CHARLOTTE, N.C. – On a black-tie and ballgown evening in downtown Charlotte on Friday evening, NASCAR honored its best from the gritty grassroots to the sport’s burgeoning stars – drivers, their teams and owners walking the red carpet in the Charlotte Convention Center.

As the evening’s co-host Alex Alexander said before the first trophies were bestowed, “the soul of NASCAR is alive and well.”

The evening started by recognizing the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series champions from across the country, including Brendon Fries – a three-time champion who won the West Region, Idaho State and Meridian Speedway titles.

The Wendell Scott Trailblazer Award, named for the late NASCAR Hall of Famer who became the first black driver to win a premier-series race, was given to two-time All-American Speedway champion and California state champion Kenna Mitchell, who accepted the prestigious trophy saying, “I hope to inspire the next generation of racers.”

Minnesota’s Jacob Goede, a 10-race winner this season, won his second NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series national championship and was presented the trophy by NASCAR Cup Series driver John Hunter Nemechek and then received the champion’s ring from Ben Kennedy, NASCAR’s Executive Vice President and Chief Venue and Racing Innovations Officer.

RELATED: NASCAR Regional Power Rankings | Inside Goede’s journey

One of the highlights of the night included recognizing the standouts from NASCAR’s hugely popular international series, which included two-time Formula One championship runner-up and 11-race winner Rubens Barrichello, who at the age of 53 claimed the NASCAR Brasil Series title.

“Of course it’s always hard to win, but to reconfirm is even harder,” said Italian Vittorio Ghirelli, who claimed his second consecutive NASCAR Euro Series championship.

“We delivered when it counted and very happy for the result and grateful to be with this team. … it’s a long travel, but it is an honor to come here to Charlotte.”

One of the night’s highlights was honoring 22-year-old Pennsylvanian Austin Beers, who became the youngest champion in the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour edging four-time series champion Justin Bonsignore in a title race decided in the season finale.

“To have it all come down to Martinsville (Va.) Speedway, one last race against Justin Bonsignore, someone of that caliber and to come out on top was pretty incredible,” Beers said. “We were very consistent all year. Every race we finished top 10 and 12 of 16 we were top five, so just very consistent and smart with strategy.”

One of Beers’ inspirations – RFK Racing NASCAR Cup Series driver Ryan Preece joined NASCAR President Steve O’Donnell in presenting the young driver with his trophy on stage. “It’s fun coming here, but a lot more fun when you are the champion,” Beers said.

The evening finished with presentations to the ARCA Menards regional and national series standouts. Trevor Huddleston won the ARCA Menards Series West title with Robbie Kennealy claiming the ARCA Menards Series West Bounty Rookie of the Year trophy.

Austin Vaughn was the ARCA Menards Series East Bounty Rookie of the Year with 16-year-old Isaac Kitzmiller taking the East Series title after a season he earned top-10 finishes in every single race.

“This is awesome and really shows all the hard work I’ve put into my career, all the running, training and studying, everything like that,” said Kitzmiller, an 11th-grade high school student from West Virginia.

Before honoring the ARCA Menards Series champions, NASCAR recognized Bill Venturini and Venturini Motorsports for their contributions to the series, wishing them well on their retirement.

MORE: Venturini’s driver-roster legacy

The room gave a strong round of applause to the ARCA Menards Series 2025 Bounty Rookie of the Year Isabella Robusto, who earned nine top-five and 14 top-10 finishes on the 20-race season with a best showing of third place at both Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway and the Dover (Del.) Motor Speedway one-miler.

“We definitely had our ups and downs this year so to come out of it with Rookie of the Year means a lot, just missed out on third in the championship, but we definitely had our good races,” Robusto said.

“I’m super excited and we’ll be announcing [2026 plans] in a couple weeks,” the 21-year-old South Carolinian added with a smile. “At the end of the day I’m just trying to be the best driver that I can and you always want to be there for the championship, but rookie of the year still means a lot and shows we can run up front and finish races and do what we needed to do. It means a lot but at the end of the day in the back of your mind, you want to be the champion and be first.”

The night concluded with recognition – and a hearty round of applause – for a huge fan favorite, ARCA Menards Series champion Brenden Queen, who not only celebrated his first major series title Friday night but also his 28th birthday. He claimed a series-best eight victories and scored an amazing 17 top-five finishes in the 20-race season.

That success certainly paid off this season, earning Queen five NASCAR Xfinity Series starts and a pair of NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race opportunities. Next year he will drive a RAM truck for Kaulig Racing fulltime in the Craftsman Truck Series.

“It’s crazy. I’m just a late model guy that was a backyard racer,” Queen said while posing with his series championship trophy. “To know that my name has gotten to that part of the sport is pretty special really, just a lot to be thankful for.

“I’ve tried really hard to soak in the moment. This week I’ve been trying really hard to just enjoy the moment. Tonight goes by so fast and then we’re going to Daytona.

“The racer in me is already focused on ‘the next one,’ but you have to balance it and have the offseason and be healthy, don’t let it consume you. I’m excited about the future but nice to have a night to reflect on the memories made with these guys,” Queen said of his team. “Pretty cool. Been through so many ups and downs and it makes you appreciate these moments.”

