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BROWN WINS RIGHT TRAILERS TOP FUEL ALL-STAR CALLOUT IN FRONT OF SELLOUT CROWD AT GAINESVILLE

Hart, Capps, C. Coughlin and A. Smith all qualify No. 1 at Amalie Motor Oil NHRA Gatornationals

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (March 7, 2026) – Four-time Top Fuel world champion Antron Brown won the Right Trailers All-Star Callout in front of a sellout crowd on Saturday at Gainesville Raceway, defeating Clay Millican in the final round of the bonus race as part of this weekend’s season-opening Amalie Motor Oil NHRA Gatornationals.

Josh Hart (Top Fuel), Ron Capps (Funny Car), Cody Coughlin (Pro Stock) and Angie Smith (Pro Stock Motorcycle) all qualified No. 1 at the first of 20 races during the 2026 NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series season.

Brown became the first two-time winner of the Callout, going 4.290-seconds at 258.76 mph in his 12,000-horsepower Matco Tools dragster to get past Millican. Both cars ran into trouble, but Brown recovered in time to take the win and the $80,000 bonus.

Brown will now try to repeat last season’s Gatornationals win, taking on Gary Pritchett to open eliminations.

“Clay was right there and I got spoiled today,” Brown said. “The car had a fast shake and I pedaled a little bit, and we were able to get it done. It’s super exciting for us because in the offseason, we regrouped after last year and we want to revamp our program.”

“What’s going to make tomorrow so tricky is, first round is going to be really good to the point it’s going to be like our Friday night setup. So first round, you better watch who you got, and race who you got, and try to think about what kind of lap you can throw out to get the job done.”

Hart officially clinched his first career No. 1 qualifier, doing so in his debut with John Force Racing thanks to Friday’s run of 3.658 at a track-record 340.30 in his 12,000-horsepower Burnyzz/Speedmaster dragster. It was a special moment for Hart to do it at his home track, especially with the 340-mph run under his belt.

Hart will open eliminations against Dan Mercier, looking for his first victory since his debut season in 2021.

“The fans are awesome,” Hart said. “The energy is always good here. My wife always attends this race, so maybe it’s just a level of comfort. It’s the first place that I ever went down a drag strip. If I could figure out how to get that comfortable at all the other race tracks, maybe we could really chase a championship.

“We’ve literally broke every single one of my career bests already this weekend. So I have all the confidence in the world. (Crew chief David Grubnic) is like the Babe Ruth of drag racing. He can almost call a shot. We’ll be ready for race day and I believe him.”

Shawn Langdon qualified second with a run of 3.681 at 338.09 and Leah Pruett took third after going 3.690 at 329.10.

In Funny Car, three-time champion Ron Capps picked up his first No. 1 qualifier in nearly three years after Friday’s standout run of 3.890 at 334.07 his 12,000-horsepower NAPA Auto Parts Toyota GR Supra easily held up.

It’s the 38th career No. 1 qualifier for Capps, who last held the top spot at both Gainesville and Brainerd in 2023. Already the Gatornationals winningest active Funny Car driver, Capps is after his fifth victory in Gainesville and will take on John Smith to open up eliminations on Sunday.

“I know I’ll never lead that list [of No. 1 qualifiers], but almost every crew chief I’ve had has been more concerned about what they do on Sunday rather than what we do in qualifying,” Capps said. “It was all about winning races and figuring out how to battle on Sunday and I’ve been blessed to be around those kinds of guys, and I’m okay with it.

“First round Sunday is going to be the quickest runs of the weekend. Conditions will be better than they were Friday night. So, if you get past that round, it’s going to turn out like today [hotter], so today we were just seeing what the lanes would hold in those conditions because if we can get far enough tomorrow, it’s anybody’s game in those conditions.”

J.R. Todd qualified second with a 3.912 at 334.15 and Paul Lee is third after going 3.920 at 331.12.

After a solid rookie season, Pro Stock’s Cody Coughlin picked up his second career No. 1 qualifier on Saturday when his run of 6.523 at 210.01 in his Coughlin Construction Chevrolet Camaro couldn’t be topped.

Next up on Coughlin’s to-do list is getting his first career victory and he’ll have that opportunity on Sunday when Coughlin takes on Chris McGaha to open up raceday.

“It can’t get any better than this,” Coughlin said. “I couldn’t be more thrilled. The KB Titan guys and gals are fantastic and just really proud to drive for them. I wouldn’t want to compete in Pro Stock unless I could race with those guys. I’ve looked up to Greg Anderson for a long time.

“It’s really cool to be teammates with him and it’s also cool to race out here with my dad who competes in Super Stock. It’s a cool moment and I’m just excited to try to get a Wally this year – maybe tomorrow.”

Matt Hartford qualified second with a run of 6.533 at 210.41, with Matt Latino right behind thanks to a run of 6.533 at 210.37.

A. Smith clinched her third career No. 1 qualifier on Saturday on the strength of Friday’s 6.740 at 199.58 on her Denso Auto Parts Buell. Smith made a pair of solid runs on Saturday in front of a capacity crowd, giving her added momentum as she seeks her first Gatornationals victory. She’ll open raceday against Kim Morrell.

Reigning world champion Richard Gadson qualified second with a 6.746 at 200.00 and Matt Smith moved into third after going 6.749 at 200.71.

Eliminations for the Amalie Motor Oil NHRA Gatornationals begin at 10 a.m. ET on Sunday at Gainesville Raceway.


GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Sunday’s first-round pairings for eliminations for the 57th annual AMALIE Motor Oil NHRA Gatornationals at Gainesville Raceway, the first of 20 events in the NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series. Pairings based on results in qualifying, which ended Saturday. DNQs listed below pairings.

Top Fuel — 1. Josh Hart, 3.658 seconds, 340.30 mph vs. 16. Dan Mercier, 3.885, 266.32; 2. Shawn Langdon, 3.681, 338.09 vs. 15. Maddi Gordon, 3.793, 321.35; 3. Leah Pruett, 3.690, 329.10 vs. 14. Jasmine Salinas, 3.791, 329.67; 4. Antron Brown, 3.694, 331.85 vs. 13. Gary Pritchett, 3.790, 304.67; 5. Tony Stewart, 3.703, 339.96 vs. 12. Clay Millican, 3.773, 321.35; 6. Doug Kalitta, 3.703, 334.07 vs. 11. Justin Ashley, 3.762, 334.73; 7. Tony Schumacher, 3.710, 338.60 vs. 10. Shawn Reed, 3.757, 325.61; 8. Tripp Tatum, 3.725, 323.81 vs. 9. Billy Torrence, 3.741, 334.90.

Did Not Qualify: 17. Scott Farley, 4.051, 298.73; 18. Will Smith, 4.248, 228.15; 19. Cameron Ferre, 7.365, 95.47.

Funny Car — 1. Ron Capps, Toyota GR Supra, 3.890, 334.07 vs. 16. John Smith, Dodge Charger, 4.188, 296.37; 2. J.R. Todd, GR Supra, 3.912, 334.15 vs. 15. Dave Richards, Ford Mustang, 4.127, 320.28; 3. Paul Lee, Charger, 3.920, 331.12 vs. 14. Spencer Hyde, Mustang, 4.104, 305.70; 4. Chad Green, Mustang, 3.926, 326.08 vs. 13. Terry Haddock, Mustang, 4.095, 305.36; 5. Matt Hagan, Charger, 3.931, 331.36 vs. 12. Julie Nataas, GR Supra, 4.081, 319.07; 6. Cruz Pedregon, Charger, 3.948, 329.91 vs. 11. Alexis DeJoria, Chevy Camaro, 4.060, 324.83; 7. Daniel Wilkerson, Mustang, 3.961, 323.19 vs. 10. Hunter Green, Charger, 4.048, 318.77; 8. Jordan Vandergriff, Camaro, 3.990, 318.47 vs. 9. Jack Beckman, Camaro, 4.029, 324.83.

Did Not Qualify: 17. Buddy Hull, 4.213, 267.22; 18. Todd Lesenko, 4.433, 278.17; 19. Austin Prock, 4.836, 217.74.

Pro Stock — 1. Cody Coughlin, Chevy Camaro, 6.523, 210.01 vs. 16. Chris McGaha, Camaro, 6.583, 208.52; 2. Matt Hartford, Camaro, 6.533, 210.41 vs. 15. Kenny Delco, Camaro, 6.575, 208.04; 3. Matt Latino, Camaro, 6.533, 210.37 vs. 14. Stephen Bell, Camaro, 6.566, 207.98; 4. Deric Kramer, Camaro, 6.535, 209.82 vs. 13. Greg Anderson, Camaro, 6.556, 208.84; 5. Greg Stanfield, Camaro, 6.538, 208.49 vs. 12. Cody Anderson, Camaro, 6.556, 209.88; 6. Dallas Glenn, Camaro, 6.540, 209.79 vs. 11. Jeg Coughlin, Camaro, 6.549, 208.36; 7. Troy Coughlin, Camaro, 6.541, 208.62 vs. 10. Aaron Stanfield, Camaro, 6.548, 209.88; 8. Eric Latino, Camaro, 6.545, 209.52 vs. 9. Erica Enders, Camaro, 6.547, 209.79.

Did Not Qualify: 17. Shane Tucker, 6.593, 208.49; 18. Mason McGaha, 6.599, 209.26; 19. Brandon Miller, 6.602, 207.62; 20. Rodger Brogdon, 6.624, 207.59; 21. Derrick Reese, 6.669, 206.48.

