The 2026 NASCAR Cup Series season is rapidly approaching. After the 2025 season, which produced plenty of thrilling finishes and memorable moments, 2026 will bring its own unique blend of stories and excitement.
With the 2026 season almost here, it is time to dive deep into season previews as NASCAR.com analyzes each team and driver’s outlook for the year ahead. View the full release schedule below:
Editor’s note: Today’s Hendrick Motorsports preview completes NASCAR.com’s countdown of team previews for the 2026 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: The ship remains steady for one of stock-car racing’s powerhouse organizations, which enters the NASCAR Cup Series season with all of its driver-crew chief pairings the same as they’ve been since 2023, with only internal changes reshaping the four-team attack. Kyle Larson will mount what should be a solid defense of his second Cup crown, but a new championship format could further benefit the Rick Hendrick-owned group, which has long been one of the sport’s most consistent. The other new wrinkles — a new Camaro body that all Chevrolet teams will have to adapt to, plus a new fitness and wellness facility (the Atrium Health Motorsports Athletic Center) where its pit-crew athletes and employees will train.
“We’ve made a few adjustments over the offseason, some for necessity, some guys are either wanting to come off the road or do something different, new people coming in,” said Hendrick Motorsports vice chairman Jeff Gordon. “In general, just always trying to get better, just always trying to elevate, and so we’re very excited. I mean, I think all four of our teams are as put together as I’ve ever seen them, working together like I’ve never seen them before, and then adding this (athletics facility) only gets that excitement that raises the bar even that much higher. Of course, some of the changes with our car, with the Camaro, I think, are positive. The potential is there to get more out of it and look forward to seeing how we execute that.”
Experience: 11 full-time seasons in NASCAR Cup Series; 402 starts 2025 stats: 1st in final Cup Series standings; 3 wins, 15 top fives, 22 top 10s, 1 pole, 1,106 laps led
Driver outlook: Larson has now won two Cup Series championships, one in his first season with Hendrick Motorsports and the other in his most recent. The 33-year-old Californian tailed off slightly results-wise last year compared to other recent seasons, but his three-win campaign and overall performance are still benchmarks that others in the garage would covet. Larson continues with No. 5 team leader Cliff Daniels, one of the sharpest crew chiefs in the sport, atop the pit box. The likelihood of a repeat championship run — especially in a new postseason format without hazardous rounds of elimination — remains high for one of racing’s foremost talents.
Experience: 10 full-time seasons in NASCAR Cup Series; 358 starts 2025 stats: 8th in final Cup Series standings; 2 wins, 11 top fives, 19 top 10s, 0 poles, 454 laps led
Driver outlook: Elliott came up one round shy of another championship shot last year, with a late-season setback at Talladega Superspeedway the prime factor holding him back. The No. 9 driver crept back into multi-win season territory last year with victories at EchoPark Speedway (formerly Atlanta Motor Speedway) and Kansas Speedway, and his versatility on multiple track types remains one of his top attributes. Elliott’s average finish (12.6) last year was second in the Cup Series, behind only Christopher Bell’s top-rated 11.2. Entering a championship format that rewards that same sort of consistency can only be a boon.
Experience: 8 full-time seasons in NASCAR Cup Series; 288 starts 2025 stats: 4th in final Cup Series standings; 3 wins, 11 top fives, 16 top 10s, 3 poles, 1,330 laps led
Driver outlook: Byron led the organization in laps led and pole positions last season, and his season-long excellence vaulted him to the championship stage in Phoenix. His work ethic and close-knit connection with longtime crew chief Rudy Fugle have helped him net multiple wins in each of the last four seasons, and this year’s expectations remain at a lofty pitch. First, though, Byron has a potential date with history — an attempt at a record third consecutive victory in the season-opening Daytona 500.
Experience: 10 full-time seasons in NASCAR Cup Series; 361 starts 2025 stats: 13th in final Cup Series standings; 0 wins, 6 top fives, 16 top 10s, 2 poles, 165 laps led
Driver outlook: Bowman inched into the postseason last season, scraping his way into the 16-driver field of championship hopefuls without a win. A new format should help the 32-year-old return there with more room for comfort, but he’ll be aiming to snap a winless skid that currently stands at 52 races. No. 48 crew chief Blake Harris said the team will enter 2026 with a new car chief (Nick Kerlin) and lead race engineer (Jonas Bell), providing what he called “a fresh start” with a new-look road crew for the group’s chemistry. Smoothing out some of the team’s execution and avoiding a repeat of the No. 48’s springtime slump from a year ago would help steady the ride this season.
NASCAR officials announced Thursday that two incentive programs would return, solidifying the dates and tracks for the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series Dash 4 Cash and the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Triple Truck Challenge in 2026.
