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Cup Series

NASCAR Cup Series

Tyler Reddick and Kyle Larson lead the field on a pace lap
Homestead Miami Speedway
Sean Gardner
Getty Images

Straight Talk Wireless 400

Sunday, March 23rd at 3:00pm ET

Homestead Miami Speedway, Homestead, FL

  • Race Preview

    • Thursday, March 20th, 2025
    • NASCAR Wire Service - Holly Cain
    Sunny South Florida is ready for the NASCAR Cup Series

    The NASCAR Cup Series returns east to Homestead-Miami Speedway for the Straight Talk Wireless 400 – the weekend’s NASCAR tripleheader marking the first time since 2021 the series has competed on the South Florida track in the spring.

    It remains to be seen if the 1.5-miler – popular among competitors – will race differently this weekend in the warm March Florida sun versus how it races in the Fall when the series typically visited more recently.

    Regardless of the timing, a good weekend has proven to be a good weekend at Homestead. Six of the last seven race winners have led the most laps. That comes in sharp contrast to the current early season. Only once in the five 2025 races has the winner led the most laps – Joe Gibbs Racing’s Christopher Bell’s victory at Phoenix.

    Hendrick Motorsports is certainly hoping its track record continues to prove successful at Homestead. The team has led 54 percent of all laps in the Next Gen Era there and Kyle Larson, driver of the No. 5 HMS Chevrolet, has led the most laps (626) of any active driver.

    His work on the 1.5-milers is especially impressive. Larson’s 12 stage wins in the Next Gen car is a series-best. No other driver has more than five stage wins.

    Larson’s 1,286 total miles led on the 1.5-mile tracks is almost double that of any other driver. Bell is second on the list with 614 laps out front.

    Larson’s Hendrick Motorsports teammate, Daytona 500 winner William Byron not only holds the championship points lead – by 29 points over the season’s three-time winner Bell – but is the only driver to run out front in every race this season. He has led laps in the last seven races – the longest consecutive streak for a driver in the series since 2019.

    This weekend Larson will have plenty of time on track even before Sunday’s green flag. He will be doing rare triple-duty work – competing in the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series on Friday (in the No. 07 Spire Chevrolet), the Xfinity Series on Saturday (No. 17 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet) in addition to Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race.

    He is attempting to become only the second driver to earn a weekend three-peat. Kyle Busch won in all three national series at Bristol (Tenn.) Motor Speedway twice in 2010 and 2017.

    “I always feel good going to Homestead,” said Larson, who won at Homestead in 2022. “It’s probably the track that suits me the best, you know, being comfortable running against the wall and stuff like that. So, yeah, the last two finishes (34th and 13th) we’ve had there don’t reflect how we’ve ran. We’ve been the best every time we go there.

    “We were stupid fast there the second- half of the fall race last time we were there with a bunch of damage underneath the car that you can’t see. So that was a satisfying run to almost have a shot to win there. But hopefully this year it goes smooth; we have a good handling race car, which I know we will, and we can just hammer away at the wall and be fast.”

    A victory Sunday for 2025’s three-trophy winner Bell would be his fourth in the opening six races – a high-achieving season start accomplished only twice previously: by NASCAR Hall of Famers Bill Elliott (1992) and Dale Earnhardt (1987).

    23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick is the defending race winner, claiming the victory from pole position last October; the second driver (also his team co-owner Hamlin) to win from pole in the last five Homestead races.

    Interestingly, there hasn’t been a back-to-back race winner at Homestead in the last 19 years when Greg Biffle won three straight from 2004-06.

    Trackhouse Racing’s Ross Chastain claims Homestead as his “home track.” It’s about two hours south of his Alva, Fla. hometown. The popular driver is coming off his first top-five (fifth place) of the season at Las Vegas last week.

    “The weather in South Florida is beautiful and it’s fun to have so many friends and family at the track,” said Chastain, who plans to drive to Homestead after visiting home. “I think Homestead provides some great racing and the ability to run up by the wall. I was there last week for an event at the track and got to meet different people from the community. I enjoy it anytime I get the chance to go to South Florida.”

