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Team Penske NASCAR Cup Series Race Report – COTA

DuraMax Texas Grand Prix
Austin, Texas – March 1, 2026

AUSTIN CINDRIC No. 2 DISCOUNT TIRE FORD MUSTANG DARK HORSE
START: 28TH STAGE 1: 12TH STAGE 2: 21ST FINISH: 32ND POINTS: 31ST
RACE RUNDOWN: Austin Cindric battled through a strategy-filled afternoon at the Texas Grand Prix at Circuit of the Americas, ultimately finishing 32nd after starting 28th in the No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang Dark Horse. In Stage 1, Cindric steadily worked his way forward from his 28th-place starting spot and reported that the “front tires were fading more than the rears” as the run progressed. He managed the balance to secure a 12th-place finish in the opening segment, and the team elected not to pit before the stage break, instead coming to pit road under caution for four tires and fuel. Cindric restarted 25th to begin Stage 2 and gained a handful of positions as the run progressed, advancing to 21st. A pit stop for four tires, fuel and an air-pressure adjustment with three laps remaining set him up to finish Stage 2 in 21st. Cindric restarted Stage 3 in 13th and worked his way into the top 10 before a left-front tire went down in the closing stretch, forcing an unscheduled pit stop for fresh tires that dropped him to 33rd. Unable to recover the lost track position in the final laps, Cindric crossed the line in 32nd.

CINDRIC’S THOUGHTS: “It was a frustrating day for us. We worked our way into the top 10 in the final stage and felt like we had something to build on, but obviously that didn’t pan out. We learned a lot about this setup, and I’m proud of the No. 2 Discount Tire team for sticking with it all afternoon. We’ll regroup and look ahead to Phoenix, which has been a strong track for our team.”

RYAN BLANEY No. 12 MENARDS/PENNZOIL FORD MUSTANG DARK HORSE
START: 4TH STAGE 1: 14TH STAGE 2: 7TH FINISH: 8TH POINTS: 4TH
RACE RUNDOWN: Ryan Blaney and the No. 12 Menards/Pennzoil Ford Mustang Dark Horse team gained four spots in the NASCAR Cup Series driver points standings with an eighth-place finish Sunday at Circuit of the Americas. Blaney was a mainstay in the top-three from the drop of the green flag in the 95-lap event and took his first lead of the afternoon eight laps in before opening up a five-second lead on the field. Crew chief Jonathan Hassler made the call to flip the opening stage, bringing Blaney to pit road from the lead with three laps remaining in Stage 1 which allowed the No. 12 Menards/Pennzoil Ford to assume the lead prior to start of the second segment. Blaney settled into second in the running order and stayed within a second of the leader during the ensuing run before the same strategy came into play prior to the stage end as he hit pit road with three laps to go in Stage 2 for a four tire stop. Due to the lead the top two had built prior to the green flag stops, Blaney was able to blend back inside the top-10 to come away with a seventh-place result in Stage 2. After the field cycled during the stage caution, Blaney lined up to take the restart from row one and continued to challenge for the top spot. With one and two-stop strategies in play to make it to the end, Hassler made the call to only make one stop the rest of the way which saw Blaney come down pit road with 27 laps to go. Blaney began his charge back towards the front after rejoining the field 11th in the running order and reached as high as third on the leaderboard before the caution flag flew with 21 laps remaining. After staying out and taking the green flag of the final restart with 17 to go, Blaney settled into third and eventually dropped to eighth over the course of the final run as teams with fresher tires made their way to the front in the closing laps. Blaney ended the afternoon with 11 laps led, marking a career-high at Circuit of the Americas in his sixth start at the Austin road course.

BLANEY’S THOUGHTS: “I just lost grip. I don’t know. I just kind of lost grip and lost touch with Shane [van Gisbergen] and Tyler [Reddick]. Yeah, it was weird. I wasn’t really pushing hard like after the green flag pit stop with Tyler, knowing it was going to be a longer run, caution or not. [The tires] didn’t really fire off very good, and I stayed in touch with those guys for maybe five laps, and they just kind of started to slowly lose and then really fall off the cliff. Overall good weekend. I hate that we didn’t finish top-three like I thought we were, but it’s hard to complain about it. We don’t have a great track record here, so we put a solid weekend together, and hopefully build on something.”

JOEY LOGANO No. 22 SHELL-PENNZOIL FORD MUSTANG DARK HORSE
START: 20TH STAGE 1: 29TH STAGE 2: 18TH FINISH: 15TH POINTS: 6TH
RACE RUNDOWN: Joey Logano and the No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil Ford Mustang Dark Horse team rallied from deep in the field prior to the final restart Sunday at Circuit of the Americas to come away with a 15th-place finish in the first road course event of the season. After starting 20th, picked up a few positions during the opening run before crew chief Paul Wolfe made the call to flip the stage by pitting with three laps remaining in the segment, resulting in a 29th-place finish in Stage 1 but allowing Logano to take the ensuing restart from seventh on the leaderboard. Logano maintained top-15 pace before the call was made to again flip the stage, bringing the No. 22 Shell-Pennzoil Ford to pit road with four laps to go in Stage 2 as Logano crossed the line 18th in the segment. Logano cycled to 10th after the remaining teams pitted under caution before the field took the green with 45 laps to go with one and two-stop strategies in play to make it to the end. Wolfe made the call to stop twice over the final stretch, bringing the No. 22 to pit road under green on lap 63 for four tires and a round of adjustments as Logano blended back into the field scored 23rd with 29 laps remaining. Logano raced his way up to 13th before a caution with 21 laps to go forced him to make his final stop under yellow and lost several spots on pit road due to being blocked in to his pit stall by the No. 77 ahead. As a result, Logano took the final restart of the afternoon from 30th with 17 laps to go and made up 10 positions on the opening lap before working his way up to 15th by the time the checkered flag flew.

LOGANO’S THOUGHTS: “We made the most of our day. What we lacked in pace at times we were able to make up for with the strategy calls we made to gain a few spots here and there. We had the opportunity to go on offense at the end by two-stopping it and did what we could on that final run. There’s a lot to look forward to these next few weeks to see where we stack up.”

The NASCAR Cup Series heads to the desert for the Straight Talk Wireless 500 at Phoenix Raceway on Sunday, March 8. Live coverage begins at 3:30 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

Matthew Brabham Powers to Victory at Sebring to Open Trans Am’s 60th-Anniversary Season

Cole Moore Wins TA Cup, Billy Griffin Victorious in XGT, Lee Saunders Tops SGT, Derric Carter Best in GT, Jordan Bupp Wins GT1 Challenge

SEBRING, Fla. (March 1, 2026) – The Trans Am Series presented by Pirelli kicked off its 60th-Anniversary season at the home of its inaugural event in 1966, Sebring International Raceway. Matthew Brabham controlled the season opener from green to checkers in his No. 16 Gym Weed Ford Mustang, holding off relentless pressure from two-time champion Paul Menard to earn his ninth-career TA victory and second at Sebring.

Brabham took the green flag from the point position after rain washed out yesterday’s qualifying session. A series of restarts gave Menard (No. 3 Pittsburgh Paints/Menards Ford Mustang), the two-time defending Sebring winner, multiple shots at the lead, but Brabham was flawless each time. He led every lap en route to victory, with Menard finishing second and Martin Ragginger (No. 7 Top Liner Chevrolet Camaro) completing the podium.

Adam Andretti (No. 17 Top Liner Chevrolet Camaro) and Kaylee Bryson (No. 2 LSI/Team Weaver Racing Dodge Challenger) delivered two of the most impressive drives of the day. Andretti, who missed the practice session that set the grid while competing in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at St. Petersburg, charged from the rear of the field into the top five by lap five, and secured fourth with four laps remaining. Bryson rebounded from a lap-one spin that dropped her to the back of the field, carving through the pack to claim fifth in the closing laps.

“A big thank you to everyone who watched our race, it was good to see fans up there watching us,” said Brabham. “A big thank you to Gym Weed and [CD Racing team owner] Chris Dyson. It’s going to be good to have him back [in the field] later on in some other races to make it more competitive up front, but this was an awesome race. Paul [Menard] pushed me all the way to the end. It was definitely interesting having so many restarts. I really had to kind of manage things and try different things to try and spice it up so I could try and stay ahead of Paul, but it was awesome out there; I had a great time. Lastly, a big thank you to the race team, CD Racing. They do such a great job putting this car together, these cars are so much fun to drive. Thank you to my mom and dad who came out, my dog Brumby and my new wife Kim.”

TA Top Five:

  1. Matthew Brabham, No. 16 Gym Weed Ford Mustang
  2. Paul Menard, No. 3 Pittsburgh Paints/Menards Ford Mustang
  3. Martin Ragginger, No. 7 Top Liner Chevrolet Camaro
  4. Adam Andretti, No. 17 Top Liner Chevrolet Camaro
  5. Kaylee Bryson, No. 2 LSI/Team Weaver Racing Dodge Challenger

The debut of TA Cup in the National Championship delivered immediate excitement. Cole Moore (No. 32 Chris Evans Race Cars Ford Mustang) seized control early, making a decisive lap-one pass on first-place starter Jim Guthrie (No. 62 Guthrie’s Garage Ford Mustang) and never looking back. New Racing America Chief Operating Officer Ken Thwaits (No. 9 Franklin Road Apparel Chevrolet Camaro) followed Moore through to take second. After a lap-four restart, Guthrie suffered a tire issue that forced him to pit and go a lap down, elevating Matt Crandall (No. 08 Avant Garde Collection Ford Mustang) to the final podium position. Guthrie recovered to finish fourth.

