Before the green flag waves and the NASCAR industry recognizes fallen service members with 600 Miles of Remembrance on Sunday, George Lutz will be on the infield grass at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Along with dozens of other volunteers, he will lead the unfurling of a giant Honor and Remember flag. The flag, Lutz hopes, will soon become the federally recognized symbol of respect and appreciation for fallen service members – and a reminder for all Americans that those who gave everything for their country should never be forgotten.

Through his non-profit Honor and Remember, an official partner of NASCAR IMPACT, Lutz will host many Gold Star families at the race track this weekend, their fallen loved ones’ names adorning the windshields of NASCAR Cup Series cars.

Lutz’s new book, Tragedy to Tribute, recounts the story of his own family’s tragic loss when his son George Anthony “Tony” Lutz II was killed while on patrol in Fallujah, Iraq in 2005.

It’s been almost 20 years since Tony tragically lost his life in Iraq. You’ve since made it your life’s mission to ensure that his memory, and the memories of other fallen service members are never forgotten. Why was it important to tell Tony’s story in this way?

After Tony’s death, I went down a spiritual path, if you will, and in my conversations with God, I came to realize that I knew that I would see him again. But what I didn’t know was what direction I should take next.

I started to lean in the direction of … how were other families [of fallen service members] feeling? How did they gain comfort? What came to them that they could embrace and give them any kind of hope?

I started to go and meet families and talk to them and share with them. And I realized that they didn’t have that structure, that support group people need when they experience tragedies. And so over time I started gathering families for meals and other things, and these were opportunities to embrace, to cry together and to share stories of their loved ones.

What I realized during that time and through these experiences was that the one thing that these families wanted more than anything was for their loved ones to be remembered. That was the one thing that these families really clung to. So the burning question in my mind was … how can every family make sure that their loved one is not forgotten?

I came to the realization that something had to be created that got everybody’s attention. The families will never forget, of course. I wear Tony’s dog tag around my neck. It was on my son’s body before he was buried. But how do we ensure that every single fallen service member is not forgotten by the general population?

So I thought, well, I’m going to create a flag. And I’m going to get that flag on every flagpole in America, and I’m going to make sure that families, wherever they live, will see this flag flying. And once we educate the families and the population about what it means and why it’s important, then every fallen hero family in America will then know that the flag is flying for them and flying for their loved ones.

Tony’s death became a means for me to have this wake-up call and realize this was necessary — to put something together so that America would never forget. And then it took, you know, God’s hand on my life to give me the energy and the passion and the relentless pursuit to make sure that I never gave up until it was achieved.

Tragedy to Tribute chronicles the journey of the organization you founded, Honor and Remember, and its growth over the years. What are you most proud of when you consider the impact and influence that Honor and Remember has had since 2008?

Since its inception on Memorial Day of 2008, I never imagined that the Honor and Remember flag would become as prominent as it has become. But here we are and it’s taken a long time.

The POW/MIA flag came along in 1971. It was 18 years later that it was finally recognized by the U.S. government. So I knew this was going to take time and that it would be a journey that required a wise approach. And that approach was founded on building relationships. With NASCAR, we have a 14-year relationship and now we’re an IMPACT partner … that’s all part of this step-by-step journey.

I’ve driven to all 48 contiguous states and I’ve been to Alaska and Hawaii to bring this message to every legislator in America, and that allowed us to get 28 state adoptions of the Honor and Remember flag as their state symbol of remembrance. I’ve visited Capitol Hill and I’ve told my story and there have been seven bills in Congress to make this flag a national symbol. Currently H.R. 1363 awaits a vote.

All that didn’t come without effort and a focus of helping people understand that the flag was meant to be a gift to the families. If we could get the flag flying on all these flagpoles, we’d giving an amazing gift to families by letting them know that we haven’t forgotten. Freedom comes at a price, and so many Americans don’t know how to express thanks to those who’ve paid the cost.

The role of NASCAR and the industry’s embrace of Honor and Remember is featured prominently in your book. What does the support of the NASCAR community mean to you, personally? How is it advancing the mission of Honor and Remember?

The NASCAR relationship began by getting to know people on the ground floor and passionately saying, “Hey, I’ve got something I think is important and you should think it’s important, and maybe together we can make some small difference.” And that’s how it started.

NASCAR for years has done a wonderful job celebrating our military and honoring veterans, but you can’t honor the military without remembering the fallen. These men and women didn’t get to be veterans. They didn’t get to come home and have a family and a career and continue to live under the freedoms that they died to protect, right?

And I think that that message resonated with NASCAR and I was allowed to be that navigator for them, that advocate that would help the industry come together to remember the fallen. Together the message from the sport has been that we proudly remember those that gave their lives so that we could enjoy what we do on a weekend basis. And so, personally, it means the world to me. NASCAR has helped me tell this story on a much broader scale, and to a massive audience of race fans.

The 600 Miles of Remembrance has become such an integral part of the Coca-Cola 600 and, more broadly, the sport’s efforts to honor and remember the fallen on Memorial Day Weekend. What impact does this program have on Gold Star Families?

You know, we’ve been working on and evolving this for a long time and the collaboration with NASCAR, Charlotte Motor Speedway and the race teams has been tremendous. It allows us to bring families that have been grieving to a place where they can not only lose themselves in the pomp and circumstance of an amazing race weekend, but they can also realize and recognize that their loved one has been embraced by a community that really gets it.

So the families come in and receive this behind-the-scenes experience that they’ve never had before, and with the addition of the names on the cars, you know, they’re just walking around on Cloud Nine. It’s a beautiful experience for them.

So, we’re actually bringing more healing to these families by bringing them together with each other, early on in the weekend and then giving them track tours and then letting them meet the race teams that they’re associated with.

It’s mind blowing for the families and to see how deeply NASCAR engages with this important message. It means the world to them.

What do you hope readers take from Tragedy to Tribute? And in what ways can NASCAR fans who are inspired to support assist in the cause of Honor and Remember?

One of the most important things fans can do is fly the Honor and Remember flag. It could be on their homes. It could be on their businesses. It could be on their churches, schoolyards or on the buildings of government legislators. And we’d like to see the flag 365 days of the year, not just on Memorial Day Weekend, because every single day is Memorial Day for a family somewhere in this country.

