Editor’s Note: Today’s Team Penske preview concludes NASCAR.com’s countdown of team previews for the 2025 Cup Series season.

TEAM PENSKE

Manufacturer: Ford
Engine: Roush Yates Engines
Driver-crew chief pairings: Austin Cindric-Brian Wilson (No. 2), Ryan Blaney-Jonathan Hassler (No. 12), Joey Logano-Paul Wolfe (No. 22)

Team outlook: For the third straight year, Team Penske enters the NASCAR Cup Series season as the defending champion of the sport. Logano’s 2024 title marked his second triumph in three seasons, sandwiching a Blaney championship run in between. Cindric wheeled the No. 2 Ford back to Victory Lane in 2024, sparking a playoff parlay for Penske as it pushed into the postseason. There appears no imminent reason to believe Penske will be any less of a threat for the championship in 2025 as its veteran-heavy roster continues to bolster confidence, particularly late in the season. Past success guarantees nothing in the future, however, and another strong display will be necessary to return to the top of the championship stage at Phoenix Raceway when the season’s final checkered flag waves in November.

AUSTIN CINDRIC, NO. 2 FORD

Experience: Three full seasons in the NASCAR Cup Series
2024 stats: 11th in final Cup Series standings; 1 win, 4 top fives, 7 top 10s
2025 championship odds (DraftKings): 100-1

Outlook: Cindric and the No. 2 Team Penske group took a mighty step forward toward regular contention at the front of the field late in the 2024 campaign. A June win at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway propelled him to the postseason, where he made a convincing charge into the Round of 12 and an impressive effort that nearly propelled him forward to the Round of 8 if not for a Talladega crash from the lead. Cindric could benefit from more consistent front-running in 2025, though. His 19.9 average finish marked a slight improvement from 2023 (21.6) but still down from his rookie-season results at 16.3. Two of his four top fives in 2024 came in the year’s final five races, but he also finished 27th or worse in four of the last seven events with two DNFs.

RELATED: Austin Cindric through the years | Cindric assesses young career

RYAN BLANEY, NO. 12 FORD

Experience: Nine full seasons plus two partial seasons in the NASCAR Cup Series
2024 stats: 2nd in final Cup Series standings; 3 wins, 12 top fives, 18 top 10s, 1 pole
2025 championship odds (DraftKings): 13-2

Outlook: One year removed from winning the 2023 Cup championship, Blaney established himself as a regular threat all over again in 2024 with his third multi-win season in the past four years. The No. 12 team is officially a threat just about everywhere, and with runner-up finishes in each of the last three season finales at Phoenix Raceway (and top fives in each of the last seven Phoenix races overall), there stands no reason to doubt Blaney will have a say in determining the 2025 championship battle. Few questions remain surrounding the 31-year-old’s on-track ability. His 13 career wins have come at every type of track on the schedule. But how consistently will his No. 12 Ford land in Victory Lane? Expect another rise in Blaney’s ascension in 2025.

RELATED: Ryan Blaney through the years | All of Blaney’s Cup wins

JOEY LOGANO, NO. 22 FORD

Experience: 16 full-time seasons in the NASCAR Cup Series
2024 stats: 1st in final Cup Series standings; 4 wins, 7 top fives, 13 top 10s, 3 poles
2025 championship odds (DraftKings): 17-2

Outlook: The title of “reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion” says it all for Logano, who soared to the peak of the sport after a series-best three postseason victories during the 2024 playoffs. Logano netted four total wins across last year’s campaign, second only to Kyle Larson’s six despite Logano’s lowest top-five and top-10 totals since joining Team Penske in 2013. As the whole of Team Penske continues to prove formidable, Logano has proved a key leader in its success. After a championship run in 2024 — his second in the past three years — the driver of the No. 22 Ford should be a force to be reckoned with again in 2025.

RELATED: All of Logano’s Cup wins | Logano through the years

BOLD PREDICTION: An all-inclusive trip to the playoffs no longer feels quite so bold for Team Penske after achieving the feat in ’24, particularly with Cindric’s continued improvement. Bolder yet, though: all three will advance to the Round of 8. It’s hard to go against the team that’s won three consecutive Cup championships — and I’m not ready to say they’ll win a fourth in a row. But Team Penske undoubtedly has the tools to do so.

NASCAR officials introduced specific penalty options for manufacturers in an update to the NASCAR Rule Book on Wednesday in case the sanctioning body finds any wrongdoing from any of its three Original Equipment Manufacturers, or OEMs.

Competition officials noted in a January update a formal penalty structure would be implemented for rules violations made by OEMs. In Wednesday’s update to the official language in the rule book, that structure was announced as a new section in the rule book, Section 10.5.2.8.c, including but not limited to the following possible reprimands:

  • Loss of 25-50 manufacturer points
  • Loss of 30-60 wind-tunnel hours
  • Loss of 250-500 RCFD (restricted computational fluid dynamics) test runs
  • Loss of 2-4 vehicle tests

Section 10.5.2.8.A of the rule book states: “NASCAR reserves the right to determine if an OEM has violated the NASCAR Rule Book and may impose penalties on the OEM or its representatives accordingly. The following framework serves as a general guideline for assessing OEM penalties. The examples provided are illustrative and not exhaustive, offering clarity on the types and ranges of infractions that may result in penalties, should NASCAR determine enforcement is warranted.”

Conversation surrounding manufacturer penalties arose following the penultimate race of the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series season at Martinsville Speedway. Multiple teams were penalized after NASCAR determined the actions of those involved violated sections 4.4.B&D: NASCAR Member Conduct of the Rule Book, which includes race manipulation and actions detrimental to stock car racing.

In an additional rule book update on Monday, Section 5.5.A, which regards competitors’ performance obligation, was updated to include the following language: “Any member who attempts to improperly influence the outcome of the event or encourages, persuades, or induces others to do so shall be subject to penalties, as outlined in Section 10 Violations and Disciplinary Action. Prohibited actions include, but are not limited to, intentional planning or conduct that prioritizes objectives other than achieving the best possible competitive result for their team.”

The 2025 Cup Series campaign officially kicks off with the 67th annual Daytona 500 on Sunday, Feb. 16 at 2:30 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN Radio and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

Beginning this season, a new online fantasy game comes to NASCAR.com as it introduces ’36 for 36.’

It is a survivor-pool style game introduced last year where a handful of NASCAR.com staff members and the NASCAR Reddit Community selected each of the 36 chartered race cars for all 36 races. This year, everyone will be eligible to sign up and participate in the game.

RELATED: Sign up for 36 for 36 now! | Where to watch NASCAR events in 2025

Unlike other survivor-pool games, you will not be eliminated if you make a wrong pick on any given weekend. Instead, it will be a full-season points accumulation based on the picks made each week starting with the Daytona 500. Only chartered cars will be available to pick, so Daytona 500 entries like Helio Castroneves in the Project 91 Trackhouse Chevrolet or Jimmie Johnson in the No. 84 Legacy Motor Club Toyota will not be available selections for the “Great American Race.”

Once you make a selection, you will not be able to select that car number for the rest of the season. Players will have to select every number come the championship race at Phoenix Raceway (Nov. 2), adding lots of strategy to the game. Picks can be made until five minutes before the official start time of the race and can be extended in the event of a delayed start.

Points earned each weekend will align with the current Cup Series points format, including finishing result, stage points earned and a bonus point for the newly added Xfinity Fastest Lap, which is rewarded to the driver who puts down the fastest lap in a given race.

A grand prize of $10,000 will go to the overall winner of the game, with second and third-place finishers earning $5,000 and $2,500 respectively.

A weekly reminder email will be sent ahead of each event so players can make selections for each race.

Three NASCAR legends will be inducted into the sport’s Hall of Fame Friday evening at the NASCAR Hall of Fame in Charlotte, North Carolina. Among the exceptional list of nominees for the 2025 class, drivers Carl Edwards and Ricky Rudd will be enshrined, in addition to driver/owner Ralph Moody.

Joining them is Dr. Dean Sicking, who will be honored with the Landmark Award for outstanding contributions to the sport.

Here is everything you need to know about the drivers and the 2025 ceremony, including broadcast and ticket information.