Editor’s note: This is the fifth 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: AJ Allmendinger, No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet
Crew chief: 
Trent Owens
Final 2025 ranking:
26th
Key stats: 
0 wins, 2 top fives, 7 top 10s, 42 laps led

How 2025 ended: Although Allmendinger did not qualify for the 2025 playoffs, the 43-year-old Californian scored his first pole position in 10 years, turning in the fastest lap at the Bristol Motor Speedway night race, where he led 24 laps – the most of any race this season. He scored two of his seven top 10s in that final 10-race stretch, but also suffered four DNFs, dropping him to 26th in the final standings.

Best race: Although it’s more likely for the renowned road course racer to earn a victory on that style of track, Allmendinger’s best statistical day of the 2025 season instead came on the traditionally tough Bristol short track. He claimed his fifth career pole position and first on an oval since Kansas in 2012. And the veteran made good on that promising start, leading the opening 23 laps of the race before being collected in a mid-race crash and ultimately retiring with a steering problem with 100 laps remaining.

RELATED: 2026 Cup Series schedule | AJ Allmendinger driver page

Other season highlights: Allmendinger proved again what a force he was on the road courses, where he has shone throughout his decorated career, collecting top 10 finishes at the Chicago Street Course and later at the Charlotte Roval. Although he was winless in his first full-time season back in the Cup Series after running for the Xfinity Series championship last year, Allmendinger did earn top-fives in crown jewels at Charlotte and again at one of the most notoriously tough ovals, Darlington Raceway.

Stat to know: Allmendinger’s seven top 10 finishes were tied with the most he’s had in his last seven seasons in the Cup Series, with the exception of 2022 (eight), and his 16.8 average starting position was his best in that statistical category since 2012 (16.3).

Quotable: “The only thing that’s been tough this year is some of the races that we’ve had a lot of speed at, and a lot of teams can say this I’m sure, but the ones that we’ve been really quick at, we’ve had some bad things happen really out of our control. So, sometimes you don’t get those results and it’s hard to go back to the shop and smile about it and know that you’re making progress.

“But at the end of the day, we’ve made a lot of progress over the last two years of me driving the Cup car of the speed that we got. Matt Kaulig has put a lot more resources into it. Obviously, (CEO) Chris (Rice) has got a lot of work on his plate between the Xfinity side of it and the Cup side of it. With (Chief Business Officer) Ty (Norris) here and then Mike Cook being here as our competition director. So, yeah, we’re making progress.” – said Allmendinger, reflecting on the development of Kaulig throughout the season.

Looking ahead: Though a smaller operation compared to many other teams on the grid, the Kaulig Racing team has proven itself year-over-year as a legitimate threat to win races, and with a veteran such as Allmendinger behind the wheel, it makes a true run at qualifying for the playoffs a viable goal. In 2026, the team is shifting its focus somewhat and will be fielding five RAM entries in the Craftsman Truck Series. That’s in addition to cars for Allmendinger and a yet-to-be-confirmed second driver in the Cup Series, where the team has announced going forward, it will be ending its technical alliance with Richard Childress Racing, although still using ECR engines.

John Force, likely the greatest drag racer in history and certainly the most gargantuan personality ever to grace the National Hot Rod Association, never raced in NASCAR.

But he has dabbled enough to make us wonder what the sport would have looked like if he had.

A frequent and curious presence at Cup races over the years (“the only time I turn left is when my car’s on fire,” he quipped before the 2010 finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway), the legendary Force has mused about sponsor pitches to add a NASCAR team to his burgeoning racing empire. He playfully battled Cup stars in exhibition match races (often at crossover corporate events that were a byproduct of Force’s business portfolio that bursts with personal and team endorsements).

He even attended Buck Baker’s driving school in 1993 at Rockingham Speedway, quickly acclimating to the vastly different skillset.

“(Baker) said I ran quick enough to qualify at Daytona,” Force once recalled before pausing a beat in his trademark self-deprecating humor. “He probably just told me that.”

It was Force who was playing nice. He attended the school partly as amends for an infamous vow during a NASCAR-NHRA celebrity softball game.

“I tell them I wouldn’t drive a tin can if they gave me one, and that’s a fact,” Force said.

It sure feels as if he should have, though — and not just because of the respect he gained for stock cars as the Southern California native mingled with his counterparts from the South.

Force might have been the most prototypical NASCAR driver who somehow never turned a lap in NASCAR.

Rick Hendrick and John Force poses for a photo
Photos courtesy of NHRA / National Dragster Archive

If you took the archetype from every iconic champion in Cup Series history and melded them into a singularly transcendent superstar with boundless charm and blue-collar appeal, you’d have John Force.

His larger-than-life persona was like rolling several NASCAR Hall of Famers into a one-in-a-trillion talent.

The record-breaking success and crowd-pleasing sway of Richard Petty? Force might rank second only to “The King” in signing autographs, and the 16-time Funny Car champion more than doubled Petty’s title total (with 157 victories to boot).