Both initiatives offer qualified drivers the opportunity to receive bonus paydays throughout the regular season.
The schedules for both programs this season are as follows:
NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series Dash 4 Cash schedule
April 4: Rockingham Speedway (qualifier)
April 11: Bristol Motor Speedway
April 18: Kansas Speedway
April 25: Talladega Superspeedway
May 2: Texas Motor Speedway
NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Triple Truck Challenge schedule
March 20: Darlington Raceway
April 3: Rockingham Speedway
April 10: Bristol Motor Speedway
Only one Dash 4 Cash track — Bristol — carries over from the 2025 program, while Rockingham transitions from a Dash 4 Cash race to the first qualifier. Bristol and Rockingham both return to the 2026 Triple Truck Challenge slate after being two of the three venues last season.
Dash 4 Cash rules in 2026 will be similar to 2025. A qualifying race will determine the four participants for the first official program race. The highest finish will collect the $100,000 prize and automatically qualify for the next Dash 4 Cash contest. The next three highest-finishing O’Reilly Auto Parts Series regulars will also qualify. These rules will repeat for subsequent Dash 4 Cash races. In order to qualify for the program, drivers must be declared to collect O’Reilly Auto Parts Series points.
The 2026 Triple Truck Challenge will also follow similar rules to those in previous years. During the three-race stretch, drivers will compete for a $50,000 bonus for winning a race. Should a driver win multiple events, the bonus money increases. If a driver wins two out of three races, he or she will be awarded $150,000 total. If a driver wins all three Triple Truck Challenge races, $500,000 total is awarded. In order to qualify for the Triple Truck Challenge, drivers must be declared to collect Craftsman Truck Series points.
The Dash 4 Cash program began in 2009, while the Triple Truck Challenge had its inaugural season in 2019. Both programs have served as midseason opportunities for drivers to be financially rewarded for performing well over a select stretch of races.
Spire Motorsports has signed Carson Hocevar to a long-term contract that will retain the Michigan native as driver of the team’s No. 77 Chevrolet “into the next decade,” Spire announced Thursday.
Hocevar, 23, is entering his third full-time season in the NASCAR Cup Series with the program and is now locked under contract for years to come.
The 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Rookie of the Year Hocevar delivered an impressive sophomore season last year that boasted two top fives, nine top 10s and one Busch Light Pole Award. His 122 laps led in 2025 marked a career high while contending for multiple race victories. The Michigan native made his Cup debut with Spire Motorsports in 2023.
“This shows we’re all committed and eager to race with each other for a long time,” Hocevar said in a team release. “I think of Jeff (Dickerson, team co-owner) as a father figure, but the same could be said for Luke (Lambert, crew chief), Tyler (Green, spotter), Bill (Anthony, team president) and all the No. 77 guys. Everyone in the building has really become a family to me. Spire is such a different team now compared to how it was my rookie season, and especially when I made my debut in 2023. It’s fun to know I’m going to be around the Cup garage for a long time, and really a dream come true.”
during contract negotiations i think i asked if it could read “if i had a pulse, i would be driving a spire race car”, but into the next decade sounds good too.
i am here for a long long time in the sport i loved as a kid. thank you, to everyone that has stuck by me.
Dickerson has been a key influence on Hocevar’s upbringing in the NASCAR ranks. Securing Hocevar as an anchor driver for the program provides stability both on and off the track for Dickerson and the entirety of Spire Motorsports.
“It’s a pretty big moment for our company to announce an extension with Carson that takes us out for multiple years,” Dickerson said in a release. “It’s not just about knowing he’ll be here with us for the long haul, but it gives our sponsors and competition group the foresight to make their own plans knowing he’s in the seat of the No. 77 as far as we can see.
“It has been an absolutely rewarding experience getting to know Carson and watching him grow up and learn from the good and bad both at and away from the race track. I love him like a son and it means a great deal to me, personally, knowing he’ll be here for several years.”
The good and bad Dickerson mentions refers to the fiery nature of Hocevar’s on-track activities — or antics, depending on whom you ask. Still an up-and-comer with just 81 Cup starts on his resume, Hocevar has quickly found speed that pits him against the sport’s elite, of which he hopes to be considered one day. With speed has come abrasive moments that have at times left him at odds with competitors.
“I expect this announcement could test the effectiveness of my blood pressure medication,” Dickerson joked in the release, “so I’ve alerted my physician, and he may have to adjust the dosage appropriately, but it’ll be worth it.”
