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2026 Niece Motorsports NCTS Race Recap: Charlotte Motor Speedway

NIECE MOTORSPORTS
NCTS RACE RECAP: CHARLOTTE MOTOR SPEEDWAY I

Event: North Carolina Education Lottery 200 (134 laps / 201 miles)
Round: 10 of 25 (Regular Season)
Track: Charlotte Motor Speedway
Location: Concord, North Carolina
Date & Time: Sunday, May 24 | 10:00 AM ET

No. 4 J.F. Electric Chevrolet Silverado RST
Driver: Ricky Stenhouse Jr. | Crew Chief: Mike Shiplett

Start: 34th
Stage 1: 8th
Stage 2: 17th

Finish: 9th
Driver Points: N/A
Owner Points: 29th

  • Key Takeaway: Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and the J.F. Electric team had a roller coaster of a day in Charlotte, but made the most out of it and nabbed another top-10 finish. Stenhouse Jr. rolled off from the trunk of the field due to the qualifying metric system, but he quickly found a way forward. The No. 4 Silverado broke into the top-10 on several occasions, but received damage later on in the race after making contact on restarts. Stenhouse Jr.’s pit crew made damage repairs which kept him in the hunt, and the Cup Series veteran was able to rally back for a solid ninth-place result.
  • Ricky Stenhouse Jr.’s Post-Race Thoughts: “It felt like we passed a thousand trucks out there today. We started at the back and worked our way forward. On a couple of those restarts, I felt like I needed to clear some of the guys that were kind of holding each line up, and I just felt like I always picked the wrong line or did the wrong thing, which took us out of being able to run top-five. I felt like my truck was capable of it, but it just seems like every decision I made was wrong as a driver on the restarts. I feel like I kind of had a flat there, so I kind of felt it out a little bit, and then lost our track position. I was coming back through there and got some damage when those two trucks got together and came in, fixed the damage up as much as we could and then drove from dead last to ninth there. Our J.F. Electric Chevy was really fast, I was really happy with it. I had a lot of fun, but I’m just bummed that I never made the right decisions there on the restarts.”

About J.F. Electric: J.F. Electric is an electrical contractor that provides engineering expertise, backed by construction and installation know-how in a diverse range of service offerings, from utilities and commercial projects, to industrial and telecommunications customers. When having a long family history in an industry, a company not only builds on its knowledge and experience, it takes pride in cultivating a solid understanding of client needs, all the while nurturing strong relationships with its employees. Evolving through five generations of the Fowler family, J.F. Electric has matured into a well-managed and thoughtfully diversified electrical contractor which is poised to continue its growth and expansion into the future.

No. 42 Comprehensive Logistics Chevrolet Silverado RST
Driver: Conner Jones | Crew Chief: Landon Polinski

Start: 22nd
Stage 1: 25th
Stage 2: 27th

Finish: 14th
Driver Points: 32nd
Owner Points: 25th

  • Key Takeaway: Conner Jones and the Comprehensive Logistics team had some close calls throughout the race in Charlotte, but never gave up and earned a top-15 result. Jones started the time-shortened event in 22nd and was moving forward when he received damage on the right front of his truck in the opening stage. Jones nearly avoided a spinning truck on the backstretch, but picked up additional damage after getting slightly clipped on the right side. The No. 42 crew repaired his truck and made adjustments to tighten the handling up for the final run to the checkers. Jones crossed the line in 14th-place – marking his best finish of the year so far.
  • Conner Jones’ Post-Race Thoughts: “I think we just fired off too free, and we were consistently too free the whole run. I felt like every time I’d get in dirty air, we could do a little something, but we would end up getting free when someone would put it on our door pretty hard. We got the damage from the stack up down into turn one. There was not really much I could do; I got ran through from the back. Overall, I feel like it was a really solid day. Best finish of the year so far. Just can’t thank all of my partners, everyone at Comprehensive Logistics, Chevrolet, Scott’s Collectibles, and my Niece Motorsports guys enough. Our truck was really, really good today.”

About Comprehensive Logistics: Comprehensive Logistics (CLI) is a full-service inbound-to-manufacturing logistics partner specializing in high-volume, high-velocity, and highly complex operations, including warehouse management, value-added services, sequencing, transportation, and sub-assembly manufacturing. By integrating advanced technology, data-driven insights, and process engineering with experienced teams, CLI delivers high-precision, reliable logistics solutions tailored to evolving customer needs. For more information, please visit complog.com.

No. 44 Acceptance Insurance Chevrolet Silverado RST
Driver: Andres Perez de Lara | Crew Chief: Wally Rogers

Start: 27th
Stage 1: 15th
Stage 2: 22nd

Finish: 19th
Driver Points: 17th
Owner Points: 24th

  • Key Takeaway: Andrés Pérez de Lara and the Acceptance Insurance team showcased resilience in Charlotte. Pérez de Lara had to start towards the rear of the field once qualifying was cancelled due to rain, but he navigated through the pack in the opening stage. The No. 44 truck had speed, and his pit crew gained him spots on multiple occasions. While running just outside the top-10 in the final stage, however, Pérez broke loose while running under another truck and went for a spin. Luckily, the truck did not receive any damage, and Pérez was able to continue on in the race. He was credited with a 19th-place finish.
  • Andrés Pérez de Lara’s Post-Race Thoughts: “It was a little bit of a chaotic race. We had to start in the back due to the metric, and I feel like we made some gains. Our Acceptance Chevy had some speed, but we just got caught in some bad situations throughout the race. That last spin at the end killed our chances at putting together a good result, but we have the speed. We’re ready to go back to Nashville and see what we can do there.”

About Acceptance Insurance: Acceptance Insurance is a proud member of Confie, the largest personal lines agency in the U.S. We believe in investing in the communities we serve by offering affordable insurance solutions so our customers can have peace of mind. Our agents and team members uphold our values, which include promoting excellence, responsibility and caring.

Acceptance has been in business for over 50 years. We have over 700 agents in over 288 neighborhood locations ready to give you the service, respect and savings you deserve. We come to you so you can find the solutions you need, regardless of your background and driving record. We offer easy solutions to meet your unique needs.

No. 45 Protect Your Melon North Carolina Chevrolet Silverado RST
Driver: Ross Chastain | Crew Chief: Phil Gould

Start: 14th
Stage 1: 11th
Stage 2: 3rd

Finish: 29th
Driver Points: N/A
Owner Points: 8th

  • Key Takeaway: Ross Chastain and the Protect Your Melon team contended for the race win in Charlotte, but unfortunately were not able to finish. Chastain started mid-pack, but it did not take him long to find the leaders. Noting a tight-handling truck, the team made adjustments to free Chastain up in the second stage where he moved up to third. After making contact with another competitor on the backstretch, Chastain’s right front tire deflated and prompted him to lose track position in the final stage. Through strategy, the No. 45 made it back into the top-five once again, but the battery became disconnected in the closing laps of the race. With too little time to change it out, the team was done for the day in 29th-place.
  • Ross Chastain’s Post-Race Thoughts:

Interviewer: Ross, I know it wasn’t the finish you wanted out there, but your truck looked good for a little bit out there. How did it feel out there today?

“Yeah, I took the left front fender in at the start of the race, and that pretty much set the tone for the rest of the day. I knocked the right front off and the right rear quarter panel. We were still fast enough to compete, but that was just a very sloppy day on my part. I took a truck that could have won and knocked the fenders off it. Our Protect Your Melon Silverado was fast, but it just wasn’t meant to be. Huge thanks to all of the No. 45 guys for bringing us a great truck today.”

About the North Carolina Governor’s Office of Highway Safety: Dedicated to reducing the numbers of traffic crashes and fatalities in North Carolina, the Governor’s Highway Safety Program promotes efforts to reduce traffic crashes in North Carolina and promotes highway safety awareness through a variety of grants and safe-driving initiatives.

About Niece Motorsports: Niece Motorsports is a professional auto racing team that has competed in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series since 2016. The team is owned by Josh Morris of DQS Solutions and Staffing and the Fowler Family of J.F. Electric and Utilitra, and was founded by United States Marine Corps Veteran Al Niece. At its 80,000 sq. ft. headquarters in Salisbury, NC, Niece Motorsports is a full-service race vehicle build shop as well as a customizable fabrication shop for any manufacturing needs.

Follow the Team: To keep up to date with the latest team news, visit niecemotorsports.com or connect on Facebook and Instagram (@NieceMotorsports) as well as X (@NieceMotorsport).

Layne Riggs wins wild, race-shortened Truck event at Charlotte

Photo by John Knittel for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Layne Riggs persevered to win a wild conclusion to the North Carolina Education Lottery 200 at Charlotte Motor Speedway on Sunday, May 24, that was postponed to two days and shortened by 24 laps due to time constraints.

The 23-year-old Riggs from Bahama, North Carolina, led five times for a race-high 52 of 110-scheduled laps in an event where he started on the front row and was competitive by racing at the front for a majority of the event. With the event mired with a race-record 11 caution periods, on-track incidents, foggy conditions, and intense on-track battles towards the front, Riggs capitalized on the final restart by receiving a push from teammate Chandler Smith. This allowed Riggs to lead the final seven laps under NASCAR’s adverse conditions rule due to time constraints, to fend off Kaden Honeycutt and notch an emotional Truck victory in the wake of the passing of two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Busch.

The event’s starting lineup was determined through a qualifying metric formula after inclement weather canceled Friday’s qualifying session. As a result, Corey Day, who filled in the No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet Silverado RST entry for the late two-time Cup Series champion Kyle Busch, was awarded the pole position. He shared the front row with Layne Riggs.

The event was initially scheduled to occur on Friday, May 22, at 7:30 p.m. ET, but was first postponed to Saturday morning and a second time to Saturday night at 9 p.m. ET due to inclement weather that canceled both the event’s practice and qualifying sessions. Ultimately, the event was postponed a third time to 10 a.m. ET for Sunday, May 24, due to the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series’ event occurring throughout the Trucks’ initial second time slate. Prior to the start of Sunday’s Truck event, NASCAR revealed intentions to use the adverse conditions rule to have the event at Charlotte complete by noon ET.

When the green flag waved and the event commenced, Corey Day gained an early launch from the inside lane while Layne Riggs struggled to launch from the outside lane. This caused the field to stack up and fan out through the frontstretch and the first two turns. Amid the early action, Day led the first lap over a hard-charging Kaden Honeycutt before the latter used the outside lane to duel with Day. Both Day and Honeycutt continued to battle fiercely for the lead until Day forced Honeycutt towards the outside wall through Turns 3 and 4. This allowed Riggs, who rebounded from his stumbling start, to storm past both and assume the lead on the second lap.

Through the first five laps, Riggs was leading by four-tenths of a second over Christian Eckes while Honeycutt, Brandon Jones, Day, Chandler Smith, Stewart Friesen, Leland Honeyman Jr., Jake Garcia and Ross Chastain were racing in the top 10, respectively. Meanwhile, Luke Baldwin, who made early contact with the outside wall through the first two turns, plummeted to the tail end of the field in 36th place.