RELATED: How to watch the NASCAR Channel on Tubi 

TICKETS AND BROADCAST INFORMATION

Tickets are currently on sale for friends and fans to attend Friday evening’s induction ceremony. The NASCAR Hall of Fame induction ceremony will air live on the NASCAR Channel at 8 p.m. ET and will simultaneously be broadcast on the Motor Racing Network (MRN). Before the show, NASCAR.com and NASCAR’s YouTube platform will host a Red Carpet live stream, starting at 4:30 p.m. ET. For more information on the NASCAR Channel, click here.

NEW INDUCTEES

• Carl Edwards: Edwards’ Cup Series career spanned 13 years, with the Columbia, Missouri, native tallying 28 victories in the premier circuit. Edwards’ national series tenure spanned even longer, beginning in 2002. Edwards, the longtime Roush Fenway Racing pilot, finished with 72 national series wins, with many of them featuring a celebratory backflip. Edwards was named to NASCAR’s 75 Greatest Drivers list in 2023. | More on Edwards

• Ricky Rudd: Known as a NASCAR Iron Man, Rudd’s 788 consecutive starts was a Cup Series record before Jeff Gordon beat the streak in 2015; Rudd’s 906 career starts rank second to Richard Petty’s 1,185. Rudd, also nicknamed “the Rooster,” posted 23 Cup Series wins over a 33-year stretch spanning four decades. Rudd is one of NASCAR’s 75 Greatest Drivers. | More on Rudd

• Ralph Moody: Moody, a World War II veteran, won five Cup Series races from 1956-57. The Taunton, Massachusetts, native additionally showed a knack for the mechanical side of the sport, with Moody pairing with John Holman in 1957 to create Holman-Moody, a team that claimed two championships (1968, 1969) and scored two Daytona 500 wins with Fred Lorenzen (1965) and Mario Andretti (1967). | More on Moody

Note: Best known for his invention of the SAFER barrier, Dr. Dean Sicking will also be honored as the 2025 recipient of the Landmark Award for Outstanding Contributions to NASCAR. | More on Sicking

SHOP: Celebrate the 2025 Hall of Fame class

EVENT SCHEDULE (All times are ET)

Thursday, Feb. 6
1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., Class of 2024 Induction: Insider Experience inside the High Octane Theater (buy tickets)

Friday, Feb. 7
4:30 p.m., Red Carpet live stream on NASCAR’s digital and social platforms
• 6 p.m., NASCAR Hall of Fame Induction dinner (sold out)
• 8 p.m., NASCAR Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony (buy tickets)

MORE: Other exclusive NASCAR Hall of Fame events

As the NASCAR Hall of Fame gathered its voting members last May to consider and select which of the sport’s worthy former competitors would be part of the Class of 2025, a letter arrived at the Hall for the voting committee and an identical copy in the mailbox of retired NASCAR Cup Series superstar Ricky Rudd.

The six-page letter was unsigned but included a long list of Rudd’s career achievements — from his streak of 16 consecutive years with a victory in the NASCAR Cup Series to his 19 years ranked among the top 10 in the final championship standings to becoming the then-youngest Daytona 500 pole winner in 1981 at age 24.

And yes, Rudd confirms — still touched by the anonymous supporter’s meticulous research — all the stories included in this passionate petition are true. From when Rudd famously raced with his eyes taped open in the 1984 Daytona 500 to the time when the sport’s iconic “tough guy” still showed up in Victory Lane in 1998 at Martinsville Speedway despite suffering second-degree burns in the race.

RELATED: Hall of Fame induction times, TV info, tickets

Rudd won the Brickyard 400 in 1997 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and was one of the most renowned road-course racers of his time with six wins. He won the 1992 International Race of Champions (IROC) championship in his first year in the all-star series that pitted NASCAR, IndyCar and sports car greats against one another in equally prepared cars.

“All of a sudden, I got a huge percentage of the votes,” Rudd recalled of getting news he had been voted into the Hall of Fame. “When I looked at it [the letter], I said, I didn’t even remember that. Those were some good numbers (laughing). I don’t know if anyone ever read it or saw it. But someone was going to bat for me hard and I have no idea who it was.”

It turned out to be a home run in Rudd’s grand slam NASCAR career.

This Friday evening as Rudd is officially inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame (NASCAR Channel on Tubi), no doubt that supporter will be among the racing legions applauding the 68-year-old Chesapeake, Virginia, native as he is formally honored as one of the sport’s very best.

Ricky Rudd smiles with eyes taped open after a Daytona crash in 1984.
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images

The reality is that while Rudd appreciated that fan’s effort, he probably didn’t even need the extra push. His 23 career wins on every sort of venue — from short oval to road course to the big tracks; from Martinsville and Dover to Riverside and Sonoma to Michigan and Indianapolis — are impressive in full. So, too, are his milestones in consistency and longevity, highlighted by a then-NASCAR-record 788 consecutive starts from 1981 to 2005 that held until 2015.

But what so many will remember about this proud Virginian is his raw gumption and determination; his willpower and his massive talent.

Rudd didn’t come up racing on the short tracks or transition from a decorated dirt career like so many of his future contemporaries. His first race in a stock car was in a Cup Series race at age 18 — something now unheard of in modern-day competition.

A family friend, Bill Champion, put Rudd in a car once owned by the late Dale Earnhardt’s then-father-in-law Robert Gee. And the bright ambitious teenager Rudd immediately went out and finished 11th at Rockingham Speedway in his debut on March 2, 1975 — placing ahead of future fellow NASCAR Hall of Famers like Darrell Waltrip, Buddy Baker and Donnie Allison.

A week later on at Bristol Motor Speedway, Rudd finished 10th, the first of what would be 374 top-10 career finishes.

“There weren’t many young people in the sport at that time and there really was no place for me at a big team at that time,” Rudd recalled. “What I felt was that I had a perfect opportunity to learn on the job because it wasn’t difficult to qualify for races in that era. And what I’m going to say [in my Hall of Fame induction speech] is ‘What better way to start your career?’

“I learned from the best teachers in the world. I learned from the Pettys, the Pearsons, Baker, Yarborough, the list goes on. Those were basically my teachers because when I would screw up they would come find me and say, ‘Ricky, you should have done this or you should have done that.’ So I felt like I had a unique opportunity. I learned from the best in on-the-job training. The downside of that was [competing in that era] it was like 160 races before I won one.”

Ricky Rudd races Dale Earnhardt and Richard Petty in 1984.
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images

Rudd’s beginnings in the sport are as interesting as his unlikely ascension to superstardom. Unlike many of his competitors, Rudd’s family had no direct association in NASCAR’s big leagues. His father — who owned a tire store — raced sporadically at the local Virginia short tracks. Rudd’s first taste of competition came from a miniature dirt track his dad built on the cul-de-sac in the subdivision where the family lived.

Rudd was the second youngest of five children and the “yard kart,” as he calls his father’s work, was intended for the older kids. But Rudd, who started turning laps on it as an 8-year-old, recalled: “I was the only one that really showed interest. I wanted to run that thing every weekend. I wanted to drive, drive, drive.”

Rudd’s older brother AJ loved to work on the cars and ultimately ended up Rudd’s mechanic. And in 1977, Rudd — with AJ’s technical assistance — won Cup Series rookie of the year.

“I kind of stumbled into dirt bike racing and then stumbled into car racing,” Rudd said. “No plan. Just lucky I was able to move up through and be in the Cup Series. But there was no strategic plan, no money behind me. I tell people, I learned to be a mechanic. My dad and brother were genius mechanics. I just liked driving fast. That’s what motivated me.”

SHOP: Celebrate this year’s class of inductees

It was also around this time that Rudd married his childhood sweetheart Linda. The two lived down the road from one another growing up and even rode the same school bus to elementary school. Eventually, they shared some classes in junior high and high school and became an item.

Rudd laughs, recalling their earliest days of dating.

“She was a few months older than me so she had her driver’s license and I only had my learner’s permit,” Rudd said. “So I would go pick her up, illegally I guess as I drove down the street, but then when she got in the car it was legal because she had her license.”

They married in 1979 and have been side-by-side at the track and in life ever since. They have a son, Landon, 30, who graduated from the New York University Steinhardt’s Department of Music and Performing Arts with a master’s degree.

Ricky Rudd and crew celebrate at Sonoma after winning in 2002.
Darrell Ingham | Getty Images

Family was something crucially important to Rudd — a thread that does seem to run through so many of NASCAR’s Hall of Famers. It was especially important during the four decades he competed full-time. And it’s been a particularly cherished landing point for Rudd, whose time behind the wheel created some of the most well-known stories in the sport’s history.

