NASCAR and the United States military go hand in hand. But never before have they worked hand in hand like this.

A groundbreaking project will finally be brought to life this weekend as NASCAR takes over Naval Base Coronado across the bay from San Diego, the product of over two years of planning and creating that brings the top levels of American stock car racing to the streets, tarmacs and runways of an active United States military base for the first time.

MORE: Schedule: Naval Base Coronado | See the track come to life

Such an effort requires unprecedented coordination and cooperation between NASCAR’s design team and the U.S. Navy. That, in part, helped make Amy Lupo a natural fit for president of the NASCAR San Diego project. Lupo spent decades creating intricate, technical sporting events out of nothing, with a history at X Games, before shifting to NASCAR to help lead its first modern-day temporary course at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

“Temporary events is my entire career,” Lupo told NASCAR.com.

And four years removed from the inaugural Clash at the Coliseum, she has helped lead perhaps NASCAR’s most ambitious project yet: racing on an active naval base.

“It’s the lessons that I’ve learned for 30 years: Expect the unexpected,” Lupo said. “Plan, plan, and overplan, and be ready to pivot it at a moment’s notice.”

That has been the course of action for NASCAR’s Design & Development team, led by operations director Brian Geye, senior director Jeremy Casperson and managing director of track development Jerry Kaproth. NASCAR has worked closely with the United States Navy to achieve a monumental feat, beginning the process in secrecy and evolving it all into one of the sport’s landmark events.

“We’ve been working with them for over two years, just understanding exactly what we can and can’t do,” Casperson told NASCAR.com in a June 12 teleconference, “and then using that information to build out how we were going to pull off what we’re going to pull off here. So that’s been a lot of back and forth over the last two years. One of the difficult things is we speak a language, NASCAR does, and the Navy — rightly so — speaks their own language. And trying to learn their language and exactly how it translates to our language and vice versa, it’s been a learning process, and I think we’ve made really good strides, and we feel like we’re in a great spot.”

The USS Carl Vinson sits at the base of Turn 3 on the Naval Base Coronado NASCAR Course.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

The 3.4-mile, first-of-its-kind course runs through the heavily worn streets of the naval base before weaving onto runways used by jets, and pit road set where there are typically anchor points for helicopters to park. The airfield remained optional until Wednesday, Casperson said.

“We’re going to turn out onto a portion of the airfield that we worked long and hard on to try to make sure those squadrons were accommodated before we showed up,” Casperson said. “And we’ve got grandstands in front of hangars and flight lines are cleared. It’s been, dare I say, smooth from that perspective, just for all of the communications that we’ve had with each other.”

Geye spent 28 years at the former Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California, before assisting with more temporary venues like The Clash, the Chicago Street Race and now Naval Base Coronado. Working through naval restrictions has been a new challenge, but one made easier by the desire on both sides to collaborate.

“We had to put together a timeline of where we were going to be, where on base, and get that blessed by the Navy,” Geye said. “Part of the course runs on base roadways, which you would think would be harder to manage. They’re actually easier to manage because the other flip side is we’re on the airfield and they’re still flying. I mean, I could have a jet fly by today, and we’re in the middle of this interview. And so the real mission is America’s military here, first and foremost.

“And so coordinating with the squadrons here, not only from helicopters on the airfield, the jets that are flying around here, coordinating all that stuff has been critical. And we just slowly migrate our way around. And who needs to fly the longest? And what’s the last point? And at some point, we have to start the build. We can’t whip it up the night before. So working through that piece with everybody has had to be pretty strategic, and thankfully I think it’s all coming together.”

MORE: Van Gisbergen among best at new venues

Casperson said NASCAR truly moved in on May 25, loading in the first few trailers and beginning work on the hospitality structure at the start/finish as well as grandstands, all of which were the focus of Week 1, roughly one month out from race week. Track walls were first laid on June 1, with work on track layout running through Wednesday, June 17, two days before on-track action is slated to begin. With barriers and fencing on either side of the course, that equates to 6.8 miles of wall and fence, Casperson added, with 3,184 barriers all installed by Wednesday night.

The work has been unrelenting, with 17 straight days of work to ensure all is completed in time for beautification around the course on its final touches. And while the focus of these processes has centered around NASCAR and the Navy, outside assistance has been critical. That includes partnering with Formula One’s Las Vegas Grand Prix on barriers and fencing, Lupo said, with 25 trucks a day working around the clock to ensure timelines are met.