The plainspoken swagger of Dale Earnhardt? His goofy style might have been slightly different from “The Intimidator,” but Force made a habit of boldly working over his rivals with brash mind games.

The colorful and controversial trash-talking of Darrell Waltrip? Force made a career of derailing interviews with bizarrely hilarious segues into cultural observations, current events and politics that left sportswriters in stitches and his PR handlers in piles of flop sweat from trying to manage the ramblings of a locomotive.

In his raspy staccato, Force paints the world in the same way he drives — careening on the edge at 300 mph.

One of NASCAR’s greatest showmen was so impressed by Force’s flair and gumption, Bruton Smith christened the largest spectator viewing area of his palatial zMax Dragway after him. “Bruton put my name on the grandstands and never paid me,” Force deadpanned in response.

The late Smith just laughed and rolled with it during a 2011 event at his Concord, North Carolina, track. Amid a litany of NASCAR luminaries, Force was the captivating star of the show who won over a crowd that included Greg Biffle and Matt Kenseth.

“John’s one of us now,” Smith said, later adding there was “no way” that the NASCAR establishment could resist Force’s infectiously energetic evangelism for racing.

There’s been much rumination lately about the legacy of Force, who announced his retirement last week in a typically off-the-cuff manner. (He dropped the bombshell during a media event without warning much of his team.)

His racing career will end at 76 years old, and nearly 18 months after a traumatic brain injury sustained in a crash at Virginia Motorsports Park that left him hospitalized for weeks.

John Force's car sends smoke into the air
Photos courtesy of NHRA / National Dragster Archive

Last weekend’s NHRA season finale was canceled because of monsoon conditions, but the pits in Pomona, California, still roared with nonstop devotionals to a classic old-school character whose everyman traits were a touchstone. Just like Harry Gant won four consecutive Cup races on Sundays after once making a living out of roofing houses on weekdays, Force was believable as the superstar who just as easily could have been driving long-haul 18-wheelers.

Funny Car champion Ron Capps marveled at the natural connection to NHRA fans.

“They sat back with a beer on TV, watched John Force, and his interviews made them feel like they could just go hang out with him,” Capps told FoxSports.com. “He was just an old truck driver, right?”

Yet Force also is irrepressibly unique.

“He’s always the life of the party,” Kenseth once said. “I don’t know if there’s another John Force in the universe.”

NASCAR never got the one-of-a-kind John Force … but with any luck, maybe it’ll get someone who knows how to marry beguiling starpower with sublime ability.

This season’s deliberations over a potential new championship format have spurred discussions about how to build interest in the next wave of young winners.

Perhaps it’s important to remember some words of wisdom from Force.

“Some say I’m the voice of NHRA,” he once said. “Some say I’m a big mouth.

“Maybe I am, but that’s how we preach the gospel.”

Amen — for any auto racing series.

Editor’s note: This is the fourth 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: Todd Gilliland, No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford
Crew chief: Chris Lawson
Final 2025 ranking: 27th
Key stats: 0 wins, 1 top five, 5 top 10s, 23 laps led

How 2025 ended: Gilliland had the most top 10s (five) in a single season of his four-year Cup career. While he still has not won a Cup race or qualified for the playoffs, he had a runner-up finish in the fall playoff race at Talladega Superspeedway and followed that up with a ninth-place run at Martinsville Speedway.

Best race: Gilliland’s best finish was his runner-up showing in the Talladega fall race, finishing a close 0.145 seconds behind race winner Chase Briscoe. Gilliland led 11 laps, just under half the number of laps he led for the entire season (23).

RELATED: 2026 Cup Series schedule | Todd Gilliland driver page

Other season highlights: Switched from his old No. 38 Ford to the No. 34 Ford, previously the car number of veteran driver Michael McDowell, who left after the 2024 season to race in 2025 for Spire Motorsports. Not known as the most prolific qualifier, Gilliland still had two strong starting positions this season: fifth (EchoPark Speedway near Atlanta, spring) and seventh (Mexico City).

Stat to know: Gilliland finished all but two races in the 36-race schedule, the fewest DNFs he’s had in a season in his Cup career. With 144 starts, Gilliland is the “elder statesman” in Cup for Front Row Motorsports teammates, followed by Noah Gragson (111 starts) and Zane Smith (81 starts).

Quotable: “The beginning of the year, we fired off really strong. We had good runs at Daytona, COTA, Atlanta, all those places, and we were doing OK. But it seemed like once we got to May, June, we just kind of hit a slump. We got damage at Pocono, got in an early wreck at Chicago, and it was like six weeks in a row where we just could not put anything together and had a lot of really bad finishes, which really buried us, and it was just really hard to get momentum going back again.” — Todd Gilliland on the ups and downs this season.

Looking ahead: Gilliland should be able to finally crack the top 20 in the final season standings in 2026. He could also come close again to earning his first career Cup win.

CARVER, Minn. — The autumn and winter months in the Minneapolis suburbs produce short, cold days and long, colder nights. This is when Jacob Goede hibernates.

