logo
Good news, bad news for NASCAR teams going into Kansas weekend

Good news, bad news for NASCAR teams going into Kansas weekend

NBC Sports07-05-2025
The NASCAR Cup Series makes its first of two visits this season to Kansas Speedway this weekend.
A year ago, Kyle Larson beat Chris Buescher by .001 seconds. In last fall's playoff race, Ross Chastain won.
Here is a look at the good news and bad news for Cup teams heading to Kansas.
23XI Racing — Good news: The organization has won three of the last six races at Kansas Speedway. … Tyler Reddick has led in each of the last seven Kansas races. … Bubba Wallace ranks third in the series with 100 stage points. … Wallace's pit crew ranks first, according to Racing Insights. … Riley Herbst finished a season-best 14th at Texas last weekend. … Corey Heim will make his first start of the season and fourth in his Cup career this weekend, driving the No. 67 car. Bad news: Wallace has placed 19th or worse in three of the last four races. … Reddick has placed 20th or worse in five of the last seven Kansas races.
Front Row Motorsports — Good news: Todd Gilliland has placed 16th or better in four of the last five races. … Gilliland's 11th-place result last week at Texas was his best finish in 24 career starts on 1.5-mile tracks. … Zane Smith finished 10th in last fall's race at Kansas. Bad news: Noah Gragson has finished on the lead lap in only three of the last eight races.
Haas Factory Team — Good news: Cole Custer has scored back-to-back top 20s for the first time this season, placing 13th at Talladega and 19th last weekend at Texas. Bad News: Even with those finishes the last two weeks, Custer is 34th in the points.
Hendrick Motorsports — Good news: Kyle Larson has ranked first or second in speed in the previous two races on 1.5-mile tracks. He ranked second in speed at Homestead, a race he won, and first in speed at Texas, a race he finished fourth. … Larson's average finish on 1.5-mile tracks this season is a series-best 4.7. … Larson leads the series with seven top-five finishes and eight top 10s this year. … Larson has scored a series-best 108 stage points. … Alex Bowman's 10 top 10s at Kansas are his most at any track. … Chase Elliott is the only driver to finish in the top 20 in every race this season. … Elliott has four consecutive top 10s at Kansas. … William Byron's average finish this season is 8.91, best in the series. … Byron has scored 107 stage points to rank second to Larson in that category. Bad news: Bowman has three finishes of 35th or worse in the last four races.
Hyak Motorsports — Good news: Ricky Stenhouse Jr.'s sixth-place finish at Texas last weekend moved him into the the final transfer spot to the playoffs. … That finish also was his best result at Texas in 21 starts. Bad news: Stenhouse has one top 10 finish in 24 Cup starts at Kansas.
Joe Gibbs Racing — Good news: Christopher Bell has won the pole for the last three races at Kansas. … Bell has led each of the six Kansas races in the Next Gen era. … Bell has 10 top 10s, including two wins, in the last 14 races on 1.5-mile tracks. … Denny Hamlin has seven consecutive top-10 finishes at Kansas. … Ty Gibbs has started in the top 10 in the last three races. Bad news: The organization has led only 16 laps on 1.5-mile tracks this season. … Hamlin has finished outside the top 20 in the past two races. … Chase Briscoe has not finished better than 13th in eight Kansas starts. … Gibbs' average finish of 23.8 at Kansas is his worst among 1.5-mile tracks.
Kaulig Racing — Good news: Ty Dillon finished a season-best 12th last weekend at Texas after gaining six spots in overtime. … AJ Allmendinger has four top-10 finishes in his last five starts on 1.5-mile tracks. Bad news: Allmendinger has finished 18th or worse in four of his last five races.
Legacy Motor Club — Good news: Placed both cars in the top 10 last weekend at Texas, marking the first time the team has done that since the season-opening Daytona 500. … Erik Jones finished a season-best fifth at Texas and John Hunter Nemechek was eighth. … The organization's five top 10s this year is one less than what it had all of last season. … Nemechek has two Xfinity wins and one Truck win at Kansas. Bad news: Jones has made 90 starts since his last Cup victory.
Richard Childress Racing — Good news: Austin Dillon has scored three top-10 finishes in a row, tied for his longest Cup streak. … Jesse Love makes his third start of the season and will be in the No. 33 at Kansas. Bad news: The organization has only one top-five finish this season. … It is now 68 races win Kyle Busch's last Cup win.
Rick Ware Racing — Good news: Last weekend's race at Texas saw Cody Ware finish 30th, marking the fifth time he's placed between 24th and 30th this season. Bad news: Ware has not started better than 33rd in the last nine races.
RFK Racing — Good news: All three of Ryan Preece's top 10s on 1.5-mile tracks were in the last four races. Bad news: It was this race a year ago that Chris Buescher lost to Kyle Larson by a series-record .001 seconds. … Buescher has finished 18th or worse in four of the last five races. … Brad Keselowski has finished 26th or worse in eight of the 11 races this year. … Preece has had four finishes of 20th or worse this season.
Larson edges Buescher in historic Kansas finish
Kyle Larson and Chris Buescher wheel nose-to-nose as the checkered flag waves in the AdventHealth 400 at Kansas Speedway, combining for the closest finish in NASCAR Cup Series history with a margin of 0.001 seconds.
Spire Motorsports — Good news: The team has won the pole for two of the last three races at 1.5-mile tracks. … Carson Hocevar has scored points in five of the last six stages. Bad news: Justin Haley has not finished better than 18th in eight starts at Kansas. … Michael McDowell has one top-10 finish in the last 21 races on 1.5-mile tracks.
Team Penske — Good news: Team has won the past two Cup races with Austin Cindric winning at Talladega and Joey Logano winning at Texas. … Ryan Blaney placed a season-best third at Texas last weekend. … Logano has three Kansas wins. Bad news: Austin Cindric does not have a top-10 finish in seven Kansas starts in Cup and has finished 31st or worse in each of his last four starts there.
Trackhouse Racing — Good news: Ross Chastain has finished in the top 10 in five of the last seven races, including his runner-up finish last weekend at Texas. … Chastain's last win came at Kansas in last year's playoff race. … Daniel Suarez has scored back-to-back top 10s. Bad news: Shane van Gisbergen has started 33rd or worse in each of the last six races.
Wood Brothers Racing — Good news: Josh Berry's victory this season came on a 1.5-mile track (Las Vegas). … He led 41 laps last weekend at Texas, also 1.5-mile track. Bad news: Berry finished 32nd at Texas due to damage suffered in a crash. … Berry has finished 26th or worse in four of the last five races.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kyle Larson Takes Clear Shot At NASCAR Teammate Chase Elliott
Kyle Larson Takes Clear Shot At NASCAR Teammate Chase Elliott