In addition to his Cup extension, Hocevar will compete for Spire in other forms of racing, from NASCAR and beyond. Spire announced Hocevar will return to NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series competition this season and will pilot Spire’s No. 77 truck in multiple races as the team pursues the 2026 series owner’s championship. While tentative, a Spire spokesperson confirmed to NASCAR.com that Hocevar is planning to compete in all eligible Truck Series races that serve as companion events to the Cup Series through Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park in July. Hocevar will also make occasional starts in Spire Motorsports’ dirt late model entry as well as making select super late model starts on pavement.
“I love to race, and there’s really no place better to race than here,” Hocevar said.
Hocevar has made 169 total starts across NASCAR’s three national series, qualifying for the Truck Series postseason in each of his three full-time campaigns. The 23-year-old finished runner-up at both EchoPark Speedway and Nashville Superspeedway in 2025 for his best career Cup Series finishes. He returns to the program with veteran crew chief Lambert atop the pit box and Green atop the spotter stand.
NASCAR will bring back its five-race In-Season Challenge in 2026, returning a midyear jolt of stakes and story lines to the regular-season schedule.
All five rounds of the bracket-style, head-to-head competition will again air during TNT Sports’ portion of the broadcast schedule. Only the top 32 drivers in the point standings will qualify for the In-Season Challenge. Instead of using three races to determine seeding on performance, drivers will be seeded based on their points position entering the mid-season tournament.
Another difference in 2026 will be the venue lineup. Sonoma Raceway will move from Round 3 in 2025 to the challenge opener in 2026, setting the tone with a road-course test right out of the gate. In Round 2, the Cup Series will remain in Illinois but transition from the downtown street course to the Chicagoland Speedway oval. It will mark the series’ long-awaited return to Joliet, Illinois, for the first time since 2019.
EchoPark Speedway near Atlanta, which opened the 2025 In-Season Challenge and busted plenty of brackets, will remain on the schedule as the third-round bout. As such, the stakes will be even higher as the event will determine which four drivers advance to the semifinal.
The historic North Wilkesboro Speedway will receive its first Cup Series points race since 1996, adding a layer of nostalgia to the penultimate bracket-style round. The North Carolina short track has already become a fan favorite again by hosting the All-Star Race the past three seasons, but with Dover Motor Speedway stepping into the All-Star role, North Wilkesboro returns to host a pivotal contest during the challenge stretch.
Finally, the Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway will once again serve as the finale, deciding the 2026 In-Season Challenge champion. With the history and crown-jewel prestige, Indy makes the perfect backdrop to deliver a winner who can handle the spotlight on one of racing’s biggest stages.
“It’s the first time that we did it this year, and obviously we learned a lot of things, gathered a lot of feedback, some positives and some areas that we may want to make some changes in the future, but I think the great part about it is it creates more story lines, especially in that portion of the season,” said Ben Kennedy, NASCAR executive vice president and chief venue & racing innovation officer. “You have a ton of energy and momentum, certainly during the Daytona 500 and as you go through the spring and then the Amazon Prime portion of the season, a strong slate from the Coke 600 to San Diego, and we have a really strong slate of races for TNT’s portion of the season, and I think returning back again with the In-Season Challenge with a wide variety of tracks, whether it’s a road course, a mile-and-a-half in Atlanta, which races a little bit like a superspeedway now, North Wilkesboro being a short track, and then ending up with another very unique race track in Indianapolis Motor Speedway on the oval again, I think it creates a lot of variety and a lot of excitement for our fans as they get to follow the In-Season Challenge.”
During its inaugural season, the In-Season Challenge produced unforgettable racing moments and story lines that carried throughout the summer stretch, culminating with Ty Gibbs banking a $1 million payday while ending Ty Dillon’s Cinderella run.
Combining road courses, short tracks, intermediate ovals and one of the most iconic venues in all of motorsports, the 2026 In-Season Challenge will again offer variety, unpredictability and the possibility for plenty of drama in Year 2.
