Ward, didn’t advance past the second round of qualifying. He will start eighth in the No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet.

O’Ward wasn’t the only series star to falter before the Firestone Fast Six. Multiple series champions Scott Dixon and Josef Newgarden were eliminated in the first round.

Six-time series champion Dixon will start 16th in the No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing after a slide at the start of his final qualifying lap of the first session. It’s the first time he was eliminated in the opening round of qualifying at this race since 2013.

Two-time series champ and two-time St. Petersburg winner Newgarden will start 23rd in the 25-car field in the No. 2 Astemo Team Penske Chevrolet.

TOYOTA RACING – NOAPS COTA Post-Race Report – 02.28.26

CREWS, SAWALICH NET TOYOTA TOP-10s AT CIRCUIT OF THE AMERICAS
Crews lead Five Laps; Brings Home Solid Sixth-Place finish in his O’Reilly Auto Parts Series debut

AUSTIN (February 28, 2026) – Joe Gibbs Racing drivers Brent Crews (sixth) and William Sawalich (seventh) earned top 10 finishes in Saturday’s NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series race at Circuit of the Americas (COTA).

Crews dazzled in his O’Reilly Series debut, taking the lead on an early race restart with an impressive move in turn one and led five total laps in the 65-lap race on Saturday afternoon. With his time in the lead, Crews became the youngest driver to lead laps in the O’Reilly Series since Casey Atwood did so in 1998 at the Nashville Fairgrounds.

Toyota Racing Post-Race Recap
NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series (NOAPS)
Circuit of the Americas
Race 3 of 33 – 156 miles, 65 laps

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS

1st, Shane Van Gisbergen*
2nd, Austin Hill*
3rd, Sammy Smith*
4th, Jesse Lovel*
5th, Corey Day*
6th, BRENT CREWS
7th, WILLIAM SAWALICH
12th, TAYLOR GRAY
15th, BRANDON JONES
26th,, DEAN THOMPSON
29th, HARRISON BURTON
35th, SAGE KARAM
*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

BRENT CREWS, No. 19 Young Life GR Supra, Joe Gibbs Racing

Finishing Position: 6th

How would you rate your overall performance today?

“Felt like today was just a big learning day. My first start obviously. Overall I just wanted to finish and keep the car in one piece and we did that. There are some things I felt like I could have done better. There at the end not thinking about it, I took the outside. I’ve been here so many times where you gain a row or two rows taking the outside and then they all get wiped out. It was a tough day, it was a long hot day and we survived. I just want to thank everyone at Joe Gibbs Racing and Toyota, and we were also happy to represent Young Life.”

Tell us about the move you made around SVG (Shane Van Gisbergen) and Connor Zilisch to lead for five laps early in the race?

“It was definitely cool. Today was a great learning day and I just want to thank everyone at Joe Gibbs Racing and Young Life and Toyota for getting us here, first of all. Today was a blast, it’s a day I dreamed of going on 10 years now. Today was a lot of fun getting to race around my friends and people I’ve thought about racing for a lot of years. We definitely struggled this week in practice and we made adjustments to make the car better and almost came out of there with a top-five, so I’m happy.”

How did the day turn out compared to your expectations?

“They were pretty close. I expected to have a pretty good day being a road course kid. Definitely was a bit eye-opening in practice. We really struggled, but got a lot better. So I was happy to almost have a top-five there. Having green flag pit stops, and coming down pit road hot and all of those things are new to me. So I’m just trying to learn.”

About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in the U.S. for nearly 70 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands, plus our nearly 1,500 dealerships.

Toyota directly employs nearly 48,000 people in the U.S. who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of more than 35 million cars and trucks at our 11 manufacturing plants. In 2025, Toyota’s plant in North Carolina began to assemble automotive batteries for electrified vehicles.

For more information about Toyota, visit www.ToyotaNewsroom.com.