Next is helping us sponsor flags for families. We present personalized, handsewn flags. It is our mission to provide a flag as a free gift for every family that requests one. Honor and Remember has presented over 5,000 flags and we’re getting close to 5,500. Fans can visit Honorandremember.org to sponsor a flag or simply make a donation to our organization and support the cause.

We also have a federal bill in Congress, H.R. 1363. I would implore all fans to reach out to their local congressional offices and ask their members to sponsor the bill and help us get it passed by the end of this session, which is the end of 2026 and the year of America’s 250th anniversary.

SPEEDWAY, Ind. — Under sunny skies and temperatures in the high-60s — the warmest it’s been this week — the 33-car Indianapolis 500 field made its final practice laps Friday in preparation for Sunday’s 109th Running of the Indianapolis 500.

Friday’s annual “Carb Day” two-hour practice session at Indianapolis Motor Speedway culminated a busy, news-making week at the track where two of the fastest cars were penalized for illegal modifications, a rookie making his first career oval start won pole position and NASCAR champion Kyle Larson is set to make his second attempt at Memorial Day’s famed “Double” — competing in both the Indianapolis 500 Sunday morning (noon ET, FOX) and then NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600 that evening (6 p.m. ET, Prime Video, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Scenes from Larson’s Double attempt

The two Team Penske cars penalized during Fast 12 pole qualifying made a huge statement Friday with two-time defending Indy 500 winner Josef Newgarden turning the fastest lap in practice and his teammate, Will Power — who will join Newgarden on the last row of the starting grid as a result of the penalties — fifth fastest.

They also went on to face one another later in the day’s best-of-three championship round of the traditional Pit Stop Challenge, with Newgarden winning his third crown in the event, which pits 16 cars in eight rounds of head-to-head timed competition.

As for practice, Indy 500 pole-winner, Israeli driver Robert Shwartzman, 25, was 29th on the speed charts. And NASCAR Cup Series championship leader Kyle Larson was 26th on single lap speed but among the top six in both 10-lap and 20-lap runs.

The 2021 NASCAR champ Larson, who hosted his Cup Series Hendrick Motorsports team trackside Friday, remained confident in his No. 17 McLaren Arrow Chevrolet, all business as he climbed out for a practice debrief.

“I think it’s a little different than NASCAR with the drafting and not knowing what people’s objectives really were, but it doesn’t hurt [to be fast in multi-lap runs],” Larson said of his work Friday afternoon. “I feel good about my balance, so yeah, I feel like we’re pretty decent. There are a couple guys that are really good also, but I feel like things feel good.”

Larson acknowledged that coming through the field from the seventh row to start the race Sunday definitely presents a different experience than he had last year, starting fifth overall on the second row.

“I would prefer to start further forward, but I think you’ve just got to be smartly aggressive and patient all at the same time back when you start beyond the first few rows,” Larson said. “I think our car handles good in the pack, so just got to be smart about it. You can’t be too aggressive because if you try to push too much and get tightness and have to lift, then you’re going to give up a spot potentially. Just got to watch out when you make moves.”

It was an unusually dramatic day for several of his competitors. Alexander Rossi, who won the 100th Indianapolis 500 in 2016, had problems with his Ed Carpenter Racing Chevrolet early, running only five laps before the team took it to the garage for repairs. The Rahal Letterman Lanigan team had to change engines in Graham Rahal’s No. 15 Honda after only 21 laps of practice.

Indianapolis-native Conor Daly, a perennial crowd-favorite, also had a challenging day in his Junco Hollinger Racing Chevrolet, the team retiring to the garage early for a full once-over. Daly, who starts 11th, called the afternoon “nerve-wracking.” He still got in 59 laps of practice and posted the 10th-best speed Friday.

Another former Indy winner, Ryan Hunter-Reay, had the most dramatic exit from the practice when his No. 23 Dryer-Reinbold Chevy had to pull off the track with the rear of his car on fire. He was concerned the issue may be with the new hybrid system the cars are running at Indy, since his teammate also experienced a problem.

After practice, Carb Day activities finished up with the always-exciting Pit Stop Challenge, and Saturday features the traditional Public Drivers Meeting and parade through downtown Indianapolis — the month finally culminating with Sunday’s Indianapolis 500 green flag at noon ET.

Hendrick Motorsports announced Friday that the organization and No. 24 Chevrolet driver and two-time defending Daytona 500 winner William Byron have agreed to a four-year contract extension that runs until 2029.

Since his rise to the NASCAR Cup Series in 2018, the 27-year-old wheelman has emerged as one of the sport’s superstars, winning 14 races since the start of 2020. Thirteen of those have come with crew chief Rudy Fugle, and since the two paired in 2021, it is the second-highest victory tally at the Cup level over that span.

MORE: Byron through the years | Hendrick all-time winners

“We’ve built something special with the No. 24 team,” said Byron in a team press release. “I’m thankful for the opportunity to continue working with amazing people at Hendrick Motorsports who believe in me, especially Mr. and Mrs. Hendrick. We’ve accomplished some great things that we’re really proud of, but we have even bigger goals ahead. I’m excited to go after them with this team and this organization.”

In February, Byron scored his second consecutive Daytona 500 victory, becoming just the 13th driver to win the “Great American Race” multiple times and the first to win the season-opening event back-to-back times since Denny Hamlin (2019-2020).

Byron has made the Cup Series Playoffs in every season since 2019, reaching the Championship 4 the last two seasons.

With his second Daytona 500 in February, he provisionally locked himself into the 2025 postseason and currently sits second in the Cup Series standings behind Hendrick teammate Kyle Larson.

Prior to his call-up in 2018, Byron won 11 races combined in the Xfinity Series and Craftsman Truck Series, snagging the Xfinity championship in 2017 to cap a four-win campaign.

The contract extension comes on the same weekend as the annual Coca-Cola 600 crown jewel event in Sunday’s race at Charlotte Motor Speedway (6 p.m. ET, Prime Video, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), which sits just across the street from the Hendrick Motorsports shop.

“William is the real deal,” said Rick Hendrick, owner of Hendrick Motorsports, in the release. “What makes him so special is that he combines natural ability with an unrivaled work ethic. You see it in the great ones — the drivers who could get by on talent alone but choose to outwork everyone anyway. That’s William. On top of it all, he’s a person of high character and embraces his role as a leader. We’re proud to have him in our lineup and look forward to many more wins together.”