See the full 2026 Cup Series schedule below:
Date
Race / Track
Broadcast partner
Sunday, Feb. 1
Cook Out Clash (Bowman Gray Stadium)
FOX Sports
Sunday, Feb. 15
Daytona 500
FOX Sports
Sunday, Feb. 22
EchoPark Speedway (Atlanta)
FOX Sports
Sunday, March 1
Circuit of The Americas (Austin)
FOX Sports
Sunday, March 8
Phoenix Raceway
FOX Sports
Sunday, March 15
Las Vegas Motor Speedway
FOX Sports
Sunday, March 22
Darlington Raceway
FOX Sports
Sunday, March 29
Martinsville Speedway
FOX Sports
Sunday, April 12
Bristol Motor Speedway
FOX Sports
Sunday, April 19
Kansas Speedway
FOX Sports
Sunday, April 26
Talladega Superspeedway
FOX Sports
Sunday, May 3
Texas Motor Speedway
FOX Sports
Sunday, May 10
Watkins Glen International
FOX Sports
Sunday, May 17
All-Star Race (Dover Motor Speedway)
FOX Sports
Sunday, May 24
Charlotte Motor Speedway
Prime Video
Sunday, May 31
Nashville Superspeedway
Prime Video
Sunday, June 7
Michigan International Speedway
Prime Video
Sunday, June 14
Pocono Raceway
Prime Video
Sunday, June 21
San Diego (Naval Base Coronado)
Prime Video
Sunday, June 28
Sonoma Raceway
TNT Sports
Sunday, July 5
Chicagoland Speedway
TNT Sports
Sunday, July 12
EchoPark Speedway (Atlanta)
TNT Sports
Sunday, July 19
North Wilkesboro Speedway
TNT Sports
Sunday, July 26
Indianapolis Motor Speedway
TNT Sports
Sunday, Aug. 9
Iowa Speedway
USA Network/NBC
Saturday, Aug. 15
Richmond Raceway
USA Network/NBC
Sunday, Aug. 23
New Hampshire Motor Speedway
USA Network/NBC
Saturday, Aug. 29
Daytona International Speedway
USA Network/NBC
Sunday, Sept. 6
Darlington Raceway*
USA Network/NBC
Sunday, Sept. 13
World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway* (St. Louis)
For the third year in a row, Ryan Blaney started toward the back in the Cook Out Clash and stormed toward the front of the pack.
This year was unlike anything Blaney experienced the last two years, though. Through sleet, wet weather and at least three on-track incidents, the 2023 Cup Series champion rallied from the rear of the field back to the front multiple times to finish third in Wednesday night’s exhibition race at Bowman Gray Stadium.
In each of the last two Clashes — 2024 at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and last year at Bowman Gray — Blaney started last in the field by way of a points provisional and managed to score podium finishes; third in LA and second last year. This time, Blaney started 16th in the 23-car field for Wednesday’s 200-lapper, which was pushed to a midweek special at the hands of a historic snow storm in North Carolina over the weekend. On dry pavement, Blaney had no problem carving through the field to climb into the top five by the scheduled mid-race break.
But that’s about the time things went haywire. Sleet waded across the 0.25-mile Winston-Salem oval, drenching the asphalt during the halted action and necessitating Goodyear’s wet-weather tires to be mounted before a delayed-but-eventual return to action. Across the next 30 green-flag laps, Blaney was involved in two separate crashes and had fallen back to 17th place. By then, he lost hope that he could realistically get back to the top five.
“I wasn’t good in the wet at all,” Blaney said. “I was kind of nervous. I thought my car was unbelievable in the dry. Got to fourth there at the break. My car kept some tire in it a little bit better than the other guys that were really good in the wet.”
And yet as the carnage continued — all resulting in a Clash-record 17 caution periods — Blaney kept chipping his way up the pylon by avoiding the mayhem around him.
“Coming from mid-pack to the front to the back to the front again is a crazy night,” Blaney said.
Despite his at-times-vocal frustration over the radio, the 32-year-old Blaney conceded he enjoyed the challenge of such unknown conditions. Never has NASCAR held racing while sleet actively fell from the sky, let alone at one of its most storied short tracks.
“It’s pretty neat working through it,” Blaney said. “Not knowing what to expect, not knowing exactly what lane is going to be dominant. Like, I was personally thinking while we were running around there under caution before we went back green in the wets, like that second lane looked — like, the asphalt looked smoother. I was like, well, maybe water is kind of sitting on top of it, but it’s out of the rubber. I don’t know which one will be better. The second lane kind of was the best lane, just from the rubber on the bottom.
“As a driver, you’re just guessing, right? You’re guessing to your best thoughts or what you think is going to be good, of how hard can I charge it, how fast can I roll? Race-car drivers, we always adapt. That stuff’s pretty neat to do when we’re thrown into that stuff. It’s pretty cool.”
Sure enough, while Ryan Preece scampered away to an emotional win in the closing laps by a 1.752-second margin, Blaney fought all the way forward to contest William Byron for the runner-up position. Byron won out and finished second while Blaney took the checkered third in the preseason exhibition.
“It’s just nice to get back in the car,” Blaney said. “Like, I haven’t been in a race car since Phoenix (in November). I didn’t have any tests or anything this winter. It was just nice to get back in the swing of things. You work with your guys through the week and in the winter, but nothing is better than working with them at the race track, kind of getting that camaraderie back, the communication side down, just getting back to what you’re used to.”
Joining Byron at the media center desk to field questions post-race, Blaney said his eyes are set next on winning the Daytona 500 on Feb. 15 (1:30 p.m. ET, FOX, HBO Max, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). But to do so, he knows he’ll need to defeat Byron, winner of each of the last two editions of the “Great American Race.”
