Corey Heim will once again strap in behind the wheel of the black and red No. 11 Toyota Tundra for Tricon Garage full-time when the Craftsman Truck Series season gets underway at Daytona International Speedway (Feb. 14, 7:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) — and the bar is higher than ever.

The return to Truck Series action will mark Heim’s third full-time campaign in the national series division, an easy decision for the 22-year-old from Marietta, Georgia when it came time to firm up his 2025 plans.

RELATED: 2025 Truck Series schedule | Daytona weekend schedule

“Those guys are awesome,” Heim said with a smile in a mid-January sitdown with NASCAR.com. “You know, it wasn’t a hard decision when they gave it to me to go back with those guys at Tricon Garage and have the same team from top to bottom, with Scott Zipadelli and the whole No. 11 crew.”

Through his previous two years in the Truck Series, Heim and his familiar Toyota team present an impressive résumé bolstered by nine wins and a combined total of 26 top-five finishes. It is a performance review that produces self-admitted high expectations for the rising talent in his quest to chase the elusive championship at season’s end.

“Certainly, I’ve had my fair share of success with those guys and couldn’t do without them,” Heim said. “Having them back for another year is, you know … our expectations are just as high as ever and we’ve yet to close it out with a championship. So, of course, that’s our primary goal, but I want to get a lot of race wins along the way.

“I certainly can’t wait to work with these guys. It’s always a privilege to be able to work with a team that’s capable of winning on a weekly basis, and I can’t wait to get started.”

There are many changes planned for the upcoming 2025 Truck Series season throughout the garage. New teams will welcome fresh faces, and several familiar names will return to the series to join Heim in the hunt for a title, as he aims to make the Championship 4 for the third year in a row.

“This year, specifically, it’s a lot of fresh faces, as you mentioned, my new teammates and some other guys coming in,” Heim said. “I saw, you know, Kaden Honeycutt is going be full-time; Layne Riggs is coming back. He was really good at the end of the year and then there are still very good guys you have, like ThorSport (Racing) and whatnot. So, yeah, some good guys are leaving, some good guys are coming in.

MORE: On the Move: Changes to know for the 2025 season

“But it’s cool to see a lot of talent in the Truck Series right now. I’m fortunate to be a part of it, and our goal remains the same: to keep winning some races and have fun while doing it.”

In addition to Heim’s full-time job for Tricon Garage, he is also a student of the sport, taking time to expand his horizons when his schedule allows him to. Heim races in the NASCAR Xfinity Series for Sam Hunt Racing on a part-time basis, and made three Cup Series starts in 2024 split between Legacy Motor Club and 23XI Racing.

“When you’re in a development stage kind of like I am, I want to be in the Cup Series within the next few years and be full-time, of course, and compete for wins as early as possible,” Heim said. “From a development standpoint, the more you race, I feel like the more you learn. So I’ve been fortunate in the past couple of years to really make my schedule diverse and race a lot of different things to keep my mind open and fresh about different things. And you know, everyone knows how different these Cup Series cars are compared to an Xfinity car and a truck. So,  having that open mind is pretty big in that sense.

“In 2020, I think I ran like seven different series, and I feel like that was a big year in my development; I finally started to win some races. And I feel like through 2021 in ARCA and beyond, up to this point, I’m unfortunate to learn some new everyday kind of thing. So it’s very important as a young driver like myself.”

The start of the 2025 season is just around the corner, with the Truck Series set to the high banks of Daytona International Speedway before you know it. At a track where anything can happen at any moment, preparations for the driver and team can be pretty tricky.

Superspeedway racing is something Heim, he admits, struggles to prepare for. For now, he’s choosing to take each event as it comes, trying to find different ways to be up front when it matters and the checkered flag flies.

“I’m not the greatest superspeedway racer by any means,” the 22-year-old acknowledged. “I’m a pretty safe guy, so I don’t make any crazy moves. And I think a guy who might, you know, lean more towards that direction of making more off-the-wall moves in the middle of the race to get track position, wherever it may be, they might do some more research on when to make those moves and whatnot.

“I feel like there does come a point, though, where I hope to be in the Cup Series, as I mentioned. And if I do race some superspeedways, eventually, I feel like I’m going to have to be more aggressive. So I think the main thing, I guess, to answer your question is just to have more of an open mind and look at how these guys, especially in the Cup Series, the best superspeedway racers, end up at the front at the end of the race.”

Only time will tell if the No. 11 Tricon Garage Toyota contends up front when the Truck Series kicks off its 2025 season at Daytona next month.

And Heim knows the expectations are higher than ever — but he’s ready to deliver.

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Ryan Blaney has made a recent habit of dramatic charges in the preseason Clash exhibition, with 2025 being the latest instance. In this case, this year’s drive from the back of the pack put him squarely behind old friend Chase Elliott.