He was never afraid to run door-to-door with “The Intimidator,” the late Dale Earnhardt and although he says there was a lot of “mutual respect” between the two, there was sometimes extra friction because they were both contending for wins. Rudd remembers — with a laugh now — a famous incident at North Wilkesboro between the two when he was so mad he climbed out of his car intent to confront Earnhardt on pit road.

“He was out after the race with his people around him and Larry McReynolds was right behind him,” Rudd recalled. “And I was getting ready to leap into the pile and grab Earnhardt and probably McReynolds saved my life. He grabbed my belt buckle when I was mid-air and stopped me. So, I’m sure I would have been jumped on by about six guys if not for Larry.”

And of course there is perhaps the most famous of all Rudd story lines, the 1984 Daytona 500 when Rudd, who was in an accident in the Busch Clash in the days leading up to the 500-mile race, had to tape his eyes open to finish the 500. True story, Rudd says, anticipating it to come up as it always does — legitimately legendary.

“There might be some discussion on who picked the tape up from the toolbox but that actually happened,” Rudd said, recalling that it was his debut for Hall of Fame owner Bud Moore’s team, his first month on the job. And he was determined to make the most of this incredible career opportunity.

Ricky Rudd flips in the No. 15 Ford at Daytona during the 1984 Busch Clash.
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images

Rudd had suffered a concussion, had those swollen eyes and was bruised with a painful rib injury from the Clash days earlier. In the 500, he remembered during a pit stop, Moore looking at him intensely then tilting Rudd’s eyes back and declaring, “man, your eyes are really swollen and that could be causing a problem.”

“And the next thing I know the tape came out of the toolbox and the eyes got taped open. … We go back out and I told him, ‘that fixed it, we’re good.’

“The cool thing was we came back the next week and won at Richmond.”

It demonstrates exactly the kind of competitive spirit matched with natural talent that made Rudd one of NASCAR’s stars. His alliterative name was easy to remember and his racing on track was impossible to forget.

He competed for legendary owners from Richard Childress and Kenny Bernstein to Rick Hendrick, Robert Yates and the Wood Brothers in a time when it was immensely challenging to own and drive a car.

His last victory came in 2002 on the Sonoma road course — holding off two other NASCAR Hall of Famers, Tony Stewart and Terry Labonte, for the victory in the famous No. 28 Robert Yates Racing Ford. His final full-time season was in 2007 at the age of 50 when he drove the No. 88 in a return to RYR, earning his final top-10 (seventh place) at the Charlotte 600-miler.

And yet for all he’s accomplished in so many forms or the sport, Rudd shared that he’s only ever displayed one of his 23 trophies in his home outside Charlotte — that Brickyard 400 trophy … which now sits at the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

Ricky Rudd celebrates his win in the 1997 Brickyard 400.
David Taylor | Allsport

As with so many of the Hall of Famers, he is genuinely resistant to name one single career “highlight” which, of course, ultimately makes sense considering the body of work it takes to receive a Hall of Fame invitation.

“I guess the thing that sits apart is the 16 years in a row of winning races but to go with that it was with many different car owners,” Rudd said of his accomplished resume. “That was one of the main things. It was Richard Childress’ first win as a car owner, Kenny Bernstein’s first win as a car owner.

“And for some of those guys I worked with — when I came back with the 28 team it hadn’t won races in a while. It wasn’t ‘me.’ I happened to be the benefactor of a good team put together but we were able to come back and win after shutting that team down and won for ourselves so that was a first-time winner.”

MORE: Rudd, Edwards elected as Class of 2025 Hall of Famers

Arguably, Rudd’s success is even more remarkable when you realize his career included time racing against early NASCAR legends like Petty, Yarborough, Waltrip as well as the next generation of stars such as Dale Earnhardt, Dale Jarrett, Terry and Bobby Labonte, and ultimately champions such as Jeff Gordon, Tony Stewart and Jimmie Johnson.

He competed door-to-door with all three seven-time champs, Richard Petty, Earnhardt and Johnson — something not many NASCAR drivers can say.

“I didn’t know a lot about Ricky before I became his teammate because NASCAR was just so new to me and it all happened so quickly,” said fellow Hall of Famer and current Hendrick Motorsports executive Jeff Gordon.

“I just knew Ricky was the guy competing against Earnhardt and then I became his teammate [at Hendrick] and realized just how good and how talented he was. That’s why I think he’d still thrive in today’s world. He had the work ethic. He had the mindset, the patience and the aggressiveness and I just think when you do have those qualities it does transcend time.

“Now that I know more about the history and Ricky’s history in the sport, I appreciate he made an impressive impact right from the beginning. He was this young, talented race car driver that could just about do anything with the race car so he got people’s attention and I think that’s what gave him these opportunities to really thrive in the sport.

“But then, you quickly found out how tough he was too with that crash at Daytona and that wasn’t going to keep him out of the car. He got this reputation of being very talented, very calculated but also just an incredibly tough and respected driver, then you put in the Iron Man [consecutive starts] stuff, too.”

Ricky Rudd drives during practice in 2007.
Jonathan Ferrey | Getty Images

It all speaks to Rudd’s contribution to the sport — one of the most memorable and remarkable competitors in NASCAR history. Now, he will be remembered and honored in perpetuity.

“It’s amazing looking back now,” Rudd said. “It’s really always been all about looking ahead. This Hall of Fame has forced me to look back whether I wanted to or not, finding old photos the Hall wanted for exhibits and it’s allowed me to go back and reminisce a little bit.

“Kind of neat to look back and wonder, ‘How did we do it?’ Not how did I do it, but how did we do it. We didn’t have a lot of money, we just made it work.”

“As a kid growing up you don’t think about ‘Hall of Fame.’ You don’t think down the road and first of all, there wasn’t a NASCAR Hall of Fame when I started racing. So, your goals are different and when you’re in a sport, you don’t look back at yesterday. You’re always looking forward to the next race. You really don’t have time to really get caught up in ‘I want to accomplish this in my career.’ There was never a plan. You want to do the very best you can and drive the very best equipment and let the results fall where they may.

“It was a tremendous honor just being asked to be one of the original 50 voters in the Hall of Fame. That alone was neat and then as time went on, I thought, I might have a shot at this one day. … Once you’re done with racing and the smoke’s cleared, you think that would really be neat to be in there with the legends you looked up to, your friends in there. What a neat deal.”

Editor’s Note: Today’s Hendrick Motorsports preview continues NASCAR.com’s countdown of team previews for the 2025 Cup Series season.

HENDRICK MOTORSPORTS

Manufacturer: Chevrolet
Engine: Hendrick Motorsports
Driver-crew chief pairings: Kyle Larson-Cliff Daniels (No. 5), Chase Elliott-Alan Gustafson (No. 9), William Byron-Rudy Fugle (No. 24), Alex Bowman-Blake Harris (No. 48)

Team outlook: It would be difficult to improve upon 2024, when all of Hendrick Motorsports’ drivers visited Victory Lane and reached the Cup Series Playoffs, and the four-team organization returns with its core personnel intact. The only thing missing was a Cup Series championship, which remained in Team Penske’s possession for the third straight year. The 2025 campaign will mark the third consecutive season for the current driver-crew chief lineup, so continuity will remain a strength, and the Rick Hendrick-owned group has bolstered its farm system by signing development driver Corey Day in the offseason. The organization is already off to a quick start with a convincing victory by Chase Elliott in the Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium. “As a team, this is a culmination of an offseason,” said Jeff Andrews, Hendrick Motorsports president and general manager. “Mr. Hendrick started us off this past Wednesday at our season kickoff luncheon with ‘Thrive in ’25.’ That is our motto.”

KYLE LARSON, NO. 5 CHEVROLET

Experience: 10 full-time seasons in the NASCAR Cup Series; 366 total starts
2024 stats: Sixth in final Cup Series standings; 6 wins, 15 top fives, 18 top 10s, 5 poles
2025 championship odds (DraftKings): 11-2

Outlook: Larson has rounded into one of the Cup Series’ most consistent winners, and he led laps in 26 of 36 races last season. He has scored 23 of his 29 career victories in his four-year term with Hendrick Motorsports, and his connection with crew chief Cliff Daniels has made the No. 5 Chevy team one of the most potent in the garage. Expectations will remain high for Larson & Co., and anything less than a multiple-win season and a deep playoff run would be considered regression.