“Looking forward to going down there to Daytona. Try to see if we can make William not win one,” Blaney said with a smile. “Yeah, I look forward to it.”
“You’re pretty good there,” Byron remarked to Blaney.
He’s right. Blaney is the most recent Daytona winner, a two-time victor in the superspeedway’s summer race and oftentimes a serious contender for the Daytona 500 win. Blaney wasn’t taking any of Byron’s pity, though.
SALISBURY, N.C. — Work-life balance in NASCAR is definitely a thing. The delicate, industry-wide dance to keep career aspirations and personal moments separate affects all comers. Race teams arguably have one of the more rigorous time-management tugs-of-war of them all.
Hours at the track can be long, and the shop-centered preparation to get there is another pressing commitment. It’s part of why Niece Motorsports’ Cody Efaw encourages his staff to shut it off once the clock strikes closing time.
“I take a lot of pride in not working extra,” says Efaw, Niece’s team CEO and president. “My motto is ‘7 to 4, not a minute more.’ ”
Sometimes, though, shutting off work mode doesn’t always mean leaving the workplace. Not long after Niece moved into its current home in 2023, Efaw and Co. had a vision to bring the life part of work-life balance onto the team’s 20-acre plot. Think along the lines of installing a ping-pong table in the break room, but on a much larger, more specific scale.
Quitting time at Niece Motorsports often means a late-afternoon migration to a homemade dirt track that’s nestled against the woods circling the shop’s backyard. The bullring — which measures a fifth or one-sixth of a mile, depending on whom you ask — has become an important gathering place for employees of all types as spectators or competitors. Their families often join in on the fellowship.
“As much fun as you can have with 6 1/2 horsepower,” one driver notes in the small pit lane as a colleague’s go-kart buzzes into the neatly banked turns. The extracurricular oval track is just one of the things Efaw has had a hand in building. There’s also the three-team operation that’s entering its second decade of NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series competition, but he’s also helped to build a community within the shop’s walls.
“I think it’s something where we spend more time with our work family than we do our own family. I have for 20-some years,” Efaw says from the driver’s seat of the team’s track-packing Jeep, a racing executive who’s right at home in well-worn jeans and scuffed work boots. “So you’re around these guys all the time, but you’re in the pressure cooker, right? You’re at the track, everything’s a go, there’s a job to do, we’ve got to go. So you never have a chance to laugh.”
Niece Motorsports
Race weekends used to be longer, Efaw notes, and some of the schedule lulls and breaks offered more time to develop team camaraderie. The dirt track fills that void, providing a reminder of the fun factor that’s drawn so many into racing in the first place.
“It’s just awesome to know when it hits four o’clock, a lot of people at your regular jobs, they leave and go home to their families, but a lot of our families come here and watch us fool around back here,” says Matt Gould, a 20-year-old racer splitting time between trucks and late models. “So it’s awesome. Like, I know as best as anybody that this race team is family-oriented, so it’s cool to see other families be oriented into this team.”
The reason Gould knows is that his father, Phil, has been a Niece Motorsports staple as a crew chief since 2019, a pivotal year in the organization’s history. His son has been a fixture since then in his own right, earning the nickname L.P. — for “Little Phil” — around the shop.
The elder Gould has seen both sides of the team’s evolution, from its feisty upstart beginnings in a small, rented space in Mooresville to its rounding into a contending organization housed in an 80,000-square-foot facility that hums three miles from Salisbury’s town center. He said the expansion has been significant, but the small-team character and charm have never left.
“It’s grown from then, but it’s a small niche group and reminded me what racing was like when I first started out, which was family — like me and my brothers and buddies and friends building a car and going to the race track and racing,” said Phil Gould, now also Niece’s director of competition. “A lot of those roots came back to me and reminded me how much I like that.”
Zack Albert | NASCAR Digital Media
* * *
On a January weekday, chassis work whirs over a music bed of classic rock from a nearby radio. The Allman Brothers’ “Blue Sky” plays while the trucks that will wear Niece’s almost sky-blue logo are being built and buffed, with the NASCAR season’s official kickoff approaching in Daytona.
In the pockets of the shop floor that aren’t occupied by trucks in various states of race readiness, the fruits of Facebook Marketplace have their homes. In one corner, a fully functional high school athletics scoreboard has been salvaged, and it’s complete with lighted numbers, controls and a working buzzer. In other tucked-away spots, second-hand karts sit idle on tiny tires awaiting their time to go.