Pro Stock Motorcycle — 1. Angie Smith, Buell, 6.740, 199.58 vs. 16. Kimberly Morrell, Suzuki, 7.857, 148.97; 2. Richard Gadson, Suzuki, 6.746, 200.00 vs. 15. Geno Scali, Suzuki, 6.882, 197.94; 3. Matt Smith, Buell, 6.749, 200.71 vs. 14. Chris Bostick, Suzuki, 6.880, 195.08; 4. Gaige Herrera, Suzuki, 6.761, 199.91 vs. 13. Marc Ingwersen, Buell, 6.847, 196.70; 5. John Hall, Beull, 6.791, 199.08 vs. 12. Brayden Davis, Buell, 6.838, 196.33; 6. Clayton Howey, Suzuki, 6.800, 197.88 vs. 11. Kelly Clontz, Suzuki, 6.836, 197.97; 7. Chase Van Sant, Suzuki, 6.803, 198.15 vs. 10. Ryan Oehler, Buell, 6.811, 197.77; 8. Steve Johnson, Suzuki, 6.807, 197.65 vs. 9. Jianna Evaristo, Buell, 6.808, 199.91.

Josef Newgarden capitalizes late for thrilling IndyCar victory at Phoenix

Photo by Ron Olds for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Josef Newgarden mounted an early comeback to this season by motoring his way to a thrilling victory in the Good Ranchers 250 at Phoenix Raceway on Saturday, March 7.

The two-time Indianapolis 500 and NTT IndyCar Series champion from Nashville, Tennessee, led eight of 250-scheduled laps in an event where he started on the front row and raced towards the front for a majority of the event. Through various pit strategies with tire management being a key topic, Newgarden executed his strategies when it mattered most as he pitted a total of five times, including a final time with 38 laps remaining following a late-race caution and a collision with the leaders Will Power and Christian Lundgaard.

Despite restarting in 10th place during the event’s final restart with 32 laps remaining, Newgarden used his four fresh tires to methodically carve his way up the leaderboard. After using the late duration to muscle back to the front, Newgarden reeled in and overtook Kyle Kirkwood for the lead with seven laps remaining. From there, Newgarden motored away and cruised to his first IndyCar victory of the 2026 campaign. 

With on-track qualifying that determined the starting lineup occurring on Friday, March 6, David Malukas achieved his first NTT P1 Award with a pole-winning average speed of 175.383 mph in 41.0530 seconds. Malukas shared the front row with teammate Josef Newgarden, the latter of whom generated an average-qualifying run of 174.548 mph in 41.2493 seconds.

When the green flag waved and the event commenced, David Malukas fended off an early challenge from teammate Josef Newgarden through the frontstretch to assume the lead entering the first turn. As the field jostled for early spots for a single lap, Malukas proceeded to lead the first lap while Newgarden, Graham Rahal, rookie Mick Schumacher and Scott McLaughlin followed suit in the top five, respectively.

Over the next four laps, Malukas stretched his early advantage to nearly two seconds over Newgarden. As Will Power climbed the leaderboard from the tail end of the field to 15th and Alex Palou motored from 10th to fourth, Malukas continued to lead at the Lap 10 mark by over one-and-half seconds over Newgarden while third-place Alexander Rossi trailed by more than two seconds.

Shortly after, the event’s first caution flew when rookie Dennis Hauger, who was racing in the mid-pack region and in front of Christian Rasmussen, spun in front of Rasmussen in Turn 2. Despite spinning, Hauger managed to preserve his entry from hitting the wall as he then slid backwards through the backstretch before he straightened his entry and continued.

The start of the next restart on Lap 20 only lasted for a single lap before the caution quickly returned. The caution’s return was due to Palou, who was overtaken by Rahal for fourth place entering Turn 3, making contact with Rinus VeeKay and getting turned into the Turn 4 outside wall. The incident spoiled Palou’s hopes of winning in his 100th IndyCar start and he was unable to continue while VeeKay was able to.

As the event restarted on Lap 30, Malukas mirrored his on-track performance from his previous restart to retain the lead over Newgarden and the field for a full lap. Meanwhile, Scott Dixon, who pitted during the event’s first caution period, used the outside lane to muscle his way up into the top-15 mark. In addition, Power continued his march forward as he navigated his way up to 13th place. Amid the battles within the field, Malukas retained the lead by less than half a second over Newgarden by Lap 40.

Through the Lap 50 mark, Malukas was leading by within eight-tenths of a second over Newgarden while Rossi, Rahal and McLaughlin continued to trail in the top five, respectively. Behind, Pato O’Ward occupied sixth place ahead of Christian Rasmussen, Kyle Kirkwood, Marcus Armstrong and Marcus Ericsson while Mick Schumacher, Nolan Siegel, Scott Dixon, Christian Lundgaard, Felix Rosenqvist, Will Power, Santino Ferrucci, Sting Ray Robb, Louis Foster and Dennis Hauger occupied the top-20 spots, respectively.

On Lap 68 and with the topic of tire wear crescendoing, green flag pit stops ensued within the field as O’Ward pitted his No. 5 Arrow McLaren Dallara-Chevrolet entry from the top-10 mark. McLaughlin pitted a lap later before more names that included Schumacher, Newgarden and the leader Malukas pitted within and past the Lap 70 mark. By the time Malukas blended back on the racing surface from pit road, he dueled with Newgarden, who pitted a lap prior to Malukas. Despite making light contact with his Team Penske teammate through the backstretch, Newgarden managed to cycle ahead of Malukas. Meanwhile, Rasmussen, who pitted during the event’s first caution and had carved his way into the top five with an early tire advantage, was leading before he pitted on Lap 77.

Towards the Lap 90 mark, Dixon was leading ahead of Felix Rosenqvist and Hauger. Meanwhile, O’Ward, who pitted early, was scored in fourth place, but racing ahead of Team Penske’s Newgarden and Malukas while Rasmussen reeled in from seventh place. By the time Rosenqvist, Dixon and Hauger pitted by Lap 98, O’Ward cycled into the lead while Newgarden, Malukas, Rasmussen and Kirkwood all followed suit in the top five, respectively.

Then on Lap 108, Rasmussen overtook O’Ward through the frontstretch to assume the lead. As Rasmussen proceeded to both stretch his advantage to two seconds over O’Ward and lap the competitors racing in the mid-pack region just past the Lap 110 mark, Newgarden and Malukas trailed the lead by three and four seconds, respectively, while Kirkwood retained fifth place ahead of McLaughlin, Rossi, Rahal, Power and Lundgaard, respectively. Meanwhile, Dixon, Ericsson and Rosenqvist were mired within the top-15 mark while Schumacher was mired within the top-20 mark.

At the halfway mark on Lap 125 and with various green flag pit strategies within the field ensuing, Rasmussen continued to lead by more than four seconds over Newgarden while Malukas, Kirkwood and McLaughlin were scored in the top five. Rasmussen surrendered the lead to pit a lap later before Newgarden, who cycled to the lead, pitted during the next lap. Meanwhile, O’Ward, who was mired within the top-15 mark but pitted several laps earlier than Rasmussen, managed to cycle ahead of both Rasmussen and Newgarden on the track while Malukas, who pitted prior to Lap 130, stalled his entry while trying to exit his pit stall.

By Lap 136, Rasmussen reassumed the lead after he reeled in and overtook several competitors, including the initial leader, Lundgaard. As Rasmussen proceeded to lead by more than four seconds over Dixon while Lundgaard pitted just past the Lap 140 mark, the caution flew on Lap 142 when Louis Foster went up the track and hit the outside wall on the right side in Turn 4. During this latest caution period, a multitude of front-runners, including the leader Rasmussen, Dixon, Armstrong, Rossi, Malukas, Rahal and Newgarden returned to pit road for service while Kirkwood and Power, both of whom last pitted on Lap 128 and 126, respectively, remained on the track.

With 95 laps remaining, the event restarted under green. At the start, Kirkwood maintained the lead over teammate Power through the first two turns while Rasmussen rocketed past Dixon for third place. As Kirkwood led the next lap, Dixon and Rasmussen dueled fiercely for third place and they even made contact during the following lap. Amid the contact, both continued to race in third and fourth, with Dixon still ahead of Rasmussen, while Kirkwood continued to lead by seven-tenths of a second over Power with 90 laps remaining.

Down to the final 75 laps of the event, Kirkwood was leading by more than a second over Power while Rasmussen, Dixon, Armstrong, O’Ward, Newgarden, Rahal, Malukas and Santino Ferrucci followed suit in the top 10, respectively. Meanwhile, McLaughlin, Rosenqvist, Hauger, Kyffin Simpson, Lundgaard, Rossi,, Ericsson, Schumacher, Caio Collet and Nolan Siegel trailed in the top 20, respectively.

Then with 60 laps remaining and with the field racing within the pit window to reach the event’s scheduled distance, Rasmussen made a bold move to the outside of Kirkwood entering the first turn to cycle back to the lead. Kirkwood pitted a lap later before Rasmussen pitted during the next lap. By the time Rasmussen cycled back on the track, he was overtaken by Kirkwood on the track. Meanwhile, Power, who pitted earlier than Kirkwood and Rasmussen, overtook teammate Ericsson, who has yet to pit, to assume the lead while O’Ward, who also pitted earlier, tried to reel in.

With less than 50 laps remaining, Power was leading by nearly a second over O’Ward while Rasmussen reeled in the latter for the runner-up spot. By then, Ericsson pitted under green before Rasmussen quickly assumed the runner-up spot from O’Ward. Rasmussen proceeded to reel in Power for the lead through every turn and straightaway over the next several laps.

Then with 43 laps remaining, Rasmussen tried to make a move to the outside of Power through the first two turns. As Power tried to defend while Rasmussen gained a slight advantage to Power’s right-rear wheel, they made contact as Rasmussen bounced off both the Turn 2 outside wall and against Power’s right-rear wheel. Following the contact, Rasmussen muscled ahead with the lead while Power fell off the pace with a flat right-rear wheel. The incident was enough to draw a caution as Power pitted. During this latest caution period, some led by O’Ward, Newgarden, Rahal, McLaughlin, Rossi and Lundgaard pitted while the rest led by Rasmussen remained on the track.

