Dale Jr Predicts No Charlotte Roval on 2025 Schedule, “Probably” Mexico

CONCORD, NORTH CAROLINA - OCTOBER 08: A general view of racing during the NASCAR Cup Series Bank of America ROVAL 400 at Charlotte Motor Speedway on October 08, 2023 in Concord, North Carolina. (Photo by James Gilbert/Getty Images)

What’s Happening?

The fans are asking NASCAR to do what no one was asking for just a few short years ago, add more intermediate tracks to the schedule. Dale Earnahardt Jr. looked at some solutions in a recent episode of the Dale Jr. Download, even predicting that Marcus Smith could get rid of the Charlotte Roval. That was not the only prediction he gave on the 2025 schedule either.

  • Dale Earnhardt Jr. is not a reporter, but, he is well-plugged into the NASCAR. He knows many powerful people in the industry personally, and he has influence in the industry as well.
  • The Next-Gen car works well on intermediate tracks, but, NASCAR is also looking elsewhere to expand the schedule. This means likely looking at road courses, which, according to Earnhardt Jr., makes it that much more important to add more intermediate tracks.
  • Fans are asking for more intermediate tracks. They want to see the Next-Gen car at its best place.

The Charlotte Roval

I think that Marcus is smart. If I know Marcus, he’ll shelve the Roval and take advantage of this popularity that this Next-Gen car has on the mile and a halfs. I feel like that we got the Roval because of how bad the product was at Charlotte. It was terrible. He had to do something, and he comes up with this great idea. The Roval was good out of the gate in the same vein that racing at the Coliseum was cool the first time, but, for me after after one or two, I’m done.

Dale Earnhardt Jr.

That’s a pretty bold prediction, but, it makes a lot of sense. The Charlotte Roval does not serve the same purpose it once did.

It was added to the schedule in 2018 because the Gen-6 car was incredible on road courses, but, NASCAR did not have the flexibility to add more road courses. Why not take a race away from a boring intermediate and do something new? Now, NASCAR has 3 other natural terrain road courses and a street race, including Watkins Glen being moved to the Playoffs. It also doesn’t help that the racing product on road courses with the Next-Gen car has been hit-or-miss at best.

That being said, Marcus Smith has publicly spoken highly of the Roval. He said during an interview with Sirius XM NASCAR Radio in the fall of 2023, “I love the ROVAL and I love that it makes Charlotte Motor Speedway the most unique venue in motorsports.”

Was Kansas enough to Change Smith’s mind?

The Chicago Street Race

This is where we get into more speculative territory. Dale Earnahrdt Jr. looks at another potential intermediate track to add back to the schedule, Chicagoland Speedway. He openly wonders if the Chicago Street Race is sustainable for years to come.

How long can we race in the Streets of Chicago? Is that a sustainable thing? Can you do that year over year for a long time? I don’t feel like that’s realistic. I think that it’s so expensive to do that eventually ythe crowd is going to level off right after after the first couple of years.

Dale Earnhardt Jr.

The Chicago Street Race has been rife with political opposition and even some local opposition. It’s easy for those opponents to tell NASCAR that there is a purpose-built race track in the area, instead of shutting down city streets during peak vacation season.

It’s also worth noting that two Chicago sports teams, the Bears and the White Sox are looking at building new downtown stadiums. That may require the city to pony up public funding, but, the city is not as willing to give them funding. If these established teams struggle to get public funding for new stadiums, how long before someone with enough power sees the Street Race as a pointless expense?

Racing Internationally

Dale Earnhardt Jr. also predicted that NASCAR would race internationally in 2025, specifically mentioning Mexico. That’s not a new report by any means, but, he brings up an interesting perspective on what racing internationally means.

More international races mean more races on road courses, which, makes it that much more important to add other types of tracks onto the schedule, specifically short tracks.

NASCAR wants to be big enough and successful enough for it and its race teams to be able to travel outside of this country and have have amazing events. That’s going to most likely be road course racing, and, man, we have enough. If we didn’t have many road courses, it wouldn’t bother me that much but we got a lot. And, what’s whittling away? One of our favorite things, short track seems to be because the mile and a half package is so great. We’re going to try to add a couple more of them somehow you you’re going to try to shoehorn one or two more of those back into the schedule…What’s got to sacrifice is our short tracks.

Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. is right that, if NASCAR wants to race internationally, it would probably be a road course race. What would you sacrifice at that point? Intermediates put on great racing, so, short tracks may be the first ones to go.

Sure, the short-track package is not great, but, how far is too far? It’s a tough balance to strike because short-track racing is part of what makes NASCAR unique, but, it’s also not producing the best racing. Where is the balance there?

The 2025 schedule is set to be an interesting one. It could be one of NASCAR’s boldest yet, and Dale Earnahdt Jr. raises some interesting questions about the schedule.

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Trucks: Mid-Race Report from EchoPark Speedway

What’s Happening?

The NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series are thundering away at EchoPark Speedway (formerly Atlanta Motor Speedway) in Hampton, Georgia. Here’s what’s going on as the second stage draws to a close in Hotlanta.