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cup Series

PREVIOUS RACE RESULTS

Josh Berry celebrates after winning
Las Vegas, Nevada - March 16, 2025 : Josh Berry, driver of the #21 Motorcraft/Quick Lane Ford, celebrates after winning the NASCAR Cup Series Pennzoil 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
Chris GraythenGetty Images

Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube

Sunday, March 16th at 3:30pm ET

Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Las Vegas, NV

  • Race Recap

    • Sunday, March 16th, 2025
    • NASCAR Wire Service - Reid Spencer
    Josh Berry grabs first NASCAR Cup Series victory at Las Vegas

    Winning an intense battle against Daniel Suárez after a restart with 19 laps left, Josh Berry pulled away to a convincing victory in Sunday’s Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

    The win was Berry’s first in the NASCAR Cup Series at a track where he won twice in a NASCAR Xfinity Series car. Berry is the fourth straight Wood Brothers Racing driver to pick up his first Cup win in the No. 21 Ford.

    “Oh, man, I don’t even know what to think,” Berry said after climbing from his car on the frontstretch. “Just awesome. I love this track. Las Vegas has been so good to me. So many great moments here.

    “Just struggled in the Next Gen car here. But (crew chief) Miles (Stanley) and this whole 21 team, everybody at Wood Brothers Racing, they gave me a great car today. Just battled and battled and battled. Man, it was our day. I just can’t believe it.

    “Such a battle with Daniel there at the end, beating and banging on a mile-and-a-half—crazy! Whoever was going to get out front was probably going to win. We were able to get in front.”

    Berry and Suárez restarted side-by-side on Lap 249 of 267. Suárez didn’t surrender the lead until Lap 252, when Berry nosed ahead at the start/finish line. Lap 253 was nearly a dead head with Berry ahead by inches, but the No. 21 Mustang cleared Suárez’s No. 99 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet through the tri-oval on Lap 254.

    “We did everything right, you know?” Suárez said “The team did an amazing job on the strategy, pit stops. We did everything right. Our car was fast. We just struggled a little bit in the short run.

    “I mentioned to my crew chief just a little bit ago, before the last run, I told him, ‘Hey, we want to be up front, I need a little bit better short run. I am having too much contact (with the bumps in the racing surface) in (Turns) 1 and 2.

    “Unfortunately, I feel like that’s why we lost the race, just a little bit too much contact. I mean, I almost wrecked in 1 and 2.”

    After clearing Suárez, Berry widened the gap in clean air and crossed the finish line 1.358 seconds ahead of the runner-up, earning a victory that also ended Christopher Bell’s three-race Cup winning streak.

    Berry got his chance when a Lap 195 caution for a seven-car wreck on the backstretch interrupted a cycle of green-flag pit stops and wrested control of the race from Stage 2 winner Kyle Larson, who had led 61 laps before pitting on Lap 197.

    With the field flipped, Larson restarted 18th and could only work his way back to ninth before the race ended.

    Berry, on the other hand, restarted seventh on Lap 201, worked the top of the track masterfully and snatched the lead from Suárez for the first time on Lap 234, before surrendering it to Cup champion Joey Logano two laps later.

    Noah Gragson’s hard contact with the Turn 2 wall on Lap 243 caused the ninth and final caution of the race and took fuel consumption out of the equation. Suárez regained the lead with a blistering four-tire stop, with Berry second off pit road, as Logano lost 19 positions during a fraught pit stop.

    But it didn’t take Berry long to set sail toward the 101st victory for the Wood Brothers, who got No. 100 last year at the hands of Harrison Burton.

    Ryan Preece ran third on Sunday, followed by series leader William Byron, who paced a group of four Hendrick Motorsports drivers in the top 10. Tire strategy helped Ross Chastain secure fifth place.

    Austin Cindric, Alex Bowman, AJ Allmendinger, Larson and Chase Elliott completed the top 10 on a day when pit road resembled a comedy of errors. Both Chase Briscoe and Kyle Busch jettisoned loose wheels onto the track, though Briscoe rebounded from four laps down to finish 17th.

