To say Texan Chris Buescher has been snakebit in his home state is putting it mildly.

In 16 starts at Texas Motor Speedway, Buescher has never scored a top 10. He has led just two of the 5,006 laps he has run at the 1.5-mile intermediate speedway. His average finish is 21.9.

RELATED: Texas weekend schedule | At-track photos

Nevertheless, Buescher frequently has shown speed at Texas, and he’s looking for a breakthrough in Sunday’s Wurth 400 Presented by Liqui Moly (3:30 p.m. ET FS1, HBO Max, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

“We’ve had more tire failures here than any other race track,” Buescher said. “Early on, we came here and had speed, but we were still understanding the new (Gen 7) car, the sensitivities to having tire blowouts.

“We’ve had days here when we’ve been pretty good, and it’s started drizzling — the great fog from five or six years ago, right? Unfortunately, I was the one who found the moisture that ended the race for three days before we got back going …

“You go through the years here, and I feel like we’ve had very few days here where we haven’t been competitive, but, man, the stats don’t show that. I hope we fix that this go-round — I think we can.”

FORT WORTH, Texas — In a manner of speaking, Carson Hocevar called his shot at Texas Motor Speedway — and wound up on the pole for Sunday’s Würth 400 Presented by Liqui Moly (3:30 p.m. ET on FS1, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Sunday’s starting lineup | At-track photos: Texas

Before Saturday’s time trials at the 1.5-mile track, Hocevar said he hoped to capitalize on his last-in-the-order qualifying position — a benefit of his first career NASCAR Cup Series victory at Talladega Superspeedway last Sunday.

“Hopefully we can roll out last and take advantage of it,” Hocevar said. “Start up front, which is super-important here. Pit stops are going to be important. Get a good pit selection and really keep the momentum rolling.”

It took a monumental lap for Hocevar to achieve that objective. Streaking around the speedway in 25.222 seconds (191.240 mph), he edged Spire Motorsports teammate Daniel Suárez (191.320 mph) for the top starting spot by 0.003 seconds.

The Busch Light Pole Award was the second of Hocevar’s career, with the first coming at Texas a year ago.

“Maybe going to (sponsor) Chili’s last night, it weighed the car down just a little bit more, and I had a little more left-side weight,” joked Hocevar, who also won Friday night’s NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at TMS. “I don’t know where those three thousandths (of a second) are, but I’m glad I had ‘em in the bank.

“My lap felt pretty good. It wasn’t quite key it up on the radio and (say)… ‘If they beat that, they can have it,’ and they don’t get beat. It wasn’t quite doing that, but I was coming off Turn 4, and I was like, ‘If this isn’t fast, I’m going to be disappointed.’ It felt good.”

RFK Racing’s Chris Buescher qualified third at 190.981 mph in the only Ford that cracked the top 10. Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Denny Hamlin and Chase Briscoe tied for fourth at 190.786 mph, with Hamlin getting the nod for the higher starting spot on an owner points tiebreaker.

Kyle Busch, Christopher Bell, series leader Tyler Reddick, Alex Bowman and Ty Gibbs completed the top 10 on the grid. Defending Cup champion Kyle Larson will start 11th. Busch, in his first race with new crew chief Andy Street, notched his best qualifying effort since winning the pole for the season-opening Daytona 500.

Byron lands fastest lap in Texas practice

William Byron topped the charts in Cup Series practice at Texas Motor Speedway, guiding the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet to a 189.294-mph lap.

Byron was also fastest in the consecutive 10-lap average category. Michael McDowell was second-fastest in the No. 71 Spire Motorsports Chevy at 188.508 mph. Rookie Corey Heim posted the third-fastest lap, with John Hunter Nemechek and Bubba Wallace completing the top five.

MORE: Practice results | Weekend schedule: Texas

Wallace’s time came before his No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota crashed during the waning moments of the first of two groups. He was unable to post a qualifying lap and will start at the rear of the 38-car field in Sunday’s 400-miler.

“It was on edge, just like Texas is,” Wallace said of the accident. “Just trying to find the right balance for us and our team. So it was going to be a good debrief to figure out if we can get some more speed, but just have to rely on our teammates and go get it (Sunday). This is a very unforgiving place. So like I said, it (the No. 23 Camry) was around before I even knew it.”

Austin Dillon also didn’t make a qualifying attempt after his No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet slowed with engine trouble, completing just three laps.

The second group was also interrupted when Daniel Suárez’s No. 7 Chevrolet stalled with a flat tire. Suárez backed up to pit road to the attention of his Spire Motorsports crew, and ended practice with the 10th-fastest time.

Contributing: Staff reports

FORT WORTH, Texas – When thinking about which drivers could be next in line to snag a Bill France Cup on their resumes, you don’t need to go far down the list to point out Christopher Bell and William Byron. But this year – the return of The Chase – could tell a different story.

The pair of perennial championship threats, who both made multiple Championship 4 appearances in the last four seasons, are off to sluggish starts in 2026. Between the one-third mark of the 2023 season through the duration of 2025, Byron spent 97 consecutive weeks inside the top 10 in points, including 47 weeks leading the series. He never dropped below third last year. Meanwhile, Bell, the always consistent Joe Gibbs Racing driver, has cracked the top five in the championship standings in each of the last four years.