Layne Riggs wins inaugural Truck race at St. Petersburg

ST PETERSBURG, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 28: Layne Riggs, driver of the #34 Long John Silver's Ford, celebrates in victory lane after winning the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series OnlyBulls Green Flag 150 at Grand Prix of St. Petersburg on February 28, 2026 in St Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by David Jensen/Getty Images).

Layne Riggs erased his difficult start to the 2026 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series season by winning the inaugural OnlyBulls Green Flag 150 at St. Petersburg on Saturday, February 28.

The 23-year-old Riggs from Bahama, North Carolina, led three times for a race-high 41 of the 80-scheduled laps in an event where he started in 28th place and steadily worked his way up the leaderboard. After outdueling teammate Chandler Smith to lead for the first time on Lap 38, Riggs captured the second stage victory.

Through two cautions and restarts throughout the final stage period, Riggs retained the lead for nearly the entire portion of the period. In the closing laps, Riggs was mired with a trio of challenges: not having enough fuel to finish the event, navigating his way through lapped traffic, and fending off late challenges from Ty Majeski and Ben Rhodes. Amid all challenges, Riggs withstood them all by navigating his way through the 14-turn circuit and even fending off a final-lap dive bomb attempt from Majeski to etch his name as the winner of the Truck Series’ first-ever race at the Streets of St. Petersburg.

The event’s starting lineup was determined using a qualifying metric formula after rain canceled the event’s qualifying and practice sessions that were scheduled to occur on Friday, February 27. As a result, Connor Mosack was awarded the pole position, and he shared the front row with Giovanni Ruggiero.

Prior to the event, rookie Cole Butcher dropped to the rear of the field in a backup truck after he wrecked his primary truck during Friday’s rain-shortened practice session. Rookie Mini Tyrrell also dropped to the rear of the field due to unapproved adjustments to his entry. During the event’s pace laps, Tyler Reif ended up dropping to the rear of the field due to stalling on the track.

When the green flag waved and the event commenced, Connor Mosack rocketed ahead of the field entering the first turn, while Ben Rhodes, who started in fourth place, made a bold move beneath Giovanni Ruggiero in an attempt to assume the runner-up spot. Ruggiero managed to fend off Rhodes as Mosack drove away through the first three turns. As the field of 36 competitors smoothly navigated through the 14-turn circuit at the Streets of St. Petersburg for the first time ever, Mosack also retained the top spot for a full lap as he led the first lap.

On the second lap, the event’s first caution flew when Justin Haley, who was racing just outside the top-10 mark, was bumped by Stewart Friesen and sent for a spin as he stalled backwards in the first turn. Haley would drop out of the lead lap category as he was unable to re-fire his entry before the field led by Mosack cycled back through the first turn and lapped Haley.

When the event restarted under green on the sixth lap, Mosack and Rhodes dueled entering the first turn before Rhodes muscled ahead and assumed the lead through the first three turns. As the field jostled for early spots through Turns 3 and 4, Rhodes muscled ahead with the lead while Mosack was fending off Ruggiero and Chandler Smith for the runner-up spot. Amid the battles throughout the 14-turn circuit, Rhodes, who built his gap to more than a second, led the next lap.

Through the first 10 scheduled laps, Rhodes was leading by a second over Mosack as Ruggiero, Chandler Smith, and Landen Lewis trailed in the top five, with the latter trailing by five seconds. Behind, Dario Franchitti, who made contact with James Hinchcliffe on the seventh lap in the first turn, was racing in sixth place ahead of Tyler Ankrum and Hinchcliffe while Kaden Honeycutt and Andres Perez De Lara occupied the top-10 spots, respectively. Meanwhile, Adam Andretti, Layne Riggs, Ty Majeski, Stewart Friesen, Kris Wright, Christian Eckes, Jake Garcia, Grant Enfinger, Colin Braun and Ben Maier were racing in the top 20, respectively, while Tyler Reif, Daniel Hemric, Daniel Dye, Brenden Queen and Cole Butcher were mired in the top 25, respectively, ahead of Mini Tyrrell, Dawson Sutton, Tanner Gray, Carter Fartuch and Jackson Lee.

