TULSA, Okla. —  Each season when teams converge in the SageNet Center for the running of the Chili Bowl Nationals, the largest Midget car event in the world, a handful of active NASCAR drivers join the fray in pursuit of the famous Golden Driller trophy.

No fewer than eight drivers who competed in one of NASCAR’s three national divisions last year are entered to compete in this year’s Midget car racing extravaganza.

They include defending NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Larson, defending NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series champion Jesse Love and Joe Gibbs Racing’s Christopher Bell and Ty Gibbs, among others.

However, if you look a little closer, you’ll find even more involvement from NASCAR personalities in the Chili Bowl pit area.

Five active NASCAR Cup Series drivers are entered in the Chili Bowl this year as car owners, including Larson, Bell, Alex Bowman, Chase Briscoe and Kyle Busch. Another familiar face in the NASCAR garage, Hendrick Motorsports crew chief Blake Harris, is the car owner for Love this year at the Chili Bowl.

Car ownership is a growing trend among NASCAR personalities at the Chili Bowl, especially for those who grew up coming to and racing during the Chili Bowl.

Bowman is a perfect example. He has been traveling to Tulsa, Oklahoma each January for more than a decade to compete in the Chili Bowl, first as a driver and now as a car owner and crew chief for his own team.

That shift from driver to owner/crew chief was a gradual one for Bowman, who is fielding cars this week for drivers C.J. Leary and Briggs Danner.

“I think this is like the 11th year I’ve brought a car to the Chili Bowl, and I’ve driven five or six times out of those 11 years,” said Bowman, who made 10 Chili Bowl attempts as a driver during his career but never qualified for the Saturday championship feature.

The stress, according to Bowman, has less to do with being a car owner and more to do with being the guy who makes the final setup decisions on his race cars.

“I’m making all the setup calls on these cars,” said Bowman. “Trying to get those calls right is probably the most stressful part of the week, but it’s a lot of fun, and I really enjoy this event.”

So far this week in Tulsa, Bowman’s setup calls have been spot-on. Danner, who was in action Monday night, finished second to Larson in the preliminary feature to lock into Saturday’s championship feature. His second driver, Leary, races Thursday night.

“Briggs has been really fast both years he’s driving for me,” Bowman said. “I think he probably could have, should have, would have won last year. He made some really conservative decisions there at the end (of Monday’s feature) to take the locked in spot, which I’m all good with. That was a good night for us.

“With C.J., we’re such close friends that it is probably the more stressful one of the week for me. Thursday is inherently always the hardest night of the week. In my opinion it is the most stacked night.”

While Bowman’s time as a driver at the Chili Bowl is effectively over — he admits he doesn’t really fit in a Midget anymore — his competitive spirit remains. If he can’t win the Chili Bowl as a driver, he wants to win it as an owner.

“I want to win this event, and my best chance is to do it with not me in the seat probably,” Bowman said. “I’m definitely having fun with it.”

Christopher Bell
Christopher Bell already has a win in his own Midget this week during the Chili Bowl after he won the Race of Champions on Monday. (Photo: Susan Wong/NASCAR)

Bell, a three-time Chili Bowl champion driver, is the latest NASCAR competitor to field his own equipment in Tulsa.

After previously racing for Keith Kunz Motorsports and CB Industries inside the SageNet Center on the temporary quarter-mile dirt oval, Bell made the decision to shift gears and build his own team from the ground up for the 2026 event.

“Last year I drove for KKM, and when I left the event, it just kind of really hit me. I felt like that chapter of my career was behind me,” said Bell, who is fielding a car for himself and Australian Kaidon Brown this week. “I said, ‘I wanna try something else.’ My goal isn’t to drive for myself. Honestly, my goal was to have two drivers I enjoy being around.

“Kaidon was always part of the plan, but unfortunately the guys that were on my list (for the second car) already had commitments. So, I was then like, “Well, I guess I’ll just drive it.’”

From the moment the checkered flag waved for the NASCAR Cup Series finale last November at Phoenix Raceway, Bell has been solely focused on the Chili Bowl. It’s been a gratifying process for a driver who grew up attending the Chili Bowl long before he was a competitor.

“From the car owner side, I just enjoyed the prep process and the shop work and assembling the cars,” Bell said. “Thinking of how we’re going to setup our pit area, the handling of the food, all that stuff. I think I just enjoyed all the extracurriculars of it.

“The Chili Bowl and the Tulsa Shootout is literally the perfect event for me to spend my offseason. I don’t have to put much into it during my regular day job, then when the offseason comes, I’ve been full-time working on these things and preparing for this week.”

Bell kicked off his tenure as a car owner at the Chili Bowl in fine style Monday when he won the O’Reilly Auto Parts Race of Champions for the fourth time.

Winning inside the SageNet Center is one thing, but doing it in his own equipment meant just a bit more. The goal, of course, is for either himself or Brown to do it again Saturday night.

“I think it’s definitely going to be more special,” Bell said. “Even the Race of Champions just felt very rewarding to win with myself crew chiefing, my father-in-law helping working on the cars, my best friend working on the cars, it definitely meant more.

