When Gio Ruggiero went NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series racing in 2025, he faced an understandable learning curve — yet still put up numbers. Just over a year later, the defending Rookie of the Year is a premier contender.

Ruggiero grew up in Seekonk, a Massachusetts suburb of Providence, Rhode Island. He began racing at 11 at the famed Seekonk Speedway — a twice-a-year stop on the Whelen Modified Tour. But instead of racing the ground pounders, he drove Bandolero and Legend cars, eventually traveling across the Northeast before first participating in Charlotte Motor Speedway’s Summer Shootout. He then transitioned into Late Models, driving for Anthony Campi Racing in Florida before moving to North Carolina at just 15 to further pursue a racing career.

In 2023, Ruggiero signed with Toyota Racing Development and Wilson Motorsports, embarking on a super late model schedule. He won the prestigious Winchester 400 that fall, setting up his debut in the ARCA Menards Series the next year.

RELATED: Truck Series standings | Michigan weekend schedule

Ruggiero contested the entire East Series schedule in 2024, finishing third in points after winning the season opener at Five Flags Speedway. He made a handful of additional ARCA starts, finishing second three times.

Soon after turning 18, Ruggiero had a full-time ride at Tricon Garage, piloting the team’s No. 17 Toyota. But he had made just one start in any series on ovals larger than a mile.

“It definitely was the biggest jump so far in my career, going from super late model racing right to Trucks,” Ruggiero told NASCAR.com this week. “It was definitely a super big learning deal for me, and had some growing pains as well to start, but I think what made it easier was racing for Tricon and having a team with super fast trucks and really good teammates.

“I had Corey [Heim] my first year, which was great to have him as a teammate and kind of be able to try and learn from him. And really the biggest learning point for me for the mile-and-a-half stuff is just the dirty air. It’s so tough at first trying to figure out how to set up passes, and really just race craft is so much different than short-track racing, so that was the biggest part of the learning curve for me, and I feel like once I figured that out, I definitely had a lot more success and just better results.”

Despite the steep adjustment, Ruggiero nearly made the playoffs in his maiden campaign. He finished the regular season with three top-six finishes in the final four races but ultimately missed the postseason by just 12 markers.

Two months later, Ruggiero wheeled to a win at Talladega Superspeedway, leading 37 of 90 laps and bookending a stretch of three consecutive top-four results. For someone who had never raced in the draft before 2025, he’s pretty good at it. He has two career second-place Daytona finishes, as well as a win in the ARCA race there this spring.

And Ruggiero’s honestly not sure why that’s a strong suit.

“Our trucks just had so much speed at the superspeedways, and that made it a lot easier for me,” he said. “You have to be cautiously aggressive, and I feel like that’s something I was good at last year, and just being really patient at the superspeedways is important. Just starting off in the trucks, I was probably a little bit more timid than I am now, and I think that may have just kind of helped me at the superspeedways.”

Around the same time as Ruggiero’s Talladega victory, Tricon added veteran crew chief Jeff Stankiewicz to the organization’s competition staff, later announcing him as crew chief of the No. 17 Toyota. Ruggiero worked with Jerame Donley in 2025, with Donley moving to the team’s No. 1 all-star truck for this season.

Stankiewicz previously served as shot-caller for Grant Enfinger, before that working with Sheldon Creed in ARCA, Trucks and the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series. With Creed, he won the 2020 Truck Series title.

gio ruggiero races in the craftsman truck series
David Jensen | Getty Images

“[Tricon] felt like they were wanting to do something different with Gio, try and get a better working relationship with him,” Stankiewicz told NASCAR.com. “I didn’t really know a whole lot about Gio when [competition director Matt Puccia] first brought it to my attention, and I kind of did some research on him and looked at the stats and was honestly pretty impressed with his rookie, first-year stats in the Truck Series.

“It’s a learning curve. I got to keep reminding myself that he’s only 19 years old, and he still has a long way to go. But he’s excelling really fast, and I’m very impressed at how hard he works at this.”

So far, so good for the first-year pairing. Through 11 races, Ruggiero has four top fives and six top 10s, ranking fifth in points and above former champions like Ty Majeski and Ben Rhodes. But that still doesn’t tell the full story.

At Texas, Ruggiero drove from fourth to the lead before a caution with three laps to go set up an overtime restart. Carson Hocevar cleared him on the jump, but while battling three-wide for second on the final lap, Ruggiero slid up the track and plummeted outside the top 10. A week later at Watkins Glen, Ruggiero was penalized for jumping a restart from the lead, with NASCAR officials confirming afterward he should not have been penalized. At Dover, a flat tire derailed a potential top-five effort.