That is, according to his wife, Erica, and three daughters, Reese, Johanna and Audrey. They’re the ones who watch him fall asleep on the family room couch, tablet in hand and television tuned to something involving race cars, seemingly every offseason evening.

He doesn’t mind when the girls give him flak or laugh when the tablet falls on his chest. The snoozing is necessary after the grueling spring and summer months, when the days are longer and warmer; when Goede spends his evenings not on the couch, but in the detached garage adjacent to the family’s house.

In 2025, Goede’s efforts in that modest race shop translated to a NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division I national championship, his second such title after winning his first in 2019. He scored 10 victories, 26 top fives and 29 top 10s in 32 late model feature races at LaCrosse Fairgrounds Speedway and Dells Raceway Park in Wisconsin, plus his home track of Elko Speedway in Minnesota.

Jacob is thankful for Erica, a former racer herself who understands the grind a national title chase requires. Reese, Johanna and Audrey get it, too; they all race quarter midgets at Little Elko Speedway on Sundays. The family that makes fun of his winter rest is also the support beam that gets him through his summer … whatever the opposite of rest is.

From mid-April through late September, Jacob Goede consumed himself with his national championship pursuit. It’s why he raced full-time at LaCrosse despite that venue being a three-hour drive from home. Car counts at LaCrosse are strong, and the size of the track allows drivers more room to maneuver when needed. More travel, but also more opportunity for points.

Goede, 40, did all this in addition to working his full-time job as a mechanical engineer at MTS Systems. He did it while supporting his daughters through softball season. He did it with the help of just a few family members in the garage once or twice a week.

Mercifully, the drudge is on hold as Goede celebrates his title. For now, his time spent in the shop is at a minimum.

“Erica’s giving me crap because I haven’t turned the garage heater on yet because I’m cheap,” Goede said. “I keep it 55. If you keep it too warm, you start sweating.

“And I sweat plenty during the summer.”

***

Jacob Goede
(Photo: Forte Design LLC/Mary Schill )

Goede’s primary pro late model is near totaled from a crash this summer, but he won’t let go of the ride that’s been so good to him. He has somewhere between 70 and 80 race winner stickers lining the roll bars around his seat.

Zip tied to one of those bars is a small toy car.

Sometime more than a decade ago, a young fan approached Goede in Victory Lane at Elko and handed him the toy car as a gift. For reasons Goede can’t totally explain, he attached the little car to a support bar in his late model and — without the boy knowing — has left it there ever since.

“I’m like, ‘You know what, I’m going to have that thing ride along with me,'” Goede said. “That kid’s grown into a teenager by now. If a kid wanted to give up his matchbox car for me, I thought it was a cool deal. Might as well ride along. It doesn’t weigh anything.”

The toy car is less of a good luck charm and more of a representation of what makes Goede tick. He’s loyal to his family, and after more than two decades of racing late models with that family, he knows what works.

Goede began racing a quarter midget at age 7, when his father John worked at a salvage yard and built his own race cars. Now, naturally, Jacob Goede does the same thing.

“He kind of instilled in me that attitude,” Jacob said of John. “I loved going out to the junkyard and rummaging through stuff. It kind of carried me into my present-day life, I guess. I enjoy working on these things. We do all our own tin work, body work, assembly work, all that. It definitely stemmed from my dad from the early ages.”

By “we,” Goede means himself and his brother Matt, who joins him in the shop typically once a week. Sometimes, if you-know-what hits the fan, his dad and father-in-law lend their help. That’s the extent of Goede’s crew.

Jacob is adamant that he couldn’t race without Matt’s help. Matt raced stock cars, as well, and employed a driving style similar to that of his brother. So Matt can simply watch Jacob’s car on the track and know what it’s doing right or wrong without any additional communication.

Jacob Goede
(Photo: Martin DeFries/Elko Speedway)

The small circle is Jacob Goede’s preference. These are the only people he trusts working on his race car. Plus, he’s found that training others to do what he does takes more time than simply doing it himself.

Three late models occupy the space inside Goede’s garage, the walls of which are covered with race winner banners, trophies and Victory Lane photos. He has two pro late models — the wrecked primary car and the secondary car he drove to a handful of wins to close the season. He also has a super late model; he says that one takes up most of his time and money even though he rarely races it.

Goede built the primary pro late model more than a decade ago, and he built the backup car as he was chasing his first national championship. He’s maintained both for years in case he felt he had another shot at a title.

That opportunity arrived in 2025, when Dells joined NASCAR as a Weekly Series track. Goede suddenly had another local(ish) venue at which to collect national points, so he informed his family he would “get serious” about racing again.

The girls were bewildered. Wait, now he’s serious, as if he wasn’t before?

Goede began his season with an 11th-place finish in Dells’ Icebreaker on April 12. A month later, he scored his first win at the same track. The next week, LaCrosse’s season began, and Goede scored two wins there before the second week of June.

Remarkable consistency carried Goede through the rest of the summer. He finished outside the top five on just a handful of occasions, and when he returned to Elko late in the season as he continued to chase points, he won all four of his starts.