Track workers add sealer around a drain on the Naval Base Coronado NASCAR course.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

The final course layout is similar to what was originally presented to a small group of drivers who offered feedback and reaction to the course that helped lead to any necessary changes along the way. Much like past iterations of temporary race tracks, iRacing played a pivotal role as its team created a LiDAR (light detection and ranging) scan to create as true-to-life renders of the track as possible.

“We utilized drivers who would come to the R&D center on the iRacing format program,” Kaproth said Tuesday. “We had multiple drivers come in who would give us some suggestions relative to tweaks of the course, and we actually had a couple different versions of that. So as we landed on the configuration, then we’d go back to the drivers and meet with them regarding some of the competitive locations.”

The abrasive surfaces around the base necessitated roughly $1 million worth of work on the surfaces alone. That includes a portion of the track in Turn 4 which runs over a section of railroad tracks used for cranes on base in addition to over 150 sites that needed welding.

“Valves, manhole covers, electrical boxes, or some compressed air boxes, all sorts of stuff that come with a military base,” Casperson said. “We didn’t really remove anything, but we added some pavement for the chicane, and we added some pavement in the Turn 4 area. We had some real big undulation down by the crane rails. We smoothed it out really the best we could. It’s not smooth, but it’s a heck of a lot better than it was.”

RELATED: 23XI Racing jackman blends racing, military worlds

The coordination necessary to pull this operation together is perhaps obvious, but there is a stronger through line to the Navy’s partnership with NASCAR than anticipated. A number of naval sailors have volunteered their own time to physically help build the course of their own volition, aiding and accelerating the process as best they can.

“We’ve got five CVs in my sight from ACB1 — Amphibious Construction Battalion One — and they’re out here working with our contractor-set wall,” Casperson said. “I’ve got probably six of them over working on the pedestrian bridges. We’ve got a couple other ones that are doing welding and miscellaneous track work, working with a couple of the operations teams from Phoenix, so just a good storyline to be working with these guys. They’re good dudes, great Americans. Glad to be working alongside them and letting them get some gratification of having a part in this monumental event for the Navy and for us.

“These guys want to be here. This is not like they’re being asked to be here. They want to be here. Any input from these guys is mostly voluntary. They were allowed to make that choice. If they wanted to go work, be a part of this, they’re eligible to come out, and that’s where almost all of them are coming from. There’s no one out here that doesn’t want to be out here from the Navy, and I think that’s great for us, and they see it as training opportunity for real-world application, so it’s awesome.”

The cooperation was carried out under the agreement and understanding that the base would otherwise remain “fully operational.”

“A lot of planning has prevented a lot of stress between the two of us, so we feel pretty good about it,” Casperson said. “But it’s still a challenge at the end of the day when we’re trying to pull off our mission, and we’re trying to make sure that we allow them to continue to operate fully as we can because this is their livelihood, right? This is the U.S. Navy. They’ve got to be ready to go at a stroke of a pen, so I think we’re doing so, but at the same point in time, it still is a challenge because time’s ticking.”

The No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing hauler drives over the Coronado Bridge heading to Naval Base Coronado.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (June 18, 2026) – Due to continued inclement weather forecasted for the North Woodstock area through the weekend, NASCAR and White Mountain Motorsports Park officials have postponed the Thunder in the Mountains 200 to Saturday, July 18, 2026. An updated event schedule will be shared at a later date.

The fourth ever NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour event at White Mountain was originally scheduled for this Saturday, June 20, at 8:00 p.m. ET.

The quarter-mile asphalt oval, which opened for business in 1993, first hosted the Modified Tour in 2020. Four-time series champion Justin Bonsignore won the first Modified Tour event at the track with Doug Coby and Kyle Bonsignore also collecting victories within the last few years.

Jon McKennedy continues to be the hottest driver on the tour, as the 2022 series champion has won two of the last three events on the schedule (Seekonk Speedway and Oxford Plains Speedway). It’s the first time McKennedy has won multiple races within a season, allowing him to pull within nine points of championship leader Stephen Kopcik after six events this season.

Stephen Kopcik continues to lead the Modified Tour standings. One season ago, Kopcik finished a close second at White Mountain to winner Kyle Bonsignore, which automatically makes Kopcik a favorite to win the Thunder in the Mountains 200 aboard the Wanick Motorsports No. 21.