Blaney managed to avoid all the chaos of the inaugural Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium, but — importantly — he also sidestepped the potential formation of an angry mob had he put a Madhouse-style maneuver on NASCAR’s Most Popular Driver.

“I think we were pretty evenly matched,” Blaney said, sizing up his No. 12 Team Penske Ford against Elliott’s No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet. “But yeah, I just, when I started to go, I just didn’t have enough right-rear (tire) and I’m like, ‘Oh, (expletive).’ Like, I’m not gonna make this pass, right? And I’m not gonna just bulldog him into him and get chased out of here with pitchforks.”

Blaney completed a stirring march from last place in the 23-car field to secure a runner-up finish in Sunday’s Cook Out Clash. It was a near-replica of his Clash effort last season, in the event’s final running at the similarly tiny Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, when he also drove from 23rd to finish third.

RELATED: Bowman Gray results | Elliott rolls to Clash win

It wasn’t quite enough to unseat race-long dominator Elliott, who led 171 of the 200 laps. But Blaney dazzled on the tricky, historic quarter-mile, putting on a show in front of a raucous, approving crowd.

“I had a blast,” Blaney said post-race. “I was saying last year we came from last to third, this year last to second. Got to not start last and have a shot to win one of these things. Yeah, that was fun. That was a blast.”

Blaney was put in that position by trouble in Saturday’s preliminaries, where a late spin resulted in a last-place finish in his qualifying heat. His team later discovered a faulty radiator that needed replacement, and Blaney started at the rear of the Last Chance Qualifier. He started Sunday’s 75-lapper to shake his car down but relied on earning the final provisional berth in the main event as the highest points finisher in last year’s NASCAR Cup Series standings.

“We had a slight, just a radiator leak — something that we certainly don’t have,” said No. 12 crew chief Jonathan Hassler. “So fortunate that wasn’t a points race, obviously, for it to be as big a penalty for us. That kind of put us behind the eight ball, but like I said, we had a good car and were able to move forward.”

Some of the customary stadium shenanigans eventually reared up, but Blaney kept his car clean and clear of the fender fracas, methodically picking his way toward the front.

MORE: At-track photos: Clash | Race Rewind: Bowman Gray

When Blaney found his way to the No. 9 Chevy’s back bumper, Elliott confessed to some initial surprise at seeing the bright No. 12 there. But Elliott also quickly recalled Blaney’s knack for navigating tracks where passing tends to be most difficult, noting his determined drive to victory in last year’s Round of 8 finale at Martinsville Speedway.

“I think the race track was racy, and there was enough tire wear that it allowed that to happen where a guy could conserve and make smart decisions and claw his way up there. Ryan certainly did that,” Elliott said. “He has become elite at places like Martinsville and here and Phoenix and some of these shorter tracks. You really have to be mindful of all those things.

“Yeah, when I saw him, I was, like, ‘Man, didn’t he start last?’ Then I thought about it a little more. I thought, ‘That’s really not all that surprising at all as good as he was at Martinsville in the fall.’ This isn’t super different from that. It is different, don’t get me wrong, but there are a lot of similarities. Not super-surprised to see him up there by the end.”

It was a sentiment shared by Hassler, who will have to do one finishing position better in next year’s Clash to continue the team’s trend.

“He’s a great short-track racer,” Hassler told NASCAR.com. “I mean, he’s able to pass on a lot of tracks where guys struggle to pass at, like Martinsville. This is our second year in a row to come from the back — we were third last year at LA and to get to second this year — so he’s just a really good short-track racer, and obviously, we gave him a good car as well.”

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Pole winner Chase Elliott held off a dramatic charge from Ryan Blaney to win Sunday night’s Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium in front of a teeming, vociferous sellout crowd at the historic quarter-mile.

Adroitly working lapped traffic in the closing stages of the 200-lap season-opening exhibition race, Elliott crossed the finish line 1.333 seconds ahead of Blaney, who started last among the 23 competitors on a driver points provisional.

Elliott claimed his first victory in The Clash, which came to Bowman Gray after a three-year stint at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. The driver of the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet reveled in the NASCAR Cup Series’ return to the iconic short track after an absence of 54 years.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos 

“This environment is special,” said Elliott, who led 171 laps, including the first 96, before surrendering the lead to eventual third-place finisher Denny Hamlin. “This is a place that has a deep history in NASCAR. I think they deserve this event, truthfully.

“I hope we didn’t disappoint. It was fun for me at least, and we’ll hopefully come back here one day.”

Hamlin led twice for 28 laps but faded after Elliott retook the top spot from him on Lap 126. And when Blaney slipped past Hamlin’s Toyota on Lap 147, it became a two-driver race.