RELATED: Kyle Larson 2024 season in review | Larson through the years

CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 9 CHEVROLET

Experience: Nine full-time seasons in the NASCAR Cup Series; 322 total starts
2024 stats: Seventh in final Cup Series standings; 1 win, 11 top fives, 19 top 10s, 0 poles
2025 championship odds (DraftKings): 11-1

Outlook: Elliott snapped out of a 42-race dry spell last year, prevailing at Texas Motor Speedway to put the No. 9 team back in the playoffs after a one-year miss. The bounceback season came after an incomplete grade to 2023, when a pair of absences (injury, suspension) derailed Elliott’s progress. This season, the No. 9 Chevy group will aim to reset the competitive bar for Elliott, who was a multiple-race winner each year from 2018-2022.

RELATED: Chase Elliott 2024 season in review | Elliott through the years

WILLIAM BYRON, NO. 24 CHEVROLET

Experience: Seven full-time seasons in the NASCAR Cup Series; 252 total starts
2024 stats: Third in final Cup Series standings; 3 wins, 13 top fives, 21 top 10s, 1 pole
2025 championship odds (DraftKings): 6-1

Outlook: Byron will roll through the gates for the season opener as the defending Daytona 500 champion, aiming to improve upon a 2024 campaign that ended in a return trip to the Championship 4 field. Byron won on a superspeedway, a road course and a short track last year, and he closed the season with a sizzling streak of seven top-six finishes in a row. There are very few weak spots in Byron’s game, and he continues to be one of the organization’s most studious drivers. Breaking Team Penske’s hold on Phoenix Raceway in the finale is the only roadblock between the 27-year-old and a first Cup crown.

RELATED: William Byron 2024 season in review | Byron through the years

ALEX BOWMAN, NO. 48 CHEVROLET

Experience: Nine full-time seasons in the NASCAR Cup Series; 325 total starts
2024 stats: Ninth in final Cup Series standings; 1 win, 8 top fives, 17 top 10s, 1 pole
2025 championship odds (DraftKings): 35-1

Outlook: Bowman jolted free from an 80-race skid with a jubilant victory in the Chicago Street Race last season, and though he showed improvement in terms of average finish (14.8, his best since 2020), his laps-led total (67) was his lowest in nine years. Whatever the reason, questions about his job security persist, even though Bowman is signed through the end of the 2026 season. Winning early — and often — this season would help to quell some of the chatter.

RELATED: Alex Bowman 2024 season in review | Bowman through the years

BOLD PREDICTION: Hendrick Motorsports puts two drivers in the Championship 4, most likely Larson and then a toss-up for the other finalist. Side prediction: Hot prospect Corey Day gets a one-off Cup Series start after his national series immersion takes off in Xfinity and Trucks.

SOUTH BOSTON, Va. — Over $75,000 in season-end bonuses will be awarded to competitors at South Boston Speedway this season through a new lucrative Championship Loyalty Bonus program sponsored by Hitachi Energy and EMPOWER Broadband.

Under the Hitachi Energy sponsorship, a $20,000 award will go to the top eligible driver in the Sentara Health Late Model Stock Car Division with payouts of $15,000, $10,000, $5,000 and $2,500 respectively going to the rest of the eligible top five drivers. All eligible drivers from sixth place back will receive $2,000 each.

“Hitachi Energy is thrilled to partner with South Boston Speedway to invest in our local racing community and ensure that top-tier drivers continue to choose South Boston Speedway as their home track,” said Hitachi Energy Community Relations and Engagement Manager Ryland Clark.

“This partnership not only strengthens grassroots motorsports but also enhances the experience for our employees, who will enjoy exclusive perks as part of our commitment to community engagement. We believe in powering progress – on and off the track – and this collaboration is another step in driving success for both our region and the sport.”

Hitachi Energy’s facility in South Boston, Va., is a key manufacturing hub specializing in the production of both distribution and power transformers. These transformers play a crucial role in adjusting and stabilizing voltage to ensure an efficient and reliable power supply across the region.

Serving the nation’s power grid, commercial buildings, industrial facilities, and railway applications, the South Boston factory spans approximately 607,000 square feet and employs about 670 individuals.

EMPOWER Broadband is sponsoring awards for the eligible drivers in the Limited Sportsman, Pure Stock and Hornets Divisions.

A $3,000 award will go to the top eligible driver in the Limited Sportsman Division with the next four eligible drivers receiving $2,000, $1,000, $750 and $500 respectively. The sixth eligible driver and all remaining eligible drivers will each receive a $250 award.

The top eligible driver in the Pure Stock Division will receive a $1,000 award. Payouts to the second through fourth eligible drivers are $750, $500 and $250 respectively. The fifth eligible driver and all other eligible drivers will each receive a $100 award.

A $500 award will be given to the top finishing eligible driver in the Hornets Division with the second through fifth eligible drivers receiving $250, $100, and $75 respectively. The fifth eligible driver and all eligible drivers that follow will each receive $50.

“We are pleased to partner with South Boston Speedway for the 2025-2026 racing seasons. EMPOWER Broadband proudly supports our local communities and businesses and are excited to have the EMPOWER brand associated with the wholesome, family-oriented entertainment that short-track racing brings to the fans at the speedway,” said EMPOWER President and CEO Casey Logan.

“South Boston Speedway is an iconic racing destination that has drawn loyal fans from all over Southside Virginia and beyond for more than 60 years. EMPOWER is committed to providing the best internet experience and empowering our local communities and businesses. It’s a winning partnership and we can’t wait to see what the next two years bring.”

EMPOWER Broadband, Inc., a subsidiary of Mecklenburg Electric Cooperative, provides middle-mile capacity, retail high-speed internet service, as well as voice over IP telephone, and high-speed data services to over 7,000 accounts across Southside Virginia and northern North Carolina. With over 2,060 miles of fiber line currently deployed, EMPOWER is positioned to continue its growth to further serve our rural communities. For more information on EMPOWER, you can visit EMPOWERmec.net.

The new South Boston Speedway Championship Loyalty Bonus Program powered by Hitachi Energy and EMPOWER Broadband is contracted for the 2025 and 2026 seasons.

South Boston Speedway
Racing during the Thunder Road Harley-Davidson 200 for the 2024 Virginia Late Model Triple Crown at South Boston Speedway in South Boston, Virginia on June 29, 2024. (Photo: Susan Wong/NASCAR)

“When we say we’re going to take care of our drivers and put on a show for our fans, we mean it,” said South Boston Speedway General Manager Brandon Brown.

“I can’t tell you how grateful I am to Hitachi Energy and EMPOWER Broadband for putting their confidence in South Boston Speedway and supporting this monumental effort. This is a special place, and our drivers deserve a special championship program like this. We want the best-of-the-best to race here, and our fans are in for an incredible season of action because of the absolutely stacked fields this program will produce. Although this is a driver/team focused bonus, fans will immediately see benefits from even more top-notch competition at SOBO each-and-every week. We are not done yet, there will be another announcement coming soon that will also make the 2025 Championship battle at SOBO one for the ages.”

Track officials noted that award payouts will be based on season-end driver track points. The Championship Loyalty Bonus is designed to handsomely reward those who attempt to compete in every event at South Boston Speedway. Program eligibility stipulations will allow one race night waiver per each eligible driver should it be needed. This waiver will be good for missing one night of racing, even if that is a twin-race night. No points will be awarded to a driver for the night they’ve chosen or are forced to use a waiver, but they will remain eligible for the loyalty bonus.

A second ‘emergency’ waiver will be considered on a case-by-case basis and will be granted only if there is any unforeseen hardship that impacts a driver’s attendance such as, but not limited to, tragedy, injury, emergency illness, or a mechanical issue or crash during race day practice/qualifying.

Two race night absences with no ‘emergency waiver’ will void eligibility for the loyalty bonus.

Two-time NASCAR national champion and seven-time South Boston Speedway NASCAR Late Model Stock Car Division champion Peyton Sellers of Danville, Virginia applauds the new South Boston Speedway Championship Loyalty Bonus program.

“This is another step in the right direction for South Boston Speedway in taking care of those who support them,” Sellers pointed out.

“With so much emphasis being put on touring series, this is an opportunity for grassroots racers to compete at their local track and be rewarded for it. This is definitely aimed at the weekly racer who works a 9-to-5 job and gives them an opportunity to run for a championship and be well compensated for it.”

Landon Pembelton of Amelia, Virginia, who is setting his sights on the 2025 South Boston Speedway Sentara Health Late Model Stock Car Division title after having won 11 races and a track championship last season, is excited about the new loyalty bonus program.