After hard contact with the inside wall during a late wreck at Talladega Superspeedway on April 26, Connor Zilisch missed the following NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Texas Motor Speedway, citing lower back issues.

The good news? A healthy Zilisch will return to action in Saturday’s BetMGM 300 (4:30 p.m. ET, The CW, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Moreover, Zilisch will also make his oval-track debut in the Cup Series in Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600 (6 p.m. ET, Prime Video, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Charlotte weekend schedule | Key links, info for Charlotte

“Charlotte is my first race in my hometown, and a lot of my family will be there this weekend so that’s exciting, for sure,” said Zilisch, who will drive the No. 88 JR Motorsports Chevrolet on Saturday and the No. 87 Trackhouse Racing Chevy on Sunday. “It’s going to be special for me to go there and race for the first time in the Xfinity car and to also double up and race the Cup car.

“I think the Xfinity race at Charlotte is going to be really good for us, considering how well we’ve done on the intermediate tracks this year. We’ve just got to continue to build on what we’ve learned throughout the season and hopefully have a good run in the Jarrett Chevrolet at my home track.”

Zilisch will have plenty of competition. Full-time Cup driver William Byron is driving the No. 17 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, hoping to duplicate teammate Chase Elliott’s victory in last year’s edition of this race.

Series leader Justin Allgaier, Zilisch’s teammate at JRM, is another strong entry. Allgaier dominated the race in 2023, winning from the pole and leading 83 of 200 laps. The reigning series champion already has two victories this season on 1.5-mile tracks, Las Vegas Motor Speedway and Homestead-Miami Speedway.

Allgaier, however, will have to buck a trend to win on Saturday. There has not been a repeat winner in the last 12 Xfinity Series races at Charlotte.

The “Double Duty” challenge — racing in the Indy 500 and Coca-Cola 600 on the same day — has humbled almost everyone who’s tried it. Larson’s ready to try again.

If at first you don’t succeed, try to pull off the most ambitious and grueling day in auto racing again — if you’re Kyle Larson, that is.

On Sunday, Larson will continue what has already been an incredibly hectic month by running the 109th Indianapolis 500, where he’ll try to build on last year’s 18th-place finish as an IndyCar rookie. Then, he’ll hop out of the open-wheel car, get in a helicopter to a private jet departing Indiana for North Carolina — where, upon touching down, he’ll take another chopper to Charlotte Motor Speedway, a place where he won just a few years ago.

At least, that’s the plan. A year ago, Larson proved the old saying true: “Man plans, and God laughs.” Arriving in Charlotte from Indy, he was ready to hop in the car and take over for Justin Allgaier (who’d started the No. 5 in Larson’s stead) … but the weather refused to cooperate with Larson’s arrangements, scuttling the rest of the race before he could even run a lap.

This time around could provide similar drama. Though the precipitation forecast for southwestern North Carolina is low to moderate during race hours, there is a higher chance of storms in central Indiana, which means Larson’s bid at the fabled “double” is still up in the air.

The weather is only one obstacle that may make Larson’s feat difficult. Since the World 600 — the precursor to the Coke 600 at Charlotte — came into being in 1960, only 22 attempts (by 14 drivers) have been made to either run in or qualify for both the Indy 500 and the Coke 600 in the same season, including Larson’s in 2025. (This excludes cases where a regular driver deliberately skipped one of the races.) Of those, only 15 saw the driver actually run in both races — and of those, only nine happened at least partially on the same day, in true double-duty fashion.

Chart of all Indy 500-Coca-Cola 600 double attempts

As we can see from the chart above, few of the double-duty attempts actually involved completing all or most of the 1,100 total miles. Donnie Allison did it in 1970, but that was when the two races were six days apart — not on the same day. A year later, when they were only a day apart, he completed 1,097.5 of the 1,110 miles. (He ran 199 of 200 laps at Indy.)

In part due to a long period of impossible logistics — the 500 and 600 began overlapping, at the same time on the same day, from the mid-1970s through the early 1990s — it wasn’t until Tony Stewart in 1999 that a driver came close to running all 1,100 miles in both races again, and he did it on the same day. Then, two years later, he became the first (and to date, only) driver to successfully pull off that feat, while Robby Gordon nearly did it the following year. (He finished 1.5 miles shy after completing 399 of 400 laps in Charlotte.)

The closest anyone has come since was Kurt Busch, who ran 906.5 miles in 2014, including the entire Indy 500, before being forced to retire early from the Coke 600 due to an engine problem. Larson got his own 500 miles in at Indy before the rain spoiled his night in North Carolina.

And all of this is focused on simply finishing the double without incident. Actually doing well in both races is an even tougher component of the challenge. Allison is the only driver to ever score a top five in both the Indy 500 and Coke 600 during the same season, though they weren’t on the same day. No driver has ever matched that feat while pulling true double-duty, and Stewart is the only one to finish top 10 in both races under those conditions. (Amazingly, he did it twice, in 1999 and 2001.)

Larson will try to change that this weekend — and according to DraftKings, he may have at least some shot. He’s a +550 favorite to win the nightcap in Charlotte, which works out to about a 10-15% win probability after adjusting for the take, and his +1800 Indy 500 odds are around 4 or 4.5%. Roughly assuming independence for those two probabilities, that works out to about a 1-in-150 chance (at best) that Larson would win both races. Those odds are long, to be sure … but if we think about it a different way, Larson has a better shot at sweeping both races than some drivers in either field have of winning just one.

And regardless of how it pans out, maybe the most fascinating thing about Larson’s bid is what it represents. Early in the period after it became possible again in the 1990s, trying the double was the domain of drivers with an open-wheel, IndyCar-style background. John Andretti and Gordon had 75 or more previous career starts in either IndyCar, ChampCar or CART at the time of their first attempt, while Davy Jones and Stewart both at least had more open-wheel races than Cup Series starts. The logic behind this was simple — the steep learning curve at Indy was best handled by drivers with open-wheel experience who had only recently moved to Cup.

Chart showing open-wheel experience and Cup experience of drivers who've attempted the double

Busch blew that up in 2014, when he ran double-duty after 482 previous starts in Cup — and zero in IndyCar. And Larson is continuing that trend these past two years: Despite his reputation as possibly the world’s most versatile driver, he had never actually run an IndyCar race before the 2024 Indianapolis 500. Instead of shying away from that inexperience, though, he’s leaning into his talent and trusting his ability to drive anything, anytime, any place.