“That was an amazing race,” said Moore. “It was one of those where everything went my way. I made the right zigs and zags on the first lap. Jeff Jefferson just gave me a really good car this weekend. I want to thank my mom and dad for everything they do in my career in racing. And Chris Evans, he called me last week to be here, so thank you, Chris. This is an honor to race these TA Cup cars. They’re unbelievable. Thank you, Ken [Thwaits], for everything you do. I just love being a part of Trans Am. This is amazing.”

TA Cup Results:

  1. Cole Moore, No. 32 Chris Evans Race Cars Ford Mustang
  2. Ken Thwaits, No. 9 Franklin Road Apparel Chevrolet Camaro
  3. Matt Crandall, No. 08 Avant Garde Collection Ford Mustang
  4. Jim Guthrie, No. 62 Guthrie’s Garage Ford Mustang

As the only competitor in the XGT class, Billy Griffin took the top step in his No. 14 Griffin Auto Care Mercedes Benz AMG GT3. He managed to avoid the adversity that befell many of the competitors over the course of the race, finishing the race seventh overall.

“I’d like to thank my team for giving me a great car to drive,” said Griffin on the podium. “That was a wild race. I have to thank Bennett and BridgeHaul, as usual, and Danny Lowry. I’d also like everybody to check out the Kevin Popke Foundation. Kevin is an Army Ranger who passed away in a motorcycle accident after retiring, and it’s a foundation that helps veterans in need in Florida.”

XGT Results:

  1. Billy Griffin, No. 14 Griffin Auto Care Mercedes Benz AMG GT3

In a stacked SGT class, Lee Saunders drove his No. 84 LandSearch LLC Dodge Viper to his eighth victory at his home track. First-place starter Chris Coffey (No. 97 Traffic Grafix/NAI Racing/GTE Engineering Ferrari 458 Challenge) led the race for the first 13 laps, but was hit by a competitor in another class and spun, allowing Saunders to take over the point position. For the remainder of the race, Coffey challenged Saunders, swapping positions with him multiple times on the final lap, but it was Saunders who took the checkered flag. Coffey finished second, and Patrick Utt (No. 49 RaceQuip/Driven Racing Oil Chevrolet Camaro) claimed the final podium spot. Milton Grant (No. 15 Sentry Self Storage/Springhill Suites Porsche 992) finished fourth and Ray Mason (No. 68 TRB Autosport Ford Mustang) crossed the finish line in fifth.

“First of all, I’d like to thank my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ for this beautiful day, and for the great country we live in,” said Saunders. “I pray that he protects all our troops wherever they are. Thank you to Trans Am for a great series that we get to race in, in its 60th year. It’s an absolute blessing that we get to do this. Sometimes I have to pinch myself just to see if it’s real. I’d like to thank my wife, my family for allowing me to do this. Thanks to KSR, Eddie, CJ; we had them there this weekend and they worked their butts off fixing stuff. It’s just amazing, the jobs they do. The new Pirelli tires are awesome. We got lucky today. Chris [Coffey] had some issues that let us get to where we are, but Chris drove the hell out of that car, super clean, I cannot thank him enough for that. I think we traded positions three or four times, and I just got lucky and did it the last time, because he was probably going to come around me again.”

SGT Results:

  1. Lee Saunders, No. 84 LandSearch LLC Dodge Viper
  2. Chris Coffey, No. 97 Traffic Grafix/NAI Racing/GTE Engineering Ferrari 458 Challenge
  3. Patrick Utt, No. 49 RaceQuip/Driven Racing Oil Chevrolet Camaro
  4. Milton Grant, No. 15 Sentry Self Storage/Springhill Suites Porsche 992
  5. Ray Mason, No. 68 TRB Autosport Ford Mustang

In just his second-career start in the GT class, Derric Carter overcame mechanical issues early in the weekend and a car switch before the race to claim his first Trans Am victory.

“The GT 500 I entered in didn’t make it out there for the race, it broke during practice, so I had to pull out the Dark Horse R,” said Carter. “I was out there trying to put down some laps, get some points, and get some drive time in that. It was tough competition. I’d like to thank a couple of people: Portable Car Hoist, I couldn’t have done it without them. It was a bunch of work trying to get that GT 500 back on track. Having a lift that you can take to the track and have anywhere is just awesome to have. I’d like to thank Mama D for her love and support. Serpent Stangs Racing did everything they could to help me get that GT 500 here this weekend. We put 300 manhours on that thing in 10 days to try to get here. I’ll be here all season, so hopefully I’ll get some competition in the other races and we’ll see the GT 500 back on track.”

GT Results:

  1. Derric Carter, No. 24 PortableHoist.com Dark Horse R

Jordan Bupp had an incredible day in GT1 Challenge, leading from start to finish in his No. 11 Hamilton Safe & Security Systems Chevrolet Camaro. In the kickoff to Trans Am’s 60th-Anniversary season, he drove the same car his father, Kenny Bupp, drove to victory at Sebring in the series’ 50th-Anniversary stop at the track. Bupp dominated as his competitors each battled mechanical issues and on-track contact, taking the checkered flag for his second-career Trans Am victory. He was followed by Axel Rivera (No. 22 RIAX Contractors/Flexitank Ford Mustang) in second, David Jans (No. 70 Ave Motorsports Ford Mustang) in third, and Paul Fix (No. 77 StopFlex Ford Mustang) in fourth.

“I can’t thank my team at Bupp Motorsports enough,” said Bupp. “Thank you to my family, FlowTech Racing Engines, Ultimate Performance Shocks, and EMCO, who makes the strongest third gear in the industry, because I used it for 25 of the 27 laps since I lost the rest of the gearbox. We had a good weekend and a fast car. The new Pirelli tires are absolutely awesome, and Racing America and Trans Am are doing a great job bringing the series where it needs to be. I can’t thank my dad enough for bringing me back here. I’m driving the same car that he won in [at Sebring] 10 years ago, so shout out to Riley Technologies for building an amazing car all these years ago, and thank you to my crew chief, Todd Florey, for getting it done.”

GT1 Challenge Results:

  1. Jordan Bupp, No. 11 Hamilton Safe & Security Systems Chevrolet Camaro
  2. Axel Rivera, No. 22 RIAX Contractors/Flexitank Ford Mustang
  3. David Jans, No. 70 Ave Motorsports Ford Mustang
  4. Paul Fix, No. 77 StopFlex Ford Mustang

Full provisional TA/GT race results can be found here.

Helio Meza Goes Two-For-Two in CUBE 3 Architecture TA2 Series, Claiming Second-Career Victory in Sebring Season Opener

2025 Champion Jared Odrick Wins Pro/Am Challenge

SEBRING, Fla. (March 1, 2026) – Helio Meza continued his sensational start in the CUBE 3 Architecture TA2 Series by earning his second win in just his second start at Sebring International Raceway. After turning heads with a victory in his Trans Am Series presented by Pirelli debut at Circuit of The Americas in November, Meza delivered another dominant performance in the season opener of Trans Am’s 60th-Anniversary season.

Driving the No. 28 Alessandros Racing/SLR-M1 Chevrolet Camaro, Meza endured several restarts and avoided the chaos and attrition throughout the field to lead from green to checkers, crossing the finish line by a margin of more than three seconds. Joining him on the podium was Vinnie Meskelis in the No. 90 Nitro Motorsports Toyota Camry, who worked his way up from a seventh-place start and celebrated his 20th birthday with a runner-up finish in his Trans Am debut. Noah Harmon (No. 7 Silver Hare Racing Chevrolet Camaro) carried momentum from 2025 into the new season with a third-place result. Adrian Wlostowski finished fourth in the No. 3 CMI/Spot-On Services/AMT Motorsports Ford Mustang, and Ethan Tovo rounded out the top five in his series debut driving the No. 10 Dick’s Sporting Goods Toyota Camry.

“That was a fun drive,” said Meza. “I just took the approach of enjoying this weekend. Last month, I didn’t know if I was going to run the full season this year. And so, to now be a full-time driver in this series is a dream come true for me. Another win for us. I can’t thank TeamSLR, Alessandros Racing, Chevrolet, M1 Racecars, just my whole team, enough. I mean, they worked so hard for this opportunity and I just can’t thank everyone enough. Josh Wise, Scott Speed, everyone at Chevrolet, we prepped so hard in the off-season for this race, and I felt like I’d already driven this race 1,000 times. I got on the track and I knew what I had to do. I couldn’t do this without the people behind me: my family, my mom, my dad, always being there for me. This one means a lot, and it’s definitely a confidence booster for the season.”