“This program is going to be a great program for the racers,” Pembelton remarked.

“I’m personally looking forward to it. This gives you something to really go after. Of course, you want to go after a track championship, but having this program on top of it is going to be good for the racers and everyone involved.

“I see this as a great thing for the future,” he added.

“It’s going to be good for short track racing. I hope this program is something we can have for years to come.”

South Boston Speedway will kick off its 2025 season on Saturday afternoon, March 22 with the SMART Modified Tour’s King of the Modifieds event. That event will feature powerful 600-horsepower open-wheel tour-type Modifieds in a 125-lap race.

South Boston Speedway’s Sentara Health Late Model Stock Car Division will open its 2025 season that afternoon as well. Twin-50-lap races, each paying $2,500 to win will be the co-feature event of the day. Other series or divisions will be announced later.

Advance tickets for the season-opening March 22 SMART Modified Tour King of the Modifieds event are priced at $20. Tickets at the gate on race day will be $25 for those events.

A proud Florida short-track tradition returns this week with the World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing at Florida’s New Smyrna Speedway.

Ongoing since 1968, the World Series of Asphalt encompasses nine consecutive nights of on-track action. Drivers from more than a dozen different divisions, such as Modifieds, Super Late Models and Pro Late Models, will battle it out of a chance to become a World Series of Asphalt champion.

Several marquee events headline the week-long affair at New Smyrna. For the Modifieds, their crown jewel events consists of the Tour Mod Blewett Memorial 76 (2/12) and the Richie Evans Memorial 100 (2/14), while Super and Pro Late Models have prestigious races like the Hart to Heart 100 (2/12) and the Orange Blossom 100 (2/13).

The World Series of Asphalt schedule is not limited to the local classes. On Saturday, the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour makes its fourth visit to New Smyrna, while the Clyde Hart Memorial 200 on Tuesday serves as the season-opener for the ASA STARS National Tour.

Tickets for the 2025 edition of the World Series of Asphalt can be purchased at the track. Below is everything to know about the festivities, including the schedule and entry lists.

World Series of Asphalt
Super Late Models will be one of several divisions heading a stacked, nine-day slate of racing in the World Series of Asphalt. (Photo: Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)

What channel is the World Series of Asphalt at New Smyrna Speedway on in 2025?

Live coverage of the 2025 World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing at New Smyrna Speedway will begin each night at 7 p.m. ET on FloRacing, the official streaming home for all NASCAR Regional properties.

The World Series of Asphalt will not be broadcasted on a traditional television network.

Below is the complete schedule for World Series of Asphalt coverage on FloRacing.

Date Event Start Time How to watch
Friday, Feb. 7 Opening night 7 p.m. ET FloRacing
Saturday, Feb. 8 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour/Night 2 7 p.m. ET FloRacing
Sunday, Feb. 9 Super Sunday/Night 3 7 p.m. ET FloRacing
Monday, Feb. 10 Night 4 7 p.m. ET FloRacing
Tuesday, Feb. 11 Night 5 (ASA STARS National Tour Clyde Hart Memorial 200) 7 p.m. ET FloRacing
Wednesday, Feb. 12 Night 6 (John Blewett III Memorial 76/Hart to Heart 100) 7 p.m. ET FloRacing
Thursday, Feb. 13 Night 7 (Orange Blossom 100/602 Mod 76) 7 p.m. ET FloRacing
Friday, Feb. 14 Night 8 (Richie Evans Memorial 100) 7 p.m. ET FloRacing
Saturday, Feb. 15 Local Showcase/Night 9 7 p.m. ET FloRacing

2025 schedule

Every division scheduled to race on a given evening in the World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing gets two individual practice sessions. Depending on the race-day schedule, some divisions will have their second group practice determine the starting lineup for the corresponding feature.

Below is the complete on-track schedule for the 2025 World Series of Asphalt at New Smyrna Speedway.

  • Friday, Feb. 7
10 a.m. Pit gates open
11 a.m. Tech/fuel/reg/tires open
12:45 p.m. Drivers meeting
1:30 p.m. Practice begins
3:30 p.m. Super Late Model tires released
4 p.m. Super Late Model pre-qualifying tech
4:30 p.m. Pro Late Model tires released
5 p.m. Pro Late Model pre-qualifying tech
5:30 p.m. Qualifying begins
7:30 p.m. Racing starts: Super Late Models (59 laps), Sportsman (35 laps), Pro Late Models (59 laps), Florida Modifieds (50 laps)
  • Saturday, Feb. 8
7 a.m. NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour credentials open
8:30 a.m. NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour garage open
11 a.m. New Smyrna pit gates open
12 p.m. Tech/fuel/reg/tires open
1:15 p.m. NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour driver/spotter/crew chief meeting
1:30 p.m. New Smyrna drivers meeting
2 p.m. Practice begins
5 p.m. Qualifying begins
6:30 p.m. NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour driver autograph session
7:30 p.m. Racing starts: NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour (200 laps), Pro Late Models (50 laps)
  • Sunday, Feb. 9
10 a.m. Pit gates open
12 p.m. Tech/fuel/reg/tires open
12:45 p.m. Drivers meeting
1:30 p.m. Practice begins
6 p.m. Qualifying begins
7:30 p.m. Racing starts: Super Late Models (35 laps), 602 Modifieds (25 laps), Pro Late Models (35 laps), Florida Modifieds (59 laps)
  • Monday, Feb. 10
8 a.m. ASA STARS hauler parking
9 a.m. Pit gates open
9 a.m. Tech/fuel/reg/tires open
9:15 a.m. ASA STARS crew chief meeting
9:30 a.m. ASA STARS pre-tech begins
12:15 p.m. Drivers meeting
1 p.m. Practice begins
5 p.m. Modified pre-qualifying tech
6 p.m. Qualifying begins
6:45 – 7:15 p.m. ASA STARS final practice
7:30 p.m. Racing starts: 602 Modifieds (25 laps), Modifieds (59 laps), Pro Late Models (35 laps), Florida Modifieds (50 laps)
  • Tuesday, Feb. 11
10 a.m. Pit gates open
10 a.m. ASA STARS garage opens
10:30 a.m. Tech/fuel/reg/tires open
12:30 p.m. Drivers meeting
1 p.m. ASA STARS pre-qualifying tech
2 p.m. Practice begins
4 p.m. Modified pre-qualifying tech
4 p.m. ASA STARS qualifying
5 p.m. Modified qualifying
5:30 p.m. ASA STARS last chance qualifier
6 p.m. ASA STARS autograph session
7:30 p.m. Racing starts: ASA STARS National Tour Clyde Hart Memorial 200 (200 laps), Modifieds (50 laps), Florida Modifieds (50 laps)
  • Wednesday, Feb. 12
10 a.m. Pit gates open
12 p.m. Tech/fuel/reg/tires open
12:45 p.m. Drivers meeting
1:30 p.m. Practice begins
4 p.m. Pro Late Model tires released
4:30 p.m. Pro Late Model pre-qualifying tech
5 p.m. Modified pre-qualifying tech
6 p.m. Qualifying
7:30 p.m. Racing starts: Hart to Heart Pro Late Model 100 (100 laps), 602 Modifieds (25 laps), Super Late Models (35 laps), Modified John Blewett III Memorial (76 Laps)
  • Thursday, Feb. 13
10 a.m. Pit gates open
12 p.m. Tech/fuel/reg/tires open
12:45 p.m. Drivers meeting
1:30 p.m. Practice begins
4 p.m. Super Late Model tires released
4:30 p.m. Super Late Model pre-qualifying tech
5 p.m. Modified pre-qualifying tech
6 p.m. Qualifying
7:30 p.m. Racing starts: Super Late Model Orange Blossom 100 (100 laps), 602 Modifieds (66 laps), Modifieds (50 laps), Pro Late Models (35 laps)
  • Friday, Feb. 14
10 a.m. Pit gates open
12 p.m. Tech/fuel/reg/tires open
12:45 p.m. Drivers meeting
2:30 p.m. Practice begins
4:30 p.m. Modified pre-qualifying tech
6 p.m. Qualifying
7 p.m. Vintage Car hot laps
7:15 p.m. Parade Laps with Modified Reunion
7:30 p.m. Racing starts: Modified Richie Evans Memorial 100 (100 laps/controlled pit stops after lap 40), Mod Mini (35 laps), Bomber A (35 laps), Ground Pounders (20 laps)
  • Saturday, Feb. 15
10 a.m. Pit gates open
12 p.m. Tech/fuel/reg/tires open
1:30 p.m. Drivers meeting
2:30 p.m. Practice begins
6 p.m. Qualifying
7:30 p.m. Racing starts: E-Mod (35 laps), Trucks (35 laps), Super Stocks (35 laps), Bomber B (35 laps)
World Series of Asphalt at New Smyrna Speedway
The pits at New Smyrna Speedway will be crowded with cars, all of which seek to earn a championship in the World Series of Asphalt. (Photo: Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)

Entry lists

Each running of the World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing attracts a variety of talented competitors across the United States and other countries.