The start of the next restart with 32 laps remaining featured Rasmussen motoring away from Kirkwood, Malukas and the field through the frontstretch and the first two turns. As O’Ward tried to carve his way to the front from seventh place on four fresh tires, Rasmussen, who initially expressed concerns about damage to his entry, continued to lead by a steady margin over Kirkwood with 30 laps remaining.

Down to the final 25 laps of the event, Rasmussen continued to lead by half a second over Kirkwood and by more than a second over third-place Malukas. Meanwhile, O’Ward reeled in and overtook Armstrong for fourth place on four fresher tires than Rasmussen while Newgarden, Rossi, Dixon, McLaughlin and Rahal were racing in the top 10, respectively. Shortly after, Newgarden, who also pitted with O’Ward, overtook Armstrong for fifth place and O’Ward tried to reel in Malukas for third place while Rasmussen led by six-tenths of a second with 20 laps remaining.

With less than 14 laps remaining, the top-five competitors were separated by one-and-a-half seconds as Kirkwood started to reel in on Rasmussen for the lead through every turn and straightaway. Two laps later, Newgarden overtook O’Ward for fourth place and he overtook teammate Malukas another lap later while Rasmussen continued to lead by three-tenths of a second with 10 laps remaining.

Then with nine laps remaining, Kirkwood drew himself alongside Rasmussen entering Turn 4 and he assumed the lead following a brief duel entering the first turn. Rasmussen then hit the Turn 2 wall, which allowed Newgarden to overtake him for the runner-up spot. As Rasmussen began to fall off the pace, Newgarden reeled in and overtook Kirkwood through the backstretch with seven laps remaining to assume the lead. With four fresher tires than Kirkwood, Newgarden stretched his lead to a second with less than five laps remaining.

When the white flag waved and the final lap started, Newgarden remained in the lead by more than a second over Kirkwood. With Kirkwood unable to reel in the deficit, Newgarden cruised around Phoenix smoothly for a final time before he cycled back to the frontstetch and claimed the checkered flag by nearly two seconds over Kirkwood.

With the victory, Newgarden, who won for the first time for Team Penske and Chevrolet, achieve his 33rd career win in the NTT IndyCar Series division, his 19th on an oval-shaped track and his first since he won the 2025 season-finale event at Nashville Superspeedway in September 2025. Newgarden’s Phoenix victory was also his second at the track as he won IndyCar’s last-scheduled event at Phoenix in 2018 before the track’s return this season.

“I’m just very surprised,” Newgarden said in Victory Lane on FOX. “It’s only been a race since we haven’t won, so it’s not like it’s been a while. The middle of the race, I don’t know that I was fully believing that we had the capability to win. We kept working through it and I’m like look, if we get another opportunity, we’re going to be on the aggressive. We’re gonna be on the offense.

We took tires and the [car] was like a rocket ship when it needed it to be. It was right at the end of the race. I’m pumped. I love to be here at Phoenix. I’m so happy we’re here. This is an IndyCar track…To be here with NASCAR is fantastic, but we got to be here as well and I love being here with this group.”

“Momentum’s a big deal,” Newgarden added. “It’s very difficult to understand how things work. Sometimes things go against us, sometimes they go for us. This was just great execution by the team. Simply as that. It was a good car, great execution. [The team] won this race today.”

As Newgarden celebrated the race victory, Christian Rasmussen, who led 69 laps, was left dejected after plummeting to 14th place following both his late incident with Will Power and late scrape with the backstretch’s wall, the latter of which ultimately cost him the victory.

“I think it’s very clear what happened,” Rasmussen said. “We were the class of the field today. The best car out there. I was so happy with the car. You can’t just run people into the wall, which was what happened today. [Power] ran me straight into the wall and after that, I had damage…The car was just impossible to drive after that. I just did what I could to salvage a day and not crash a car. Just frustrating. Man, so frustrating because we should’ve won the race today. Obviously, [I] didn’t.”

Kyle Kirkwood settled in second place while David Malukas capped off a weekend that started with achieving his first career pole position and leading a race-high 73 laps by notching his first podium result with Team Penske with a third-place result.

Pato O’Ward took the checkered flag in fourth place ahead of Marcus Armstrong. Alexander Rossi, Scott Dixon, Scott McLaughlin, Graham Rahal and Kyffin Simpson completed the top 10 in the final running order. 

There were 18 lead changes for 11 different leaders, and four for 41 laps. In addition, 15 of 25 starters finished on the lead lap.

Following the second event of the 2026 NTT INDYCAR SERIES season, Josef Newgarden leads the standings by five points over Kyle Kirkwood, 12 over both Scott McLaughlin and Pato O’Ward, and 19 over Alex Palou. 

Race results:

  1. Josef Newgarden, eight laps led
  2. Kyle Kirkwood, 47 laps led
  3. David Malukas, 73 laps led
  4. Pato O’Ward, 10 laps led
  5. Marcus Armstrong, eight laps led
  6. Alexander Rossi
  7. Scott Dixon, 12 laps led
  8. Scott McLaughlin
  9. Graham Rahal
  10. Kyffin Simpson
  11. Santino Ferrucci
  12. Felix Rosenqvist
  13. Christian Lundgaard, eight laps led
  14. Christian Rasmussen, 69 laps led
  15. Dennis Hauger, three laps led
  16. Will Power, 10 laps led, one lap down
  17. Marcus Ericsson, two laps led, one lap down
  18. Mick Schumacher, two laps down
  19. Caio Collet, two laps down
  20. Nolan Siegel, three laps down
  21. Sting Ray Robb, four laps down
  22. Rinus VeeKay, five laps down
  23. Louis Foster – OUT, Contact
  24. Alex Palou – OUT, Contact
  25. Romain Grosjean – OUT, Mechanical

Next on the 2026 NTT INDYCAR Series schedule is the series’ inaugural Java House Grand Prix of Arlington at the Streets of Arlington, Texas. The event is scheduled to occur next Sunday, March 15, and air at 12:30 p.m. ET on FOX.

Newgarden Hunts Down Victory, Takes Series Lead at Phoenix

AVONDALE, Ariz. (Saturday, March 7, 2026) – It took Josef Newgarden 17 races last year to earn his only victory of the NTT INDYCAR SERIES season.

That winning box already is checked this year, two races in.

Two-time series champion Newgarden earned his first victory of the season and 33rd of his illustrious career by closing down and passing leader Kyle Kirkwood with seven laps remaining to win the Good Ranchers 250 on Saturday at Phoenix Raceway. Newgarden, who started second, drove away to a 1.7937-second victory in the No. 2 XPEL Team Penske Chevrolet over the No. 27 JM Bullion/Gold.com of Andretti Global driver Kirkwood.

“I’m very surprised,” Newgarden said. “In the middle of the race, I don’t know that I was fully believing that we had the capability to win. We just kept working through it, and I’m like, ‘Look, if we get another opportunity, we’re going to be aggressive, we’re going to be on the offense.’

“We took tires, and the thing was like a rocket ship when it needed to be, right at the end of the race. Hats off to the whole crew. I’m pumped.”

NTT P1 Award winner David Malukas finished third in the No. 12 Verizon Team Penske Chevrolet as Roger Penske’s legendary team celebrated its 60th anniversary season with two podium positions.

Pato O’Ward finished fourth in the No. 5 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, with Marcus Armstrong rounding out the top five in the No. 66 ROOT Insurance Honda of Meyer Shank Racing w/Curb Agajanian.

INDYCAR’s first race in Phoenix since 2018 – Newgarden and Team Penske also won that event – featured plenty of action throughout the field, as there were 565 on-track passes, an INDYCAR record at the 1-mile desert oval. But a combination of tire strategy and deft maneuvering in traffic delivered the victory to Newgarden, who also won the season-ending race last August at Nashville Superspeedway to avoid a winless 2025.

Kirkwood made his last stop on Lap 192 and was running fourth behind teammate Will Power, Christian Rasmussen and O’Ward on Lap 207. Power and Rasmussen were engaged in a ferocious duel for the lead, with the left front wing end plate of Rasmussen’s No. 21 ECR Splenda Stevia Chevrolet making contact with the right rear tire of Power’s No. 26 TWG AI Honda exiting Turn 2.

That impact cut Power’s tire, triggering the final caution period of the race and ending his chances of an improbable victory after starting last in the 25-car field. Rasmussen’s car also was damaged.

During that final caution period, Newgarden and a handful of other drivers near the front entered pit lane for fresh Firestone Firehawk tires, as tire grip was a far bigger strategic factor in this race than fuel management. Rasmussen, Kirkwood, Malukas and Armstrong were among the drivers who decided to stay on track, opting for track position over traction.

Rasmussen led at the final restart of the 250-lap race on Lap 218, but his damaged car ended up being no match for Kirkwood, who drove past Rasmussen for the lead on Lap 242. Rasmussen faded in the last eight laps with car damage and worn tires, placing a bitterly disappointed 14th after thrilling the large crowd with many daring passes to get to the front five times for 69 laps.

“We were the class of the field today – best car out there,” Rasmussen said. “It’s so frustrating because we should have won the race today.”

Kirkwood led Newgarden by six-tenths of a second when he took the lead, but Newgarden’s tire advantage was obvious within less than a lap. Newgarden gnawed into Kirkwood’s lead and drove under Kirkwood in Turn 4 for the lead for good just two laps later, on Lap 244.