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Kyle Larson Takes Clear Shot At NASCAR Teammate Chase Elliott

Kyle Larson Takes Clear Shot At NASCAR Teammate Chase Elliott originally appeared on The Spun. NASCAR's Kyle Larson had free smoke for everybody on Sunday — including one of his Hendrick Motorsports teammates — after being contacted throughout the day at this weekend's Iowa Corn 350. The 33-year-old driver got bumped several times in today's Cup Series race. And while he thankfully was able to avoid anything catastrophic, finishing 28th was not where the No. 5 Chevy imagined he would be when the day started. After losing out on valuable position going into one of the turns ahead of the caution, Larson finally had had enough and went off on his team's radio. "How much f—ing room do I have to leave people?" Larson yelled, via Dustin Albino. "... I've been trying to be a good teammate, a good competitor and it hasn't gotten me anywhere for the last hour." Larson and fellow Hendrick wheelman Chase Elliott had quite a few awkward situations ensue during Sunday's action. Where in one instance Kyle almost wrecked Elliott's No. 9 ZL1, but the former Cup Champion was somehow able to keep himself from spinning out and suffering some serious damage in the three-wide pack. Fans reacted to Larson's explosion on X and sympathy was pretty hard to come by: "He um.. vented," a user said. "'Good teammate' is NOT in Kyle Larsons vocabulary lmaoooo," another laughed. "People are racing him how he has previously raced them…" a fan commented. "Pot kettle black." "Larson getting used up is so beautiful 🥹 He's been doing that to his teammates for yearsss," another person claimed. "Dude has been doored 6 times lol." "Man that's so funny coming from him," another fan posted. "hahaha, needed that laugh." Elliott ended him finishing 14 spots ahead of Larson at P14 but neither were able to come close to catching William Byron who completed the trifecta at Iowa Speedway with victories in the Truck, Xfinity and Cup Series as of today. Both drivers will attempt to have a better performance when they Go Bowling At The Glen next week in Upstate New Larson Takes Clear Shot At NASCAR Teammate Chase Elliott first appeared on The Spun on Aug 4, 2025 This story was originally reported by The Spun on Aug 4, 2025, where it first appeared.