What was once the domain of open-wheel experts is now being redefined by elite all-around drivers who see no reason to just stay in their lane — especially if they’re as adaptable as Larson. Maybe the fates will let him have his shot this year, for the sake of racing fans everywhere, or maybe they’ll conspire to ruin his double-duty plans again anyway. But when you’re as good as Larson is, there will always be another chance to try again in the future, too, as long as he wants it.

With help from seven-time Super Bowl champion quarterback Tom Brady, seven-time Cup champion Jimmie Johnson will be doing his own version Sunday of “The Double” from Charlotte to Indianapolis.

But the NASCAR Hall of Famer once was close to doing what Kyle Larson will in attempting to become the fifth driver to race the Indianapolis 500 and Coca-Cola 600 in the same day.

RELATED: Weekend schedule | Charlotte entry list

During the latest episode of “Hauler Talk,” Johnson revealed he was close to competing in the Indy 500 during his run of five consecutive championships in the No. 48 Chevrolet.

“I pushed hard for The Double back at the peak of my NASCAR days, and I had a situation develop or scenario develop to drive a Penske car,” Johnson said. “And at the time, Honda was the only engine supplier in the sport. And as we got closer to making a decision, I could sense (car owner) Rick (Hendrick) wasn’t really a fan of it. I still had the home hurdle to clear and then from a manufacturer standpoint, it just didn’t seem possible. So I kind of unwound it, but that has been a childhood dream for me.”

After making his debut in the 2022 Indy 500 during his only full-time IndyCar season, Johnson said he still was mulling a “Double” attempt but then decided to shift into part-time driving and NASCAR team ownership with the rebranded Legacy Motor Club.

“When I left the 500, I felt like there was unfinished business and that I wanted to go back,” he said. “But as that year wore on and really looking myself in the mirror about what’s required of a driver and as I knew I was moving into this ownership stage at Legacy, I knew that I just had to start spending less time in the race car if I really wanted to take this next step. The phone’s rang a few times to go back and drive at the 500 with some decent opportunities. But I just think that door is shut for me and my time needs to be spent elsewhere.”

Johnson is pulling hard for Larson to win one or both races this Sunday.

“It does so much for motorsports, especially racing here in the U.S., to have a headline like that in a historic moment, the recognition it would garner,” Johnson said. “We should all be rooting for that, even if you’re not a Larson fan. I would love to see him win at Indy and then finish second in one of our cars in the 600, and that would be like the perfect day for me, selfishly. But the better he runs, the better it is for racing in the U.S., period.”

Johnson’s path might cross with Larson’s this weekend at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. After Coke 600 qualifying at Charlotte Motor Speedway (where he will make his 700th career start in Cup), Johnson will head to Indianapolis to hang out with six-time IndyCar champion Scott Dixon (who attended the Daytona 500 weekend in February as Johnson’s guest).

Before returning to Charlotte, Johnson will give Brady a ride in a two-seater IndyCar during the parade laps of the 109th Indianapolis 500. Johnson has gotten to know Brady through Knighthead Capital Management, the investment firm that has joined with Legacy Motor Club.

“I’m a sucker for interesting opportunities,” Johnson said with a laugh. “I’ve been able to get closer to Tom Brady over the last year. I think he’s a little nervous about the opportunity. He’s worried about getting carsick, and so I have been leaning into that and trying to make him more nervous and look forward to scaring him out there.”

Johnson wrecked in a 28th-place finish at the 2022 Indy 500, which has sparked some playful jousting with Brady.

“There’s a text thread we’re on, and people started sending him, ‘The last time that he was at the 500, this happened,’ ” Johnson laughed. “And then I followed up with Tom, one of the best things to do is to crash a car. Like, you can’t believe how exhilarating it is to crash a car. He was like, ‘Wait a second, what did I get myself into?’ ”

During the interview, Johnson also discussed his new podcast (“Never Settle” with co-host Marty Smith), the challenges of becoming the owner of Legacy Motor Club, making his 700th start in the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway, his appearance at the NASCAR Hall of Fame vote and his relationship to late seven-time champion Dale Earnhardt.

Other topics covered during the 15th episode of “Hauler Talk,” which explores competition issues in NASCAR:

— Ryan Preece’s penalty in the All-Star Open for running over the “Choose V” commitment box and how it was addressed.

— The future of the “Promoter’s Caution.”

— The prospects of North Wilkesboro Speedway playing host to a Cup points race and the timing of the 2026 schedule.

Click on the embed above 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 and for the past 10 years at NBC Sports Digital. He is a contributor to the new “Hauler Talk” show on the NASCAR Podcast Network. He also has covered various other motorsports, including the IndyCar and IMSA series.

Thursday, May 22 will provide a special night of racing at North Carolina’s Hickory Motor Speedway, appropriately nicknamed “The Birthplace of NASCAR Stars.”

Two rising figures in stock-car racing, Keelan Harvick and Brexton Busch, will race in the evening’s Legend Car feature, which is the support division for the ASA STARS National Tour Ross & Witmer 255. Busch, the son of two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Busch, will make his Legend Car debut.

Harvick, the son of 2014 Cup champ Kevin Harvick, will look to defend last year’s victory in this event.

Keelan Harvick
The Harvick family celebrates Keelan’s win in the Legend Car feature at Hickory Motor Speedway on May 23, 2024. (Photo: Adam Fenwick/NASCAR)

The ASA STARS race, scheduled to start at 7:30 p.m. ET, is also loaded with talent, including 2020 Cup champion Chase Elliott. The Legend Car feature will roll off earlier in the evening at 5 p.m. ET.

Below are storylines for Thursday, plus the complete Super Late Model entry list.

ASA STARS at Hickory Motor Speedway: Storylines

  • Cole Butcher riding momentum after Nashville win

Cole Butcher enters Hickory fresh off a dominant win at Nashville and sits atop the ASA STARS National Tour standings. The Canadian standout looks to stay hot on one of short track racing’s most challenging surfaces.