    In a race that featured 32 lead changes among 13 drivers, Austin Cindric was second to Larson in laps led with 47, followed by Logano with 40, Tyler Reddick with 34, Bubba Wallace with 20 and Berry with 18.

    For practical purposes, Christopher Bell’s bid for a fourth straight Cup Series victory came to an end during pit stops under caution for Shane van Gisbergen’s spin off Turn 2 on Lap 107.

    By then, Bell, who started from the rear because of an unapproved throttle body change, had advanced to second in the running order, but his front tire changer failed to secure the left-front wheel before Bell left his stall, located near the entrance to pit road.

    After frantic radio communication, Bell pulled into the pit of teammate Chase Briscoe, where the front tire changer on the No. 19 team tightened the loose lug.

    Bell dropped to the rear of the field under penalty for receiving service outside his pit box and could make no progress in dirty air after two subsequent restarts. His No. 20 Toyota was running 29th when the No. 34 Ford of Todd Gilliland bounced off the Turn 4 wall on Lap 147 to cause the fifth caution of the afternoon.

    Complaining of a loss of rear grip, Bell finished Stage 2 in 27th place, his chances for a rare four-race winning streak all but gone.

    Bell subsequently ran as high as sixth after a two-tire stop on Lap 189 to gain track position, but he lost spots when the field flipped for the Lap 201 restart and could only recover to 12th at the finish.

    “It was a grind today for sure,” Bell said. “I don’t really know how I feel yet, but we certainly didn’t do what we did the last couple of weeks, and that was just have a nice clean race.

    “I think the Interstate Camry was definitely capable of competing for the win when we were at our best, but just going to the back and to the front and to the back and to the front, we just didn’t get a handle on the balance, because it changes so much from being back there. I felt like we were in position in Stage 2 to contend for another win, but it got away from us.”

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cup Series
Xfinity Series

NASCAR Xfinity Series

NASCAR Xfinity Series Contender Boats 300
Homestead Miami Speedway
Sean Gardner
Getty Images

Hard Rock Bet 300

Saturday, March 22nd at 4:00pm ET

Homestead Miami Speedway, Homestead, FL

Race Results

  • Race Preview

    • Thursday, March 20th, 2025
    • NASCAR Wire Service - Holly Cain
    Xfinity Series gears up of Dash 4 Cash in Miami

    Always a highlight reel at the Homestead-Miami weekend, Saturday’s Hard Rock Bet 300 marks the second consecutive 1.5-miler for the NASCAR Xfinity Series.

    Reigning NASCAR Xfinity Series champion Justin Allgaier claimed his first victory of the season last week at the Las Vegas 1.5-mile track earning the JR Motorsports driver a bid to compete for the $100,000 prize money in the opening Xfinity Dash 4 Cash event this weekend. Richard Childress Racing teammates Austin Hill and Jesse Love and Haas Factory Team’s Sam Mayer are also racing for the big bonus money – with the highest finisher among the foursome claiming the check.

    Not only do they stand to win bonus money with Xfinity’s Dash 4 Cash, the next victory for either Hill or Love will give the legendary RCR team a milestone 100th series win – something accomplished only by Joe Gibbs Racing and Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing. Hill is the defending Homestead winner.

    As good as the current group of drivers have been at the South Florida track, historically speaking there are no overwhelming favorites on the grid. The last seven series races there have been won by seven different drivers.

    Allgaier holds a 19-point advantage over Atlanta race winner and fellow Chevrolet driver Love atop the championship standings.

    The 2021 NASCAR Cup Series champ Kyle Larson will drive the No. 17 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet Saturday – he is the 2015 Homestead Xfinity Series winner and one of four former winners in the field (also Harrison Burton, 2020; Mayer, 2023 and Hill, 2024).

    Kennametal Pole Qualifying is set for 10:30 a.m. (The CW App) and interestingly, no former pole-winners are entered. No pole-winner has hoisted the Homestead trophy since 2020.

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xfinity Series

PREVIOUS RACE RESULTS

Justin Allgaier celebrates in victory lane
Las Vegas, Nevada - March 15, 2025 : Justin Allgaier, driver of the #7 Jarrett Logistics Chevrolet, celebrates in victory lane after winning the NASCAR Xfinity Series The LiUNA! at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
Jonathan BachmanGetty Images

The LiUNA!