But Blaney’s car tightened up in the late going, preventing the No. 12 Team Penske Ford driver from challenging for the win. Blaney thought better of making an overly aggressive move on the series’ seven-time Most Popular Driver Award winner.

“I’m not going to bulldog into him and get chased out of here with pitchforks,” Blaney quipped. “… I just didn’t quite have enough right rear at the end to make a move on him.”

WATCH: Elliott discusses Clash victory | Elliott on how “experience” makes Bowman Gray win all the more special

Joey Logano finished fourth, followed by Bubba Wallace, who advanced from his 14th-place starting position. Ross Chastain, Austin Cindric, Tyler Reddick, Shane van Gisbergen and Chris Buescher completed the top 10.

Hamlin rued the final restart on Lap 121 after the seventh caution for Brad Keselowski’s spin off Wallace’s bumper.

“I just didn’t do very well on that restart there and kind of lost the bottom, and Chase took advantage of it,” Hamlin said. “Once you get the lead, it’s a lot easier to hang on to it.

“I thought that they were just a little better that second half than we were, along with the 12 (Blaney) was as well. We just have to get a little bit better, but overall, a good day for our Sport Clips Toyota.”

In the Last Chance Qualifier that determined positions 21 and 22 in the main event, Kyle Larson charged from the 10th starting position and survived nine cautions to win the 75-lap event and advance to the Clash.

On Lap 72, Larson grabbed the lead from Josh Berry, who was making his first competitive start for Wood Brothers Racing at the track where team patriarch and NASCAR Hall of Famer Glen Wood secured all four of his Cup Series victories.

SHOP: Chase Elliott winner’s gear

Larson took the top spot for the first time on Lap 30 and led a race-high 36 circuits en route to the win. However, Larson’s No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet sustained damage after he surrendered the lead to Erik Jones for a restart on Lap 65.

In a melee moments after racing resumed, Jones spun in a three-wide mishap with Berry and Larson and dropped out of contention.

“My car was way better than it was yesterday,” said Larson, whose eighth-place finish in his Saturday heat relegated him to the Last Chance Qualifier. “That was fun. I was able to get to the front without really getting into too many people.

“But then after that long break (for local champion Burt Myers’ hard wreck on Lap 61), I cycled really tight for that restart and allowed Erik to get in front of me and just kind of lost control of the race at that point. Then, the next restart, it got crazy, and I got a bunch of damage.”

Berry, who started 13th, held second to secure the 22nd spot in the Clash. Berry and Larson finished 13th and 17th, respectively, in the main event.

“It got pretty rough,” Berry said. “You hate that it comes to that, but it is what it is—it’s the ‘Madhouse,’ it’s Bowman Gray Stadium, it’s a tight race track, and you’re going to run into each other.”

MORE: 2025 Cup Series schedule

The Cup Series will officially kick off the 2025 regular season at Daytona International Speedway for the Daytona 500 on Sunday, Feb. 16 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

NOTE: Post-race inspection was completed without issue in the Cup Series garage, confirming Chase Elliott as the winner.

Kyle Larson stormed from a 10th-place starting position to win Sunday night’s Last Chance Qualifier, joining Josh Berry to collect the final two open spots in the Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium.

Larson, the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series champion, struggled in Saturday’s heat race, finishing eighth of 10 drivers in Heat 2, sending him to the 75-lap LCQ rather than the big show immediately. Those Saturday struggles vanished Sunday as he wheeled his No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet through the field Sunday. With his finish in the LCQ, Larson will start 21st in The Clash (8 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: 2025 Clash lineup | At-track photos

“I thought if I take the outside front row, there’s a higher percentage of a chance that I’m gonna get wiped out whenever I either get down or somebody shoves somebody into me,” Larson said of his lane choice on restarts. “So I just thought my safest thing was to choose inside second row, and thankfully, it worked out.”

“My car felt like a totally different race car, so I was happy with that,” Larson said in regard to the No. 5 team’s adjustments before the LCQ. “It really allowed me to get to the front pretty quickly. Hopefully, they can get it repaired here, and we’ll have a decent shot here, I think, in this race.” 

Though his speed was fast enough for fourth-quickest in Saturday’s opening practice sessions, Larson qualified just 22nd of the 39 entrants, setting him up for a sixth-place start in Heat 2. Once the 25-lap preliminary began, Larson was trapped on the outside behind Zane Smith as Smith ran side-by-side with Bubba Wallace and Daniel Suárez. Smith eventually worked his way to the bottom, but Suárez shunted him out of the way and back into Larson’s path. Larson bounced off Smith’s No. 38 Ford and nearly turned sideways across the front bumper of Cody Ware’s No. 51 machine. Larson couldn’t recover in the remaining 18 laps and was forced to settle for his spot in the LCQ.

