Cam Waters is set to make his NASCAR Cup Series debut at Sonoma Raceway next month with RFK Racing as part of its Stage 60 program, the team announced Tuesday.
Waters, the Australian Supercars star, currently competes for Tickford Racing in Melbourne. The only driver to have won both the Australian Formula Ford Championship and the Supercars Development Series, Waters has made two NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series starts this season for ThorSport Racing at Martinsville Speedway and Kansas Speedway.
BuildSubmarines.com will sponsor Waters’ No. 60 Ford, highlighting AUKUS, a trilateral security partnership between Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
“This opportunity for me is a dream come true and one that I do not take lightly given the global audience of NASCAR and the Cup Series,” Waters said in a press release. “I’ve been fortunate to dip my toes into the NASCAR waters a bit this year and am excited to put my road-racing experience to the test this summer. It takes a village to make something like this come to fruition, so I especially want to thank the team at BuildSubmarines.com and AUKUS for giving me this opportunity to highlight the AUKUS security partnership, and for all the efforts at RFK to pull this off.”
Waters will pilot the Ford Mustang Dark Horse in an Open entry at the California road course on June 9 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Per RFK Racing’s press release, Waters has accumulated 11 wins, nearly 50 podium finishes, and 24 career pole positions since beginning his full-time tenure in 2016. The Victoria native drives the No. 6 Ford Mustang GT for Tickford and holds the record for the youngest driver to compete in the Bathurst 1000, an event in which he has secured three consecutive podium finishes.
“Cam has certainly logged his share of miles the last couple of months flying back and forth from Australia, but he’s done a great job familiarizing himself with NASCAR and working with David Ragan in our simulator,” Mark Rushbrook, global director, Ford Performance Motorsports said in a release. “It’s always exciting when we can have someone from another part of our global motorsports family compete in a different series, and we feel this is a great opportunity for him to showcase his talent. We’re grateful to RFK for initiating this Stage 60 program, and we’re looking forward to Sonoma.”
According to the team’s press release, the AUKUS partners are working together to “deliver a sovereign conventionally armed, nuclear-powered submarine capability to Australia through a three-nation collaborative process involving training, production and technology integration.” The first Australian submarines will be acquired through the sale of United States Virginia-class nuclear-powered attack submarines, the release said, followed by the construction of a new class of submarines in both the UK and Australia.
“The AUKUS agreement adds even more stability to the well-paying skilled trades careers available at more than 15,000 companies making up America’s Submarine Industrial Base,” Kiley Wren, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer at BlueForge Alliance, owner of BuildSubmarines.com, said in the release.
“We’re privileged to team up with RFK Racing through #Stage60 to raise awareness of these opportunities and the remarkable purpose behind them. Having a stand-out Australian driver behind the wheel of the No. 60 ‘Car With a Mission’ in Sonoma further amplifies this cause, and we look forward to seeing Cam Waters do what he does best.”
Sonoma will mark the second appearance of RFK’s Stage 60 initiative, launching at this year’s Daytona 500 with veteran driver David Ragan.
The second annual NASCAR Day Giveathon begins today, with NASCAR and The NASCAR Foundation teaming up to host a 37-hour online event to raise awareness and funds for nonprofits across the country.
With the Giveathon beginning at 8 a.m. ET and running until 9 p.m. ET on May 15, the opportunity is present for you to donate to one of 350 participating charities, including driver charities taking part in the occasion.
Contributions will be accepted online throughout the entire 37-hour window, with donors designating their funds toward their charities of choice from the list of participating organizations. The Giveathon will also feature bonus grants and matching gift donations for nonprofit organizations, as well as T-shirts and memorabilia items as incentives for donors.
Donor incentives additionally include the opportunity to be listed on the bed of the Rev Racing Gainbridge No 2. Chevrolet Silverado driven by Nick Sanchez in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race on May 18 at North Wilkesboro Speedway; a commemorative helmet for the first 100 donors who contribute $750 or more; a commemorative coin for the first 300 donors of $50 or more; and a commemorative T-shirt for the first 1,500 donors of $75 or more.