The Premier League is two weeks from starting, but the FA Cup has already begun
The Premier League is two weeks from starting, but the FA Cup has already begun

New York Times

time2 hours ago

  • New York Times

The Premier League is two weeks from starting, but the FA Cup has already begun

About 13 miles separate Wembley from Rotherhithe, once a patchwork of thriving docks and bustling wharfs in London but now the leafy home to Fisher FC and the only British pub licensed to sell U.S. postage stamps. There's little to link these two districts. On a very clear day, locals suggest it's possible to catch a glimpse of the famous arch that towers over the national stadium when standing on Stave Hill. Advertisement Today, though, is not about sightseeing. Today is about the 2025-26 FA Cup getting underway, with hundreds of grassroots clubs from up and down the land doing battle in the extra preliminary round of a competition that will culminate next May in a Wembley final. Few here at Fisher's modest St Paul's Sports Ground to watch the tie against fellow amateur side Camberley Town expect today's victors to still be in the cup come the autumn, never mind walking out at Wembley in 287 days. Nevertheless, there's an unmistakable buzz in this corner of the capital ahead of the world's oldest knockout competition getting underway. 'The beauty of the FA Cup is it lets everyone dream,' says Jim Maycock, Fisher's club secretary and one of several volunteers who keep this fan-run club from the ninth tier of English football operating smoothly. 'Competing in the greatest cup competition in world football gives a club relevance. Just being in the cup puts you on the map. Players and supporters at our level can watch, say, the quarter-finals in March and think, 'We were in this same competition a few months ago'.' All non-League life is present in this season's extra preliminary round, ranging from the two oldest clubs in the world, Sheffield FC and Hallam, through to a famous old Football League name in Bradford (Park Avenue) and cup debutants Windsor & Eton. The dream for these part-time footballers is to enjoy a long cup run, maybe even battling through to the first-round proper in November when clubs from League One and League Two, the bottom two divisions of the EFL, enter. Or, if we're really talking fantasy land, reach the third round and a possible meeting with big boys Manchester City, Liverpool or Chelsea. Should Fisher or Camberley go on to realise that dream in January, it would be the equivalent of the New York Yankees playing North Dakota amateurs Enderlin Indies in a competitive fixture. Advertisement As far-fetched as this sounds, it does happen in English football. After kicking off their 2020-21 cup campaign in the preliminary round at home to Barnoldswick Town, eighth-tier Marine made it all the way to the third round and a glamour tie with Tottenham Hotspur, then managed by Jose Mourinho. Marine earned a £500,000 windfall from that run, but it's not just the money that can be life-changing. There's also the opportunity the cup affords players at clubs such as Fisher, whose resources don't stretch to paying wages. Footballers at this level are here for the love of the game and a chance to perhaps get a lift-up in their careers thanks to Ajay Ashanike, a manager with an enviable reputation for developing grassroots talent. 'The boys understand this is a showcase for them,' says Ashanike, whose recent proteges include Ade Owulu at League Two Salford City, plus Jamie Yila (Maidstone United) and Peter Ojemen (Slough Town) in National League South. 'To help them go as far as they can in the game. Fulfil their dreams. That's what we do here, progress players and develop them. They're all good footballers. You just have to give them that belief, give them a personality. Success in the cup can help.' The FA Cup may have lost some of its sheen over the past couple of decades amid the rise of the Premier League and the UEFA Champions League. But it remains the most storied competition in the world. First played in 1871, the cup has created innumerable heroes, ranging from Wembley winners to those who have caused a famous 'giant-killing', where a top-flight side has been slain by a lower league team in a fashion similar to David getting one over Goliath in the Bible. Sir Stanley Matthews and Ronnie Radford may not seem natural bedfellows. One became football's first knight of the realm in 1965, while the other worked all his life as a joiner and carpenter. Advertisement But the two men are forever entwined in FA Cup folklore. Matthews had the 1953 final named in his honour after Blackpool triumphed 4-3 against Bolton Wanderers. Radford scored arguably the most famous goal in the competition's history as non-League Hereford United knocked out top-flight Newcastle United 19 years later. This sense of inclusivity remains today, with 747 teams from the Premier League down to level 10 of the English football pyramid competing in this year's competition. In a way, Fisher's picturesque home, sitting just a stone's throw from the River Thames and hemmed in on three sides by trees, embodies this unusual mix of haves and have-nots. The stadium itself is basic. There's a main stand of around 150 seats down one side and a small covered terrace, dubbed the 'Dockers End', that runs to just six steps and barely covers the width of