Other notable entrants include defending Modified Tour champion Austin Beers, Patrick Emerling, Tyler Rypkema, Mike Christopher Jr., Eric Goodale, Matt Hirschman, Paulie Hartwig III and Jayden Harman, among others.

For updated event information as available, fans can visit nascar.com/regional.

The NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series returns to action after an off weekend with Friday’s Navy 250 getting the inaugural green flag on the Qualcomm Circuit at Naval Base Coronado (7 p.m. ET, FS1, NASCAR Racing Network Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Front Row Motorsports driver Layne Riggs leads the championship standings — up 26 points on Tricon Garage driver Kaden Honeycutt after winning two of the last three races. Riggs’ Front Row Motorsports teammate Chandler Smith is third, 90 points off Riggs’ pace.

RELATED: Weekend schedule | Naval Base Coronado race information hub

The victor of this weekend’s trophy could be settled by the 2026 title favorites. Riggs won the season’s first road course — and series’ first street course — at  St. Petersburg in March, and Honeycutt won the most recent one at Watkins Glen International in May.

Five drivers in the field have won on road courses in the Truck Series — also including former series champ Ben Rhodes, Justin Haley and Parker Kligerman. McAnally-Hilgemann Racing’s Daniel Hemric (5.86) boasts the best average finish on such tracks.

Six races remain to set the 10-driver Chase field, and the battle for the final spots is close; eighth-place Tyler Ankrum is only 14 points ahead of 11th-place Stewart Friesen. Ninth-place Hemric and 10th-place Jake Garcia, meanwhile, boast identical point totals (278).

MORE: Craftsman Truck Series standings

Not only is this weekend a big chapter for the sport in terms of locale, but Friday’s truck race will feature four of the sport’s very best in rare appearances on the grid.

Seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion and NASCAR Hall of Famer Jimmie Johnson will make his first Truck Series start in 17 years; the San Diego native is driving the No. 1 Tricon Garage Toyota in front of the hometown fans. Trackhouse Racing team owner Justin Marks, a fellow Californian, will make his first series start since 2022 in the Spire Motorsports No. 77 Chevrolet.

Popular former full-timer Brendan Gaughan, who last raced in the series in 2013, will steer the No. 20 Chevrolet for the McAnally-Hilgemann. NASCAR on FOX commentator and 2010 Daytona 500 winner Jamie McMurray will make his first series start since 2008. He’ll drive Kaulig Racing’s No. 25 Ram truck, which has featured a list of All-Star drivers this season. So far, the best finish for the No. 25 Ram belongs to Cup Series regular A.J. Allmendinger, who finished sixth at Watkins Glen.

MORE: Paint schemes racing in San Diego | Turn a lap around Qualcomm Circuit

Back-to-back practice sessions for the Truck Series open the weekend on track Friday at noon ET and 1 p.m. ET, followed immediately by Kennametal Pole Qualifying at 2 p.m. ET — all three sessions on FS2 — and the race at 7 p.m. ET (FS1).

Last week’s near-miss victory at a Pocono Raceway for Haas Factory Team’s Sam Mayer was disappointing in the competitive moment, but all the more motivation for the most successful road course driver in the field as the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series arrives at Naval Base Coronado for Saturday’s first United Rentals Driven to Serve 250 (5 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

The 3.4-mile, 16-turn course on the active Naval Base may be just what Mayer, 22, needs to get back into the win column for the first time since the Wisconsin native won at Iowa last August.

After back-to-back multi-win seasons in 2023 and 2024, Mayer had just that single victory last year. However, he always shows up to turn right and left feeling optimistic. Half of his eight career series wins have come on road courses — the four victories most among those entered this weekend.

MORE: See entry list | Qualifying order

He knows he’ll have to contend with his former JR Motorsports team — again — for the trophy, however. JR Motorsports drivers have won every road course race since Watkins Glen in September 2024; an 11-race winning streak. Mayer was part of that run with his former team, claiming his last road-course win at the Charlotte Roval in October 2024. However, 14 of the last 15 road course race winners are not competing in San Diego.

Mayer’s former JR Motorsports teammate, championship leader Justin Allgaier, has three road course wins, and it was he whom Mayer battled for the trophy last week in the closing laps at Pocono. It’s a very reasonable bet this weekend’s California trophy could come down to another duel between the two.

Allgaier, who collected his series-best fifth win at Pocono, has already secured a berth in The Chase with seven regular-season races remaining. The 2024 series champ holds an unprecedented 250-point lead over reigning series champion Richard Childress Racing’s Jesse Love atop the championship standings — a points margin greater than that from second place to 15th place.