Matching gift donations are made possible by the generosity of Giveathon sponsors, including NASCAR, Kaulig Giving, Jeep Beach, First Nation Group and Borkan Skahill. Matching donations will be matched up to $500 per gift on May 15 during the hours listed:
8 a.m.
NASCAR
$10,000 Match
9 a.m.
Kaulig Giving
$10,000 Match
10 a.m.
Jeep Beach
$10,000 Match
11 a.m.
First Nation Group (veterans/military charities)
$10,000 Match
Noon
Borkan Skahill
$10,000 Match
1 p.m.
NASCAR
$15,000 Match
2 p.m.
Kaulig Giving
$15,000 Match
3 p.m.
Jeep Beach
$15,000 Match
4 p.m.
First Nation Group (veterans/military charities)
$15,000 Match
7 p.m.
Kaulig Giving
$10,000 Match
8 p.m.
NASCAR
$10,000 Match
Driver and industry charities participating in the NASCAR Day Giveathon include the following:
One of the most traditional venues on the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour schedule, New York’s Riverhead Raceway, welcomes the series for the first time this year on Saturday night for the Miller Lite Salutes Wayne Anderson 200.
The race, named in honor of five-time Riverhead Raceway track champion and 1994 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour champion Wayne Anderson, is the 74th in the history of the series at the quarter-mile asphalt oval located on New York’s Long Island.
Justin Bonsignore and Mike Ewanitsko are tied at the top of Riverhead Raceway’s all-time win list with the series at 11 wins each. Bonsignore won two of the three races held at Riverhead last year, with eventual series champion Ron Silk claiming the third. Other notable Riverhead winners include Richie Evans, Jimmy Spencer, Mike Stefanik, Donny Lia, Ryan Preece, Ted Christopher, Doug Coby, Timmy Solomito, Steve Park, Reggie Ruggiero and the aforementioned Anderson.
Tickets to the Miller Lite Salutes Wayne Anderson 200 are available trackside. Below is everything you need to know about the fifth race on the 2024 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour schedule.
Matt Hirschman, driver of the No. 60 Pee Dee Motorsports Modified, during the Buzz Chew Chevrolet Cadillac 200 for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at Riverhead Raceway on May 20, 2023 in Riverhead, New York. (Photo: Dakota Moyer/NASCAR)
Miller Lite Salutes Wayne Anderson 200 at Riverhead Raceway
It’s almost like a broken record these days, but Justin Bonsignore has another chance to make history when the green flag waves on Saturday night at Riverhead Raceway.
One more victory would move him into sole possession of first on Riverhead’s NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour wins list. It would also tie Bonsignore with Ted Christopher for third on the all-time series wins list.
Standing in his way are several Whelen Modified Tour and Riverhead Raceway regulars who are looking for their own trips to Victory Lane. Leading the way is Jake Johnson, fresh off his first series victory two weeks ago at Monadnock Speedway for Boehler Racing Enterprises. Ron Silk, a winner last summer at Riverhead, will also try to deny Bonsignore Saturday evening.
Among the local competitors looking to defend their home turf will be Timmy Solomito, who will be in his own No. 66 as he looks to bank his fourth Riverhead Whelen Modified Tour win. He also happens to be the latest NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series winner at Riverhead after scoring a win in Modified competition on May 11.
Mark Stewart, who scored a surprising runner-up finish in Whelen Modified Tour competition at Riverhead last September, will be in the field in the No. 81. Jack Handley Jr. is also expected to be in the field after scoring a fifth-place finish at Riverhead in June. Other local competitors set to join the fray include Tom Rogers Jr., Matt Brode, Roger Turbush and Chris Young Jr., among others.
In addition to the local contingent, familiar faces like Patrick Emerling, Austin Beers, Eric Goodale, Matt Hirschman, Craig Lutz, Tyler Rypkema, Kyle Bonsignore and Trevor, Tyler and Tommy Catalano will all be in the field.
Two drivers are making landmark starts on Saturday. Series veteran Tim Connolly will participate in his 200th career Whelen Modified Tour race, while Melissa Fifield will compete in her 150th event.
The full entry list for Saturday’s Miller Lite Salutes Wayne Anderson 200 is available here.
