Every NASCAR Driver’s NASCAR 25 Driver Rating

Photo by iRacing

What’s Happening?

The release of iRacing’s NASCAR 25 console game is right around the corner, and among the things revealed by iRacing,

  • Player ratings are a key element of almost any other sports game, and NASCAR games are no stranger to the concept. This year, with the release of iRacing’s NASCAR 25 console game, iRacing is making Driver Ratings a key element of the game.
  • These ratings are on a 1-100 scale, with driver skills on Short Tracks, Intermediate Tracks, Speedways, Concrete Tracks, Superspeedways, and road courses determining their ratings. Only one driver, William Byron, has a 100 overall rating.
  • As iRacing unveils the rating for each driver prior to launch, this article will be updated with their overall rating. For any and all information, including timelines, promotional videos, and in-game info, make sure to check out our in-depth article on NASCAR ’25 below.

NASCAR Cup Series

100 Overall
  • #24 | William Byron – 100 Overall

99-90 Overall
  • #11 | Denny Hamlin – 99 Overall
  • #5 | Kyle Larson – 99 Overall
  • #12 | Ryan Blaney – 98 Overall
  • #20 | Christopher Bell – 97 Overall
  • #9 | Chase Elliott – 96 Overall
  • #45 | Tyler Reddick – 92 Overall
  • #19 | Chase Briscoe – 92 Overall
  • #22 | Joey Logano – 90 Overall
  • #23 | Bubba Wallace – 90 Overall

80-89 Overall
  • #17 | Chris Buescher – 89 Overall
  • #6 | Brad Keselowski – 88 Overall
  • #48 | Alex Bowman – 87 Overall
  • #1 | Ross Chastain – 87 Overall
  • #54 | Ty Gibbs – 86 Overall
  • #60 | Ryan Preece – 84 Overall
  • #77 | Carson Hocevar – 84 Overall
  • #8 | Kyle Busch – 84 Overall
  • #2 | Austin Cindric – 83 Overall
  • #16 | A.J. Allmendinger – 80 Overall

70-79 Overall
  • #21 | Josh Berry – 78 Overall
  • #43 | Erik Jones – 77 Overall
  • #71 | Michael McDowell – 77 Overall
  • #42 | John Hunter Nemechek – 76 Overall
  • #3 | Austin Dillon – 76 Overall
  • #99 | Daniel Suarez – 76 Overall
  • #38 | Zane Smith – 75 Overall
  • #7 | Justin Haley – 74 Overall
  • #88 | Shane van Gisbergen – 72 Overall
  • #4 | Noah Gragson – 71 Overall
  • #34 | Todd Gilliland – 71 Overall

60-69 Overall
  • #47 | Ricky Stenhouse Jr. – 69 Overall
  • #41 | Cole Custer – 68 Overall
  • #10 | Ty Dillon – 66 Overall
  • #56 | Martin Truex Jr. – 63 Overall
  • #35 | Riley Herbst – 63 Overall
  • #87 | Connor Zilisch – 63 Overall
  • #01 | Corey LaJoie – 60 Overall

50-59 Overall
  • #51 | Cody Ware – 55 Overall
  • #84 | Jimmie Johnson – 54 Overall
  • #40 | Justin Allgaier – 52 Overall
  • #44 | J.J. Yeley – 50 Overall
  • #78 | B.J. McLeod – 50 Overall

40-49 Overall
  • #50 | Burt Myers – 40 Overall
  • #66 | Josh Bilicki – 49  Overall
  • #66 | Chad Finchum – 46 Overall
  • #91 | Helio Castroneves – 44 Overall

NASCAR Xfinity Series

100 Overall
  • #88 | Connor Zilisch – 100 Overall

99-90 Overall
  • #7 | Justin Allgaier – 99 Overall
  • #19 | Aric Almirola – 97 Overall
  • #2 | Jesse Love – 94 Overall
  • #9 | Ross Chastain – 93 Overall
  • #41 | Sam Mayer – 93 Overall
  • #21 | Austin Hill – 92 Overall
  • #00 | Sheldon Creed – 92 Overall