The following lap, the event’s first caution flew due to Shane van Gisbergen, who was racing towards the rear of the field, getting loose and spinning his No. 71 NationsGuard Chevrolet Silverado RST entry through the first two turns as he was dodged by Travis Pastrana. As the event restarted on the 11th lap, Riggs motored ahead of Eckes and Honeycutt from the inside lane and through the first two turns to retain the lead while the rest of the field behind fanned out through the backstretch. While Riggs led the next lap, the field continued to fan out and jostle for early spots through every turn and straightaway.

On Lap 14, Eckes and Riggs made contact for the lead through the frontstretch, with Riggs nearly getting sideways while trying to side-draft Eckes on the right-rear side. This allowed Eckes to move into the lead and both Honeycutt and Brandon Jones followed suit in second and third, respectively. Meanwhile, Riggs dropped to fourth place in front of teammate Chandler Smith as Eckes continued to lead by four-tenths of a second through the Lap 20 mark.

Shortly after, the event’s second caution flew due to Ty Majeski falling off the pace and coasting his No. 88 Menards/ThorSport Racing Ford F-150 entry through the apron. Majeski’s incident occurred not long after he pitted during the event’s first caution, and he dropped out of the lead lap category after he needed a wrecker to push him back to pit road. Teammate Cole Butcher would also drop off the pace, and he needed a wrecker’s push to assist him due to a mechanical issue. During the latest caution period, nearly the entire field led by Eckes pitted while some, including Justin Haley, Dawson Sutton, Frankie Muniz, Spencer Boyd, and Josh Reaume, remained on the track. Following the pit stops and with mixed pit strategies ensuing, Enfinger, who only opted for fuel for his entry, exited pit road first ahead of Riggs, Eckes, Chastain and Honeycutt, respectively.

With two laps remaining in the second stage period, Haley was pushed by Enfinger ahead of Sutton through the frontstretch before the field, including the front-runners, engaged in a three-wide battle for the lead. Amid the three-wide action through the backstretch, Eckes motored ahead with the lead and he retained the lead throughout the two-lap shootout.

When the first stage period conclude on Lap 30, Eckes captured his third Truck stage victory of the 2026 season. Brandon Jones settled in second ahead of Riggs, Enfinger, Honeycutt, Sawalich, Day, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Jake Garcia and Giovanni Ruggiero, respectively, while 32 of 36 competitors were scored on the lead lap.

The second stage period started on Lap 35 as Eckes and Jones occupied the front row. At the start, Eckes motored ahead with the lead from the inside lane as the field fanned out through the first two turns and the backstretch. As Riggs came storming through the runner-up spot, Eckes led the next lap while teammates Honeycutt and Jones battled for third place in front of Enfinger and Day.

On Lap 38, the caution returned due to Luke Baldwin’s No. 2 Team Reaume Chevrolet Silverado RST entry blowing up in smoke and flames through the frontstretch. Baldwin managed to steer his entry below the apron through the first two turns and park it before he exited under his own power. Following an extensive caution period, the event restarted on Lap 45. At the start, Eckes and Riggs battled for the lead in front of a stacked field before Riggs received a push from Jones to motor ahead. As Honeycutt tried to make a three-wide move, Eckes lost ground of the lead as Riggs led the next lap over Jones, Eckes and Honeycutt, respectively.

During Lap 46, the caution returned for a wild accident through the backstretch when Day, who was trying to fend off Giovanni Ruggiero for sixth place, got turned. Amid Day’s spin, his No. 7 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet Silverado RST entry briefly came off the ground before it landed back on the ground and pounded the inside wall hard on the driver’s left side. Day’s wrecked entry then slid back up the track and was hit by Mini Tyrrell while the rest of the field scattered to avoid the carnage. During the latest caution period, some including Ruggiero, Enfinger, Stenhouse, van Gisbergen, William Sawalich, Chandler Smith, Dawson Sutton, Frankie Muniz, Corey LaJoie, Kris Wright, Conner Jones and Leland Honeyman Jr. pitted while the rest led by Riggs remained on the track.

The start of the next restart on Lap 53 featured Riggs motoring ahead from the inside lane ahead of Eckes, where Riggs then threw a block on Eckes through the backstretch. As the field both scrambled and fanned out towards multiple lanes through the frontstretch, Riggs led the next lap over Eckes and Jones while Ross Chastain navigated his way up to fourth place in front of Daniel Hemric, Honeycutt and Ben Rhodes.

When the second stage period concluded on Lap 60, Riggs captured his second Truck stage victory of the 2026 season. Eckes followed suit in second ahead of Chastain, Hemric and Jones while Honeycutt, Friesen, Rhodes, Jake Garcia and Tyler Ankrum settled in the top 10, respectively. By then, 31 of 36 starters were scored on the lead lap. During the event’s second stage break period, multiple competitors and front-runners led by Riggs and Eckes pitted while the rest led by Enfinger remained on the track.

With 68 laps remaining, the final stage period commenced as Enfinger and Connor Zilisch occupied the front row. At the start, Enfinger received a push from Ruggiero from the inside lane to motor ahead of Zilisch through the first two turns. Through the backstretch, Chastain and Honeyman Jr. made contact as Chastain nearly got loose while slipping through the backstretch’s infield. Chastain managed to keep his entry straight and proceed without drawing a caution despite sustaining a left-front tire rub. Another lap later, the caution returned due to Spencer Boyd spinning. At the time of caution, Ruggiero was leading ahead of Enfinger, Zilisch, Sawalich and Eckes, respectively.

The next restart with 62 laps remaining featured Ruggiero maintaining the lead form the inside lane ahead of Zilisch, Enfinger and a stacked field through the first two turns and the backstretch. As the field fanned out through Turns 3 and 4 before navigating back through the frontstretch, Ruggiero led the next two laps as the event reached its final 60-lap mark. Two laps later, the caution flew due to Leland Honeyman Jr. spinning below the apron entering the backstretch and hitting the inside wall on the driver’s left side.

During the latest caution period, a majority of the field led by Ruggiero pitted for service while some including Ankrum remained on the track. Ankrum and Sutton, both of whom did not pit, led the field to the next restart with 52 laps remaining. At the start, Ankrum was pushed by Riggs from the inside lane to motor ahead through the first two turns until Riggs used the outside lane and a push from Ross Chastain to assume the lead. As Riggs led the next lap, the field scrambled, fanned out and jostled for late positions while Zilisch, who was racing in the top 10, was penalized for a restart violation.

With less than 50 laps remaining, Riggs maintained a stable lead over a fierce battle for the runner-up spot that involves Chastain and Riggs. Behind, Chandler Smith occupied fourth place in front of Zilisch, Hemric and Ankrum while Friesen got loose and barely touched the outside wall entering the frontstretch. The caution then flew with 47 laps remaining due to Kris Wright and Brenden Queen wrecking against one another towards the frontstretch’s outside wall.

During the next restart with 40 laps remaining, Riggs and Eckes battled for the lead as the adverse condition rule came into effect with only 15 minutes left before the noon deadline loomed. Riggs initially had the advantage at the start before Eckes received a push from Honeycutt to overtake Riggs through the backstretch and lead for the next lap. Eckes maintained the lead until Riggs reassumed it with 12 minutes left. With 12 minutes left, Friesen spun through the frontstretch’s grass, but he nursed his entry to pit road without drawing a caution. Amid Friesen’s incident, Riggs maintained the lead over Eckes, Honeycutt, Chandler Smith and Chastain before the caution flew with 11 minutes remaining. The caution was for Andres Perez De Lara spinning as he entered the backstretch.

When the event restarted with four and a half minutes left on the clock, Riggs received a push from teammate Chandler Smith from the inside lane to motor ahead of Eckes and lead through the backstretch. Eckes then dropped out of the top-five mark, and the field scrambled through every turn and straightaway as Riggs maintained the lead with three minutes left over Honeycutt, Zilisch, and Chandler Smith.

Then, with less than three minutes left, the caution flew when Chandler Smith, who was dueling with Zilisch for third place, got loose as he slid up the track while nearly making contact with Zilisch, spun down the track, and hit the inside wall head-on. During the caution period, the noon deadline struck, and the event concluded under caution. This awarded Riggs, who sported his college UNC Charlotte on his No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford F-150 entry, the victory over a hard-charging Honeycutt.

Riggs
Photo by John Knittel for SpeedwayMedia.com

With the victory, Riggs, who dedicated his victory to the late two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Busch, recorded his seventh NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series career victory, his second of the 2026 season after he won at the Streets of St. Petersburg in mid-February, and his first at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Riggs’ Charlotte victory was also the third of the year for both Front Row Motorsports and Ford, with Ford achieving a Truck victory at Charlotte for a second time ever.

“I hope [Kyle Busch]’d be proud of that performance,” Riggs, who paid homage to Kyle Busch by performing Busch’s signature bow on the frontstretch and fought tears of emotions, said. “Our hearts are really heavy this weekend and just been trying to struggling with it a little bit, and just trying to have my game face on and right . Great job to everybody at Front Row Motorsports. Thank you so much to my teammate Chandler Smith. He stuck with me and pushed me [on that last restart]. Super proud of him and the strong performance we had today. This is a track that [Front Row Motorsports] and the Nos. 34 and 38 have struggled at for years. We really got to it on the Ford Racing Simulator. We went to work and we got it done. “

Kaden Honeycutt settled in second place while Connor Zilisch rallied from his late restart violation penalty to finish third. Ben Rhodes and Giovanni Ruggerio finished in the top five while Christian Eckes, Brandon Jones, Tanner Gray, Rick Stenhouse Jr., and William Sawalich completed the top 10 in the final running order.

There were 18 ead changes for nine different leaders. The event featured 11 cautions for 53 laps. In addition, 27 of 36 starters finished on the lead lap.

Following the 10th event of the 2026 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series season, Kaden Honeycutt leads the standings by 11 points over Layne Riggs, 71 over Christian Eckes, 75 over Giovanni Ruggiero, and 78 over Chandler Smith.

Results:

  1. Layne Riggs, 52 laps led, Stage 2 winner
  2. Kaden Honeycutt
  3. Connor Zilisch, one lap led
  4. Ben Rhodes
  5. Giovanni Ruggiero, 12 laps led
  6. Christian Eckes, 33 laps led, Stage 1 winner
  7. Brandon Jones, one lap led
  8. Tanner Gray
  9. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
  10. William Sawalich
  11. Daniel Hemric
  12. Corey LaJoie
  13. Jake Garcia
  14. Conner Jones
  15. Shane van Gisbergen
  16. Grant Enfinger, four laps led
  17. Justin Haley, three laps led
  18. Timmy Hill
  19. Andres Perez De Lara
  20. Tyler Ankrum, three laps led
  21. Travis Pastrana
  22. Dawson Sutton
  23. Leland Honeyman Jr.
  24. Frankie Muniz
  25. Spencer Boyd
  26. Stewart Friesen
  27. Cole Butcher
  28. Josh Reaume, one lap down
  29. Ross Chastain, three laps down
  30. Chandler Smith, four laps down
  31. Kris Wright – OUT, Accident
  32. Brenden Queen – OUT, Accident
  33. Ty Majeski, 59 laps down
  34. Mini Tyrrell – OUT, Accident
  35. Corey Day – OUT, Accident, one lap led
  36. Luke Baldwin – OUT, Engine

Next on the 2026 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series schedule is Nashville Superspeedway in Lebanon, Tennessee, for the Allegiance 200. The event is scheduled to occur next Friday, May 29, and air at 8 p.m. ET on FS1, NASCAR Racing Network and SiriusXM.