Saturday, March 15th at 4:30pm ET

Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Las Vegas, NV

  • Race Recap

    • Saturday, March 15th, 2025
    • NASCAR Wire Service - Reid Spencer
    Justin Allgaier holds off Aric Almirola for first win at Las Vegas

    On Friday night, Justin Allgaier saw the Eagles in concert. On Saturday, he was flying.

    Holding off Aric Almirola over a 102-lap green-flag run, Allgaier finally claimed victory at Las Vegas Motor Speedway after finishing second four times at the 1.5-mile track.

    Allgaier’s victory in The Liuna! was his first of the season, the 26th of his career and the 90th for JR Motorsports in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. The reigning series champion crossed the finish line 1.067 seconds ahead of Almirola, who lost ground trying to run the outside lane with just over three laps left.

    The decisive moment in the race, however, may have come much earlier. Allgaier lost the lead to Almirola during an exchange of pit stops midway through the final stage, but he regained it in traffic on Lap 152 and remained out front the rest of the way.

    With the victory, Allgaier qualified for the first Xfinity Dash4Cash race next Saturday at Homestead-Miami Speedway, along with third-place finisher Jesse Love, fourth-place Austin Hill and fifth-place Sam Mayer. The highest finisher among the four earns a $100,000 bonus.

    Almirola isn’t scheduled to run the Homestead race.

    “It was amazing,” said Allgaier. “This whole team—I just can’t say enough. Aric and I were going at it. Hats of to him; he ran a heck of a race…

    “Rick Brandt (of sponsor Brandt) was here last night. He took us to a great concert, Eagles concert … Everyone at JR Motorsports, I can’t say enough about how proud I am of what we have here. It’s been special.”

    After Allgaier took the lead on Lap 152, he opened an advantage of more than two seconds over Almirola, who spent the next 40 laps whittling the margin down to a car-length. But Almirola couldn’t find a way past Allgaier in the closing laps.

    “You always hate to finish second, but Justin and that team was I felt like the class of the field today,” Almirola said. “We were close, but they could just take off so much faster than I could. I think that’s really the difference.

    “I thought my only hope was to cycle in front of him on the green-flag stop, and we did, but I just got caught up behind some lapped traffic there that I misjudged. I wasn’t sure which way they were going, and he got by me and built such a big gap that I used my stuff up trying to get back to him.”

    The green-flag stops in the final stage proved costly to Sunoco rookie Connor Zilisch, who streaked into the lead on Lap 100 and held it until Allgaier nosed ahead at the start/finish line on Lap 127.

    During the stops on Lap 145, however, Zilisch drew a speeding penalty and served a pass-through that dropped him to the back of the lead lap. He rallied to finish ninth, the last driver on the lead lap.

    Allgaier led 102 of the 200 laps, followed by Almirola (51) and Zilisch (28). Brandon Jones, Ryan Seig, Harrison Burton, Zilisch and Sheldon Creed completed the top 10.

    Allgaier, who won the first stage by 8.262 seconds and finished second in Stage 2, took over the series lead by 19 points over Love.

  • Complete Results
  • Loop Data Boxscore
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  • Race Penalties

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xfinity Series
Truck Series

NASCAR Truck Series

Corey Heim and Taylor Gray race
Homestead Miami Speedway
Sean Gardner
Getty Images

Baptist Health 200

Friday, March 21st at 8:00pm ET

Homestead Miami Speedway, Homestead, FL

Race Results

  • Race Preview

    • Thursday, March 20th, 2025
    • NASCAR Wire Service - Holly Cain
    CRAFTSMAN Truck Series kicks off a tripleheader weekend in Miami

    The NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series returns to action this week in the Baptist Health 200.

    CR7 Racing’s Grant Enfinger is the defending Homestead race winner. Last week’s Las Vegas winner, Corey Heim led a race best 68 of the 134 laps but finished fourth in the October 2024 Homestead visit.

    Reigning series champion Ty Majeski won at the track in 2022 and three-time series champ Matt Crafton hoisted the trophy in 2015.