Five laps later, Mosack, who had been reeling in on Rhodes over the previous laps, trailed Rhodes by within three- and four-tenths of a second through every turn and straightaway. Despite being pressured by Mosack, Rhodes retained the lead by four-tenths of a second during the next lap. Rhodes then briefly locked up his tires as he entered the first turn, but he managed to keep his entry straight and at the front. As Tanner Gray wrecked on Lap 17, he managed to keep going without drawing a caution.

When the first stage period concluded on Lap 20, Rhodes, who rebuilt his advantage to more than four seconds, cruised to his first Truck stage victory of the 2026 season. Mosack settled in second place while Landen Lewis, Chandler Smith, Ruggiero, Franchitti, Riggs, Ankrum, Honeycutt, and Perez De Lara were scored in the top 10, respectively. By then, 30 of 36 competitors were scored on the lead lap.

Under the event’s first stage break period, the event was paused for three minutes as the entire field, except for Mosack, parked on pit road, with each competitor parked in their respective pit boxes for service. For the competitors who pitted, all retained their respective spots as they entered pit road before the start of the second-stage period.

The second stage period started on Lap 23 as Mosack and Rhodes occupied the front row. At the start, the field fanned out entering the first turn as both Rhodes and Mosack occupied the front row. Through the first turn, Rhodes, who was racing on fresh tires than Mosack, quickly reassumed the lead. As Rhodes retained the lead from Mosack and Smith through the first three turns, Honeycutt, who was racing in the top 10, overshot Turn 4 and plummeted below the leaderboard as he navigated his truck back on the course. With the rest of the field navigating through the remaining turns smoothly, Rhodes extended his advantage to one-and-a-half seconds as he returned to the start/finish line and led the next lap.

On Lap 25, the caution returned when Adam Andretti, who was racing within the top-20 mark, got bumped by Christian Eckes in Turn 7. The contact sent Andretti spinning and rear-ended the wall, as Eckes also collided with Andretti. As most of the field scattered to avoid the carnage, Daniel Hemric was also involved after he hit Andretti’s damaged entry. At the time of caution, Rhodes was still leading ahead of Smith, Lewis, Riggs, and Ruggiero, while Mosack had dropped to eighth place on his worn tires.

The event’s next restart on Lap 30 featured Rhodes, Smith, and Riggs dueling against one another in a three-wide formation in a battle for the lead. As the trio entered the first turn, Smith, who was pinned in the needle of the three-wide racing, executed a bold crossover move beneath teammate Riggs to overtake him and Rhodes with the lead in the first turn. As the field behind jostled for spots, Smith proceeded to lead the next lap while Riggs, Rhodes, Lewis, and Ruggiero trailed behind.

At the Lap 35 mark, Smith continued to lead by six-tenths of a second over his hard-charging teammate Riggs while Rhodes trailed in third place by one-and-a-half seconds. Meanwhile, Majeski was up into fifth place behind Lewis, and Ruggiero occupied sixth place while Ankrum, Franchitti, Enfinger, and Perez De Lara trailed in the top 10 ahead of Kris Wright, Colin Braun, Ben Maier, Stewart Friesen, and Dawson Sutton.

Two laps later, Riggs, who pressured teammate Smith for the lead, seized an opportunity to get beneath Smith in the first turn. Smith, however, fought off Riggs’ challenge and retained the lead through the first three turns before Riggs tried again to go beneath Smith through a brief straightaway from Turns 3 and 4. Despite racing alongside Smith, Riggs was unable to execute his pass before he then succeeded in overtaking and muscling ahead of Smith from Turns 5 to 8. Riggs proceeded to stretch his advantage to more than a second over the next handful of laps over Smith, while Lewis, Majeski, and Rhodes trailed in the top five, respectively.

When the second stage period concluded on Lap 40, Riggs captured his first Truck stage victory of the 2026 season. Teammate Smith settled in second ahead of Lewis, Majeski and Rhodes while Ruggiero, Ankrum, Franchitti, Enfinger and Perez De Lara were scored in the top 10, respectively. By then, 28 of 36 starters were scored on the lead lap.