Qualifying has proven to be crucial on road courses, with the winner starting on the front row an amazing 52 percent of the time. The polesitter has won 31 percent of those races.

The pass for the win, however, has come within the final five laps in five of the last seven road-course events. Through the opening 17 races of this season, there has not been an overtime finish — the longest such streak in series history.

Of note, Joe Gibbs Racing driver Brandon Jones is on an eight-race streak of top-10 finishes — best in the series — while, conversely, Love’s streak of 30 races running at the finish ended abruptly last week at Pocono with a Lap 1 wreck.

Jeremy Clements will make his 548th series start this weekend – setting an all-time record. The driver of his family-owned Jeremy Clements Racing team made his series debut at Pikes Peak, Colorado, in 2003.

Practice on the new course is set for Friday at 3:30 p.m. ET (CW App), followed by Kennametal Pole Qualifying at 1 p.m. ET on Saturday (The CW).

HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. — Sunday’s Anduril 250 Race the Base will be contested on a 3.4-mile layout, the fifth-longest track in the history of NASCAR’s top level.

While notable, that isn’t the reason this race weekend has been circled on many Cup teams’ calendars since the beginning of the year.

The race — and the companion NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series and NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series events on Friday and Saturday — will be run on one of the most unusual courses in stock-car racing history. NASCAR has built a winding 3.4-mile course around and through Naval Base Coronado, an active military facility in San Diego, California. It’s more than a bit odd for heavy stock cars to be running side-by-side with an aircraft carrier and other heavy-duty naval hardware as part of the landscape.

Additionally, the weekend will bring together NASCAR’s best and some of the country’s most highly trained military personnel, from sailors aboard seagoing vessels to members of elite SEAL teams.

And that’s where Damian Jackson and his teammates at 23XI Racing enter the picture.

A former SEAL and later a college football player at Nebraska, Jackson is the jackman for driver Riley Herbst’s team. Regarded as a quiet-but-productive team leader in 23XI’s Star Wars-like Airspeed race shop in Huntersville, Jackson saw the Naval Base Coronado weekend experience as a perfect opportunity to blend two worlds. He put team officials in touch with members of the Navy SEAL Foundation. Discussions through the various chains of command led to one active-duty SEAL and several former SEALs visiting the shop recently for two days of activities, with the Navy SEAL Foundation also set for involvement with 23XI over the race weekend.

The race at the base will be an unusual highlight for Jackson and others who have worn or are wearing Navy colors.

Jackson has been a supporter of the foundation, which supports SEALs, former SEALs and family members of the Navy community, since leaving the Navy.

RELATED: Naval Base Coronado weekend schedule

“The SEAL Foundation helps families (of SEALs) – like when one of my buddies passed away — a lot, and I wanted to see if we could work a sponsorship for them,” Jackson said. “The foundation helped out his wife tremendously, and they do that for all families that struggle with that. That’s why I wanted them involved. I played a little role in it, but it was really 23XI that put it all together.”

Other 23XI personnel say Jackson understates his influence in virtually everything he does, including his work in helping make the SEAL-23XI relationship a reality.

After six years in the Navy, Jackson worked his way from walk-on to scholarship player for the Nebraska Cornhuskers. After a brief flirtation with pro football, he decided to give NASCAR a shot despite almost no knowledge of the ins and outs of working pit road for a team.

A giant of a man, Jackson turned heads when he walked into 23XI for tryouts, but muscles and size don’t necessarily mean success in the high-intensity world of pit stops, just as special skills and dedication fuel the SEALs, recognized as one of the best military units in the world.

“The day that he came over and worked out, it was different from what other people did,” said Jake Lind, 23XI assistant pit crew coach. “Instead of starting to do things immediately, he kind of stepped back and studied it. That’s where he started. It was a different approach. I know he tries to give the coaches the credit for learning so quickly, but it was his work ethic.

“We showed him what to do, but it’s him being here seven days a week and working – that’s what got him where he is now. His work ethic. He’s very, very quiet, but he shows up and outworks everybody. He raises the level just by being here. I think it’s his determination that failure is not an option.”

Head pit crew coach Jon Carvin said Jackson, in only a year and a half at 23XI, has spread his approach to getting things done across the team’s systems.