Through 10 races in 2026, Bell has slipped to ninth in the regular-season championship standings. Meanwhile, Byron, who had a dreadful April, with a pair of finishes of 30th or worse, has plummeted to 11th. After the conclusion of five races, the No. 24 team has been outside the top 10 in points.

RELATED: Texas weekend schedule | At-track photos

“We just got to get going,” Byron said on Saturday morning at Texas Motor Speedway. “We’ve got to get to a normal style race track and reset from some of the weeks that we’ve had.”

Upon a 35th-place early exit at Talladega Superspeedway last weekend, Byron checked the point standings and had an honest conversation with himself. But between a putrid performance with a steering problem at Bristol Motor Speedway and being in the eye of the storm last weekend at the 2.66-mile oval, he tallied a mere nine points total in two of the last three events.

“It was a bit of a shock coming out of Talladega seeing how far we had fallen in the points,” Byron stated. “Two out of three weeks, not a lot of points. Just have to reset.

“When you look at The Chase format, it sets up well if you can be in the top 10, really. Look at how many points you can gain or lose in 10 weeks. It’s about trying to get to that part of the season, but you’ve got to get there by being competitive. Just being able to have weeks where we can be a contending car and that’s going to give us confidence that we can gain points.”

The performance of the No. 20 team has been strong in 2026, leading 303 laps, third-best in Cup. The finishes tell a different story, however, with a 40% top-10 percentage.

The last two weekends, specifically, have been gut-wrenching. He was well positioned for a top-five finish in overtime at Kansas before contact with eventual race winner Tyler Reddick on the penultimate lap cut a tire, dropping him to 20th in the finishing order. He followed that up at Talladega by contending for a top 10 and was in the middle of a multi-car incident yards away from the finish, crediting him with a 17th-place finish.

MORE: Cup Series standings

“It’s so painful,” Bell said of his late-race madness the last two weeks. “I don’t know that I’ve had a stretch like that where – they always say, ‘Don’t count your chickens before they hatch,’ but jeez.

“I feel optimistic that it’s going to turn around at some point.”

Like Byron, Bell has noticed himself glancing at the points more frequently in 2026. And even though he’s ninth in the standings, the No. 20 team ranks less than a full race – 54 points – behind third-place Ryan Blaney. Any shot at catching Tyler Reddick, who has a 110-point buffer over second place alone, he believes, is out of the question.

“It’s a bummer where we’re at,” Bell noted. “On the positive side, we’ve gotten terrible finishes and are within striking distance – not of the Regular Season Championship – but hopefully of the big picture, full-season championship, we are still in position.”

FORT WORTH, Texas – Midway through Group 1 practice for Sunday’s Würth 400 presented by Liqui Moly at Texas Motor Speedway, Bubba Wallace’s No. 23 Toyota snapped around through Turns 1 and 2 quicker than he realized. The result is 23XI Racing unloading the backup car for race day.

“It just came around out of nowhere and surprised me,” Wallace told reporters after the incident. “I knew I was loose in the moment, went to correct it and it was too late. Hate it. Thought we had some decent speed. Just a long Saturday that’s going to make for a good Sunday.”

RELATED: Starting lineup | At-track photos: Texas

Wallace ranked fifth in single-lap speed before the crash. The No. 23 car dipped to 18th on 10- and 15-lap averages.

Among the hurdles to overcome on Sunday will be poor pit-stall selection and the need to find track position at a venue where it’s paramount. There is optimism, however, as six of the top 10 in last year’s Texas race’s finishing order started 24th or worse, including all three podium finishers.

“Looking at the positives of the day, erase the negatives and go drive hard tomorrow,” Wallace said of his outlook come the green flag. “Just need to execute all day tomorrow. We’re starting at the back, no good pit stall. The odds are against us, so we will see how mentally tough we are.”

The unique characteristics of Texas make it unforgiving. With how treacherous the 1.5-mile oval can be, Wallace knows he will need to pick his way through the field carefully to avoid another disappointing finish.

“You just have to be smart about it,” he added. “Coming here a handful of times, you know where to be, putting yourself in the right spot to capitalize on and we’ll be OK.”

Entering Texas, Wallace has three finishes of 34th or worse in the last five races, including a pair of DNFs. He vowed not to make the same mistake twice this weekend.

Wallace concluded, “I haven’t crashed in practice in quite some time. The positive of that is, I pushed the limits, found the limit and it won’t happen again.”

FORT WORTH, Texas — The voices in Kyle Busch’s head have changed frequently over the years. One is back for more as Richard Childress Racing attempts to right the No. 8 team.

Hours after scoring RCR’s first top-10 finish of the 2026 season last Sunday at Talladega Superspeedway, Jim Pohlman was relieved of his duties as crew chief of the No. 8 car. The organization announced Monday that Andy Street will replace Pohlman as crew chief effective immediately, while Pohlman moves to a leadership role in the competition department.

RELATED: Texas schedule | At-track photos: Texas

Pohlman’s jump from JR Motorsports’ O’Reilly Auto Parts Series program to the Cup Series pit box lasted only 10 races, with Busch and the No. 8 team ranked a dismal 27th in Cup Series points.

