COLUMBUS, Ohio. (Jan. 7, 2026) — Justice, the leading fashion and lifestyle brand for tween girls, is excited to announce its newest collaboration with NASCAR, bringing the high-energy world of motorsports to tween fashion through an exclusive, sport-inspired apparel collection.

This dynamic partnership blends Justice’s vibrant, trend-driven aesthetic with NASCAR’s iconic racing legacy, resulting in a bold collection that celebrates fandom, self-expression and confidence. Designed for tween girls, the NASCAR x Justice collection delivers playful graphics, sporty silhouettes, and nostalgic racing details — all reimagined in a way that feels fun, wearable, and full of personality.

Launching at the start of the new year, the collection features standout hero pieces, including the NASCAR x Justice Bomber Jacket, a statement layering piece with racing-inspired patches and bold color blocking, Flare Denim with a retro edge, a White Oversized Graphic Tee featuring iconic NASCAR graphics and a cozy Heather Fleece Hoodie and Jogger set designed for all-day comfort. Each style is designed for easy mix-and-match dressing, taking tweens from school days to weekend adventures with confidence and ease.

The collection includes over 33 styles, with prices starting at $7, making it accessible for everyday wear and gifting.

“At NASCAR, we’re focused on creating meaningful connections with the next generation of fans,” said Megan Malayter, vice president of licensing and consumer products at NASCAR. “This collaboration with Justice allows us to engage girls and families in a fun, authentic way that brings together fashion, sport and community.”

As part of the launch, Justice has partnered with seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson and his family to bring the collection to life in a meaningful, family-forward way. Johnson’s daughters serve as the faces of the NASCAR x Justice collection, modeling the styles and helping highlight the joyful, inclusive spirit behind the collaboration. The partnership will come to life through social content and authentic family storytelling tied to one of NASCAR’s most iconic racing events.

“The NASCAR x Justice collection encourages tweens to embrace the confidence that comes with celebrating what they love, while offering guardians accessible, age-appropriate styles they can feel good about,” said Elizabeth McCusker, vice president of marketing for Justice. “This collaboration reflects the growing influence of fandom-driven fashion and the exciting way iconic brands can connect across generations.”

The collection officially launched on Jan. 4, 2026, alongside a national sweepstakes celebrating the partnership. Fans have the opportunity to win a trip to the 2026 Daytona 500, including travel, accommodations and access to unforgettable race-week experiences. The sweepstakes reinforces Justice’s mission to create meaningful, memory-making moments for girls and families, both on and off the track.

Justice will also host an immersive branded activation at the Daytona 500, taking place Feb. 12–15, allowing fans to experience the collection up close in a dynamic, real-world setting. The on-site experience will feature interactive, family-friendly elements, styling moments and exclusive photo opportunities designed with young fans and families in mind.

NASCAR x Justice styles are available at Walmart stores nationwide and online at Walmart.com, with expanded in-store and digital availability rolling out in the weeks following launch.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Jan. 6, 2026) — NASCAR today announced that Steve Phelps has made the personal decision to step away from the company and his role as Commissioner of America’s top motorsport. Phelps, who joined NASCAR in 2005, will transition out of the company by the end of the month, leaving a legacy of leadership and a strategic vision that delivered significant growth and lasting innovation, championed equity and social justice initiatives and created industry-wide opportunities for all stakeholders.

“As a lifelong race fan, it gives me immense pride to have served as NASCAR’s first Commissioner and to lead our great sport through so many incredible challenges, opportunities and firsts over my 20 years,” said Steve Phelps. “Our sport is built on the passion of our fans, the dedication of our teams and partners and the commitment of our wonderful employees. It has been an honor to help synthesize the enthusiasm of long-standing NASCAR stakeholders with that of new entrants to our ecosystem, such as media partners, auto manufacturers, track operators and incredible racing talent. As I embark on new pursuits in sports and other industries, I want to thank the many colleagues, friends and especially the fans that have played such an important and motivational role in my career. Words cannot fully convey the deep appreciation I have for this life-changing experience, for the trust of the France family and for having a place in NASCAR’s amazing history.”

Under Phelps’s leadership, the sport has transformed its annual schedule with extraordinary new events and ‘bucket list’ fan experiences, reshaped its strategic vision, expanded its international footprint, secured long-term media rights and charter agreements and assembled a world-class leadership team focused on building the future of stock car racing with fan experience at its core. Among his most important priorities has been welcoming all fans into NASCAR. His other achievements include the integration of NASCAR’s landmark merger with ISC, launching the record-setting Next Gen race car in 2022 — only the seventh new vehicle in the sport’s history — and many other accomplishments that position the sport for continued success.