The current entry list for the Modified class consists of 33 competitors. Headlining the group is Matt Hirschman, who is seeking his third consecutive World Series of Asphalt title and his sixth overall.

Among those looking to dethrone Hirschman is NASCAR Cup Series driver Ryan Preece, who was the last driver to win three consecutive World Series of Asphalt Modified titles from 2015-17. Other notable names entered include Patrick Emerling, Austin Beers, Jack Baldwin and Timmy Solomito, along with Tommy, Trevor, Tyler and Amy Catalano.

Plenty of talented drivers are also entered in the Super Late Model class, such as defending track champion Brad May. He is joined on the entry list by full-time NASCAR Xfinity Series competitor William Sawalich, along with Derek Kraus, Derek Griffith, Chase Pinsonneault, Ty Fredrickson and Max Reaves.

The Pro Late Model division features young stars like dirt standout Jade Avedisian, who is set to embark on a full year in full-bodied stock cars. She will have to fend off names like Treyten Lapcevich, Taylor Reimer, Raphael Lessard and Isaac Kitzmiller to add a World Series of Asphalt title to her growing resume.

Below is the full list of drivers entered for this year’s World Series of Asphalt.

  • Modifieds

0 Glenn Styres. Ohsweken ON
1 Patrick Emerling. Boston NY
1 Stephen Kopcik. Newton CT
2 JR Bertuccio. Centereach NY
5 Jeff Goodale. Riverhead NY
7NY Jack Baldwin. Mooresville NC
7 Rich Parker. Forked River NJ
8 Chris Finocchario. Macedon NY
8 Cam McDermott. Canterbury. CT
11 Norman Newman. Kincardine ON
14 Jake Lutz. Hamburg NY
17 Danny Knoll. Amherst NY
19 Jeffrey Battle. Dunstable MA
21 Joe Bertuccio. Centereach NY
24 Andrew Krause. Freehold NJ
25 Brian Robie. Sunapee NH
32 Tyler Rypkema. Owego NY
36 Dave Sapienza. Riverhead NY
40 Ryan Preece. Berlin CT
46 Craig Lutz. Middle island NY
50 Ronnie Williams. Lebanon CT
54 Tommy Catalano. Ontario NY
56 Trevor Catalano. Ontario NY
58 Eric Goodale. Riverhead NY
60 Matt Hirschman. Northampton PA
64 Amy Catalano. Ontario NY
66 Timothy Solomito. Islip NY
71 James Pritchard. Oak Ridge NJ
81 Mark Stewart. Wading River NY
84 Tyler Catalano. Ontario NY
92 Anthony Nocella. Woburn MA
09 Christopher Hatton. New Smyrna Beach FL
179 Austin Beers. Northampton PA

  • Super Late Models

1 Kasey Kleyn. Quincy WA
9 Derek Kraus. Stratford WI
9 Brad May. Oviedo FL
11 Bobby Kendall. Montello WI
12G Derek Griffith. Hudson NH
14 Chase Pinsonneault. Belle River ON
15 Gabe Sommers. Plover WI
15 Mike Hopkins. Hermon. ME
17 Hudson Bulger. Fort Valley GA
17 Danny Knoll. Amherst NY
18 Max Reeves. Trinity NC
22 George Phillips. Charlotte NC
23 Billy Vanmeter. Indianapolis IN
24 Gavan Boshele. Mooresville NC
25 William Sawalich. Eden Prairie MN
26 Dawson Sutton. Lebanon TN
27 Bobby Good. Lake Mary FL
28 Cole Butcher. Dartmouth NS
29 Austin Teras. Gray ME
36 Ty Fredrickson. Northfield MN
44 Conner Jones. Fredricksburg VA
51 Cody Ware. Charlotte NC
81 Carson Brown. New London NC
83 Cory Hall. Jolicure NB
89 Dylan Fetcho. Lebanon TN
08 Nicholas Naugle. Dartmouth NS
09 Jeremy Davis. Tamworth NH
100 Weston Marthaler. Glenwood MN
112 Steve Weaver Jr. Plantation FL

  • Pro Late Models

0T Treyten Lapcevitch. Grimsby ON
0 Glenn Styres. Ohsweken ON
4 Brody Whorff. Bath ME
5 Ryan Phipps. Heyburn ID
6 Brandon Lopez. Woodstock GA
9 Brad May. Oviedo FL
10 EJ Tamayo. Miami FL
11 Randy Sargent. South Beliot IL
15 Hudson Sharp. Jupiter FL
18 Max Reeves. Trinity NC
18 Mike Scorzelli. Feura Bush NY
24 Jade Avedisian. Clovis OK
25 Taylor Reimer. Tulsa OK
26 Isaac Kitzmiller. Maysvile WV
29 Cole Robie. Windham ME
29 Hunter Wright. Lebanon TN
37 Larry Gelinas. Buxton ME
42 Eric St-Gelais. St Aime Des Lac QC
44 Conner Jones. Fredricksburg VA
47 Brody Monahan. Waterford CT
48 Raphael Lessard. Vallée-Jonction QC
51 Anthony Bello. Newtown CT
83 William Roberge. Beaumont QC
00 Jimmy Renfrew. Candia NH
08 Nicholas Naugle. Dartmouth NS
153 Travis Stearns. Auburn ME

  • 602 Modifieds

2 Tony Pettinelli. Rome NY
3 Steve Zaleski. Bayonne NJ
4 RJ Surdell. Willington CT
9 Matt Montineri. Ponte Vedra FL
12 Bobby Jones. Palmerton PA
12 Cody Norman. Lewisville. NC
15 Michael Brennan. Old Bridge NJ.
16 Nickolas Hovey.Chaplin CT
17 Lee Sharpsteen. Waverly NY
17 Wayne Skinner. Whiting NJ
22 JR Bertuccio. Centereach NY
27 Adam LaCicero. Lavallette NJ
36 Richie Cooper. W. Long Branch NJ
37 Nick Baer. New Tripoli PA
49 Max Handley. Medford NY
57 Justin Beecher. Billerica MA
57m Michael Leone. Toms River NJ
73g Bobby Geiger. Galloway NJ
73 Paul Hartwig Jr. Galloway NJ
73x Paul Hartwig Sr. Galloway NJ
98 Sean McElearney. Lake Wylie SC
02 Jerry Gradl. Buffalo NY
06 Chris Hatton Sr. Deltona FL
09 Christopher Hatton. New Smyrna Beach FL

  • Florida Modifieds

2 Brad Bowman. Clearwater FL
2 Hank Baker Jr. Oak Hill FL
6 Zach Stacy. Enon OH
15 Matthew Green. Orlando FL
32 Dylan Williams. New Smyrna Beach FL
33 Shain Held. Orlando FL
45 Jason Allen. Sarasota FL
55 Chuck Barnes Jr. Louisville KY
57 Tim Moore. St. Petersburgh FL
58 Dan LaRocco. Strongsville OH
61 Brad Springer. Ashley IN
66 Jerry Symons. New Smyrna FL
72 L.J Grimm. Seffner FL
79 Joe Aramendia. Seguin TX
$ Jon Beach. Muskegon MI

  • Pro Trucks

28 Richard Griffis. Leesburg FL
31 JT Chastain. Punta Gorda FL
192 Anthony Lessard. St. Henri QC

  • Sportsman

5 David Childs. Port Orange FL
112 Dave Werning. Palm Coast FL
151 Sean Fitzgerald. Tangerine FL

  • E-Mod

2 Hank Baker Jr. Oak Hill FL
10 Carson May. Oviedo FL
14 Dalton Symons. New Smyrna Beach FL
35 Eugene Tumminello Jr. Debary FL
53 Michael Mark. Deland FL

  • Super Stocks

25 Ricky Locklair Jr. Darlington SC
88 Scott Sipe. York Haven PA

  • Mod Mini

6 Mark Broat. Orlando FL
90 Robert Strmiska. Lexington NC

  • Bomber A

3 Eddie Evans. Port Orange FL
7 Aaron Foye. Cocoa FL
13 Joe Racine. Port Orange FL
14 Brandon Monroe. Orlando FL
23 Vincent Cortez. Daytona Beach FL
49 Bailey Kight. St. Augustin FL
72 Charles Friddle. Cocoa Beach FL
76 Richard Monroe. Belleview FL
88 Stephen Brown. Port Orange FL

  • Bomber B

11 Niko Garrano. Davenport FL
26 Lucas Johnson. Orange Park FL
45 Travis Soukup. Deltona FL
66 Chase Symons. New Smyrna Beach FL
K9 Chuck Rush. Sanford FL

  • Ground Pounders

4D Frank Pelky. Melbourne FL
44 Tobi Smith
52 Hank Baker. Oak Hill FL
61 Eddie Freeman. Deltona FL
111 Colin Smith

World Series of Asphalt champions

For nearly six decades, the World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing has attracted many of the best drivers in the history of United States motorsports.