The Sept. 20 finale at his home track was the perfect exclamation point. In the first late model feature of the night, he beat Tim Anderson to the finish line in a near photo finish.

***

The wall of Victory Lane photos in the back of Goede’s garage is like a time machine. He began collecting images from Elko’s track photographer in 2014. That’s when the victories began pouring in. He raced at Elko from 2002-07 but competed on regional late model tours from 2008-13. When life brought him back to his home track full-time — freshly married with a baby — he hit the ground running thanks to what he’d learned over the previous decade.

“You see the progression of our family,” Goede said, pointing at the wall of photos. “2014, we just had Reese, and my wife was pregnant with Johanna. And then, 2016, picked up Audrey. So you see them from babies to now teenagers with Reese.”

Now the girls are adding their own Victory Lane memories to the family’s lore.

Jacob Goede
All three of Jacob Goede’s daughters race quarter midgets at Little Elko Speedway. (Photo: Yem Sanlaeid/NASCAR)

Goede’s nephew several years back began competing in quarter midgets, and Reese, 7 at the time, wanted to watch her cousin. She quickly realized she wanted to race, too, and her dad’s arm did not need even a slight twist.

Goede’s father had saved his quarter midget from when he was a kid, so he dusted the car off and prepared it for Reese. They were testing just a couple weeks after her initial request. Reese began racing the next season, and each year after that, another Goede girl joined the field.

In 2025, all three girls raced quarter midgets at Little Elko, a smaller oval located across the street from the 3/8-mile track their dad has dominated for more than a decade.

“So not only am I trying to prepare late models, but I’m also trying to keep up with these things,” Jacob Goede said. “It’s pretty special watching your kids do something that you love as well. I really enjoy it … I’m probably a little too intense sometimes.

“The coolest part is watching them put it together. You try and teach, and there’s been times where it can be so frustrating. I wish I could just dump my brain into theirs so they can just do the things I know how to do. But when you see them start to figure it out. … Or, sometimes, you don’t even talk about things, and it’s like, ‘Hey, how did you figure that out?’ So that’s the coolest part for me. When they’re truly happy when they win or make a good pass or something like that.”

Jacob Goede
(Photo: Yem Sanlaied/NASCAR)

The 2025 season was a climax of fulfillment for Goede. His second title delivered more emotion than the first.

He’s older, and his kids are now of the age where they know and understand what their dad accomplished. The family is busier than it was six years ago. Goede has to miss more of the girls’ practices, games and performances simply because the schedule is so full. Still, he calls the effort “a family operation.”

For example, one week this summer, he and his dad prepared his super late model for a Thursday test. They then swapped motors in the Dells car to go to a test at LaCrosse that Friday. That night, they pulled the still-hot motor out of the car, replaced it with the crate motor and raced at Elko on Saturday.

That grind is a source of pride. Goede recalls the first time he attended the NASCAR Regional awards banquet in 2014 and the videos he watched at the ceremony. He wondered how he could ever compete with drivers who seemingly benefitted from full-time efforts. Now he’s that guy even though his operation is nowhere near a full-time detail.

“I guess I use it as motivation,” he said. “Weekly racing doesn’t have to be a full-time gig. I have a full-time job, and we race on the weekends. It gets busy. Summers are maybe a lack of sleep sometimes.

“Whatever. It’s what I love to do.”

Goede isn’t sure whether he’ll chase national points again in 2026. He’s still exhausted from the effort in 2025.

“It’s all you think about,” he said. “Every moment, that’s what you concern yourself with. It’s a different style of racing than going after track points. You’re watching stuff you have no control over, drivers you don’t know. It consumes you. … We’ll see.”

His future in a race car depends on his kids. If they want to continue behind the wheel, he’ll need to devote more time and energy to their development. Goede admits he’d be fine getting out of the late models and serving as crew chief for his daughters, but only if they’re willing to dedicate themselves to the craft. He’s too competitive to give up the seat otherwise.

He’s not worried about the future, though, with the present offering so much satisfaction. He’ll proceed through the winter celebrating his latest national championship accordingly.

Yes, he’ll spend invaluable time with his girls and occasionally wander out to his scarcely heated garage to work on his race cars.

But he’ll also sleep on the couch.

Editor’s note: This is the third 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: Zane Smith, No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford
Crew chief: Ryan Bergenty
Final 2025 ranking: 28th
Key stats: 0 wins, 1 top five, 5 top 10s, 22 laps led 

How 2025 ended: Finishing his second full-time season in the Cup Series, Smith showed improvement in his return to Front Row Motorsports after a challenging rookie season in 2024 at Spire Motorsports. In the last 10 races of the 2025 season, Smith finished inside the top 10 twice at Bristol and Talladega. With five top-10 finishes, Smith could have likely increased his total if circumstances out of his control had not occurred on numerous occasions, such as crashing out in Stage 3 of the Coca-Cola 600 after spinning off the front bumper of Shane van Gisbergen while running inside the top 15. The 26-year-old native of Huntington Beach, California, improved his average starting position from 26.1 to 20.1 and average finishing position from 23.2 to 21.1, giving the No. 38 driver something to build on entering 2026. 

