
RFK Racing Teammates Battling Themselves, Others On Playoff Bubble
Published
Aug. 5, 2025 9:47 a.m. ET
share
x
link
NEWTON, Iowa — RFK Racing has two drivers fighting for a NASCAR Cup Series playoff spot on points.
That would be great — except they're fighting against each other.
With three spots currently available by points, Chris Buescher leads Ryan Preece by 23 points for the final spot. If there is a new winner in the final three races, they could both potentially miss the playoffs.
Chris Buescher waves to fans as he walks onstage during driver intros prior to the NASCAR Cup Series Iowa Corn 350
That almost happened on Sunday at Iowa Speedway when their teammate and team co-owner, Brad Keselowski, challenged for the win before winding up third.
At one point relatively late in the race, Preece could have held up Keselowski but knew Keselowski had the better car. He likely would have tried to put another driver passing him in a more precarious position, but he knew what was at stake.
"Brad caught me, and I figured even though I hate losing another spot in the points, I knew it was the right thing to do with how fast he was at the time and how many laps he led," Preece said.
ADVERTISEMENT
"He's my teammate and my owner. He's part of the group that signs my check. It was the right thing to do for the company."
Brad Keselowski (right) and Chris Buescher walk the grid during practice for the NASCAR Cup Series Iowa Corn 350
It also kept Preece from potentially putting himself in a precarious situation and losing even more spots as he had a loose car. If he had tried to hang on to the position, he risked wrecking himself.
"If I didn't get as loose as I did, and I felt like I could challenge the [leaders] for the win, I would have raced the s--- out of him," Preece said. "But at that point in time, it was damage control, and try to not lose more time to anybody behind us."
Preece finished fifth and cut 20 points off the margin to Buescher, so he sits 23 points behind.
With the final three regular-season races being Watkins Glen (road course), Richmond (short track) and Daytona (superspeedway), there are opportunities for strategy to come into play.
Drivers might pit before a stage end for track position or they might try to pit just outside a fuel window and stretch it to the end. Or at a place like Richmond, they might opt to cut a stage in thirds instead of half and hope that fresher tires will make the difference.
Ryan Preece gets introduced before the NASCAR Cup Series Toyota/Save Mart 350
In some racing series, an organization might direct the drivers to use different strategies, in hopes that one of them can win the race for whichever strategy works the best with the way the race plays out.
Keselowski, who faces the possibility of seeing none of his cars make the playoffs or possibly two of his cars make the playoffs (all three could if each of them won in the final three regular-season races), said he would not give such directives to his drivers.
"The crew chiefs have the ultimate level of autonomy at RFK to be able to make the calls that they feel are best for their team," Keselowski said prior to the Iowa race. "But certainly you like to be smart at it from a company perspective.
"Right now, where we're at, seemingly at least two or three teams need to win a race to get a win. But we're very competitive. There's a realistic potential to do that."
NASCAR has relatively strict rules to limit teams from manipulating a finish to benefit a specific driver as they are directed to get the best finish possible. But teammates do work together at certain places, such as at Daytona when it comes to working in the draft or fuel mileage.
"We do try to push those things from time to time," Keselowski said about strategy directed by the organization. "But the ultimate reality is you can't tell somebody to take a low percentage shot and ruin their day just so you feel better about it. There's certainly a balancing act."
Both Buescher and Preece could look at moments this season with frustration considering they haven't solidified a playoff spot.
(L-R) Brad Keselowski, Ryan Preece and Chris Buescher walk the grid prior to practice for the Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium in February
Buescher was docked 30 points for a rear bumper cover violation at Kansas. Preece was disqualified from a second-place finish at Talladega for too many shims on the rear spoiler, which cost him 39 points.
Right now, the playoff bubble — with three spots currently available for winless drivers — has Tyler Reddick up by 122 points, Alex Bowman with a 63-point cushion and then Buescher (+23).
Preece joined the team this year and the group has made steady progress, so just the fact they have a shot at the playoffs on points is somewhat of a surprise.