“The effort level and the attention to detail is what you hope you can instill into your players, and it’s really nice and refreshing when one of your players already has all of that built into his beliefs and core structure,” he said. “You can’t possibly be around him and not raise your game because you’re going to be made to look so poor compared to what he is and what he does.

“He leaves no doubt that he cares and he wants to do well and wants others to do well, too. His contact with the Navy SEAL Foundation and getting that ball rolling and trying to do things that he knows are helping and supporting other people — he does a great job with that.”

Lind and Carvin said the sessions involving the SEALs and 23XI personnel at the shop benefited both entities as they shared approaches to operations.

“When you look at the SEAL teams, you’re looking at the most elite military unit in the world,” said Geoff Leard, the foundation’s director of athletic events and partnerships and among those who visited 23XI. “At the shop, we were blown away from the leadership all the way down to probably the lowest guy on the totem pole. How the team works there – the camaraderie, everything replicates exactly what a SEAL team is.”

At least for public consumption, Jackson downplays the San Diego race weekend. “It’s another race at another place,” he said. “Just because it’s in San Diego, it doesn’t mean we need to start freaking out.”

It’s difficult to imagine, though, that the 23XI contingent, now well-versed in the SEAL approach to life and work, and competing in a dramatically different environment, won’t see this one as beyond special.

Sometimes it takes time to do something right.

That was the case for Jon McKennedy, who has spent the last two years working toward a full-time return to the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour.

McKennedy won the 2022 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour championship in his most recent full season with the series while driving for team owner Tim Lepine. The plan was for McKennedy to try and defend his championship in 2023, but things fell apart, and McKennedy parted ways with Lepine’s team after just six races.

Since then, the driver from Chelmsford, Massachusetts has worked tirelessly to build his own program for a return to the Modified Tour. This year, all the pieces came together to make that a reality.

RELATED: Find out who is racing Saturday at White Mountain

“I had to start obviously from the beginning,” McKennedy said. “It took having the right people behind me as far as crew guys to do the Tour and do it right. I needed some good guys for pit stops, and I needed some good sponsorship partners to make this happen.

“I was very fortunate the last year or two to get a bunch of people on board to help me with this. I’ve got a good group of guys. It was all kind able to come together, and I thought this year was the right time to do it.”

Entering Saturday’s Thunder in the Mountains 200 at White Mountain Motorsports Park (8 p.m. ET on FloRacing), McKennedy’s return to full-time Modified Tour competition has gotten off to a solid start.

Jon McKennedy
Jon McKennedy has won twice through the first six Modified Tour races of the year. It’s the first time he has won multiple races in a single season. (Photo: Andrew Stein/NASCAR)

Through the first six races of the season, McKennedy has earned wins at Seekonk Speedway and Oxford Plains Speedway. He’s finished outside the top 10 just once. Those results have helped McKennedy climb to third in the series standings, nine points behind championship leader Stephen Kopcik.

McKennedy credits his early success to a few different factors. Chief among them is experience at several of the tracks on the Modified Tour schedule with different regional touring divisions.

That experience was particularly evident at Seekonk and Oxford Plains, where he had not only raced before, but won.

“This is now my second year with the FURY chassis. My guys have established a pretty good notebook now and we have a pretty good understanding of the car,” McKennedy said. “A lot of these tracks that we’ve been racing at like Thompson, Oxford and Seekonk, these are all tracks that I have raced at on and off for the last 10 to 15 years with other open wheel series.

“I’ve just got a lot of laps at those tracks, a lot of experience. I’ve won a bunch at all of them in other divisions. Things are just clicking.”

RELATED: Watch the Thunder in the Mountains 200 live on FloRacing

With two wins through the first six events, McKennedy has already accomplished a new feat by winning multiple Modified Tour events in a single season.

He’s also led more laps than any other driver through the first six races. His five top-10 finishes are tied with Austin Beers and Patrick Emerling for the most through the first six races. He’s also one of four drivers with three top-five finishes through the first six races of the year.

McKennedy will need that kind of consistency if he hopes to stay in the championship fight through the summer months. A win this weekend at White Mountain Motorsports Park would go a long way toward that goal.

“At the end of the day I feel like we legitimately have a chance to run up front and race for the win,” McKennedy said. “It’s previously been a pretty good track for us. I know last year with the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour we had a few issues that kind of hindered our race and made it a handful.