“Steve will forever be remembered as one of NASCAR’s most impactful leaders,” said NASCAR Chairman and CEO, Jim France. “For decades, he has worked tirelessly to thrill fans, support teams, and execute a vision for the sport that has treated us all to some of the greatest moments in our nearly 80-year history. It’s been an honor to work alongside him in achieving the impossible, like being the first sport to return during Covid, or in delivering the unimaginable by launching new races in the LA Memorial Coliseum and NASCAR’s first-ever street race in downtown Chicago. Steve leaves NASCAR with a transformative legacy of innovation and collaboration with an unrelenting growth mindset.”

“Over his two decades at NASCAR, Steve has balanced strong leadership and a consistent pursuit of excellence with a sincere commitment to our fans,” said NASCAR Executive Vice Chair, Lesa France Kennedy. “He has helped to bring fans some of the best, most unforgettable moments in our history, and most importantly, he’s laid an incredible foundation for continued growth and success for the entire sport. A true consensus builder and passionate advocate, we thank Steve for bringing his intelligence, integrity and love of racing to this sport each and every day. While his career may take him elsewhere, he’ll always have a place in our NASCAR family.”

NASCAR has not announced any additional leadership or personnel changes as Phelps’s departure comes during a time of stability with an exceptional leadership team in place that ensures the continuity of NASCAR’s strategic vision and critical execution. There are no immediate plans to replace the Commissioner role or to seek outside leadership, as the administration of his responsibilities will be delegated internally through NASCAR’s President and executive leadership team.

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

KAULIG RACING

Manufacturer: Chevrolet
Engine: ECR Engines
Driver-crew chief pairings: Ty Dillon-Andrew Dickeson (No. 10); AJ Allmendinger-Trent Owens (No. 16)

Team outlook: A building year for Kaulig Racing in 2025 has led to measured optimism for the two-team outfit based in Welcome, North Carolina. Both Dillon and Allmendinger returned to full-time Cup Series racing after completing part-time schedules in 2024, with both delivering highlights for the organization as Allmendinger earned the team its first oval-track pole position and Dillon made a deep Cinderella run in the inaugural In-Season Challenge. Momentum from last year should carry the team into better futures ahead in 2026.

TY DILLON, NO. 10 CHEVROLET

Experience: 7 full-time seasons in NASCAR Cup Series; 281 starts
2025 stats: 33rd in final Cup Series standings; 0 wins, 0 top fives, 1 top 10, 0 poles, 19 laps led

Driver outlook: Ty Dillon returns to the No. 10 Chevrolet this season, marking the first time he’s had consecutive seasons with a team since a four-year tenure with Germain Racing and its No. 13 Chevrolet from 2017 through 2020. That stability offers Dillon and crew chief Andrew Dickeson time to expand on their 2025 learnings and build toward more consistent results in 2026. In all, the No. 10 car earned 13 top-20 finishes in 2025, leaving plenty of room for improvement in the new year.

RELATED: Ty Dillon driver page

AJ ALLMENDINGER, NO. 16 CHEVROLET

Experience: 10 full-time seasons in NASCAR Cup Series; 482 starts
2025 stats: 26th in final Cup Series standings; 0 wins, 2 top fives, 7 top 10s, 1 pole, 42 laps led

Driver outlook: In 2025, AJ Allmendinger reminded us why he should never be overlooked, earning his first pole position in 10 years by posting the fastest lap in September’s qualifying session at Bristol Motor Speedway and his first pole on an oval since April 2012 at Kansas Speedway. The veteran racer remains as strong a contender on road courses as ever but just as sneaky at intermediate ovals like Charlotte Motor Speedway, Darlington Raceway and Homestead-Miami Speedway, where he scored finishes of fourth, fifth and seventh, respectively, last season. Another year with crew chief Trent Owens and an updated notebook should bode well for Allmendinger in 2026.

MORE: AJ Allmendinger driver page

Ty Dillon and AJ Allmendinger race at Daytona for Kaulig Racing.
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

Legacy Motor Club announced Monday that Justin Alexander will serve as crew chief for the No. 43 Toyota and driver Erik Jones in the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series season.

Alexander takes the place of Ben Beshore, who moves to a new role as the organization’s director of race engineering.

RELATED: 2026 Cup Series schedule | On the move: Changes for 2026

Alexander is a five-time winner in the Cup Series, scoring each of those victories while paired with Austin Dillon and the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing team. That list includes a triumph in the 2018 Daytona 500 and his first win with Dillon in another crown jewel, the Coca-Cola 600 a year before.

Next season, Alexander will join forces with Jones, who ended up 24th in the final Cup Series standings last year — a four-spot improvement from 2024.

“We’re continuing to evolve and refine every part of our race program, and Justin is a tremendous addition to our crew chief lineup,” said Legacy M.C. owner Jimmie Johnson, a seven-time Cup Series champion. “His experience, communication style, and leadership align perfectly with the direction we’re headed. We appreciate Ben’s hard work and look forward to his continued contributions as he transitions into his new role.”