"If we were to get in the playoffs, we could be a threat, especially at this point in the season where we've spent 20-something races together and gaining a notebook of our own and understanding things that I key off of or what I want in a race car," Preece said.
"We've been super consistent. We've been top 10. When we execute races, we're top five. We're developing into a team that can lead laps and win races. It's going to take a win ... to lock ourselves in. But at the same time, we've been doing a good job of executing races and putting ourselves in position, so that's all you can do."
For Buescher, the feeling is all too similar to one he has had in recent years battling for a playoff spot until late in the regular season. He has won at Watkins Glen, Richmond and Daytona over the last couple of seasons. He missed the playoffs last year.
"There's always different circumstances, and somehow or another, we always end up there [on the bubble]," Buescher said. "We have to figure out how to win our races earlier in the season.
"But we've had some speed and some good runs ... and we've been in the hunt at a lot of different races."
Bob Pockrass covers NASCAR and INDYCAR for FOX Sports. He has spent decades covering motorsports, including over 30 Daytona 500s, with stints at ESPN, Sporting News, NASCAR Scene magazine and The (Daytona Beach) News-Journal. Follow him on Twitter @bobpockrass.
share
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox Sports
6 minutes ago
- Fox Sports
The World Is Dan Hurley's Playground: UConn Strikes Gold with Furphy and Reibe
College Basketball The World Is Dan Hurley's Playground: UConn Strikes Gold with Furphy and Reibe Updated Aug. 5, 2025 2:35 p.m. ET share facebook x reddit link STORRS, Conn. — Even for a state like Connecticut, where college basketball is a year-round passion, there was nothing particularly special about the morning of June 28, another nondescript Saturday amid a searing summer in this part of the country, with far too many weekends remaining before UConn returns to the court. But things began to change shortly after 11 a.m. local time in response to what was happening across the ocean and several time zones away, as Australia battled the United States in the group phase at this year's FIBA Under-19 Basketball World Cup, an event held in Lausanne, Switzerland. There in Vaudoise Arena, the American roster included bonafide stars like BYU signee AJ Dybantsa, the No. 1 overall prospect in the 2025 recruiting cycle; Louisville signee Mikel Brown Jr., the No. 8 overall prospect; and Arizona signee Koa Peat, the No. 9 overall prospect. All of them future first-round talents. And yet the player who outscored them all — the one whose highlights quickly began circulating the internet to enliven Huskies fans several thousand miles away — was a far less recognizable combo guard for the Australians named Jacob Furphy, a product of the NBA Global Academy. Though his team wound up losing by double digits, Furphy poured in a game-high 24 points on 9-for-18 shooting to set social media ablaze, at least within the college basketball sphere. His mixture of spot-up shooting, crafty pick-and-roll maneuvers and a unique ability to finish around the rim had UConn supporters salivating at a time when the program's recruiting class also included five-star shooting guard Braylon Mullins (No. 15 overall) and blue-chip center Eric Reibe (No. 28 overall), who shined for runner-up Germany in the same event. ADVERTISEMENT "You're looking out there on the floor and there's lottery picks up and down the lineup for the Americans and [Furphy] is playing great. He's hanging with all those guys," UConn assistant coach Luke Murray told me last week. "It was just fun to see him play against the best guys. We already had an incredibly high expectation for him, and so we were excited to get to work." With two future Huskies competing in Switzerland, where the United States eventually prevailed, Murray and head coach Dan Hurley hopped across the pond in support of their signees. They watched giddily as the tournament developed into an international emergence for Furphy, who averaged 16.7 points, 4.4 rebounds and 2.4 assists in seven games, and yet another confirmation for the long-admired big man Reibe, who put up 15.4 points, 5.0 rebounds and 1.6 assists per game while playing a central role for the Germans. Reibe and Furphy even played against each other in the quarterfinals — "I liked talking a bit of s--- to him," Furphy told me — as online chatter about the legitimacy of UConn's forthcoming push for a third national title in four seasons intensified. The identification and procurement of a player like Furphy, who committed to