“Certainly if I could do it with another person driving, it would be icing on the cake.”

MOORESVILLE, N.C. — Ashly Ennis, Hendrick Motorsports’ director of racing communications, was named the recipient of the inaugural Jon Edwards Excellence in Public Relations Award, NASCAR announced Wednesday evening.

The award honors the legacy of Edwards, a longtime and highly respected public relations representative who passed away unexpectedly in April 2025. Edwards worked with four-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Jeff Gordon and two-time champion Kyle Larson, both at Hendrick Motorsports, establishing a legacy of integrity, mentorship and passion for both NASCAR and his job, leaving a lasting impact on the sport’s communications community.

MORE: 2026 Cup Series schedule | Legacy of Jon Edwards

Ennis was honored with the award in a celebration in Mooresville, North Carolina, for her exceptional work during the 2025 season, during which she served as the communications representative for William Byron, driver of the No. 24 Chevrolet and two-time Daytona 500 champion. In eight seasons with Hendrick Motorsports, Ennis has established a reputation as a respected leader throughout the NASCAR garage, collaborating often and impactfully with media members and fellow public relations representatives to heighten awareness of Byron, Hendrick Motorsports and the No. 24 team.

“Honestly, I’m a little bit in disbelief,” Ennis told NASCAR.com, “simply because there are so many people in this room who have contributed to my career — Jon by far the most. But there are so many people who have been in this sport longer than me, who worked with Jon before me that also contributed to my career. So it’s a little bit of disbelief, but honestly, I’m just honored.”

Jeff Gordon and Ashly Ennis pose after Ennis won the inaugural Jon Edwards Excellence in Public Relations Award.
David Jensen | Getty Images

Members of Edwards’ family were on hand Wednesday night to deliver the trophy to Ennis. Helping present Ennis the award was Gordon, with whom Edwards worked since 1994, one year into Gordon’s illustrious career that led him into the NASCAR Hall of Fame. In Gordon’s eyes, Ennis was the perfect person to receive the inaugural award named in memory of his friend Edwards.

“You’re amazing at what you do. I did not know this is happening, but I’m so proud, so happy,” Gordon said. “There’s very deserving people in this room, but I don’t know if there’s any more deserving right now at this moment than you. You’ve earned it. You deserve it, so congratulations.”

Ennis, who joined Hendrick Motorsports in November 2018, is an Ohio native who earned both undergraduate and graduate degrees from Georgia Southern University.

The award was created to acknowledge individuals who embody Edwards’ commitment to excellence, service and character both on and off the track, NASCAR said in a release. Ennis worked closely with Edwards at Hendrick Motorsports. His impact and approach to the job, Ennis said, still resonates today with her and countless other public relations professionals throughout the sport.

“There’s moments where I feel bad for the people who are going to be coming up through the ranks that will never know Jon on a personal level,” Ennis said. “And I hate that, because I feel like everyone should know Jon. But I just feel like it shows the level that we should strive for, and we should also go learn to make it in our own way.

“There is no textbook, cut-and-dry ‘This is how the role is.’ And I say that even with training people. You can’t sit there and be like, ‘This is how the role is done,’ because it changes, and it changes every moment, every situation. But the gold standard is Jon. And I just feel like if everyone strives to be close to that, it just makes our sport a little better.”

Editor’s note: Today’s Richard Childress Racing preview continues NASCAR.com’s countdown of team previews for the 2026 Cup Series season.

RICHARD CHILDRESS RACING

Manufacturer: Chevrolet
Engine: ECR Engines
Driver-crew chief pairings: Austin Dillon-Richard Boswell (No. 3); Kyle Busch-Jim Pohlman (No. 8)

Team outlook: RCR has collectively had a tough go of it in the last two seasons. Since 2024, only Austin Dillon made the playoffs (finished 15th in 2025), while Kyle Busch hasn’t made the playoffs since his first year with RCR in 2023. A significant change for 2026 is that Busch will have a new crew chief, Jim Pohlman — Busch’s third crew chief since the start of the 2025 season. The team also named Mike Dillon as chief operating officer, John Klausmeier as technical director and Andy Street as performance director. These leadership changes, coupled with a strong group waiting in the wings in what is now the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series, could point to a brighter future around the bend.

AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 CHEVROLET CAMARO

Experience: 12 full-time seasons/3 part-time seasons in NASCAR Cup Series; 444 career starts
2025 stats: 15th in final Cup Series standings; 1 win, 1 top five, 5 top 10s, 0 poles, 119 laps led

Driver outlook: After finishing with one win and five top-10 finishes in both 2024 and 2025, Dillon is considered a long shot by DraftKings to win the championship in 2026. He’s managed six total wins since 2017 (all of his Cup career wins). With the new Chase championship format set for 2026, Dillon won’t have the “win-and-you’re-in” to make the playoffs this season. This time, the No. 3 team will need to show more consistency over the long haul in order to make it to The Chase.