TOYOTA RACING – NCTS Charlotte Post-Race Report – 05.24.26

HONEYCUTT HOLDS POINTS LEAD WITH RUNNER-UP FINISH
TRICON Garage puts all five of their Tundras in the top-10 for the second time in team history

CHARLOTTE, NC (May 24, 2026) – Kaden Honeycutt battled for the lead late before finishing second in a shortened NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race at Charlotte Motor Speedway on Sunday afternoon. The race, which was delayed four times from its original starting time of Friday evening, completed 110 of 134 laps before it was called. Honeycutt continues to hold the points lead.

TRICON Garage had a stellar team day as they placed their five Tundras in the top-10 for the second time in team history (COTA 2024). Honeycutt (second) was followed to the line by Gio Ruggiero (fifth), Brandon Jones (seventh), Tanner Gray (eighth) and William Sawalich (10th). For Jones, it is his third top-10 in as many Truck starts this season.

TOYOTA RACING Post-Race Recap
NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series (NCTS)
Charlotte Motor Speedway
Race 10 of 23 – 201 Miles, 134 Laps

TOYOTA FINISHING POSITIONS

1st, Layne Riggs*

2nd, KADEN HONEYCUTT

3rd, Connor Zilisch*

4th, Ben Rhodes*

5th, GIO RUGGIERO

7th, BRANDON JONES

8th, TANNER GRAY

10th, WILLIAM SAWALICH

18th, TIMMY HILL

23rd, LELAND HONEYMAN JR.

26th, STEWART FRIESEN

*non-Toyota driver

TOYOTA QUOTES

KADEN HONEYCUTT, No. 11 Safelite + Foster Love Toyota Tundra TRD Pro, TRICON Garage

Finishing Position: 2nd

What would have one more restart done for you?

“I don’t know. Maybe would have won the race. We will never know. I thought that with Ben (Rhodes) behind me, I would have had a really good pusher to go and mix it up for the win, but unfortunately, we had the time clock. What else could you do. We couldn’t go more than five or six laps green today, really just a bad race for all of us. Really egregious, but thank you to Safelite, Foster Love, the whole 11 team, TRICON Garage, TOYOTA RACING, Mobil 1 – everyone that supports us, it is very much appreciated. Definitely could be worse. I definitely wanted to be the guy that gave Kyle (Busch) the bow there, because he definitely deserved it. If I had won, I was planning on giving Brexton (Busch) the flag, because he probably would have laid another butt whopping on us if he was here. Just a bad week for all of us; a tough weekend for the whole community. Hug your loved ones, appreciate them, tell your mom and dad that you love them even if you don’t have a great relationship with them. Life means more than racing for sure. Second is good, still have a points lead and we will fight in Nashville next week.”

GIO RUGGIERO, No. 17 First Auto Group Toyota Tundra TRD Pro, TRICON Garage

Finishing Position: 5th

How do you feel about the run?

“I feel good about the truck. Our Tundra drove really good. Just unfortunate that we ran out of time there at the end of the race, but just looking forward to going to Nashville and continuing to have speed and the handling we have had the last few weeks.”

TANNER GRAY, No. 15 Black’s Tire Toyota Tundra TRD Pro, TRICON Garage

Finishing Position: 8th

Solid top-10 and helped TRICON get all of their Tundras in the top-10. Can you tell us about your race?

“Yeah, just not a very clean day for our Black’s Tire Tundra. I feel like this is one of our better race tracks for qualifying, so I was bummed out when it got rained out. Just starting 19th, 20th made it kind of tough on us. We fired off – I was too tight, so we tried to come down and make a small adjustment and just kind of got on the other side of it, and really just hopped around on either side of the balance most of the day. There at the end, we just went back to how we started the race and was able to get back through there with a good call by Jeff (Hensley, crew chief) putting tires on when he did, just a couple of good restarts. Not a super clean day, but hopefully we can build on it as we go into Nashville. We are in a little bit of a points hole, so hopefully this is a start of digging us out of that.”

About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in North America for nearly 70 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands, plus our more than 1,800 dealerships.

Toyota directly employs nearly 64,000 people in North America who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of over 50 million cars and trucks at our 14 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.

The Legendary Billy Green 150 Presented by NAPA Auto Parts Unofficial Race Results & Post-race Note

ARCA Menards West at Colorado National Speedway:
The Legendary Billy Green 150 Presented by NAPA Auto Parts Post-Race Notes

  • Reigning ARCA Menards West champion Trevor Huddleston (No. 50 High Point Racing / Racecar Factory Ford) led the final 126 laps to score his second consecutive victory in Saturday’s The Legendary Billy Green 150 Presented by NAPA Auto Parts at Colorado National Speedway. Huddleston took the lead from Sioux Chief PowerPEX Pole Award winner Robbie Kennealy (No. 1 Jan’s Towing Ford) at lap 25 and led the rest of the way.
  • The win is Huddleston’s fifth consecutive top-five finish to open the season; he is the only driver to finish in the top five in every race so far this year.
  • Kennealy finished second, his best finish of 2026. His 24 laps led were his first laps at the front of the field since he led three laps at Tucson Speedway in April.
  • Local favorite Cade Fox (No. 66 Champ Transportation / Grease Monkey Chevrolet) finished third in his ARCA Menards West debut driving for his Colorado National Speedway rival Eric Rhead. Fox, who celebrated his 17th birthday on Saturday, is a regular competitor in the track’s Grand American Modified division and finished one point behind Rhead for the championship in 2025.
  • Mason Massey (No. 19 Mongoose Power Solutions Chevrolet) finished fourth, his fourth top-five finish of the year. Despite his fourth-place finish, Massey drops to 20 points behind Huddleston for the lead in the ARCA Menards West championship standings.
  • Kyle Keller (No. 4 Nascimento Motorsports / Battle Born Chevrolet) finished fifth in his first ARCA Menards West start of the season. It’s the second top-five result for the Nascimento Motorsports team; they finished second at Kevin Harvick’s Kern Raceway with Eric Nascimento, Jr. at the wheel.
  • Mia Lovell (No. 15 Pine Health Toyota) was forced to start at the tail of the 16-car field after a mechanical issue at the end of practice forced her Nitro Motorsports team to miss qualifying. Lovell patiently worked her way through the field and scored a career-best sixth-place finish.
  • Hailie Deegan (No. 16 NAPA Auto Care / Monster Energy Chevrolet) finished seventh after spending the bulk of the race battling inside the top five. Deegan earned one of her three career ARCA Menards West victories at Colorado National Speedway in 2019.
  • Cole Denton (No. 71 Jan’s Towing Ford) finished eighth, Gavin Ray (No. 7 Johns Manville Toyota) finished ninth, and Andrew Champman (No. 55 High Point Racing / Racecar Factory Ford) rounded out the top ten.
  • There were only two cautions, the first for a spin by Scotty Milan (No. 51 Scott’s Auto / Milemarker Chevrolet) at lap 50 and the second and final caution for the midway break at lap 76.
  • Huddleston’s margin of victory was 1.938 seconds; his winning average speed was 63.025 miles per hour in a race that took 53 minutes, 33 seconds to complete.
  • The next race for the ARCA Menards West is the NAPA Auto Care Greg Biffle Memorial 150 at Tri-City Raceway. The race is scheduled to start at 11 pm ET / 8 pm PT on Saturday, June 6 and will be streamed live on FloRacing. ARCARacing.com will have live timing & scoring data for all on-track activity and live race audio.

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.

Ross Chastain wins a bizarre, weather-shortened O’Reilly event at Charlotte.

Photo by Logan Allen for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Ross Chastain emerged victorious in a bizarre, rain-shortened Charbroil 300 at Charlotte Motor Speedway on Saturday, May 23.

The 2025 Coca-Cola 600 champion from Alva, Florida, led three times for 28 of 91-shortened laps. Chastain started in 14th place. The event was delayed over four hours due to inclement weather. When the event resumed in the evening, with damp and misty conditions, Chastain settled in third place at the first stage’s conclusion after battling towards the front.

During the second stage period, Chastain utilized two restarts, one on Lap 58 and another on Lap 66, to fiercely battle his competitors, Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Hill and Jesse Love for the lead. On track conditions continued to worsen, becoming damper and mistier.

After swapping the lead with Love on four instances, Chastain overtook Love for what would be a final time on Lap 72. Another lap later, he, along with several competitors, ran over a patch of oil that came off of Dawson Cram’s entry. It forced many drivers to drift up the track and make contact with the outside wall through the first two turns.

Amid the incident, Chastain retained the lead and remained on the track under a cautious pace to capture the second stage victory. A lap after the second stage concluded, he, along with the entire field, was directed to pit road. This forced a second red-flag delay due to the mist on the track. With track conditions not improving, NASCAR declared the event official 109 laps shy of its scheduled distance and awarded Chastain his first NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series victory of the 2026 season.

The event’s starting lineup was determined using a metric qualifying format after inclement weather canceled Saturday’s on-track qualifying. Per the metric formula, Justin Allgaier was awarded the pole position, and he shared the front row with rookie Corey Day.

When the green flag waved and the event commenced, Justin Allgaier launched ahead with the lead from the inside lane while Corey Day struggled to launch from the outside lane, which created a mini stack-up. As the field fanned out and jostled for early spots through the first two turns and the backstretch, Allgaier was challenged by Sam Mayer in a side-by-side battle for the lead, starting from the first two turns and carrying forth through Turns 3 and 4. Amid Mayer’s challenge, Allgaier led the first lap by 0.024 seconds.

Prior to the second lap, the event’s first caution flew due to Harrison Burton spinning in Turn 3 after making contact with Jesse Love. After the caution period was extended due to light sprinkles, the event restarted on the 11th lap. At the start, Mayer dueled with Allgaier from the inside lane until he motored ahead through the first two turns. As Allgaier fended off teammate Connor Zilisch for the runner-up spot, Day then challenged Zilisch for third place while Mayer led the next lap.

Through the Lap 15 mark, Allgaier, who reassumed the lead from Mayer two laps earlier, was leading by four-tenths of a second over Mayer while Zilisch, Austin Hill and Day occupied the remaining top-five spots over Ryan Sieg, Brandon Jones, Rajah Caruth, Ross Chastain and Sammy Smith, respectively. Over the next five laps, Brent Crews overtook Sammy Smith for 10th place. In addition, Day and Hill swapped for fourth place while Jones and Ryan Sieg swapped for sixth place. Meanwhile, Allgaier stretched his lead to more than a second over teammate Zilisch while Day trailed by two seconds in third place, along with fourth-place Austin Hill.

On Lap 25, a scheduled competition caution flew as Allgaier had maintained the lead over teammate Zilisch, Day, teammate Ross Chastain and Jones, respectively. During this caution period, nearly the entire field led by Allgaier pitted for service while JJ Yeley, Nathan Byrd, Dawson Cram and Joey Gase elected to remain on the track for a single lap. Following the pit stops, Allgaier exited pit road first ahead of Zilisch, Day, Jones and Chastain, respectively, and he cycled back to the lead when Yeley, Byrd, Cram, and Gase pitted their respective entries.

Then on Lap 33, the field led by Allgaier was directed to pit road and the event was placed in a red flag period for four hours, 21 minutes and 59 seconds due to rain falling on the track. When the red flag lifted and the field returned to the track under caution at 10 p.m. ET. During the caution period, some, like Jeb Burton, Blaine Perkins, David Starr, Joey Gase and Josh Bilicki, pitted while the rest, led by Allgaier, remained on the track.

When the event resumed on Lap 37 at 10:08 p.m. ET, Allgaier motored ahead from the inside lane and he maintained the lead for a full cycle while teammate Zilisch kept pace from the runner-up spot. Amid multiple battles that ensued within the field, Allgaier retained the lead for another lap (Lap 39) before Zilisch made a move beneath Allgaier entering the frontstretch and barely led the next lap. Amid the side-by-side battle, Zilisch briefly got loose through the first two turns. This allowed Allgaier to motor back ahead with the lead from the outside lane.

Then on Lap 41, Allgaier slipped up the track and got loose through Turns 3 and 4. This allowed Zilisch to make another move beneath Allgaier through the frontstretch as the former led while Day used the momentum gained entering the frontstretch to assume the runner-up spot. Allgaier then engaged in a fierce battle with teammate Ross Chastain and Day to maintain the runner-up spot while Zilisch maintained a steady advantage.

When the first stage period concluded on Lap 45, Zilisch captured his third O’Reilly stage victory of the 2026 season. Allgaier, Chastain, Day and Mayer followed suit in the top five, respectively, while Love, Jones, Caruth, Crews and Creed were scored in the top 10, respectively.

Under the event’s first stage break period, nearly the entire field led by Allgaier returned to pit road, this time for pit service, while Blaine Perkins remained on the track. Following the pit stops and amid mixed pit strategies, Allgaier exited pit road first after only opting for fuel to his entry. Austin Hill, who only went for a two-tire pit service, exited second ahead of Zilisch, Day and Love, respectively.

The second stage period started on Lap 51 as Perkins and Allgaier occupied the front row. At the start, the field stacked up as Allgaier used the outside lane to outduel Perkins through the first two turns and lead through the backstretch. Shortly after and as the field fanned out to multiple lanes through the backstretch, the caution returned when Creed bumped and got Jones sideways exiting the backstretch. This resulted in Jones colliding with teammate Crews and both went up the track and collided with Harrison Burton against the outside wall while the rest of the field scattered to avoid the carnage. As a result, the Toyota trio of Jones, Crews and Burton were knocked out of contention.

The next restart on Lap 58 featured Allgaier and Hill dueling for the lead through the first two turns as the field fanned out. Amid the jostling of positions, both Hill and Chastain used the outside lane to motor past Allgaier through the backstretch and Turns 3 and 4 before Hill led the next lap. During the following lap, Love overtook Allgaier for third place as the latter was fighting the grip from his entry. Soon after, on Lap 60, the caution returned when Mayer, who was racing in between Day and Zilisch towards the top-five mark, got loose, veered to the right and smacked the outside wall through the first two turns. The incident ended Mayer’s event with a wrecked entry and heavy right-side damage.

As the event restarted on Lap 66, Love executed a three-wide move beneath teammate Hill and Chastain through the backstretch to storm to the lead. As the field behind fanned out and jostled for spots, Love led the next two laps before Chastain dueled and overtook Love entering the first two turns. Both Chastain and Love fiercely swapped and dueled for the lead over the next four laps before Chastain managed to clear and slightly drive away from Love.

The caution then returned on Lap 72 due to multiple competitors, most notably the leader Chastain, Allgaier, Gray and Creed, hitting the outside wall through the first two turns after slipping through oil that came out of Dawson Cram’s entry. Following the chaotic incidents, Chastain maintained the lead and Allgaier pitted for fresh tires while Gray and Creed went behind the wall (garage area) for repairs.

As the event entered an extensive caution period to clear the oil off the racing surface. The track conditions also became misty. With the visibility becoming foggier and amid multiple attempts to have a late-race shootout to conclude the second stage period, the second stage period concluded under caution. Chastain was scored as the leader and the stage winner. Love settled in second ahead of Hill, Sawalich, Day, Zilisch, Ryan Sieg, Cole Custer, Carson Kvapil and Caruth, respectively.

Another lap later, the field led by Chastain was directed to pit road and placed in a second red flag delay due to the wet, misty conditions. With the conditions not improving, NASCAR declared the event official and Chastain was awarded the victory.

With the victory, Chastain notched his third NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series career win in his 220th start, his first at Charlotte and his first driving for JR Motorsports. He also achieved his first O’Reilly victory since he won at Daytona International Speedway in July 2019 and the ninth victory of the 2026 season for JR Motorsports.

“I first watched a [JR Motorsports] car drive by me here at Charlotte in 2014,” Chastain said on pit road on the CW Network. He continued, saying, “I was on the apron in practice, and one drove by. I decided right then that I wanted to be in one [JR Motorsports car]. It took me until 2025 to get in one.

“That’s a testament to just continuing to work. I’ve asked and couldn’t raise the funds. I’ve asked if they were full. I had funds like there wasn’t room at the end…I did not think that we would win one like this, driving into the fence in liquid. I have no idea what it was, but I drove off into [Turn] 1 like normal, and there was something on the track. No matter how we win, I felt like we could’ve raced with [the field] again at the end.”

Ross
Photo by Logasn Allen for SpeedwayMedia.com

Amid his victory celebrations on pit road, Chastain took a moment to pay homage to his fellow competitor and two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Busch, the latter of whom died this past Thursday from a severe illness at age 41.

“This weekend, [it is] just incredible to try to grasp losing Kyle,” Chastain added. “I just don’t understand how he’s not here racing. I don’t grasp it mentally or spiritually. Obviously, racing is the best thing we can do to celebrate him and what he did in this sport and in his life. That feels good to win because it was a long time coming.”

Chastain, who has now won across NASCAR’s top three national touring series divisions at Charlotte Motor Speedway, would continue honoring Kyle Busch by performing Busch’s signature bow in Victory Lane before the former executed his own signature move by smashing a watermelon.

Meanwhile, Love was left bitter over NASCAR’s management of the overall event prior to the official call on pit road. Amid his frustrations, Love, who notched his third runner-up result of the 2026 season, took the lifelong lessons garnered in the wake of Kyle Busch’s death into perspective and tried to seek any positives while also paying homage to Busch.

“I’m mad,” Love said. “I think it’s a complete joke [with NASCAR] handling [the event] how they handled it. I was really mad when I got out of the car, for obvious reasons, get on top of the pit box and realize that I got to do interviews. Then I kind of realized if this week’s taught us anything, it’s that this all doesn’t matter as much as we think it does. There are things way more important than a trophy. As much as I’m angry and confused and upset, I also realize there’s a lot of hurt people right now. I think we can find some OK-ness and knowing that.”

Austin Hill, who is going to pilot Kyle Busch’s re-numbered 8 entry to 33 for this weekend’s Cup Series’ Coca-Cola 600 event, settled in third place while William Sawalich and Corey Day finished in the top five. Connor Zilisch, Ryan Sieg, Cole Custer, Carson Kvapil, and Rajah Caruth completed the top 10, respectively.

There were 14 lead changes for seven different leaders. The event featured six cautions for 54 laps. In addition, 29 of 38 starters finished on the lead lap.

Following the 15th event of the 2026 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series season, Justin Allgaier, who ended up in 29th place, continues to lead the standings by 145 points over Jesse Love, 167 over Corey Day, 186 over Sheldon Creed, and 216 over Brandon Jones.

Results:

  1. Ross Chastain, 28 laps led, Stage 2 winner
  2. Jesse Love led four laps
  3. Austin Hill, one lap led
  4. William Sawalich
  5. Corey Day
  6. Connor Zilisch, seven laps led, Stage 1 winner
  7. Ryan Sieg
  8. Cole Custer
  9. Carson Kvapil
  10. Rajah Caruth
  11. Sammy Smith
  12. Parker Retzlaff
  13. Anthony Alfredo
  14. Dean Thompson
  15. Leland Honeyman Jr.
  16. Austin Green
  17. Lavar Scott
  18. Patrick Staropoli
  19. Kyle Sieg
  20. David Starr
  21. Ryan Ellis
  22. Jeb Burton
  23. Joey Gase
  24. Blaine Perkins led three laps
  25. Josh Bilicki
  26. Nathan Byrd
  27. Brennan Poole
  28. Andrew Patterson
  29. Justin Allgaier, 36 laps led
  30. Jeremy Clements, one lap down
  31. Taylor Gray – OUT, Accident
  32. Sheldon Creed – OUT, Accident
  33. Dawson Cram – OUT, Engine
  34. JJ Yeley – OUT, Fuel Pump
  35. Brandon Jones, 29 laps down
  36. Sam Mayer – OUT – Accident, 12 laps led
  37. Brent Crews – OUT, Accident
  38. Harrison Burton – OUT, Accident

Next on the 2026 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series schedule is Nashville Superspeedway in Lebanon, Tennessee, for the Sports Illustrated Resorts 250. The event is scheduled to occur next Saturday, May 30, at 7:30 p.m. ET on the CW Network, PRN Radio, and SiriusXM.

Tyler Reddick will start on pole for the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte

Photo by Logan Allen for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Tyler Reddick was awarded the pole position for the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway on Saturday, May 23.

The event’s starting lineup was going to be determined through a single-car, single-lap qualifying session. A total of 39 competitors vying for 39 starting spots cycled around Charlotte Motor Speedway once to post the fastest lap amongst one another. The competitor who posted the fastest single lap was awarded the pole position.

Due to inclement weather, the event’s starting lineup was determined using a qualifying metric formula per the NASCAR rulebook. As a result, Tyler Reddick, driver of the No. 45 Mobil 1/O’Reilly Auto Parts Toyota Camry XSE entry for 23XI Racing, was awarded the top-starting spot for this year’s longest, crown-jewel event on the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series schedule.

Reddick, this year’s Daytona 500 champion from Corning, California, is currently leading in both the driver’s and owner’s standings. He is also coming off a fifth-place result during the latest Cup points-paying event at Watkins Glen International (May 10). This year’s Coca-Cola 600 event will mark Reddick’s third time starting on pole position based on NASCAR’s metric qualifying formula, with his other two instances occurring at EchoPark Speedway in mid-February and Talladega Superspeedway in mid-April.

Reddick will share the front row with Ty Gibbs, the latter of whom finished in third place at Watkins Glen and is ranked in sixth place in the driver’s standings. Shane van Gisbergen, who won at Watkins Glen, will start in third place and share the second row with Michael McDowell, the latter of whom finished in the runner-up spot to van Gisbergen at Watkins Glen. Chase Briscoe, who finished in fourth place at Watkins Glen, will start in fifth place and share the third row with Ryan Blaney, with Blaney finishing in 11th at Watkins Glen.