the six-yard box. But what gives this homely setting a big business feel is a backdrop featuring the cluster of gleaming skyscrapers making up Canary Wharf, that beacon for 1990s Docklands regeneration. Those attempts by Margaret Thatcher's government to revive what had become a derelict part of London following the decline and then closure of the docks included building the Surrey Docks Stadium, Fisher Athletic's 5,300-capacity home during a heyday that included four years in the Conference (fifth tier) between 1987 and 1991. That club also twice reached the cup's first round proper. Athletic folded in 2009 amid ruinous debts, five years after leaving Surrey Docks to groundshare with Dulwich Hamlet. Phoenix club Fisher FC emerged from the ashes and moved back to Rotherhithe in 2016. They are just a couple of hundred yards up Salter Road from Athletic's old home, which has since been turned into a housing estate called Fisher Close and the accompanying Mayflower Park. Advertisement Since reforming, the furthest the club has been in the cup is the second qualifying round in 2022-23. Even that involved a mammoth eight ties, as replays were needed to get past Sutton Common Rovers, Sittingbourne and Spelthorne Sports before finally bowing out to Welling United from three tiers above in National League South, again after a replay that drew a record crowd of 573 to St Paul's. The attendance for Camberley's visit in this season's extra preliminary round can't match those numbers. Millwall are playing a friendly against Portuguese top-flight side Estoril Praia just a couple of miles down the road at The Den, which doesn't help. But, still, a turnout of 264 is impressive. It's also slightly above last season's average gate, when they finished fourth in the Southern Counties East Premier Division. Judging by the smattering of club colours on show in nearby riverside pubs during the two hours before kick-off, many are determined to make a day of it. Those enjoying a pint at The Mayflower — so named because the ship that transported the first Pilgrims to America in 1620 was moored here — can buy U.S. and UK stamps at the bar thanks to a special licence granted in recognition of the pub's unique history. U.S. visitors might even feel like they are on a mini Wall Street. This one-time wasteland has been transformed by pyramid-topped One Canada Square and other skyscrapers. Often, a fixation with the vista can continue into the game itself. But not against Camberley, as supporters quickly become engrossed in a cracking cup tie between two attack-minded teams. Fisher take a seventh-minute lead when Chibueze Echem fires in from close range after initially out-jumping goalkeeper Dom West to meet a cross. Camberley appeal for a foul, but referee Royan Campbell is having none of it. 'It's a contact sport, leave it,' explains the official, whose exemplary decision-making throughout, together with a no-nonsense manner that never once strays into condescension, makes him one of the afternoon's standout performers. When a ref is poor people are first to complain. So it's only right that when a ref is good he should be commended… today's ref was excellent. Best ref we have had for a long time. Good control and spoke to the players like a human being not a robot! #PromoteHim — Camberley Town (@CamberleyTownFC) August 2, 2025 Camberley continue to pose a first-half threat, particularly through Shane Qoloni. But it's Fisher who go in 2-0 ahead at the break thanks to a thumping 20-yard free kick from Michael Sarpong. Fisher, as is perhaps to be expected from a fan-owned club where members pay £20 a season, boast a vocal crowd. 'When the Fish go swimming in…' is just one of many songs given a second half airing by the regulars in a Dockers End decorated with flags and banners. Advertisement The noise levels rise further just after the hour when substitute Rafael Garcia, once on the books of Everton and surely destined to be among those Fisher manager Ashanike soon propels back up the football pyramid, is fouled in the penalty area and Kesna Clarke duly converts from the spot. Qoloni pulls a goal back for the visitors, but there's to be no late fightback as Fisher claim a 3-1 victory. This brings a welcome £1,125 in prize money to go with an away tie at Jersey Bulls in the next stage and a chance to further bolster the coffers of a club whose annual turnover in 2023-24 stood at £80,435. Wembley Stadium may still be a long way away, with another 12 rounds to be negotiated to reach the May 16 final. But, here in Rotherhithe, as the home players embark on their customary post-match 'high-five' session with supporters in the Dockers End that serves as a 'thank you for attending', there's no mistaking the joy clubs such as Fisher can get from the cup. 'The atmosphere was electric and the boys really put in a performance,' says Ashanike. 'Everyone here has a story. Look at Rafa, he was playing for Everton two seasons ago. Now, he is here with us trying to progress himself. 'As a child, you want to play at Wembley. That's the dream for every kid. We know this won't happen for us. But we give it a go and see how far we can go in the competition. Two years ago, we had a good run and created so many memories. We want to mirror that.' (Top photos: Getty Images and Richard Sutcliffe/The Athletic)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store