If the lines in the shop sometimes blur between the work-life split, so does the division between the front offices and the hands-on work bays in the back. On this typical offseason Thursday, Matt Gould is on chassis-building detail, improving his skills on the assembly row and finish fabrication — “whatever they need me to do,” he says. His father’s day is also split between meeting a General Motors rep in his office and making seat rails back in the shop’s main floor. While there’s a threshold between the carpet of the office world and the smooth, hard surface of the shop, that line blurs, too.
Donovan Strauss, 20, has all the markings of an up-and-coming racer with CARS Tour experience, but on this offseason Thursday, he’s on a ladder, peeling an old vinyl wrap off one of Niece’s haulers to get the team ready for Daytona. “I look at people that succeed, they have work ethic,” Efaw says. That trait stretches across each of the team’s departments.
“You get on more common ground when you’re in there elbow to elbow, and everybody’s pitching in,” Phil Gould says. “… I think the younger kids coming in being able to work and help is big, just gaining respect of all the people that work here. These guys, they’re our face when they go to the race track, so getting to know them and having a rapport, I think, is important.”
Even while he’s overseeing the dirt oval and making enhancements to the grounds, Efaw is still working. When he’s not fielding phone calls from team partners, he’s observing. When one driver in Niece’s pipeline blends his kart onto the backstretch and then promptly slows with a dry fuel tank, he files it away that a more hands-on approach might be needed to assist his development. Another driver has his go-kart dialed in after an adjustment. Efaw notes that, too.
Niece Motorsports
Management has long been in Efaw’s blood. The 41-year-old had four people reporting to him when he worked as a youngster on a dairy farm growing up in rural Ohio. His standout high school athletics career placed him in positions where a captain’s sense was almost required — a basketball point guard, a pitcher in baseball and a quarterback during his football days. Those lessons have served Efaw well as he manages the nearly 60 full-time employees under Niece’s roof.
“I don’t want to punch a clock. I refuse to have time clocks unless the state comes in and tells me I’ve got to have them,” Efaw says. “I do believe in everything there, from the drivers being in there working, there’s a level of continuity. Chemistry is sometimes tossed to the side over margins or profits or production or what we’ve got to get done, but if you have at the core a solid continuity and chemistry and a positive culture, you’ll be able to achieve all those things. I just think a lot of that’s overlooked because of the bottom dollar, so I think it’s very important that they come through this cycle.”
The organization’s big plans for the season ahead include an all-star press for the Feb. 13 opener at Daytona (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1, NASCAR Racing Network Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Cup Series regular Ricky Stenhouse Jr., a former Daytona 500 champ, will be in a Niece Motorsports truck for his series debut. So will extreme sports star Travis Pastrana, who returns to Niece for his first NASCAR start since 2023. Americana influencer Cleetus McFarland has joined forces with Niece to attempt his first Truck Series race. And Ross Chastain — a regular in the Cup Series and at the Niece dirt track who launched to national-series prominence along with the team seven years ago — plans to max out his mandated eight-race allotment of Craftsman Truck Series events with the team this season.
More is potentially in store for the dirt track, too. Efaw talks about retaining walls, some basic bleacher seats and the possibility of tapping into the expertise of ownership partner J.F. Electric for lighting.
Niece Motorsports
Phil Gould says he welcomes the recreation but also laughs at how his family’s journey has made a full-circle trip. When his son, Matt, graduated to full-bodied stock cars as he climbed the racing ladder, the Goulds sold off their go-karting equipment. Now they’re back in business.
“Being able to go back there and turn some laps keeps me young,” the elder Gould says before joking, “or makes me realize how old I am when I go out there.”
Phil Gould might be a fair distance removed from his driving days in the Pro Stock division at historic Wall Stadium in his native New Jersey, but one of Niece’s most popular attractions has drawn him back in. The friendly competition has meant more father-son moments for the Goulds, but other team members and their families have built similar bonds while kicking up some North Carolina clay.
For this crowd, a ping-pong table in the break room just wouldn’t do.
“I was racing with Matt, and actually I led most of one of the races, and he passed me about two (laps) to go, nerfed me out of the way,” Phil Gould said. “I mean, I wasn’t mad. I was jokingly mad. He said, ‘Well, Dad, that’s how you taught me how to race.’ I was like, ‘Well, good point. I guess I’d be mad if you didn’t.’ ”
Garrett Mitchell — best known as his internet persona Cleetus McFarland — will attempt to make his NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series debut with Niece Motorsports at Daytona International Speedway, the team announced Thursday.
McFarland would pilot the No. 4 Chevrolet in the Fresh from Florida 250 on Feb. 13 (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1, NRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) in his inaugural NASCAR national series start, provided he qualifies on speed with 44 trucks entered for 36 spots in the season-opening event. NASCAR announced Feb. 10 that McFarland was cleared to compete at Daytona.