“I think the writing is in the points standings,” Busch said in a cheerful mood after finishing runner-up in Friday evening’s Craftsman Truck Series race at Texas Motor Speedway. “We’re not where we need to be. There’s got to be a change somewhere. From my understanding, I feel like the conversation with Jim was well received and he was fine with it.”

Austin Dillon revealed earlier Friday that Busch led a positive meeting with the entire RCR shop floor shortly after the news broke. In steps Street, who worked with the two-time Cup champion for the final five events of the 2025 campaign.

“I thanked Jim for his leadership and for him being there and being a part of the team and what he did for the time,” Busch said of the town hall meeting. “I’m full in; I’m all committed. I’ve never probably worked as much in these last four years as I did in 15 at JGR. That’s due to us needing to get better and us getting the things heading in the right direction.

“We’ve got to put the train back on the tracks and have a direction of what we need to do in order to be able to go forward. Just reiterating all of that and giving them the vote of confidence that we’re all in this together and we’re digging in.”

Street takes over a No. 8 program that sits 66 points below The Chase cutline with 16 races remaining. Since the start of 2025, he has been on the Cup side at RCR, spending the previous handful of seasons as a crew chief for the company’s O’Reilly program. He has called the shots for the team’s part-time No. 33 entry in seven races last year, and another four this season.

Dillon believes Street was the best choice to replace Pohlman.

“I think [Street has] shown that his ability to work with Kyle at the end of the year last year and have some solid runs,” Dillon said. “I think that’s what the obvious move was to make. I think it should be a positive tone for that team. What I like to see is when that team’s in there with us after practice and we’re all in there trying to move the needle forward.”

Having that prior experience with Street – which included a pair of top-10 finishes and a fifth-place effort in the 2025 season finale at Phoenix Raceway – could pay dividends. Busch knows what to expect and it’s someone that is fairly straightforward in their approach.

“Andy and I, we conversate a lot and did a lot last year,” Busch said. “I feel like he’s (got) a simpler mentality about how he goes about looking at things. It has to make sense to him for him to be able to believe it and he doesn’t just believe in what the computer tells him. I feel like that’s a good way of being back to basics and a little bit more methodical about race cars.”

MORE: Letarte, McMurray analyze the swap

Busch also knows that the immediate fix isn’t switching crew chiefs. But it could be the first of multiple steps to get the No. 8 team back towards the front of the pack.

“[Do] we come to Texas and flip everything around and run top 10 right here, right now? Not sure about that,” Busch said. “We certainly have done all of our due diligence this week in trying to be as prepared as we best know how.”

Going the first nine races without cracking the top 10 was the longest stretch Busch has ever gone into a season without banking a top 10. He holds an average finish of 22.1, more than four positions worse from 2025. It’s on pace to be the worst year of his career in many of the major statistical categories.

However, Busch isn’t throwing in the towel. This move is the exact opposite of that. Add that the 63-time Cup winner is in a contract year and know that he has a lot left to prove.

“I feel like we’re in this together anyways,” Busch stated. “I love Richard (Childress, team owner). I feel like we’ve worked really well together. Austin has been a phenomenal teammate that I’ve been able to work with. I feel like he’s one of the best that I’ve had. It’s been a joyful time working with him. It’s just the results aren’t there. We’ve got to line that up and try to be better in order to get those.”

Dillon confirmed that Pohlman will remain in the organization, though RCR hasn’t listed his title. Ultimately, it’s going to be a swap from positions with Street.

FORT WORTH, Texas — The glass slipper still firmly on his foot from last Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series win at Talladega, Carson Hocevar mashed the gas in overtime on Friday night and ran away to victory in the SpeedyCash.com 250 at Texas Motor Speedway.

Beating runner-up and Spire Motorsports teammate Kyle Busch to the finish line by 0.730 seconds in overtime, Hocevar notched his sixth career NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series victory, this one coming at the 1.5-mile intermediate track that gave him his first in the series in 2023.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Texas

The triumph reversed a 1-2 finish from earlier this season at EchoPark Speedway near Atlanta, where Busch beat Hocevar to the stripe by 0.114 seconds.

“It’s unbelievable — what a fun race,” Hocevar said after climbing from his No. 77 Chevrolet on the frontstretch. “We had to reverse the order, obviously the 1-2 with Kyle. I watched him win a lot of truck races, and it’s finally good to put an end to his Texas streak.”

Busch had won his last four Truck Series starts at Texas, but an early brush with the outside wall forced him to regain a lost lap as the beneficiary under caution for Cole Butcher’s crash in Turn 2 on Lap 51.

Busch fought through the field and challenged for the lead in the late going but failed to add to his record 68 Truck Series wins.

“We had an eventful night,” Busch said. “We didn’t start off very well. We were really, really loose and made a lot of adjustments to get it close. When we put the last set off tires on, we were really fast, felt really good.

“I was struggling with grip all night long, but (crew chief) Brian (Pattie) and the guys made a lot of good calls to get us dialed back in. It would have been nice to be in Victory Lane, but it’s good to have a teammate in there and have him get his shot. I got one, he got one, so now we’re even there.”

After the second stage break, Hocevar thought he might have a loose wheel, but that didn’t prevent him from going all-out during a succession of restarts late in the race.