Ryan Blaney earned the provisional spot for Sunday’s main event based on his points finish last year (2nd) after exiting early due to a mechanical issue found before the race.

berry and larson talk in the garage
Zack Albert | NASCAR Digital Media

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Tim Brown and Burt Myers both grew up at Bowman Gray Stadium, both part of families with rich racing history here. Brown’s earliest memories, he said, date back to when he was 5 or 6 years old, back when he joined Myers and other youngsters to play along the tree-lined pit area on Saturday nights while their older relatives tuned, wrenched and prepped.

Their paths never strayed very far from there, but now their memories include record-breaking statistics that vet them as stadium legends. This was, and is still, their playground.

“That’s what makes it even more special to get to make a Cup debut here,” Brown says.

Brown and Myers will attempt to put some local flavor into the main-event field as the lone double-duty drivers for Sunday’s Cook Out Clash (8 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), which will stage its first edition at the quarter-mile track. They’ll be vying for the two open spots on the 23-car starting grid in the 75-lap Last Chance Qualifier (6 p.m. ET), hoping their hometown advantage as Bowman Gray regulars holds sway.

RELATED: Clash weekend schedule | Bowman Gray’s rich history

Those early childhood memories have evolved into one of the track’s most competitive rivalries. Brown and Myers have combined (in a near-even split) for 23 championships and 198 wins in the featured Modified Division, and their tendency to find each other’s cars at the front of the pack has created fierce racing between them through the years. Myers says at Bowman Gray, the roots typically run deep — to a lifelong level, in some cases — so it’s natural that altercations would sometimes flare.

“Me and Tim Brown been racing together for almost 30 years,” Myers says. “What do you think is going to happen at least three or four times throughout our careers, racing against each other and battling for wins and championships every Saturday night? That’s what creates rivalries.”

So it was also natural that both Modified standouts landed a call-up to the majors for the Cup Series’ return to Bowman Gray. Brown will drive the No. 15 Ford for Rick Ware Racing, where he works full-time as a suspension and drivetrain specialist. Myers reached a deal with AmeriVet Racing’s No. 50 Chevrolet team for a potential Clash debut.

When Brown was presented with the suggestion that he might also hope for the best for Myers in a show of stadium solidarity against the Cup Series stars, he didn’t exactly throw water on his competitive fires. But he was also quick to recognize the importance of this moment for a pair of Bowman Gray lifers.

“That’s a tough question to answer because the racer in me says no, but I think it’s good that both of us got this opportunity to do this and thanks to everybody involved that thinks the same way,” Brown says. “At my age, just to get the opportunity to do this is overwhelming and it’s super special.”

Brown’s age is 53, which makes him the oldest driver on this weekend’s entry list. Myers’ age is 49, second-oldest in the Cup garage this weekend, but he cautions not to take that number at face value.

“Don’t make a mistake now, I’m in my prime,” Myers says with a laugh. “That’s what I tell people. I’m like Doc Holliday, I’m in my prime.”

As reigning track champion, Myers has some truth behind the statement. A whopping 15 of the last 17 Modified titles have gone to either Brown or Myers, and both are still winning races on a regular basis.

MORE: Nostalgia, excitement on tap | At-track photos: Bowman Gray

The track that’s greeting them this weekend has undergone a transformation, with new SAFER barriers lining the oval and bright, Musco lights illuminating the action. For Brown and Myers, those changes are particularly personal.

“I mean, it’s a double-edged sword,” Myers says. “The old-school Burt Myers, I love the nostalgia of it, of the old track with the red and white guardrail, and I like the fact that it was the old Bowman Gray. So I was sad to see that go, but at the same time, what they’re doing and what they’ve done only speaks of the future of Bowman Gray. In other words, I think we can all agree that Bowman Gray is probably going to still be there racing in another 100 years. They’re not going to do all this just to run one show. This is for the Cup show, but at the same time, this is for the longevity of the short-track series that has been so successful there for so long.”

Says Brown: “Cosmetically, it’s beautiful and that’s important, too, for the fans that come, for sponsors to spend money to come. If you say, ‘Hey, we’re partners with teams that race here’ and you show them this race track now, they’re gonna be impressed. Now, it did have some history with the old guardrails laid over and painted and things and had some character and very historical, but it’s just a new chapter, so it’ll still have the same persona, it’ll still have the same passion of fans and it’ll still put on a great race, but it just looks great now.”

The hometown crowd that will pack the place Sunday evening will have a local rooting interest, but it’s also a shot at the big leagues for two homegrown heroes.

“It means everything to me, not just to me but my family and all of our partners and sponsors that have been with me through this journey for many years,” Brown says. “Just to be at this level to get to shine is just outstanding and I can’t wait to make the best of it.”