McFarland, 30, made four ARCA Menards Series starts last year in his first foray into professional stock-car racing. McFarland raced at both Daytona and Talladega Superspeedway in addition to Charlotte Motor Speedway and Bristol Motor Speedway, earning a career-best finish of ninth at Charlotte.
A native of Bradenton, Florida, Mitchell grew a close connection to the late NASCAR great Greg Biffle in recent years. Biffle served as an advisor for McFarland’s ARCA debut at Daytona one year ago. In the wake of a tragic Dec. 18 plane crash that took the lives of Biffle and his family, Mitchell spoke at Biffle’s gathering of remembrance and emphasized the motto to “Be Like Biff.”
Part of being like Biff includes racing at Daytona, where Biffle scored his first career NASCAR Cup Series victory at the 2.5-mile superspeedway in 2003.
McFarland joins a notable lineup for Niece Motorsports drivers for the 2026 Truck Series opener. Among his teammates will be 2023 Daytona 500 champion Ricky Stenhouse Jr. in the No. 45 J.F. Electric Chevrolet in his series debut, as well as famed X-Games star and motorsports icon Travis Pastrana, who will drive Niece’s No. 42 Brunt Workwear Chevrolet.
Black Rifle Coffee Company will sponsor McFarland’s attempt.
Other notables in the field include three-time Cup champion Tony Stewart, Cup Series regular John Hunter Nemechek and Cup part-timer and media personality Corey LaJoie.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. and AUSTIN, Texas — NASCAR and FloSports today announced an expanded slate of racing events that will bring FloRacing coverage live
throughout the 2026 season to the NASCAR Channel, further expanding the reach of short-track racing across North America.
The 2026 simulcast schedule includes:
Friday, February 6 – World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing – Opening Night
Saturday, March 28 – ARCA Menards Series East at Hickory Motor Speedway
Saturday, April 4 – ARCA Menards Series East at Rockingham Speedway
Thursday, April 30 – High Limit Racing at Texas Motor Speedway
Saturday, May 2 – ARCA Menards Series East at Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway / ARCA Menards Series West at Shasta Speedway
Friday, June 26 – ARCA Menards Series West at Sonoma Raceway
Wednesday, July 1 – NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at Seekonk Speedway
Thursday, August 20 – High Limit Racing at Santa Maria Speedway
Friday, August 28 – NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at Stafford Speedway
Saturday, September 5 – American Flat Track – Night 1
Thursday, September 17 – High Limit Racing at Lucas Oil Speedway
Saturday, September 26 (Tentative) – ValleyStar Credit Union 300 at Martinsville Speedway (Virginia Triple Crown Finale)
Sunday, October 11 – NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Season Finale at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park
Saturday, November 7 – Fall Brawl at Hickory Motor Speedway
Friday, December 4 – Snowball Derby Qualifying Day and Support Events
*Races and dates are subject to change.
The NASCAR Channel and FloRacing simulcasts will elevate grassroots racing by bringing marquee short-track events to a national audience while maintaining deep roots in local racing communities.
The majority of the simulcasts will be produced by FloRacing and feature its broadcast teams. It is the latest distribution agreement by FloSports aimed at broadening the reach of its coverage and exposing new fans to its portfolio of grassroots racing events. It follows the launch of the FloRacing 24/7 FAST channel on Amazon Prime Video, Fubo and YouTube, alongside a recent agreement with FS1 to bring select High Limit Racing events across its channel this season.
“Expanding our simulcast schedule with more races and different forms of racing reinforces NASCAR’s commitment to the local tracks, teams and drivers that are the backbone of our sport,” said Dan Barker, NASCAR Managing Director, Content Strategy & Distribution. “Partnering with FloRacing allows us to deliver high-quality coverage, and make more forms of motorsports and prestigious events accessible to fans everywhere through the NASCAR Channel’s growing free platform.”
“Our goal is to continue to meet our fans where they are, and this distribution partnership with NASCAR does exactly that. We firmly believe that NASCAR Grassroots racing is some of the best on the planet, and our goal is to expose as many people as possible to it, while maintaining that Flo look and feel that short track fans have come to love,” said Michael Rigsby General Manager of FloRacing. “We are very thankful that NASCAR is aligned with us on growth, new fans, and showcasing the stars that might otherwise go unnoticed.”
The NASCAR Channel provides 24/7 programming and content to fans for free, including classic races, delayed broadcasts of the current season, select live events, NASCAR Studios original content, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio’s The Morning Drive. The NASCAR Channel is available on The Roku Channel, Xumo Play, Tubi, Samsung TV Plus and Prime Video. No subscription or registration is required.