Best race: Smith excelled in the Bristol Night Race, with a season-best third-place finish in Thunder Valley. In a race that required NASCAR’s best to master tire management, Smith restarted on the front row with four laps remaining at the high-banked Tennessee short track. Although he fell short of victory, Smith was right up there competing with the sport’s top drivers for his first career Cup Series win. He ran inside the top 10 for most of the night before rising to the top five at the end, with a third-best average running position of 7.88.  

RELATED: 2026 Cup Series schedule | Zane Smith driver page 

Other season highlights: After setting a quick time in qualifying for the Talladega spring race, Smith earned his first career Busch Light Pole Award. In the summertime, he got in a feud with former Spire teammate Carson Hocevar, who sent the Front Row driver spinning into the outside wall in Turn 1 at Iowa. The two collided again in the Kansas fall race, as Smith moved Hocevar up the hill in Turn 3. In addition, Smith walked away from a wild ride at the 1.5-mile Sunflower State track after getting squeezed against the wall and flipping several times during an overtime restart. 

Stat to know: Two of Smith’s five top 10s were a pair of seventh-place finishes at Michigan and EchoPark. He started in the top 10 in both races. In his three other top 10s at Phoenix, Bristol and Talladega, he rolled off the grid 23rd or worse. 

Quotable: “When you’re trying to get your first win in the Cup Series — something you’ve just wanted to be in for your whole life — and then the opportunity is right in front of you (and) it’s going to be settled in a couple of minutes, yeah, there’s a lot of things running through your head. Like, man, pretty much everything that I have known in my career, I need to funnel it down to right now to see how I could possibly execute this race win.” — Zane Smith said in a teleconference on being in contention to win at NASCAR’s highest level. 

Looking ahead: On Oct. 23, Front Row announced that Smith will return as the driver of the No. 38 Ford in 2026 after signing a multiyear contract extension, with crew chief Ryan Bergenty back atop the pit box. The Bob Jenkins-owned organization is searching for its first Cup Series win since 2023. If Smith can produce more breakout performances next year, he might be the first Front Row driver to take them back to Victory Lane. 

CONCORD, North Carolina — Eighty-Two Autosport proudly announces Robert Yates Racing Engines (RYRE) as the recipient of its 2025 Supply Chain Partner of the Year Award, recognizing the company’s outstanding contributions to performance, reliability, and innovation within Eighty-Two Autosport’s competitive racing program.

Robert Yates Racing Engines, an industry leader in high-performance engine design and manufacturing, has played a critical role in Eighty-Two Autosport’s continued development on and off the track. Through exceptional support, precise craftsmanship, and unwavering commitment to quality, RYRE has exemplified what it means to be a true partner in performance.

“Robert Yates Racing Engines has been instrumental in allowing our team to continue growing, by providing engines focused solely on reliability,” said John-Michael Shenette, Owner of Eighty-Two Autosport. “Their dedication to excellence and deep understanding of race-engine technology make them an invaluable part of our success. We’re proud to recognize their contributions with this award.”

Throughout the 2025 season, RYRE has demonstrated consistent leadership in technical collaboration, timely delivery, and continuous improvement—helping Eighty-Two Autosport achieve top performance in a highly competitive motorsports landscape.

“We’re honored to receive this recognition from Eighty-Two Autosport,” said David Lewis, General Manager of Robert Yates Racing Engines. “Our partnership is built on shared passion, precision, and performance. Working alongside a team that values perfection as much as we do drives us to keep improving every day.”

The Supply Chain Partner of the Year Award is presented annually by Eighty-Two Autosport to recognize exceptional partners who demonstrate superior quality, collaboration, and impact across the organization’s racing operation.

WINSTON SALEM, N.C. – NASCAR today announced the return of the Cook Out Madhouse Classic to historic Bowman Gray Stadium as part of the Cook Out Clash Weekend on Saturday, Jan. 31, 2026. The day of racing will now include two action-packed Bowman Gray Stadium divisions – the Modified Division and Sportsman Series – delivering an afternoon of high-intensity, hometown action.

The event, held prior to NASCAR Cup Series practice and qualifying, will air live on FloRacing and the NASCAR Channel, which is available on Xumo Play, Tubi, SamsungTV Plus, The Roku Channel, Amazon Prime and Amazon Fire TV.

“The Cook Out Madhouse Classic is one of the most authentic and electric experiences in all of short-track racing,” said Justin Swilling, NASCAR’s Project Lead for the Cook Out Clash. “The atmosphere inside Bowman Gray Stadium is unmatched, and so is the intensity and passion of the competitors. Their undeniable spirit brought NASCAR Cup Series racing back to Bowman Gray Stadium this year, so we’re incredibly excited about expanding the Madhouse Classic lineup to highlight the Madhouse stars who made it all possible.”

The return of the Cook Out Madhouse Classic follows last year’s dramatic debut at Bowman Gray Stadium featuring the stars of the Modified Division. Chris Fleming held off a hard-charging Burt Myers to claim the checkered flag in front of Saturday’s capacity crowd. The thrilling performance set the stage for the sold out inaugural Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium, which marked the first Cup Series event at the iconic venue since 1971.