MORE: Gio Ruggiero driver page

“Just really need to finish these races off, minimize mistakes and just execute a good day all around from all perspectives,” Ruggiero said. “Sometimes that’s just the way it goes in racing. You lose some that you should have won, and sometimes you’ll run into a win [where you] shouldn’t have won the race. The way that I look at it, I’ve always kind of had this evaluation of it, but if you’re going to win three races, you probably should have been in contention for five or six of them to get that three. That’s just how racing works. There’s always so much that could go wrong or right, and you really need to have speed multiple times just to get one win.”

Ruggiero’s average start is more than four positions better than last year. His average running position is up over two positions as well, good for third among series regulars. He also ranks third in quality passes and fourth in driver rating.

Why the big jump, and why right now?

“Just probably going back to the same race tracks again with notes,” Stankiewicz said. “Him being able to go back to that race track, understand the tendencies of the race track, understand the tendencies of the race car from the start of the race to the end of the race, too, has been a big thing for him to understand, what the tracks do when they take rubber.

“When we unload and execute, we have an opportunity to run in the top five week in and week out … There’s a little disappointment on the front we haven’t won, but we also feel very confident that we are maintaining top five in points, getting good stage points, unloading with good speed off the truck.”

Stankiewicz believes the team isn’t far from championship-caliber. Michigan International Speedway lies ahead this Saturday (1:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), a place where Ruggiero contended and led laps last year before suffering damage in a late crash. But it won’t be until late September when the tailgaters return to intermediates. Two road courses and a slew of short ovals lie ahead, including his home race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

No matter where the series goes, Ruggiero’s confidence is clear. He’s hungry and looking to keep building his meteoric — yet possibly overlooked — rise in NASCAR.

“The competition and the series is so tough, which is why I love the Truck Series,” Ruggiero said. “I really like racing with all the Cup guys and I feel like I’ve learned a lot just really last year, but as well in the first few races this year racing with Cup guys and just racing up front for the win a couple times for the lead of these races has taught me a lot.

“I have a super big drive to succeed and win, which I feel like a lot of people do have, but also not as many as you may think have the determination that I feel.”

ATLANTA, Ga. — Following last year’s exhilarating EchoPark Speedway summer race win, the Chase Elliott Foundation is continuing its partnership with NAPA Auto Parts and Hendrick Motorsports for the 10th edition of its Desi9n to Drive art collaboration with Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. Launched in 2017, the foundation’s Desi9n to Drive program has raised and donated more than $545,500 to Children’s over its first nine years.

Elliott’s No. 9 race car and race uniform, from head to toe, will feature a design imagined by two pediatric patients at Children’s for the NASCAR Cup Series race at EchoPark on Sunday, July 12. Race fans can enter an online sweepstakes fundraiser to win a flyaway race weekend trip for two to meet Elliott, with donation proceeds benefiting Children’s.

RELATED: See all angles of the scheme

Last year, Elliott won the EchoPark night race with a late-lap surge to the front. His winning race car featured a Dream Big-themed design by 12-year-old Rhealynn Mills, a pediatric cancer patient at Children’s. Rhealynn captured the hearts of race fans everywhere when she celebrated with Elliott on the track’s frontstretch immediately following the race on live television.

“The Desi9n to Drive race weekend is one of my favorites of the season,” said Elliott, a Dawsonville, Georgia, native. “It was really unbelievable to win the Atlanta night race last year at my home track in the No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Chevy in the ninth year of doing this program with Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. Hopefully, we can defend our race title for NAPA and get back to Victory Lane and bring more awareness to the patient stories at Children’s.”

This year’s Desi9n to Drive program received dozens of sports- and recreation-themed artwork submissions from patients at Children’s. The selected artwork sketches of two patients — 8-year-old Maximus Peace and 9-year-old Noelle Springer — have been combined into a baseball-themed design that will serve as the paint scheme and driver uniform look for the July 12 race.

Maximus was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes at age 2 and is insulin-dependent. Despite dealing with the chronic disease on a daily basis, he enjoys being a normal kid, playing baseball, playing piano and spending time with his dogs. Maximus has a positive attitude toward life and exhibits a vibrant personality, which shows as he performs in stage plays and commercials.

Noelle was diagnosed with a form of leukemia called acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) at age 5. After many rounds of treatment, including chemotherapy, she rang the end-of-treatment bell more than a year ago. Like Maximus, Noelle exhibits a glowing, can-do approach to life. She enjoys spending time with her older sisters, Abby and Claire.

“We are grateful for the opportunity to partner with Chase and his foundation once again in support of the remarkable, life-changing work the team at Children’s undertakes on a daily basis,” said Katherine Wooten, director of partnerships at NAPA. “It is an honor to have the No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Chevy wear this year’s special livery and drive awareness for a truly worthy cause.”

Before Wednesday’s Atlanta Braves home game, Elliott and the two patients unveiled the race car’s paint scheme at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta Park, the 30,000-square-foot dedicated family space located on Truist Park’s left-field plaza. Pieces of the race uniform will be revealed over the next few weeks before the July 12 race.