  • Return to Historic Hickory: A throwback battle awaits

The ASA STARS Tour returns to Hickory Motor Speedway, a venue steeped in racing history. With worn pavement and tight corners, the .363-mile bullring is sure to deliver old-school thrills and fierce competition.

  • Kevin Harvick named Grand Marshal of the Ross & Witmer 255

NASCAR legend Kevin Harvick has been announced as the Grand Marshal for the marquee midweek event. The 2014 Cup Series champion brings additional spotlight and prestige to a can’t-miss night of racing.

  • Chase Elliott joins the field for Hickory showdown

In a blockbuster move, Chase Elliott will compete in the Ross & Witmer 255. The 2020 NASCAR Cup champion returns to his short-track roots in front of what’s sure to be a strong Hickory crowd.

  • Keelan Harvick and Brexton Busch set for first head-to-head battle

In a special INEX National Qualifier, Keelan Harvick and Brexton Busch — sons of NASCAR champions Kevin Harvick and Kyle Busch — will go head-to-head in Legend Car competition for the first time. All eyes will be on this next-generation showdown as two of racing’s youngest rising stars battle for bragging rights.

Kyle and Brexton Busch
Kyle and Brexton Busch at Millbridge Speedway on March 26, 2025. (Photo: Yem Sanlaeid/NASCAR)

Entry list – ASA STARS at Hickory

MOORESVILLE, N.C. — In celebration of Major League Baseball’s 2025 jewel event, the MLB Speedway Classic presented by BuildSubmarines.com in Bristol, Tennessee, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Budweiser and MLB are teaming up to bring a NASCAR Hall of Famer, American beer and America’s favorite pastime to fans by recreating and paying homage to the iconic No. 8 Budweiser / MLB All-Star Game paint scheme.

The legendary scheme will be showcased at the MLB Speedway Classic on Aug. 2 and will be raced by Earnhardt Jr. in the zMAX CARS Tour event at South Carolina’s Anderson Motor Speedway on Aug. 16.

SHOP: Dale Jr. All-Star scheme merchandise

In July 2001, the original Budweiser / MLB All-Star Game paint scheme cemented its place in racing history when Earnhardt Jr. raced the red and white No. 8 design to an emotional victory in his first trip to Daytona International Speedway following the tragic loss of his father at the track earlier that year.

“It is an incredible opportunity to reunite with Budweiser and Major League Baseball,” Earnhardt Jr. said. “I’ve watched that July 2001 race at Daytona so many times. It’s such a great memory for me. I am excited that we have this chance to collaborate with Bud and MLB to bring that scheme back again because of what it means to me and so many others.”

This partnership follows Budweiser and Earnhardt Jr.’s reunion last November, when they brought back one of the most recognizable paint schemes in racing history, the red Bud No. 8 made famous by Earnhardt Jr. from 1999 to 2007.

RELATED: Memorable Dale Jr. paint schemes

Dale Earnhardt Jr
Dale Earnhardt Jr. celebrates his win in the 2001 Pepsi 400 Daytona International Speedway. (Photo: ISC Images & Archives via Getty Images)

Furthermore, as the longest-tenured sponsor of Major League Baseball, Budweiser has been a staple in the sport’s traditions and game-day experience for 21+ fans for decades. This August, Budweiser, MLB and Earnhardt Jr. are helping fans celebrate another historic milestone by promoting the MLB Speedway Classic that will be held at Bristol Motor Speedway. One of NASCAR’s most popular tracks will host a special regular season contest between the Atlanta Braves and Cincinnati Reds, marking the first Major League game to be played in the state of Tennessee. Attending fans can also view the No. 8 Budweiser / MLB Speedway Classic show car at the event.

“The incredible fan response to Budweiser’s reunion with Dale Jr. last November reminded us just how special this partnership is to racing fans,” said Todd Allen, SVP of Marketing at Budweiser and Bud Light. “This No. 8 Budweiser / MLB All-Star Game-inspired paint scheme pays tribute to one of the most iconic moments in the storied history of Dale Jr. and Budweiser’s partnership. The MLB Speedway Classic is the perfect stage to revive this fan-favorite design, uniting an American racing icon and American beer at a first-of-its-kind MLB event.”

In addition to enjoying the action at the MLB Speedway Classic and Anderson Motor Speedway, fans can commemorate the return of this iconic paint scheme with limited-edition merchandise available now on shopjrnation.com and coming soon to additional select retail locations.

Anheuser-Busch has proudly supported and elevated NASCAR through Budweiser, Busch and Busch Light for more than 40 years. Its long-standing commitment to the motorsports industry has included driver partnerships – notably as the primary sponsor of Earnhardt Jr. for nine seasons – key event sponsorships and media investments in motorsports.

Follow along on Budweiser’s social channels for more details about its partnership with Earnhardt Jr. and programming at MLB Speedway Classic in Bristol, and stay up to date on the racing events at the JRM X account or watch the Anderson Motor Speedway race on www.FloRacing.com.

Editor’s Note: New Prime Video subscribers can enjoy a 30-day free trial period to see Prime Video’s extensive NASCAR coverage, from race broadcasts to original longform content. With the first two episodes of the “Earnhardt” docuseries launching May 22 on Prime Video and two more episodes set for May 29, enjoy the story behind the statue commemorating the seven-time champ that keeps drawing fans in from all over to pay tribute to him.

KANNAPOLIS, N.C. — In the months after Dale Earnhardt’s death in the 2001 Daytona 500, community leaders in his hometown of Kannapolis, North Carolina, formed a committee to decide how best to honor the NASCAR legend. The city council, business leaders and the family were all on board. The group gravitated toward a statue.

Roger Haas, a Kannapolis councilman for 22 years, recalls the next logical question: Well, what’s it going to look like?

Plans for another monument were also taking shape in Daytona Beach, Florida. That memorial statue, which stands just outside the speedway gates, depicts Earnhardt in his driver’s uniform with his left arm raised in triumph after his 1998 Daytona 500 victory. The unveiling predated the Kannapolis statue’s dedication by nine months, but the hometown memorial would be different, especially if Earnhardt’s mother, Martha, had any say.

“I’m 76 years old, and I’ve never heard a line any better than this one,” Haas recalled with a laugh last week. “When I was telling her, I said, ‘What do you think it ought to look like?’ And she said, ‘Well, you know, he was a son a lot longer than he was a race car driver.’ So I thought, there it is. There’s the hook right there. From then on it was, he’s going to be dressed in his button-down shirt, in his Wrangler Jeans and his Justin boots and all these things as he would walk around town, not what he would look like at Daytona or Charlotte or Darlington or any of these tracks. I think that was one smart move.”

