The Moonshine and Motorsports Trail and Rick Houston, host of the Moonshine & Motorsports Trail Racing Podcast, will hold a special live event at North Wilkesboro Speedway this weekend in the fan zone. They’ll be joined by Thad Moffitt, driver of the No. 46 Moonshine & Motorsports Trail Chevrolet. Look for the tent at the track this Saturday for some cool things for NASCAR fans.
Fans can enjoy special appearances from two VIPs: Truck Series driver Thad Moffitt will host an autograph session, and Rick Houston, host of the Scene Vault Podcast and the Moonshine & Motorsports Podcast, will also be there to meet fans and listeners.
The display wouldn’t be complete without a show car or show truck. A Faction46 show truck will also be there, and special surprise prizes will be given away.
NASCAR fans are expected to flock back to Wilkes County this weekend for one of the biggest NASCAR events of the year.
Schedule
The tent will be located in the Fan Zone at North Wilkesboro. Fans can stop by during any of these operating hours, and be sure to stick around for some special surprise giveaways
Friday: 1:30-7:00 PM
Saturday: 8:00 AM-5:00 PM (Rick Houston appearance at NOON)
Sunday: 11:00 AM-7:00 PM (Thad Moffitt Autograph Session at 1:00; Concert in the Midway from 1:30-3:00)
Be sure to stop by and say hello, and check this display out this weekend if you’re traveling out to North Wilkesboro. We can’t wait to meet you!
Don’t forget to subscribe to the Moonshine & Motorsports Podcast on any of your favorite listening platforms.
Joe Gibbs Racing has filed a lawsuit against former competition director Chris Gabehart, alleging he took confidential team information and intended to use it to benefit Spire Motorsports.
NEWS: Joe Gibbs Racing has filed a lawsuit against former competition director Chris Gabehart alleging he "embarked on a brazen scheme to steal JGR’s most sensitive information and use it for the benefit of a direct competitor in NASCAR — Spire Motorsports."
The organization is seeking financial compensation and a court order to prevent Gabehart from using or disclosing what it describes as proprietary data and trade secrets obtained during his tenure. In the filing, JGR states that Gabehart had access to sensitive technical, strategic, and operational information while serving in one of the team’s highest leadership roles. His employment contract, submitted as part of the case, shows he earned about $1 million annually plus performance bonuses. The team argues that such information could provide a competitive advantage if shared with another organization.
Chris Gabehart, in competition director role at JGR, was making $1 million a year plus bonuses. According to his contract that was filed as part of JGR lawsuit against him: https://t.co/7hyM4xFxRjpic.twitter.com/EBxsxcfEc4
In its complaint letter, JGR alleges that Chris Gabehart synchronized his personal Google Drive with his team-issued laptop, allowing confidential files to be copied outside the organization. Investigators also allegedly found a Google Drive folder labeled “Spire,” including a subfolder titled “Past Setups,” along with more than a dozen photos of the laptop screen taken in November 2025 that allegedly showed sensitive internal documents. The filing also states that Gabehart conducted online research about Spire Motorsports during the same period, which JGR cites as evidence that the information was intended for the competing team.
JGR's complaint letter against Chris Gabehart explains the "Brazen Theft of its confidential information and trade secrets" and how they concluded it was for Spire Motorsports.
According to JGR, Gabehart synced his personal Google Drive with his JGR laptop. pic.twitter.com/Px6W6SL94P
The filing also states that JGR learned on February 11, 2026, that Gabehart intended to accept a role as Chief Motorsports Officer at Spire, a position overseeing the team’s racing operations.
According to the complaint, JGR issued a demand letter in December 2025 instructing him not to use or disclose confidential information and to participate in a forensic review to identify any retained data; Gabehart’s legal counsel responded that any JGR materials would be returned but opposed the forensic review, stating that a Google Drive folder labeled “Spire” contained only personal notes and that he did not possess sensitive documents. JGR challenges these claims in its filing.
What’s the Context Behind This?
The lawsuit follows Gabehart’s departure from Joe Gibbs Racing on December 3, 2025, which happened without a public explanation at the time. Gabehart had recently moved from serving as Denny Hamlin’s crew chief to overseeing competition across the organization. Neither Gabehart nor the team came to public to explain the reasons behind the split, which sparked fan speculation and theories for over two months.
Some of the speculation during the off-season suggested that Gabehart could join Spire Motorsports, though nothing has been announced. The lawsuit does not confirm any employment agreement but claims that the alleged actions were intended to benefit exactly that organization.
Team owner Joe Gibbs later explained that the organization chose not to hire a single replacement competition director after Gabehart’s exit. Instead, JGR created a 5-person competition committee that includes former director Wally Brown and 4 additional leaders focused on performance. Gibbs stated that the the group shares the responsibility for preparing the team’s cars and race strategy.
Gabehart’s tenure at JGR dates back to 2016 in the then-Xfinity, now O’Reilly Auto Parts Series before he became Hamlin’s crew chief in 2019. Together, they won 22 Cup Series races, including the Daytona 500 in 2019 and 2020, and reached the Championship 4 three times. He moved into the competition director role for the 2025 season, overseeing performance across all Cup teams.
JGR’s filing emphasizes that the competition director position involves broad access to internal processes, technical development plans, and strategic information, and the team is seeking legal remedies to prevent any use of that information outside the team and to recover damages related to the alleged breach of contractual obligations.