“Desi9n to Drive is more than a design contest; it is an opportunity for our patients to see their imagination, resilience and creativity celebrated on a national stage,” said Beth Buursema, director of corporate and community giving at Children’s. “Through Desi9n to Drive, our patients, Maximus and Noelle, are sharing their stories through their artwork and experiencing a once-in-a-lifetime moment. The Children’s family is grateful to the Chase Elliott Foundation for helping make those dreams a reality.”

Fans can visit desi9ntodrive.org to learn more and enter the flyaway race weekend trip sweepstakes. The sweepstakes begins June 3 and closes July 13.

Given how busy his life has become over the past two years, Brenden “Butterbean” Queen has not had much time to return to his Late Model Stock Car roots.

The success Queen found in the discipline, especially with Lee Pulliam Performance, helped him earn an opportunity to win an ARCA Menards Series championship with Pinnacle Racing Group last year. Now Queen is full-time in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series with Kaulig Racing, where he sits 13th in points after 10 events.

Despite his hectic schedule, Queen has been patiently waiting to strap into a Late Model Stock more frequently. He will get that chance this summer when he teams back up with Pulliam’s operation to run seven Late Model Stock events, including the first two legs of the Virginia Late Model Triple Crown at South Boston Speedway and Langley Speedway.

Queen wants to occupy some of his limited free time with the Virginia Triple Crown and Late Model Stocks in general, as he owes nearly every part of his ongoing journey to what he learned on short tracks.

RELATED: What to know for this year’s Triple Crown

Brenden Queen
As part of his partial Virginia Triple Crown bid this year, Brenden ‘Butterbean’ Queen will attempt to become the all-time winningest driver in Hampton Heat history at Langley Speedway. (Photo: Ted Malinowski/NASCAR)

“Late Model Stock racing will always be a huge part of me and my career,” Queen said. “Obviously, the priority is my job at Kaulig Racing, but it was cool to see the schedule and have some weeks I could fill in with some Late Model Stock racing. I only got to race one time last year in the late model world.

“It’ll be nice to run multiple races this year.”

Long before joining Pulliam, Queen was a staple in Late Model Stocks during the 2010s with his bright green, family-owned No. 03. Queen primarily competed at his home track in Langley but regularly branched out to other tracks around the southeast to prove he could hold his own with the elites of the discipline.

In 2014, Queen contested the entire Virginia Triple Crown — South Boston’s Thunder Road Harley-Davidson 200, Langley’s Hampton Heat and the ValleyStar Credit Union 300 at Martinsville Speedway — for the first time. The outing was a difficult one for Queen; a ninth-place run in the Hampton Heat was his only finish inside the top 10.

As Queen continued to build the “Butterbean” brand, the Virginia Triple Crown grew along with him. Through a collaborative effort between NASCAR and FloSports, the three-race stretch now offers a total purse of $50,000, $20,000 of which goes to the champion.

Queen has been impressed with the effort that has gone into making the Virginia Triple Crown a cherished Late Model Stock tradition. There was already an element of prestige brewing during the event’s early years. Each track’s unique layout encouraged both precision and caution, as one bad race could potentially doom a title run.

With the increased purse and subsequent notoriety, Queen believes there is now more of an incentive for drivers to contest all three parts of the Virginia Triple Crown.

“If you go to [South Boston] and run good, it makes you go to Langley,” Queen said. “Everybody’s almost always going to Martinsville, but [the Virginia Triple Crown] gives you some reasons to go.

“In our Late Model Stock world, we know how big of a deal it is and how hard it is to put three races together at that level at three different tracks.”

Although Queen has never won the Virginia Triple Crown, he’s found success in the event over the years, particularly in the second leg at Langley.

Queen won the Hampton Heat for the first time in 2020 with his own equipment, though that race was not part of the Virginia Triple Crown due to the COVID-19 pandemic canceling the other two legs. Teaming up with Pulliam brought Queen two more Hampton Heat victories in 2023 and 2024, tying him with C.E. Falk III for the most with three.

Brenden Queen
(Photo: Sean Gardner/Getty Images)

The accolades Queen has accumulated at Langley alone, including three consecutive track titles from 2020-22, always surprise him whenever he reflects upon them. He considers his maiden Hampton Heat conquest to be the catalyst that made him a perennial contender not only at Langley, but against any stout Late Model Stock field.

That confidence is why Queen is eager to return to his home track to pursue another Hampton Heat triumph after finishing third in what was his only Late Model Stock appearance across the 2025 season.

“I never thought I’d win one [Hampton Heat], let alone three,” Queen said. “They never got easier. If anything, they got harder to win. Looking back, it just happened so fast. Last year was awesome. We put up a fight and came up two spots short of that record-breaking three in a row and four total.