Participation in the Cook Out Madhouse Classic is by invitation only, determined by the top 22 drivers from the Modified Division and top 20 drivers from the Sportsman Series (NASCAR reserves the right to add provisional entries in each race). Saturday’s race program will showcase all the hallmarks of Bowman Gray’s legendary format, including practice, single-car qualifying, and a 125-lap modified feature and 100-lap sportsman feature.

The Madhouse crowd will amplify every lap, and fans will also enjoy the unforgettable Fan’s Challenge, a treasured Bowman Gray tradition. In this format, the four fastest qualifiers will each have the chance to relinquish their earned starting spot and drop to the rear of the field. Drivers who accept become eligible for a special event bonus awarded if they can race their way back to their original top-four position or better. It’s a risk-reward wrinkle that embodies the competitive spirit of The Madhouse.

Fans are encouraged to act now to secure their seats for both the Cook Out Clash and the Cook Out Madhouse Classic by visiting www.nascarclash.com. The 2026 Cook Out Clash will air live on FOX on Feb. 1 at 8 p.m.

Editor’s note: This is the second 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: Daniel Suárez, No. 99 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
Crew chief: 
Matt Swiderski
Final 2025 ranking: 
29th
Key stats: 
0 wins, 2 top fives, 7 top 10s, 35 laps led

How 2025 ended: There were flashes of excellence for Suárez throughout the year, but it wasn’t enough to make the 2025 Cup Series Playoffs in his ninth season. While Trackhouse teammates Ross Chastain and Shane van Gisbergen reached the postseason, Suárez struggled to run consistently inside the top 15 and had an average finish of 20.9 — his worst in five seasons at Trackhouse and three positions behind his 17.9 mark in 2024.

Best race: Suárez nearly snuck his way into the playoffs early into the season at Las Vegas. Late-race strategy paid off for the likes of Suárez, Josh Berry and Ryan Preece as they found themselves toward the front of the field on the final restart. The No. 99 held the lead up until 16 laps to go when Berry passed Suárez and went on to win his first career Cup race. Suárez still finished second, which was one of two runner-up results on the year (Daytona summer).

RELATED: 2026 Cup Series schedule | Daniel Suárez driver page

Other season highlights: Suárez plated back-to-back top 10s at Talladega and Texas in the spring. Starting two weeks later, he had no finish worse than 19th between Nashville and Pocono, and during that four-race stretch, the Mexican-born driver arguably had the greatest drive of his career, taking the No. 9 JR Motorsports Chevrolet from last to first as the 33-year-old wheelman won the Xfinity Series race in his home country. He also ended the Cup Series regular season strong with three consecutive top-10 results, coming just 0.031 seconds short of a playoff bid in the Daytona regular-season finale as Ryan Blaney took the checkered flag.

Stat to know: Suárez led only 35 laps across the 2025 season, his lowest total since leading 20 laps in 2020 with Gaunt Brothers Racing.

Quotable: “I’m just enjoying. I’m like a kid on Christmas. That’s why you guys see me with a smile … I love the pressure. You put me against the wall, and I’m going to come back at you swinging … So I’m good with it. You know, this is just gonna be a better story. You know, we win on Sunday, and then we’re gonna be laughing about, ‘hey, we almost didn’t make practice.’ You know, it’s a shame that it happened, but we don’t blame anyone. We just find solutions.” — Suárez on soaking up the spotlight in the Cup Series’ debut in Mexico City.

Looking ahead: Suárez will get a reset in 2026 as he moves on from Trackhouse to pilot the No. 7 Chevrolet for Spire Motorsports, teaming up with Michael McDowell and Carson Hocevar. Suárez is seeking his first victory since the Atlanta spring race in February 2024 and his third career postseason appearance.

Doing a lot with a little is a philosophy that has followed Kenna Mitchell throughout her young career.

The Loomis, California, native knows the equipment she competes in is not quite as contemporary or refined compared to the other teams the West Coast. That has never been a deterrent for Mitchell, who battled adversity to bring home a Limited Pro Late Model championship at her home track, All American Speedway, this year.

Mitchell’s resolve, along with the selfless mindset she exhibits in and out of the car, were two factors that contributed to her being the recipient of the 2025 Wendell Scott Trailblazer Award. Named after NASCAR Hall of Famer Wendell Scott, the award is presented to a driver based on their performance along with other qualities like sportsmanship and community service.

Scott was the first African American to win a NASCAR race in 1963 and Mitchell understands the impact he continues to have on motorsports today. Mitchell is doing everything to embody the characteristics Scott once displayed by blazing her own trail regardless of the circumstances around her.

“On some weekends, I see only one other girl at the track,” Mitchell said. “The guys don’t want to be beat by girls, so they race us rougher. [The Wendell Scott Trailblazer Award] means a lot to me because we had a year where we had to persevere through a lot of things.

“If it could go wrong, it went wrong, but we still had a good year at [All American] by winning a track championship.”