MORE: Austin Dillon driver page

KYLE BUSCH, NO. 8 CHEVROLET CAMARO

Experience: 21 full-time seasons/2 part-time seasons in NASCAR Cup Series; 750 career starts
2025 stats: 21st in final Cup Series standings; 0 wins, 3 top fives, 10 top 10s, 0 poles, 88 laps led

Driver outlook: The 2025 season was Busch’s last under RCR’s original contract with him, but the team gave him a one-year extension for 2026. Busch has not been the driver he once was: The 63-Cup race winner has not won a race since 2023, and his finishes in the last two seasons (20th in 2024 and 21st in 2025) are single-season career-worst performances for him. However, if he can recapture what he had at the beginning of his tenure at RCR when he rolled off three quick wins and without the “win-and-you’re-in” rule, it’s not out of the question that Busch could produce consistent enough results to break his postseason drought.

MORE: Kyle Busch driver page

A Gathering in Remembrance will be held on Friday, Jan. 16, to honor the lives lost in the Dec. 18 plane crash in Statesville, North Carolina, including NASCAR great Greg Biffle.

The memorial, open to the public, is set for 11 a.m. ET at the Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte, North Carolina, where Biffle, wife Cristina, daughter Emma and son Ryder, as well as Dennis Dutton, his son, Jack, and Craig Wadsworth, will be remembered. Fans unable to attend the gathering in person can watch the ceremonies via live stream on NASCAR.com, Facebook, YouTube and The NASCAR Channel to pay respects to those who were lost.

Biffle, the 2000 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series champion and 2002 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series champion, was named as one of NASCAR’s 75 Greatest Drivers in 2023. The Vancouver, Washington native was a 19-time winner in NASCAR Cup Series competition, earning all 19 victories while driving the No. 16 Ford for team owner Jack Roush.

Biffle was honored as the 2024 NMPA Myers Brothers Award winner for his outstanding rescue and aid efforts in Western North Carolina in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. will make his NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series debut driving the No. 45 Chevrolet for Niece Motorsports at Daytona International Speedway, the team announced Wednesday.

Stenhouse, the 2023 Daytona 500 winner and two-time NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series champion, has never made a Truck Series start despite competing in NASCAR’s national series since 2009. The Mississippi native will compete in each of the first two truck races of 2026 for Niece, driving the No. 45 J.F. Electric Chevrolet at both Daytona and EchoPark Speedway.

MORE: 2026 Truck Series schedule | The Chase returns

“I’ve always wanted to run a truck, but never had the opportunity to put something together,” Stenhouse Jr. said in a release. “When Cody (Efaw, Niece’s CEO) called me, I definitely had a lot of interest to see what all they have been building here at Niece Motorsports, especially looking at their level of competition. With it being at Daytona, obviously winning the 500 was awesome, and I’d love to win a Truck Series race there, too. I’ve always wanted to race a truck, but I wanted it to be competitive — and this checks all of those boxes.”

Stenhouse has won four Cup Series races and eight O’Reilly Auto Parts Series races across a combined 582 starts. All four of his Cup victories have come on superspeedways — two at Daytona and two at Talladega Superspeedway.

“We are all very excited to welcome Ricky Stenhouse Jr. to our team for his first time racing in the Truck Series,” Efaw said. “I’ve known Ricky for several years now dating back to our time at Roush (now RFK Racing), and he’s always been a natural on superspeedways. I believe he will have a true shot at contending for the win at both Daytona and Atlanta.”

J.F. Electric CEO and chairman Greg Fowler became part of Niece Motorsports’ new ownership group in 2025 along with Josh Morris, CEO of DQS Solutions & Staffing.

“Josh Morris and I are thrilled to welcome Ricky Stenhouse Jr. to Niece Motorsports for his NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series debut at Daytona,” Fowler said. “There’s no bigger stage for a debut than Daytona, and we believe Ricky gives our team a real opportunity to contend for the win. We’d love nothing more than to be celebrating together in Victory Lane at the end of the race.”

The Fresh from Florida 250 begins the 2026 truck season at Daytona on Friday, Feb. 13 at 7:30 p.m. ET on FS1, NRN Radio and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

Editor’s note: Today’s Front Row Motorsports preview continues NASCAR.com’s countdown of team previews for the 2026 Cup Series season.

FRONT ROW MOTORSPORTS

Manufacturer: Ford
Engine: Roush Yates Engines
Driver-crew chief pairings: Noah Gragson-Grant Hutchens (No. 4); Todd Gilliland-Chris Lawson (No. 34); Zane Smith-Ryan Bergenty (No. 38)

Team outlook: Continuity will be key to improvement in 2026 for Front Row, which turns the page after a year of transition. FRM entered last season with two new faces in Gragson and Smith, who joined forces with Gilliland as the organization expanded to a three-car outfit. Results were mixed, with just three top-five finishes (one for each driver) over the course of the year, but the foundation of the team’s lineup is mostly intact, as are aspirations of returning to the postseason after a two-season drought.