“We’ll give it another go this year and try to break the record of most wins in it. You never know; maybe this will start another streak [of going] back-to-back again.”

Before Queen gets to Langley for the Hampton Heat, he will first have to contest South Boston’s Thunder Road Harley-Davidson 200. He’s never won there.

What makes South Boston so challenging from Queen’s perspective is how dynamic the racing surface can be. Depending on the conditions, Queen said either the top or bottom groove can be dominant, which makes a strong qualifying effort imperative for the 200-lap feature given how hard it can be to pass.

Yet Queen feels he got closer to South Boston’s Victory Lane than ever with Pulliam, especially during the 2023 Thunder Road Harley-Davidson 200, when he finished second after starting on pole. With no Truck Series obligations for this year’s opening leg of the Virginia Triple Crown, Queen is prepared to go all in with Pulliam so he can finally prevail at South Boston.

“We’ve been close but have never had it work our way,” Queen said. “[2023] really stings, because looking back on it, if I could have just done something different, I would have knocked that one off the list, but maybe I wouldn’t be coming back to try it again if I had already won it. This was one I circled as an off weekend, so I can have full attention on it.

“I’d love to knock that crown jewel off and narrow it down to what I haven’t won.”

Brenden Queen
Despite scoring accolades that include an ARCA Menards Series title, Brenden “Butterbean” Queen still wants to win the other two legs of the Virginia Triple Crown. (Photo: Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images)

The Thunder Road Harley-Davidson 200 is the only leg of the Virginia Triple Crown when Queen does not have to worry about a Truck Series conflict. For the Hampton Heat, the Truck Series runs at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park the night before, allowing Queen to travel back and forth if there is no rain delay for the former.

The ValleyStar Credit Union 300 is where things get tricky. The Truck Series is at Kansas Speedway the same day as the 200-lap Late Model Stock feature at Martinsville. With a tentative 1 p.m. ET green flag for Kansas, Queen would have to hustle to make the main event in Martinsville on time.

Despite the potential logistical nightmare of such a venture, if Queen were to win one or even two legs of the Virginia Triple Crown beforehand, he would be willing to travel to Martinsville and pursue his first grandfather clock.

“I don’t know if they have the rule this year where you’re locked into Martinsville by winning [one of the first two legs],” Queen said. “If they do have that rule, I’d have to look how I could get to Martinsville after Kansas and start at the rear, I guess. Martinsville is the other of the two big crown jewels I haven’t won.

“To win the Late Model race there would be super special. You never know how things could work out.”

The Truck Series will remain Queen’s priority. He’s spent most of his career building toward such a moment and does not plan to take his opportunity with Kaulig for granted. That’s why he’s thrilled to return to Late Model Stocks for two of the discipline’s biggest events after being mostly absent in 2025.

Given that his Late Model Stock appearances will be limited for as long as he is in NASCAR’s top three divisions, nothing would make Queen happier than to sweep the first two legs of the Virginia Triple Crown.

The NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series head to Michigan International Speedway this weekend for their annual stops in the Irish Hills. The ARCA Menards Series kicks off on-track activity Friday, followed by Trucks on Saturday and culminating with the FireKeepers Casino 400 on Sunday (3 p.m. ET, Prime Video, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Below are the qualifying orders for both series.

MORE: Weekend schedule | How to watch NASCAR on TV

Cup Series
Single-car qualifying will occur at 6:10 p.m. ET on Saturday, with practice earlier in the day at 5 p.m. ET (Prime Video).

POSITIONNUMBERDRIVERMETRICGROUP
144* JJ Yeley(i)41.01
288Connor Zilisch #37.11
31Ross Chastain33.71
448Alex Bowman32.11
521Josh Berry31.61
616AJ Allmendinger31.11
760Ryan Preece30.01
86Brad Keselowski27.71
9133Austin Hill(i)27.01
1023Bubba Wallace26.91
1151Cody Ware26.21
1242John Hunter Nemechek25.51
1341Cole Custer24.91
1424William Byron24.31
152Austin Cindric23.31
1617Chris Buescher22.71
1734Todd Gilliland21.51
184Noah Gragson20.51
1935Riley Herbst20.31
203Austin Dillon19.82
2110Ty Dillon18.02
225Kyle Larson17.92
237Daniel Suárez16.32
2471Michael McDowell16.22
2522Joey Logano15.22
2643Erik Jones14.02
2738Zane Smith12.32
2854Ty Gibbs10.62
2947Ricky Stenhouse Jr.9.72
3077Carson Hocevar9.72
3197Shane van Gisbergen7.12
3212Ryan Blaney6.52
3319Chase Briscoe6.32
349Chase Elliott6.12
3545Tyler Reddick4.52
3620Christopher Bell3.52
3711Denny Hamlin1.32

Craftsman Truck Series
Single-truck qualifying will occur at 10:35 a.m. ET on Saturday, with practice earlier in the day at 9:30 a.m. ET (FOX One).