Following the event’s second stage break period and after the field non-competitively pitted for service, the event’s third and final stage period commenced with 37 laps remaining. At the start, Riggs jumped ahead of teammate Smith entering the first turn, while Majeski overtook Smith through the first turn to assume the runner-up spot. As the front-runners fanned out and jostled through Turns 3 and 4, Ankrum collided into the rear of Lewis, which resulted in Ankrum sustaining significant front-end damage as the latter still continued racing straight and without drawing a caution. Amid the scrambles within the field, Riggs led the next lap over a hard-charging Majeski and Smith while Rhodes, Lewis, and Ruggiero occupied the top-six spots. Behind, Franchitti was up into seventh place while Enfinger, Ankrum, and Perez De Lara trailed in the top 10, respectively.

With 35 laps remaining, Riggs stretched his advantage to a second over Majeski while Smith, Rhodes, and Lewis continued to trail in the top five. Riggs proceeded to add another second to his lead over the next five laps while Majeski, Smith, Rhodes, and Lewis retained top-five spots ahead of Ruggiero, Franchitti, Enfinger, Perez De Lara, and Honeycutt. During this stretch, there were two on-track incidents that occurred, both of which occurred in Turn 1. The first was when Cole Butcher wheel-hopped and spun in the first turn while battling for a top-20 spot with 33 laps remaining. Then, with 30 laps remaining, Wright, who was also battling within the top 20, locked up the brakes on his entry and slid sideways while barely dodging Sutton. During both incidents, the event remained under green flag conditions.

Following a caution that flew with 29 laps remaining due to Derek White stalling his entry, the event restarted with 25 laps remaining. At the front, Riggs and Majeski dueled for the lead until Riggs fended off Majeski through the first turn to retain the lead. As Riggs proceeded to lead through the next three turns, Majeski, who was racing with a damaged left-front fender, fended off teammate Rhodes to retain the runner-up spot while Smith, Lewis, Ruggiero, Franchitti, Enfinger, Honeycutt and Perez De Lara trailed in the top 10, respectively. Meanwhile, Nathan Nicholson and Mini Tyrrell, both of whom were racing within the mid-pack region, made hard contact against the right-side wall through the first two turns, but both continued to nurse their damaged entries without drawing a caution.

With 24 laps remaining, a pair of on-track incidents occurred. The first was when Ruggiero, who was having a strong run in the top-10 mark, wrecked against the wall in Turn 4. Shortly after, Hinchcliffe, who was racing within the mid-pack region and overshot Turn 10 during the second stage period, made contact with Wright and spun through Turns 5 and 6. During both incidents, the race remained under green-flag conditions, but the caution returned on the next lap after Derek White stalled on the track for a second time, this latest time in Turn 9.

As the event restarted with 19 laps remaining, Majeski used the outside lane and took advantage of Riggs briefly hopping the curb through the first turn to assume the lead. As Majeski led through the next three turns, Riggs fended off doff Rhodes and Smith to retain the runner-up spot while Honeycutt carved his way into the top five in fifth place. Then, as Majeski led through Turn 13, he briefly got loose and overdrove Turn 14. Despite making slight contact with the tire barriers on the left side, he managed to blend back on the circuit in sixth place without drawing a caution while Riggs reassumed the lead and led the next lap.

Down to the final 15 laps of the event, Riggs was leading by nine-tenths of a second over Rhodes while Smith, Honeycutt, Majeski, Lewis, Enfinger, Perez De Lara, Braun and Hemric were racing in the top 10 ahead of Ben Maier, Haley, Jake Garcia, Mosack, Hinchcliffe, Tyler Reif, Daniel Dye, Butcher, Kris Wright and Brenden Queen, respectively. Meanwhile, Franchitti, who was racing in the top-10 mark, dropped to 28th place and lost a lap to the leaders after he pitted under green due to a steering issue, while Eckes was down in 25th place after he was bumped and sent for a spin by Reif in Turn 4 a few laps earlier.