“It’s a cool track. Unique, high banks. It’s a track I feel pretty comfortable at, and I feel like I have a pretty good package going into it. I think we have a pretty good chance to run up front and hopefully contend for the win.”

As the NASCAR field prepares for battle stations at Naval Base Coronado later this month, a squadron of drivers will tackle the facility in a different — and unique — manner ahead of time in “NASCAR vs. Navy: The San Diego Mini Movie,” a 30-minute special now streaming on Prime Video.

Six NASCAR Cup Series stars, all with call signs — Christopher Bell (Twister), Ryan Blaney (Whiskey), Chase Briscoe (Hoosier), Noah Gragson (Rizz), Carson Hocevar (Hurricane) and Connor Zilisch (Nugget) — will go head-to-head with United States Navy SEALs in a series of elite challenges. Set against the backdrop of San Diego, the showdown celebrates grit, competition and American pride, all while introducing NASCAR to a new audience in thrilling fashion.

RELATED: Buy Naval Base Coronado tickets now!

“We got some insights and the history of the base and got to tour a lot of neat things,” Blaney said regarding the experience and the upcoming special. “I’ve always found I’ve been really fortunate in my life to visit a lot of different branches of military and to be able to go around the base and see some of the amazing things that they have, a lot of cool aircraft, aircraft carriers, stuff like that. That stuff just kind of geeks me out a little bit, you know? Just getting to talk to all the folks that are on the base, and, you know, the soldiers that are there every single day and show our appreciation of what they do. It’s neat. So, I’m excited for everybody to see that. I think it’s going to turn out well.”

Openness, honesty and a fair bit of laughs will be several themes throughout the mini movie, with drivers getting a taste of the atmosphere ahead of the sport’s inaugural racing event there in just a few weeks’ time.

“It was so much fun, really cool,” Bell said. “I just think that that race is going to be such a cool atmosphere, racing on the Navy base out there, and I’m really looking forward to it. I think it’s going to be a very unique experience, and something that’s gonna create really, really cool images, and something that we’re gonna cherish forever.”

MORE: Cup Series schedule | O’Reilly Auto Parts Series schedule | Craftsman Truck Series schedule

All three NASCAR national series will race at the base this weekend, doing battle on the 3.4-mile street-course layout. The NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series will race Friday (7 p.m. ET, FS1, NASCAR Racing Network Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). The NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series will compete Saturday in the United Rentals Driven to Serve 250 (5 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). The Cup Series will conclude the weekend’s festivities on Sunday in the Anduril 250 (4 p.m. ET, Prime Video, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

This weekend, NASCAR’s three national series — the NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series and NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series — head to sunny Southern California for their debut at Qualcomm Circuit at Naval Base Coronado. Bookmark this page for everything you need throughout race weekend, including qualifying orders, practice speeds, race results and more.

RELATED: Full weekend schedule | TV listings

NASCAR Cup Series

Race day: Sunday at 4 p.m. ET on Prime Video. The categories listed below will be filled out with links as the information becomes available.

Tires: Nine sets for the weekend (five new sets for the race, one set for qualifying, which transfers to the race, and three sets for practice). Teams will also have six wet-weather sets available.

Entry List
Qualifying Order
Practice Results
Practice Lap Averages
Practice Lap Times
Qualifying Results
Pit Stalls
Stage 1 Results
Stage 2 Results
Unofficial Race Results

NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series

Race day: Saturday at 5 p.m. ET on The CW. The categories listed below will be filled out with links as the information becomes available.

Tires: Six sets for the weekend (three new sets for the race, one set for qualifying, which transfers to the race, and two sets for practice). Teams will also have four wet-weather sets available.

Entry List
Qualifying Order
Practice Results
Practice Lap Averages
Practice Lap Times

Qualifying Results
Pit Stalls
Stage 1 Results
Stage 2 Results
Unofficial Race Results

NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series

Race day: Friday at 7 p.m. ET on FS1. The categories listed below will be filled out with links as the information becomes available.

Tires: Six sets for the weekend (three new sets for the race, one set for qualifying, which transfers to the race, and two sets for practice). Teams will also have four wet-weather sets available.

Entry List
Qualifying Order
Practice 1 Results
Practice 1 Lap Averages
Practice 1 Lap Times
Practice 2 Results
Practice 2 Lap Averages
Practice 2 Lap Times
Qualifying Results

Pit Stalls
Stage 1 Results
Stage 2 Results
Unofficial Race Results

The past month of NASCAR action has seen the Cup Series pay visits to some of its most familiar locales: Watkins Glen, Dover, Charlotte, Michigan and Pocono. Nashville was the only track in that stretch with fewer than 40 races run in the modern era (since 1972), and even it now has six races under its belt since making its Cup debut in summer 2021.