NOAH GRAGSON, NO. 4 FORD

Experience: 2 full-time seasons in NASCAR Cup Series; 111 starts
2025 stats: 34th in final Cup Series standings; 0 wins, 1 top five, 3 top 10s, 0 poles, 7 laps led

Driver outlook: Gragson is back for a second season in the No. 4 Ford, but with a new face atop the team’s pit box. Longtime race engineer Grant Hutchens will take the helm from Drew Blickensderfer, starting his first full-time crew chief role in the Cup Series. He’ll be working toward establishing a better performance baseline with the 27-year-old Gragson, who absorbed eight crash-related DNFs last year, a contributing factor to his total of just 16 lead-lap results in 2025 — next-to-last among Cup Series full-timers. His brightest spot last season was a fourth-place effort at Talladega in April; expect the superspeedways to be a place for potential positives until the pairing builds chemistry.

TODD GILLILAND, NO. 34 FORD

Experience: 4 full-time seasons in NASCAR Cup Series; 144 starts
2025 stats: 27th in final Cup Series standings; 0 wins, 1 top five, 5 top 10s, 0 poles, 23 laps led

Driver outlook: Gilliland enters 2026 again as the most-tenured driver at Front Row, though he’s the youngest of the trio at just 25 years old. His most recent campaign represented steps forward in some ways (a career-best 20.8 average finish, plus a career-high second place at Talladega in October), but steps back in others (a five-spot drop in the final Cup Series standings and leading 107 fewer laps than the year before). Achieving his own performance upswing and assuming a leadership role will be crucial for the team’s composure.

ZANE SMITH, NO. 38 FORD

Experience: 2 full-time seasons in NASCAR Cup Series; 81 starts
2025 stats: 28th in final Cup Series standings; 0 wins, 1 top five, 5 top 10s, 1 pole, 22 laps led

Driver outlook: Smith’s first career pole position (at Talladega in April) stands as a highlight from last year, but so does a third-place finish at Bristol and top 10s at Phoenix, Michigan and Atlanta. The Cup Series progress has been measured so far for Smith, who delivered a Craftsman Truck Series championship to Front Row in 2022 and returned to the organization’s Cup side last season. Finding more gains on those first-year highlights — in whatever increment, and on an array of track types — will be a necessity for the No. 38 team.

NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. — The quiet of NASCAR winter just received a rumbling bit of offseason thaw.

A one-day organizational test provided that much-needed jolt Tuesday at North Wilkesboro Speedway, where Cup Series teams got back on track for their first unofficial laps of 2026. The sound of engines echoing through the Brushy Mountains that surround the revered 0.625-mile oval was a familiar signal of the approaching season, but also a nod toward the NASCAR-mandated horsepower bump for a majority of tracks this year.

RELATED: Cup Series schedule | 2026 team previews

Fifteen teams — one from each chartered Cup Series organization — participated Tuesday as NASCAR competition officials deployed a handful of setup configurations to draw a bead on the series’ short-track balance. The day’s constant was a 750-horsepower baseline, an increase from the 670 target engine output on road courses and tracks measuring less than 1.5 miles in recent seasons. The switch was a well-received rules wrinkle, based on the earliest impressions.

“The more horsepower, the better, yes,” said Hyak Motorsports veteran Ricky Stenhouse Jr. “I think if we can continue in that direction … Goodyear’s continuing to do a good job of bringing us tires that wear out, and they’re continuing to evolve that. I think all of us, drivers and teams, are on board with that. So you pair that with NASCAR adding horsepower, I think everybody in the garage has been on board, but I think everything’s going the right direction to get us even better racing.”

The prep session comes ahead of the Cup Series’ return to North Wilkesboro for the Window World 450 on July 19 (7 p.m. ET, TNT Sports, HBO Max, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). The historic track has hosted the non-points All-Star Race the last three seasons, but this year’s 450-lap event will mark the circuit’s first points-paying meet since 1996, when the Cup Series’ original 48-year run here ended.

Tuesday’s test initially was set for a 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. ET window, but competition officials extended the on-track time by two hours into the evening after working through a list of proposed rules and configurations. NASCAR tested — both individually and in multiple combinations — different settings with the rear suspension/camber, a softer tire compound and some minor aerodynamic adjustments.

Weather conditions warmed in the afternoon sun, but were still far cooler than what’s expected when the Cup Series makes its midsummer return. The wintertime chill increased the grip level, which offset the potential finesse that drivers might need to manage the horsepower boost. A far different effect is anticipated come July.

“I don’t see the power hurting the entertainment factor of the race, and hopefully it allows us to have to pedal the cars at some point throughout a run,” Hendrick Motorsports’ Chase Elliott said. “There’s a lot of grip out there today, I feel like, but even by the end of 40 laps, there’s a good bit of fall-off, even for the temperatures that we have today. So I would have to imagine you come back here in the summer months … certainly it’ll be warmer than it is today, and kind of combine that with more cars being on the track, I do think there’ll be some wear. Then obviously the power will impact that another step as well. So I feel like the tire changes that Goodyear made last year were some really good steps in the right direction, and hopefully we just kind of keep inching up on making these long runs more of a challenge.”