Chris Buescher, Austin Cindric, Austin Dillon and AJ Allmendinger will start in the top 10, respectively, ahead of Denny Hamlin, who won last weekend’s NASCAR All-Star Race at Dover Motor Speedway.

Notably, Austin Hill, who is driving the No. 33 Cheddar’s Scratch Kitchen Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 entry for Richard Childress Racing will start in 13th place. Hill is piloting the entry that has been renumbered from 8 following the death of two-time Cup Series champion and former Coca-Cola 600 champion, Kyle Busch.

Photo by John Knittel for SpeedwayMedia.com.

In addition, Katherine Legge, who is attempting to become the first female competitor to achieve the Memorial Day ‘Double’ by competing in both the Indianapolis 500 and the Coca-Cola 600 on the same day, will start in 37th place for the latter event. Legge is starting in 26th place for this year’s 110th running of the Indianapolis 500.

With 39 competitors vying for 39 starting spots, all made the main event.

Earlier today, the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series’ North Carolina Education Lottery 200 event at Charlotte was postponed a second time from 8 a.m. ET to 9 p.m. ET for Saturday due to inclement weather. The NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series’ Charbroil 300 event at Charlotte also had its practice and qualifying sessions, but plans to hold the event at 5 p.m. ET. The Cup Series plans to host a Coca-Cola 600 combined practice session in preparation for Sunday’s main event.

Coca-Cola 600 – Starting Lineup:

  1. Tyler Reddick
  2. Ty Gibbs
  3. Shane van Gisbergen
  4. Michael McDowell
  5. Chase Briscoe
  6. Ryan Blaney
  7. Chris Buescher
  8. Austin Cindric
  9. Austin Dillon
  10. AJ Allmendinger
  11. Denny Hamlin
  12. Ryan Preece
  13. Austin Hill
  14. Daniel Suarez
  15. John Hunter Nemechek
  16. Chase Elliott
  17. Christopher Bell
  18. Kyle Larson
  19. Zane Smith
  20. Todd Gilliland
  21. Erik Jones
  22. Cole Custer
  23. Carson Hocevar
  24. Bubba Wallace
  25. Connor Zilisch
  26. Brad Keselowski
  27. Ross Chastain
  28. Noah Gragson
  29. Alex Bowman
  30. Riley Herbst
  31. William Byron
  32. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
  33. Joey Logano
  34. Josh Berry
  35. Ty Dillon
  36. Timmy Hill
  37. Katherine Legge
  38. Cody Ware
  39. Corey Heim

The 2026 Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway is scheduled to occur on Sunday, May 24, and air at 6 p.m. ET on Prime Video, PRN Radio, SiriusXM and HBO MAX.

TOYOTA RACING – NCS Charlotte Quotes – Denny Hamlin – 05.23.26

TOYOTA RACING – Denny Hamlin
NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

CONCORD, NC (May 23, 2026) – Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin was made available to the media on Saturday prior to the NASCAR Cup Series race from Charlotte Motor Speedway.

DENNY HAMLIN, No. 11 National Debt Relief Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

What was it like for Kyle to come to Joe Gibbs Racing in 2008, and how did your relationship evolve over the next 15 years?

“I mean, it was eye opening for one. When I signed my deal with Joe Gibbs Racing as development driver, it was kind of, I think it was the first year he going to run full-time with Hendrick in the O’Reilly Series. I just remember that, it was kind of him and Martin (Truex) and just those two guys going back and forth and just he was really, really good, but I didn’t really know until he got in the same equipment that I got in and I could see how fast he was and just generally how good he was. At that point, it was like this is going to be super challenging to be the fastest and the best at your organization. You are going to have a really tough time, as long as this guy’s your teammate. So just at that point when he came over and obviously set the world on fire, it certainly was eye-opening to me. To see kind of how in-depth he was with the race cars quite a bit different style than myself personally. But that was just kind of how he grew up is being super hands-on with the cars and he was very in tune with wanting to be involved with setups and things like that strategy. I was just a feedback kind of person. That was it you were just going to get the driving side of that from me. So it certainly challenged me to evolve and when I came into NASCAR itself, it was like, I come from short tracks. I didn’t come from a mile and a halves and stuff like this. It just was such an important part of my development process to have a teammate like him that was good at stuff like this, that I could learn from. So there’s no question, there was many, many instances where me and Kyle got to switch cars at a test, and at that point when I sat in the cars, I was like, okay, so this is what a winning car feels like. This is just not the direction that I would think, and then vice versa, we go to short tracks, he’d get in and be like, man, it’s a lot different than what I would shoot for, and that combo is what made us more rounded than we ever were as race car drivers, just having that opportunity. I’m just super grateful for the opportunity to work with them as long as I did.”

Are there things that the public doesn’t know that helped make Kyle great?

“Well, I mean, there’s some of it that just some people are just more skilled than others, and he was just far more skilled than 99.9% of the people that did it, and I don’t know how he did some of the stuff that he did behind the wheel. I was teammates and got beat by him more times than I beat him. Just, I don’t know. He was exceptional in what he did. I don’t know what that is. I think he had a really good upbringing and had his brother to kind of push off of. That probably was super helpful. He got to race all kinds of different cars when he was younger, started at a very young age, but there’s still that it factor that can’t be learned and that’s what kind of set them apart from everyone else.”

How would you like to see Kyle be honored going forward?

“I really don’t I don’t know the answer necessarily to that. Everyone pays tribute in different ways. It’s just like everyone grieves in different ways and some people celebrate in different ways. So, it’s very hard to say what is the right thing. You just try to do the, as a person, you try to do the right thing, and honor him yourself and try not to judge anybody else’s celebrations or tributes because they’re celebrating in their own way.”

What can you tell us about the level of intensity that Kyle held?

“It was definitely a level of intensity, but…I don’t know if arrogance is the right word, but he earned it. Like, he backed it up. Like, it was well earned. That’s what I think made him so good is that he could drive in on lap one lap of practice and say, it’s going to stick because I’m going to make it stick. and so that level of confidence is what makes the greats of sports better than everyone else. I never have been that guy that – every weekend we talk about, I got to work my way into this. I’ll see you on Sunday. He just had the swagger, and he had it when he was a rookie and he had it at all times. That’s something that just, uh, doesn’t come by too often and you saw kind of Michael Jordan’s documentary, right? Like his swagger and confidence that, and that just set him apart and allowed him to take himself to another level, and that as teammates, that’s what I saw out of Kyle’s. It’s just the ability to reach a level that it’s hard for me to comprehend or be able to replicate.”

Do you think there are things you are going to pay attention to health wise after this week?

“You’re crazy if you don’t have a certain level of paranoia at this point. I just know my side of things, we really try to prepare as best we can, and for all things that may or may not happen, and to try to not leave any burden to the family or anything like that, but you try to live every day to the fullest. That’s what this reminds us of, right? You try to prepare and all those other things, but at some time, you have to just enjoy the day and the moment that you’re in, because tomorrow’s not given.”

Was your interaction with Dover with Kyle your last interaction?

“It was good. I mean, we had laughs and smiles together. That was really a good opportunity. I wasn’t even aware that we were doing it together. I don’t think it was planned. I think he might have been early to that appearance. Quite unusual, but he was early. I think he was supposed to be before me or after me and instead went on with me for that one. But it was good. We got to talk about old people’s stuff (laughter). There were aches and body pains, things like that, and just they were listening off kind of our accomplishments and stuff, and it was like, Kyle, that just means that we’re old (laughter). That’s it. This many starts and got all these accomplishments. It just means we’ve been around a really, really long time, and so it was really good to have that last interaction with them and see them.”

What were you doing and what was your reaction when you got the news?

“I was at an autograph session and just kind of right in the middle of it. I got a call and I knew I needed to step away and take it for a few minutes and then come back.”

About Toyota

Toyota (NYSE:TM) has been a part of the cultural fabric in North America for nearly 70 years, and is committed to advancing sustainable, next-generation mobility through our Toyota and Lexus brands, plus our more than 1,800 dealerships.

Toyota directly employs nearly 64,000 people in North America who have contributed to the design, engineering, and assembly of over 50 million cars and trucks at our 14 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.

Ford Racing Notes and Quotes – Joey Logano Charlotte Media Availability

Ford Racing Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Coca-Cola 600 Media Availability — Charlotte Motor Speedway
Saturday, May 23, 2026

Joey Logano, driver of the No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang Dark Horse, has one career NASCAR Cup Series victory at Charlotte Motor Speedway with that coming in the Bank of America 500 in 2015. Logano held a Q&A session with reporters earlier today and spoke about a variety of topics.

JOEY LOGANO, No. 22 Shell/Pennzoil Ford Mustang Dark Horse – APPARENTLY THERE WAS A BASKETBALL GAME AT TALLADEGA WITH THE FAMILIES AND KYLE WAS SMACK TALKING YOU THROUGH THE ENTIRE THING. WHAT CAN YOU TELL US ABOUT THAT GAME AND WAS A REFLECTION OF THE THAWING OF YOUR RELATIONSHIP? “First off, our hearts are broken. I think our community couldn’t be more surprised. Our eyes have been open to a lot of different things here in the last couple days and it’s affected everybody here in a very unique way in a very heart touching way as well throughout this week and seeing how everybody comes together in moments like this is pretty impressive to see. But, yes, to answer your question, probably one of the last times I talked to Kyle was at the playground at Talladega. I remember seeing him and the first thing I walked up to him because it was right after he did a podcast saying how he didn’t like me, and, of course, because I just hit things head-on I walked up to him and said, ‘What the heck, I thought we were friends?’ Then we had a good laugh about it and joked about it. Brexton and Hudson, they play together all the time. He’s a great kid and so they’re shooting hoops and, to be honest with you, neither one of us knew how to play basketball worth a crap, so I’m glad no cameras saw it because it would have been a little embarrassing. It hurt my argument of being an athlete, so I’m glad nobody saw it, but it was a side of Kyle where you can get him away from the racetrack and away from the competitive environment. I got to spend a lot of time with him flying to the west coast and playing cards and stuff like that. Even though we had this little rivalry, if you will, on the racetrack and we didn’t see eye-to-eye on a lot of things from that perspective, we were able to put that stuff away and joke around and have a little piece of what that is and, to your point, who know what would have been once we were done racing. You see everybody changes. When you’re done racing you bury the hatchet, if you will. It was obviously far too young and far too soon. There aren’t words to describe how I feel, but also everybody else in the garage today, and not just the garage but our fans. You see the social media stuff from around the world and all the way to our president. You think about the impact that Kyle made in our sport, but also around the world is pretty incredible.”