In some aspects, the NASCAR Cup Series’ takeover of the Bowman Gray garage is a long way from the spring and summer nights that Brown and Myers spent growing up around the stadium fieldhouse. The complexion might be different, but for both, it still feels like home.

“It’s so cliche, and we joke about it, and I say it all the time: Our lives are planned around racing — vacations, parties, birthdays, childbirth, everything we do is planned around racing,” Myers says. “Me and (brother) Jason were born in November and December. I don’t think that was coincidence. I really don’t, and it’s because of drivers and teams who are so engulfed in racing, and when you add in the spectacle of Bowman Gray Stadium and how special that place is to NASCAR and to us, that’s all we know.”

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — It was a great night for NASCAR’s seven-time Most Popular Driver Award winner.

After setting the fastest time in the final four-minute practice session and earning the top starting spot in the first qualifying heat, Chase Elliott won that heat wire-to-wire to win the pole position for Sunday’s Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium (8 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Elliott described track position at the tight quarter-mile track as critical to success.

“It’s going to be tough to win from the third or fourth row,” said Elliott, who will share the front row with Heat 2 winner Chris Buescher, who led every lap of the qualifier and held off new Joe Gibbs Racing hire Chase Briscoe to claim the second starting spot in the 200-lap exhibition race.

“I think the first couple of rows certainly have a massive advantage on the rest of the field. Obviously, anything can happen. You all have been watching long enough to know that anything can happen, and I’m well aware of that. But I think just in a normal circumstance of people not totally crashing each other or whatever — yeah, I certainly would want to be on the first couple of rows and, fortunately, we are. We’ll try to take advantage of that.”

RELATED: Live lineup updates | 2025 Clash schedule 

Heat 3 and 4 winners Denny Hamlin and Tyler Reddick will start from third and fourth on the grid, respectively. To underscore just how important starting position is, all four heat winners won wire-to-wire after posting the four fastest laps in the final practice sessions to earn their pole positions for the qualifiers.

The top five drivers in each heat advance to Sunday’s Clash. The remaining 19 drivers will compete for two spots in a Last Chance Qualifier (6 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) that precedes Sunday’s main event. The 23rd spot in the field goes to the driver with the highest number of 2024 championship points not otherwise qualified for the Clash.

That provisional belongs to Ryan Blaney, who finished 10th after starting third in a wild first heat that featured three cautions in 25 laps. Should Blaney finish top two in the LCQ, the provisional will be handed to Kyle Larson, who started sixth and finished eighth in the second heat and will have to race his way into the main event.

MORE: 2025 Clash format | At-track photos: Bowman Gray

After battling a loose condition in his No. 17 Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing Ford in the opening eight-minute practice session, Buescher benefited from adjustments made to the car based on considerable preparation time in the simulator.

“We had the changes ready, so when we got there and realized we were just way too loose, we were able to make quick adjustments to get in the ballpark,” said Buescher, who had failed to qualify for the main event in the last three Clash events at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

WATCH: Gragson describes wild, fun racing at Bowman Gray

Joining Elliott in the main event from Heat 1 were Brad Keselowski, Noah Gragson, Kyle Busch and Ross Chastain. Heat 2 qualifiers included Buescher, Briscoe, Shane van Gisbergen, Bubba Wallace and Daniel Suárez.

Advancing from Heat 3 in addition to Hamlin were reigning Cup Series champion Joey Logano, William Byron, Carson Hocevar and Alex Bowman. Joining Reddick from Heat 4 were Christopher Bell, Ryan Preece, Austin Cindric and Todd Gilliland.

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — In what surreal, alternate reality does former Cup Series champion Kyle Larson race alongside 12-time track champ Tim Brown at Bowman Gray Stadium? In what dream state would brothers Austin and Ty Dillon race bumper-to-bumper at the same arena where their grandfather, Richard Childress, famously sold popcorn and peanuts from the grandstands as a youth? And where else would fans jam in to fill 30 sections of bleachers for practice?

The mythical “Madhouse” is the very real answer, as NASCAR’s top division held official on-track sessions at Bowman Gray Stadium for the first time since the dog days of August 1971. Saturday evening’s preliminaries were a tantalizing preview on the eve of a full-fledged return in Sunday’s Cook Out Clash (8 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), the non-points season opener that’s making its eagerly awaited debut at the quarter-mile track.

RELATED: Clash weekend schedule | Back to Bowman Gray’s roots | Live lineup updates

Fans cheered the brimming sense of nostalgia as Cup Series cars rolled back onto the historic track shortly after the stroke of 6 o’clock. More history is yet to be made.

“It’s really special,” said Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Dillon, whose Welcome, North Carolina, hometown is just 15 miles south. “I remember leaving Truck (Series) races on Friday night, flying home and excited about coming to Bowman Gray on a Saturday night, sit in the beer garden and watch the wrecks — and the race that happens around the wrecks.”