POSITIONNUMBERDRIVERMETRIC
142Ricky Stenhouse Jr.33.0
225Parker Kligerman31.7
32Morgen Baird30.2
415Tanner Gray30.0
593Caleb Costner28.6
676Spencer Boyd27.8
716Justin Haley27.7
898Jake Garcia27.5
977Carson Hocevar(i)26.8
1033Frankie Muniz26.1
1181Kris Wright25.1
1222Josh Reaume24.9
135Spencer Davis24.9
1499Ben Rhodes22.9
1514Mini Tyrrell #22.1
164Cleetus McFarland(i)21.3
1710Corey LaJoie20.8
1813Cole Butcher #19.6
1912Brenden Queen #19.6
2011Kaden Honeycutt19.5
2126Dawson Sutton19.4
2220Daniel Dye18.4
2344Andrés Pérez16.4
2419Daniel Hemric15.3
2562Christopher Bell(i)11.3
2688Ty Majeski11.1
279Grant Enfinger10.6
281Corey Heim10.3
2952Stewart Friesen8.7
3017Gio Ruggiero8.4
3118Tyler Ankrum7.7
3291Christian Eckes7.1
3345Ross Chastain(i)5.2
3438Chandler Smith3.9
357Connor Mosack2.3
3634Layne Riggs1.0

* Required to qualify on time
# denotes series rookie
(i) denotes ineligible for driver points

Kevin Magnussen will pilot Trackhouse Racing’s Project 91 entry at Naval Base Coronado in his NASCAR Cup Series debut on June 21, the team announced Wednesday morning.

Magnussen, a 10-year veteran of Formula One and a noted sports-car racer, will drive the No. 91 Qualcomm Technologies Chevrolet in NASCAR’s inaugural race on an active United States military base, as Qualcomm will serve as the Official Circuit Partner of NASCAR San Diego race weekend.

MORE: Explore San Diego course | Buy tickets

A native of Denmark, Magnussen made 185 career starts in F1 from 2014 through 2024, competing for McLaren, Renault and Haas throughout his time in the sport, earning a career-best second-place finish in his debut at Melbourne in the 2014 Australian Grand Prix for McLaren. In a move to sports cars in 2021, Magnussen won the Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix in IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship competition for Chip Ganassi Racing at Belle Isle alongside co-driver Renger van der Zande. He also made one NTT IndyCar Series start in 2021 at Road America before rejoining F1 from 2022 through 2024.

In an already diverse career, Magnussen will now add stock-car racing to an already impressive resume.

“I’m incredibly excited and honored to have the opportunity to compete in NASCAR,” Magnussen said in a team release. “What Justin Marks and Trackhouse have done with Project 91 is unique, to provide drivers from outside of the NASCAR world with a chance to compete at this level. I’m proud to have this opportunity.

“I’ve already spent time with the team in North Carolina — meeting everyone, doing the seat fit, going through pit-stop procedures and all the details that come with preparing for a NASCAR weekend. They’re an awesome group of people, incredibly dedicated, and just as excited about this debut as I am. I really can’t wait to get to San Diego and experience it all for the first time.”

Magnussen will have three teammates on track at the San Diego street course, joining full-time competitors Ross Chastain, Connor Zilisch and Project 91 alum Shane van Gisbergen on track. Phil Surgen, the team’s director of technology, will serve as Magnussen’s crew chief on the No. 91 car. Surgen previously served as crew chief for five years alongside Chastain. As part of the team’s partnership with Qualcomm, Trackhouse notes in its press release that the technology company will aid the four-car organization’s on-track performance with artificial intelligence.

“Through the Qualcomm Dragonwing™ AI on-prem appliance, the competition and performance team will gain efficient insights into real-time data, streamlining faster and more strategic in-race decision-making,” the release states. “The technology will analyze and distribute complex data and radio communications to race engineers at both the track and race shop.”

While the 33-year-old has never competed in NASCAR, the Danish driver has gotten behind the wheel of a NASCAR stock car before. His time as a competitor for Haas F1 Team led to a NASCAR crossover in 2022, when he and then-teammate Mick Schumacher traveled to Charlotte Motor Speedway, riding shotgun with Chase Briscoe around the track’s Roval in a Gen 6 Cup car before ripping laps of their own.

“NASCAR, it’s a different animal to a Formula One car,” Magnussen said after his first experience. “That’s what we’re used to. When you drive in NASCAR, as a Formula One driver, it’s like you’ve never driven a race car before. It’s completely different.