It’s that Dale Earnhardt that’s explored and discovered in the new docuseries “Earnhardt,” which debuts the first two episodes Thursday on Prime Video. The everyman qualities of Earnhardt away from the track have been forever cast in 9 feet and 900 pounds of bronze, standing sentry over the textile town that he helped put on the map as a motorsports mecca.

Many of the landmarks that helped shape Earnhardt’s story still stand along what was once marketed as the “Dale Trail” tour in Kannapolis and neighboring towns. Several stops on that route have since closed, but Earnhardt’s name and legacy have endured at the place he called home.

The welcoming smile on his towering likeness keeps inviting people to walk the same streets that he once did.

“That’s probably my favorite thing is the statue,” says Dale Earnhardt Jr., who tells the story of how an acquaintance in the sport arranged for prom pictures for his son and friends in front of the memorial. “… That, to me, those moments where someone who obviously never saw this person compete but still has this respect and appreciation for him in some way, that is so fascinating to me and something I totally did not expect to happen. I thought that once all the people, once all of us aged out that saw him compete and knew what he was like to be around, that his legacy would fade and his impact would be less noticeable. But it’s pretty cool to see this younger generation have this sort of connection to him.”

Every time old-school influencer Cleetus McFarland or a younger fan with a nostalgic bent says, “Do it for Dale,” that connection takes hold. “I mean, I know that’s just a kind of a motto, if you will, but it’s just neat that he’s sort of still resonating with that younger demographic,” Earnhardt Jr. says. “So the statue is so important. There’s not a grave that we can all go visit; that’s very private and not available to the public. So where can you go and be where you would be able to celebrate this individual, and I think that statue is the perfect place.”

Zack Albert | NASCAR Digital Media

* * *

Clyde “Ross” Morgan recalled that he was up against “some pretty high-powered competition” when he made his presentation for what would be the centerpiece of Dale Earnhardt Tribute Plaza. Golfing acquaintances from Kannapolis had encouraged the sculpture artist to enter, and his interview was the first of the day — 8 a.m. sharp — with others to follow.

The creators of the Michael Jordan statue in Chicago were also in the running, Morgan said, so he had lowered his expectations, with the planning committee telling him it would take several weeks to reach its decision. Instead, Morgan received a phone call around lunchtime that day. An informal straw poll was unanimous, and the commission was his.

“I was just over the moon with this,” Morgan says now, 83 years old and still producing sculptures from his studio in Sedona, Arizona.

His first proposal had several similarities to the statue that would be unveiled at Daytona the following year — racing suit, racing shoes, victory stance. The family’s influence helped change his direction, shaping Morgan’s creation into a likeness that would be a more natural fit in his hometown.

The racing gear gave way to those trademark Wranglers and cowboy boots, projecting an image that was more Dale than Intimidator. The only nod to his racing persona is his signature wraparound sunglasses peeking out from his shirt pocket.

The statue’s size helps capture the larger-than-life personality that made Earnhardt a racing icon. But the choice of working-man attire has strengthened the connection, both to his fans and the community.

“I always thought that the attraction that he had to people was he was a common man, just like I’m a common man,” says Haas, who’s lived in Kannapolis the last 50 years. “So it wasn’t like he had millions of dollars and it was given to him to go racing and all of this, he pulled himself up from the bootstraps as the old saying goes and made himself into something special. So if he can do it, I might be able to do it, too. I may not be a racer, I may be a factory worker or something, but if I can pull myself up, I can make myself into something special just like he did. And to me, that was always the attraction I think Dale Earnhardt was. You come from humble beginnings, you can go as far as you want to go if you’re dedicated and you’re serious about what you’re doing.”

Martha Earnhardt waved a green flag in the plaza square to start the groundbreaking process on Aug. 21, 2002. Nearly two months later, the statue was unveiled on a Monday, one day after a 500-mile race at nearby Charlotte Motor Speedway.

NASCAR Hall of Famer Benny Parsons was among the speakers at the plaza’s dedication, and he encapsulated the bittersweet mood. “I doubt very seriously that Kannapolis has ever had a happier or a sadder day,” Parsons said. That characterization stuck with Morgan more than two decades later.

“It was surprising to me, because I was one of the speakers and I guess I thought it was more of a celebratory event, and it turned out to be quite emotional for most of the people that were there, and so I was struck by that,” Morgan says. “I could tell there was a lot of love for this man.”

Morgan’s remarks that October day hinted at the statue’s permanence. “The artist that completes a project like this will be forgotten next week, but the bronze and the memories live on forever,” he said.

Earnhardt’s legacy — and Morgan’s contribution — are still remembered in Kannapolis today. Morgan has a memento from his creation in his studio that serves as a keepsake and a reminder. Even some 2,000 miles away in central Arizona, Earnhardt remains a draw.

“When we did the original sculpture, I kept his head. It’s clay, and that’s the type of clay that doesn’t harden, and so when people come by my studio, they notice that,” Morgan said. “I’m amazed at how many people recognize him from that and it’s been a real feather in my cap, if you will. When I started doing bronzes to begin with — I changed careers at 40 — I knew bronze lasted forever, and I determined that if I was going to do a bronze, I wanted to do pieces that would mean something to people long after I’m gone, so I’ve been very careful in the pieces that I do, that I get them historically correct and that they are important in the history of our country.”

A fan takes a cell-phone photo of the Dale Earnhardt statue in the center of the tribute plaza in Kannapolis, North Carolina.
Zack Albert | NASCAR Digital Media

* * *

There are worse ways to spend an afternoon than strolling the streets of downtown Kannapolis. The city’s population has nearly doubled since Earnhardt first hit stock-car racing’s big leagues, but the place has retained its small-town Main Street feel.

Find the down staircase on West Avenue and you can try your hand at slot-car racing. Legend has it that Earnhardt’s first racing trophy came in slot-car form at a long-gone track called D&D Model Raceway. That trophy was also in miniature — an 8-inch-tall token.