The rare test day also presented an opportunity for new team, driver and crew chief pairings to get better acquainted in an at-track setting. Four of the 15 participating teams Tuesday were breaking in new combos — Kyle Busch and new crew chief Jim Pohlman at Richard Childress Racing, Erik Jones with newly appointed crew chief Justin Alexander at Legacy Motor Club, Ross Chastain and crew chief Brandon McSwain at Trackhouse, and new driver Daniel Suárez joining Spire Motorsports and incumbent crew chief Ryan Sparks.

MORE: Changes to know for 2026 | Next season’s top storylines

For Suárez — the lone new driver in a new place at Tuesday’s test — he was pleased to have a familiar voice with spotter Frankie Kimmel going with him to Spire’s No. 7 team. The rest of the “getting to know you” session, he said, was an all-new experience.

“It’s been super-productive for us, just to learn from each other, learn to communicate, learn about the car,” Suárez said. “I already have a list of items that I want to improve, because what you see in the car in the shop is one thing. When you have the opportunity to make some laps, it’s a whole new perspective. So with everything being new for me, I already have my list of items to improve once we get back to the shop, but the main thing also is the communication, just to make sure that we’re on the same page.”

Tucson Speedway’s annual New Year tradition has officially arrived with the running of the 2026 Chilly Willy.

The event at the 3/8-mile asphalt oval in Tucson, Arizona annually draws more than 100 entries for multiple divisions of racing. The inaugural Chilly Willy was held in 2014, with Dustin Ash taking home top honors in the event that has become one of the West Coast’s most popular early season races.

This season, a $20,000 payday awaits the winner of Sunday’s Super Late Model finale. The prize will surely draw the attention of some of the West Coast’s top Super Late Model aces.

While Super Late Models will headline the 2026 edition of the Chilly Willy, they’re not the only class on the schedule this weekend. The CARS Tour West Pro Late Models will launch their season Saturday with a 125-lap main event. Legend cars will also be in action during all three days of racing beginning Friday.

Below is everything you need to know for Tucson Speedway’s season-opening Chilly Willy.

Tucson Speedway
The prestigious Chilly Willy at Tucson Speedway is now entering its 13th year. (Photo: Rebecca Noble/NASCAR)

What TV channel is the Chilly Willy on in 2026?

All racing action from the 2026 Chilly Willy at Tucson Speedway can be viewed live on FloRacing, the official streaming home of all NASCAR Regional properties.

The Chilly Willy will not be shown on a traditional television network.

Below is the complete broadcast schedule for Chilly Willy coverage on FloRacing.

Date Start Time How to Watch
Friday, Jan. 16 7:45 p.m. ET FloRacing
Saturday, Jan. 17 3:45 p.m. ET FloRacing
Sunday, Jan. 18 2:45 p.m. ET FloRacing

2026 schedule and procedures

A busy racing docket for the Chilly Willy begins Friday evening with on-track action for all three divisions, including features for the Super Late Models and Legends as well as qualifying and the Last Chance Qualifier race for the CARS Tour West Pro Late Models.

The Chilly Willy starting grid will begin to take shape Saturday with qualifying followed by a pair of 50-lap qualifying races. The two fastest drivers from Chilly Willy qualifying will lock into Sunday’s 150-lap Chilly Willy main event, with all other drivers required to race their way into the Chilly Willy via the qualifying races. The top-10 finishers of both qualifying races will lock into the Chilly Willy.

Saturday will also include the 125-lap CARS Tour West Pro Late Model main event, which will feature 2014 NASCAR Cup Series champion Kevin Harvick and his son Keelan, as well as NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series driver William Sawalich.

The last chance to qualify for the Chilly Willy 150 field will take place Sunday when all remaining drivers compete in a Last Chance Qualifier, with the top six finishers punching their tickets to the main event. The Chilly Willy 150 field will consist of 32 or fewer starters, including four promoters choice positions.

Legend cars will also be in action with multiple 50-lap features Sunday.

Below is the complete weekend schedule for the 2026 Chilly Willy at Tucson Speedway.

(All times MT)

  • Friday, Jan. 16
Time Event
8 a.m. Registration/Pit Gates Open
8:30 a.m. – 3 p.m. Tech Open
8:30 a.m. – Close Tire Barn Open
10 a.m. Mandatory Driver & Spotter Meeting
11 a.m. – 3 p.m. Practice
4 p.m. Front Gates Open
4 p.m. Qualifying (Super Late Models / Pro Late Models / Legends)
5:55 p.m. Opening Ceremonies
6 p.m. 50 Lap Super Late Model Feature(s)/25 Lap Legends Feature(s)/Pro Late Model LCQ
  • Saturday, Jan. 17
Time Event
8 a.m. Registration/Pit Gates Open
8:30 a.m. – 1 p.m. Tech Open
8:30 a.m. – Close Tire Barn Open
9 a.m. Mandatory Driver & Spotter Meeting
10 a.m. – 12 p.m. Practice
1 p.m. Front Gates Open
1 p.m. Super Late Model Qualifying
Followed by… Legend Car Qualifying
1:55 p.m. Opening Ceremonies
2 p.m. Legends Heat Races & Features
Followed by… Super Late Model Qualifying Duals (50 Laps)
4 p.m. CARS Tour West Pro Late Model Feature (125 Laps)
  • Sunday, Jan. 18
Time Event
8:30 a.m. Registration/Pit Gates Open
9:30 a.m. – 1 p.m. Tech Open
9:30 a.m. – Close Tire Barn Open
10:30 a.m. Mandatory Driver & Spotter Meeting
11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. Practice
12 p.m. Front Gates Open
12:55 p.m. Opening Ceremonies
1 p.m. Super Late Model Last Chance Qualifier
Followed by… Legends Main Events (50 Laps)
Followed by… Intermission
Followed by… Chilly Willy 150
Jace Hansen
Jace Hansen is the defending winner of the Chilly Willy 150. (Photo: Rebecca Noble/NASCAR)