The list of Super Late Model champions alone is comprised of drivers who have won the Daytona 500, short track titles and NASCAR titles. Dick Trickle, Mark Martin, Joe Ruttman, Pete Hamilton, Ty Majeski, Bubba Pollard and David Rogers are a part of the exclusive group that has claimed at least on World Series of Asphalt Super Late Model title.

Plenty of renowned Modified competitors also have excelled at New Smyrna during the World Series of Asphalt. Richie Evans won the Modified title six times in his illustrious career, with other notable champions including Reggie Ruggiero, Ted Christopher, Tom Baldwin, Steve Park and Ron Silk.

Below is a complete list of World Series of Asphalt champions in the Modified and Super Late Model classes.

Year Super Late Model Champion Modified Champion
1968 Tom Pistone n/a
1969 Dave McInnis n/a
1970 Randy Tissot n/a
1971 Gary Balough n/a
1972 Joe Ruttman n/a
1973 Larry Rogero n/a
1974 Pete Hamilton n/a
1975 Pete Hamilton n/a
1976 Freddy Fryar Maynard Troyer
1977 Mike Eddy Richie Evans
1978 Mark Martin Ron Bouchard
1979 Mike Miller Richie Evans
1980 Junior Hanley Richie Evans
1981 Junior Hanley Richie Evans
1982 Dick Trickle Greg Sacks
1983 Mark Malcuit Richie Evans
1984 Dick Trickle Richie Evans
1985 Dick Trickle Jimmy Spencer
1986 Dick Trickle Reggie Ruggiero
1987 David Rogers Reggie Ruggiero
1988 Joe Shear Tom Baldwin
1989 Dick Anderson Reggie Ruggiero
1990 Junior Hanley Tony Jankowiak
1991 Dick Anderson Mike Ewanitsko
1992 Pete Orr Steve Park
1993 Pete Orr Steve Park
1994 Pete Orr Tom Baldwin
1995 Bruce Lawrence Tim Connolly
1996 David Russell Tom Baldwin
1997 Lowell Bennett Tom Baldwin
1998 Jason Shuler Ted Christopher
1999 David Rogers Ted Christopher
2000 Wayne Anderson Ted Christopher
2001 David Rogers Ted Christopher
2002 Jimmy Cope Robbie Summers
2003 Wayne Anderson Ted Christopher
2004 Mike Fritts Eric Beers
2005 Louis Mechalides Ted Christopher
2006 Travis Kittleson Andy Seuss
2007 Jeff Scofield Eric Beers
2008 Jeff Choquette Jimmy Blewett
2009 David Rogers Ted Christopher
2010 BJ McLeod Ted Christopher
2011 Tim Russell Ted Christopher
2012 Kyle Benjamin Chuck Hossfeld
2013 Ryan Moore Woody Pitkat
2014 Steve Wallace Ron Silk
2015 Zane Smith Ryan Preece
2016 Ty Majeski Ryan Preece
2017 Harrison Burton Ryan Preece
2018 Stephen Nasse Matt Hirschman
2019 Bubba Pollard Chuck Hossfeld
2020 Derek Griffith Matt Hirschman
2021 Derek Griffith Matt Hirschman
2022 Sammy Smith Jimmy Blewett
2023 Casey Roderick Matt Hirschman
2024 Brent Crews Matt Hirschman

 


Sammy Smith looks on.
Jonathan Bachman | Getty Images

12. Sammy Smith, No. 8 JR Motorsports Chevrolet

Analysis: Smith enters his second season under the JR Motorsports banner, and there is plenty to build on in 2025. The Iowa native finished 11th in the 2024 championship standings and logged career highs in top fives (seven) and top 10s (16). Although past Daytona results don’t pop off the page – Smith has averaged a 21st-place finish in two series-opening races there – the 20-year-old still possesses upside. With Phillip Bell returning atop the pit box (he was the No. 8 crew chief for 10 races last season), there’s continuity, too.

Ryan Sieg looks on.
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

11. Ryan Sieg, No. 39 RSS Racing Ford

Analysis: Make it a dozen for the 37-year-old Sieg, who enters his 12th full season in the Xfinity circuit. 2024 offered glimpses of hope for Sieg in his hunt for Xfinity Series win No. 1, with his best average finish (14.7) since 2019 and the most laps led in a season (80) since 2020. Daytona has been a mixed bag for Sieg, but his 35 career laps led there have come across two season-opening races (23 in 2021, 12 in 2024).

Parker Retzlaff smiles.
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

10. Parker Retzlaff, No. 4 Alpha Prime Racing Chevrolet

Analysis: Retzlaff joins Alpha Prime Racing for 2025 after racing full-time for Jordan Anderson Racing from 2023-24. It’s only natural for a driver to want to make a great first impression, and Daytona could be just the location for the Wisconsin native to accomplish this for his new organization. In four career Xfinity races at Daytona, Retzlaff has finished inside the top 10 three times. Two of those times came in the Xfinity series opener (fourth in 2023, third in 2024). Opportunity knocks.

Nick Sanchez looks on.
James Gilbert | Getty Images

9. Nick Sanchez, No. 48 Big Machine Racing Chevrolet

Analysis: A banner 2024 in the Truck Series leads to a full-time Xfinity Series gig for the 23-year-old Sanchez, taking over the Big Machine Racing reins from Parker Kligerman. Good news for Big Machine: Sanchez was a playoff driver in 2024, and he brings a Daytona pedigree to the table. One of Sanchez’s two Truck wins last season came in the Daytona season-opener, leading a race-best 26 laps in the process. There’s a bonus — Sanchez raced in six Xfinity contests with Big Machine in 2024, so there’s already a degree of comfort for driver and team alike.

Christian Eckes looks on.
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

8. Christian Eckes, No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet

Analysis: Sanchez isn’t the only Truck Series Playoffs driver making the full-time leap to Xfinity. Enter Eckes, who transitions from McAnally-Hilgemann Racing to Kaulig Racing as the No. 16 driver in place of AJ Allmendinger. Although Eckes doesn’t bring prior Xfinity experience to the table the way Sanchez does, the momentum of being a 2024 Championship 4 driver can’t be ignored. Three consecutive finishes inside the top 10 at Daytona in Trucks — in addition to 29 laps led in that span — help matters, too.

Harrison Burton looks on.
James Gilbert | Getty Images

7. Harrison Burton, No. 25 AM Racing Ford

Analysis: Burton returns to the Xfinity fold after three full-time Cup Series seasons with Wood Brothers Racing. Rewind the clocks a touch to catch a glimpse at how Burton fared during his last full-time Xfinity Series stint. Spoiler alert: It was pretty good. From 2020-21, Burton tallied four wins, 25 top fives and 44 top 10s, finishing eighth in the final standings in each season. Daytona, you might ask? Four top 10s in four Xfinity starts there. He also did something … pretty special there in Cup last season.

Sam Mayer looks on.
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

6. Sam Mayer, No. 41 Haas Factory Team Ford

Analysis: Mayer departs JR Motorsports and joins Haas Factory Team in what will be the organization’s inaugural 2025 season. While Mayer’s 2024 was a step back from his 2023 Championship 4 season in terms of average finish (18.0 compared in 2024 compared to 13.2 in 2023), the 21-year-old still won three races and made the playoffs. Mayer’s Xfinity record at Daytona needs work, given he’s yet to log a top 10 there (seven attempts), but under a new team banner and a fresh crew chief to learn from in Jason Trinchere, anything is possible.