The minor-league baseball park in downtown is the home to Kannapolis’ Single-A affiliate of the Chicago White Sox, and though the team name has since rebranded from the Intimidators to the Cannon Ballers, the mustachioed mascot with aviator goggles still bears some Earnhardt resemblance. Across the street and down a block, visitors to veteran-owned Old Armor Beer Company can quench their thirst with an Earnhardt Outdoors altbier — a robust, malty concoction made in partnership with Kerry Earnhardt, Dale’s oldest son.

Drive a little farther out and the street names offer a hint at how Earnhardt’s career was destined. With its modest, old-school garage in the backyard, the family home still stands in a part of Kannapolis called Car Town, on the corner of Sedan Avenue and Coach Street — one block over from V-8 Street.

Old Highway 136 was renamed N.C. 3 in honor of Earnhardt’s longtime car number in 2002, and a portion of that roadway still includes Dale Earnhardt Blvd. Drive along that route and the streets click off with names like Chrysler, Dodge, Plymouth, Ford. Hit the turn signal to see Chevrolet Street, Packard Avenue and Cadillac Street. Rounding back toward downtown brings you to Idiot Circle, where Earnhardt and fellow teenage cruisers once made left turns at much slower speeds.

Those landmarks are where Haas bussed visiting tourists for years, pulling back the curtain on Earnhardt lore. Haas has since retired from the tour-guide business and his long-serving role on the city council, but he still feels the family name’s lasting influence when fans come to Kannapolis in search of all things Earnhardt.

“Here we are 20, 25 years past, and they’re still coming to town to take a look,” Haas says. “I always felt like we were trying to make him more a person than a race car driver, because people saw him mainly as a race car driver. So I thought if I could add something to it to make him more personal, then we probably did our job, because he was a great race car driver, but he was also a great person, too.”

On a random Tuesday last week, fans from all points of the map came to pay a visit to the statue at the center of it all. A man from Trinity, North Carolina, nearly an hour away stopped by for a photo. A couple from Clinton, Maine, took in the plaza as a side trip on the way to the weekend’s All-Star Race festivities at North Wilkesboro Speedway. A couple from Newcomerstown, Ohio, met up with family in town at the monument, trading their favorite Dale Earnhardt quotes before ultimately deciding that “If you ain’t first, you’re last,” was not one of them.

The points on the map are a cross-section of what Haas has seen through the years, with visitors from faraway states and foreign countries all coming to the statue at the heart of town to pay their respects. He recalled a couple getting married at the foot of the statue years ago, helping them to coordinate a reception at Martha Earnhardt’s home to watch that Sunday’s NASCAR race with her. “These people were like, if I live to be 150 years old, I’ll never forget our wedding day,” he says with a chuckle.

That legacy hasn’t faded. Folks who work downtown still gather there during their lunch breaks, sitting on the benches arranged in groups of three in a nod to Earnhardt’s car number, taking the seven steps down — one for each Cup Series championship — into the plaza grounds.

Martha Earnhardt died in 2021 at the age of 91, but the connection to her hometown and its favorite son has endured. So has the statue, created in the image that she helped shape — a hometown boy first, a racer second.

“I would sometimes go by and pick up his mother, and we’d just drive by the statue, and it was hard on her,” Haas says. “She’d say, ‘You know, Dale’s standing out there in the rain, and he doesn’t even have a jacket on,’ or ‘it’s cool today, and he doesn’t even have anything to keep him warm.’ So I always thought, wow, it’s even comforting to his own mother to go by and see the statue, and I think it gave some kind of comfort even to her. I think we didn’t know what to do, but I think we did it right when I look back on it.”

Here’s what’s happening in NASCAR with the 2025 NASCAR All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway in the rearview and the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway (Sun., 6 p.m. ET, Prime Video) up next.

RELATED: How to watch NASCAR races on Prime Video

1. Will Hendrick maintain 2025 pace in stretch run to NASCAR Playoffs?

Hendrick Motorsports has had a stranglehold on the front of the field through the first portion of the 2025 season. Will it last? Will any other team find its equal share of dominance?

Hendrick Motorsports has “only” won four of the season’s first dozen points races. A driver for a different team won three straight at one point (and the All-Star Race!) and yet it feels Hendrick’s championship organization is smothering the field.

All four drivers in the stable seem to have established a firm top-10 residency while compiling a lap-leading pace not seen in decades. There appear to be no signs of slowing, either, with the only question, really, being if the four-car powerhouse will manage to keep it up the rest of the way.

The numbers are hard to ignore and strongly indicate that it will.

Hendrick has led 41.6% of all laps raced this season. Think about that for a second — nearly every other lap, every week, the race has been led by Alex Bowman, William Byron, Chase Elliott or Kyle Larson. It’s the team’s highest percentage through 12 races since 1996 (44.1%), when it featured a three-driver lineup consisting of two championship-winning future Hall of Famers along with one of the most respected drivers in the sport’s history.

Larson? That force of nature driving the No. 5 car? He’s led nearly a quarter of the 2025 laps run himself (24.5%), the most any single driver has led since Kevin Harvick paced 26.4% of the season’s first 12 races in 2015.

They’re not just getting to the front, though; they’re staying there. The foursome has already racked up 29 top-10 finishes — a team record through 12 races — and at least one of them has landed in the top five in every single event. For context, no other team has had a car finish in the top 10 in every race.

The thing is, though … nobody has been this dominant, for this long, within the Next Gen era. Hendrick is Hendrick, of course, and any sort of precipitous drop-off should not be expected; but is this current pace sustainable? While the numbers are gaudy, the rest of the field isn’t exactly rolling over for them.

Team Penske, after what’s becoming an annual sluggish start (that tends to finish with a Bill France Cup, mind you), has rattled off four top-five finishes and two wins in the last three races. Joe Gibbs Racing, while quieter on the 1.5-milers this year than we’re used to, is always lurking and has seen its share of dominance this season as well, and is riding the momentum of a raucous All-Star Race victory via Christopher Bell. Those two teams have been, and will likely continue to be, the biggest hurdles for Hendrick, but it’s not all sunshine for the sport’s other past heavyweights.