Entry list

The current entry list for the 2026 Chilly Willy stands at 36 Super Late Models.

Headlining the group of Super Late Models making the trip to Tucson Speedway is defending Chilly Willy winner Jace Hansen, who will be traveling from his home in Colorado to compete at Tucson. Hansen will attempt to become the first back-to-back Chilly Willy since Preston Peltier from 2022-23.

Kole Raz, who won the Chilly Willy in 2024, is back in search of his second victory in the event. Michael Scott, a Chilly Willy winner in 2019, is also entered. Dylan Jones, the defending Super Late Model track champion at Tucson, is entered, as is Colorado National Speedway track champion Brett Yackey and his brother Bruce Yackey.

Other notable entrants include Gabe Brown, who is making the trip from his home in New Hampshire, West Series race winners Johnny Borneman III and Kody Vanderwal and Washington’s Kasey Kleyn, among others.

  • Super Late Models
Car No. Driver
1 Kasey Kleyn
3k Ken Bonney
05 David Smith
08 Jace Hansen
8 Nick O’Neil
9 Ethan Ebert
9n Ron Norman
11 Darren Robertson
11j Johvan Dillon
12 Bruce Yackey
14 Brandon Carlson
17 Taylor Mayhew
18 Tyler Emond
24 Nathan Gasser
24b Gabe Brown
21L Mia Lovell
26 Dylan Jones
28 David Levitt
32 Brett Yackey
34 Rudy Vanderwal
42 Kyle Reid
43 Kody Vanderwal
52 Ryan Philpott
57 Jen Hall
58 Kyle Ray
63 Rowdy Rpuinski
69 Bill Engle
72 Marc Groskreutz
76 Kole Raz
81 Darrell Midgley
82 Michael Scott
93 Dave Garber
98 Kyle Wade
99b Johnny Borneman III
99 Zane McKissick
100 Weston Marthaler
  • Pro Late Models
Car No. Driver
1 Austin Herzog
1 Kasey Kleyn
3K Ken Bonney
05 Eric Schmidt
5J James Hamlin
5P Ryan Phipps
7 Kenna Mitchell
7 Robby Sawyer
8 Bristol Borneman
09 Ryley Seibert
9 Ethan Ebert
11 Johvan Dillon
12 Colton Hale
12 Kyle Keller
15 Jace Hale
20 Alex Braseth
20 Andy Sole
22 John Siereka
22Y Nash Youngren
24 Cody Dempster
24 Gabe Brown
24 Chase Burgeson
24 Mia Lovell
25 Jaron Giannini
25 Hayden Hoogeveen
25 William Sawalich
27 Marc Groskreutz
29 Kevin Harvick
32 Brett Yackey
38 J.D. White
40 Alex Lessor
51 Jeffrey Peterson
51 Brenden Ruzbarsky
55 Haeden Plybon
55 Linny White
62 Keelan Harvick
67 Billy Coles
69 Trevor Seibert
88 Tanner Emond
99 Skyler Bohard
  • Legends
Car No. Driver
2 Stephen Brucker
3 Trey Daniels
05 Robby Czub
6 Tyler Hicks
8 Landon Wilfong
9 Adriana Camp
9I Jason Irwin
11 Daniel O’Donnell
12 Deeahamee Malone
13 Jerry Davis
15 Davis Jacobson
15x Kai Lovell
18 Mike Webb
18g Brody Glaze
18m Mike Dutro
18r Gavin Ray
19 Brandon White
21 Grayson Miller
22 Turner Brown
22c Chase Burgeson
24 Cole Dasenbrock
24h Tristan Haider
25 Colton Ray
25g Jaron Giannini
32 Scott Anderson
32 Cody Milan
35 Brian Smith
38 Garrett Wilson
42 Stephen Bazen
43 Christian Bazen
43d Dylan Wolf
44 Tanner Reif
45 Colt Johnson
53 Ashton Williams
55 Johnathan Davis
64 Zeke Hanger
70 Brenton Schmich
77 Travis Blevin
84 Michael Webber
85 Jarrett Dickson
86 J.C. Fickenscher
96 A.J. Davis
99 Brody Whitbeck
196 Joshua Davis
711 Tripp Goodrich

Past Chilly Willy winners

Year Winner
2014 Dustin Ash
2015 Tayler Riddle
2016 Chuck Wares
2017 Owen Riddle
2018 Chris Eggleston
2019 Michael Scott
2020 Preston Peltier
2021 Christian McGhee
2022 Preston Peltier
2023 Preston Peltier
2024 Kole Raz
2025 Jace Hansen

 

CONCORD, N.C. — Crowning a NASCAR champion will look different in 2026 than it did last season, and yet it will be strikingly familiar.