With 10 laps remaining, Riggs extended his lead to more than two seconds over Rhodes while Chandler Smith and Majeski, both of whom battled for third place, trailed by more than four seconds. Honeycutt continued to occupy fifth place while Lewis, Perez De Lara, Braun, Hemric, and Maier were up in the top 10 ahead of Hinchcliffe, Haley, Mosack, Reif, and Garcia. As the laps dwindled, Riggs had his lead shrink to a full second over Rhodes with five laps remaining, but the former continued to lead through every turn and straightaway of the 14-turn circuit.

When the white flag waved, and the final lap started, Riggs remained in the lead by nearly a second ahead of a side-by-side battle between Rhodes and Majeski. Seconds later, Majeski overtook teammate Rhodes, the latter of whom had been reeling in Riggs for the lead in the late stages, for the runner-up spot through the first turn while Riggs, who began to express concerns about fuel shortage, rebuilt a steady gap. Despite weaving his truck back and forth a handful of times through the turns, Riggs led through Turn 13 as Majeski tried to reel in. 

Then, entering Turn 14, Majeski tried to fully reel in his entry to the rear bumper of Riggs’ entry, but he missed his mark and overdrove the turn. With Majeski having to regather his momentum and fend off Rhodes for second place, Riggs was able to cruise through the final turn and final straightaway, and he claimed the checkered flag to win by eight-tenths of a second over Majeski. 

With the victory, Riggs collected his sixth NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series career win in his 57th series start, his first on a road course event and his first since he won at Bristol Motor Speedway in September 2025. Riggs’ St. Petersburg victory was also the second of the 2026 season for the Ford manufacturer and the second for Front Row Motorsports, with the organization having both of its trucks (Nos. 34 and 38) winning at least once this year.

Riggs’ St. Petersburg victory was a huge momentous boost for the driver and team of the No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford F-150 entry, as they were ranked in 23rd place in the driver’s standings after finishing 31st and 27th through the first two races (Daytona International Speedway & Atlanta’s EchoPark Speedway). Currently, the St. Petersburg victory has boosted them to fifth place in the standings as they continue their yearlong pursuit of making the Chase and winning the championship. 

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Photo by David Jensen/Getty Images

“[The] First thing I’m gonna say [is] thank you to Joey Hand,” Riggs said in Victory Lane on FOX. “I know he’s watching at home. My road course guy. He’s the man. He helped me so much. We’ve been working on this racetrack in the simulator at Ford Racing since December. I really, really wanted to get my first win on a road course. The short track guy from Bahama, North Carolina, won at St. Pete. Can you believe it? I’ve really been trying to perfect my craft. I feel like I’ve been close on the road courses. Just big shoutout to everybody at Front Row Motorsports…It’s just a dream come true. I literally said this year [that] I just want to win a road course just to show I’m not just that short track guy.”

“[The truck] sputtered with about to eight [laps] to go,” Riggs added. “The [fuel] pickup on these trucks are on the left side, so every time that I would turn to the left, the fuel would slosh away. So the whole time, I was just trying to get it to go, not knowing, trying to manage your gap. Thank you to Ben [Rhodes] and Ty [Majeski]. They ran me pretty clean. I know that last corner, Ty probably could have cleaned me out if he wanted to. We were so close there. What an awesome feeling.”

Ty Majeski settled in second place for his second top-four result of the 2026 season, while Ben Rhodes, who was in striking distance of achieving his first victory in two years, settled in third place for his second consecutive top-four result of the year.

Chandler Smith and Kaden Honeycutt finished in the top five. Landen Lewis, Andres Perez De Lara, Daniel Hemric, Colin Braun, and James Hinchcliffe completed the top 10. Notably, Dario Franchitti settled in 27th place, a lap down, following his late green-flag pit stop.

There were nine lead changes for five different leaders. The event featured six cautions for 17 laps. In addition, 24 of 36 starters finished on the lead lap.

Following the third event of the 2026 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series season, Chandler Smith leads the standings by 34 points over Ben Rhodes, 50 over Ty Majeski, 54 over Giovanni Ruggiero, and 56 over Layne Riggs.