Gio Ruggiero led the field to the overtime restart on Lap 171, but he lost impetus in the middle of a three-wide situation on the white-flag lap, as Hocevar charged into the lead and opened a gap of 10 car-lengths.

Kaden Honeycutt finished third, right behind Busch’s Silverado, with Brandon Jones and pole winner Ben Rhodes in fourth and fifth, respectively, as Ruggiero fell to 14th. Layne Riggs, Christian Eckes, Daniel Hemric, Ty Majeski and Chandler Smith completed the top 10.

Though Honeycutt left with the series lead — by 14 points over Smith — he remained frustrated with his inability to close out a victory.

“I’m proud to be able to drive a truck like this,” said Honeycutt, who is winless in 66 Truck Series starts. “It’s disappointing that I just keep failing. There’s no excuse for it. As soon as I got the lead (on Lap 149), I didn’t protect it right. I didn’t do the right things and ultimately that’s what led us to lose.

“Just got to figure out how to get restarts done. I’ve got to figure out how to win races. It’s eating me alive, I can promise you that.”

Ruggiero likewise missed an opportunity. He had passed Hocevar for the lead on Lap 165 of a scheduled 167, but a violent, five-truck accident on the frontstretch caused the eighth caution, necessitated a red flag for cleanup and forced overtime.

Hocevar won the second stage and led a race-high 76 laps to 41 for Rhodes, who won the first stage wire-to-wire.

The Craftsman Truck Series returns to action next Friday at Watkins Glen International for the Bully Hill Vineyards 176 at The Glen (4:30 p.m. ET, FS1, NASCAR Racing Network Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Note: Inspection was completed in the Craftsman Truck Series garage, confirming Hocevar’s victory. The No. 34 truck of Layne Riggs had two lug nuts not safe and secure, and as a result, they will receive a $2,500 fine and a crew member will be suspended for one race.

NASCAR heads to Texas Motor Speedway for a high-speed weekend triple-header on the 1.5-mile oval featuring the NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series and NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series. Bookmark this page for everything you need — from qualifying order and practice speeds to results and more.

RELATED: Full weekend schedule | TV listings

NASCAR Cup Series

Race day: Sunday at 3:30 p.m. ET on FS1. The categories listed below will be filled out with links as the information becomes available.

Tires: 10 sets for the weekend (eight new race sets, one set transferred from qualifying and one for practice).

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

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

NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series

Race day: Saturday at 3:30 p.m. ET on The CW. The categories listed below will be filled out with links as the information becomes available.

Tires: Six sets for the weekend (four new race sets, one set transferred from qualifying and one for practice). 

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

Qualifying Results

Pit Stalls
Stage 1 Results
Stage 2 Results
Race Results

NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series

Race day: Friday at 8 p.m. ET on FS1. The categories listed below will be filled out with links as the information becomes available.

Tires: Five sets for the weekend (three new race sets, one set transferred from qualifying and one for practice). 

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

Pit Stalls
Stage 1 Results
Stage 2 Results
Race Results

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (May 1, 2026) – Due to continued inclement weather forecasted for the Oxford area through the weekend, NASCAR and Oxford Plains Speedway officials have postponed the All States Materials Group 150 to Saturday, June 6. An updated event schedule will be shared at a later date.

The first NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour event at Oxford in nearly 35 years was originally scheduled for this Saturday, May 2, at 6:15 p.m. ET.

Stephen Kopcik enters Saturday’s event as the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour points leader following back-to-back victories at Martinsville Speedway and Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park. It is the first time in his career that he has led the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour standings.

Kopcik’s victories at Martinsville and Thompson made him just the second driver in NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour history to win his first and second career races in consecutive events. Rick Fuller was the first to do it in 1988 when he scored his first and second victories in consecutive events at Orange County Speedway and Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park.

Only a handful of active NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour competitors have ever raced at Oxford Plains. They include Jon McKennedy and Matt Hirschman, each of whom have earned wins at Oxford Plains Speedway during their respective careers.

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

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — NASCAR and Coca-Cola are expanding their shared commitment to the military community this May with the return of NASCAR Salutes Together with Coca-Cola, while also honoring America’s 250th anniversary through a special evolution of the program: NASCAR Salutes 250 Together with Coca-Cola.

The annual initiative recognizes and supports active duty service members, veterans, military families and fallen heroes through a series of programs throughout Military Appreciation Month, including special recognition in the 600 Miles of Remembrance at the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway on May 24 and culminating at Nashville Superspeedway on May 31.

RELATED: Petty, Dillon help pack meals for local food banks

As part of this year’s enhanced platform, NASCAR and Coca-Cola will introduce the NASCAR Heroes Pass — a fan-driven initiative designed to honor military service members in a lasting and meaningful way.

From May 1 through May 31, fans can visit NASCAR.com/Salutes to nominate a deserving active duty service member or veteran from any branch of the U.S. Armed Forces. GOVX will verify nominees to ensure authenticity and integrity of the program. A total of 250 recipients will be selected to receive a NASCAR Heroes Pass, granting them lifetime access to NASCAR races — defined as two tickets to one participating track annually for 20 years.