“Everything you know is out of the window. It’s a lot of fun. You’ve got to relearn everything again, and it’s like driving a race car for the first time. It’s awesome.”

Briscoe watched as the duo caught on quickly, noting lap times were only “three or four seconds off” in only a handful of laps.

“I think if they ever wanted to come try it, they’d definitely be competitive,” Briscoe said.

Preview of the No. 91 Qualcomm Chevrolet Kevin Magnussen will drive in NASCAR at San Diego.
Courtesy of Trackhouse Racing

Magnussen will get his first legitimate chance when NASCAR travels to Coronado for its own moment of history.

Trackhouse fields its Project 91 program with the intent of expanding Trackhouse Racing’s global reach by fielding an Open entry in the Cup Series for renowned international racing drivers, an effort led by team owner Justin Marks that has hit the track five times since the program’s inception in 2022. Magnussen’s appearance marks the first for Trackhouse Racing’s Project 91 entry since the 2025 Daytona 500, when four-time Indianapolis 500 champion Hélio Castroneves made his NASCAR debut.

“I’m thrilled to be able to bring back Project 91 again this year, especially at San Diego,” said Marks. “We were waiting for the right opportunity with the right partner and driver to bring this Project 91 entry to fruition. Qualcomm is a worldwide brand, and Kevin Magnussen is a global driver, and both are elements we look for when it comes to running Project 91.”

Kimi Räikkönen, the 2007 Formula One World Champion, served as the team’s proof of concept when he debuted at Watkins Glen International in 2022, ultimately making two Cup starts for the organization.

The program exploded on the scene, though, thanks to three-time Supercars champion Shane van Gisbergen, when his NASCAR debut culminated in a stunning victory in July 2023 in NASCAR’s inaugural race on the Chicago Street Course. The New Zealander made one more Project 91 start that year for Trackhouse but ultimately springboarded a full career shift to NASCAR, with SVG now in the midst of his second full-time season and sitting 12th in the current points standings.

MORE: SVG earns career-best oval finish at Nashville

Magnussen will make Project 91’s sixth start in the Anduril 250 at Naval Base Coronado on Sunday, June 21 (4 p.m. ET, Prime Video, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

All States Materials Group 150

Oxford Plains Speedway

  • Entry list
Car No. Driver Team Crew Chief Chassis Mfg. Sponsors
1 Patrick Emerling USNE Motorsports Dale Hedquist LFR USNE Power
3 Tyler Rypkema BRE Racing Greg Fournier Boehler Racing Northeast Drilling; SYP
05 Teddy Hodgdon Teddy Hodgdon Racing Ted Hodgdon FURY Race Cars Business Time Motorsports; The Landau Team of Re/Max; Montanari Fuel
8 John-Michael Shenette Eighty-Two Autosport Scott Morin LFR USNE Power Charlotte, Eighty-Two Services
17 Anthony Nocella Michele Davini Chris Mctaggart LFR Bells Septic; Sontag Motorsports; Copart; Xtreme Autobody; Keene Towing & Recovery
18 Ken Heagy Heagy Motorsports Greg Gorman FURY Race Cars Merkel Racing Engines
21 Stephen Kopcik Wanick Motorsports Nick Kopcik Troyer Wanick Construction; Newtown Pools
31 Mike Christopher Jr. Elite Motorsports Eugene Orlando LFR Elite Towing; Elite Racing; Baker Racing
50 Ronnie Williams Ronnie Williams Adam Skowyra FURY Race Cars Empower Financial Advisory
54 Tommy Catalano Catalano Motorsports Rick Kluth Troyer FX Caprara; USNE Power
56 Trevor Catalano Catalano Motorsports David Catalano Troyer USNE Power
58 Eric Goodale Goodie Motorsports Rob Hyer FURY Race Cars GAF Roofing
60 Matt Hirschman Pee Dee Motorsports Mike Stein Troyer Bar Harbor Bank & Trust; Pee Dee Motorsports
64 Austin Beers KLM Motorsports Ron Yuhas Troyer G&G Electrical Supply, Fastrack Electric, Dell Electric, Lumiere Electrical, AP Marquadt & Sons, Andrew James Interiors, Hugh
73 Paulie Hartwig III Hartwig Racing Bobby Geiger Jr LFR Professional Therapy Associates; Jersey Shore Contracting
79 Jon McKennedy Jonathan McKennedy Racing Patrick Walsh FURY Race Cars Stuarts Automotive, Christophers Towing, Levasseur HVAC, Hillsboro Ent., Leone’s Landscaping
82 Andrew Molleur DWR Racing Michael Molleur LFR Horton Avenue Materials
84 Tyler Catalano Catalano Motorsports Tom Fuchs Troyer Catalano Motorsports

 

There will be no penalty issued for the crash involving Austin Dillon and Brad Keselowski at Nashville Superspeedway after NASCAR officials quickly determined no fault in the incident.