CUBE 3 Architecture TA2 Series National Championship Top 10:

  1. Helio Meza, No. 28 Alessandros Racing/SLR-M1 Chevrolet Camaro
  2. Vinnie Meskelis, No. 90 Nitro Motorsports Toyota Camry
  3. Noah Harmon, No. 7 Silver Hare Racing Chevrolet Camaro
  4. Adrian Wlostowski, No. 3 CMI/Spot-On Services/AMT Motorsports Ford Mustang
  5. Ethan Tovo, Dick’s Sporting Goods Toyota Camry
  6. Sam Corry, No. 70 Nitro Motorsports Toyota Camry
  7. Eric Cayton, No. 71 Ray Skillman Auto Group Ford Mustang
  8. Stanton Barrett, No. 88 Acellis-8T8 Energy Drink Ford Mustang
  9. Tanner Reif, No. 75 Silver Hare Racing Chevrolet Camaro
  10. Gian Buffomante, No. 95 Nitro Motorsports Toyota Camry

Jared Odrick delivered a commanding performance in the Pro/Am Challenge season opener at Sebring, leading from start to finish in his No. 00 Black Underwear/Helium Mobile Chevrolet Camaro. Odrick set the tone early and never relinquished control, showcasing pace and precision throughout the race to secure a dominant victory. Tom Sheehan, driving the No. 97 Vixen Cycle Co./LTK/COPE Ford Mustang, maintained a steady run to start and finish second, while Cale Phillips advanced one position to claim third in the No. 99 Nitro Motorsports Toyota Camry. Roberto Sabato brought the No. 61 6th Gear Racing Ford Mustang home in fourth, and Christina Lam impressed in her Trans Am debut with a fifth-place finish in her No. 66 Helium Mobile Chevrolet Camaro.

“Black Underwear feels great to have on the car, and have on my body,” said Odrick on the podium. “It was a pretty crazy effort this weekend. We started off on the back foot, missing our test session, so we really didn’t get to dial in the car the way that we wanted to. But we had a lot of good notes from when we were testing here [in January], and that carried over. We’ve got a great team this year. I really love the guys that we have. We keep refining our mission, and we keep seeing further and further up the field, and I think that’s what we’re going to try to continue this whole season. I’m super grateful for the competitors that are up here. They’re getting better and better. We’re gonna take that into consideration and keep our foot to the pedal.”

CUBE 3 Architecture TA2 Series Pro/Am Challenge Podium:

  1. Jared Odrick, No. 00 Black Underwear/Helium Mobile Chevrolet Camaro
  2. Tom Sheehan, No. 97 Vixen Cycle Co./LTK/COPE Ford Mustang
  3. Cale Phillips, No. 99 Nitro Motorsports Toyota Camry Full provisional TA2 results can be found here.

John Atwell Earns First Trans Am Win in Inaugural TA Sprint Race at Sebring

SEBRING, Fla. (March 1, 2026) – In the inaugural race for the TA Sprint series, John Atwell scored his first-career Trans Am victory in his No. 02 XRC/DFW Concrete/A&J LabPortal Ford Mustang. Starting fifth, he worked his way through the field and took over the lead on lap three. He remained in control for the remainder of the 50-mile sprint, crossing the finish line first. Bruce Raymond (No. 54 BruCat Properties Ford Mustang) finished second, and James Libecco (No. 89 Allied Dermatology/Gunn Dermatology Chevrolet Camaro) rounded out the first-ever TA Sprint podium.

“I think this is a great format,” said Atwell. “I’ve done TA2 for years, but I just think TA Sprint is a great format for people who are not quite ready to do TA2. The thing is, there’s a lot of cars out there, and it’s a fun thing to do. I just did it because I wanted to support the series. We actually brought two other cars with us, my teammates Paul [Ruth] and Rob [Kacprowicz]. Everything went great, they all got personal bests of what they’ve done here before. I think everybody who has an old car should bring it out.”

TA Sprint Results:

  1. John Atwell, No. 02 XRC/DFW Concrete/A&J LabPortal Ford Mustang
  2. Bruce Raymond, No. 54 BruCat Properties Ford Mustang
  3. James Libecco, No. 89 Allied Dermatology/Gunn Dermatology Chevrolet Camaro
  4. Rob Kacprowicz, No. 27 5×5 Brewing Ford Mustang
  5. Alan Davison, No. 16 FPEC Ford Mustang
  6. Rene Molina, No. 8 5×5 Brewery/Mission, Texas Chevrolet Camaro
  7. Paul Ruth, No. 11 Paul Ruth Realtor Chevrolet Camaro

Why the Stuff You Forget to Protect During a Move Is Usually the Stuff That Breaks

Photo by depositphotos at https://depositphotos.com/

Most people spend their packing energy on the obvious things. The TV gets a custom box. The dishes get wrapped one by one. The couch gets a moving blanket. And all of that’s fine, but it’s rarely where the damage happens.

The stuff that actually breaks during a move? It’s the things nobody thought needed protecting. The bathroom mirror that got leaned against a dresser. The glass shelves from the bookcase that got sandwiched between two mattresses. A framed photo from your wedding, tossed into a box with zero cushioning because you ran out of bubble wrap three rooms ago. These are the items people file claims over, and the frustrating part is most of that damage was preventable.

There’s a pattern here. Mirrors are a big one. Tall, heavy, fragile, and awkward to carry. Most people don’t own a box that fits one, and they end up improvising with blankets and tape and hoping for the best. If you’ve got a large mirror or glass-topped table, it’s worth looking into some mirror packing tips before you try wrapping it in a comforter and calling it done. The right technique involves corner protectors, painter’s tape across the glass face (to hold shards together if it does crack), and a box or crate that doesn’t leave room for sliding around. Sounds like a lot for one item, but replacement costs on a decorative mirror can hit $300 to $500 pretty fast. That ten minutes of prep starts to look like a solid trade.

Glass Shelves and Cabinet Panels

This is the one that catches people off guard every single time. You take apart a bookcase or entertainment center, set the glass shelves aside, and then forget about them until they’re rattling around in the back of a half-loaded truck.

Glass shelves don’t need a fall to break. Pressure from a heavy box stacked on top, a shift during a sharp turn, or even friction against a rough surface can chip or crack them. The fix isn’t complicated: wrap each shelf in bubble wrap, separate them with cardboard, and stand them upright in a box labeled “FRAGILE” on at least two sides. That last part matters because movers and helpers can’t protect what they don’t know about.

Artwork and Framed Photos

People treat framed art like it’s sturdier than it is. A frame might feel solid in your hands, but glass cracks under pressure that wouldn’t concern you with most other items. And canvas paintings can dent or puncture if something shifts against them during transit.

The FMCSA’s consumer rights guidelines point out that items packed by the owner may carry different liability terms than those packed by a professional crew. That’s a real consideration if you’re handling your own artwork. Corner protectors, cardboard on both sides of the glass, and upright positioning in the truck all reduce the risk. Don’t lay framed pieces flat in a stack. That’s how you get a cracked frame at the bottom of the pile.

Lamp Shades and Light Fixtures

It’s a weird one, but lampshades are surprisingly hard to pack. They’re too big for most boxes, too delicate for stacking, and they dent if you look at them wrong. The shade should come off the base. Wrap the base on its own. And for the shade, a large box with crumpled packing paper around it works better than trying to nest it inside something else.

Ceiling light fixtures that you’re taking with you (chandeliers, pendant lights) need even more attention. Remove bulbs, wrap arms or branches individually, and use a box lined with packing paper. One poorly packed chandelier can turn into a $400 problem.

The Kitchen Drawer Nobody Talks About

Every house has a junk drawer, and nobody packs it properly. Batteries, takeout menus, a screwdriver, some twist ties, a lighter, and half a roll of tape. It all gets dumped into a random bag and thrown on top of the nearest box.

But there’s usually at least one thing in that drawer you’ll need within the first 24 hours. A flashlight. A tape measure. The Allen wrench for your bed frame. Take five minutes to sort it into a ziplock bag, label it, and keep it with your essentials box. You’ll thank yourself later when you’re not digging through fifteen mystery bags at midnight.

Electronics You Forgot You Owned

The TV gets the royal treatment. The gaming console, the router, the printer, and the external hard drive sitting behind a monitor? Not so much.

If you’ve still got the original boxes, use them. Manufacturers designed those for impact absorption during shipping, and they work just as well for a household move. If the boxes are long gone, wrap each item in anti-static bubble wrap (regular bubble wrap can build static that messes with sensitive components) and pack snugly in a box with padding on all sides.

And back up your data before anything gets loaded onto a truck. A dropped hard drive with no backup is the kind of loss you can’t fix by filing a claim.

Cleaning Supplies and Chemicals

Here’s one that surprises people: bleach, aerosol cans, certain paints, and even nail polish remover are classified as hazardous by most moving companies. They won’t load them. And honestly, they shouldn’t. A leaking bottle of bleach inside a sealed truck can ruin upholstered furniture and clothing in ways that no amount of stain remover will fix.

Transport these items yourself, in a separate sealed container. Or just toss them and buy replacements at the new place. Not worth the risk. The FMCSA’s tips for a successful interstate move recommend going through your entire inventory before moving day to flag items that fall outside what your mover will transport.

It Comes Down to Timing

The recurring theme here is the same: people start packing too late, rush through the fragile stuff, and end up paying for it on the other end. A cracked mirror costs more than the box that would’ve saved it. A damaged painting costs more than ten minutes of wrapping.