The program is designed to go beyond just recognition by creating a lifelong connection between NASCAR and those who serve. It also aims to encourage fan participation and storytelling throughout the month.

“For more than a decade, NASCAR Salutes has been a cornerstone of how our sport honors the military community,” said Jess Smith, Vice President of Brand at NASCAR. “With the introduction of the NASCAR Heroes Pass as part of NASCAR Salutes 250 Together with Coca-Cola, we’re deepening that commitment in a way that creates lasting impact and celebrates service for years to come.”

MORE: Cup Series standings | Watch NASCAR video highlights

NASCAR Salutes Together with Coca-Cola has delivered meaningful at-track experiences for service members and their families, united partners across the motorsports industry and driven critical investments in military and veteran service organizations through NASCAR Impact and other league-wide efforts. The program builds each year toward Memorial Day Weekend and the 600 Miles of Remembrance, where every NASCAR Cup Series driver takes the green flag with the name of a fallen service member displayed on their car.

“As Coca‑Cola proudly celebrates America’s 250th anniversary throughout the year, this Military Appreciation Month is especially meaningful,” said Don Rouse, Vice President of Sports & Entertainment at Coca‑Cola North America. “NASCAR Salutes Together with Coca‑Cola is a cornerstone of our partnership. We’re honored to provide Heroes Passes to deserving service members and veterans so they can experience the excitement of NASCAR for years to come.”

Honor and Remember will again collaborate with NASCAR teams to host Gold Star Families at Charlotte Motor Speedway as part of the 600 Miles of Remembrance. This year, Honor and Remember and NASCAR are calling on race fans to sign the Declaration of Remembrance, recognizing the nearly 1.4 million service members who have lost their lives in military service over the country’s history.

As a NASCAR IMPACT partner, Honor and Remember is working toward a goal of 1.4 million signatures by Memorial Day Weekend 2026 – a symbolic tribute of one signature for every fallen hero.

As part of this year’s NASCAR Salutes 250 Together with Coca-Cola program, NASCAR will:

Host at-track experiences for military members, veterans and their families, including:

  • Discounted grandstand tickets for military members all season long through NASCAR MilTix Presented by GOVX. Active military and veterans can verify their status and purchase tickets by visiting NASCAR.com/miltix.
  • Complimentary grandstand tickets and VIP experiences throughout May for service members from local bases, made possible by Chevrolet’s NASCAR Troops to the Track program and Vet Tix.
  • The “Mobility Pit Box,” which will welcome mobility-impaired race fans and veterans at select events, continues Toyota’s commitment to “Mobility for All.”

Bring together the motorsports industry in recognition of the military, including:

  • O’Reilly Auto Parts, featuring patriotic red, white and blue windshield headers during the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series race at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
  • Craftsman, displaying red, white and blue windshield decals on all NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series entries during race weekend at Charlotte.
  • Goodyear, continuing its tradition of replacing its iconic “Eagle” sidewall design with “Honor and Remember” for the Coca-Cola 600.
  • Mechanix Wear, outfitting NASCAR officials with special camouflage gloves for race weekend.

NASCAR Salutes 250 Together with Coca-Cola represents an evolution of one of the sport’s most meaningful initiatives — bringing fans, partners and the industry together to honor service, celebrate America’s legacy and create lasting connections with the military community for years to come.

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. Contest begins 5/1/26 and ends on 5/31/26. Open to U.S. residents, 18+. See Official Rules for eligibility and complete details: nascar.com/salutes. NASCAR, LLC, NASCAR Digital Media, LLC, and The Coca-Cola Company are not sponsors of this Contest.

PORTAGE, Mich. — Carson Hocevar lives like he drives — wide open, unapologetically, unconventionally. He stays up all night playing video games, races like a single missed opportunity counts as abject failure and says what’s on his mind, consequences be damned.

The man dubbed the “Hurricane” charms fans and sponsors, annoys competitors and relishes both. If you like it, great. If not, maybe even better because the sport needs a villain, or at least someone to talk about.

None of this is an accident. Hocevar watches old races to study drivers’ techniques, and he also absorbs how they talk, what they say in interviews, what attracts fans and what repels them.

RELATED: Hocevar earns first Cup win in Talladega thriller

And he has applied what he has learned. He sounds like a young Carl Edwards when he says he wants to live life to the fullest and doesn’t want to be friends with other drivers. He looks like a young Kyle Busch when he tries to lead every lap. Even his victory celebration on Sunday was a mimic of Dale Earnhardt Jr. after he won the 2014 Daytona 500 (albeit Hocevar turned it up to 11).

With a toothy grin, aggressive style and surgical car control, he has been on the verge of superstardom for months, maybe even years. So when he squeezed himself out of his No. 77 Spire Chevy window after taking the checkered flag at Talladega Superspeedway on Sunday and drove down the frontstretch facing the fans so he could see them and they could see him, it lit not just NASCAR but the sports world like a flash of lightning.

And in the “Hurricane’s” wake, the sports world seemed to be asking: Where did THAT come from?

To answer that question, NASCAR.com spent a few days in the West Michigan places that shaped him.