MORE: Erik Jones’ 2025 season in review

Said Cal Wells III, Legacy Motor Club CEO: “Justin is a proven race winner, and we believe there’s the potential for a strong chemistry with Erik (Jones). We’ll also have Ben raising all ships with the performance engineering group. With all these changes, we’re hoping to continue the growth we saw in 2025.”

The organization also announced a personnel shift in its executive leadership, moving Scott Roggenbauer from Chief Financial Officer to Chief Operating Officer.

KWINANA BEACH, Western Australia — Kyle Larson has no idea how winning a second NASCAR Cup Series championship will affect his standing among his peers.

“I haven’t been back in the NASCAR garage,” Larson said before hot laps and qualifying on Dec. 29, the second preliminary night of High Limit International racing at the Perth Motorplex, where he was defending his 2024 win in Australia’s richest sprint car race.

“Once you win the championship, everybody kind of disappears and does their own thing, so you really don’t notice it until you get back into the garage … It’s a big deal, but you really don’t see the respect from it that much until you get back to Daytona or I guess the Clash at Bowman Gray (Feb. 1).”

RELATED: 2026 Cup Series schedule | Buy tickets

Larson won his second Cup title in November at Phoenix Raceway, becoming only the third full-time active driver in the series to hold more than one championship in NASCAR’s top division. Joey Logano leads with three titles, and Kyle Busch has two.

But make no mistake. Though his level of recognition may be delayed in the Cup garage, Larson already is an international superstar whose global impact has been growing exponentially.

Tony Clarke, an 80-year-old from Adelaide in South Australia, watched the broadcast of last year’s High Limit Racing event in Perth last year. Subsequently, he followed some of Larson’s exploits in Cup racing and in the Indianapolis 500.

Larson’s winning performance in the High Limits feature motivated Clarke to drive 1,600 miles across the continent through barren land where gas stations are 350 miles apart and cellular phone service is sketchy at best.

The trip took 28 hours and “two sleeps” in the car, as Clarke put it.

“I want to see Kyle Larson,” he said.

Told of Clarke’s journey, Larson shook his head in wonderment.

“Having the success I’ve been able to fortunately have in NASCAR the past five seasons or whatever has helped all of this,” Larson said. “I think it’s all helped translate to growing racing — NASCAR, sprint cars, even the dirt late model stuff when I was in that.

“I think racing’s just in a healthy spot right now. So, yes, it’s pretty neat to have fans travel from very far distances, within this country and even outside the country, to come watch myself race but get a chance to see others they may not have heard about yet.”

Wherever Larson goes, his reputation precedes him. Often called a “generational talent,” his success in a wide array of racing machines has defined his career.

The 2025 season was emblematic. Larson started the year by winning a Golden Driller Trophy in the Tulsa Shootout for micro sprints and followed that with his third title in the Chili Bowl Nationals for midget race cars.

Driving the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, Larson won three Cup Series races and claimed the title in November by holding off Denny Hamlin after a late restart and finishing third behind Ryan Blaney and Brad Keselowski.

Larson capped the 2025 campaign with his second straight victory in the High Limit International main event in Perth, pocketing $110,000 in Australian dollars for the sprint car win.

That’s not to say that 2025 wasn’t without its disappointments. Larson’s second attempt at the Indianapolis 500/Coca-Cola 600 double ended badly and likely took its toll on the usually resilient driver.

MORE: Larson through the years, career highlights

“You think about the double, the month of May, the 600,” Hendrick Motorsports vice chairman Jeff Gordon said after the championship race at Phoenix. “It’s the first time I saw his confidence brought down a notch. I think it was a humbling experience.”

Throughout the season, Larson insisted that there was no hangover from the double attempt. In retrospect, he acknowledged there might have been.

“I would say ‘No,’ but then it’s hard to argue with the timing of all that,” said Larson, who didn’t win a Cup Series race after taking the checkered flag at Kansas Speedway on May 11. “I had a great season going to that point, then had a couple of bad weeks at Indy and went into the 600, and then all my racing kind of took a dip — Cup racing, sprint car racing, all that.

“You could argue that, OK, our cars took a dip in performance as well, but still … I guess maybe it did, but it was just bad timing — I don’t know. It did seem to all kind of come crashing down for a couple of months, but you’ve got to stick with the process and stay confident in yourself, your team and the people around you. I think that’s what makes the championship at the end of the year extremely meaningful.”

Editor’s note: This is the last in a series in which we review the top 30 drivers in the NASCAR Cup Series in reverse order of the 2025 final standings.

