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NASCAR odds for the Truck Series race at Charlotte in May 2025

NASCAR odds for the Truck Series race at Charlotte in May 2025

USA Today23-05-2025
NASCAR odds for the Truck Series race at Charlotte in May 2025
The NASCAR Truck Series is ready to compete in the North Carolina Education Lottery 200 at Charlotte Motor Speedway during the 15th race weekend of the 2025 season. This will represent the fourth straight race for the Truck Series dating back to Texas Motor Speedway in early May.
Nick Sanchez entered victory lane in last year's race at Charlotte, with Stewart Friesen and Grant Enfinger rounding out the top three spots. Sanchez's win marked his second and final victory during the 2024 season. However, who are the favorites to win this weekend?
Below, you can check out the NASCAR odds via BetMGM for the 2025 North Carolina Education Lottery 200 at Charlotte as of Friday, May 23!
NASCAR odds for the Truck Series race at Charlotte (May 2025)
Corey Heim: +160
Kyle Busch: +250
Layne Riggs: +700
Ross Chastain: +800
Chandler Smith: +1600
Grant Enfinger: +1800
Kaden Honeycutt: +1800
Daniel Hemric: +2200
Ty Majeski: +2500
Ben Rhodes: +2500
Rajah Caruth: +3500
Tanner Gray: +3500
Brandon Jones: +4000
Tyler Ankrum: +4000
Jake Garcia: +4000
Stewart Friesen: +6000
Parker Kligerman: +8000
Gio Ruggiero: +10000
Matt Crafton: +12500
B.J. McLeod: +12500
Connor Mosack: +25000
Jack Wood: +35000
Dawson Sutton: +35000
Matt Mills: +35000
Andres Perez de Lara: +50000
Luke Fenhaus: +100000
Frankie Muniz: +100000
Justin Carroll: +100000
Toni Breidinger: +200000
Timmy Hill: +200000
Stefan Parsons: +200000
Cody Dennison: +200000
Spencer Boyd: +200000
Mason Maggio: +200000
More: NASCAR Cup Series odds for the 2025 Coca-Cola 600
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INDIANAPOLIS — Bubba Wallace drove the closing laps of Sunday's Brickyard 400 with a pair of guests in his cockpit. Their voices echoed the dichotomy of emotions the 23XI Racing driver elicits whenever he steps on stage for pre-race introductions: those thundering boos filled with hate, disgust and doubt, and the raucous yells and rhythmic chants of his name that rain down whenever one of NASCAR's most divisive drivers finds successes. Though he's worked in recent years to silence the noise and silo himself off from the world on race days in an attempt to discover an internal calm to help lessen the valleys on bad days and refocus himself on the ones where success seems within his grasp, dueling voices still linger. One: a nagging, irritating and oftentimes successfully demotivating devil in his ear that tells him he's not good enough to be leading the closing laps of a Crown Jewel race — and certainly not good enough to win one. 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Did they get moved yet? Oh, that's right, it was rigged. Of course,' Wallace chided in his post-race news conference, a reference to the ways in which the stockcar world's most high-profile active Black driver is held to what he believes to be either unreasonable or unfair standards by some when he falters, combined with the ways in which his successes are knocked down a peg, too. 'You're gonna have people boo you, and you're going to have people cheer you. I had a guy today call me a 'punk.' Well, punks get trophies, I guess. 'I like to have fun with the fans, and it is what it is, but I really do appreciate the support, deep down, as a guy who used to struggle with the boos and wonder 'Why?' It's just sports, and people are going to have the drivers they like and the drivers they hate, the drivers they want to see win and the drivers they want to see crash. But you've just got to go out a compete.' 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'Those last 20 laps, it was probably 20 laps of me telling myself I'm not going to be able to do it, and so I found my biggest problem, and that's that if I could shut that off fully, we could do a lot more of this,' he said. 'I really thought this year started out way different than any other, and mentally it has, but here we were in the same spot before the race. 'Is Bubba Wallace going to make it into the playoffs?' Like, 'Damn, dude, is it me?' 'There's a lot of expectations on you to deliver with this team we have at 23XI, with having the right people and the right sponsors. It takes everybody at (the shop) to have days and moments like this, and so there's a certain expectation level to win. To not be able to for almost three years, you really start to doubt yourself and wonder, 'Wow, really is this it?' After this contract is up, is this it?' I still have a couple years left now, but hopefully this gives me at least another year more.'

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