Results:

1. Layne Riggs, 41 laps led, Stage 2 winner

2. Ty Majeski, two laps led
3. Ben Rhodes, 23 laps led, Stage 1 winner
4. Chandler Smith, seven laps led
5. Kaden Honeycutt
6. Landen Lewis
7. Andres Perez De Lara
8. Daniel Hemric
9. Colin Braun
10. James Hinchcliffe
11. Ben Maier
12. Justin Haley
13. Connor Mosack, seven laps led
14. Cole Butcher
15. Christian Eckes
16. Tyler Reif
17. Daniel Dye
18. Jake Garcia
19. Kris Wright
20. Tanner Gray
21. Carter Fartuch
22. Grant Enfinger 
23. Adam Andretti
24. Brenden Queen
25. Giovanni Ruggiero, one lap down
26. Stewart Friesen, one lap down
27. Dario Franchitti, one lap down
28. Mini Tyrrell, three laps down
29. Jackson lee, five laps down
30. Frankie Muniz, six laps down
31. Tyler Ankrum, 10 laps down
32. Timmy Hill, 17 laps down
33. Dawson Sutton – OUT, Accident
34. Nathan Nicholson – OUT, Accident
35. Derek White – OUT, Fuel Pump
36. Wesley Slimp – OUT, Power Steering

Next on the 2026 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series schedule is Darlington Raceway in Darlington, South Carolina, for the Buckle Up South Carolina 200. The event is scheduled to occur on March 20 and air at 7:30 p.m. ET on FS1, NASCAR Racing Network and SiriusXM.

Taylor Stays Perfect To Claim First Career Pole in St. Pete

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026) – Max Taylor kept his season-opening weekend in INDY NXT by Firestone perfect by winning the pole Saturday for the Grand Prix of St. Petersburg.

Taylor’s first career pole was the exclamation point of an event in which he also has led both practice sessions on the 14-turn, 1.8-mile temporary street circuit at the start of his first full season in the INDYCAR development series. He claimed the pole at 1 minute, 4.8887 seconds on his final lap during the second group of qualifying in the No. 28 Susan G. Komen machine that Dennis Hauger drove to the 2025 INDY NXT by Firestone championship last season for Andretti.

Connecticut native Taylor, 18, joined Andretti Global full time this season after making six INDY NXT starts last season amid a full campaign in USF Pro 2000.

“First pole position, so I’m over the moon,” Taylor said. “P1 every session this weekend so far, so I’m just excited to keep attacking. I love this car, love this track, and I love my team.”

Up next is the 45-lap race at 10 a.m. ET Sunday (FS1, FOX One, FOX Sports app, INDYCAR Radio, powered by OnlyBulls).

Rookie Nikita Johnson will start on the front row at his hometown race. Johnson, from St. Petersburg, led the first qualifying group at 1:05.2148 in the No. 21 Cape Motorsports Powered by ECR entry.

Andretti Global dominated qualifying, taking three of the first four spots on the starting grid. Besides Taylor on pole, Seb Murray qualified third at 1:05.3912 in the team’s No. 27 Prosperity car, while Lochie Hughes qualified fourth at 1:05.3105 in the No. 26 Andretti Global machine.

Polish rookie Tymek Kucharczyk will start fifth after a top lap of 1:05.4028 in the No. 71 HMD Motorsports car, while Josh Pierson put four Andretti cars in the top six with his lap of 1:05.5975 in the No. 29 Starchive Andretti entry.

Accidents ended the sessions of two drivers who hoped to qualify near the front.

Enzo Fittipaldi, the grandson of two-time Indianapolis 500 winner Emerson Fittipaldi, clipped the wall with his No. 67 HMD Motorsports entry. He will start last in the 24-car field.

Toward the end of the second group, INDY NXT race winner Matteo Nannini hit the barrier twice in an accident that inflicted heavy damage to the front of his No. 20 Enve Motorsports car fielded by Cape Motorsports Powered by ECR. He will start 23rd.