A drawing of a track by Carson Hocevar from when he was a child.
A detail of a drawing of a track by Carson Hocevar from when he was a child at Scott’s Sports Cards, Coins & Jewelry in Portage, Michigan, on April 29, 2026. (Nic Antaya for NASCAR)

The place: Scott’s Sports Cards, Coins & Jewelry

The story: The origins of his racing obsession

Hocevar’s parents, Scott and Amy, own Scott’s Sports Cards, Coins & Jewelry, which they describe as “the leading buyer of estate jewelry in Portage, Michigan, as well as the area’s best choice for coins, sports cards and memorabilia.”

The store sits near a pub, an auto parts store and a wings place on a busy street in Portage, a city of 50,000 in southwestern Michigan, roughly halfway between Chicago and Detroit. Inside the store on Wednesday afternoon, a coin expert discussed the rising value of silver coins, a card expert flipped through a customer’s collection looking for unique items, and a jewelry expert appraised items brought in in a sandwich bag.

The store has Carson memorabilia, but you have to ask, or you’d (probably) miss it. His shirts are folded on shelves, and his trading cards sit under glass, across from Wrigley Field seats and next to a collection of Derek Jeter items.

Scott and Amy had been told they couldn’t have children and were married for 11 years before he was born. The store was thriving, and his arrival corresponded with a boom in the gold market. They worked long hours and brought him along. He napped, he played, he stoked dreams of racing glory.

The wall inside a back office was once covered with his racing-related artwork. Tornado damage prompted the removal of most of the “Hurricane’s” drawings. Only two items remain. One is a photo of him at age 7 in a quarter midget. The other is a drawing of a race track. A smiley face sun hovers over Turn 4. A red hauler heads to the Turn 1 tunnel. Based on the shape and what appears to be a lake in the infield, it looks to be Daytona International Speedway.

MORE: Hocevar launches first-win celebration to remember

A stickler for detail, Carson wanted his toy race tracks to be just like the real thing, and when he ran pretend races, he insisted his toy cars represent the real ones he imagined them to be. “If you don’t have the right number or the right sponsor, that’s not the real race for him,” Amy says.

Even now, 20 years into his racing obsession, his parents only know that he’s racing crazy; they can’t really explain what prompted it. They were not race fans until he was. If anything, their background suggests he’d be a baseball nut.

When Carson was born, his parents were co-owners of a baseball team in the independent Frontier League. His dad has known Hall of Famer Derek Jeter, who grew up in nearby Kalamazoo, for many years and is on the board of his foundation. When Carson was 3, Scott and Amy took him to a suite in Detroit’s Comerica Park for the 2006 World Series. He used a table to play with his toy cars and didn’t care about what was happening on the field. “After a couple games, the caterers realized they should not put anything on that table,” Amy says.

None of that stuck. He only ever cared about racing — so much so that when Carson got in trouble, Amy says, the only effective way to punish him was to take away his cars.

In their absence, he asked if he could play with dominoes.

Because they had numbers on them.

Quarter midgets drive on track at Little Kalamazoo Speedway
The Little Kalamazoo Speedway Quarter Midget Club practices at Little Kalamazoo Speedway in Kalamazoo, Michigan, on April 29, 2026. (Nic Antaya for NASCAR)

The place: Little Kalamazoo Speedway

The story: If you build it, he will race

Every story about a driver who reaches NASCAR’s top level is also a story about his parents’ sacrifice. In most cases, the dad shoulders the work. In Carson’s case, it was his mom, except for the very beginning.

For the first year of Carson’s racing “career,” Scott was in charge because Amy was busy managing the store’s Beanie Babies craze. Just as her son knew every car number, every sponsor, every driver and demanded authenticity when he recreated the races, she knew every Beanie Babies release, every special one and every fake. Hot items drew big dollars — the most she paid for one was $13,000 — and they demanded her time.

Amy Hocevar poses for a portrait at Little Kalamazoo Speedway
Owner Amy Hocevar poses for a portrait at Little Kalamazoo Speedway. (Nic Antaya for NASCAR)

Then the Beanie Babies craze ended, and her racing craze began.

In 2009 and 2010, Amy shuttled Carson nearly three hours round-trip to a track in Lansing so he could practice his quarter midget. At the same time, the store owned a suite at Kalamazoo Speedway, a few miles from their home. Amy looked out over Turn 3, saw unused property, got to talking with track officials, and soon they hatched a plan for Amy to build Little Kalamazoo Speedway.

It’s concrete, banked, 1/20th of a mile, and shaped like a paper clip, with a grass strip in the middle and plastic barriers ringing the outside. It almost looks like a boy drew Martinsville, gave that to a construction crew, and they used that as a blueprint.

There is no track, nor will there ever be, where Carson has turned more laps. It opened in 2011, when he was 8, and he visited almost daily, driving hundreds of laps each time.

SHOP: Carson Hocevar gear

His career launched from there. In quarter midgets, he won 15 national championships and 79 national races. While Scott ran the store, Amy booked travel for 40-plus weekends a year and accompanied Carson to all of them. And she fought and beat breast cancer, too.

The more Carson raced, the deeper his passion became. He repeatedly watched DVDs of races and in-car cameras of tracks where he planned to compete. He knew how to get around tracks before he got to them.