“We thought about it, but we were talking about it, and the pits opened,” Kirkwood said about the possibility of pitting during the late caution. “(Staying out) was the right thing to do at the time.”

As a bonus in this young season, Newgarden became the first driver other than four-time series champion Alex Palou to lead the standings since June 2024. Two-time Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge winner Newgarden leads Kirkwood, 78-73, after two races as he tries to win the series crown for the first time since 2019.

“Do we really have the lead?” Newgarden said. “Two races in, so I wouldn’t read too much into it. But momentum is a big deal. It’s very difficult to understand how things work. Sometimes things go against us, sometimes they go for us. It was just great execution by the team.”

Palou placed 24th, completing just 21 laps in No. 10 DHL Chip Ganassi Racing Honda, after side-by-side contact with the No. 76 Juncos Hollinger Racing Chevrolet of Rinus VeeKay led to a trip into the SAFER Barrier.

It was Palou’s worst finish since he placed 25th last June in Detroit after contact eliminated him from that street race.

The feverish start to the 2026 NTT INDYCAR SERIES season continues with a third race in three weekends, the highly anticipated debut of the Java House Grand Prix of Arlington on Sunday, March 15 in Arlington, Texas. The temporary street circuit travels around AT&T Stadium, the home of the Dallas Cowboys, and Globe Life Field, the home of the Texas Rangers.

Ford Racing Notes and Quotes – Logano Powers Ford Mustang Dark Horse to Phoenix Cup Pole

Ford Racing Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Straight Talk 500 Qualifying — Phoenix Raceway
Saturday, March 7, 2026

LOGANO CAPTURES FIRST CUP POLE OF THE YEAR FOR FORD RACING

  • Joey Logano captured the first NASCAR Cup Series pole of the season for Ford Racing today.
  • The pole is Logano’s 34th overall and third at Phoenix Raceway.
  • Logano’s pole is his 29th with Ford Racing, which puts him fifth on the manufacturer’s all-time list. Only Fred Lorenzen (30), David Pearson (31), Mark Martin (39) and Bill Elliott (48) are ahead of him.
  • The pole is Ford Racing’s 713th all-time in NASCAR’s top series.

Ford Qualifying Results:

1st – Joey Logano
3rd – Austin Cindric
5th – Ryan Blaney
10th – Josh Berry
13th – Ryan Preece
17th – Chris Buescher
24th – Zane Smith
30th – Todd Gilliland
35th – Noah Gragson
37th – Brad Keselowski

JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang Dark Horse – POLE-WINNING PRESS CONFERENCE

TAKE US THROUGH YOUR LAP. “Today the car was really good. I don’t know if I can take much credit. The car drove really well and I just kind of took what it gave me. The car, I thought was good in race trim – a lot of sliding around from everybody. It’s funny because it doesn’t drive nice, but the pace was there, which was encouraging for tomorrow because it still feels like there are some areas to get better, and then Paul and Joe and the guys did a good job at dialing it in and getting the balance really good for qualifying to where I didn’t have to do anything crazy to make speed. It just happened, so I’m really proud of that. Obviously, this is a big weekend for Team Penske with the Indycars here. Malukas getting the pole for here in a few minutes when that race starts, and then us being able to do it on our end, too. There’s a little bit of a rivalry there. I don’t know if we’ve really talked about it, but I think internally all of us want to deliver some wins this weekend. On top of that, our paint scheme for this weekend is also really special. It’s the Scott McLaughlin Bathurst 1000 win, so that was really big for his career, but also really big for Team Penske. That car won, I think it was 18 or 16 races that year. It was a boat load. You start to lose count when you get to your toes, so he’s definitely done a lot in that paint job, so it’s neat to continue some of that success, at least in qualifying.”

TEAM PENSKE WON BOTH POLES AND ROGER IS HERE. THINGS ARE LOOKING GOOD THIS WEEKEND. “This is a big weekend for us. There are a lot of partners here. The hospitality trailer setup there going into turn one, so you want to make sure you have a good run. It’s the worst feeling, and I’ve been through it on both ends. I’ve been through it where everybody comes to the race and you don’t show up. There’s just nothing good to show them, and then there are times where everybody is there and you win and there’s really nothing better than that, so everybody is here and it’s nice to show that. All of the Team Penske cars are fast – our three cars, the three IndyCars all looked solid yesterday in practice as well. Now it’s just time to execute the race, which is the hard part.”

ALL THREE DRIVERS ARE STICKING AROUND TOMORROW FOR YOUR RACE. WHAT DOES THAT MEAN? “I think they’ll be on the pit boxes, yeah. I don’t know what a timing stand is. Welcome to NASCAR over here. We’ve got to get them used to it. I’ve got to go up to the Fox booth here in a minute for the IndyCar race and my terminology is a little different than what they’re used to over there, so it’s gonna be fun. We’ve had a good time doing some fun things this week so far out here all together. We obviously are around each other a lot at home with our race shops being the same building, but this is the second time I can remember that we’re at the same racetrack together, so it’s fun to be able to talk to each other about the differences. Usually, we talk about the differences, but we’re at different racetracks. Now we’re at least at the same track and you can hear how they drive their cars and what they need out of it and those types of things versus us. It’s polar opposites. It’s so different, but fun to talk about.”

WERE YOU EXPECTING TO WIN THE POLE TODAY? “You never know anymore. When you have practice like we used to have, like a longer practice when you can put a set of tires on and you can maybe make a mock run. You’re like, ‘OK, I kind of see what we have for pace.’ But these days you just don’t know. You just go out there and you go as fast as you can and you don’t know if you’re gonna be 30th or first. It’s really hard to say before the run starts. Obviously, the 2 had a pretty good lap going out early and still was able to qualify, I think, in the top five, so that’s pretty impressive to do it as early as he did, so I felt like if I didn’t screw up, the speed was in the car. I just had to make sure I got all of it out of it. Like I said, the speed is there for the Penske cars right now.”

WHAT HAS ROGER MEANT TO YOU PERSONALLY AND PROFESSIONALLY? “I think probably everyone in this room has had some kind of interaction with Roger at some point, probably, and I don’t want to speak for everyone, but I’m sure it’s been the most professional thing that you can be involved around. As a driver for him, or even someone just on the team, those are the people that you want to be around – somebody that’s gonna do something the right way, that’s gonna do it in a professional way, but is also very competitive and wants to win no matter what it is. Business. Racing. You name it, he’s gonna want to be the best at it. You can imagine as a competitor no matter what your position is on a team, you want to be with the best. I say this all the time, but you can’t soar like and eagle when you’re working with turkeys and he’s an eagle. Those are the ones you want to attach to. You want to fly together and I’ve been very fortunate to drive for him for the last 14-15 years and I think when you look at the tenure of the employees, the sponsors, the drivers, no one really moves that often. Once you’re in, you want to be there. Nobody wants to leave because you’re gonna see success eventually, one way or another. Everyone works hard. Everyone has the same culture and the same thought process. It’s something I’m really proud of. I take a lot of pride in saying I drive for Team Penske because I think it’s a dream for almost all drivers to say that you’ve driving for Roger Penske. You see the list of legends that has driven for him and it’s ridiculous, so to have your name be part of that, it’s something I take a lot of pride in and I don’t take that lightly. Those guys are the ones that built the company over 60 years, and then for us to have the opportunity to carry the flag and continue that, that’s really special.”

IT SEEMS LIKE PHOENIX IS SPECIAL PLACE FOR YOU. “Yeah, I mean it’s been special for the last few years because of the championship race and we’ve had some success out here racing for championships, so it’s been a special place for that reason. The cars have been fast here, but, to your point, Roger’s got some dealerships right up the road with the museum as well that’s really, really cool. So, yeah, I wouldn’t call it a home track, but it’s definitely one of our tracks that we consider close to home – maybe a vacation home if you will. It’s a place that everybody enjoys coming to because there are a lot of partners we have out here as well with Discount Tire and them as well, so it’s definitely a special place.”

HOW WILL YOUR MINDSET CHANGE FROM QUALIFYING TO THE RACE? “I think tomorrow the big thing that’s in our mind right now is that the track temp is going to be up significantly from what we just had in practice and what does that do to our race car. Obviously, we’re gonna go slower. The pace for the whole field will be down. The cars will be slipping and sliding. The track will rubber up. It will get wider, which is good. It was already getting wide in practice, so the track will be getting a little bit wider so we can have more options to pass. Fall off is gonna be a real thing. There’s a lot of thoughts right now and some things that we want to do to dial our car in a little bit better too as well.”

CAN YOU TAKE US THROUGH HOW YOU MENTALLY PREPARE FOR A RACE AND HOW THAT CHANGES WHEN YOU GET IN THE CAR? “For me, I just want to be prepared to see everything that’s coming my way and that’s how I mentally prepare. I don’t have a psych you up music or something that tries to get you rolling or any superstitious stuff. That’s not who I am. I just want to know the facts and get as many of those in my mind as I can and that’s gonna mentally make me feel confident. If I can know as much about the race before it happens, that’s what’s gonna get me prepared and ready. That’s my job during the week and then you get your report card when it comes to Sunday.”

WHAT PERCENT OF THE SLIDING AROUND IS DUE TO THE 750, THE TIRE, AND JUST TEMPERATURE? “It’s hard to put a percent on it. I’d say the power is definitely in effect. It’s not huge, but it’s directionally that way. I think anytime you talk to a race car driver they’re gonna say to put more horsepower in it, but the fact that it seems like the fall off is pretty high, cars are searching around already. That has to go into the equation somehow. You’re on the brakes more. You’re on the gas a little bit less, but you’re spinning them more. It’s just easier to wear the tire out. That just promotes a wider track. That just promotes better racing, so whether it comes from tire wear or the engine, more power that creates tire wear. All of it kind of goes together. It’s all a package. It’s hard to say what is affecting it the most. There’s no doubt that Goodyear has done an incredible job of bringing a tire that actually falls off because for years here you’d run a whole run and it was like three-tenths, four-tenths slower than what you started. Now, you’re second off, so we’ve come a long, long way. Goodyear has done the biggest amount. If you were to say what’s what. Goodyear is the biggest component to that. The engine definitely is directionally better. I think we also have to be open for more. Just because we’re sitting up here saying this is good, it’s never good enough, but I think for what we’ve done at this racetrack, this is gonna be a great race tomorrow. One of our better races, in my opinion.”