Kenna was inspired to start racing by her father Michael Mitchell, who competed in a variety of disciplines throughout his own career that included Modifieds and Limited Late Models.

The Mitchells had the privilege of competing alongside each other on a handful of occasions until Michael elected to step out of the driver’s seat to focus on his daughter’s development. A more streamlined effort has enabled Kenna to tackle a healthy schedule of full-bodied stock car events outside of All American.

For all the insightful advice Michael has provided over the years, Kenna admitted she and her father are on opposite ends of the spectrum with their driving styles. From her own experiences, Kenna finds value in being patient and methodical while trying to obtain track position.

“He was definitely a lot more aggressive than I [am] in racing,” Kenna said. “He’s always telling me to be aggressive, but I like racing clean. I use the bumper a little bit to pass, but he’s always telling me ‘Come on, you got to race them harder! Race them how they race you.’ I tell him ‘I can’t. I like racing people clean.’

“It’s so satisfying to get a pass without even touching the other car.”

Kenna Mitchell
By balancing out patience and aggression, Kenna Mitchell has become one of the most consistent drivers at All American Speedway over the past few years. (Photo: Don Thompson/All American Speedway)

Although Michael’s racing mindset differs from his daughter’s, he appreciates the way Kenna handles herself out on track. Michael’s own career did not begin until he was in his mid-30s, yet the positives and negatives he experienced provided him plenty of material on how to mentor Kenna when it came time for her to start racing.

Michael admitted there is not much left for him to teach his daughter, who has already competed in more races than he ever did. Even though Kenna is only 19 years old, Michael always finds himself impressed on how much respect his daughter shows to both her fellow competitors and her equipment.

“A lot of the newer drivers tend to drive a little over their head or over where their car is at,” Michael said. “As the sport gets more and more expensive, if it’s not [Kenna’s] night, she’s not doing something dumb or wrecking somebody, she’s finishing the race. When she knows she’s got a shot to win, then she’s going to do whatever she needs to do to get the win.”

Balancing out patience and aggression has already yielded Kenna titles in Bandoleros, Jr. Late Models and Super Late Models, all of them at All American. The versatility she has displayed gave her the confidence to branch out and run plenty of West Coast touring events alongside veterans and other young prospects.

There are challenges that come with going up against many other talented competitors, but Kenna is doing everything possible to study and make strides.

“It’s fun racing all the different tracks and getting used to different lines,” Kenna said. “At [Kevin Harvick’s Kern Raceway], in the Supers and Pros, you can run both the high side and low side pretty consistently. [The Bullring at Las Vegas] is the same thing. With some tracks, it depends on the weather and time of day on whether you can run one line or the other.”

More traveling is the tentative plan next year after securing her most recent All American track title. The effort will be simplified compared to 2025, as Kenna and her father want to focus on running one car per weekend instead of two.

It was only a year ago when Mitchell embarked on a full-time campaign in the CARS Tour West Limited Pro Late Model Series, scoring four top fives in 10 starts. That consistency is why Michael believes his daughter will be ready for another full year, this time with the CARS Tour West’s Pro Late Model division.

Michael is eager to see what his daughter can do in 2026, but understands wins are not going to be easy to acquire against stout Pro Late Model competitors. As long as she keeps adhering to her clean, composed mindset, Michael knows she can excel no matter the situation.

“We’ve been in a position to get some [touring] wins,” Michael said. “[Kenna] was up front a few times. She had one race where she led a good portion but got a flat. I feel like our expectation would be picking up some wins. I wouldn’t rule out a championship, but to be in the top three at the end of the year would be awesome.”

Kenna Mitchell
A proven winner at All American Speedway, Kenna Mitchell is ready to start collecting more checkered flags at tracks around the West Coast (Photo: Don Thompson/All American Speedway)

Michael is proud of everything Kenna has already accomplished, from the multiple track titles at All American to now being a recipient of the Wendell Scott Trailblazer Award. She joins a small but notable group to earn that honor, which includes Nick Sanchez, Rajah Caruth, Lanie Buice and last year’s winner Caity Miller.

Every race is a new opportunity for Kenna to both learn and pass down her knowledge to others. Along with helping Chase Hand, the son of two-time 24 Hours of Daytona winner Joey Hand, when he was part of her program, Kenna also enjoys meeting and sharing ideas with other women looking to advance their own driving careers.

From her perspective, earning respect is one of the most important qualities a driver can possess in the modern era. By building relationships off the track and displaying poise behind the wheel, Kenna feels she has the trust of nearly everyone around her, which in turn has only bolstered her confidence.

The 2025 season tested Kenna more than she wanted, but her commitment to racing remains stalwart. She intends to keep embodying all the qualities that garnered her the Wendell Scott Trailblazer Award while continuing to make a name for herself on the West Coast with the resources at her disposal.

“I’m definitely keeping up with helping out the racing community and other drivers while keeping it clean on track,” Kenna said. “Win or lose, I love racing and I’m going to keep that mentality. We’re out here to win, but everybody is going to put up a good fight.”