Amy still owns Little Kalamazoo Speedway today, more than a decade after Carson outgrew it. It is home to the Little Kalamazoo Quarter Midget Club. For $150 a year, members can show up and have their kids drive whenever they want. Volunteers handle all jobs — race director, flag man, scorekeeper, etc. Carson sometimes helps out when he’s in town.

Amy arrived there on Wednesday evening to help with rookie practice. The children donned helmets that looked to weigh nearly as much as they did and fire suits not much bigger than onesies. With dads pushing them to get them started, they ran timid laps for a few minutes, hobbling around like toddlers learning to walk, before rain soaked the track.

Jennifer Feger poses for a portrait while working at The Root Beer Stand
Jennifer Feger poses for a portrait while working at The Root Beer Stand in Kalamazoo, Michigan, on April 29, 2026. (Nic Antaya for NASCAR)

The place: The Root Beer Stand

The story: Local boy made good

Two miles north of Scott’s, across from a Discount Tire and in between The Tangy Crab and St. Monica Catholic Church, sits The Root Beer Stand, a Portage lunch staple. Cash only, but there’s an ATM on site. The low-slung, bright orange brick building houses the kitchen, and the “dining room” is a parking lot under a canopy. Customers have parked there and devoured hot dogs and slurped root beer for 95 years.

Carson eats here whenever he is in town, often placing orders with Jennifer Feger, a wiry ball of energy in jeans and a wide grin.

Blond hair tumbled out of Feger’s gray winter hat on this chilly, rainy, nasty spring afternoon. Joyful enthusiasm tumbled out of her mouth as she bounced on sneakered feet from the counter to a car, took an order, bounced back to place that order at the counter, then carried it on a tray back to the car, bouncing less so this time as not to spill the root beer in the frosted mug.

Even after many years of doing this, interaction with The Root Beer Stand’s clientele still brings Feger great delight. She left to try the corporate life — it sucked by comparison — so she came back to jibber-jabber with every customer. This is how she met Carson and Scott. They always order hot dogs with cheese, chili, onions, ketchup and mustard, and a couple of ham and cheese sandwiches.

Feger doesn’t follow racing, but she knows Carson is a driver from chit-chatting with him. “Bro!” she has told him repeatedly, “One day, you’re going to be big.”

In response, she says, he flashes a smile and says, “Maybe one day,” and she half-jokes she half-wishes there weren’t a full couple of decades gap in their ages.

She knew he won the race on Sunday but had not heard about his unique celebration — driving down the frontstretch while sitting on the car’s door edge.

“Like a tray!” she said. “I love that.”

Now Feger hustled to take an order from Terry Derhammer, white hair, white handlebar mustache, white Tahoe. He knows Carson’s grandfather as they are members of the local Eagles club, and he knows Scott and Amy. If you live in Portage long enough, you know everybody. (And he has sold jewelry to Scott.) He knew Carson’s grandmother, too, and attended her memorial service last year. He was surprised to see all of Carson’s crew members there.

Derhammer is an old-school NASCAR fan who walked away from the sport after the death of Dale Earnhardt. He was in Daytona that fateful day, and things changed for him in the years after. He stopped watching. Then along came Carson, barreling through other drivers on his way to Victory Lane. A sly grin crossed Derhammer’s race-starved heart. He’s seen this film before, and he loves the ending.

Not only is Carson a local boy made good, but he’s also a local boy made good who drives with the aggression and attitude that evoke the sport’s glory days, the days Derhammer loves and misses and yearns to return to.

“He’s the next Dale Earnhardt,” he says as Feger drops off his hot dogs and popcorn.

Carson Hocevar stands on his car, celebrating a win at Berlin
Carson Hocevar stands on his car, celebrating a win at Berlin Raceway. (Special to NASCAR)

The place: Berlin Raceway

The story (Part 1): Old-school veteran meets new-school driver

Berlin Raceway, a 7/16th of a mile track, sits between a green forest and the white stables of the county fairgrounds, just outside of Grand Rapids, an hour north of Portage. It doesn’t really have a frontstretch or a backstretch, or at least neither is long enough for a driver to ever straighten his wheel out.

On Tuesday afternoon, a light breeze whistled across the track. It was silent except for birds chirping, the distant hum of a highway … and the occasional elephantine roar of a solitary driver turning lonely practice laps.

If Little Kalamazoo Speedway is where Carson’s dream of becoming a NASCAR Cup Series winner was born, and Talladega was where that dream came true, Berlin Raceway is where that dream stopped seeming far-fetched.

When Carson was 11, his dad called Johnny Benson Jr., the 1995 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series champion, 2008 NASCAR Craftsman Trucks Series champion and legend in Michigan racing. They knew each other because Scott’s had sponsored Benson’s car for races in Michigan.

Scott wanted to buy Benson’s race car for Carson. Instead, after watching Carson test at Hickory Motor Speedway near Charlotte and being impressed with his car control, Benson offered to coach Carson. In his first race under Benson, though Carson qualified well, Benson forced him to start in the back. Benson’s father had done the same thing with him decades before, during his upbringing in nearby Grand Rapids. He wanted Carson to see the race unfold before he was in the middle of it. The car was fast, but Carson didn’t know how to race it yet. “You can see how they’re running, you can see how they’re attacking the race,” Benson says.