80-89 Overall
  • #8 | Sammy Smith – 89 Overall
  • #1 | Carson Kvapil – 88 Overall
  • #54 | Taylor Gray – 88 Overall
  • #20 | Brandon Jones – 87 Overall
  • #39 | Ryan Sieg – 86 Overall
  • #48 | Nick Sanchez – 85 Overall
  • #18 | William Sawalich – 85 Overall
  • #16 | Christian Eckes – 83 Overall
  • #25 | Harrison Burton – 83 Overall
  • #9 | Daniel Suarez – 83 Overall

70-79 Overall
  • #9 | Shane van Gisbergen – 79 Overall
  • #27 | Jeb Burton – 77 Overall
  • #10 | Daniel Dye – 75 Overall
  • #26 | Dean Thompson – 75 Overall
  • #17 | Corey Day – 71 Overall

60-69 Overall
  • #42 | Anthony Alfredo – 69 Overall
  • #44 | Brennan Poole – 68 Overall
  • #4 | Parker Retzlaff – 68 Overall
  • #99 | Matt Dibenedetto – 68 Overall
  • #51 | Jeremy Clements – 68 Overall
  • #24 | Ryan Truex – 68 Overall
  • #11 | Josh Williams – 67 Overall
  • #28 | Kyle Sieg – 62 Overall

50-59 Overall
  • #91 | Josh Bilicki – 59 Overall
  • #71 | Ryan Ellis – 58 Overall
  • #70 | Leland Honeyman Jr. – 59 Overall
  • #70 | Thomas Annunziata – 52 Overall
  • #87 | Austin Green – 57 Overall
  • #53 | Joey Gase – 50 Overall
  • #31 | Blaine Perkins – 55 Overall
  • #45 | Mason Massey – 53 Overall
  • #07 | Patrick Emerling – 50 Overall
  • #14 | Garrett Smithley – 51 Overall

40-49 Overall
  • #74 | Dawson Cram – 46 Overall
  • #07 | Nick Leitz – 45 Overall
  • #35 | Greg Van Alst – 44 Overall
  • #45 | Brad Perez – 43 Overall
  • #32 | Jordan Anderson – 42 Overall
  • #45 | Caesar Bacarella – 41 Overall
  • #66 | Chad Finchum – 41 Overall
  • #50 | Preston Pardus – 41 Overall
  • #91 | Jesse Iwuji – 40 Overall

NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series

100 Overall
  • #11 | Corey Heim – 100 Overall

90-99 Overall
  • #7 | Kyle Busch – 98 Overall
  • #44 | Ross Chastain – 95 Overall
  • #07 | Kyle Larson – 90 Overall
  • #34 | Layne Riggs – 93 Overall
  • #98 | Ty Majeski – 90 Overall

80-89 Overall
  • #38 | Chandler Smith – 89 Overall
  • #19 | Daniel Hemric – 86 Overall
  • #9 |  Grant Enfinger – 86 Overall
  • #18 | Tyler Ankrum – 85 Overall
  • #99 | Ben Rhodes – 83 Overall
  • #1 | William Sawalich – 83 Overall
  • #17 | Gio Ruggiero – 82 Overall
  • #45 | Kaden Honeycutt – 81 Overall
  • #75 | Parker Kligerman – 80 Overall

70-79 Overall
  • #1 | Brandon Jones – 79 Overall
  • #52 | Stewart Friesen – 79 Overall
  • #71 | Rajah Caruth – 79 Overall
  • #81 | Connor Mosack – 79 Overall
  • #07 | Corey LaJoie – 78 Overall
  • #13 | Jake Garcia – 76 Overall
  • #15 | Tanner Gray – 76 Overall
  • #88 | Matt Crafton – 75 Overall
  • #77 | Andres Perez de Lara – 75 Overall
  • #1 | Brent Crews – 73 Overall
  • #44 | Bayley Currey – 70 Overall