WHAT MADE KYLE SUCH A GREAT DRIVER? “Obviously, he had a ridiculous amount of God given talent. You knew that from when he first started. He was one of the youngest to come in. He was the youngest coming in right before me, so I watched everything he did and tried to learn from it, so he had a ton of talent, but he had a ridiculous amount of grit, which was probably what made him one of the greatest is that he was fiery, he had the will to win and he was gonna push and do whatever he could do to make that happen. You saw plenty of moves on the racetrack. He was very intelligent and very smart about the race car. He knew what he wanted, and I always feel like he raced very fair on the racetrack on top of all that, but I think what made him great was just his determination. I mean, the guy was out there racing anything he could get in at any point, just like O’Donnell probably said it the best, he was an American badass. When you think race car driver and what that person should be like or would be like, Kyle Busch is probably one of the first that comes to your mind on the type of racer he was. Like I said, he was fair about a lot of things and he was tough, really tough.”

IS THERE ONE THING HE DID ON THE TRACK THAT JUMPS OUT TO YOU AS A MEMORY? “Gosh, there are quite a few. He was quite the highlight reel on so many levels, whether it was on track or sitting where I’m sitting right now, I think we all have memories of just the things that he would do or say was just pure and raw. On the racetrack, I always think about those saves that he had at Daytona and he’s sparking the track bar mount across the track and how amazing that was, and obviously the wins. The numbers are staggering. The numbers I don’t see ever being beat. A lot of those stats and records will forever be there. That legacy and legend will continue for generations into the future, in my opinion. It’s hard to pick one. Like I said, he’s quite the highlight reel for everybody.”

CAN YOU TALK MORE ABOUT WHAT YOUR FIRST IMPRESSIONS WERE OF KYLE, AND WAS THERE A TIPPING POINT IN THAT RELATIONSHIP WHERE IT IMPROVED? “I feel like we probably had a rollercoaster of a relationship. Early in my career, he was my teammate, so obviously I watched and learned and created a good relationship there. We went on vacation together. I remember and that relationship I still think was there deep down inside. Unfortunately, sometimes competition gets in the way of things and kind of was there for a little bit, but I do think over the last five or six years that relationship was growing, maybe not at a very fast rate, but it was definitely mending. We raced each other a lot on the racetrack and was very fair about stuff. We may have had fun in the media a little bit and said things and gone along with it, but I do think a lot of it there was a lot of respect between the both of us, definitely me towards him on what he was able to accomplish on the track. Like I said, we had a lot of laughs and a lot of fun – kind of joking about a lot of it just because I’m gonna hit it head on and make an awkward moment and talk about it, and it was always fun to see the reaction of Kyle in those moments and just kind of breaking that ice and breaking that tension. Over time, that relationship would grow. Like I said, our kids would really be one of the biggest pieces that was growing that relationship. When you’re over at MRO and everyone is hanging out, and that’s probably one of the things that has hit me the hardest throughout all of this is thinking about Brexton and Lennix. I couldn’t imagine. The first thing I want to do is just go hug my kids, and I’m sure everybody in here thought about their family members immediately. I think that’s one of the biggest things we can take out of all this is just taking every moment living it to the fullest. You truly don’t know when it’s your last day. I don’t think anyone would have ever thought. Kyle is only five years older than me. You don’t think about that type of stuff. Immediately I started thinking about what are the things I’m putting off healthwise that I should be attacking right now. I’m not making speculations of anything that happened with Kyle, I just know personally inside – and all of us should be thinking that too – is we shouldn’t put anything off. We should hit everything head-on if we can, mend relationships if we can, hug our loved ones while we can because you just never know.”

ONE OF THE DRIVERS SAID EARLIER IT DOESN’T FEEL LIKE A RACE WEEKEND. WHAT IS IT LIKE OUT THERE AND WHAT WILL IT BE LIKE TRYING TO GO RACE ON SUNDAY? “It’s definitely a very different vibe. I never really felt anything like this before at the racetrack. I was up in the booth last night for the Truck race and it was a different feeling from up there. The majority of the time we talked about Kyle as we should. We talked about some stories. We asked a lot of drivers for their stories and obviously that is continuing into today and the rest of the weekend and I’m sure for many years into the future it will be like that, as it should be, but it is definitely a sad day at the racetrack. I can’t say there are many days that people can say that. A lot of people say that a day at the racetrack is better than a day anywhere else, but today it just doesn’t feel normal. You just kind of see less smiles and everybody is sad. It’s an emotion that we’re all feeling as raw as it can be and we’re all trying to handle it in our own way while we’re still going about our business – as you guys are writing countless stories at the moment and we’re still trying to figure out how do we win the Coca-Cola 600 – but there are some pretty heavy emotions on our hearts.”

GOING FORWARD, HOW DO YOU THINK RACES WILL CHANGE WITH HIS ABSENCE? “I’m not sure how to answer that. I think the race itself is different without him out there, but I think the industry itself at a larger scale will be impacted more so than just the race. The race is always just the end. That’s the result of what everything you do going into the week and something that I thought was pretty interesting last night up there in the booth was how many team members he’s worked with in at least the Truck Series. You hear stories from so many different people and how Kyle impacted them one way or the other, most of them being ‘he made me better.’ That was the common thing that I heard. ‘He forced me to be better.’ He made people feel uncomfortable. He pushed them. That’s a good trait to have. You want a leader that’s like that and he’s touched countless team members throughout all three garages. I can’t say I’ve done that. That’s something that’s pretty unique. For me, I’ve driven for one team for the most part – two, but for the most part I know our group really, really well. He’s worked with so many different teams, whether it’s the Trucks or Xfinity or Cup. All of them, he’s been around for years and he’s made people stronger that was around him, and I think that’s the impact that he’s leaving behind and that’s gonna change a lot, but also will continue for generations – the impact he made – but it will change a lot going into the future too.”

HOW WILL YOU REMEMBER THE BATTLES WITH KYLE AND HOW DOES THAT PERSPECTIVE CHANGE IN LIGHT OF ALL THIS? “I feel like I’ve always been the kind of person that wants to see the best of anybody. Like I say, Kyle had a lot of great traits and the memories on track, obviously, they’ll be there, but racing isn’t what life is, you know what I mean? I know we all get consumed in this stuff and it is a great sport and it’s done a lot for my family, it’s done a lot for everybody here and the fans and the joy it brings for everybody – absolutely – but it’s not everything. It’s not what makes you as a person, and I think that’s important to remember throughout these type of moments. The moments that I’ll probably remember some of the most is like Michael (McDowell) was talking about earlier when we were playing basketball or just cutting up with each other, giving each other a hard time. I mean, there were a lot of moments where we just picked on each other. It’s sad to lose that guy that we had those moments with. In moments like this, you learn to appreciate those things too because as much as at times he frustrated me and made me mad, it’s kind of sad to lose that. It’s kind of like a Tom & Jerry situation. You kind of miss when you don’t have that guy to do that with anymore, but definitely, like I said, and we had that respect for each other in that same way. It’s just really sad, but those are probably the memories that will stick with me as much as anything that happened on track.”

TOYOTA RACING – NCS Charlotte Quotes – Joe Gibbs – 05.23.26

TOYOTA RACING – Joe Gibbs
NASCAR Cup Series Quotes

CONCORD, NC (May 23, 2026) – Joe Gibbs Racing owner and founder Joe Gibbs was made available to the media on Saturday prior to the NASCAR Cup Series race from Charlotte Motor Speedway.

JOE GIBBS, owner and founder, Joe Gibbs Racing

Opening remarks.