the Huskies last October, is in keeping with the philosophical revolution Hurley underwent following his team's dispiriting loss to 12th-seeded New Mexico State in the first round of the 2022 NCAA Tournament. Slowly but surely, and with more than a few nudges from Murray, who is regarded as one of the keenest offensive minds in college basketball, Hurley availed himself to the possibility that junkyard defense and unflinching toughness weren't the only traits needed to win at the highest levels. He followed Murray down the rabbit hole of complex offensive actions, high-powered analytics and the pursuit of players with more holistic understandings of the game, the kind who can make complex reads in real time by enacting a set of well-drilled principles. "My mental health is much better embracing offense," Hurley told me back in 2024, two months before winning his second consecutive national title with a team that finished No. 1 in the country for offensive efficiency. Many of the specific player attributes and schematic ideas that UConn came to embrace are staples of the international game, where freedom of movement and off-ball screening begets beautiful team basketball over some of the one-on-one, isolation-heavy trends in the NBA. That meant it was only a matter of time before the Huskies, who are entering Year 8 under Hurley, began eyeing recruits familiar with those types of systems when identifying potential targets. Reibe, who chose UConn over Kansas, Creighton, Indiana and Oregon, was born in Germany and spent a chunk of his childhood in Switzerland before eventually completing his high school career at the Bullis School in Potomac, Maryland. He possesses exceptional ball skills for a 7-footer and can operate comfortably from either the low post, where his soft touch should be an asset for the Huskies, or the perimeter, where his jumper extends beyond the 3-point line and his sharp passing can feed cutters. With several years of national team experience under his belt, Reibe, who flitted back and forth between a four- and five-star ranking, now comes to Storrs as the primary backup for starting center Tarris Reed Jr., the former Michigan transfer. "Coach Murray watches a lot of EuroLeague and tries to implement some stuff from there and then combine it with the stuff from [the United States]," Reibe said. "They kind of mix it together, and I see a lot of similarities." McDonald's High School All-American Eric Reibe (22) poses during a photo shoot. (Photo by Brian Spurlock/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) Furphy, meanwhile, was born in Tasmania, an island off the southeast coast of Australia, and traveled back and forth to the mainland several times each year as his basketball career progressed. He eventually relocated to the capital city of Canberra, which is smack in the middle of Melbourne and Sydney, to join Basketball Australia's Centre of Excellence and the NBA Global Academy, a program that has produced players like Andrew Bogut, Joe Ingles, Patty Mills and Josh Giddey. As with Reibe, the versatile Furphy has been part of his country's international pipeline for several years and even made his debut with Australia's senior team in the 2025 Asia Cup qualifiers. He, too, recognized the offensive overlap between the kind of basketball he's been taught and the core tenets Murray described to him during recruiting conversations. "That was one thing I talked to my agent about as soon as I found out that UConn was interested," Furphy said. "It's a style that I like playing and I've played pretty much growing up my whole life. That was one of the main attractions for sure." Jacob Furphy of Australia drives to the basket during the FIBA U19 Basketball World Cup 2025. (Photo by Vianney Thibaut/FIBA via Getty Images) This summer, Australia's U19 national team ran much of their offense through Furphy at the FIBA tournament by asking him to come off screens or come through actions and then make the right decisions with the ball in his hands, even if he wasn't technically the team's point guard. Murray was impressed with Furphy's comfort level in a high-usage role and lauded his understanding of how to change speeds as a cutter. Hurley came away from the trip to Switzerland pleased with how Furphy carried himself on the court: He was the first player in and out of every huddle; he was constantly communicating with teammates and coaches; he ran everywhere he went — always a point of emphasis with Hurley. Now, Furphy will be part of a deep guard rotation that includes returner Solo Ball and newcomers Silas Demary Jr. (Georgia transfer), Malachi Smith (Dayton) and Mullins. He projects as a shooting guard or undersized small