60-69 Overall
  • #26 | Dawson Sutton – 62 Overall
  • #91 | Jack Wood – 62 Overall
  • #42 | Matt Mills – 62 Overall
  • #66 | Luke Fenhaus – 60 Overall

50-59 Overall
  • #1 | Lawless Alan – 59 Overall
  • #56 | Timmy Hill – 59 Overall
  • #44 | Josh Bilicki – 58 Overall
  • #66 | Luke Baldwin – 54 Overall
  • #44 | Conner Jones – 52 Overall
  • #76 | Spencer Boyd – 52 Overall
  • #66 | Johnny Sauter – 51 Overall

40-49 Overall
  • #33 | Frankie Muniz – 49 Overall
  • #5 | Toni Breidinger – 48 Overall
  • #44 | Matt Gould – 47 Overall
  • #2 | Cody Dennison – 46 Overall
  • #22 | Josh Reaume – 45 Overall
  • #04 | Cory Roper – 44 Overall
  • #95 | Clay Greenfield – 44 Overall
  • #6 | Norm Benning – 43 Overall
  • #21 | Jayson Alexander – 43 Overall
  • #28 | Bryan Dauzat – 42 Overall
  • #23 | Stephen Mallozzi – 41 Overall
  • #74 |  Caleb Costner – 40 Overall

ARCA Menards Series

90-99 Overall
  • #28 | Brenden Queen – 99 Overall
  • #18 | William Sawalich – 97 Overall
  • #06 | Lavar Scott – 90 Overall
  • #20 | Lawless Alan – 90 Overall

80-89 Overall
  • #55 | Isabella Robusto – 86 Overall
  • #25 | Jake Finch – 84 Overall
  • #23 | Tyler Reif – 83 Overall
  • #73 | Andy Jankowiak – 83 Overall
  • #35 | Greg van Alst – 80 Overall
  • #97 | Jason Kitzmiller – 81 Overall

70-79 Overall
  • #46 | Thad Moffitt – 78 Overall
  • #77 | Corey Day – 76 Overall
  • #03 | Alex Clubb – 74 Overall
  • #22 | Amber Balcaen – 73 Overall
  • #99 | Michael Maples – 72 Overall
  • #79 | Isaac Kitzmiller – 72 Overall
  • #09 | Cody Dennison – 72 Overall
  • #50 | Trevor Huddleston – 72 Overall
  • #76 | Kole Raz – 71 Overall
  • #12 | Takuma Koga – 71 Overall
  • #15 | Patrick Staropoli – 71 Overall
  • #48 | Brad Smith – 71 Overall

60-69 Overall
  • #02 | Lanie Buice – 69 Overall
  • #13 | Tanner Reif – 69 Overall
  • #88 | A.J. Moyer – 69 Overall
  • #06 | Brayton Laster – 68 Overall
  • #67 | Ryan Roulette – 67 Overall
  • #11 | Zachary Tinkle – 67 Overall
  • #27 | Tim Richmond – 65 Overall
  • #71 | Kyle Keller – 63 Overall
  • #02 | Eloy Falcon – 63 Overall
  • #93 | Caleb Costner – 62 Overall
  • #10 | Ed Pompa – 62 Overall
  • #31 | Rita Goulet – 61 Overall
  • #56 | Timmy Hill – 61 Overall
  • #03 | Todd Souza – 60 Overall
  • #09 | Robbie Kennealy – 60 Overall