WERE YOU SLIDING AROUND MORE? “I felt like it. I felt like I was sliding around a little bit more and the tire is the same, so I’ve got to assume that it’s the temperature a little bit, but also the power.”

AUSTIN CINDRIC, No. 2 Menards/Quaker State Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “Our Menards/Quaker State Ford Mustang Dark Horse had really good speed in practice and qualifying, so starting third puts us in a solid position. If we can keep tires on it and stay in the mix, I think we’ll have a shot. It’s been a tough start to the year with some of the damage we’ve dealt with, but today showed what this team is capable of.”

RYAN BLANEY, No. 12 Dent Wizard Ford Mustang Dark Horse – “It’s a really good day for us. It looks like we’re gonna be really good in qualifying. I thought our race speed was pretty good and the qualifying lap was OK. I kind of missed it a little bit. I didn’t have the cleanest one, but we’re starting fifth. I’m proud of the effort. All three of our Ford Mustangs are in the top five, 1-3-5. It’s awesome and I’m looking forward to tomorrow.”

CHRIS BUESCHER, No. 17 Fry’s/Artesano/Kraft Ford Mustang Dark Horse – IS THERE CONCERN ABOUT TIRES? “Yeah. There’s some concern. It’s something we’ve got to figure out and dive into, knowing the issues we had here the last race I thought we took steps to correct. We’ll dive into that a little bit further. I would say that where we fired off and balance and long run speed, if you call 15 laps long run, I was fairly happy with our car, but at the end of it we need it to last a little longer. We’re gonna certainly dive into it. We’ve got our post-practice meetings coming up here, so we’ll try and figure out if we can diagnose if it’s something specific to us or another Phoenix.” DID YOU NOTICE ANY DIFFERENCE WITH HORSEPOWER? “I would say I was not quite to the point of the run where it’s really gonna show up big. I unfortunately did get to watch a lot of SMT and it sure looks like it’s gonna be a handful as we get late in the run. I would say the amount of fall off that we’ve seen, that’s where you’re gonna feel it is that point where you’re not able to use it. When we fire off in qualifying and you can get wide-open, whether it’s 670 or 750, you don’t get that big seat-of-the-pants feel, but when you’re unable to use all you’ve got, that’s when you start noticing. I’d say it’s got potential to change this race a little bit.” YOUR TIRE PROBLEM WAS AT 15 LAPS, SO COULD IT BE AN ISSUE WITH INDYCAR OR NOAPS RUBBER? “Maybe. We were group one, so is there something to that? Maybe. It was a right side. I know the 35 had a left side. The 6 had a right side, so it’s strange to be both sides. I feel like that’s not very typical, so I don’t have the answers yet.”

BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 6 Consumer Cellular Ford Mustang Dark Horse – WHAT HAPPENED? “I guess I blew a right-front tire going into turn three. It’s surprising. We had put a bunch of air in it after our teammate had issues and we still had an issue.” YOU’VE HAD A CHANCE TO ASSESS. WILL YOU GO TO A BACKUP? “Most likely. The front clip appears bent, but I’ll let these guys figure it out.”

Joey Logano wins first Cup pole of 2026 at Phoenix

Photo by Ron Olds for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Joey Logano sped to his first Busch Light Pole Award of the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series season for the Straight Talk Wireless 500 at Phoenix Raceway on Saturday, March 7.

The event’s starting lineup was determined through a single-car, single-lap qualifying format. In this format, all 37 competitors vying for 37 starting spots cycled around Phoenix Raceway once to post the fastest lap amongst one another. The competitor who posted the fastest single lap was awarded the pole position.

During Saturday’s qualifying session, Logano, who was the 19th-fastest competitor during Saturday’s practice session and fought through slick on-track conditions, clocked in a single-qualifying lap at 135.537 mph in 26.561 seconds. The lap was enough for Logano to achieve the first pole position of this season for himself, Team Penske, and Ford.

With the pole, Logano achieved his 34th career Cup Series pole, which places him in 18th place on the all-time Cup poles list. The pole was also Logano’s third at Phoenix and his first in the series since New Hampshire Motor Speedway in September 2025.

“Obviously, [the car] was good for qualifying,” Logano said on Prime. “I thought we were pretty good on the long run, too. A really special weekend for Team Penske, celebrating our 60th [anniversary]. Cool for Team Penske. [David] Malukas got the IndyCar pole [for Saturday’s Phoenix race], so we were able to sweep the poles at least here so far. Hopefully, we can do it more in the race. It matters a lot more then.”

Logano will share the front row with Kyle Larson, the latter of whom clocked in the second-fastest single-qualifying lap at 134.943 mph in 26.678 seconds. Logano’s teammate, Austin Cindric, qualified in third place with a lap at 134.675 mph in 26.731 seconds. 

Daniel Suarez, who was the fastest competitor in practice, claimed the fourth starting spot with a lap at 134.610 mph in 26.744 seconds. Ryan Blaney, Penske’s third Cup competitor, posted his lap at 134.595 mph in 26.747 seconds to grab the fifth starting spot.

Ross Chastain, Carson Hocevar, Tyler Reddick, William Byron, and Josh Berry completed the top-10 starting grid.

Notably, Anthony Alfredo, who is subbing for Alex Bowman in the No. 48 Ally/Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 entry, qualified in 31st place with a lap at 132.900 mph in 27.088 seconds. Bowman is currently sidelined due to a vertigo diagnosis. Bowman’s timeline for returning to competition remains to be determined.

In addition, Brad Keselowski was the lone competitor who did not post a qualifying time due to wrecking his primary car after he cut a right-front tire and slammed into the Turn 3 outside wall during Saturday’s practice session. Keselowski’s teammate, Chris Buescher, and Riley Herbst also had tire issues during practice, but both were able to keep their primary entries intact and qualify 17th and 22nd, respectively.

With 37 competitors vying for 37 starting spots, all made the main event.

Phoenix – Qualifying position, Best speed, Best time:

  1. Joey Logano, 135.537 mph, 26.561 seconds
  2. Kyle Larson, 134.943 mph, 26.678 seconds
  3. Austin Cindric. 134.675 mph, 26.731 seconds
  4. Daniel Suarez, 134.610 mph, 26.744 seconds
  5. Ryan Blaney, 134.595 mph, 26.747 seconds
  6. Ross Chastain, 134.544 mph, 26.757 seconds
  7. Carson Hocevar, 134.539 mph, 26.758 seconds
  8. Tyler Reddick, 134.394 mph, 26.787 seconds
  9. William Byron, 134.373 mph, 26.791 seconds
  10. Josh Berry, 134.258 mph, 26.814 seconds
  11. Denny Hamlin, 134.233 mph, 26.819 seconds
  12. Christopher Bell, 134.148 mph, 26.836 seconds
  13. Ryan Preece, 134.143 mph, 26.837 seconds
  14. Ty Gibbs, 134.128 mph, 26.840 seconds
  15. John Hunter Nemechek, 134.038 mph, 26.858 seconds
  16. Michael McDowell, 134.018 mph, 26.862 seconds
  17. Chris Buescher, 133.953 mph, 26.875 seconds
  18. Shane van Gisbergen, 133.939 mph, 26.878 seconds
  19. Connor Zilisch, 133.919 mph, 26.882 seconds
  20. Chase Briscoe, 133.844 mph, 26.897 seconds
  21. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., 133.834 mph, 26.899 seconds
  22. Riley Herbst, 133.819 mph, 26.902 seconds
  23. AJ Allmendinger, 133.804 mph, 26.905 seconds
  24. Zane Smith, 133,799 mph, 26.906 seconds
  25. Austin Dillon, 133.591 mph, 26.948 seconds
  26. Chase Elliott, 133.551 mph, 26.956 seconds
  27. Austin Hill, 133.536 mph, 26.959 seconds
  28. Bubba Wallace, 133.230 mph, 27.021 seconds
  29. Kyle Busch, 133.151 mph, 27.037 seconds
  30. Todd Gilliland, 133.131 mph, 27.041 seconds
  31. Anthony Alfredo, 132.900 mph, 27.088 seconds
  32. Erik Jones, 132.871 mph, 27.094 seconds
  33. Ty Dillon, 132.680 mph, 27.133 seconds
  34. Cody Ware, 132.441 mph, 27.182 seconds
  35. Noah Gragson, 132.319 mph, 27.207 seconds
  36. Cole Custer, 130.833 mph, 27.516 seconds
  37. Brad Keselowski, Did Not Qualify

The 2026 Straight Talk Wireless 500 at Phoenix Raceway is scheduled to occur on Sunday, March 8, and air at 3:30 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN, SiriusXM, and HBO Max.

Ford Racing Notes and Quotes – Brad Keselowski Phoenix Media Availability

Ford Racing Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Media Availability — Phoenix Raceway
Saturday, March 7, 2026

Brad Keselowski, driver of the No. 6 Consumer Cellular Ford Mustang Dark Horse, stopped by the Phoenix Raceway infield media center to answer questions about his season to date and this weekend’s race. Keselowski is currently 12th in the series point standings.

BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 6 Consumer Cellular Ford Mustang Dark Horse – THERE’S BEEN A LOT OF TALK ABOUT COOL SHIRTS SINCE AUSTIN. WHAT DO YOU TELL YOUR TEAMS AS FAR AS THE BALANCE OF KEEPING A DRIVER COOL VERSUS POTENTIAL MODIFICATIONS FOR PERFORMANCE? “Our group, we let the teams have that autonomy of what they want to run, so if the driver wants to run a cool shirt, he runs a cool shirt and we try to provide the necessary engineering support to make sure that there isn’t an issue. I had one last year where we probably didn’t do a good enough job with that and we came back in and buttoned it up. Cool suits are a tough thing because they’re not designed in our environment to fail to safe, so when they fail, it’s fairly devastating and occasionally those things are gonna happen. It’s unfortunate when it happens to anyone, not just our team. There’s a solve that’s being worked on for all the different teams, but nothing seems to have been bulletproof yet. It’s one of the nuances of currently racing in the Cup Series.”

YOU HAD JOEY HAND ON STAND BY LAST WEEK, BUT YOU OPTED TO STAY IN THE CAR. WHY WOULD YOU DO THAT WHEN YOU ALMOST HAD A FAIL SAFE PLAN TO HAVE A GOOD POINTS DAY? “Well, Joey was a fail safe in case I wasn’t able to run the race, where if I felt I couldn’t be competitive. In the car, I felt competitive. I felt like I could drive it to its limits and any change was just gonna put us further back, not because Joey isn’t a good driver, but by the time you execute a change and go to the back of the pack and do all those things and he can re-acclimate in a car that’s not made for him, not fitted for him, etc, that’s a lot to ask of somebody. If I felt like I was holding the team back, I would have made a change, but I didn’t feel that way.”

DID YOU ENJOY PARTICIPATING IN THE FULL SPEED SHOW? “I watched a few clips. I can’t say I’ve seen the entire thing. I think it just came out a day or two ago and I’ve been pretty jammed up, but that said, it’s great that this sport has that level of coverage. I think when I started in the Cup Series the teams and the sponsors were really, really protective around doing things like that, but the industry has found a way to get the teams in a better place and the different producers have over the years been more accommodating as well to making sure we don’t put things in there that embarrass ourselves or the sport, so I think that we’ve found a nice balance. I’m really proud of the sport for being able to put those types of things together, and I think Amazon as a whole, what they’ve brought to our sport, in my eyes at least, is underappreciated. They’ve put a big investment in the sport. They’re promoting really hard with not just the races that they cover, but the things they do outside of covering the races to cover the sport, so it’s refreshing to see that level of engagement.”

HOW DO YOU LIKE SHARING THE WEEKEND WITH INDYCAR AND WOULD YOU EVER WANT TO RACE IN AN INDYCAR? “I tested an IndyCar at Road America about 10 years ago and I loved it. I had a lot of fun. What’s really, really difficult is that all of my time in Cup I’ve never been with a manufacturer in the Cup Series that competes in the IndyCar Series and to go back and forth between the two is considerable pain for the OEMs that is tough to justify. I think that window for me has probably come and gone. There was a time where I was very, very interested, but life takes us in other places and I’m not complaining.”

HAS THE PREPARATION FOR PHOENIX THIS TIME AROUND CHANGED SINCE IT’S NOT HOSTING THE CHAMPIONSHIP EVENT ANYMORE? “One of the things that I really like about the format that we have switched to for 2026 is every race is kind of a championship race. The way the points stack up, significantly with a bonus to the winner. That has large ramifications to how the championship is gonna play out. Tyler Reddick winning the first three races is not just huge in the sense of how hard that is to achieve, it’s huge in the sense of the ramifications it has for him for being a real contender for the championship because of the extra bonus points that are offered. The structure of last year’s points, honestly, him winning the first three races was not super meaningful to the playoffs or to the championship. It was just a nice stat to have, so I look at this format and what it’s intended to do. It’s intended to make every race a big race and, for us specifically, this is what I think most of the teams would tell you is the start of the regular season. It’s more of a traditional racetrack and more of what we’re going to see. It values the things that most of the races from here on out are going to value, whether that’s speed in the race car, tactics by the driver, execution by the pit crew, or strategy by the crew chiefs. Those four elements are more represented here than they are the first three weeks of the season and more representative of the challenges we’re gonna have throughout the rest of the year.”

HOW ARE YOU FEELING AFTER THE PHYSICAL NATURE OF THE FIRST THREE RACES? HOW ARE YOU HEALING? “Really well. This is supposed to be a six to 12 month recovery and I’m on track to do it in three to four, which is great. I was just saying to my team when I was coming here that I got out of the motorhome and took my first three or four steps without a cane. I’m like, ‘I’m almost ready to be rid of this thing.’ Mentally, I’m ready to be rid of it, but physically I’m not. It feels good. Yes, driving the car is not the best thing for me in some ways, whether it be the vibration or the loads or just the movements to get in and out, but once I’m in the car I feel reasonable. I can’t say it’s the best I’ve ever felt, but I feel reasonable. There are little setbacks that come from driving the car with dehydration or just the workload in general, but with a day or two of recovery I’ve been able to come back even stronger each of the three races we’ve had so far. I’m really happy just staying the course and putting the work in and dealing with the pain. In some ways, it’s good for me because it provides the motivation to put the work in to do the rehab at a really high level and I think that’s been really good for me.”

THERE IS SOME IRONY THAT YOU’RE HIGHER IN POINTS THIS YEAR THAN A YEAR AGO WHEN YOU WERE HEALTHY. IS THAT A REFLECTION OF THIS ADDED WHATEVER YOU’RE HAVING TO DEAL WITH? “Certainly from the outside-in it could appear that way, but I would say that the start of last year was not very good for the 6 team and there was a lot of reasons for that. Some of it was poor luck and some of it was just poor execution. We turned over pretty much the entire team from ‘24 to ‘25 and that was a big transition. Now, the team has got its legs underneath it and I think it can position itself to be a contender.”

MICHAEL JORDAN HAS A TEAM THAT HAS WON THREE IN A ROW. DO YOU FIND THAT HIS PROFILE HAS BEEN GOOD FOR EVERYBODY IN THE SPORT? “Yeah. It’s hard to argue against Michael having a positive influence on the sport. I love the fact that he’s so engaged and at the races. I just can’t emphasize enough how important that is, not just for Michael, but for any of the key stakeholders to just have a physical presence at the racetrack, and that’s at all levels, not just the team level. So, for him to have a physical presence, I think it’s a testament to his fortitude for being a part of this sport because, let’s face it, even though he’s won the first three races, he’s lost a lot more as every car owner will. It’s not a dig on him. If I’m a guy like him, personally, and I wake up and say, ‘Where do I want to be today,’ and I know that I have less than a 10 percent chance of winning, flying my butt all across the country when I have all the things that Michael has is probably something that takes me a minute to emotionally justify, but he does. I’ll give him a lot of respect and credit for that because this sport is a grind, not just for the people that work in it, but also for the key stakeholders, whether it be team owners, executives, etc. He’s made the decision and choice to participate at a high level to be engaged. The fringe benefit for the sport is the brand that he has outside of it, which naturally comes with him, which I think is a great thing. I’m happy for him. I’m happy for the sport. It’s hard for me to see any negatives. I’m sure there are probably some out there, but I don’t see them and I”m genuinely happy that he’s a part of our sport.”

Ford Racing NASCAR: Brad Keselowski Phoenix Media Availability

Ford Racing Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Media Availability – Phoenix Raceway
Saturday, March 7, 2026

Brad Keselowski, driver of the No. 6 Consumer Cellular Ford Mustang Dark Horse, stopped by the Phoenix Raceway infield media center to answer questions about his season to date and this weekend’s race. Keselowski is currently 12th in the series point standings.

BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 6 Consumer Cellular Ford Mustang Dark Horse – THERE’S BEEN A LOT OF TALK ABOUT COOL SHIRTS SINCE AUSTIN. WHAT DO YOU TELL YOUR TEAMS AS FAR AS THE BALANCE OF KEEPING A DRIVER COOL VERSUS POTENTIAL MODIFICATIONS FOR PERFORMANCE? “Our group, we let the teams have that autonomy of what they want to run, so if the driver wants to run a cool shirt, he runs a cool shirt and we try to provide the necessary engineering support to make sure that there isn’t an issue. I had one last year where we probably didn’t do a good enough job with that and we came back in and buttoned it up. Cool suits are a tough thing because they’re not designed in our environment to fail to safe, so when they fail, it’s fairly devastating and occasionally those things are gonna happen. It’s unfortunate when it happens to anyone, not just our team. There’s a solve that’s being worked on for all the different teams, but nothing seems to have been bulletproof yet. It’s one of the nuances of currently racing in the Cup Series.”

YOU HAD JOEY HAND ON STAND BY LAST WEEK, BUT YOU OPTED TO STAY IN THE CAR. WHY WOULD YOU DO THAT WHEN YOU ALMOST HAD A FAIL SAFE PLAN TO HAVE A GOOD POINTS DAY? “Well, Joey was a fail safe in case I wasn’t able to run the race, where if I felt I couldn’t be competitive. In the car, I felt competitive. I felt like I could drive it to its limits and any change was just gonna put us further back, not because Joey isn’t a good driver, but by the time you execute a change and go to the back of the pack and do all those things and he can re-acclimate in a car that’s not made for him, not fitted for him, etc, that’s a lot to ask of somebody. If I felt like I was holding the team back, I would have made a change, but I didn’t feel that way.”