Give yourself a few weeks before the move. Start with the things you don’t use daily and work forward. The weird, fragile, sentimental items should get packed first, not last. They deserve the attention, and your future self deserves not having to explain to an insurance adjuster how a bathroom mirror ended up in three pieces because it was sandwiched between two mattresses with zero protection.

That part is usually preventable.

15 Things You Need to Know About Bad Credit Car Finance

Photo by depositphotos at https://depositphotos.com/

A challenging credit history doesn’t have to mean giving up on owning a vehicle. Every year, thousands of UK drivers secure bad credit car finance and get back on the road, even after experiencing financial setbacks. If you’ve had money troubles in the past, here’s what you need to know to move forward with confidence.

1. Bad Credit Doesn’t Automatically Mean Rejection

Credit problems can happen to anyone, and specialist lenders understand that. Rather than issuing blanket refusals, many assess applications based on your current circumstances.

2. “Bad Credit” Will Cover a Range of Situations

Some of the most common credit issues will include:

  • Any late payments or any missed payments
  • Any defaults on credit cards or loans
  • If there are any County Court Judgements (CCJs)
  • Individual Voluntary Arrangements (IVAs)
  • Management plans on debt
  • Bankruptcy or insolvency

Each of these impacts lenders differently, especially depending on how recent they are.

3. Specialist Lenders Look Beyond Your Credit Score

Unlike high-street banks that rely heavily on automated scoring systems, specialist lenders consider:

  • The stability of your employment
  • Your income and the affordability
  • Time passed since past credit issues
  • Financial recovery evidence
  • The reasons behind previous problems

This human-focused approach gives many applicants a genuine second chance.

4. Stable Employment Improves Approval Chances

Most lenders prefer you to have at least 3–6 months in your current job. Consistent income reassures them that repayments are manageable.

5. Managing Your Bank Account Matters

Avoid overdrafts, returned payments, and erratic spending. A well-managed bank account shows financial responsibility, even if your past credit history isn’t perfect.

6. Registering on the Electoral Roll Helps

Being registered at your current address improves your credit profile and helps lenders verify your identity quickly.

7. A Deposit Can Make a Big Difference

While some lenders offer zero-deposit options, putting down 10–20%:

  • Reduces lender risk
  • Lowers monthly payments
  • Improves affordability checks
  • Can secure a better interest rate

Even a small deposit can strengthen your application.

8. Choosing the Right Car Increases Approval Odds

Lenders prefer:

  • Reliable, practical vehicles
  • Strong resale cars
  • Reasonably priced models
  • Vehicles proportionate to your income

High-performance or luxury vehicles are typically harder to finance with poor credit.

9. Hire Purchase (HP) Is a Common Option

HP agreements involve:

  • An initial deposit
  • Fixed monthly payments (usually 24–60 months)
  • Ownership will transfer after the final payment is made

It’s one of the most straightforward and popular structures for applicants with credit issues.

10. Conditional Sale Works Similarly to HP

With a Conditional Sale agreement:

  • Fixed monthly payments
  • Ownership will transfer at the end
  • The lender will retain ownership during the agreement

This structure provides security for lenders while offering a clear path to ownership.

11. Guarantor Finance May Be an Option

If you have a family member with good credit, they may act as a guarantor. This can:

  • Improve approval chances
  • Potentially reduce the interest rate

However, they become legally responsible if you miss payments.

12. Interest Rates Will Be Higher, But Not Forever

Bad credit finance carries higher interest rates due to increased risk. However:

  • Rates can vary based on your circumstances
  • A deposit can reduce the costs
  • Refinancing after 12–24 months may secure better terms

Higher rates are often temporary while you rebuild your credit.

13. Consider the Full Cost of Ownership

Don’t focus solely on monthly repayments. Also factor in:

  • Insurance, which could be higher
  • Any road taxes
  • The fuel cost
  • The maintenance costs
  • Any admin or arrangement fees

Affordability should cover total running costs.

14. Be Prepared With Documentation

Lenders typically require:

  • Photo ID (driving licence or passport)
  • Proof of address
  • Provide proof of income, such as payslips, bank statements, and tax returns
  • Your monthly expenses

Having documents ready speeds up the process and shows organisation.

15. Car Finance Can Help Rebuild Your Credit

Upon successfully managing your agreement:

  • You will build a positive payment history
  • You will improve your credit score over time
  • Will expand your future borrowing options
  • Possibly allows refinancing at lower rates

Set up direct debits and contact your lender immediately if you face financial difficulties. Proactive communication protects your progress.

Common Mistakes That Shorten the Life of Luxury Vehicles

Key Takeaways

  • Delayed servicing increases internal engine wear
  • Specialist diagnostics protect complex electronic systems
  • Correct fluids and OEM level parts support long-term reliability
  • Preventative maintenance reduces major mechanical failure risk

The Reality of Owning a European Luxury Vehicle

You invested in a luxury vehicle for a reason. The refinement, handling, engineering detail and driving feel set it apart from standard cars on the road. Whether you drive a BMW, Audi, Mercedes Benz, Volkswagen or Porsche, you expect smooth performance and long term reliability. What many owners do not realise is how easily small servicing decisions can shorten that lifespan.

Driving conditions are rarely perfect. Heavy traffic, short urban trips and long highway runs all place unique demands on engines and drivetrains. If maintenance is treated as routine rather than strategic, wear builds up quietly. By the time a major fault appears, the damage has often been developing for years.

Stretching Service Intervals Beyond What Your Car Actually Needs

One of the most common mistakes is extending service intervals beyond what your vehicle realistically requires. Manufacturer schedules are often based on controlled conditions. In real world driving, oil degrades faster, particularly in turbocharged engines that dominate European line ups.

Stop start traffic increases heat cycles. Short trips prevent engines from reaching full operating temperature, contributing to carbon deposits and internal moisture build up. Over time, lubrication quality drops and internal components such as timing chains, camshafts and turbo bearings experience increased friction. The impact may begin subtly with rougher idling or reduced fuel efficiency before turning into costly mechanical repairs.

Cooling systems are also affected. Modern European engines operate within tight temperature ranges for efficiency and emissions control. Coolant that is not replaced at the appropriate interval loses its protective properties, increasing the risk of corrosion within radiators, heater cores and water pumps.

Choosing the Wrong Workshop for a European Vehicle

Many owners assume any qualified mechanic can maintain a prestige vehicle. While general mechanical skill is essential, European models often require specialised diagnostic equipment, brand specific procedures and access to updated technical data. Proper European car servicing involves manufacturer level scan tools, correct software capability and familiarity with common model specific issues.

Without appropriate diagnostics, stored fault codes may go unnoticed. Control modules may not be correctly calibrated after parts replacement. For example, battery replacements often require system registration to ensure correct charging behaviour. Brake servicing on vehicles with electronic parking brakes requires correct electronic reset procedures. Skipping these steps can lead to premature component wear or persistent warning lights.

Ignoring Early Warning Signs and Dashboard Alerts

Modern luxury vehicles rely on advanced sensor networks that monitor engine performance, emissions systems, cooling efficiency and transmission behaviour. When a warning light appears, it typically indicates a developing issue rather than a random glitch.

Delaying investigation allows minor problems to expand. A small coolant leak can turn into overheating. An oil leak can damage surrounding rubber components and engine mounts. Addressing warning lights early reduces the likelihood of secondary damage and higher repair costs.

Using Incorrect Fluids and Lower Grade Parts

European engines are engineered around specific oil grades and manufacturer approvals. Gearboxes often require exact transmission fluids that differ from generic alternatives. Coolant formulas vary in chemical composition, and mixing incompatible types reduces corrosion protection.

Aftermarket parts that do not meet original equipment standards can also shorten vehicle lifespan. Suspension arms, brake components and electronic sensors are designed to operate within precise tolerances. Lower quality replacements may fit physically but perform differently under load, affecting handling stability and system accuracy.

Skipping Preventative Maintenance on Known Wear Components

Prestige vehicles contain components with predictable wear patterns. Water pumps, thermostats, control arm bushings and timing components all have expected service lives. Replacing them proactively reduces the risk of breakdown and collateral damage.

Waiting for complete failure often increases labour costs and may result in further mechanical damage. Preventative replacement supports consistent performance and preserves long term reliability.

Overlooking Software Updates and System Calibration

Manufacturers regularly release software updates that refine fuel mapping, transmission shift behaviour and emissions control systems. These updates can improve efficiency, driveability and component longevity.

Workshops equipped to install manufacturer approved updates ensure that your vehicle operates according to the latest specifications. System recalibration after repairs also maintains smooth integration between electronic modules.

Luxury vehicles are engineered to deliver long service life when maintained correctly. Consistent servicing, specialist expertise and proactive attention to emerging issues all contribute to preserving performance, safety and resale value.

Justin Adakonis Holds Off Jared Thomas on Streets of St. Pete for Maiden Mazda MX-5 Cup Win

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (March 1, 2026) – Justin Adakonis (No.23 McCumbee McAleer Racing) earned his first-ever Whelen Mazda MX-5 Cup presented by Michelin win on the streets of St. Petersburg and held off two-time series champion Jared Thomas (No. 96 JTR Motorsports Engineering) to do so.