forward who is capable of sliding over to point guard when necessary. And while his playing time as a true freshman will likely be less than what Furphy was used to with Australia, he's skilled enough to contribute immediately in a reserve role. "We just love his versatility," Murray told me. "He's a screener, he's a cutter, he's an initiator of offense, he's a really good pick-and-roll player. Historically, we haven't been a team that plays a ton out of pick and roll, but he's going to be a guy that we're going to give more freedom to play that way. "He's going to have to continue to get better defensively and get more accustomed to dealing with size and athleticism when he's making his reads as a passer — just getting more accustomed to how that length presents itself on the court, presents itself at the rim when he goes to be a scorer — but yeah, we're super excited about him." That Furphy spent his entire childhood on the other side of the world means the Huskies didn't become aware of him until receiving a tip from a journalist who specializes in covering the NBA Draft. The recommendation sent Murray down another rabbit hole of studying Furphy on tape from his time with both the national team and the NBA Global Academy. Murray liked him enough to ask fellow assistant Tom Moore to visit Atlanta when one of Furphy's teams was competing in the United States last summer. Moore loved what he saw, just as Murray hoped he would, and the Huskies' recruitment of Furphy accelerated once the staff returned to campus and Hurley caught up on the latest film. They convinced Furphy to sign with UConn over Illinois, another program mining international talent at a high level, and have been thrilled with the decision ever since — even if he was ranked outside the top 130 players in the country in the final 247Sports rankings. But fast-forward to this summer and the FIBA tournament became Furphy's formal introduction to the American basketball world. It marked the first time that Hurley watched his incoming freshman play in person, and what a string of performances he and Murray saw. "He doesn't necessarily have the best body, he doesn't have unbelievable length or tremendous athleticism or great speed," Murray said of Furphy. "But that's part of the reason people didn't think [former UConn star] Cam Spencer was that good in high school, you know, or didn't think he was that good at Loyola [before entering the transfer portal]. "So again, I think a lot of it is about fitting stylistically. He may not be a perfect fit for everybody, but he's a perfect fit for us." Michael Cohen covers college football and college basketball for FOX Sports. Follow him at @Michael_Cohen13. Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account , and follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily! FOLLOW Follow your favorites to personalize your FOX Sports experience College Basketball share


USA Today
36 minutes ago
- USA Today
How to watch IndyCar live in Portland in 2025, weekend schedule
The NTT IndyCar Series is ready for the upcoming action in Portland, marking the 15th official race weekend of the 2025 season. In 2024, Will Power won, with Alex Palou and Josef Newgarden rounding out the podium. IndyCar drivers and teams finally return to Portland, and they're ready to put on a show! Below, you can find more details about the on-track action in Portland this weekend! IndyCar live today: Portland Here are the upcoming practice, qualifying, and race times for the current race weekend on the IndyCar schedule (all ET). Watch IndyCar in Portland FREE on Fubo More: IndyCar schedule: Start times, TV networks, and more in 2025 We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. Motorsports Wire operates independently, though, and this doesn't influence our coverage.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Mookie Betts Player Props: August 5, Dodgers vs. Cardinals
Mookie Betts was hitless in his previous game (0 for 4), but will take another crack at it when the Los Angeles Dodgers face Miles Mikolas and the St. Louis Cardinals on Tuesday at 10:10 p.m. ET on MLB Network, SportsNet LA and FDSMW. Find odds, stats, and more below to make your Mookie Betts player prop bets. Betts is hitting .231 with 15 doubles, a triple, 11 home runs and 42 walks. Watch tonight's Dodgers game on Fubo! Mookie Betts Prop Bets and Odds How to Watch Los Angeles Dodgers vs. St. Louis Cardinals Mookie Betts vs. Miles Mikolas Mookie Betts prop bet insights MLB odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds updated Tuesday at 1:24 p.m. ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub. Mookie Betts stats against the Cardinals Cardinals starter: Miles Mikolas