  • The ThorSport Trucks dominated the opening stage with polesitter Jake Garcia and his teammate Ben Rhodes leading a bulk of the first two stages. They, along with fellow Ford driver Chandler Smith, formed a dominating single-file truck line at the top of the stage.
  • Corey Heim returned to the Craftsman Truck Series this weekend. He started the race strong, methodically working his way up through the pack, eventually taking the race lead away from the ThorSport Trucks late in Stage 1. He went on to win the stage.
  • On Lap 4 of the race, Christian Eckes, who returned to the Truck Series after an ill-fated stint in the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series with Kaulig, had some issues. He’s off to a tough 2026 season. Back at MHR driving the No. 91 truck, he suffered a broken driveshaft, ending his day.
  • With both stages now in the books, the top point earners so far in this race are Stewart Friesen (15 points with the Stage 2 win) and Andres Perez (7 points).
  • Cup drivers such as Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (No. 45), Carson Hocevar (No. 77), and Kyle Busch (No. 7) have yet to upset the truck regulars and not for a lack of trying. Kyle Busch tried to make the bottom work in Stage 1 but was never able to clear the leaders. Still, they all three ran solidly in the Top 10.

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What to Watch Out for in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Race at EchoPark Speedway

What’s Happening?

After the season-opening race at Daytona, the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series returns to yet another drafting-style track–the EchoPark Speedway (formerly known as Atlanta Motor Speedway). This race part of a thrilling NASCAR double-header with the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series slated to follow. Here’s what you need to keep an eye on in today’s Fr8 Racing 208 at EchoPark Speedway.

  • ThorSport swept the front row for today’s race during yesterday’s qualifying session. Jake Garcia will roll off from the pole in the No. 98 with his teammate, Ben Rhodes alongside in the No. 99
  • Their FORD Teammate, Chandler Smith, snuck away with the win in the season-opening race at Daytona. Because win-and-you’re-in is over, he’ll need to continue that consistency today at EchoPark, a similar-style drafting track.
  • Kyle Busch is in the field today. The winningest driver in NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series history is the highest starting Chevy, driving the Spire No. 7. He’s the defending winner of this race looking for early bragging rights to start the season.
  • Adam Andretti, the cousin of Michael and Marco Andretti, is in this race and is even starting inside the top 10. Keep an eye out for him today as he’ll be running a partial schedule.
  • The weather was a big point of concern today. The race was delayed for thirty minutes but skies ultimately broke, track drying began, and the start time was rescheduled to 2:34 PM EST.

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DAYTONA BEACH, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 14: Brad Keselowski, driver of the #6 Castrol Ford, walks with a cane in the garage area during practice for the NASCAR Cup Series Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway on February 14, 2026 in Daytona Beach, Florida.

Will Brad Keselowski Miss Out on COTA?

What’s Happening?

Brad Keselowski showed he can still wheel it at Daytona, establishing that even a broken femur, one of the worst hits an athlete can take, could not keep him on the sidelines. In fact, on the final lap, he was still in the hunt, attempting to go three-wide with Elliott before Riley Herbst’s move up the track wrecked both his plans and his car, leaving him with a P5 finish. Now, while he is ready for the Atlanta race on Sunday, his planned COTA run on March 1, 2026, hangs in the air, as he is still recovering from his injury, and a road course race requires more strength and leg work than oval races. Hence, Joey Hand is lined up as the relief driver for the No. 6 Ford.

Speaking in the Atlanta media scrum, Keselowski said he is glad to have Hand in the wings, noting he serves as Ford’s reserve for road courses. Hand has raced and won across the globe, even finishing P4 in the Chicago Street race back in 2024 for RFK Racing. That’s why Keselowski called him “a great guy,” adding that “he’s been very helpful.”

Still, with Hand being smaller in build, fitting him into the RFK Racing co-owner’s seat could pose a risk. When Fox Sports reporter Bob Pockrass floated the idea of Keselowski starting the race and then handing over mid-way, the 2012 Cup champ left the door open. “No, it is possible. So we kind of run through all that. and we’ve got a lot of good options with it,” he said, keeping all cards on the table.

The team has already been laying the groundwork, and Keselowski sounds like someone bracing for a game-time call on whether he can go the distance. He admitted, “I’m going to just see how I feel. I’ve got some more stuff, tests next week to get through with medical tests and physical tests, and I’ll probably just see how those go and make a decision on what’s best for the team,” after navigating the G-forces at Atlanta and eyeing more medical checkups.

That leaves the door ajar for a split-duty play, where Keselowski could start the race to bank points and then hand over the wheel to a stand-in, most likely Hand, if Keselowski’s leg refuses to cooperate.

Background

During the off-season, Keselowski broke his right femur in an accident while he was on a trip with his family, out skiing, in December 2025. He was cleared for the Daytona 500, but road courses like COTA demand more from the body. Even during Daytona Speedweeks, he hinted that while he could handle straight-line racing, a full road-course grind might be a different beast. Ahead of the season opener, the RFK Racing owner was seen moving through the garage with a cane, indicating that the road back still has miles left.