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NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series State and Provincial champions for 2025

In addition to national, regional and track championships, each season, the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series also crowns champions at the state and provincial level. This year, 28 drivers secured state or provincial championships at venues across the United States and Canada. Below is a closer look at every state and provincial champion from the 2025 season. RELATED: Division I regional champions for 2025
Racing in the Late Model class at Alaska Raceway Park, Jeremy Copley made eight starts and scored five victories this year to capture the Alaska state championship for the first time. Capturing the Alberta provincial championship for the second straight year is Cameron Medd, who scored four feature wins at Edmonton International Raceway on his way to the Late Model track title. Racing in the Super Late Model division at Tucson Speedway, Dylan Jones nabbed five wins in 15 starts on his way to the Arizona state crown. It’s his second Arizona state title and first since 2022. Kenna Mitchell split her time between All American Speedway and Kevin Harvick’s Kern Raceway this year. She nabbed a pair of wins at All American on her way to the Limited Pro Late Model track title as well as her first California state title. A native of Wyoming, Michael Scott spent his season racing at Colorado National Speedway. In nine feature starts, he won four times, which helped him capture the Colorado state championship for the first time. A strong start was all Gavan Boschele needed to secure the Florida state championship this season. Boschele made six starts at Florida’s New Smyrna Speedway during the World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing in February. He won three times on his way to the Super Late Model title during the annual event as well as his first Florida state title. Racing in the Modified division at Idaho’s Meridian Speedway, Brendon Fries bagged three wins in 17 starts. A strong season that saw him finish in the top 10 in every race allowed him to capture the track title, the Idaho state title and the West Region Division I championship. The Idaho state crown is his second in three years. Ricky Baker made the most of his 13 starts this year at Grundy County Speedway. He won four times and never finished outside the top 10 on his way to his first Illinois state championship. Racing in Adams County Speedway’s ultra-competitive Modified class, Josh Cooper triumphed four times in 15 starts this year on his way to the track title. That success allowed him to claim his first Iowa state championship in 2025. Jacob Burns enjoyed a strong season at Massachusetts’ Seekonk Speedway that saw him win three times and 14 starts while never finishing outside the top 10. As a result, he clinched his first Massachusetts state championship. Austin Hull enjoyed a breakout year in Berlin Raceway’s premier Super Late Model division in 2025. He won the track championship and the prestigious TEKTON 250 Battle at Berlin, both of which helped him secure the Michigan state crown for the first time. Chris Marek was the man to beat this season in Elko Speedway’s Late Model division. He won three times and captured the track championship to go along with his first Minnesota state championship. There is domination, and then there is what Ryan Gillmore did this year at Monett Motor Speedway. In 16 starts at the Missouri dirt track, Gillmore won 13 times to claim the B Modified track title as well as his first Missouri state championship. Racing in the Pro Late Model class at The Bullring at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Cody Brown nabbed an impressive five wins from March to September to secure his first Nevada state championship. Splitting time between Claremont Motorsports Park and Monadnock Speedway turned out to be a good choice for Brian Robie, who won track titles at both venues this year. He won 12 features between the two tracks in addition to his second New Hampshire state title. For the second consecutive season, John Beatty Jr. proved to be the king of New York. Racing in the Modified class at Riverhead Raceway, he scored one win, eight top fives and 10 top 10s to capture the track title and the New York state title. Racing in Eastbound International Speedway’s Sportsman division, Sara Thorne secured three wins in seven events to capture the track title and her first Newfoundland and Labrador provincial championship. The champion of Bowman Gray Stadium’s headlining Modified class, Brandon Ward earned three wins this season to narrowly claim his first North Carolina state crown by two points ahead of fellow Bowman Gray competitor Tim Brown. In his first season of racing in Limaland Motorsports Park’s Modified division, Aidan Hinds bagged three wins, the track championship and his first Ohio state championship. Making the drive to Oklahoma from his home in Missouri, Mitch Keeter won eight times in 14 starts on his way to the Salina Highbanks Speedway B Modified championship. He also claimed his second Oklahoma state title and first since 2017. Jeramy Curtis bagged one win and never finished outside the top five this season at Ontario’s Grand Bend Speedway. He claimed the Late Model track title as well as the Ontario provincial championship. Toby McIntyre continues to be the man to beat in the state of Oregon after he captured the Street Stock title at Coos Bay Speedway as well as his third consecutive Oregon state championship in 2025. For the first time ever, a Jennerstown Speedway driver has captured the Pennsylvania state title. The honor goes to Barry Awtey, who won three times in Jennerstown’s Late Model class to win the track title as well as the Pennsylvania state title by two points ahead of Grandview Speedway’s Duane Howard. David Hébert continues to be among the best in the province of Quebec. Racing in the 358 Modified class at Autodrome Granby and Le RPM Speedway, Hébert won the Northeast Region Division I championship as well as his fourth consecutive Quebec provincial championship. Competing in Kingsport Speedway’s Late Model class, Zeke Shell triumphed 13 times and never finished outside the top 10 in 23 starts. That allowed him to claim his second Tennessee state title and first since 2018. Chase Johnson was almost unbeatable in the Late Model class at Dominion Raceway this year. He won 15 times in 26 starts and easily claimed the track title, NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Josten’s Rookie of the Year Award, the Southeast Region Division I title and the Virginia state title. For the ninth time in his career, Naima Lang has captured the Washington state title. Competing at Evergreen Speedway, he won twice in nine starts to also capture the track’s Pro Late Model championship. Jacob Goede won just about every championship he could this year. In addition to his second NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division I national championship, the driver from Minnesota won his first LaCrosse Fairgrounds Speedway Late Model title, the Midwest Region Division I title and his second Wisconsin state title.