The Chase returns to NASCAR in the new year, the sanctioning body unveiled Monday at the NASCAR Productions Facility in Concord, North Carolina. Sixteen drivers will vie for championship glory over the final 10 races of the campaign. There will be no eliminations nor any automatic berths granted to race winners; only points will determine the champions of the NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series and NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series moving forward.

RELATED: NASCAR unveils The Chase for 2026 | The Chase 101: How it works

NASCAR Hall of Famers Mark Martin and Dale Earnhardt Jr. joined Chase Briscoe and Cup champions Chase Elliott and Ryan Blaney to unveil the new format alongside NASCAR President Steve O’Donnell Monday afternoon.

After a 12-year run of elimination racing that boiled the championship battle down to the final race, Martin beamed with support of NASCAR’s new direction.

“Everyone wins with this format,” Martin said. “Everyone. The fans win. They were heard. They win. The drivers, the teams win. NASCAR wins. Everybody wins.”

The inaugural iteration of The Chase format was used from 2004 through 2013, beginning with a 10-driver field in 2004 before expanding to 12 drivers in 2007, with all positions locked in based on points through the 26-race regular season. From 2011 through 2013, the final two berths in the 12-driver field were awarded to the two winningest drivers ranked 11th through 20th.

But in 2014, the sport shifted to a new system entirely — win a regular-season race as a full-time racer, and you were locked into the playoffs. Then, the task was surviving three rounds of eliminations, with four drivers left vying for the title in a one-race showdown — best finisher wins the championship.

After Monday’s announcement, all that matters are points: Accumulate the most points, and you will find yourself on the path toward winning a title.

“It makes it simpler for our fans to follow,” Earnhardt Jr. said. “I’m a fan of the sport, and now I’m compelled to plug in every single week because I know there’s a long-form objective for my driver to accomplish to be able to give himself the opportunity to win the championship. And so even though my driver may have success early on in the season, it does not assure him success in the postseason. So with the way that they’re going to stack the bonus points and everything else, it’s critical that these drivers have success every single week. Every single race, every single lap will have more importance. I think that’s fun for the driver to have a more clear objective now to get to the championship and easier for our fans to follow.”

Dale Earnhardt Jr. speaks on a NASCAR panel to announce the return of The Chase.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

Martin made The Chase four times, with Earnhardt Jr. qualifying six times. Neither claimed the Cup Series championship in their pursuits, but they both lauded the merits of chasing a title organically. Both voiced support for a system that reverted back to a full-season points format with no playoff reset, but they also agreed The Chase was the best possible step forward for the sport.

“I think that this is the most perfect compromise that you could ever ask for,” Martin said. “It’s going to require our 2026 champion to be lightning fast and incredibly consistent, and that’s what we can all get behind. I’m really excited. I think it’s fantastic. And I just appeal to all the race fans, but especially the classic fans who say to me, ‘I don’t watch anymore.’ I say we need you. Come on back. We’re headed in the right direction. Come back and join with us, and we’ll keep making progress.”

The Chase coming back to NASCAR is the result of a process that neared 18 months of work, all headed by Tim Clark, NASCAR’s executive vice president, chief brand officer. Clark assembled a wide-ranging group of industry representatives from former drivers to current drivers and media representatives to form a committee that oversaw potential alterations to NASCAR’s championship format. The outcome of that committee’s work resulted in unified support Monday of NASCAR’s new direction — one with an already familiar road map, with help from drivers who competed under the original Chase format, the elimination-style playoffs and even those who partook in both.

Ultimately, Clark tipped his hat to Denny Hamlin, a runner-up in the 2025 title run, for his contributions to the playoff committee throughout the course of last season.

“I’ll call out Denny Hamlin in particular,” Clark said. “Denny shared some anecdotes through these conversations that were really impactful, that were real-time in the season. Conversations were happening in 2025, and he was referencing races and the playoff format in 2025. To be able to have that level of input from our competitors, especially at such a high level, and someone that’s been around this sport and competed at such a high level for such a long time, that is unbelievable feedback to have. And to be able to get that perspective balance with Dale Jr. or Kevin Harvick or Mark Martin, I mean, you couldn’t ask for anything better.”

MORE: Chase Elliott: ‘We’re making history’

Elliott, the 2020 Cup Series champion and driver of the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, strongly endorsed Monday’s announcement. Although he won the title in an elimination-style format, the 21-time Cup Series winner favors a format that rewards consistency week in and week out — exactly what The Chase demands. Elliott is fairly selective when to offer an opinion, often sticking to the belief that if it doesn’t make him faster on Sundays, he has no use for it. The championship format, however, was a matter too important for him to sit on the sidelines without offering input that could better the sport in the long term.