50-59 Overall
  • #39 | D.L. Wilson – 59 Overall
  • #00 | Nate Moeller – 59 Overall
  • #05 | Eric Johnson Jr. – 59 Overall
  • #69 | Will Kimmel – 58 Overall
  • #05 | David Smith – 56 Overall
  • #30 | Cleetus McFarland – 56 Overall
  • #51 | Blake Lothian – 55 Overall
  • #19 | Jake Bollman – 55 Overall
  • #72 | Jonathan Reaume – 52 Overall
  • #86 | Brian Clubb – 52 Overall
  • #95 | Hunter Wright – 51 Overall
  • #66 | Presley Sorah – 51 Overall
  • #08 | Sean Corr – 51 Overall
  • #04 | Dale Quarterley – 50 Overall

40-49 Overall
  • #03 | Willie Mullins – 48 Overall
  • #96 | Jackson McLerran – 46 Overall
  • #01 | E.J. Tamayo – 44 Overall
  • #85 | Becca Monopoli – 44 Overall
  • #29 | Kyle Steckly – 43 Overall
  • #62 | Steve Lewis Jr. – 43 Overall
  • #03 | Alex Quarterley – 42 Overall

This article will be updated as more driver ratings become available.

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AVONDALE, ARIZONA - OCTOBER 31: JGR team owner and NASCAR Hall of Famer, Joe Gibbs looks on in the garage area during practice for the NASCAR Cup Series Championship at Phoenix Raceway on October 31, 2025 in Avondale, Arizona. (Photo by James Gilbert/Getty Images)

Email From Chris Gabehart Claims “Resentment” From Gibbs Family Members Was a “No-Win Situation”

What’s Happening?

An email sent by former Joe Gibbs Racing Competition Director Chris Gabehart claims that resentment towards him from members of the Gibbs family made him feel that the future of JGR was a “no-win situation.”

Last week, Joe Gibbs Racing filed a lawsuit against former Crew Chief and Competition Director Chris Gabehart, claiming that the former Daytona 500 Champion had schemed to steal vital information from the team in the lead-up to his departure from JGR for Spire Motorsports.

Not even ten days since JGR filed this lawsuit, the two have continued to trade barbs and accusations back and forth through the court system.

In a filing earlier this week, Gabehart accused the team of misleading him in his duties as competition director in 2025, and specifically calling out JGR’s No. 54 team, driven by Joe Gibbs’ grandson Ty, alleging that the team received “differential treatment.”

Friday, an email sent to JGR CFO Tim Carmichael by Gabehart in November 2025 (released as part of this lawsuit) showed just how uncomfortable he had grown working at JGR during his tenure as Competition Director, with the industry veteran stating that Ty Gibbs and his mother, Heather, held “resentment” towards Gabehart.

The now former Competition Director went on to say in this email that, as the two were the future bosses of JGR, “I’m afraid that leaves me in a no-win situation.”

These exchanges, including the claims made by Gibbs in his filing earlier this week, have swept fans into a whirlwind of sorts, with the two sides even meeting in court today for the lawsuit’s first official hearing.

Of course, Gabehart’s claims about the state of operations at JGR pale in comparison to the accusations made by the Gibbs team in their initial lawsuit.

On Tuesday, the team even added Spire Motorsports, Gabehart’s current employer, as a co-defendant, and requested the court force Gabehart to sit out at least the 18 months since his termination before doing any work in NASCAR similar to his role at JGR.

The team is also asking that any information procured by Spire from Gabehart be returned, though the CEO of TWG Motorsports, which owns Spire, Dan Towriss, told Bob Pockrass of FOX Sports Friday that “Spire doesn’t want data from Joe Gibbs Racing. It doesn’t have data from Joe Gibbs Racing. No point in time has it had data from Joe Gibbs Racing.”

Alongside Spire, Gabehart adamantly denied any wrongdoing in a post to social media last week, saying, “I feel compelled to speak out today and forcefully and emphatically deny these frivolous and retaliatory claims.”

What do you think about this? Let us know your opinion on Discord or X. Don’t forget that you can also follow us on InstagramFacebook, and YouTube.