And then there’s that. The lore that’s existed for decades around Bowman Gray — the fights, the carnage, the preadolescents giving drivers middle-finger salutes that somehow qualify as a family activity — is getting an elevated profile from the local/regional/weekly level to the national spotlight. That tradition popped up early Saturday with a first-lap crash in the Modified Division Madhouse Classic event that prompted that driver-to-driver gesture by mid-afternoon. It continued with a slam-bang vibe in the Cup Series’ qualifying heats later Saturday evening.

That passion from those confrontations has typically been heated through the years, but the pre-race chatter about those time-worn Madhouse customs has come with a wink and a nod.

“No, we already met in the NASCAR trailer, and they already gave us the list of who’s supposed to fight with who,” cracked Kyle Busch, who scrapped with Ricky Stenhouse Jr. in the most recent non-points Cup event — the 2024 All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway. “So yeah, that’s already done. I can’t disclose names, so just wait and see.”

The crew chiefs will be fighting some of their own unknowns. The Clash has been held for the last three years at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, where the temporary quarter-mile track was roughly modeled on Bowman Gray’s configuration. The differences lay in the lack of an infield wall, the unique contours that border the horseshoe-shaped seating area, and the smaller, more intimate setting.

MORE: Paint Scheme Preview | At-track photos: Bowman Gray

A couple of weeks back, crew chief Paul Wolfe told his driver, Joey Logano: “Hey, let’s take a ride up there one day for a little field trip.” With two engineers from the No. 22 Team Penske Ford crew, that road trip included a stop for lunch and an informal walk around the track.

“Obviously, there’s a lot of similarities to LA, sure. It’s not drastically different from a track layout standpoint,” Wolfe said. “Yeah, it’ll be exciting. How the racing plays out, you have this small strip of what you’d call a curb or whatever, then into the grass. At least at LA, there was like an inside wall. Where here it’s just, I don’t know if it’s just free game, so it could get interesting. It was cool, though. I mean, I’m excited to go do it. I like change, and I think we’ve had a lot of that, and continue to do it. It definitely keeps things exciting, keeps you on your toes.”

Local media outlets have celebrated the return of NASCAR’s top series to Winston-Salem with wall-to-wall coverage and reporters marveling — privately and publicly — about Bowman Gray’s next-level sprucing up. Fresh paint, new lighting and just-installed SAFER barriers have done plenty to modernize the facility that’s been here since the Depression Era, but bringing the stadium up to code has been done with care, faithfully keeping the character and old-school feel intact.

A recent Cup Series revival at North Wilkesboro was done with similar mindfulness. But as Busch noted, the capital improvements aren’t just a premier-series phenomenon.

“The fact of us going somewhere to reinvest into the future for other racing, the local-level racers, to be able to see a better venue to be able to go enjoy and bring their sponsors and have fun and race and compete is only going to benefit from the top,” Busch says. “So bringing that down here to Bowman Gray, seeing the upgrades here, looking at other tracks around the country that we could do some of the same stuff.”

Busch noted grassroots tracks in Alabama and Florida that might benefit from a similar treatment. “So that could be a really cool thing down the road, that this continues to kind of float around,” he said. “Now return on investment? I don’t know, but I think the return on investment is the younger generations and the younger racers that want to be somebody (can) get to race at a cool place, and then can move up the ladder and someday, one day, go back and race at their home track as a pro.”

Hendrick Motorsports driver Chase Elliott topped the leaderboard in a combined practice and qualifying session on Saturday ahead of Sunday night’s Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium (8 ET, FOX, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

The driver of the No. 9 Chevrolet set the pace at 63.762 mph over Chris Buescher (63.622 mph), Denny Hamlin (63.600 mph) and Tyler Reddick (63.546 mph).

Those four drivers started on the pole in their respective 25-lap heat races later in the evening at the “Madhouse.”

RELATED: Live lineup updates | 2025 Clash schedule 

Brad Keselowski (63.515 mph) rounded out the top five.

Chase Briscoe (63.501 mph), Christopher Bell (63.407 mph), Joey Logano (63.407 mph), Ryan Blaney (63.313 mph) and Shane van Gisbergen (63.305 mph) completed the top 10.

In this practice session, the field was broken up into separate groups and each group got to take the track three times. In each driver’s third and final time on track, their fastest lap time determined the starting lineup for the heat races.

MORE: 2025 Clash format | At-track photos: Bowman Gray

Ty Gibbs set the quickest overall time at 64.199 mph in Group 1 of practice but ended up 24th fastest (62.994 mph) after 39 drivers set a qualifying time in the final practice session.