Timmy Solomito, driver of the No. 66 Modified, races during the Miller Lite Salutes Mike Ewanitsko 200 for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at Riverhead Raceway on June 24, 2023 in Riverhead, New York. (Photo: Dakota Moyer/NASCAR)
Schedule: Saturday, May 18 … Final practice from 3:30 to 4:15 p.m. … Qualifying at 6 p.m. ET … Miller Lite Salutes Wayne Anderson 200 at 8 p.m. ET (FloRacing).
Qualifying: Two consecutive qualifying laps. Faster lap determines qualifying position. Adjustments or repairs may not be made on the vehicle after the vehicle has taken the green flag at the start/finish line. NASCAR reserves the right to have more than one vehicle engage in qualifying runs at the same time. Starting field for the Miller Lite Salutes Wayne Anderson 200 is limited to 28 starters including Provisional Positions.
Tire allotment: The maximum tire allotment available for this event is eight (8) tires per team. All tires used for qualifying and the race must be purchased at the track and scanned by Hoosier, unless otherwise approved in advance by the Series Director. Four (4) tires must be used for qualifying and to begin the race. All qualifying tires must remain in impound until released by NASCAR Officials. The remaining tire allotment may be used for practice and/or change tires and/or emergency change tires during the event. The tire change rule is zero (0) tires, any position.
NASCAR announced on Monday that it will add a new twist to next season’s races with the TNT Sports portion of the 2025 Cup Series schedule featuring an in-season, bracket-style tournament.
The prior three races, airing on Prime Video, will set the seeding for the tournament as the sanctioning body tries the new concept during the first season in its historic seven-year media rights deal.
“With the launch of our new media rights partnerships in 2025, we were excited to partner with Prime Video and TNT Sports to collaborate on fan engagement concepts that drive story lines in our sport and innovation from a production perspective,” said Brian Herbst, NASCAR SVP, media and productions, in a press release.
“Having head-to-head driver matchups for each one of TNT’s NASCAR Cup Series races will add a compelling fan engagement element across media platforms like TNT, Bleacher Report, House of Highlights and NASCAR digital platforms.”
All drivers are eligible for the seeding races, and the top 32 drivers from those events, airing on Amazon’s Prime Video, will qualify for the in-season tournament that starts with TNT Sports’ first race. Seeding will be based on best finish in the three Prime Video races with tiebreakers determined by next-best finish, followed by season points position.
Drivers in the in-season tournament on TNT Sports and Max will compete head-to-head with the higher finishing driver advancing over five rounds. The winner of the in-season tournament will get to take home a $1 million prize.
“It’s never been a better time to be a fan of motorsports, and this new first-ever in-season tournament will bring a new competitive dynamic to NASCAR’s summer race weekends,” said Craig Barry, executive vice president and chief content officer, TNT Sports. “TNT Sports has always been at the forefront of creativity and innovation, and NASCAR is a perfect partner to bring this vision to life across our networks and platforms.”
“We’re excited to be part of NASCAR’s first in-season tournament next season,” said Charlie Neiman, head of sports partnerships, Prime Video. “This tournament will showcase the league’s ability to drive innovation and engage fans with increased competition during a key part of the NASCAR schedule.”
As part of the media rights deal, Prime Video and TNT will evenly split a series of 10 midseason Cup races. Both also own exclusive rights to select practice and qualifying sessions in the Cup Series through the 2031 season.
Amazon’s Prime Video and TNT Sports join FOX Sports and NBC Sports in providing live coverage of all 38 Cup Series races beginning in 2025 and running through 2031.
DARLINGTON, S.C. — The request came out over the team radio shortly after the checkered flag flew on a dramatic day at Darlington Raceway. A car with the No. 6 — team owner Jack Roush’s flagship — had just won a NASCAR Cup Series race for the first time in nearly 13 years, but it required a finishing touch: Brad Keselowski was going to need that American flag.
The traditional punctuation mark to a Keselowski victory had been out of sight in a sometimes agonizing three-plus-year drought, but not forgotten. RFK Racing mechanic Jon Ellis grabbed it from the pit area — still in the plastic wrapping and mothballed over the course of a 110-race winless streak, the longest of his Cup Series career — and No. 6 jackman Dustin Lineback brought it to the waiting car on the frontstretch.
With Old Glory properly unfurled for Keselowski’s post-race burnout, the victory meant everything for the 40-year-old veteran driver/owner, the team that he’s brought back to prominence and the manufacturer that’s been part of the organization’s fabric from the outset.
Keselowski roared to victory in Sunday’s Goodyear 400 with an opportunistic leap to the top spot. 23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick and fellow RFK Racing driver Chris Buescher plummeted from contention after their heated contest for the lead turned especially frantic in the closing laps, ending in a pit-road squabble. But the triumph was no fluke, not with Keselowski running among the top two or three for the majority of the sun-baked South Carolina afternoon, and not with the No. 6 group’s recent upturn in performance.
Keselowski had won 35 times on the Cup Series circuit before Sunday, almost all of those victories delivered during his 12-year tenure with team owner Roger Penske. Sunday’s triumph, his 36th, was the first with his name above the company’s door and not just the driver’s.
“It’s a heck of a ride,” said Keselowski, who joined forces with the Roush Fenway group for a rebrand to RFK Racing after the 2021 season. “So much has changed over the last three years from when I walked in the door, and I see just a group that keeps getting stronger. It’s tough because I feel like there’s been a lot of two steps forwards, one step back, and you keep doing those. Everybody kind of looks at it like, we just took these two steps forward, why are we taking another step back, and it leads to the next gain.
“We took a pretty big step back over the offseason. It was with a lot of intentionality in a couple critical categories. We paid for that dearly to start the year and kind of lost some performance. But it was in the name of being able to do this right here: Win races honest and be competitive, and the two steps forward are just now being realized. It never comes as quick as you want it to. It’s a tedious, painful process that takes a deep grind at all levels, whether that’s the driver level, the organizational level, the pit crew level. But that grind is worth it when you have moments like this. I surely appreciate it.”
The latest two-step-forward jump was celebrated in Darlington’s cozy Victory Lane. Jack Roush, the 82-year-old team founder, had been there many times over before Sunday — five times in the Cup Series, and 15 in Xfinity competition — but not since 2009. But there was also Doug Yates — the other half of the Roush Yates Engines consortium that supplies Ford’s power plants — making sure his colleagues, partners and well-wishers all got high-fives.
The start of the year had been a rough one for the automaker, which got off to what Yates called a “well-publicized” 0-for-12 drought with the new Mustang Dark Horse model for Cup competition. Buescher was just one one-thousandth of a second away from breaking that streak last weekend in a photo finish at Kansas Speedway. Sunday, Keselowski gave Yates reason to celebrate at a track where his father, Hall of Famer and engine-building maestro Robert Yates, savored each win.
“This never gets old, coming to Victory Lane,” Yates told NASCAR.com, adding that Sunday’s effort had him optimistic for Ford’s prospects for the rest of the spring into the summer months. “This is what it’s all about, and one of our favorite race tracks. My dad loved racing here, and we’re carrying that on today.”
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR.com
Buescher arrived later, having cooled off somewhat after his post-race confrontation with Reddick. After a visit with his teammate and boss, Buescher — who had taken the laurels for each of the four previous victories under the RFK banner — fist-bumped with each member of the No. 6 crew that had contributed to Sunday’s triumph.
Reddick’s pole-starting No. 45 Toyota was frequently the first car off pit road during Sunday’s 400-miler, relying on the heavy advantage of selecting the first pit stall nearest the pit-lane exit. But the No. 6 crew held its ground under the difficult circumstances, keeping Keselowski in the hunt.
Darlington has long been described as a driver’s race track for its everlasting reputation as treacherous and challenging, and the on-track showdown among Keselowski, Reddick and Buescher down the stretch was the stuff of “Too Tough to Tame” legend. The battling on pit road was every bit as demanding for the over-the-wall personnel.
“That’s why it’s so special. Darlington is the hardest to pit, there’s sand everywhere, the pit road’s uneven — it’s like playing golf in the rough — but we ran all eights today,” said Lineback, in his third season at RFK, noting the No. 6 crew’s ability to routinely crack the nine-second barrier Sunday. “We were pitting P1 on the average, and it’s hard to beat the 45 when they’re in pit stall 1, and they had a great day. So it’s like two juggernauts going at it — a pair of kings versus a pair of kings. But hey, we did what we had to do, and we ran eight-second stops and that’s our goal, and that was the best day we’ve ever had on pit road.
“To still come out with a win, I believe the last time (off pit road) they got us by a nose and you know it can be frustrating to not win off pit road, but pit stall 1 is huge, and that’s why qualifying is very, very important. But hey, you’ve got to be there at the end, and that’s what we did to get the win.”
In agreement was Keselowski, who perched on the door of his No. 6 Ford for photos with his crew and the Goodyear 400 trophy.
“The 6 team is one of the best pit crews on pit road. Really proud of them today. They were just flawless, put us in position there,” Keselowski said. “We didn’t have the No. 1 pit stall, and that No. 1 pit stall was worth a solid one to two positions every time. We kept losing positions, but it wasn’t because of them. The pit stops were phenomenal. They just continued to deliver. It would have been easy for them to give up, too. It’s been a hard couple years for them, as well. But they keep putting the work in. They’re energized. They just grind it out. They’re all experienced, total professionals. I feel super lucky to have them.”
That crew got a sentimental helping hand Sunday, as Keselowski’s daughters — Scarlett and Autumn — helped to push the No. 6 Ford back toward the Cup Series garage. Paige Keselowski, their mother, joyfully filmed the girls’ handiwork with her phone as a special Mother’s Day treat.
Keselowski had noted even before Saturday’s qualifying how bullish he was about RFK’s prospects in the coming weeks, and sure enough, the patriarch is now back in the victory column for the first time since April 2021. Keselowski has long been regarded as a reliable contender for multiple-win seasons for the bulk of his Cup Series career, and that return to form might not be far off.
Maybe best to keep the American flag handy in the No. 6 pit box.
“It has been a long time coming. It’s honestly, it’s hard to explain. It brings tears to all of our eyes, and to finally get it done, it’s everything,” Lineback said. “This is probably the biggest win in my career, and I’ve had Daytona 500 wins, I’ve won championships. But with this group, I know how hard we work, how hard Brad’s worked, and just to see it come together, it’s everything. And it’s on Mother’s Day, so for my mom to see it and watch it, it’s very special and it’s such a blessing.”
Plenty of folks are thrilled to see Brad Keselowski’s 110-race winless drought come to an end, but perhaps no one more than his oldest daughter, Scarlett.
Keselowski scored the win in Sunday’s Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway in dazzling fashion and celebrated his 36th career NASCAR Cup Series victory as usual — by performing a burnout while displaying the American flag out his driver-side window.
Scarlett, his 8-year-old daughter, joined the festivities Sunday with younger sister Autumn, as both rode in the passenger seat of dad’s car to Victory Lane before joining him in the media center for a press conference.
But Scarlett didn’t want the party to stop there. Keselowski’s wife, Paige, posted a video to social media Monday morning of Scarlett walking into school with the same American flag Keselowski used after Sunday’s race.
No one happier than this girl. She wanted to take the race winning flag to school today so her class could use it for the pledge of allegiance ❤️🇺🇸 🏁 pic.twitter.com/w9zfnFjCW1
— Paige Keselowski (@Paigekeselowski) May 13, 2024
“No one happier than this girl,” Paige Keselowski wrote. “She (Scarlett) wanted to take the race-winning flag to school today so her class could use it for the Pledge of Allegiance.”
Keselowski had not won since April 2021 at Talladega Superspeedway, when Scarlett was just 5 years old and Autumn was just 1 year old. The triumph also marked Keselowski’s first behind the wheel of the No. 6 RFK Racing Ford and first as team co-owner.
The 2012 Cup champion Keselowski will pursue another first at North Wilkesboro Speedway as he eyes the $1 million prize in Sunday’s NASCAR All-Star Race (8 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
Sunday’s Goodyear 400 came down to a thrilling, three-car battle over the final 33 laps, with Brad Keselowski emerging victorious after Chris Buescher and Tyler Reddick fell out of contention late.
Reddick was the class of the field almost all day — but things change quickly at the “Lady in Black.” When the checkered flag flew, one sophomore driver stormed to his best career finish and a rookie nabbed his first top five of the year. Meanwhile, two past NASCAR Cup Series champions struggled to overcome late challenges.
After a doozy of a Darlington stunner, see which drivers are trending upward and those going in the wrong direction.
THREE UP ⬆️
1. Ty Gibbs, No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media
Started: 4th
Finished: 2nd
What happened: Lost in the fray of Sunday’s post-race ruckus, the JGR rookie notched a career-best runner-up finish Sunday at Darlington, the track “Too Tough to Tame.” Gibbs was a frontrunner all afternoon, notching a third-best 4.05 average running position, per NASCAR loop data, behind only Reddick and Keselowski.
What’s next: Gibbs returns to the historic North Wilkesboro Speedway for the All-Star Race, where the No. 54 team pit crew won Gibbs the pole for last year’s All-Star Open. Gibbs will have to race his way into the big show Sunday night, but he accomplished that feat in last year’s event with a second-place finish in the Open.
2. Josh Berry, No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media
Started: 33rd
Finished: 3rd
What happened: Despite a qualifying effort that left him third-from-last, Berry methodically picked his way through the field to score his first top-five finish since joining Stewart-Haas Racing. The result was no fluke for Berry, who posted the 13th-best average running position (14.33) Sunday and his fourth straight top-20 finish.
What’s next: The short-track ace returns to a familiar playground at North Wilkesboro, where Berry won the All-Star Open a year ago, substituting for a then-injured Alex Bowman. He’ll look to make his second appearance in the All-Star Race on Sunday.
3. Justin Haley, No. 51 Rick Ware Racing
James Gilbert | Getty Images
Started: 28th
Finished: 9th
What happened: Haley keeps improving with Rick Ware Racing, wheeling the No. 51 Ford to his first top-10 finish with the organization. Haley has shown flashes of speed all year, evidenced by a 17th-place finish in March at Bristol. But Haley is on an upswing now, with finishes of 23rd (Dover), 18th (Kansas) and ninth in consecutive weeks.
What’s next: Haley’s campaign to earn the Fan Vote into the 2024 All-Star Race has been nothing short of spectacular. If the No. 51 team continues its forward charge, perhaps it won’t need to rely on the ballots to compete for the $1 million prize.
What happened: Logano was solidly at the front of the field Sunday, racing inside the top five and top 10 for much of the afternoon. But a speeding penalty at Lap 255 under the race’s final caution period upended any of the good mojo the No. 22 team built, squandering what was a ninth-best average running position (9.92).
What’s next: The 2016 All-Star Race winner is looking for another $1 million payday. The difference, of course, is that the 2016 contest was run at Charlotte Motor Speedway and not the tight confines of North Wilkesboro. Logano was 10th on the short track a season ago.
2. Martin Truex Jr., No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
James Gilbert | Getty Images
Started: 10th
Finished: 25th
What happened: Truex appeared to be a real player early in Sunday’s race, still searching for that elusive first victory of 2024. What he found, however, was a damaged nose on his car after a multicar collision at Lap 129. The 2017 Cup champion was able to continue, but ultimately faded through the pack for his first finish outside the top 20 this season.
What’s next: The All-Star Race has never quite been Truex’s cup of tea, with just four top 10s in 12 appearances in the main event and a 14th-place result last year. The good news? Charlotte Motor Speedway awaits after the All-Star exhibition — a track where Truex has won three times.
3. Tyler Reddick, No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota
Jacob Reeves | For NASCAR Digital Media
Started: 1st
Finished: 32nd
What happened: It was all looking so good for Reddick until it wasn’t. Reddick dominated Sunday’s race at Darlington, leading a race-high 174 of 293 laps on a day no one else led more than 40. But in a desperate attempt to pass Chris Buescher for the lead with 10 laps to go, Reddick slid high, knocking Buescher into the wall and cutting Reddick’s right-rear tire, sending the No. 45 car to a 32nd-place finish instead.
What’s next: With two disappointing results in the rearview mirror in addition to last week’s 20th-place run at Kansas, Reddick shifts sights to North Wilkesboro, where he earned a third-place finish in last year’s inaugural return to the North Carolina gem.