The last time we saw Cup cars out on a track with five or fewer all-time races was Gateway last September — before that, it was Iowa in August — and the last completely brand-new track to hit the series schedule was Mexico City last June. Given that the hottest driver in NASCAR right now — riding a three-race winning streak — is 45-year-old Denny Hamlin, who’s seen it all in his 22-year stint behind the wheel, perhaps the only way for the field to catch up is to render all of that experience irrelevant.

Enter Naval Base Coronado in San Diego, which will stage its first-ever race on Sunday at 4 p.m. ET on Prime Video. 

The track is a temporary street course in the mold of Chicago, which was the first street race in Cup Series history when it debuted in 2023, so perhaps drivers can tap into those three races for valuable intel Sunday. But it’s not really the same otherwise: Watching a virtual lap around the circuit, it feels instead like a blend between old CART-era street tracks like Toronto and the runways of the iconic Burke Lakefront Airport in Cleveland.

So it’s going to be up to NASCAR’s quickest studies to learn how to handle this track in stock cars, and fast.

Some drivers have excelled more than others in their first-ever encounter with a track. According to either Adjusted Points+ index or Driver Rating — take your pick — the best modern-era Cup driver in his career debut at a particular circuit was Tony Stewart, whose finishes were nearly twice as good as the Cup average and had a 94.7 average rating at tracks he had never seen before at the highest level of stock-car racing.

(Would we expect anything less from a three-time Cup champ who also won an IndyCar title, and has proven he can drive anything from Daytona to dirt tracks to dragsters?)

Among active Cup names, the best stats belong to Chase Elliott, who (among other figures) is tied with Jeff Gordon and Shane van Gisbergen — more on that guy in a bit — for the most wins ever on tracks he was debuting on at the time, at three. Hamlin, Kyle Larson and Jimmie Johnson (technically active in ‘26) also stand out in this regard, although Hamlin’s first experiences with most tracks are getting pretty far back in the rearview mirror by now. (Sorry, Denny!)

RELATED: Naval Base Coronado weekend schedule

It’s one thing to hop in the car during your first trip to a track and do well — at least some of your teammates, or your crew chief, may have a notebook or setup tip that helps ease your adjustment. But what about when nobody knows what they’re doing, and everyone has to figure it out on the fly?

Here are the best modern-era drivers at races where at least 75% of the field was making their first-ever career start at a track/configuration, with a minimum of five races under that circumstance:

 

Chase Elliott again shows up as shining brightest when a track has either never been run before in NASCAR history, or at least never in recent history. He is one of only four drivers — joining Rusty Wallace, Jeff Gordon and Ricky Rudd — with finishes at least 100% better than Cup average under those circumstances, and that quartet is the only group that carries a triple-digit Driver Rating there as well. Other active drivers on both lists that you can plop down at a totally unfamiliar track and get great performances anyway include Joey Logano, William Byron and Kyle Larson.

That type of situation has become more and more relevant in the 2020s, as NASCAR has added a bunch of new tracks, either making their all-time debut (Iowa, San Diego, etc.), returning to the calendar after a long hiatus (North Wilkesboro), or even debuting a new configuration (Atlanta after its repave). That differs from the previous era: While the series also added a number of new sites from the mid-1980s into the 2000s, between Chicagoland/Kansas making their debuts in 2001 and the Charlotte Roval joining the schedule in 2018, only one new track — Kentucky in 2011 — was added to the docket.

Naval Base Coronado will only add to that new tradition. And the main driver to watch is one we’ve only briefly mentioned, because he didn’t have a large enough sample to appear on the rankings. But what a sample it has been.

I’m referring, of course, to van Gisbergen, perhaps the ultimate new-track savant when it comes to a brand-new road course. Like most things involving left- and right-hand turns, SVG absolutely dominates the statistical lists for drivers with a minimum of two starts in those situations:

Now, of course, SVG is the greatest road-racer in series history anyway, so it may not seem all that surprising that he dominates any list of road-course prowess. But van Gisbergen’s overall career road course performance rates are “only” a 291 Adjusted Points+ and 123.5 Driver Rating. His performances at Chicagowinning in his Cup debut, the very race that began the legend of SVG — and Mexico City — where he won by a stunning 16.567 seconds — were extra-dominant even by his usual road-racing standards.