It’s time to kick off a new NASCAR season with the annual Cook Out Clash on Feb. 2 (8 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) — but in a new location. After running the Cup Series’ preseason exhibition at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum for three years, the race shifts to a new venue in historic Bowman Gray Stadium in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

Here’s how it works: The field of 39 entrants are split into three practice groups Saturday, with each group receiving three sessions. The final practice session also serves as qualifying, with each driver’s fastest lap determining the heat race lineups in order of speed. Each heat race is 25 laps (only counting green flag laps and no overtime), with the top five in each locking into Sunday’s main event.

RELATED: How to watch The Clash

Those who don’t transfer into the main event from the heat races will compete in Sunday’s Last Chance Qualifier Race, spanning 75 laps. The top two finishers will then tag the back of the field for the 200-lap feature. The 23rd and final spot in the Clash is reserved for the driver who finished the highest in the final standings from the 2024 season and didn’t race into the main event.

Follow along below for updated lineups and results for all of this weekend’s on-track action, including the heat races, last chance qualifier and the main event.

Heat Race 1 Results

FinishStartCarDriver
11No. 9 ChevroletChase Elliott
22No. 6 FordBrad Keselowski
37No. 4 FordNoah Gragson
48No. 8 ChevroletKyle Busch
55No. 1 ChevroletRoss Chastain
610No. 10 ChevroletTy Dillon
79No. 3 ChevroletAustin Dillon
84No. 7 ChevroletJustin Haley
96No. 21 FordJosh Berry
103No. 12 FordRyan Blaney

Heat Race 2 Results

FinishStartCarDriver
11No. 17 FordChris Buescher
22No. 19 ToyotaChase Briscoe
33No. 88 ChevroletShane van Gisbergen
45No. 23 ToyotaBubba Wallace
57No. 99 ChevroletDaniel Suárez
64No. 38 FordZane Smith
78No. 43 ToyotaErik Jones
86No. 5 ChevroletKyle Larson
99No. 51 FordCody Ware
1010No. 66 FordGarrett Smithley

Heat Race 3 Results

FinishStartCarDriver
11No. 11 ToyotaDenny Hamlin
22No. 22 FordJoey Logano
33No. 24 ChevroletWilliam Byron
45No. 77 ChevroletCarson Hocevar
54No. 48 ChevroletAlex Bowman
66No. 54 ToyotaTy Gibbs
78No. 35 ToyotaRiley Herbst
87No. 47 ChevroletRicky Stenhouse Jr.
910No. 50 ChevroletBurt Myers
109No. 15 FordTim Brown

Heat Race 4 Results

FinishStartCarDriver
11No. 45 ToyotaTyler Reddick
22No. 20 ToyotaChristopher Bell
36No. 60 FordRyan Preece
43No. 2 FordAustin Cindric
55No. 34 FordTodd Gilliland
69No. 71 ChevroletMichael McDowell
77No. 16 ChevroletAJ Allmendinger
88No. 42 ToyotaJohn Hunter Nemechek
94No. 41 FordCole Custer

Last Chance Qualifier Race Results

FinishStartCarDriver
110No. 5 ChevroletKyle Larson
213No. 21 FordJosh Berry
35No. 3 ChevroletAustin Dillon
412No. 42 ToyotaJohn Hunter Nemechek
54No. 71 ChevroletMichael McDowell
62No. 38 FordZane Smith
711No. 47 ChevroletRicky Stenhouse Jr.
81No. 10 ChevroletTy Dillon
99No. 7 ChevroletJustin Haley
1019No. 15 FordTim Brown
1114No. 51 FordCody Ware
1216No. 41 FordCole Custer
1318No. 66 FordGarrett Smithley
143No. 54 ToyotaTy Gibbs
158No. 16 ChevroletAJ Allmendinger
166No. 43 ToyotaErik Jones
177No. 35 ToyotaRiley Herbst
1815No. 50 ChevroletBurt Myers
1917No. 12 FordRyan Blaney

Cook Out Clash Results

FinishStartCar NumberDriver
11No. 9 ChevroletChase Elliott
223No. 12 FordRyan Blaney
33No. 11 ToyotaDenny Hamlin
47No. 22 FordJoey Logano
514No. 23 ToyotaBubba Wallace
617No. 1 ChevroletRoss Chastain
716No. 2 FordAustin Cindric
84No. 45 ToyotaTyler Reddick
910No. 88 ChevroletShane van Gisbergen
102No. 17 FordChris Buescher
1112No. 60 FordRyan Preece
128No. 20 ToyotaChristopher Bell
1322No. 21 FordJosh Berry
1420No. 34 FordTodd Gilliland
1513No. 8 ChevroletKyle Busch
1615No. 77 ChevroletCarson Hocevar
1721No. 5 ChevroletKyle Larson
1811No. 24 ChevroletWilliam Byron
1919No. 48 ChevroletAlex Bowman
209No. 4 FordNoah Gragson
215No. 6 FordBrad Keselowski
2218No. 99 ChevroletDaniel Suárez
236No. 19 ToyotaChase Briscoe

Editor’s note: Saturday’s practices and heat races air on FS1. Sunday’s Last Chance Qualifier and Cook Out Clash air on FOX.