A second consecutive race where Chris Buescher looked destined for his first checkered flag of 2024 ended in bent fenders and flared tempers as Buescher and Tyler Reddick clashed in the closing laps at Darlington Raceway, ending with a face-to-face confrontation on pit road.
Buescher was walled by Reddick in a fight for the win in Sunday’s Goodyear 400 after Reddick dove to Buescher’s left in Turn 3. Reddick drifted high and contacted Buescher, who had nowhere to go but to bounce off the SAFER barrier to his right.
The result of the contact was a flat right-rear tire for Reddick and damage that forced Buescher to hit pit road, allowing Buescher’s teammate and RFK Racing co-owner Brad Keselowski to escape with the victory. Buescher ultimately finished 30th and Reddick 32nd.
“Trying to be decent about it,” Buescher said after the race. “We had clean racing all day long and to get flat-out fenced like that, there’s no excuse. It’s just a poor decision and immature move. I don’t get it.”
Buescher was also a near-winner one week ago at Kansas Speedway, where Kyle Larson door-slammed the No. 17 RFK Racing Ford down the front stretch and nipped Buescher at the finish line by 0.001 seconds, the closest finish in NASCAR Cup Series history.
While Buescher’s career isn’t history-laden with disagreements with his competitors, that could change for the 31-year old.
“It about has to. We keep getting run into without hitting somebody else first,” Buescher said. “Struggle to understand the reason.
“I’ve had issues with hardly anybody out here. Growing up trying to race clean and be smart about it. I’ve had to fix my own race cars a lot growing up and I hate trying to fix noses or fix doors and I try to remember that for these men and women that work so hard on our cars to make them fast every week. You’re going to have times where you going to push and shove but can’t find a reason or an excuse for that.”
Third… yeah I was a little pissed. Our whole team deserves to be in victory lane. We keep showing speed like this and that will happen… just wish it was today. Really looking forward to the 600 after the All Star race
After Buescher unleashed his frustrations on him with a shove and a stern discussion, Reddick didn’t offer a defense for the contact and was apologetic after climbing out of his damaged No. 45 Toyota.
“I completely understand that. If I just would’ve took myself out of it, I had a flat, that’s a different story, but yeah he was going to win that race had I not tried that,” Reddick lamented. “I realized it wasn’t going to work. There was just no grip left and yeah I slid right into him and took us both out. I’m not happy about it.”
Reddick led a race-high 174 laps and won Stage 2. The final stint of Sunday’s showdown saw him in a fierce battle with both RFK Fords, which ended in Brad Keselowski’s first triumph since 2021.
With 30 laps to go, Keselowski forced Reddick into the wall off Turn 4 that allowed Buescher to take a daring move down toward the pit-road barrier to overtake both the Nos. 6 and 45.
Reddick worked his way back to Buescher before the contact with 10 laps to go.
“I was hoping I was going to surprise him, but he was ready for it,” Reddick said. “And yeah, I tried to back out of it, but it’s Darlington man. There’s no grip left.”
Buescher still takes positives from his effort today. Leading 21 laps and scoring points in both stages has the No. 17 team continuing its upward trajectory following the runner-up result last weekend at Kansas.
“There’s a fight in this team right now that no single on-track action is going to take away from us,” Buescher said.
The Prosper, Texas native will eventually celebrate his teammate’s first victory in 110 races, but Buescher admitted the end “selfishly, is hurting me.”
“We’ve been able to race respectfully for our careers and we try to do that week in and week out and it’s not getting us anywhere right now,” Buescher said. “Just to get wiped out like that, it’s a shame. That’s a big shame.
“On the flip side, I’m stoked for Brad and the 6 bunch and RFK to get a win here, that’s huge. But right now, selfishly, I’m mad for my team and our group. We had a great day there and we didn’t get anything to show for it.”
DARLINGTON, S.C. — A combination of stubbornness and patience paid off handsomely for Brad Keselowski on Sunday at Darlington Raceway, where the driver of the No. 6 Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing Ford ended a 110-race winless streak with victory in the Goodyear 400.