DID YOU ENJOY PARTICIPATING IN THE FULL SPEED SHOW? “I watched a few clips. I can’t say I’ve seen the entire thing. I think it just came out a day or two ago and I’ve been pretty jammed up, but that said, it’s great that this sport has that level of coverage. I think when I started in the Cup Series the teams and the sponsors were really, really protective around doing things like that, but the industry has found a way to get the teams in a better place and the different producers have over the years been more accommodating as well to making sure we don’t put things in there that embarrass ourselves or the sport, so I think that we’ve found a nice balance. I’m really proud of the sport for being able to put those types of things together, and I think Amazon as a whole, what they’ve brought to our sport, in my eyes at least, is underappreciated. They’ve put a big investment in the sport. They’re promoting really hard with not just the races that they cover, but the things they do outside of covering the races to cover the sport, so it’s refreshing to see that level of engagement.”

HOW DO YOU LIKE SHARING THE WEEKEND WITH INDYCAR AND WOULD YOU EVER WANT TO RACE IN AN INDYCAR? “I tested an IndyCar at Road America about 10 years ago and I loved it. I had a lot of fun. What’s really, really difficult is that all of my time in Cup I’ve never been with a manufacturer in the Cup Series that competes in the IndyCar Series and to go back and forth between the two is considerable pain for the OEMs that is tough to justify. I think that window for me has probably come and gone. There was a time where I was very, very interested, but life takes us in other places and I’m not complaining.”

HAS THE PREPARATION FOR PHOENIX THIS TIME AROUND CHANGED SINCE IT’S NOT HOSTING THE CHAMPIONSHIP EVENT ANYMORE? “One of the things that I really like about the format that we have switched to for 2026 is every race is kind of a championship race. The way the points stack up, significantly with a bonus to the winner. That has large ramifications to how the championship is gonna play out. Tyler Reddick winning the first three races is not just huge in the sense of how hard that is to achieve, it’s huge in the sense of the ramifications it has for him for being a real contender for the championship because of the extra bonus points that are offered. The structure of last year’s points, honestly, him winning the first three races was not super meaningful to the playoffs or to the championship. It was just a nice stat to have, so I look at this format and what it’s intended to do. It’s intended to make every race a big race and, for us specifically, this is what I think most of the teams would tell you is the start of the regular season. It’s more of a traditional racetrack and more of what we’re going to see. It values the things that most of the races from here on out are going to value, whether that’s speed in the race car, tactics by the driver, execution by the pit crew, or strategy by the crew chiefs. Those four elements are more represented here than they are the first three weeks of the season and more representative of the challenges we’re gonna have throughout the rest of the year.”

HOW ARE YOU FEELING AFTER THE PHYSICAL NATURE OF THE FIRST THREE RACES? HOW ARE YOU HEALING? “Really well. This is supposed to be a six to 12 month recovery and I’m on track to do it in three to four, which is great. I was just saying to my team when I was coming here that I got out of the motorhome and took my first three or four steps without a cane. I’m like, ‘I’m almost ready to be rid of this thing.’ Mentally, I’m ready to be rid of it, but physically I’m not. It feels good. Yes, driving the car is not the best thing for me in some ways, whether it be the vibration or the loads or just the movements to get in and out, but once I’m in the car I feel reasonable. I can’t say it’s the best I’ve ever felt, but I feel reasonable. There are little setbacks that come from driving the car with dehydration or just the workload in general, but with a day or two of recovery I’ve been able to come back even stronger each of the three races we’ve had so far. I’m really happy just staying the course and putting the work in and dealing with the pain. In some ways, it’s good for me because it provides the motivation to put the work in to do the rehab at a really high level and I think that’s been really good for me.”

THERE IS SOME IRONY THAT YOU’RE HIGHER IN POINTS THIS YEAR THAN A YEAR AGO WHEN YOU WERE HEALTHY. IS THAT A REFLECTION OF THIS ADDED WHATEVER YOU’RE HAVING TO DEAL WITH? “Certainly from the outside-in it could appear that way, but I would say that the start of last year was not very good for the 6 team and there was a lot of reasons for that. Some of it was poor luck and some of it was just poor execution. We turned over pretty much the entire team from ‘24 to ‘25 and that was a big transition. Now, the team has got its legs underneath it and I think it can position itself to be a contender.”

MICHAEL JORDAN HAS A TEAM THAT HAS WON THREE IN A ROW. DO YOU FIND THAT HIS PROFILE HAS BEEN GOOD FOR EVERYBODY IN THE SPORT? “Yeah. It’s hard to argue against Michael having a positive influence on the sport. I love the fact that he’s so engaged and at the races. I just can’t emphasize enough how important that is, not just for Michael, but for any of the key stakeholders to just have a physical presence at the racetrack, and that’s at all levels, not just the team level. So, for him to have a physical presence, I think it’s a testament to his fortitude for being a part of this sport because, let’s face it, even though he’s won the first three races, he’s lost a lot more as every car owner will. It’s not a dig on him. If I’m a guy like him, personally, and I wake up and say, ‘Where do I want to be today,’ and I know that I have less than a 10 percent chance of winning, flying my butt all across the country when I have all the things that Michael has is probably something that takes me a minute to emotionally justify, but he does. I’ll give him a lot of respect and credit for that because this sport is a grind, not just for the people that work in it, but also for the key stakeholders, whether it be team owners, executives, etc. He’s made the decision and choice to participate at a high level to be engaged. The fringe benefit for the sport is the brand that he has outside of it, which naturally comes with him, which I think is a great thing. I’m happy for him. I’m happy for the sport. It’s hard for me to see any negatives. I’m sure there are probably some out there, but I don’t see them and I”m genuinely happy that he’s a part of our sport.”

CHEVROLET NCS AT PHOENIX RACEWAY: Connor Zilisch Media Availability Quotes

NASCAR CUP SERIES
PHOENIX RACEWAY
TEAM CHEVY DRIVER QUOTES
MARCH 7, 2026

Connor Zilisch, driver of the No. 88 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet, met with the media in advance of the NASCAR Cup Series practice and qualifying session at Phoenix Raceway.

Media Availability Quotes:

You’ve raced a lot of other stuff outside of NASCAR. Is there any realistic possibility or chance we see you one day racing in endurance in Europe?

“Not anytime soon. No, I’m pretty committed to NASCAR and what I’ve got going here. I’ve always dreamed of racing at Le Mans and stuff like that. But yeah, it’s going to have to wait.”

Did you enjoy participating in the latest edition of Full Speed? What was the most satisfying aspect of that for you?

“Yeah, I really enjoyed it. I’m very new to NASCAR, obviously, and although I feel like I’ve made it to the Cup Series quickly, not a lot of people really know me, how I got here or much about me at all. So yeah, it’s cool to share my story a little bit through that docuseries. I haven’t watched it yet, but I saw clips from it before they posted. I thought they did a really good job piecing everything together. I was going to watch it on the flight here, but I ended up playing Mario Kart the whole flight. But I’ll end up watching it sometime here in the next few days.”

With some of the drivers having issues with cool shirts last week, do you relook at what you do, or do you just have confidence in what your team’s doing with it?

“Yeah, I mean, it’s always a risk when you wear that thing is that it could always fail. But you know, you have t to have airflow to it. That’s a big part of it. If you cut off the airflow to the cool shirt box, it gets hot and fails. I’ve always made sure to tell my team that I’ll give up a count or two of downforce to make sure that I’m not going to burn up inside the race car, and if that means flowing a little extra air to it, then so be it.

But you know, I’ve never had one of those fail… knock on wood. But yeah, surely last week if mine failed, it would have been a really tough day. It was already hot and when those things fail, it gets hotter than just being in the car without anything.

Yeah, it’s always a risk. But thankfully, I haven’t had one fail on me yet.”

I don’t know how many times you’ve run for points, but is it startling to see yourself 32nd?

“It’s not what we want, obviously. Although it’s early, you still think about it. But it’s a very long season. We’re three races into 36, so although I’d rather be sitting inside the top-10 and say ‘yeah, it’s good’, a lot of it’s out of our control. I feel like we’ve ran better than 32nd in points so far this year, and the results just haven’t really shown it. So yeah, we just got to keep doing our thing and it’ll turn around.”

I’m curious if you’ve found that people are willing to run with you because you bring such a strong resume into the series? Have you not had that kind of a problem in terms of getting people to run with you? What would you say has been the biggest lesson that you’ve learned as a full-time Cup Series driver?

“Yes and no. I mean, I think if Joey Logano’s lined up behind me and he has the option to push Brad Keselowksi who’s got 25 years of experience, or me, he’s probably going to push Brad.

But I think it definitely helps not having a bad reputation, so I think there’s a lot of guys that are willing to work with me. But, you know, not a lot of people have seen me on track to trust me or whatever it is. But yeah, it’s definitely something that you build over time and it’ll continue to grow.

I would say after each race, you can’t let it get to you. Obviously I’ve had a couple rough weeks so far, but you just have to keep doing the same thing and know that it’s going to turn back your way eventually and that things are going to start to go well. After the first two weeks, I was sitting dead last in points. I went to COTA last week and felt like I had a chance to win the race and finish 14th. It sucks, but you got to know that there’s a lot left in front of you and you can’t stress on the things that are out of your control.”

You said you played a little bit of Mario Kart on the flight down here. Who’s your main character and what’s your favorite track?

“Yeah, a couple of my crew guys on my team, we all have Nintendo Switches and we hop on Mario Kart on the flights to make them a little quicker. When you don’t have Wi-Fi, I guess that’s the stuff you do (laughs). I switch around. I was running Donkey Kong for a little bit. You know, he’s my go-to, but my favorite track would probably be rainbow road. I like rainbow road. But it’s fun. It passes time. The flights out here on the charter planes can get long, so it’s good to have something to keep your mind busy.”