Benson’s lessons were as much about managing the car and expectations as they were about driving. His advice was blunt: “Don’t cause your own wrecks. You knock the nose off this car, pal, we’re going to have a problem.”

They never had one.

A young Carson Hocevar smiles from the driver seat. (Special to NASCAR)
A young Carson Hocevar smiles from the driver seat. (Special to NASCAR)

The place: Berlin Raceway

The story (Part 2): Where the boy becomes a man

Jeff Striegle — who called NASCAR races for MRN for more than two decades, including Carson’s first win in the Craftsman Truck Series — serves as Berlin’s general manager. On Tuesday, Striegle motored a golf cart around the track, rumbling over old and weathered asphalt — the way it should be, as Striegle says. He pointed out “character bumps” coming out of Turns 2 and 3. He cut off Turn 4, narrowly missing the retaining wall, to demonstrate the fastest way around the track.

Starting with his lessons with Benson and continuing with races for a team owned by Mike Bursley (now Berlin’s track president), Carson grew from a passionately obsessed boy with uncommon car control and latent potential into a budding superstar.

It wasn’t always easy. He sat on the couch watching TV while Benson worked on the car … until Benson insisted that he help. At the track, between practice sessions, Carson played as any prepubescent boy would. He wandered around, got dirty, kicked rocks across the parking lot, etc. Then the team would call him over, he’d put on his helmet, rip laps until practice was over, then go back to playing.

He grew out of that restless boy energy … mostly, kinda, sorta, actually maybe not. Really, that restless boy energy turned into restless man energy. Put another way, when Carson wielded a flamethrower on the YouTube documentary series “RISING,” and said he was burning stuff because that’s fun, it seemed like a grown-up version of kicking rocks across the parking lot.

Just as he matured off the track, he matured on it. The most important win in Carson’s early career came at Berlin Raceway. Racing against men old enough to be his father, he lined up for a late restart with the lead. The second-place driver was a former track champion named Terry VanHaitsma, who was roughly 25 years older than him.

Striegle was VanHaitsma’s team owner and coached his driver during the final caution. “I’m going, ‘Take this kid to school, take this kid to school,'” Striegle said. “But in the end, we were the ones that got taken to school.”

Carson won the race and made national headlines because he was only 13.

A view of the trophy room
A view of the trophy room at Carson Hocevar’s childhood home in Portage, Michigan. The trophies are all from Hocevar’s racing career between 2011 and 2015. (Nic Antaya for NASCAR)

Soon, NASCAR called the track to say drivers must be 14 to compete in NASCAR-sanctioned races, and Carson was forced to sit out the rest of the season. His mom points out with delight that he won the track championship the next season, a stunning accomplishment for a 14-year-old.

His driving style back then does not resemble his driving style now. He never tried to squeeze a full car into half a hole as he does now. “He wasn’t pissing people off,” says Bursley. “I think the only thing he was doing to make them mad was beating them.”

It was only later, once he entered big national races and had the confidence born of winning at Berlin and elsewhere, that Carson started to drive more aggressively. He has made no secret that his only goal in life was to win at the Cup level. He bristled at the idea that he needed a backup plan. He passed up a normal childhood in pursuit of that goal. Now that he was so close to it, he wasn’t going to miss his chance by not driving as hard as he could.

He developed as a fan favorite in Berlin, too. Early on, he was shy, awkward, uncomfortable around fans, says Tim Horvath, who owns HDFive, a racing design and branding company and has known Carson since he was 10. “I remember teaching him how to take a photo. He would stand there and be all stiff, and I’m like, ‘Carson, you’ve got to loosen up, man, these are your fans,'” Horvath says. “You’ve got to reach in for a hug. These people want you to interact with them.”

Those two things — his aggressive style and his ability to relate to fans, both of which grew out of his experience at Berlin — explain Carson’s rise to the verge of superstardom. “They need a guy that stirs up the pot a little bit, and Carson fulfills that,” Horvath says.

The place: Living rooms across West Michigan

The story: That’s a great celebration, Carson, but please don’t die

Horvath, Striegle and Bursley all got choked up when Carson took the checkered flag on Sunday. Horvath saw it as vindication for years of supporting him. Striegle was bummed he wasn’t there to broadcast the race himself, so he called Carson’s run off of Turn 4 to the checkered flag in his head. And Bursley shot Carson a text that said, “The first one is always the hardest, now go win the rest.”

Carson’s friends in West Michigan watched with a mix of delight and concern as this man, who is “8 feet tall and skin and bones,” as Horvath joked, crawled halfway out of his car, sat on the window, and started to drive it like that. They worried he’d crash into the wall, fall out and run himself over or get hurt in some other way equal to the risk he was taking.

To see him execute a wildly creative move, soak up the moment with fans, and do something no one had ever seen before … surprised none of them. Said John VanDoorn, whose company, VanDoorn Racing Development, built and maintained cars owned by Carson Hocevar Racing:

“That’s Carson 101 right there.”

It’s the Carson Hocevar that all of West Michigan had seen before.

And now everyone else is seeing him, too.

Carson Hocevar celebrates in Victory Lane at Talladega Superspeedway.
Carson Hocevar celebrates in Victory Lane at Talladega Superspeedway. (Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media)