“I’m a fan, and that’s all I’ve really ever known, to be honest,” said Elliott, the eight-time reigning most popular driver and son of 1988 champion Bill Elliott. “So when I don’t say anything, it’s not because I don’t care. It’s just sometimes, you feel like that you can be spinning your wheels some days, and it’s a distraction of me doing whatever job that it is I’m looking at right now. But certainly from my perspective on this, this is something I can genuinely get behind and support and speak up about and me not be sitting here lying to you while I’m doing it.

“Proud of the change. Proud of everybody being able to come together. There’s a lot of folks that deserve a lot of credit for this, so let’s celebrate it because I think this is a good step for us. And I think there’ll be some extremely exciting moments throughout the year, and whoever ends up coming out on top, let’s celebrate who won a little more and complain a little less.”

Elliott’s belief in the system illustrates one of Earnhardt Jr.’s core priorities when it came to finding the right solution as NASCAR looked to pivot from its one-race title format.

“I said this in the first meeting in Daytona — the one thing that I think we need to prioritize is, how do we get this to really matter to the driver?” Earnhardt said. “This is the person that’s trying to win the championship. It’s important for fans, important for broadcasters. It’s important to me that we like it, right? But who is it mostly important to, and who values the overall outcome the most? That’s the driver. How do we get the driver to think this is the greatest way to do it? And how do we get that championship trophy and that accomplishment to be the most important thing they’ll ever do in their life in a professional sense? If we get that, the fans, the broadcaster, the media, everybody else follows, right? Everything else goes with it.”

Enthusiasm is plentiful heading into NASCAR’s next chapter. With that comes the close of another, with the elimination-style championship hunt now over after a 12-year run. The lessons learned from that decade-plus era, O’Donnell said, have helped shape the sport’s future.

“I think the legacy [of the elimination format] is certainly it taught us a lot, certainly changed how we even look at racing and winning,” O’Donnell told NASCAR.com. “It changed the dialogue within the industry of that ‘great points day,’ but I think it got us to where we are today, which is a great thing also. We rewarded legitimate champions under all those seasons that everyone knew the rules and went after it, but it also helped us get back to, I think, what feels right for the sport going forward, which is The Chase format, 26 and 10. So its legacy will be something that helped us continue to focus on our drivers, continue to focus on storylines and continue to focus on winning and how important that is to create not only champions but future stars in the sport.”

Kaulig Racing is kicking off its Free Agent Driver Program in style in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series by naming three-time Cup Series champion Tony Stewart as the first driver in the No. 25 Ram Trucks entry for the Feb. 13 season opener at Daytona International Speedway.

The announcement was made on Tuesday and came as season preparations were well underway for Kaulig Racing, which is partnering with RAM to field five Truck Series entries this season. Daniel Dye (No. 10), Brenden “Butterbean” Queen (No. 12) and Justin Haley (No. 16) are driving full-time for the team, with a fourth truck (the No. 25) going to a rotation of free-agent drivers like Stewart and the fifth (No. 14) being driven by the winner of the “Race for the Seat” reality TV series.

RELATED: 2026 Craftsman Truck Series schedule

The Hall of Famer Stewart hasn’t driven in a NASCAR national series race since 2016 in the Cup Series with Stewart-Haas Racing. His participation comes on the heels of NASCAR revealing that The Chase championship format is back, a system in which Stewart won two of his three championships.

“I’ve raced just about everything with four wheels at Daytona, but never a truck. So when a seat in the new Ram was offered up for their first race back in NASCAR, I didn’t hesitate,” Stewart said in a team release. “Ram’s Free Agent program is another great way for me to stay sharp and have a little fun.”

Stewart has started six times in the Truck Series across five seasons from 1996-2005 and won twice, in 2002 and 2003 at Richmond Raceway, in the No. 33 Chevrolet for Andy Petree Racing. Daytona has been home to plenty of success for Stewart, including four points-paying Cup wins, seven O’Reilly Auto Parts Series victories, three exhibition Clash wins and three Duel at Daytona qualifying races for the Daytona 500.

Kaulig’s entrance to the Truck Series delivers Ram back to the series for the first time in over a decade, last winning with Ryan Blaney in 2012. To return with Stewart, who won the 2025 Top Fuel regular-season championship driving for Dodge in NHRA drag racing, Ram brings back a familiar winner to NASCAR competition to start 2026 with a splash.

“We’re not just returning to the track; we’re rewriting the playbook,” Tim Kuniskis, Head of American Brands, SRT Performance, NA Marketing and Retail Strategy at Stellantis, said in a release. “Bringing Tony in as the first Free Agent will generate a crazy amount of excitement, which is exactly why we created the program — allowing fans to watch an all-time favorite driver get back into the seat, but this time, it’s a Ram truck. This is about honoring a legacy. Tony represents grit, determination, and the spirit of racing — pure adrenaline for the fans.”

The Truck Series gets underway this season with the Fresh From Florida 250 at 7:30 p.m. ET on Friday, Feb. 13 at Daytona International Speedway (FS1, NASCAR Racing Network Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).