NASCAR’s Charter War Finally Goes to Court—And It Starts Monday
The charter fight everyone’s been whispering about goes public Monday, and both sides are showing up loaded with witness lists and sharp elbows.
The charter fight everyone’s been whispering about goes public Monday, and both sides are showing up loaded with witness lists and sharp elbows.
The team made it official Friday evening on social media and confirmed the news on Monday.
The armchair crew chiefs expected a moonshot; Chevy showed up with a sharpened Camaro and a smirk.
Under the chandeliers of the JW Marriott in Scottsdale, Kyle Larson and NASCAR’s best traded helmets for tuxedos, delivering speeches, laughs, and a few tears as the 2025 season came to an emotional close.
It was the strangest kind of joy. Kyle Larson won the Cup, Denny Hamlin lost his dream, and both men handled it like champions.
Connor Zilisch’s Saturday ended in heartbreak, but by Tuesday, he was already smiling — because that’s racing.
At age 18, NASCAR Xfinity Series driver Daniel Dye founded the platform “Race to Stop Suicide,” a non-profit organization dedicated to breaking the stigma surrounding mental health and suicide.
Denny Hamlin seems, somehow, at peace.
William Byron and Chase Briscoe came to Phoenix chasing glory—only to leave with nothing but what-ifs.