With this being a combination weekend with INDYCAR here today, I know that one of your bucket list races is the Indianapolis 500. Have you had any interaction with those drivers so far, or are you going to have some today?

“No, I haven’t. I’ll probably walk out to the grid before the race. I’ve got a couple of friends out there that I’ll go say hello to and wish luck, but I’ve been pretty focused on what we’ve got at stake this weekend in the Cup Series. I’ll watch their race. I’ll hang out for the race. You know, I’m curious to see what it’s like, but I haven’t been doing anything around the paddock.”

Coming to Phoenix for the first time in a Cup car, you had good runs here in the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series. What’s your expectation? What have you heard about the shortcut there in these next generation race cars? How do you prepare to get ready for this new challenge you have this weekend?

“Yeah, I’m excited. Phoenix is a really cool racetrack. There’s a lot of ways to go about it. I think the dog leg is rough no matter what race car you’re in. You’ve always got to readjust your helmet after you get done with rolling through there. I’m looking forward to seeing what it’s like in a Cup car. I know it’s a little bit quicker. You know, you’re shifting. It’s my first time ever shifting at an oval. I guess I shifted at like St. Louis last year, but in the Cup car, at least, it’s my first time.

So yeah, I’m excited to see what it’s like. It’s going to be cool to figure it out, and hopefully we can have a good weekend.”

You’re three starts into your first full-time Cup season and a handful more before that. Would you say your comfort level is with the Next Gen car compared to all the other cars you’ve driven?

“Yeah. I mean, we’re three races in, but really, the season starts this weekend in a way. Obviously, I can’t say that exactly, but the first three races, we had two speedways and a road course, so this is the first race where you kind of start to figure out where we are as a team and how fast our race cars are going to be. Phoenix is the first test to that. So yeah, it really all starts this weekend. I feel like I’ve done a good job at the speedways and last weekend at the road course, but this will really be the test of how comfortable I am. I think it’s just going to continue to get better as the year goes on.”

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.

NHRA PRO MOD DRAG RACING SERIES POWERED BY FUELTECH TO OPEN 2026 SEASON IN GAINESVILLE

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (March 7, 2026) – Celebrating 25 years of incredible action in 2026, the NHRA Pro Mod Drag Racing Series opens its season this weekend at Gainesville Raceway as part of the prestigious Amalie Motor Oil NHRA Gatornationals.

It is the first race of 11 races in the category during the 2026 campaign and this weekend’s must-see race is powered by FuelTech.

J.R. Gray enters the season as the reigning world champion, getting the victory in a winner-take-all final round last season in Las Vegas, finishing off a spectacular season that included four wins, five final-round appearances and his first championship.

Through two rounds of qualifying on Friday, Mike Stavrinos, who won the first two races of 2025, is in the top spot with a run of 5.688-seconds at 252.14 mph. Travis Harvey is right behind with a 5.708 at 245.99 and two-time world champion Stevie “Fast” Jackson is third after a 5.711 at 249.72. Gray is fourth as the standout competitors in the category look to start the season with a victory at one of the biggest events of the year during NHRA’s 75th anniversary season.

For the second straight season in Gainesville, FuelTech is the powered by partner for the race and continues to be a marquee supporter of NHRA Pro Mod racing.

“As NHRA celebrates 75 years of drag racing excellence, FuelTech is proud to continue our sponsorship of the Pro Mod class and support one of the most exciting and technically advanced categories in the sport,” said Luis de Leon, Chief Operating Officer of FuelTech USA. “For 75 years, NHRA has represented innovation, determination, and the relentless pursuit of speed — values that align perfectly with FuelTech’s mission and the racers we serve.”

The Pro Mod field in Gainesville includes a host of star drivers, including champs like Gray, Jackson and Mike Castellana, as well as top talents like Alex Laughlin, Lyle Barnett, Jason Scruggs and more.

The weekend will also include the continuation of the FTI Performance Pro Mod Showdown, which offers an extra incentive for drivers in the category. The FTI Pro Mod Showdown will once again reward the driver who records the best cumulative E.T. average across all four qualifying sessions. The winner will receive a $7,500 bonus from FTI Performance, adding another high-stakes incentive to an already huge weekend.

The NHRA Pro Mod Drag Racing Series continues with the final two qualifying rounds at 10:45 a.m. and 2:25 p.m. ET on Saturday. The first round of eliminations is slated for later on Saturday at 5 p.m., with eliminations continuing on Sunday. Saturday’s first qualifying session and the first round of eliminations will be broadcast for free on NHRA’s YouTube page as well.

To purchase tickets to the 2026 Amalie Motor Oil NHRA Gatornationals, visit www.NHRA.com/tickets. Children 12 and under are free in general admission areas with the purchase of an adult ticket. General parking is free and limited preferred parking is available for purchase. For more info on NHRA, including the full weekend schedule in Gainesville, please visit www.NHRA.com.


About FuelTech

Pro Mod showcases the perfect fusion of extreme horsepower and advanced vehicle control technology. At FuelTech, we remain committed to providing racers with the tools they need to compete at the highest level. The FT700 ECU continues to set the standard in engine and powertrain management, delivering unmatched processing power, data acquisition, safety strategies, and control capabilities tailored to the demands of modern drag racing.

Through our partnership with the NHRA Pro Mod Series, we reaffirm our dedication to innovation, peak performance, and the passionate drag racing community. As teams continue to push the limits of speed and engineering, FuelTech stands beside them with complete vehicle management solutions designed to give racers a competitive edge— on every pass. For more information, please go to fueltech.net.

About NHRA

NHRA is the primary sanctioning body for the sport of drag racing in the United States. NHRA presents 20 national events featuring the NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series and NHRA Lucas Oil Drag Racing Series, as well as the NHRA Pro Mod Drag Racing Series and NHRA Flexjet Factory Stock Showdown™ at select national events. NHRA provides competition opportunities for drivers of all levels in the NHRA Summit Racing Series and NHRA Street Legal™. NHRA also offers the NHRA Jr. Street® program for teens and the Summit Racing Jr. Drag Racing League® for youth ages 5 to 17. With more than 100 Member Tracks, NHRA allows racers to compete at a variety of locations nationally and internationally. NHRA’s Youth and Education Services® (YES) Program reaches over 30,000 students annually to ignite their interest in automotive and racing related careers. NHRA’s streaming service, NHRA.tv®, allows fans to view all NHRA national events as well as exclusive features of the sport. In addition, NHRA owns and operates three racing facilities: Gainesville Raceway in Florida; Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park; and In-N-Out Burger Pomona Dragstrip in Southern California. For more information, log on to www.NHRA.com, or visit the official NHRA pages on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.

LEGACY MOTOR CLUB CHEF DUYEN HA TO COMPETE ON BRAVO’S TOP CHEF: CAROLINAS

JIMMIE JOHNSON APPEARS AS SURPRISE GUEST JUDGE

STATESVILLE, N.C. (March 7, 2026) — LEGACY MOTOR CLUB team chef Duyen Ha will step into the national spotlight this month as a contestant on Top Chef: Carolinas (Season 23), premiering March 9 on Bravo. The new season, filmed across Charlotte, North Carolina, and Greenville, South Carolina, opens with a high-energy culinary challenge at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Adding to the crossover moment, seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion and LEGACY MOTOR CLUB owner Jimmie Johnson will appear as a surprise guest judge in the premiere episode.

Hosted by Kristen Kish and judged by Tom Colicchio and Gail Simmons, the season features 15 chefs competing through challenges inspired by the culinary traditions of the Carolinas. Episodes began streaming early on Peacock on March 3.

Ha joined LEGACY MOTOR CLUB as executive chef in 2025 to help build and oversee the organization’s race-weekend culinary program, preparing meals for the organization’s hospitality and guest entertainment arm, developing food experiences for partners and guests at select races throughout the season. A Michelin-trained chef who has worked in several acclaimed European kitchens, Ha also previously won an episode of the Food Network’s Chopped, where chefs must create dishes under intense time and ingredient constraints.

That experience translated well to the fast-moving environment of NASCAR, where Ha has helped develop a culinary program that draws inspiration from each race market while serving large groups during race weekends at an elite level.

“Race weekends move fast, and the kitchen has to keep up,” said Ha. “Being part of this team and helping build the program has been incredibly rewarding, and Top Chef gave me the chance to bring that same energy and creativity next level.”

Johnson said seeing Ha compete on a national stage reflects the culture of excellence the organization strives for across every part of its operation.

“Duyen is an important part of our team,” Johnson said. “The way she approaches her craft mirrors how we approach racing — with preparation, creativity and a commitment to doing things the right way. It was fun to be part of the premiere episode, I completely surprised her, and I’m excited for people to see what she brings to the competition.”

Top Chef: Carolinas premieres Monday, March 9 on Bravo, with early streaming available now on Peacock.

LEGACY MOTOR CLUB (LEGACY MC) is a premier auto racing organization owned by seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion and 2024 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee, Jimmie Johnson and Knighthead Capital Management, LLC. Drawing from a rich tradition of success, LEGACY MC is dedicated to pushing the boundaries of motorsport and setting new standards of excellence. The CLUB competes under the Toyota Racing banner in the NASCAR Cup Series with the No. 43 Toyota Camry XSE piloted by Erik Jones and the No. 42 Toyota Camry XSE driven by John Hunter Nemechek. Johnson also races on a limited basis in the No. 84 Toyota Camry XSE. With NASCAR legend and Hall of Famer Richard Petty, “The King”, serving as CLUB Ambassador, LEGACY MOTOR CLUB blends timeless racing traditions with a new forward-thinking vision. As an inclusive community for motorsport enthusiasts, LEGACY MC honors both its storied past and the promising future of its members, always striving for victory and championship glory at the pinnacle of NASCAR competition.