Richard Childress Racing is having arguably its slowest start in years, and 23XI Racing is searching for consistency. Even playoff regulars like RFK Racing’s Brad Keselowski are feeling the heat and running out of time to cool the temp; the 2012 champ has had a miserable start, with three straight DNFs and not a single top 10 through the first 12 races. The other two RFK drivers, Chris Buescher and Ryan Preece, have also seen how quickly things can unravel; each finds themselves in a points deficit after technical issues with their cars resulted in penalties in separate weeks after looking like playoff contenders. (Note: RFK is appealing the penalty to Buescher’s No. 17 Ford.)

There’s plenty of racing left, however. The likelihood of none of those teams figuring it out is, well, not likely at all.

History tells us that this level of control is rare, even for NASCAR’s winningest team in history, and rarely lasts all the way to Phoenix. The grind of the summer, the pressure of the playoff trim-down and an In-Season Challenge that could force a degree of chaos make the next few months feel like anybody’s game, honestly.

Hendrick’s numbers are historic, but the road ahead is littered with potential spoilers and hungry rivals.

Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

2. Drink it in: What moment will the 2025 Coca-Cola 600 see?

NASCAR’s marathon race has a history of bringing the big moments, being a streak-snapper and setting up the winner for a potential championship run. Don’t expect anything different come Sunday.

NASCAR’s longest night is nearly here, and if history is any guide, the Coca-Cola 600 is about to deliver another unforgettable chapter.

Charlotte Motor Speedway’s annual Memorial Day Weekend crown jewel isn’t just a test of speed or stamina; it’s a race that always seems to conjure up the unexpected, the dramatic and, at times, the downright improbable.

Though it’s been the case in past decades with certain teams dominating for years at a time, recent seasons have proven that the 600 is nobody’s personal playground anymore. In fact, the last eight runnings of this race have each been won by a different driver, with only Martin Truex Jr. — now retired — managing to double up in the last 13 years. Dominance does matter, as five of the last seven winners have also led the most laps, but it’s far from a guarantee that results in a trip to Victory Lane. That said, the polesitter has converted on a victory twice in the last three runnings of the race that had qualifying, indicating that starting up front does tend to help.

One thing the Coca-Cola 600 is famous for, among the many, is breaking droughts. With several big-name drivers sporting notable winless streaks, if one of them (perhaps one of the handful of former champions in desperate need of a win) is able to make the magic happen, this would certainly qualify as a “moment.”

Seven times a driver has snapped a winless streak of 30 or more races in this event, most recently Ryan Blaney in 2023 to propel his championship run, and this race has a knack for serving as a launching pad. In the playoff era, it’s even provided hope for those on the outside looking in: Both Denny Hamlin (2022) and Austin Dillon (2017) won the 600 while sitting below the playoff elimination line, proving that a single night in Charlotte can rewrite an entire season.

So who’s poised to seize the moment in 2025? Well, unfortunately for the field, it does appear to shape up on paper as one that heavily favors Hendrick drivers. Larson owns a sparkling 3.75 average on intermediate tracks this year and, really, any of the four could walk out of Charlotte Motor Speedway and sleep in their own bed next to a Coca-Cola 600 trophy. (Though Larson’s the only one that could collect two trophies that day.)

Byron, in particular, is the name to circle. He’s finished fourth or better in three of the last four Coca-Cola 600s and was runner-up a year ago. He’s logged top 10s in 10 of his last 14 races on 1.5-mile tracks and has led laps in five straight Charlotte oval events. The two-time defending Daytona 500 winner has been consistently excellent the entire year and should break through for win No. 2 of the season sooner rather than later, and quite possibly on Sunday.

Despite the team’s lack of recent consistency, though, 23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick is another driver to watch; he’s finished in the top 10 in all five of his Coke 600 starts, with an average finish of 6.4 to lead all active drivers. Consistency like that is rare in a race this grueling.

But don’t overlook the sleepers. Hyak Motorsports driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr. has quietly put together a strong Charlotte resume, finishing seventh in two of the last three Coca-Cola 600s and notching top 15s in seven of his last nine starts there. He’s also lurking in the top 15 in the standings and could turn the playoff picture on its head if he were able to secure his spot Sunday night.

On the flip side, some big names have struggled to solve the 600 puzzle. 23XI’s Bubba Wallace has just one top 10 in eight Charlotte oval starts and has been hampered by penalties in nearly every attempt. Trackhouse Racing’s Ross Chastain’s average finish in this race is a distant 23rd, with only one result better than 15th, but he’s also been closing in on a win lately — will he buck the trend of his spotty past here?

Drivers’ endurance and teams’ ability to adapt as conditions change will certainly test the field this weekend, particularly given the last full running of the race was two years ago. It’s a race where strategy, patience and a little bit of luck are as important as raw speed and, time and again, it’s been the site of dramatic finishes, first-time winners and season-defining moments.

As the engines fire and the laps begin to mount, fans and teams alike should savor every minute, because at the Coca-Cola 600, anything can — and often does — happen.

Drink it in, everyone. The next great NASCAR memory is just 600 miles away.

charlotte
David Jensen | Getty Images

3. Bell on All-Star aggression: ‘If anything, I was on the nicer side’

Christopher Bell details his side-by-side battle with Joey Logano from Sunday night’s All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway.

4. Longest winless streaks ended in the Coca-Cola 600

From Kyle Busch to Chase Elliott to Brad Keselowski and beyond, several big-name drivers are riding lengthy winless streaks. The Coca-Cola 600 has a habit of being a streak-snapper, so will one of them get back in the win column Sunday? (Credit: Racing Insights)

DriverDateStreak
Mark Martin5/26/0273
Ryan Blaney5/29/2359
Kasey Kahne5/25/0852
Kyle Petty5/24/8736
Martin Truex Jr.5/29/1634
Carl Edwards5/24/1531
Brad Keselowski5/24/2030
Neil Bonnett5/29/8324

5. Catch the pack — news and notes from around the garage

Paint Scheme Preview: 2025 Coca-Cola 600 weekend

Kurt Busch, Harry Gant, Ray Hendrick elected to NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2026; Wheeler named Landmark Award winner

Hall of Fame voter Zack Albert’s Class of 2026 ballot

@nascarcasm: Fake texts to All-Star Race winner Christopher Bell

Kyle Larson qualifies for 2025 Indianapolis 500, will start 19th

Analysis: All-Star thriller delivers heavyweight bout between title contenders

Power Rankings: Coca-Cola 600 may be prime time for Elliott’s first 2025 win

Logan Riely | Getty Images