The Round Four race started with a long caution to remove the heavily damaged cars of Matt Novak (No. 11 Advanced Autosports) and Jeremy Fletcher (No. 22 McCumbee McAleer Racing) but then commenced a long green-flag fight for the lead between Adakonis and Thomas.

Adakonis led the way on the lap seven restart, but Thomas took over the spot with a daring side-by-side moment from Turn Four through Turn Nine. The following lap, Adakonis used the very same move to retake the lead from Thomas.

The duo settled into a rhythm and began to pull away from Ethan Lampe (No. 31 Advanced Autosports), who was in his own fight with Saturday’s race winner, Bobby Gossett (No. 44 BSI Racing). The fight for the final podium spot enabled Adakonis and Thomas to pull away by more than three and a half seconds before another full-course caution came out.

It was during this caution that Adakonis became concerned that he might have used up his car holding off Thomas and was now vulnerable to an attack from Thomas on the restart.

“I didn’t have much left in the car,” Adakonis said. “I kind of burned through my tires trying to pull away. I just had to use everything I had left.”

When the green flag waved with four and a half minutes left on the race clock, Adakonis took a defensive posture into Turn One. It worked, but behind them, Ethan Jacobs’ (No. 99 JDH Racing) car came to a stop with damage in Turn Two. A disabled car meant a full-course caution was imminent.

Both drivers’ teams were telling them it was now or never, knowing a race-ending full-course caution would come out before the cars reached start/finish.

“(Car Chief) Stuart [McAleer] was yelling in my ear,” Adakonis said. “He was like ‘got a car off, car off. Go, go, go!’ Yeah. I figured his [Jared’s] team would tell him too.”

“I knew the yellow was gonna come,” Thomas said. “I could kind of tell by yesterday, with the way they let us race all the way back to the incident—I knew I had a few corners, so I tried the most of it.”

Thomas lunged inside of Adakonis entering the final turn, but slid wide, and Adakonis breezed past. He had momentum on his side and cruised to victory as the yellow flags came out and the race ended behind the safety car.

“This is amazing,” Adakonis said. “It was really emotional. I kind of started to tear up on that in lap. Everything just hits you. I got my parents in the stands and saw them cheering. I’ve got my girlfriend here on pit lane too. I can’t even describe It’s been so much hard work and time and effort. I’m so proud of all these guys. MMR, they give me a great car all year. They believed in me and I finally got it done.”

With plenty of experience at St. Pete, Thomas knew there was no such thing as waiting for the right moment to lead the race. When yellows are likely, he wants to be out front, setting the pace.

“At this place you can control the race from the lead,” Thomas said. “I wanted to get there if I could and obviously starting sixth was not ideal. I wanted to make my way to the front and kind of control if I could.

“Justin was quick, especially on the short runs, and he was very aggressive to come back at me. So, I made the choice: I said, ‘let’s make this a two-car race.’ I bid my time, stayed in line, give him a push when I could, and we got away.”

Lampe crossed the finish line in third, but in post-race technical inspection his car was found to have violated the rules for maximum camber, and he was moved to the back of the field. As a result, Gossett, who, early in the race, had a nasty brush with the wall on the exit of Turn 14, was promoted to third.

A special guest driver, Earl Bamber (No. 21 Hendricks Motorsports) just missed the podium and finished fourth. His fellow guest driver Sebastien Bourdais (No. 38 McCumbee McAleer Racing) finished ninth.

For the second race in-a-row, Frankie Barroso (No. 48 Spark Performance) finished fifth.

Gresham Wagner (No. 5 JTR Motorsports Engineering) earned the Penske Shocking Performance Award by advancing an astonishing 28 positions in the race.

Charlotte Traynor (No. 43 PDR Racing) secured the top finishing female award, crossing the finish line in 26th.

The Takumi Award, for drivers over the age of 40, went to Christian Hodneland (No. 32 BSI Racing).

Both MX-5 Cup races from St. Pete are available to rewatch anytime on the RACER and IMSA YouTube channels.

Rounds Five and Six at Mid-Ohi0 Sports Car Course take place June 5 – 7. Prior to that, the series will hold a test on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course, April 14 – 16, in preparation for a doubleheader at the legendary circuit in September.

About: The Whelen Mazda MX-5 Cup presented by Michelin is the signature spec series for Mazda Motorsports. The series has been operated by Andersen Promotions since 2017 and is currently sanctioned by IMSA. Mazda-powered grassroots champions can earn Mazda scholarships for this pro-level series. The Whelen Mazda MX-5 Cup awards more than $1 million in prizes and scholarships.

Find out more at http://www.mx-5cup.com.

7 Critical Questions to Ask Before Walking Into a Truck Dealership

Photo by depositphotos at https://depositphotos.com/

Most truck buyers walk into a dealership with a vague idea of what they want. They’ve browsed some photos, maybe watched a few YouTube comparisons, and they know their rough budget. That’s not enough. Salespeople aren’t adversaries, but they’re also not going to volunteer the information that might slow the sale down. These seven questions put that information in your hands before you step onto the lot.

What’s the as-equipped towing capacity on this specific VIN?

This is the first question that separates serious buyers from browsers. Manufacturers advertise “max towing capacity,” but that number almost always refers to a specific configuration – often one with a particular engine, axle ratio, and tow package that doesn’t match the truck you’re actually looking at on the lot.

Ask for the towing capacity on the exact vehicle identification number. The dealer can pull this from the manufacturer’s configuration data. If the salesperson can’t answer that directly, ask to see the window sticker and look for the axle ratio. A truck spec’d with a numerically lower rear axle (say, 3.08) is built for fuel economy, not hauling. A 3.73 or higher is built to pull weight. Don’t let the brochure numbers substitute for what the actual truck can do.

What’s the real payload capacity after options are added?

People often confuse payload and towing capacity. Payload refers to the weight you put in the bed and the cab of the truck – such as tools, materials, and passengers. You can calculate it by subtracting the curb weight from the GVWR. The more options the manufacturer adds to the truck, the higher the curb weight, and the lower the actual payload you can carry.

For example, if a truck is advertised to have a 2,000 lbs payload capacity, in reality, it may only have 1,600 lbs because of the weight of the loaded trim package. This makes a big difference if you are using your truck to transport materials for work or if you are hauling livestock.

What does the out-the-door price actually include?

Starting price is just a reference and not the total cost. Additional features from dealers, region-based taxes, and documentations can increase the cost significantly. So, it’s better to get the final cost on paper before discussing other topics. There is nothing wrong with it, in fact, most reputable dealers do this. If a dealer avoids giving this information upfront, it’s better to look elsewhere.

Is there specialized service support for this drivetrain?

The question is more important than buyers tend to think. Heavy-duty diesel engines and modern electric or hybrid drivetrains demand technicians with particular certifications. Not all service departments have them. If you’re looking to purchase a diesel work truck or a vehicle with an electrified powertrain, find out if the dealership has technicians trained to work on that platform – and how long you’ll have to wait for a service appointment in general.

The average age of light vehicles on the road reached 12.5 years in 2023 (S&P Global Mobility). You’re going to own this truck for a long time. Requisite servicing matters more than most buyers factor into their decision.

What does the warranty actually cover for commercial use?

Warranty language is tiny print. Most standard powertrain warranties have carve-outs for commercial or “severe duty” use — and that can include things like regular towing, off-road driving, or just heavy payload cycles. If you’re buying a work truck, the dealership should be able to explain to you in concrete terms what, exactly, would void certain coverage.

Find out what “wear items” are. Brakes, clutch components, and suspension parts are often not covered under the powertrain. For Chevrolet Trucks in Wyoming and similar regional inventory, dealers who primarily handle working trucks will be easy to tell apart because they’ll be well-versed in all of this and can explain it to you clearly.

Does the wheelbase work for where this truck actually lives?

This aspect of the truck is often underestimated. In fact, a long-wheelbase crew cab with an 8-foot bed has a turning radius that is not suitable for most residential garages or small construction sites. So, before you get attached to a specific setup, make sure to measure your garage door opening and your parking spot, and consider the type of job site you’ll be on.

What’s the service history on any used inventory you’re considering?

If you’re hunting for a used or certified pre-owned truck, ask for a full service history (not just an owners report). A truck that putted around a family farm pulling a trailer may have been pampered, while one that served a commercial fleet may have towed near maximum capacity for years without corresponding maintenance intervals. CPO programs do involve inspections, but they vary by brand. Ask what the inspection process covered and whether there’s any documentation of drivetrain or differential service.

Walking into a truck dealership prepared doesn’t mean being difficult. It means knowing which specs to verify, which numbers to question, and which answers should give you pause. Get specific. The right truck for your work isn’t just the one that looks good on the lot—it’s the one that performs exactly as advertised once you actually put it to use.

Texas Three-Step: Reddick Makes NASCAR History With Win in DuraMAX Texas Grand Prix Powered by RelaDyne

Tyler Reddick celebrates with his son, Beau and his 23XI Racing teammates after winning Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series DuraMAX Texas Grand Prix Powered by RelaDyne at Circuit of The Americas in Austin, Texas. Photo credit: Harold Hinson Photography.
  • 23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick becomes the first driver in NASCAR history to win the first three Cup Series races in a season.
  • Trackhouse Racing’s Shane van Gisbergen finishes runner-up to end his five-race winning streak on road/street courses dating to last season.

AUSTIN, Texas (March 1, 2026) – Tyler Reddick of 23XI Racing became the first driver in NASCAR history to win the first three Cup Series races to start a season after securing Sunday’s victory in the DuraMAX Texas Grand Prix Powered by RelaDyne at Circuit of The Americas.

Reddick (No. 45 Chumba Casino Toyota) turned in a “Jordanesque” performance, starting from the pole, leading a race-high 58 laps and masterfully fending off road-course master Shane van Gisbergen of Trackhouse Racing in the closing laps for a 3.944-second victory.

Reddick opened the season with back-to-back wins at the season-opening Daytona 500 and last week at EchoPark Speedway for the team co-owned by NBA legend Michael Jordan and NASCAR star Denny Hamlin. He punctuated his stellar start to the 2026 campaign by becoming the first two-time NASCAR at COTA winner in the event’s six-year history while cementing his name in the NASCAR record books.

“It means the world,” said Reddick, whose historic victory was the 11th of his Cup Series career. “Yeah, it’s so fitting. We get going at the end there and I’m leading and there’s SVG, the guy I’ve been trying to beat for a while now. Just to be able to outlast him there and hold on for the win is just incredible.”

“…It’s pretty crazy. I’m just trying to soak it all in, honestly.”

“What a dream start for those guys,” said Hamlin, who finished 10th on Sunday. “… They’re locked in right now. Tyler is locked in. He was just so poised from qualifying day. You can’t get poles at this type of race track unless you are just really disciplined and where I’m looking from, where I restarted there, and he is under attack on the first two laps on the restart and he stayed absolutely disciplined and didn’t make any mistakes. That’s what champions are made of, and he is well on his way.”

“Look, I just put up the money. I’m just a competitor,” added Jordan about his ownership role. “But I think Denny has done an unbelievable job in terms of helping build this team, and I think the team has done a good job of taking on leadership and going out and winning. That’s what it’s about, winning.”

Reddick started on the pole of the 95-lap race on the 2.41-mile National Course, but did not lead a lap or finish among the top 10 in the first stage as the strategy prioritized tire conservation. Trackhouse Racing’s Ross Chastain, who started second, won the stage while van Gisbergen, who won Saturday’s NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series Focused Health 250, improved 11 positions from this starting position to move into second.

Reddick finished fifth in the second stage – won by Ty Gibbs of Joe Gibbs Racing – but flexed his muscle by leading 18 of the 25 laps in the segment. He led early in the final 50-lap stage for 20 laps before the final cycle of pit stops and a caution from Laps 76-78, which set up a potential showdown with van Gisbergen. Reddick maintained his lead on the restart with van Gisbergen, who won five of the six Cup Series road/street races last season, lurking on his tail in second. With 10 laps remaining, van Gisbergen was in striking distance at just 0.367 of a second behind.

The dramatic pass never materialized as Reddick methodically stretched his lead over van Gisbergen. He opened up a one-second lead with seven laps remaining and eliminated any drama by extending it to more than three seconds with three to go.

“We lacked a little bit of turn and a little bit of drive,” van Gisbergen said. “Tyler was amazing. The way he was driving was really good, and his car was good. … It was still an amazing result, but you’re always disappointed with second when the expectations are so high.”

Joe Gibbs Racing driver Christopher Bell, the 2025 NASCAR at COTA winner, finished third and Gibbs and Spire Motorsports’ Michael McDowell rounded out the top five, respectively.

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Risk, Calculation, and Composure – Three Qualities That Unite Auto Racing and the World of Random Numbers

Competition is more than entertainment — it is part of identity. Whether it is following NASCAR on a Sunday afternoon or exploring digital tables and spinning reels late at night, the attraction remains the same: uncertainty, pressure, and the chance to come out ahead through smart decisions.

At first glance, stock car racing and the world of probability-driven gaming seem unrelated. One takes place at 180 miles per hour on asphalt; the other unfolds on a screen. Yet beneath the surface, both environments reward the same core qualities: risk awareness, strategic calculation, and emotional discipline.

The Nature of Risk: Managed, Not Avoided

In auto racing, risk is constant. Drivers push limits on every lap. A late pit stop can cost track position. Staying out during a caution can either secure a podium finish or end in disaster.

Professional teams do not eliminate risk. They measure it.

Engineers analyze tire degradation, fuel windows, and caution probabilities. Crew chiefs weigh weather patterns, track temperature, and competitor tendencies. Every move is a controlled gamble based on available data.

The same principle applies to modern online gaming platforms. Random number generators ensure unpredictability, but the framework around that randomness is structured. Return-to-player percentages, volatility levels, and payout tables provide measurable variables. The player cannot control the outcome of a spin, but they can control how they approach it.

Understanding this difference is critical. Risk in both racing and probability-based entertainment is not about blind leaps. It is about informed positioning.

Calculation: Where Strategy Meets Mathematics

Behind every victory lane celebration lies a spreadsheet.

Racing teams simulate scenarios before the green flag even waves. What happens if a caution falls within a five-lap window? What if tire wear exceeds projections? How does track position statistically impact win probability at this venue?

These are not emotional decisions. They are probability models translated into action.

In digital gaming environments, similar mathematical structures operate in the background. Volatility defines how often payouts occur. House edge shapes long-term outcomes. Session length affects variance exposure.

For players within the Greek-American community who appreciate analytical thinking, understanding these mechanics transforms the experience. It becomes less about chasing luck and more about navigating probability.

This is where platforms such as VegasHero Casino offer structured environments designed around transparent payout systems, promotional incentives, and strategic bonus opportunities. When players approach these systems with calculation instead of impulse, the experience changes fundamentally.

Volatility and Track Position: A Surprising Parallel

High-volatility games resemble aggressive race strategies. Payouts are less frequent but potentially larger, much like staying out on old tires hoping for track position.

Low-volatility formats mirror conservative race management. Steady progress. Smaller gains. Lower swings.

Neither approach is universally superior. The choice depends on temperament, goals, and tolerance for fluctuation. Professional racers know this. Skilled players learn it.

Composure Under Pressure

Perhaps the strongest bridge between auto racing and probability-driven entertainment is emotional control.

A driver who panics after a bump loses focus. A rushed restart can erase hours of preparation. Champions remain calm even when radios are filled with chaos.

The same psychological discipline matters in environments governed by random outcomes. Short-term variance can create emotional swings. A string of unfavorable results may tempt a player to increase exposure beyond their plan.

Composure prevents reactive decisions.

Greek culture values resilience. The ability to stay grounded during turbulence is deeply familiar to many who built new lives in the United States. That resilience translates directly into smarter entertainment choices.

At VegasHero Casino, where digital tables, sports lines, and reward-driven incentives coexist, composure becomes a strategic advantage. Bonus structures and promotional offers can enhance play when used intentionally, but they require clarity and discipline to serve their purpose effectively.

Bankroll Management: The Crew Chief Within

Every driver has a crew chief guiding decisions. In probability-based play, bankroll management serves that role.

Setting limits. Defining session budgets. Avoiding emotional doubling. These are not restrictions; they are strategic guardrails.

Just as a team would never run an engine beyond safe temperature thresholds, a thoughtful player respects predefined boundaries.

Community, Competition, and Identity

For Greek players living in America, competitive environments often carry cultural meaning. Family discussions about sports. Friendly rivalries. Strategic debates.

Digital gaming spaces extend that competitive instinct into another format. Leaderboards, tournament-style events, and structured promotions create opportunities to test judgment within defined systems.

Access to a secure, structured environment matters. Through the online gaming and bonus-driven platform at vegas-hero.com, players can explore tables, reels, and promotional rewards within a controlled digital framework that mirrors the organized intensity of race weekends.

Structure builds confidence. Transparency builds trust.

Lessons from the Track

Auto racing teaches three enduring lessons:

Risk should be measured.Calculation should guide action.Composure should anchor decisions.

These principles apply equally to environments built on probability. Randomness will always exist. What distinguishes outcomes over time is not emotion or impulse but method.

In racing, preparation meets unpredictability at 180 miles per hour.

In probability-based gaming, preparation meets randomness in milliseconds.

Both reward the same mindset.

Those who understand risk without fearing it, who calculate before committing, and who remain composed regardless of short-term swings position themselves differently. Not guaranteed success, but structured engagement.

For members of the Greek-American community who appreciate both the roar of engines and the quiet tension of probability unfolding, the connection is clear.

Competition, when approached intelligently, becomes less about chance and more about character.

Tyler Reddick achieves historic three-peat victory at COTA

Photo by Jake Daugherty for SpeedwayMedia.com.

Tyler Reddick etched a new milestone by becoming the first competitor to win the first three events in a NASCAR Cup Series schedule. He accomplished this feat by winning the DuraMax Grand Prix at Circuit of the Americas (COTA) in Austin, Texas, on Sunday, March 1.

The 2026 Daytona 500 champion from Corning, California, led three times for a race-high 58 of 95 scheduled laps at COTA. He lost the lead on the opening lap and through the first turn despite starting on pole position. However, he remained within striking distance of the lead group.

Reddick led his first 18 laps during the second stage period and executed his pit strategies to perfection. He chose to pit before the conclusion of the event’s first two stage periods and cycled to the front for the event’s third and final stage period at COTA.

Then, through a late cycle of green flag pit stops and a restart with 17 laps remaining, Reddick, who had dominated the final stage period, managed to retain the top spot during the latest restart. But he had road course ace Shane van Gisbergen reeling him in. Amid van Gisbergen’s late challenges, Reddick maintained his ground and did not miss his beat for the remainder of the event. This enabled Reddick to achieve the victory and keep both himself and 23XI Racing perfect to start the 2026 Cup Series season.

With on-track qualifying that determined the starting lineup occurring on Saturday, February 28, Tyler Reddick secured his first pole position of the 2026 Cup Series season with a pole-winning lap at 88.380 mph in 97.760 seconds. Joining Reddick on the front row was Ross Chastain, the latter of whom qualified at 88.256 mph in 97.897 seconds. Before the event, Erik Jones dropped to the rear of the field due to unapproved adjustments that were made to his No. 43 Legacy Motor Club Toyota Camry XSE entry.

When the green flag waved and the event commenced, Tyler Reddick was pinned in the middle of an early three-wide battle for the lead as Ross Chastain and Chase Briscoe challenged the pole-sitter through an uphill climb that led to the first left-hand turn to Turn 1. As the field fanned out through the first turn, Briscoe managed to move in front of Reddick and lead through the Esses, a series of right- and left-hand turns from Turns 2 to 6A. The field continued to bump, fan out, and jostle for early spots from Turns 6B to 20 as Reddick tried to regain the lead from Briscoe. With the clean air to his advantage, Briscoe managed to cycle back to the frontstretch and lead the first lap while Chastain challenged Reddick for the runner-up spot.

Over the next four laps, Briscoe retained his advantage and even stretched it to as high as nine-tenths of a second by the fifth lap mark. Behind, Ryan Blaney navigated his way into the runner-up spot over Chastain and Reddick. Christopher Bell trailed in fifth place by two seconds. Another lap later, Reddick dropped out of the top-five category as he was overtaken by both Bell and Michael McDowell while Blaney started to reel in on Briscoe for the lead. 

On the eighth lap, Blaney, who first made his move and dueled with Briscoe for the lead in Turn 12, gained the upper advantage and seized the top spot in Turn 15. Blaney proceeded to lead his first lap on the ninth lap and extend his lead to a second over Briscoe by the 10th lap. Behind, Chastain trailed in third place by two seconds while Bell and Shane van Gisbergen, the latter of whom was posting fast lap times, were in the top five. McDowell, Chase Elliott, Reddick, William Byron and AJ Allmendinger followed suit in the top 10 while Chris Buescher, Kyle Larson, Ty Gibbs, Alex Bowman, Carson Hocevar, Zane Smith, Denny Hamlin, Todd Gilliland, Connor Zilisch and Joey Logano were racing in the top 20, respectively.

Through the Lap 15 mark, Blaney extended his advantage to more than five seconds over Chastain while van Gisbergen was up into third place. Meanwhile, Briscoe fell back to sixth place as he was overtaken by McDowell and Reddick while Byron, Larson, Bell and Buescher followed suit in the top 10, respectively, along with Allmendinger, Elliott, Ty Gibbs, Bowman and Zilisch.

Another lap later, mixed strategies within the field occurred as Bell, Larson and Byron pitted their respective entries under green. Reddick, Briscoe, Zilisch, Joey Logano, Todd Gilliland, Daniel Suarez, Cole Custer, John Hunter Nemechek, Noah Gragson and Erik Jones all pitted on Lap 17 before the leader, Blaney, pitted on Lap 18. By then, pit road became inaccessible as the first stage period was nearing its conclusion. Meanwhile, Chastain, who was among several who elected not to pit but to pursue stage points, cycled to the lead.

When the first stage period concluded on Lap 20, Chastain cruised to his first Cup stage victory of the 2026 season. Teammate van Gisbergen followed suit in second place by two-and-a-half seconds while McDowell, Chris Buescher, AJ Allmendinger, Ty Gibbs, Alex Bowman, Chase Elliott, Carson Hocevar, and Denny Hamlin were scored in the top 10, respectively. By then, Blaney, Reddick, Briscoe and Bell were mired in 14th, 17th, 26th, and 28th, respectively.

Under the event’s first stage break period, a majority of the field led by Chastain, including those who did not pit before the first stage’s conclusion, pitted while the rest led by Blaney, including those who did pit prior to the first stage’s conclusion, remained on the track. For those who pitted, van Gisbergen exited pit road first and he was followed by Buescher, Allmendinger, Gibbs and McDowell, respectively.

The second stage period started on Lap 24 as Blaney and Reddick occupied the front row. At the start, the field quickly fanned out to multiple lanes as the front-runners navigated through the uphill climb to the first turn. Prior to the first turn, Connor Zilisch, who restarted in the top 10, was bumped by Daniel Suarez and sent spinning entering the first turn, but he was dodged by the field as the event remained under green. At the front, Reddick retained the lead for a full lap and he also remained on the track despite reporting concerns of a loose wheel. 

At the Lap 30 mark, Reddick, who remained on the track and did not report any recurring concerns of a loose wheel to his entry, continued to lead by four-tenths of a second over Blaney while third-place Byron trailed by a second. Behind, Suarez and Larson were racing in the top five ahead of Bell, Briscoe, van Gisbergen, Gilliland and Allmendinger while Ty Gibbs, McDowell, Austin Dillon, Logano, Cole Custer, Buescher, Chastain, Bubba Wallace, Bowman and Kyle Busch were mired in the top 20 ahead of Austin Cindric, Nemechek, Erik Jones, Zane Smith and Ty Dillon. Meanwhile, Noah Gragson, who spun from 16th place in the middle of Turns 6A and 6B just past the Lap 25 mark, was at the tail end of the field in 37th place.

By Lap 35, Reddick stabilized his steady advantage to four-tenths of a second over Blaney while third-place Byron trailed by more than two seconds. Behind, Suarez retained fourth place and he trailed the lead at COTA by nearly six seconds while Larson also trailed by six seconds in fifth place. A lap later, van Gisbergen overtook Larson for fifth place as Briscoe, Bell, Ty Gibbs and McDowell pursued from the top 10. 

A lap after the Lap 40 mark, where Reddick was still leading by more than a second over Blaney, a handful of competitors that included Buescher, Bowman, Hamlin, Jesse Love and Cody Ware strategically pitted under green. The leader Reddick along with numerous names that included Briscoe, McDowell, Bell, Logano, Chastain, Kyle Busch, Austin Cindric, Ryan Preece, Nemechek, Elliott, Ty Dillon, Erik Jones, Zilisch, Hocevar and Gragson, pitted on Lap 42 before Blaney, who initially inherited the lead, pitted by Lap 43 along with Byron, van Gisbergen and Larson. With pit road becoming inaccessible for the field as the second stage period was nearing its conclusion, Ty Gibbs cycled to the lead.

When the second stage period at COTA concluded on Lap 45, Ty Gibbs captured his first Cup stage victory of the 2026 season. Allmendinger settled in second ahead of Suarez, Gilliland and Reddick while Bubba Wallace, Blaney, Cole Custer, Byron and van Gisbergen were scored in the top 10, respectively. By then, all 37 starters were scored on the lead lap while Briscoe, McDowell, Bell, Larson, Buescher and Chastain were mired within the top-20 mark.

During the event’s second stage break period, some led by Ty Gibbs, including those who did not pit prior to the second stage’s conclusion, pitted while the rest led by Reddick remained on the track. 

Final Stage

With 45 laps remaining, the final stage period commenced as Reddick and Blaney occupied the front row. At the start, Reddick fended off Blaney and a hard-charging Briscoe to lead through the first turn and the Esses. As the field navigated through the Esses along with the remaining national circuit turns that led back to the frontstretch, Reddick maintained the top spot and led the next lap while numerous jostling, bumping and on-track contact ensued within the field.

As the event reached its final 40-lap mark, Reddick was being pressured by Blaney for the lead. Despite being pressured by Blaney through every straightaway and turn over the previous five laps, Reddick maintained the top spot while third-place Briscoe and fourth-place Byron both trailed by two seconds. Meanwhile, van Gisbergen was trailing by nearly four seconds in fifth place while McDowell, Bell, Chastain, Larson and Cindric occupied the top-10 spots ahead of Kyle Busch, Zilisch, Logano, Buescher, Preece, Elliott, Ty Dillon, Ty Gibbs, Love and Hamlin.

Then with 33 laps remaining, Bell, who was racing outside the top-10 mark and was rubbing fenders with Larson a few laps earlier, pitted under green. Another lap later, teammate Briscoe limped to pit road as he reported a transaxle issue. As Briscoe took his entry to the garage, teammate Gibbs, Elliott, Suarez, Zane Smith, Austin Dillon and Hocevar all pitted before more that included Buescher, Kyle Busch, Logano, Wallace and Custer pitted during the following lap. As Reddick continued to lead by eight-tenths of a second over Blaney with 30 laps remaining, Larson, Preece, Love, Berry, Ware and Keselowski all pitted under green.

With 27 laps remaining, the leaders at COTA, Reddick and Blaney, pitted under green along with Riley Herbst while van Gisbergen cycled to the lead. By the time both Reddick and Blaney exited pit road, the former barely fended off the latter to muscle ahead when both blended back on the racing groove. Van Gisbergen would then surrender the lead to pit during the next lap, along with teammate Connor Zilisch, the latter of whom was up to third place. Allmendinger, Ty Dillon, Hamlin, Nemechek and Gilliland also pitted with 25 laps remaining, while Byron, who led the previous lap, pitted along with Chastain, Cindric, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. This left the leader, Michael McDowell, as the lone competitor who had yet to pit.

Then with 21 laps remaining, the caution flew when Chastain went off course at COTA and lost his right-rear wheel between Turns 19 and 20. At the time of caution, McDowell, who has yet to pit, was leading by six seconds over both Reddick and Blaney while Bell, van Gisbergen, Larson, Zilisch, Gibbs, Kyle Buch and Buescher were scored in the top 10. During the caution period, Myatt Snider, who was pit spotting for Jamie Little, took over driving responsibilities of Alex Bowman’s No. 48 Ally/Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 entry due to Bowman parking in the garage and battling illness.

Back on the track at COTA, some led by McDowell and including Bell, Larson, Gibbs, Busch, Buescher, Preece, Logano, Ty Dillon, Wallace and Allmendinger pitted while the rest led by Reddick, Blaney, van Gisbergen, Zilisch and Byron remained on the track.

As the field restarted with 17 laps remaining, the field fanned out through the uphill climb to the first turn as Reddick retained the lead. Behind, a multitude of on-track bumps ensued as both Cindric and Byron collided into Zane Smith, which sent both Smith and Zilisch spinning. With the event remaining under green, Reddick led through the first turn and the Esses while van Gisbergen overtook Blaney to assume the runner-up spot. Despite being pressured by van Gisbergen from Turns 6A and 6B through Turn 20, Reddick maintained the lead by six-tenths of a second during the next lap.

With less than 15 laps remaining, Reddick extended his advantage to a second over van Gisbergen while Blaney, Byron and Bell pursued in the top five ahead of Elliott, Hamlin, Gibbs, Mcdowell and Larson. Riley Herbst, Allmendinger, Nemechek, Wallace, Gilliland, Buescher, Preece, Custer, Logano, and Love all trailed in the top 20, respectively, while Zilisch, Cindric, and Zane Smith were mired in 29th, 32nd, and 33rd following their late restart contact. Not long after, Buescher was sent for a spin in Turn 20 after Kyle Busch bumped teammate Jesse Love into Buescher, but the event remained under green.

Down to the final 10 laps of the event at COTA, Reddick continued to lead by three-tenths of a second over a hard-charging van Gisbergen, with the latter regaining his momentum and reeling in Reddick. Behind, Bell, who was charging his way towards the front on fresh tires after he pitted during the previous caution, bumped and overtook Blaney for third place while Byron continued to occupy fifth place. Over the next five laps, Bell, who retained third place, trailed the top-two leaders by three-and-a-half seconds while Gibbs and McDowell moved up to fourth and fifth, respectively, in front of Larson, Blaney, Elliott, Hamlin, and Allmendinger as Byron dropped to 11th place. Meanwhile, Reddick stretched his lead at COTA up to more than a second over van Gisbergen.

Victory

When the white flag waved at COTA and the final lap started, Reddick remained in the lead by four seconds over van Gisbergen. With van Gisbergen unable to reel in from his deficit and Reddick not missing his mark while navigating around COTA for a final time, the latter cycled the No. 45 Chumba Casino/23XI Racing Toyota Camry XSE entry back through the frontstretch and claimed the checkered flag by nearly four seconds over van Gisbergen.

By becoming the first ever competitor to win the first three events in a NASCAR Cup Series schedule, Reddick also achieved his 11th Cup career victory, his second at COTA and his eighth driving the No. 45 Toyota entry for 23XI Racing. The victory was also the 12th overall for 23XI Racing and the 10th for crew chief Billy Scott as Reddick, who extended his series’ points lead, also became the first repeat Cup winner at COTA.

No. 45 Chumba Casino/23XI Racing Toyota Camry XSE
Photo by Jake Daugherty for SpeedwayMedia.com.

“[The win] means the world,” Reddick said on FOX. “It’s so fitting. We get going at the end there. I’m leading, and there’s [van Gisbergen], the guy I’ve been trying to beat for a while now. To be able to outlast him there and hold on for the win, it’s incredible. [I’m] Just really proud of the Chumba Casino Toyota Camry, everyone at 23XI [Racing]. We worked really hard. We did not like getting beat like that at road courses, and it’s one race, but it was so important. So fitting that we were able to get three in a row and make history.”

“[I was] Just trying to remember everything that I knew was going to be important there at the end and just tried to minimize the mistakes,” Reddick, when describing his late battle with van Gisbergen, added. “Shane, that’s what he’s so good at, man. He does not make mistakes, and I certainly made a couple, and just doing everything I could to just manage the gap and just stay away from him, if you know what I mean. If I let him get close enough, it was going to be probably hard to hold him off.”

Like Reddick, co-owner Michael Jordan was left elated for a third consecutive week in having his organization going three-for-three to commence the 2026 season.

“It’s time for change, and the [23XI Racing] guys feel the same thing,” Jordan said. “Tyler came here with the most pressure, I guess. Everybody expected him on he had the chance to win three in a row. That’s the hardest one to win. He kept to his strategy. Man, the [23XI Racing] guys put together a great car. I think [crew chief] Billy [Scott] did an unbelievable job in calling the game, calling the race and Tyler did a good job. He beat some good competition. You see [van Gisbergen] coming back there, you get a little nervous, but I think he had them covered pretty much the whole day.”

“I’m proud of the team that we put together,” Jordan added. “Denny [Hamlin], I’m sure, [feels] the same way. He feels the same way as I do. I think a lot of credit goes to him because I think he’s the mastermind behind finding Tyler, putting together Billy Scott, and all that. I just put up the money. I’m just a competitor, but I think Denny’s done an unbelievable job in terms of helping build this team. I think the team has done a good job in just taking our leadership and going out and winning. That’s what it’s about. Winning. I’ll be at Phoenix [next weekend]!”

Van Gisbergen, who was attempting to win a road course event in the Cup Series for a historic sixth consecutive time, settled in the runner-up spot as he also fell short of sweeping the weekend at COTA following his O’Reilly Auto Parts Series victory on Saturday. Despite ending up one position short, van Gisbergen achieved his first top-five result of the 2026 season.

“It’s weird to be disappointed with second,” van Gisbergen. “This area’s just at a high level. I felt OK. We got our Safety Culture Chevy a lot better than yesterday, but just following Tyler, his driving was immaculate. His car was very good too. I tried, but didn’t quite have enough. Still a great points day for the No. 97 [team].”

Christopher Bell rallied from a two-race slump to start the 2026 season by finishing third while teammate Ty Gibbs and Michael McDowell finished in the top five. Kyle Larson, Chase Elliott, Ryan Blaney, AJ Allmendinger, and Denny Hamlin completed the top 10, respectively.

There were 14 lead changes for nine different leaders. The event featured three cautions for 10 laps. In addition, 33 of 37 starters finished on the lead lap.

Following the third event of the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series season at COTA, Tyler Reddick continues to lead the standings by 70 points over teammate Bubba Wallace, 72 over Chase Elliott, 86 over Ryan Blaney, and 96 over both Shane van Gisbergen and Joey Logano.

Circuit of the Americas (COTA) Results:

1. Tyler Reddick, 58 laps led
2. Shane van Gisbergen, two laps led
3. Christopher Bell
4. Ty Gibbs, five laps led, Stage 2 winner
5. Michael McDowell, five laps led
6. Kyle Larson
7. Chase Elliott
8. Ryan Blaney, 11 laps led
9. AJ Allmendinger, one lap led
10. Denny Hamlin
11. Bubba Wallace
12. Kyle Busch
13. William Byron, one lap led
14. Connor Zilisch
15. Joey Logano 
16. Ty Dillon
17. John Hunter Nemechek
18. Ryan Preece
19. Austin Dillon
20. Brad Keselowski
21. Todd Gilliland
22. Noah Gragson
23. Riley Herbst
24. Chris Buescher
25. Daniel Suarez
26. Josh Berry
27. Jesse Love
28. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
29. Cole Custer
30. Cody Ware
31. Carson Hocevar
32. Austin Cindric
33. Zane Smith 
34. Erik Jones, two laps down
35. Ross Chastain, two laps down, four laps led, Stage 1 winner
36. Alex Bowman, six laps down
37. Chase Briscoe – OUT, Transaxle, eight laps led

Next on the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series schedule is Phoenix Raceway in Avondale, Arizona, for the Straight Talk Wireless 500. The event is scheduled to occur next Sunday, March 8, and air at 3:30 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM and HBO MAX.