During the latest episode of the “Hauler Talk” podcast, senior director of racing communications Amanda Ellis said the wreck was reviewed immediately at NASCAR’s remote race control facility in Concord, North Carolina.

RELATED: Nashville recap | NASCAR goes ‘Nashville hot’ as tensions rise

“Scott Miller pulled all the data from that incident, and we knew pretty quickly that Austin was out of the throttle (before hitting Keselowski),” Ellis said. “They obviously tangled on the track, and then the incident happened, right? But we were able to tell pretty quickly that it wasn’t a situation where Austin was in the gas or anything related to that.”

In his team’s radio communication and interviews, Keselowski held Dillon responsible for the crash. Prime Video analyst Steve Letarte dissected the incident Monday in a NASCAR.com video and determined Dillon was at 100% throttle at the exit of Turn 4 and dropped to 17% throttle at the time of impact on the front straightaway.

“Those two (drivers) clearly kind of had some differences of opinion throughout the race,” Ellis said. “And so that one is really more of just a racing incident, and that’s really how NASCAR viewed it on Sunday night.”

The crash was one of 11 cautions, including four for drivers with brake issues.

WATCH: Inside the brake rotor failures at Nashville

NASCAR vice president of racing communications Mike Forde said the problems likely were the result of setups that weren’t optimized for a 2026 rules package with an increase to 750 horsepower and lower downforce. The higher corner entry speeds necessitated heavier braking.

“Depending on what kind of brake package you use and setup that you chose, which is a team’s choice, that’s what we believe led to a lot of the problems,” Forde said. “I think it’s going to be pretty easily fixable. We saw 30-some cars that didn’t have any problems. We did see the four, but we want to see zero. So I think there will be some learnings from the entire garage, but I think, suffice to say, we looked at it, and if this was back at the 670 (horsepower) package last year, we probably wouldn’t have seen the problems.

“It’s kind of the teams have to work through it, and I don’t think anyone’s calling for any change in that regard.”

Other topics covered by Forde and Ellis during the 56th episode of “Hauler Talk,” which explores competition issues in NASCAR:

— The decision to hold the yellow flag for a Kyle Larson spin near the end of the race at Nashville.

— The process and rules that govern how a polesitter starts a race.

— The verdict in Ryan Preece’s appeal hearing.

— Why flashing lights are used to help drivers determine when the pits are closed.

Click on the embed below to listen or search for “Hauler Talk” wherever you download podcasts to hear it on your phone, tablet or mobile device.

Nate Ryan has written about NASCAR since 1996 while working at the San Bernardino Sun, Richmond Times-Dispatch, USA Today Co. and, for the past 10 years, at NBC Sports Digital. He is a contributor to the “Hauler Talk” show on the NASCAR Podcast Network. He has also covered various other motorsports, including the IndyCar and IMSA series.

Goodyear Racing will use a new right-side tire setup for the NASCAR Cup Series this weekend as teams prepare for Sunday’s FireKeepers Casino 400 (3 p.m. ET, Prime Video, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

With the smooth and high-speed surface of the 2-mile oval in the Irish Hills, Goodyear had the challenge of providing a tire that could handle the stress going into the corners of the track. The left-side tire is the same setup used on multiple ovals this year, including Nashville last weekend.

RELATED: Michigan weekend schedule

“This weekend’s Goodyear Racing Eagle tire setup builds on the intermediate track package teams have already raced multiple times this season,” said Justin Fantozzi, Goodyear Director of Racing for the Americas. “Michigan is one of the fastest tracks on the NASCAR schedule, featuring a smooth surface and multiple racing grooves that allow drivers to run different lines. The high speeds place significant stress on the right-side tires, so we have brought a new right-side tire designed to withstand those loads while also increasing strategy options for teams.”

NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series teams will run a familiar setup this weekend, using the same setup from Texas Motor Speedway and the same left-side tire run the last two weekends at Nashville and Charlotte.

Meeting the standard for 1-mile tracks or longer, the 15-inch Goodyear tires will also feature inner liners.

Tire allotments for each team competing this weekend:

  • Cup Series: 8 total sets — 6 new sets for the race, 1 for qualifying, which transfers to the race, and 1 for practice.
  • Craftsman Truck Series: 5 total sets — 3 new sets for the race, 1 for qualifying, which transfers to the race, and 1 for practice.

LEBANON, Tenn. — Nashville Superspeedway delivered drama, action and intensity from start to finish Sunday night.

For viewers, the Music City mayhem capped a thrilling weekend in the Volunteer State. For most drivers other than Denny Hamlin, the chaos left their stomachs in knots.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Nashville

Sunday’s Cracker Barrel 400 marked the NASCAR Cup Series’ official start to the second half of the regular season and another grueling test on both man and machine in the Tennessee heat with a new racing package, featuring lower downforce and 750 horsepower under the hood.