FloRacing fans are encouraged to watch all races on the updated FloSports Connected TV app, which features enhanced discoverability and streaming capabilities, providing the ultimate viewing experience on Samsung and VIZIO smart TV’s, Roku, Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV and Android TV devices. FloSports is also available on the web and for download on mobile devices (iOS and Android) via the FloSports app.
To watch all these races and gain access to more than 1,000 races annually, subscribe to FloRacing by visiting https://www.floracing.com/signup.
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — The old adage that you never know what you might see at “The Madhouse” now holds truer than ever.
If you’re looking for bloopers, tomfoolery and roughhouse antics from the bizarro side of the stock-car racing world, Bowman Gray Stadium is your ground zero. Wednesday night, the stadium’s voluminous book of oddities added a new chapter, a passage produced by one of the wildest weather stretches in recent memory.
Ryan Preece emerged as the victor and one of the last drivers standing in Wednesday’s snow-delayed Cook Out Clash that unofficially kicked off the NASCAR Cup Series season. The exhibition showcase at one of NASCAR’s oldest facilities was a story of perseverance, not just by Preece, but by the industry that saw it through and the hardy fans who braved the elements.
That’s not to say it was necessarily pretty. The 200-lap, 50-mile race took roughly three and a half hours to complete, slowed by delays, 17 caution flags and dicey wet-weather competition. But the mailman’s creed of “neither snow nor rain …” easily applied, with more frozen precipitation mixed into the saying.
“I mean, just a wacky day,” said Ryan Blaney, third in his Team Penske No. 12 Ford. “A wacky race, really, from the first 100 laps going dry, and then a sleeting wintry mix right in the middle there, and then firing off, having really no clue what to expect.”
An all-timer winter storm was Round 1 of the unexpected. On the eve of Sunday’s scheduled start, nearly a foot of snow dropped on North Carolina’s Piedmont Triad area, pushing the non-points event to the middle of the week. A herculean effort to clear stacks of snow from the track, bleachers and surrounding grounds finally made the place race-ready.
Jonathan Bachman | Getty Images
“I mean, I give NASCAR a lot of credit for getting us in this week, you know?” said Cliff Daniels, crew chief for Kyle Larson’s No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet. “I mean, look, we’re looking at inches of snow on the ground here still, and they were able to get the track clean. Big credit to the track crew and everybody they had on hand to be able to get the facility and everything that we had here ready to go.”
Come race day, Old Man Winter’s next counterpunch presented a new set of Clash challenges. Rain that occasionally mixed with sleet fell at the race’s halfway break, causing a series of delays and forcing teams to switch to wet-weather Goodyear tires to keep going. Frigid temperatures were a constant, and the multiple thrills and spills posed another disruption with caution laps not counting toward the race’s total. They most certainly did count toward teams’ fuel consumption, though, and as a series of cars’ tanks ran dry, race officials mandated another break to fill up.
Drivers adjusted, too. The tried-and-true preferred lower lane that’s worked for decades at the quaint quarter-mile oval gave way to a higher and eventually drier groove. The spray and the glare from the lights and the slick track surface created another obstacle.
Year 1 of The Clash at Bowman Gray was also cold, hosted on the same January-into-February weekend in 2025. But it was nothing this extreme, prompting some post-race speculation about whether it should return to the historic venue.
“The weather is the weather. It is what it is,” Blaney said, noting he didn’t have a definitive opinion on the event’s fate in Winston-Salem. “You can’t predict that stuff. I don’t think you can judge a race or a track off of that weird weather circumstance. I think this place honestly, judging off the first half, put on a good show. Just the way calamity is, it would be with any place.”
Bowman Gray typically runs a spring-to-midsummer schedule for its weekly shows, but it’s been no stranger to cold-weather racing, either. Before NASCAR’s modern era, the track hosted the Tobacco Bowl for modified and sportsman cars around the turn of the new year, and the race was a sought-after event for drivers and spectators.
Preece’s opinion might understandably be biased, given his deep-rooted foundation in the Modifieds that form Bowman Gray’s featured division, and that he was left holding the hefty trophy at race’s end. His vote, he said, would be a Clash at New Smyrna Speedway in Florida, where he was headed directly post-race to get cracking on a week’s worth of events in the 60th annual World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing before Daytona. But his heart, he said, was also with the track that means so much to the sport and the diehard community that supports it — wacky weather races or not.
“Bowman Gray is special,” Preece said. “Here is what I’m going to tell you guys: The fact that this city still came out — like we had a great crowd for 34 degrees with potential for rain. I’m sure a lot of people had to miss work on Monday and Tuesday and couldn’t come out here early enough. They came out for the feature. For me, I can appreciate that. They love racing. I think I want to go to places that want us and love racing.”