    Heim has wasted no time establishing himself as a championship favorite – again. He’s won two of the season’s three races and led a series best 51 laps, however he sits second to Majeski in the standings, five points off the reigning champ’s pace. Enfinger dropped to third in the championship last week, tied with Chandler Smith, eight points back.

    As with the other two NASCAR series on the marquee this weekend, the trucks have a long and assorted winner’s list. The last 10 races have all been won by different drivers.

    When it comes to consistency, however, the 22-year-old Heim has certainly proven to be a master of the 1.5-milers – like Homestead – winning three of the last five races on that brand of track and his No. 11 TRICON Garage Toyota leading 504 laps on 1.5-mile tracks since he started competing fulltime – nearly double that of any other competitor.

    Kyle Larson, who will drive the No. 07 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet. The last – and only other time he drove that truck he ended up in Victory Lane (at North Wilkesboro, N.C. in May 2023). Fellow NASCAR Cup Series star, the hometown favorite this week, Ross Chastain will drive the No. 44 Niece Motorsports Chevrolet. He has three top-five finishes in three Homestead starts in the series.

  • Entry List
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truck Series

PREVIOUS RACE RESULTS

Corey Heim celebrates with a burnout
Las Vegas, Nevada - March 14, 2025 : Corey Heim, driver of the #11 Safelite Toyota, celebrates with a burnout after winning the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Ecosave 200 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
Jonathan BachmanGetty Images

Ecosave 200

Friday, March 14th at 9:00pm ET

Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Las Vegas, NV

  • Race Recap

    • Friday, March 14th, 2025
    • NASCAR Wire Service - Reid Spencer
    Excellent pit work propels Corey Heim to Truck Series victory at Las Vegas

    Corey Heim made a mistake on pit road, but his crew picked up the slack when it counted.

    A lightning-fast stop under caution on Lap 86 put Heim in the lead, and that was the impetus the driver of the No. 11 TRICON Garage Toyota needed to win Friday night’s Ecosave 200 NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

    The stellar work of the pit crew allowed Heim to overcome a pit road speeding penalty he incurred at the end of the first stage on Lap 31.

    “First of all, the pit crew did such a good job of getting the truck up front,” said Heim, who won his second race of the season, his first at LVMS and the 13th of his career. “I made that mistake in Stage 1 when I sped on pit road and put us behind.”

    In a race run in uncharacteristically cold weather and stopped twice for sudden rain showers, Heim took the lead for good on Lap 101, passing Layne Riggs after the final restart following the fourth and final caution for Jack Wood’s accident in Turn 4 on Lap 93.

    Heim led a race-high 42 of 134 laps to 39 for Stage 2 winner Tyler Ankrum and beat runner-up Grant Enfinger to the finish line by 0.825 seconds.

    “This wasn’t exactly what we wanted in terms of the weather being cold and whatnot,” Heim said. “It seems to be a lot better when it’s hot and greasy, and we’re sliding around…

    “I was doing everything I can there. I think all of us were completely wide open at the end. I spent a lot of time looking at my mirror, and it worked out.”

    Enfinger passed Tanner Gray for the second spot on Lap 126 but couldn’t catch Heim over the final eight laps. Enfinger felt the battle with Gray might have cost him a chance to win.

    “We got side by side and lost a little but right there,” Enfinger said. “And we probably went over our tire limit a little bit right there and that hurt us at the end.

    “Corey was a lot better than us in the short run, and (crew chief) Jeff (Stankiewicz) really got this (No. 9 Chevrolet) really, really strolling on the long run. Our pit crew did an amazing job getting us from 11th to fifth (on the final stop). And when we were in the top five, we could race with those guys.”

    Gray held third place at the finish, followed by reigning series champion and Stage 1 winner Ty Majeski and Riggs. Stewart Friesen, Rajah Caruth, Chandler Smith, Matt Crafton and Ankrum completed the top 10.

    There were 21 lead changes among 12 drivers, both race records. Rain interrupted the race at the end of the first two stages, with red-flag periods lasting 55 minutes, 51 seconds and 19 minutes, 42 seconds, respectively.

  • Complete Results
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truck Series