The season-opening Cook Out Clash exhibition race will star 23 drivers in a 200-lap feature event on Sunday, Feb. 2 at 8 p.m. ET (FOX, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) — and, like previous iterations, will have a unique qualifying method to make the field.

The tight confines of the 0.25-mile Bowman Gray oval set up for an event similar to that hosted by the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum from 2022 through 2024.

MORE: Full 2025 Cup schedule | Behind the scenes at Bowman Gray

The weekend’s on-track action begins Feb. 1 with live practice sessions on FS1 (6:10 p.m. ET). The entrants will be split into three practice groups, with each group getting three practice sessions. Each competitor’s fastest lap from their final practice session will determine the starting lineup for all of four 25-lap heat races. The practice groups are assigned based on 2024 owner points, starting with Joey Logano in Group 3 and moving across to William Byron in Group 1, then Tyler Reddick, Christopher Bell and so on.

PRACTICE GROUPS

Group 1Group 2Group 3
William ByronRyan BlaneyJoey Logano
Kyle LarsonChristopher BellTyler Reddick
Alex BowmanDenny HamlinChase Elliott
Daniel SuárezAustin CindricChase Briscoe
Ty GibbsShane van GisbergenBrad Keselowski
Bubba WallaceChris BuescherJosh Berry
Carson HocevarKyle BuschRoss Chastain
Riley HerbstTodd GillilandZane Smith
Noah GragsonCole CusterRicky Stenhouse Jr.
Ty DillonErik JonesAJ Allmendinger
Austin DillonJustin HaleyMichael McDowell
Ryan PreeceJohn Hunter NemechekCody Ware
Tim BrownBurt MyersGarrett Smithley

FINAL PRACTICE/QUALIFYING GROUPS

Group 1Group 2Group 3
Carson Hocevar (1A)Kyle Busch (2A)Ross Chastain (3A)
Riley Herbst (1A)Todd Gilliland (2A)Zane Smith (3A)
Noah Gragson (1A)Cole Custer (2A)Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (3A)
Ty Dillon (1A)Erik Jones (2A)AJ Allmendinger (3A)
Austin Dillon (1A)Justin Haley (2A)Michael McDowell (3A)
Ryan Preece (1A)John Hunter Nemechek (2A)Cody Ware (3A)
Tim Brown (1A)Burt Myers (2A)Garrett Smithley (3A)
William Byron (1B)Ryan Blaney (2B)Joey Logano (3B)
Kyle Larson (1B)Christopher Bell (2B)Tyler Reddick (3B)
Alex Bowman (1B)Denny Hamlin (2B)Chase Elliott (3B)
Daniel Suárez (1B)Austin Cindric (2B)Chase Briscoe (3B)
Ty Gibbs (1B)Shane van Gisbergen (2B)Brad Keselowski (3B)
Bubba Wallace (1B)Chris Buescher (2B)Josh Berry (3B)

The final practice sessions will be a bit different, acting as a qualifying session that will determine the grid for each heat race. Each group will stage in the pit area and then split into two smaller groups of 6-7 cars. From there, the A and B groups will each get 4 minutes to set a fast time.

The overall fastest driver in final practice will start from pole position in Heat 1; the second-fastest driver will start from the pole in Heat 2; the third-fastest driver will start from the pole in Heat 3, and so on. Only green-flag laps will count in each heat with no overtime in play. The top five finishers in each heat will advance to Sunday night’s feature event.

Those who do not advance will have one more chance to advance courtesy of a 75-lap Last Chance Qualifier, or LCQ, on Sunday afternoon. Like the heat races, only green-flag laps will count toward the lap total with no overtime in play. The top two finishers in the LCQ will advance to the feature race, where they will start 21st and 22nd, respectively. The 23rd and final starting position in the Clash will be awarded to the driver who finished highest in the 2024 driver points standings who did not already transfer into the main event.

Sunday night’s 200-lap feature starting lineup will be set by the results of the heat races. Heat 1’s winner will start on pole for the main event while Heat 2’s victor will start second in the feature. A timed break will be observed at the race’s halfway point at Lap 100. Like the preliminary events, only green-flag laps will count and the event must finish under the green flag.

The 2025 Cook Out Clash marks the Cup Series’ first return to the historic Bowman Gray Stadium since 1971, when Bobby Allison scored the victory in the last of 29 points-paying races at the quarter-mile venue in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.