And that’s bad news for the other 38 drivers in the field this Sunday. You don’t really want to run up against van Gisbergen at any road course, even the ones like Sonoma or Watkins Glen, where you and he both have full notebooks (and he just executes better with the help of his heel-toe footwork). But at a new track where you have to both learn and drive as him?

Good luck.

The NASCAR Cup Series’ In-Season Challenge returns for its second season in 2026, bringing a five-race, bracket-style tournament to TNT Sports’ portion of the summer schedule.

Thirty-two drivers qualify for the challenge and compete in head-to-head matchups over five consecutive races, culminating with the Champions Round at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on July 26. Continue reading for more information on the challenge, including the format, schedule, bracket and latest updates.

Print your bracket!

The Bracket

Tap to expand

What is the In-Season Challenge?

The In-Season Challenge is a 32-driver, single-elimination tournament contested during the NASCAR Cup Series season.

Drivers are seeded based on their points position entering the challenge and compete head-to-head across five races. The higher finisher in each matchup advances to the next round until a champion is crowned at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

How are drivers seeded?

Simply put, the drivers were seeded in order of their points position following the race at Pocono Raceway.

How do drivers advance?

The driver with the better finishing position in each head-to-head matchup advances to the next round.

The tournament field is cut from 32 drivers to 16, then eight, four and two before the championship matchup at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

How do the seeds break down?

Read a full preview here.

Buy stock in: Tyler Reddick, 23XI Racing, No. 45 Toyota
Seed: 
1
Comment: 
There have been no weaknesses in Reddick’s game in 2026, leading the regular-season championship battle since hoisting the Harley J. Earl Trophy in February at Daytona International Speedway. The five-time victor this year has proven to excel at all types of race tracks, with the lone exception being short tracks, and even that has improved from prior years. The No. 45 team feels like a near lock for at least the semifinals.

Dark horse: Zane Smith, Front Row Motorsports, No. 38 Ford
Seed: 
24
Comment:
Smith grew up racing karts and has a competitor in Carson Hocevar (road courses aren’t his specialty) in the opening round. The No. 38 team hasn’t seen the deserved results in recent weeks, wrecking out at Michigan International Speedway and Pocono while competing inside the top 10. With either Daniel Suárez or Front Row teammate Todd Gilliland waiting in the wings at Chicagoland, Smith is a real sleeper to advance to Round 3.

How can I fill out a bracket?

The NASCAR Cup Series 2026 In-Season Bracket Challenge is open for registration, giving you the opportunity to compete against other fans for the chance at prizes. You can create your own In-Season Bracket Challenge league, so gather a group of bracket aficionados and see if you can be the best in your pool.

Entrants will earn points for each correct pick in their bracket entry. For Round 1, 10 points will be awarded for each correct pick. In Round 2, 20 points will be awarded, with 40 and 80 points following in Rounds 3 and 4, respectively. A correct pick in the final round is worth 160 points.

Oh, and prizes will be awarded to the top three eligible entrants who score the most points. The top prize winner will receive $10,000, while the second- and third-place winners will receive $5,000 and $2,500, respectively.

If you can correctly predict the outcome of every single matchup and fill out a perfect bracket, you win $1 million.

Where will the In-Season Challenge take place in 2026?

DATEROUNDLOCATIONTIMENETWORK
June 28Round 1Sonoma Raceway3:30 p.m. ETTNT Sports
July 5Round 2Chicagoland Speedway6 p.m. ETTNT Sports
July 12Round 3EchoPark Speedway7 p.m. ETTNT Sports
July 19Round 4North Wilkesboro Speedway7 p.m. ETTNT Sports
July 26Champions RoundIndianapolis Motor Speedway2 p.m. ETTNT Sports

The five-race challenge features a variety of track types, including road courses, intermediate tracks, a short track and a crown-jewel event to crown the champion.

Race recaps and results

Come back throughout the In-Season Challenge to catch up on each race.

Round 1: Sonoma Raceway

Race winner:
Recap:

Round 2: Chicagoland Speedway

Race winner:
Recap:

Round 3: EchoPark Speedway

Race winner:
Recap:

Round 4: North Wilkesboro Speedway

Race winner:
Recap:

Champions Round: Indianapolis Motor Speedway

Race winner:
Recap: