Patrick Staropoli, a retina surgeon by trade, is accustomed to high-pressure moments.
As full-time driver of the No. 48 Big Machine Racing Chevrolet in 2026, he’s laser-focused on making it in the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series.
After winning the PEAK Stock Car Dream Challenge with Michael Waltrip Racing more than a decade ago and winning an ARCA Menards Series West race at Irwindale Speedway, opportunities dried up for Staropoli on the national level. His time as a developmental driver for MWR came and went, leaving him focused on medical school.
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“Fortunately, I was still able to go back and finish medical school, and that was the primary focus,” Staropoli told NASCAR.com. “I wanted to get that done no matter what, and then I raced on the side as much as I could: late models, modifieds for the last 10 years.”
Staropoli raced around Florida while attending Bascom Palmer Eye Institute at the University of Miami, among the best institutions for ophthalmology practice. Before that, he graduated from Harvard University, initially believing he was going down the engineering path.
But no matter how much he excelled in the classroom, racing was always at the forefront.
“The deal that I had with my parents and car owners and everybody growing up was that I had to take school seriously if I wanted to race,” Staropoli said. “I loved racing, so that was my motivating factor to do well in school.”
After graduating from “The U,” Staropoli moved to Houston within the last three years to work for Retina Consultants of Texas. He could do upwards of six or seven surgeries per day while seeing anywhere from 60 to 90 patients.
“The pitch when I came out there was that we would use the racing platform to raise awareness for what we were doing in retina and taking care of people and their sight,” Staropoli said. “They stayed true to their word. I got out there and got to continue racing, and they’ve been big supporters of mine with this opportunity this year.”

Enter Big Machine Racing.
Staropoli transitioned to NASCAR in 2025, first in ARCA. He sped through the process of running a quartet of NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series races, while also making four O’Reilly Auto Parts Series starts for Sam Hunt Racing. He scored a pair of top-20 finishes at Martinsville Speedway and started to get the bug of wanting to make a full-time stab at racing.
Staropoli inked a full-season ride with Big Machine in late December to pilot the team’s flagship No. 48 Chevrolet, taking over the ride in place of Nick Sanchez, who won at EchoPark Speedway for the team in 2025.
“You figure that you get a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and you don’t want to leave that on the table,” Staropoli said of rushing to the Big Machine ride. “I’ve seen before where I thought I had a path to get somewhere [and it] goes away. When you get a chance like this, you have to jump on it.”
In late January, Staropoli uprooted his life and moved to the Charlotte hub. He is practically at the race shop every day, eager to learn and improve his craft.
“We felt like studying and preparing was not going to be a problem based on his career,” Patrick Donahue, crew chief of the No. 48, said. “We knew that if we gave him the information, he would put the work in, and he does that every week, just like everyone else. He watches film, studies the races, looks at SMT and goes to the sim. We do everything that we’re supposed to do.
“But he knew there was going to be a lot of pressure on him to fill big shoes.”
Almost every week, Staropoli visits a race track for the first time. Entering Saturday’s O’Reilly race at Rockingham Speedway (2:30 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), he ranks 18th in the driver standings with four top-20 finishes.
MORE: O’Reilly Auto Parts Series standings | O’Reilly Auto Parts Series schedule
“Every track that I go to this year — the majority of them — are new,” Staropoli said. “Even though I’ve been playing a lot of video games since I was a kid, it’s different going out there and doing it in the real thing. Class is in session every week.”
On Mondays, the Big Machine squad regroups and adjusts for upcoming races. The goal for everyone on the team is to continue improving and make minimal mistakes, believing the No. 48 team can make a playoff push through its technical alliance with Richard Childress Racing.
“We know our race cars can go fast, we know we have all the equipment to provide,” Donahue said. “It’s putting the puzzle together that works best for Patrick. We’re working extremely hard to help him on that.”
After the 2026 season concludes at Homestead-Miami Speedway in November, Staropoli intends to return to Houston to practice in the medical field. Come February 2027, he hopes to still have a seat in NASCAR.
“The goal is going to be for a couple of months [in Houston] and then be back at Daytona next year,” Staropoli said. “The ultimate goal for any race car driver is to race on Sunday. That’s been the dream since I was a kid. I’m fortunately closer now than I’ve ever been before, and I just hope I can execute this year and audition to keep myself around.”




