Driver: Kyle Larson, No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Crew chief: Cliff Daniels
Final 2025 ranking: 1st
Key stats: 3 wins, 15 top fives, 22 top 10s, 1,106 laps led

How 2025 ended: In the best possible way, hoisting the Bill France Cup at season’s end. Larson entered the ranks of multi-time Cup Series champions with his second title, vaulting past Denny Hamlin on the final round of pit stops in the Phoenix Raceway finale and holding on in overtime for a third-place result — best among the Championship 4 field. He became the 18th driver in NASCAR history with more than one Cup Series championship, and the third to score more than one for Hendrick Motorsports, joining seven-time champ Jimmie Johnson and four-time title winner Jeff Gordon.

Best race: Two max-points days stand out, but Larson’s springtime victory at Bristol Motor Speedway was a masterclass performance that provided the No. 5 team with a needed lift. Larson led 411 of the 500 laps, sweeping both stages along the way. The triumph followed another Bristol romp a day earlier in the Xfinity Series, where he led 276 of the 300 laps from the pole, but it also prompted a heartfelt dedication just days after the loss of longtime Hendrick Motorsports PR representative Jon Edwards.

RELATED: 2026 Cup Series schedule | Kyle Larson driver page

Other season highlights: Larson had similar strength on display at Kansas Speedway in May, when he logged a stage-sweeping victory to repeat in the Advent Health 400. He started from the pole position and led 221 of the 267 laps, vaulting into the Cup Series points lead for the first time in 2025. Larson’s day marked another historic distinction — the most laps led by any driver in a 400-mile race on a 1.5-mile track in series history.

Stat to know: Larson added to Hendrick Motorsports’ rich history, securing its record 15th Cup Series championship one year after the organization celebrated its 40th anniversary season. He also became the third driver to win multiple titles in the elimination-style playoff format, joining three-time champion Joey Logano and twice-champ Kyle Busch.

Quotable: “I don’t think any of us foresaw us getting a second championship in the fashion that we did today. That probably makes it seem even different. Nonetheless, we’re on the list two times. That’s something to be proud of. As far as for legacy, I really don’t put a whole lot of thought into that yet. Like I’ve mentioned many times before, I think it’s really hard to think about that sort of thing right now as you’re still competing and plan to compete for quite a while. We’re still going to try and go out there and win more races. The legacy will kind of take care of itself as we approach that.” — Larson, in the hours after clinching the championship in Phoenix.

Looking ahead: Expect few changes to the core of the No. 5 team, led by Larson and the masterful Cliff Daniels atop the pit box. The 33-year-old driver’s contract with Hendrick Motorsports is up after the 2026 season, so locking up his services will be a priority for the organization. In terms of the on-track side, Larson has gone 24 races without a Cup Series win — a confounding eternity for a driver of his caliber. However, if Larson ends up in title contention again next year, he’ll enter the season finale at new host track, Homestead-Miami Speedway, as the defending race and series champion.

With the 2025 NASCAR campaign officially in the books, review season is officially here. Through the end of the calendar year, NASCAR.com will complete a deep dive of every NASCAR Cup Series driver who finished first through 30th in the driver standings, in addition to roundups for the Xfinity Series and Craftsman Truck Series seasons.

RELATED: By the Numbers: 2025 Cup Series season | By the Numbers: 2025 Xfinity, Truck Series season

Season reviews are being rolled out in reverse order, beginning with 30th place on Nov. 17 and concluding with 2025 Cup Series champion Kyle Larson on Jan. 2. Track each review here:

Nov. 17: Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
Nov. 18: Daniel Suárez
Nov. 19: Zane Smith
Nov. 20: Todd Gilliland
Nov. 21: AJ Allmendinger
Nov. 24: John Hunter Nemechek
Nov. 25: Erik Jones
Nov. 26: Carson Hocevar
Nov. 29:
Michael McDowell
Nov. 30:
Kyle Busch
Dec. 1:
Brad Keselowski
Dec. 2:
Ty Gibbs
Dec. 3: Ryan Preece
Dec. 4:
Chris Buescher
Dec. 5:
Josh Berry
Dec. 6: Xfinity Series roundup
Dec. 8: Austin Dillon
Dec. 9: Austin Cindric
Dec. 10: Alex Bowman
Dec. 11: Shane van Gisbergen
Dec. 12: Bubba Wallace
Dec. 13: Craftsman Truck Series roundup
Dec. 15: Ross Chastain
Dec. 16: Tyler Reddick
Dec. 17:
Chase Elliott
Dec. 18:
Joey Logano
Dec. 22:
Ryan Blaney
Dec. 23:
Christopher Bell
Dec. 26: William Byron
Dec. 29:
Chase Briscoe
Jan. 2: Kyle Larson

MORE: 2026 Cup Series schedule | Buy tickets