The case is expected to proceed through the court while the season continues, leaving Gabehart’s future in the sport uncertain.
This year marks the second season of NASCAR’s groundbreaking 2025 media rights deal, and fans are curious to see just how year two will stack up with year one. This article will walk you through the 2026 season race by race, comparing viewership week by week to NASCAR’s 2025 season.
The goal of this article is to keep a tally of each race on the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series schedule. Our tracker will also compare head-to-head each week’s race (or closest comparable race) to its 2025 counterpart.
This tracker will mostly focus on how NASCAR fared week to week, regardless of schedule changes, such as Watkins Glen, which shifts from the fall in 2025 to 2026.
To understand how a race stacked up against itself from the prior season, turn to our race-by-race list to see the totals of compared weeks. Look below to the season as a whole section, which only counts races up to a specific week.
Throughout this tracker, alongside breakdowns by race type, broadcast availability, and Chase races, there will be notes about any potential delays or changes to the broadcast network or the race weekend.
For tracks like Chicagoland, which replaces the Chicago Street Circuit, their race will be compared head-to-head with last season’s most comparable race. In Chicagoland’s case, that would be the 2025 Chicago Street Race.
The 2026 Season as a Whole: Through Week 3
All Races (3 Total in 2026): Includes Ratings for The Clash, Daytona Duels, and the All-Star Race, along with the 36-race regular schedule
2026 (3 Races) Total/Average Viewership to Date: 11.673 Million/3.891 Million Per Race
2025 (3 Races) Total Viewership to Date: 11.674 Million/3891 Million Per Race
Total Viewership Difference (2026 vs 2025): -0.001 Million (-0.008%)
Average Viewership Difference (2026 vs 2025): -0.0003 Million (−0.007%)
Network Races to Date (2 Total in 2026): Points and Exhibition/Qualifying Races
2026 (2 Races) Total/Average Viewership to Date: 9.838 Million/4.919 Million Per Race
2025 (2 Races) Total Viewership to Date: 9.838 Million/4.919 Million Per Race
Total Viewership Difference (2026 vs 2025): -0.000 Million (0%)
Average Viewership Difference (2026 vs 2025): -0.000 Million (0%)
Exhibition/Qualifying Races (2 Total in 2026): ONLY Includes Ratings for The Clash, Daytona Duels, and the All-Star Race
2026 (2 Races) Total/Average Viewership to Date: 4.184 Million/2.092 Million Per Race
2025 (2 Races) Total Viewership to Date: 4.913 Million/2.457 Million Per Race
Total Viewership Difference (2026 vs 2025): -0.729 Million (-14.838%)
Average Viewership Difference (2026 vs 2025): -0.365 Million (−14.855%)
.@FoxTV got 7.489 million viewers for Sunday's Daytona 500, up from last year's rain-delayed race (6.76 million).
➡️ @NASCAR sacrificed about five percentage points from its best-case scenario for viewership by moving the race up an hour to avoid rain, per historical trends. pic.twitter.com/5PCpcCETYV
Viewership Comparison (2025 vs 2026): +0.728 Million Viewers (+10.767%)
*The 2025 Daytona 500 was pushed back several hours due to rain, while the 2026 Daytona 500 was pushed up one hour to avoid inclement weather
NASCAR Cup Series 2026 Duels at Daytona on FS1 via Adam Stern
.@FS1 got 1.835 million viewers for Thursday's America 250 Florida Duel at Daytona, basically flat from 1.837 million last year. pic.twitter.com/ULI9Ywc2Mi
Scene Vault Podcast’s creator Rick Houston is launching a new documentary series that will take a deep look at one of the most painful and transformative periods in NASCAR history. Firestorm, produced by The Scene Vault Podcast, chronicles the 17 month stretch from May 2000 to October 2001 when 5 drivers lost their lives in on-track accidents, marking the era that permanently changed the sport’s approach to safety.
The 10-episode series revisits the tragedies involving Adam Petty, Kenny Irwin Jr, Tony Roper, Dale Earnhardt, and Blaise Alexander. Rather than focusing solely on the crashes themselves, Firestorm analyzes the human stories behind the drivers, the emotional toll on the garage, and the sweeping changes that followed.
Listeners can access the series through The Scene Vault’s podcast platforms, where episodes are released as part of its long-running motorsports history programming. The show is available on major podcast services, as well as through videos on YouTube.
The first episode of Firestorm is already up on YouTube, and you can check out by tapping below
Topics covered in the series include:
In-depth profiles of the 5 drivers whose deaths defined the era
The technical failures and safety shortcomings present at the time
Behind-the-scenes debates over measures such as SAFER barriers (“soft walls”)
Resistance to head-and-neck restraint systems like the HANS device
How the tragedies accelerated sweeping safety reforms across NASCAR
You can also listen on Audible, Amazon Music, iHeartRadio, Apple Podcasts, and other services by simply searching for “The Scene Vault Podcast”
By combining archival research, firsthand accounts, and technical analysis, Firestorm aims to document how grief and controversy ultimately led to one of the most significant safety revolutions in motorsports history, providing context as for why modern NASCAR safety standards exist and the heavy price paid to achieve them.
Subscribe to The Scene Vault and hit the bell to never miss an episode.