Connor Zilisch smiles.
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

5. Connor Zilisch, No. 88 JR Motorsports Chevrolet

Analysis: Yes, Zilisch only has four Xfinity Series starts – and only 10 national series starts total – to his name entering 2025. But if there is one driver who can immediately make a statement out of the gate, it’s the 18-year-old Zilisch, who collected his first pole position and victory in his first career Xfinity start last season at Watkins Glen. Granted, The Glen is not a superspeedway, and Zilisch has never raced a NASCAR machine at Daytona. However, for someone dubbed the “next superstar,” let’s not act shocked if he figures the superspeedway ropes quickly.

Jesse Love smiles.
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

4. Jesse Love, No. 2 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet

Analysis: Remember when Love logged his first career Xfinity pole in his first start last season? It was at Daytona. And while he didn’t win the 2024 season opener, the No. 2 pilot illustrated just the kind of speed he could muster on a superspeedway. The reigning Rookie of the Year enters his second season with Richard Childress Racing, and after his inaugural Xfinity campaign saw continued success on superspeedways, it’s anyone’s guess what is in store for the California native who just turned 20 years old.

Sheldon Creed smiles.
James Gilbert | Getty Images

3. Sheldon Creed, No. 00 Haas Factory Team Ford

Analysis: Creed’s 2024 Xfinity season was … unique. His 16 top fives ranked second in the entire circuit (Chandler Smith, 17), while his 23 top 10s were tied for first (Cole Custer). He collected not one but six runner-up finishes, including at the Daytona season opener last season. Creed joins Haas Factory Team, his third team in as many seasons, and although he’s yet to find Victory Lane in Xfinity, the 2020 Truck Series champion brings speed and experience to his new organization. The breakthrough has to be coming.

Justin Allgaier looks on.
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

2. Justin Allgaier, No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet

Analysis: Allgaier ranks highly in this installment for obvious reasons. The 38-year-old is fresh off a 2024 Xfinity Series Championship crown, and with Cole Custer’s departure to Cup, he is now the only returning Xfinity Series driver who led 700-plus laps in 2024 (709). Daytona has been kind to Allgaier of late, with six top 10s over the last seven races, including finishes of fifth (2022), third (2023) and eighth (2024) in the last three Xfinity openers. Can the defending champ kickstart 2025 with his second career Daytona win?

Austin Hill looks on.
James Gilbert | Getty Images

1. Austin Hill, No. 21 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet

Analysis: Since his jump into the Xfinity Series three seasons ago, Hill has finished sixth (2022), fifth (2023) and fourth (2024). Coming off his first Championship 4 berth, Hill is hungry for more in 2025, and the winning appetite certainly starts at Daytona, where Hill has won each of the last three season-opening races. Whether the Georgia native can make it four in a row remains to be seen, but make no mistake: Hill will easily be a Daytona favorite, and in due time, maybe the championship favorite, too.

The 2025 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series campaign begins soon, with the season kicking off at Daytona International Speedway Feb. 14 (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Familiar faces return to the circuit, while newer ones look to leave their mark in a season surely to bring plenty of excitement from start to finish. Before the green flag waves at Daytona, view the top 10 drivers in the series ahead of the season opener.

RELATED: 2025 Truck Series schedule


Andres Perez de Lara looks on during practice for the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series.
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

10. Andrés Pérez de Lara, No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet

Analysis: Pérez de Lara is the newest rookie entering a full-time campaign in the Craftsman Truck Series. Pérez comes in as the reigning ARCA Menards Series champion and an experienced road-course racer. With the Truck Series adding additional road courses to the schedule, the Mexico City native could make a surprise appearance in Victory Lane.

Matt Crafton on the Craftsman Truck Series grid at Bristol Motor Speedway
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

9. Matt Crafton, No. 88 ThorSport Racing Ford

Analysis: You can never really count out Crafton when it comes to fighting for a championship in the Craftsman Truck Series. Crafton enters his 25th full-time season and is the only active three-time Truck Series champion. The pilot of the No. 88 Ford is the only active driver with national series experience as the series prepares to return to Rockingham. Experience that could land him right in the middle of the championship fight in the fall.

Layne Riggs, driver of the No. 38 Love's Travel Stops Ford, celebrates with crew after winning the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series UNOH 200 presented by Ohio Logistics at Bristol Motor Speedway.
James Gilbert | Getty Images

8. Layne Riggs, No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford

Analysis: Riggs put together a strong 2024 rookie season, which included two wins to open the Craftsman Truck Series Playoffs, the only non-playoff driver in any national series to win the opening two races. With a full season under his belt and with crew chief Dylan Cappello up to speed, the 22-year-old could make a big statement with wins in 2025.

Ben Rhodes stands on pit road after the Truck race at Kansas
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

7. Ben Rhodes, No. 99 ThorSport Racing Ford

Analysis: We have all heard about even-year Joey Logano when it comes to winning championships, and a driver who is right along with the reigning Cup Series champ is the Louisville, Kentucky native in Rhodes. Rhodes enters his 10th year in the Truck Series and has been crowned champion two times (2021, 2023). Entering another odd year, Rhodes has the chance to become the first three-time champion since his teammate, Matt Crafton.

Chandler Smith stands on pit road after a NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Las Vegas.
Brittney Wilbur | NASCAR Digital Media

6. Chandler Smith, No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford

Analysis: Front Row Motorsports expands to a two-truck operation for the 2025 Craftsman Truck Series season, adding 22-year-old Smith to its driver lineup. Smith spent the previous two years in the Xfinity Series, where he scored three wins. The new driver of the No. 38 Ford also has two previous full-time seasons in the Truck Series, where he has amassed five victories. As the new operation gets off the ground, look for Smith to enter the playoff conversation.

Rajah Caruth looks on during qualifying at Talladega Superspeedway.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

5. Rajah Caruth, No. 71 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet

Analysis: Caruth comes into his third full-time Truck Series campaign and his second year piloting the No. 71 Chevrolet for Spire Motorsports. In his 2024 season for the Spire organization, Caruth captured his first national series victory at Las Vegas and put the No. 71 in the middle of the championship hunt, making it to the Round of 8. If the recent Winston-Salem State University graduate can keep the momentum moving, 2025 can be another career year.

Daniel Hemric looks ahead while wearing sunglasses
James Gilbert | Getty Images

4. Daniel Hemric, No. 19 McAnally-Hilgemann Chevrolet

Analysis: Hemric makes the move from the NASCAR Cup Series and replaces Christian Eckes in the No. 19 Chevrolet for McAnally-Hilgemann Racing in the Truck Series. The 2021 Xfinity Series champion will have some rust to knock off as he competes in his first full-time Truck Series season since 2016, but if the podium effort by the No. 19 team a year ago is any indication, Hemric could be in prime position to add another national series title to his resume.

James Gilbert | Getty Images

3. Grant Enfinger, No. 9 CR7 Motorsports Chevrolet

Analysis: The Craftsman Truck Series veteran in Enfinger enters his ninth year competing full-time in the series. The driver of the No. 9 Chevrolet is a 12-time winner and has made the Championship 4 two years in a row. The 2023 runner-up continues to inch closer to hoisting a trophy above his head at the championship finale in Phoenix and always finds a way to wind up in Victory Lane when it matters.

ty majeski smiling
James Gilbert | Getty Images

2. Ty Majeski, No. 98 ThorSport Racing Ford

Analysis: Majeski, the reigning and defending Craftsman Truck Series champion, was a late bloomer in the playoff hunt in 2024. Majeski won the final two races of the regular season to cement his spot in the championship hunt. He kept the momentum rolling all the way to Phoenix and cashed in on his first national series championship. Entering 2025, the Wisconsin native looks to become the first repeat champion since his teammate Matt Crafton (2013-14).

David Jensen | Getty Images

1. Corey Heim, No. 11 Tricon Garage Toyota

Analysis: Corey Heim will pilot the No. 11 Toyota for his third full-time season in the Truck Series for 2025. Heim is an 11-time victor and has a combined total of 79 top-five and top-10 finishes in the series and scored six wins in his runner-up campaign from a year ago. Making the Championship 4 the past two years leaves Heim as an easy contender for the series title come year’s end.