Keselowski’s triumph, which came at the expense of hard-luck teammate Chris Buescher and pole winner Tyler Reddick, gave the Ford Dark Horse Mustang its first NASCAR Cup Series victory this season in 13 races and led to a heated exchange between Buescher and Reddick on pit road after the fact.
It was also Keselowski’s first win as a principal owner in RFK Racing, his second at Darlington and the 36th of his career.
“What a heck of a day,” exulted Keselowski, who finished 1.214 seconds ahead of runner-up Ty Gibbs. “It’s Darlington, so whether it’s your first win, your last win, this is a really special track. The history of NASCAR, it’s as tough as it gets, and that battle at the end with my teammate and Tyler Reddick, we just laid it all out on the line, it was freaking awesome.
“I thought it couldn’t get much better than Kansas. It did today. That was awesome. I’m so glad you guys got to see that (addressed to the fans). That was incredible. Thanks for being here.”
Keselowski was stubborn in the way he raced Reddick after the final restart on Lap 261 of 293, aggressively staying beside the No. 45 Toyota and running him up the track in Turn 3.
For four straight laps, Keselowski and Reddick battled side-by-side, allowing Buescher to slip past into the lead at the start/finish line on Lap 264. Reddick cleared Keselowski shortly thereafter and took off in pursuit of Buescher.
That’s when Keselowski exercised patience and stayed within striking distance, waiting for the drama that unfolded ahead of him.
On Lap 284, Reddick’s ill-timed bid for the lead went awry. His No. 45 Camry slid up the track into Buescher’s Ford, pinning it against the outside wall in Turn 4. Both cars were damaged and unable to maintain pace, and Keselowski charged into the lead on Lap 285.
Buescher, still smarting from last week’s loss to Kyle Larson at Kansas in the closest finish in Cup Series history (0.001 seconds), confronted Reddick on pit road after the drivers climbed from their cars.
“We got wrecked,” Buescher said later. “That one’s clear as day. Don’t need any cameras to tell us. I don’t know what to say. We’ve raced really clean through the years, tried to be really respectful about it, and we get used up.
“It (Reddick’s move) is just something that you know is not going to work. I’m just really pissed off about it right now. We certainly had a chance to win another one. I’m proud to have that speed. Just huge congratulations to Brad and the 6 bunch on their win. That’s awesome, but I wanted it for our group right here.”
Reddick took responsibility for the incident and punctuated his conversation with Buescher with the words “I know. I (screwed) up—I’m sorry.”
Reddick elaborated after he and Buescher separated.
“I completely understand where he is coming from,” Reddick said. “He was running the top, running his own race, running his own line to keep me at bay. I made a really aggressive move and was hoping I was going to clear him. When I realized I wasn’t going to, I tried to check up to not slide up into him, but, yeah, I wish I wouldn’t have done that.
“I completely understand why he is that mad. He did nothing wrong. Just trying to win the race, and to take myself out—that’s one thing—I can live with that, but just disappointed it played out the way that it did, and I took him out of the race as well.”
All but lost in the late-race drama was Gibbs’ career-best second-place finish. The driver of the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota also finished second in Stage 1 and third in Stage 2 behind respective stage winners Kyle Larson and Reddick.
Josh Berry finished third in his No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford, followed by Denny Hamlin and Chase Briscoe. William Byron, Bubba Wallace, Alex Bowman, Justin Haley and Michael McDowell completed the top 10.
Hamlin led one lap during a cycle of green-flag pit stops in the final stage, extending his streak of consecutive races with at least one lap led to 17.
Larson (34th on Sunday after a late-race crash) leads the series standings by 30 points over Martin Truex Jr., who finished 25th after suffering alternator issues.
Ryan Blaney was the race’s first retiree after a restart crash at Lap 129. William Byron dove three-wide beneath Blaney and Martin Truex Jr. in Turn 2 and drifted high, squeezing Truex into Blaney, who then contacted the outside wall. Blaney’s No. 12 Team Penske crew was unable to repair the car within the allotted time on the Damaged Vehicle Policy clock, ending Blaney’s race. Blaney swerved at Byron on the race track to show his displeasure before returning to the garage.
NOTE: There were no issues in post-race inspection, confirming Keselowski as the race winner.