“Well, just a terrible time, obviously. For all of us, the NASCAR family, and so a few thoughts I had first was just for Sam, and Brexton and Lennix, Tom, Gaye, just for that family. Our focus is going to be for the future for them, because we’re going to be there, and so whatever they need, we want to be a part of that, and so we just try and just encourage the Sam and everything that she’s going to go through. Our family has kind of gone through this and so, it’s just, honestly, it’s the worst thing that could happen in life, and so we just want to encourage them. Secondly, I just want to say that for Richard (Childress) and RCR (Richard Childress Racing), we just wanted to work in concert with them, and I reached out to Richard and told him that we just want to be together on this. We feel so, so much hurt for him, and RCR. Just a terrible thing to happen to them, and what’s happened to him also in the past, and so we just really want to do anything we can to encourage our RCR, and we want to work together as we go forward with this with them. The first time I heard about Kyle Busch, Coy, my son, was racing Trucks, and I forget where they were, it was, like, someplace Nashville or someplace. I don’t know where it was, and so I called him to kind of see how it was going after practice, and he said, ‘Hey Dad, there’s a 16-year-old here, and said he’s two seconds faster than anybody. He said, I hope to kick him out.’ (laughter) Actually, what happened, it was true. It was Kyle Busch, and they kicked him out. He was too young to be there and was so fast. So that was the first time that you kind of hear about Kyle, and when you think about everything that he accomplished – 63 cup wins, 234 wins in all three series and two championships. Just a phenomenal talent. There were really kind of three different things, I was going to mention to y’all, that as I thought about Kyle and everything, that I got to experience with him, and we got to experience with him, not just me, but everybody at our race team. The very first thing was that wreck, the crash in 2015, and so I think it said a lot about Kyle because I’ve been around a lot of athletes in football, and what have you. When they get a serious injury, that can really affect you, about your thoughts, going forward. So that night, after that wreck, I went to the hospital there where they had him, and at that point, he was on a gurney, and the doctor was there. Sam was there. Everybody was kind of there, and Kyle was raving at the doctor, and he was going, Get me in there. Fix this. I want to get back to racing, and so, I don’t know if he was drugged up some or not (laughter), but that was his approach, and honestly, his foot was, I thought, for us, the thing that we were worried about the most, because his foot was really in a bad situation. So, they fixed it, put the rod in his leg that night, and then we flew him back to here to Anderson, and he did his foot, and there was a lot to that, a lot of screws, and all kinds of stuff. So, you’re kind of worried about that. Obviously, that’s your braking foot and everything. I gave him one day, I went over to the house, and so I walked into the house, and he already had a trampoline type deal, and he’s doing pull ups on this thing. You know what I mean? So I’m standing there talking to him, and then he goes, watch this. He started wiggling his toes at the end of the cast, and I went like this, I went, Hey, are you supposed to be doing that? He goes, No, they told me not to do that. I said, quit doing that (laughter). But I just wanted to make a point to y’all. When you think about that, here’s an athlete really getting hurt, both of his legs and, yeah, his one leg and his foot, and for him to come back through that process, he was after it, honestly, every single day, in rehab. He came back in 11 weeks, and so I’m sitting on the box at Sonoma when he came back. That was a road race. That’s what we were really worried about, because of his foot, and the pressure and everything. So, we’re just hoping somehow, he can get through this, and I was sitting up there with some of the Mars people. I remember that. At the end of that race, when he came across that finish line and won that race, they were crying, everybody was crying. So, when you think about that, he came back in 11 weeks. He won five races and a championship. So, I just think, as far as courage and determination and a desire to win, I got to tell you, I’m not sure how many people could have or athletes could have gone through that, and handle it that way. So the one thing I always felt about Kyle, that guy had great courage. He was not afraid of almost anything, and he had a burning desire to race. It was just inside of him. So that’s the first thing I was going to mention. The second thing is, I honestly feel like if some of you heard that interview with Adam (Stevens), his crew chief, for our period of time, there at Joe Gibbs Racing. I think he had the best description of Kyle, and he said it was like a freight train. This thing is going, and you can get on, there’s going to be a big prize on the ride, and if you get in the way, you’re going get run over, okay? (laughter) I thought that was a great description of him and a bunch of all just got on board. I know we did at our race team, and it was full bore. He’s going, and there’s be some good things in there, and then every now and then, he’s going to run over a few things, and cross the line, and that passion and everything came out in so many different ways. Honestly, I may have 100 Kyle Busch stories, but I’ll just give you one that kind of says a lot about him. We were at Loudon, New Hampshire, and he finished second, and so I kind of slid over to where they’re interviewing people there, because sometimes, sometimes, there might be something I could have to handle afterwards (laughter), and so I slid over there, and his interview was absolutely great, and so I said, Well, gosh, you know, he must be happy. He finished second, so he’s probably happy. He walked 10 yards to me. I was standing there, and he went just like this, he went, Your cars sucked (laughter), and he kept right all walking. Some of you heard it because I was, I was nervous, the press heard that. You know what I mean? Those are examples of just his passion for things. It happened one other time, I give you one other quick one. We’re at Indy, and if you guys probably remember this, it was about the second or third restart. We had great cars. Both of us, both of us. Martin (Truex Jr.) was on the front row with Kyle, and that was our alliance car that Martin was in. They restarted, probably the two best cars. Martin got down on the curb. Some of you maybe remember this, and he shot up and just took Kyle out, put him right in the wall. So again, I knew this was going to be, this is not going to be good. Our alliance car, so I go over to where they’re interviewing the press, and again, Kyle handled looked pretty good, and then he walked to me and he goes just like this. There’s your alliance car, and he just kept walking (laughter). I mean, the passion that he had, and all of us experienced that, and I think that’s just, that was him, and I just admired that part of him so much. Did he carry him too far sometimes? Yeah, but the way he came across, but all of us saw that, and you guys probably witnessed, you probably have all of you, a lot of Kyle Busch stories. But then the third thing I was wanting to mention, because there’s a part of him that I just, I just really admired, and that was kind of highlighted in several things with his personality and the way he dealt with things. One of those is you guys may know, we do a Christmas video, and when J.D. was here, he and Dave Alpern, were Sal and Pern and they were – this wild video, and all kinds of stupid stuff. They had all kinds of skits and everything, and I’m going tell you, that Kyle Busch, he loved that. Every single thing we asked him to do, at one point, they had these plastic gloves, and they shoved it down over their head, you know what I mean? They got the fingers up like this. He was full bore on all that. Whether it was in a car, singing all kinds of stupid songs and stuff, he was full bore on the, he had a great sense of humor, but things like that. When he was away from a racetrack, he was so funny, and then we had one skit, I always remember. It was probably the best one we had. It was Kyle, and we had the young drivers, you know, in Xfinity, sitting in front of him. He was going do be the anger management coach, coaching the guys up, and it was all these funny things about how to handle things when they don’t go wrong, so the other part of that too, that I would just say to you, as we all know, in our sport, one of the most important things for a driver at this level is to be able to, you know, represent some of the biggest and best companies in the world. For our sport, it’s different. I don’t call them sponsors, I call them partners. Great partners, and to be able to keep a great partner for a long period of time, with the driver is really, really hard to do, because they got to constantly be talking to the top executives in the company, entertaining, signing stuff. It’s just nonstop. It’s a huge part of our sport that you don’t have in other sports. Mars, I reached out to Pam, Victoria, William, this week, and what they really said to me, it was more than a sponsorship. It was a partnership, and they went with him through all of that. There was a side of Kyle that was funny, and you get him away from a racetrack, really quick witted would say funny things, he could laugh at himself. He would be a part of our funny jokes and stuff that we would have at our complex, and he did a masterful job of keeping our sponsors. I mean, you think about that, five contracts with Mars. One of the biggest, most powerful companies in the world, and it was a personal. It was personal relationships he had with the key partners in that company. So, for all those things, and then the other side of that side of Kyle and Sam was Bundle of Joy, the way he cared about others that were going through similar type things that him and Sam had gone through, and the way he kind of reached out with that tells the side of Kyle that all of us, I just wanted to kind of mention that, because it was so important, because that part of him, sometimes, some people really didn’t get to see, but we got to see it. I would say this for me personally; I’ll have Kyle Busch stories forever. I can’t tell you how many funny things he did, and some of the things would shock, shock me, and everything, and I’m going, What the heck is he doing? (laughter) You know what I mean? I said, For God’s sakes, quit pushing my buttons. Say that to yourself. Funny things like that. So anyway, I just end with that, that this was somebody that we all kind of admired, a great athlete, that can do things that all of the rest of us you envision yourself, we admire pro sports, because these guys do things that are just, we admire, because it’s unbelievable the talent that they have. Just wanted to share those things with you.”

When was your last communication with Kyle?

“Here’s another example of Kyle. When Ty (Gibbs) won his race at Bristol, he reached out to Ty and said, Congrats on that. I thought it was great, and then he called me. I thought that was really something that he was willing to do. That was the last time I had a chance to talk with him.”

How important was Kyle’s personality for the sport of NASCAR?

“I think we love that about our sport; you see it in other sports too. Sometimes you admire the person that’s different, that’s going about things differently, and their passion, they wear it on their sleeve, and if Kyle was thinking something, he said it, he wasn’t planning things. He just did things, and I think we all kind of admired that, and I think we love that – that’s part of our sport, for sure, because our fans love their drivers and the people they’re pulling for, and so, that part of somebody, I remember, I would, when we first started with him, as I rode through, going to different hospitalities and stuff, I’d see people with the M&M’s when first started showing up, and I would stop, and sign something for him and say, Thank you, and after a while, it was a lot of people, because they had that M&M’s on, and so, yeah, you just saw him kind of, his popularity grew with the fans, and it was different. The one thing I always remember, if you remember, sometimes I would go, What the heck? But remember when he got out of the car at Bristol, and all the fans were booing, and he goes like this, he goes… (laughter) How do you come up with that? You know what I mean? And I thought to myself, why is he doing that? You know what I mean? So, I don’t know, I just love the guy, and the way he approached things, sometimes you would question, but he was definitely a unique person, and we really, really will miss Kyle.”

What was it like from your perspective to watch Kyle grow as a husband and father during his time with you?

“I do think there was definitely a change. I remember that very first year, to be quite truthful, probably one of the most exciting things that happened with us in racing, was when he came to us, and Mars signed on with us. I think they’d won, like, three races, they’d been in racing for, like, eight years or something. In that first year, with Toyota, and we won eight races with Kyle. I mean, it was something, like, you just can’t even dream that that would happen. But then I do think he, at that point, single in life, I think then Sam, when Sam came along and I saw a definite difference where he was really caring for somebody else and started thinking about other things in his life, and then, of course, with Brexton and Lennix, I think that is another step, and so I definitely felt like there was the maturing part of it, and he’s really was caring for somebody else, for sure, and a big way. So you kind of see that in somebody, a young guy, that goes through that process, and we kind of lived, lived through that with him.”

How do you start to counsel with them with your experience with extreme loss?

“Yeah, I kind of lean in a way on Heather and Melissa, my two daughters in laws, and I think the first part of this is just trauma, for sure, and so we just need to encourage and be there and love them. But I think then it’s the journey down the road, you know? And for me, I think what’s really important for Sam will be, and, Brexton and Lennix, and so I want to be there for that. We all do, you know? I think all of you will be supporting through this process, but I think it’s down the road that’s really important, and there’ll be ways that we can probably encourage the family and support them. I know Richard (Childress) is focused also on all that. I don’t want to lose out on how important this is for Richard and them. So anyway, I think it’ll be down the road, which is really, really becomes important, and I know that’s been the ways with my grandkids.”

What ways do you feel like Kyle helped make you a better owner?

“The first part of when we first got together, what you’re trying to do is build a race team. If we look at this, we started with 17 people and one car. We had Jimmy Makar, running everything, and so the journey to, I thought that’s the way it would always be. I thought it was going to be a hobby type thing, and so it just started growing, and today, it’s become what our family, and everybody that works there, you think about so many times, it’s all the people that work there that built the race team. Honestly, for us, we got so many people that, it’s the people that build it. It wasn’t us. We did our part to be there, the family, and everybody at work, Dave (Alpern), administration, Chris (Helein), everybody’s been there for a long period of time. We’d been a part of the family, but it was really the people there that grew our race team. When came on board, you’d think about it. We just signed with Toyota. We didn’t know, we made a decision because we wanted a chance to maybe distinguish ourselves with a manufacturer, thought that might be a chance for us, but for us to get off to the start we did, and for him to be such a key part of that, that was just a huge stepping stone for us. So you kind of look at that and say, He meant a lot to us, and then the other key drivers that came along that were a part of our process and our history. It’s just a great thing to be a part of something like this and see all the people that were a part of building our race team. I give out the awards, the 20-year awards, at Christmas to our employees. I think I gave out 15 last year. We got people who’d been there 30, and so when we make decisions, I know J.D. was always, he said, Dad, it was always the people. We need to make decisions based off of the people that work for us, and so, he was always intent on that. Well, Kyle was a part of helping us build that, because we all know, you’re not going anywhere unless you got a great athlete driving that car. Now, he’s not the only one that’s a team sport. You got to have the crew chiefs, the pit crews, and everything that it takes. You know what? What kind of amazed me, when I got into racing, it was, I thought it was a hobby. One car, go the racetrack, fix it, come back, go the racetrack thing, and today, it’s one of the things that you have to do everything. You’ve got travel now. You got PR, you got social and digital. You got to build the cars. You got the front office and everything that it takes, and so, really, it becomes a real, it’s a team effort to everybody, and he was a key part of that. We know the drivers get a lot of attention. They deserve it.”

In what ways do you want to honor and pay tribute to him in the future?

“I think we just want to, like I mentioned, working with Richard (Childress) and NASCAR and Toyota for us, and all those ways, we want to be a part of whatever we can do. We’re going to do some things, obviously, for the race. We’re going to do some things on our cars. All of our cars are going to have Rowdy over the door. They’re going to have a sticker that shows Kyle with the trophy, with the NASCAR trophy, and things like that, but those are things for this weekend, but there’ll be other things as we go forward, and I’m sure we’ll all work together, but we’re want to make sure we work with Richard, and we don’t want to step on anything there that they want to do. So, we’re working together. I texted Richard and told him that. That we want to be a part of whatever he wants to be a part of.”

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Ford Racing Notes and Quotes – Brad Keselowski Charlotte Media Availability

Ford Racing Notes and Quotes
NASCAR Cup Series
Coca-Cola 600 Media Availability — Charlotte Motor Speedway
Saturday, May 23, 2026

Brad Keselowski, driver/owner of the No. 6 BuildSubmarines.com Ford Mustang Dark Horse, won the Coca-Cola 600 in 2020. He stopped by the Charlotte Motor Speedway infield media center this morning to talk about this weekend’s race, along with his memories of Kyle Busch.

BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 6 BuildSubmarines.com Ford Mustang Dark Horse – AS A DRIVER HAVING RACED KYLE, WHAT WILL HIS ABSENCE BE LIKE IN THAT REGARD AS A COMPETITOR? “I don’t know if it’s soaked in for me fully. I’ve been racing or going to racetracks and competing against Kyle Busch since 2001, so that’s 24-25 years. It certainly will be different. He brought a lot of different things to this sport and specifically on track a lot of different ways of looking at it – fresh ideas that were things that I at least learned from, so a really dedicated racer and innovator and specifically was strategic with the moves that he would make on the racetrack. I was just watching a video of him from Dover last week, where he had some kind of issue and was smart enough to realize he could speed down pit road and it would be better for him, and those are the type of things that were just quintessential Kyle. That’s irreplaceable.”

HAD YOUR RELATIONSHIP WITH KYLE STARTED TO THAW AT ALL THE LAST COUPLE OF YEARS? HOW MUCH DO YOU LAMENT NOT HAVING THE CHANCE TO SEE WHERE THAT RELATIONSHIP COULD HAVE EVOLVED IN YOUR RESPECTIVE POST-DRIVING CAREERS? “I’ll start with the latter, kind of selfishly I was hopeful for a long time that our racing career would continue on a journey that saw us in the Hall of Fame and doing those type of things together. Who knows? Maybe one day, competing in the Truck Series against each other when we were done with Cup. Obviously, that’s not going to be the case now, but with respect to our relationship, I would say there was a small thaw over the last year, maybe two, that came from his circumstances being different with respect to race teams and positions on the grid. It was interesting to see, and it was thawing almost more by the weekend. I flew with Kyle Busch on the way to Dover last Friday and those are things I never thought I would say three, five, 10 years ago. So, I think it was on that path. I don’t have any great stories to tell, but it’s sad to not see that through. Whatever loss I have there, honestly, pales in comparison to many others, so I don’t want to overplay that, but it’s the reality.”

OVER THE LAST FEW WEEKS HAD YOU NOTICED KYLE WAS NOT FEELING WELL? DID YOU GET A SENSE THAT HE WAS NOT FEELING WELL? “Yes, and I won’t go into any specifics, but then when he ran the Truck race on Friday of last week, those were honestly erased in my mind. I’m not any level of doctor, but I do know the workload that is associated with running a double-duty weekend pretty well having done it myself. He obviously executed at a very high level, winning one of the races, so I was kind of very dismissive of that.”

DO YOU THINK BECAUSE OF THE SCHEDULE THAT WE’RE UNDER IN RACING THAT SOMETIMES, PARTICULARLY THE COMPETITORS, MIGHT NOT PAY AS MUCH ATTENTION TO WHAT COULD PROGRESS WHEN YOU GET SICK? “Again, I’m not a doctor, but I can only speak for myself. The racing season is a very difficult season. It’s 38 weekends a year, and there’s a lot going on, a lot of opportunities to have cycles in your health. I broke my leg at the end of last year, the beginning of this year, and I had to power through it because that’s what this sport requires. There are preliminary races here with the Truck Series and NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series. There are no shortage of drivers that would love to take my seat or anybody else’s seat if we weren’t feeling well, and I think every driver feels that pressure as most athletes do, so it’s not unique to NASCAR in that sense. We’re all thinking to ourselves, ‘I don’t want to be replaced. I love my job. I love this sport,’ and you try to power through it the best you can. That’s not always ideal, but it’s the reality of life in sports. I can’t speak to where Kyle was or exactly what was going on with him. I don’t know that. I did read the report just before I walked in here, and I was certainly saddened by that. Race car drivers don’t want other people to get in their cars because they don’t know if they’ll ever get back in it themselves, so that’s pretty natural.”

WHAT IS THE BEST WAY TO HONOR KYLE BUSCH GOING FORWARD? DID YOU SEE THE VIDEO THIS MORNING OF THE CAR BEING LOWERED? “I did see the car lowering video. I’ve got to be honest, I’m not that great at those types of things of understanding what’s the best way forward to honor him. I’ve heard and read a lot of different ideas and there are some that you like more than others as you can imagine. Probably the best one that I know right now that I would like to see is something with effect to the Hall of Fame and so forth, but I understand there’s a lot of things to work through on that, but it’s very clear that Kyle is a first ballot Hall of Famer and I don’t know why that needs to wait another year.”

SO YOU THINK HE DESERVES TO BE IN THE HALL OF FAME RIGHT AWAY? “Yeah, I think so.”

WHAT DID YOU THINK WHEN YOU SAW THE VIDEO? “Kyle’s loss is the whole industry’s loss, and the industry has had a lot of losses here in the last five or six months. That seems to come in waves. I don’t know why that is, so it’s been a tough few months for the industry and this is another hard one. I don’t want to try to weigh one against another, but it’s a tough part of this sport. There are a lot of people in this garage area. I did some napkin math a few months ago and I figure there are about 10,000 people that work in this industry, whether it’s at the teams or at NASCAR or at the racetracks. The events go on because of them and some of them have more notoriety than others, which is natural, but whenever you have a group of people that large, there is going to be loss. There’s going to be moments of pain and some just naturally hit harder and wider than others and Kyle’s hits pretty deep.”

YOU WERE 17 WHEN DALE EARNHARDT PASSED. WHEN YOU THINK OF HIM AND KYLE BUSCH FROM THAT KIND OF LENS, CAN YOU COMPARE THE TWO? WERE THEY PRETTY SIMILAR? “I wasn’t in the garage when Dale died. I guess I was a teenager and I remember it, but I wasn’t in the garage area, so it’s hard for me to speak from an industry perspective, but I can speak more from a fan perspective and see a lot of similarities, for sure. Clearly, both had a lot of fans, a lot of recognition, a lot of notoriety. I hate comparing things because it’s different eras and it’s never seemingly fair. I know a lot of people get their feathers ruffled, but it is a significant moment in the sport. Much like when Dale died, this sport won’t be the same without Kyle. How that is, I’m not entirely sure. I’ll understand it a lot more in the next three to five years and you will too, but it is a certainty that it will be different – much like when Dale passed it was different.”

YOU REPOSTED A STORY ABOUT A FAN WHO INTERACTED WITH DENNY HAMLIN SIGNING AUTOGRAPHS WHEN DENNY GOT THE NEWS. FOR YOUR SAKE, HOW DIFFICULT IS IT GOING TO BE FOR YOU BEING HERE AT THE TRACK AND INTERACTING WITH THE FANS UNDER THESE CIRCUMSTANCES? “You have to keep moving. I mean, there are a lot of fans in this sport that paid a lot of money to come here and watch this race. They have expectations. It’s kind of like if you work as anyone in a business that serves people, which we effectively do, they still expect to be served whether you’re having a good day or an awful day. I just appreciate the grace that the fans have given to date over everyone in the industry trying to sort out their own emotions and grieving process, and hope that continues, but I understand that there are still expectations. There’s still a race to run. There’s still fans that bought tickets and want to see the race and sponsors and so forth that have paid money and people that have worked really hard to prepare for this weekend. That’s not meant to be dismissive at all. It’s a tough balancing act for sure.”

DO YOU FEEL LIKE KYLE MADE YOU BETTER AND, IF SO, HOW? “Oh, all the time, yeah. Even before everything happened over the last few days, I was thinking about it. I was behind Kyle one time here a number of years ago. This would have been 10-15 years ago and he was running down here in turns three and four. He had this unique line where he wouldn’t arc the corner, but he would kind of hit the apron really early and make the car turn, and he was making it work really well. I still remember being behind him and seeing him do that because, at the time, the dialogue of how to run this racetrack was off of Jimmie Johnson, who would come into turn three and he would kind of start at the top of the racetrack with this huge arc down to the bottom and then run up off the corner with a lot of speed. Kyle’s approach was like a 180 of that, and he was making it work in front of me, where I, at the time, was trying to do everything that Jimmie was doing. It’s in those moments you’re like, ‘Oh, there’s more than one way to do this.’ He had a way that was something that I saw and added that to the playbook. ‘When my car is driving a certain way, this is how I’m gonna run this track.’ So, I was thinking about that this week as I was preparing to run the race. I need to make sure that’s in my playbook for if my car is driving a certain way or certain track condition, and I was thinking about seeing that from Kyle a long time ago. There are all kinds of nuances. Drivers learn from other drivers. It’s totally natural. You just seemed to learn more from Kyle than most other drivers.”

THE CARS NOW ARE ALMOST BULLETPROOF, SO WITH THE EXTRA 100 MILES WHERE DOES THAT PUT THE PRESSURE NOW? MORE ON THE TEAMS? THE PIT CREWS? THE DRIVERS? “It’s funny you say that. I was telling somebody this the other day. My uncle is in town for the race weekend. He hasn’t been here for 20-some years, but he ran this race in the seventies. NASCAR has the YouTube Channel NASCAR Classics. I don’t know if anyone in this room has seen it, but we’ve spent the last few nights re-watching some of those old races that he ran in and I’m not very patient with watching a race, particularly one that’s been run 50 years ago. So, I pulled up my phone and loaded up the race results as I was watching the race and I was stunned. A number of these races they had 40 cars start and less than 15 finish. Third and fourth place were multiple laps down, not one lap down, multiple laps down like three, five, 10 laps down, and the DNF list was half the field and it was engine, engine, engine, engine and then some obscure crash here or there. I guess with time you forget those things. Maybe we’ll see somebody blow and engine this weekend in the Cup Series. I suspect if we do, it will only be one or two, where 50 years ago it was more than half the field. So, that’s a big change. On top of that with the stages, this track used to be notorious for going really long, like three or four pit stop cycles under green, so you never had a chance to catch your breath as a driver. You had to keep adapting to the track as it went to night. Now with the stages, it only has one pit cycle generally until you have a yellow flag or a guaranteed yellow, so that has changed the racing a lot. Of course, the Next Gen car is very durable. I would say pit road has become more important than it used to be for the Coke 600. It used to be the Coke 600 qualifying was not really all that important because it was such a long race. Now it’s probably even more important than any other race because you’re guaranteed to have a number of yellow flag pit stops and if you don’t qualify well, your pit selection is really problematic and can keep you from having a good day. Last year’s Coke 600, I had an excellent car. I’d say I had a car that could run in the top two or three and we did not qualify well and every pit stop was a long stop because I was parked around other cars and it cost me a chance to win the race. That puts a lot of emphasis on qualifying that I don’t think existed, so the racing has evolved. There’s more emphasis on pit crews, more emphasis on restarts and less emphasis on car durability without a doubt.”

YOUR VICTORY CELEBRATION IS UNIQUE AND SPECIAL. IF YOU GET THE OPPORTUNITY TO WIN AGAIN, THAT’S GOING TO BE A FANTASTIC IMAGE BUT YOU ALSO HAVE THE OPPORTUNITY TO PRESENT A LASTING IMAGE AS THE FINAL VOICE OF THE WEEKEND. WITH THAT POWER, WHAT WOULD YOU HOPE TO RELATE TO FANS IN A SENSE OF HONORING AND ACKNOWLEDGING KYLE? “I hope to have that honor. There are no guarantees and there are 30 other drivers that are doing their best to deny that, but I would suspect that whoever wins this race will do some kind of bow, and I would be no different. I think that’s the best way.”