That added speed and reduced aerodynamic stability appeared to lead to extra wear on the brakes, resulting in numerous failures in brake rotors Sunday, including Trackhouse Racing teammates Connor Zilisch and Ross Chastain as well as then-leader AJ Allmendinger, who surged through strategy to score a Stage 1 victory.

But brakes weren’t the only source of misfortune. Mistimed contact led to multiple incidents, many collecting those around the 16th-place bubble in the Cup Series points standings where the cutoff will be determined for The Chase at the end of August. In total, 24 of Sunday’s 38 cars were involved in an accident, according to Racing Insights. That list includes Chastain, Austin Cindric and Bubba Wallace.

Chastain, runner-up in the 2022 season standings, has fallen to 26th in points after his second consecutive DNF left him 37th at Nashville and sits 67 points behind Cindric for the provisional 16th and final spot in the 10-race postseason run. Cindric was collected in a Lap 193 crash off Turn 4 when Brad Keselowski and Austin Dillon collided, sending Keselowski into a spin and into Cindric’s door. Keselowski, 13th in points, was unable to continue and finished 34th while Cindric trudged on to a 26th-place result. Ryan Preece, Keselowski’s RFK Racing teammate, wasn’t involved in an incident but fell outside The Chase after a radiator issue sent his No. 60 Ford to the garage early, resulting in a 36th-place finish.

Wallace, meanwhile, was involved in an incident not of his doing for the fourth consecutive week, including the exhibition All-Star Race at Dover on May 17. Wallace started the year strong and sat inside the top three in the points standings for five straight weeks. But in a dismal stretch since Darlington Raceway in late March, Wallace has finished 22nd or worse in six of the last nine races, including three straight after finishing 32nd at Nashville, and now sits 15th in points, just 34 points inside The Chase bubble.

“It’s been a long couple weeks,” a dejected Wallace said after being evaluated and released from the infield care center. “Just tired. But I become the [expletive] when I let this carry over in the Mondays and Tuesdays, so I’ve got to somehow put on a face.

“Just a weird race. A lot of cautions. I’m just beyond devastated.”

View of a damage race car in garage with crew members standing around.
Ethan Smith | For NASCAR Digital Media

That frustration was not reserved for the rear of the field. Third-place finisher Chase Briscoe was gutted by not winning Sunday’s race against Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Denny Hamlin and Christopher Bell in search of his first win of 2026, particularly because he has his eyes set on a run to the top five in points despite sitting 14th in standings post-Nashville.

“I’ve never been so frustrated to not win a race before,” Briscoe said.

But as he inches up the standings leaderboard, Briscoe found slight solace on a night where he finished where he was running, as opposed to Charlotte one week earlier where he crashed out after a top-five day was rounding into form.

“I mean, I’m frustrated and annoyed right now, just because I felt like I certainly had a car that could have won the race, and then ended up third with it,” Briscoe said. “But to have a fast car, right? There’s been a lot of points this year where we’ve had cars that were capable of running up front and we haven’t been able to have the finish, so yeah, it’s nice to get the finish tonight.”

Briscoe said fifth place in points is the goal for the No. 19 team after a poor start to the season left him outside the top 20 for the first seven weeks of 2026. After Sunday, he trails Kyle Larson by 66 markers for sixth place and is 106 points behind teammate Ty Gibbs for fifth.

“We’re slowly chipping away at it,” Briscoe said. “Just really want to win.”

Hendrick Motorsports, another perennial contender, has been to Victory Lane twice this season with Chase Elliott, who sits fourth in points after a seventh-place finish at Nashville. But its other three drivers — Larson, William Byron and Alex Bowman — are still seeking that first breakthrough of the year after uncharacteristic misfortune or mistakes.

MORE: Cup Series standings

Team president Jeff Andrews has no doubt the No. 24 team will sort its way up the pylon as Byron is 11th in points and Bowman in the No. 48 plays catch-up from a four-race absence for vertigo earlier this season. But this is the time of year where any weaknesses must be addressed.

“Between now and September, you want to start seeing some consistency, and that builds confidence,” Andrews told NASCAR.com. “The 24 has just had some terrible luck here. We’ve just got to get that turned around, and it will. That’s too good of a race team not to get that turned around. And the 5 (Larson), I mean, ran over a brake rotor tonight, running fifth. Not much we can do about that. That’s not in our hands. So we’ve just got to go back and pump each other up and take the positives from the night and carry that on into September, and we will.

“We’ve got Michigan and Pocono coming up, and should be two good tracks for us. Just go race there, take it one week at a time. And as long as the momentum is going forward, and as long as the gains are going in the forward direction, by the time we get to September, I feel like we’ll be right in the middle of it.”