7 Reasons Racetracks Die

A few years ago, I looked at the racetracks preserved on iRacing that no longer exist in real life. After digging deeper, I expected to find one common reason they all shut down. Instead, each one tells a completely different story — from booming cities and land value spikes to ownership changes, broken promises, and even mysteries that still don’t have clear answers.

  • Did Myrtle Beach Speedway simply get swallowed by a rapidly growing city?
  • How did the death of one passionate owner seal the fate of USA International Speedway?
  • Was Auto Club Speedway really closed for a short-track revival — or just prime California real estate?
  • And why did places like Concord Speedway and the Chicago Street Race disappear for completely different reasons?

Some tracks were pushed out by urban development. Some lost the one person fighting to keep them alive. Others faded due to declining support — or were never meant to last forever in the first place. No two closures are the same, and that’s what makes this deep dive so fascinating.

Watch Also:

NASCAR’s “Full Speed” Docuseries is moving to Prime Video

What’s Happening?

NASCAR’s documentary series “Full Speed,” which used to live on Netflix, had its first two seasons look back at entire playoff runs. But now, NASCAR is shifting the series to Amazon Prime Video for its third season, and the scope of the series will also shift to new storylines.

Dropping on March 5, the new season is aimed at zooming in on one event: the 2026 Daytona 500. Instead of a multi-episode run, this time it’s a single-episode documentary that goes all in on one race.

The film will follow big names and storylines from the Daytona 500. It will spotlight the winner, Tyler Reddick, and lean into driver storylines around the weekend. That includes Kyle Busch trying to get his groove back, Brad Keselowski clawing his way back after a broken leg, Connor Zilisch being pushed as the next big thing, and Noah Gragson bringing chaos wherever he goes.

Some fans might question the move away from Netflix, especially after Season 1 pulled in 3.4 million views in the first half of 2024. Then in 2025, the docuseries clocked 900,000 views after its early May release and added another 200,000 between July and December.

But with Prime Video stepping in as one of NASCAR’s broadcast partners, moving the series lines up with a bigger play to keep content under one roof.

Amazon has already dipped into NASCAR storytelling with projects like the docuseries Earnhardt about Dale Earnhardt. Moving Full Speed to Prime follows the same playbook. And for fans who still haven’t seen previous installments, the first two seasons are also heading over to Prime Video.

Fan Reactions

However, Reddit fans are divided in their opinions about the decision. Some fans actually get why NASCAR changed the format and platform, while a chunk of fans think leaving Netflix is risky because Netflix is where casual viewers stumble into shows. Others push back, pointing out that Prime actually has a massive reach in the U.S. and strong marketing muscle.

While one fan commented, “Makes sense. I highly doubt they were gonna make a new season around a points format they don’t use anymore,” another stated, “Idk the semantics and numbers and everything behind it so I’m probably talking out of my ass….buttttttt….at what point does nascar take the less money for the exposure. You need to be on Netflix, people watch Netflix. People don’t watch Amazon video as much. Who’s gonna watch this that isn’t a nascar fan already. You have a higher chance of getting people lost on Netflix than lost on Amazon Prime Video.”

One fan commented on the news, saying, “100%. I have Amazon Prime and Netflix. AP is a train wreck for videos especially now with their ad program with videos. I steer clear because Netflix is still ad free.” Another fan supported NASCAR’s move, saying, “Prime actually has slightly more subscribers in the USA and in my opinion is better at marketing. It’s a lateral move.”

Another backed NASCAR, stating, “Most NASCAR fans will find some way to be on prime in the month of June. I think they are counting on people watching it then if they have not already seen it. Similar to the Earnhardt documentary that dropped in June last year.”

Another fan comment implied something less glamorous yet very real, pointing out that the Netflix seasons didn’t see a surge in viewership. The first season did okay, but later numbers dipped: “Netflix didn’t seem to work that well for the 2 playoff seasons.”

Will you be watching on Prime Video? Let us know your opinion on Discord or X. Don’t forget that you can also follow us on InstagramFacebook, and YouTube.