Kaden Honeycutt Finds Ride for Remainder of the Season

INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA - JULY 25: Kaden Honeycutt, driver of the #45 DQS Solutions & Staffing Chevrolet, waits on the grid prior to the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series TSport 200 at Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park on July 25, 2025 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images)

What’s Happening?

Following his release from Niece Motorsports Monday morning, Kaden Honeycutt has found a ride for the remainder of the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series season, filling in for an injured Stewart Friesen at Halmar Friesen Racing starting next weekend at Richmond Raceway.

Update: Kaden Honeycutt announced on X that he will race for Young’s Motorsports this weekend at Watkins Glen International.

  • Honeycutt, in his first full-time season racing in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, was released from his deal with Niece Monday afternoon. Currently sitting sixth in points, fans wondered if Honeycutt would still qualify for the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Playoffs without a ride.
  • On Tuesday afternoon, Halmar Friesen Racing confirmed that the 22-year-old prospect will drive their No. 52 entry for the remainder of the season, starting next weekend. Stewart Friesen, the full-time driver of the No. 52, is out for the remainder of the season following a fiery crash during a big block modified dirt race last week.
  • Though he gets behind the wheel of the No. 52 next weekend, Christopher Bell has taken on driving duties this weekend. As of right now, Honeycutt could qualify for the playoffs; however, he has yet to find a ride for this weekend’s race at Watkins Glen International.
  • Niece claimed Monday morning that Honeycutt had signed a contract with a rival team and OEM for the 2026 season. Stating that moving on from the driver at this moment “allows our team the opportunity to begin building for next year.”
  • That new OEM is expected to be Toyota, and Honeycutt will likely take on full-time driving duties at the TRICON Garage for the 2026 season.

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Best bet for the DuraMAX Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas

After two weeks of drafting this week the NASCAR Cup Series goes road course racing at the Circuit of the Americas (COTA). This will be the second year running this specific layout. Starting in 2025 NASCAR is running on a shorter 18-turn, 2.356-mile circuit rather than the full 3.426-mile 20-turn loop. Goodyear is also bringing back the same tire that debuted here last season.

This week Shane Van Gisbergen has opened as a heavy favorite at all books. Last year he won the last five road/street courses of the season. However, at COTA Van Gisbergen had what was, by his standards, a disappointing weekend. Van Gisbergen qualified and finished sixth.

After COTA however, Van Gisbergen ran off five straight road/street course wins. So respect is certainly deserved, but at least in my simulations, not at the level the books are giving. This does open up theoretical value on outright bets, that said, I’m looking for markets where I don’t have to directly bet against Van Gisbergen.

Chase Briscoe Top 10 | +110 (theScore Bet)

Chase Briscoe’s first four seasons at the Cup level while driving for Stewart-Haas Racing were not inspiring. Over 21 road/street course races he had only six Top 10 finishes and no Top 5 finishes. However, last season, driving with Joe Gibbs Racing, Briscoe had three Top 10 finishes and two Top 5 finishes. Briscoe’s success with Joe Gibbs Racing is hardly surprising though. In 11 road course starts in the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series while driving top tier equipment Briscoe had eight Top 10 finishes, four Top 5 finishes, and two wins.

In addition to his 50% Top 10 finish rate in 2025, Briscoe’s in race performance was outstanding in 2025. He completed nearly 60% of his laps on road/street courses inside the Top 10. That includes running over 50% of his laps at COTA inside the Top 10.

Enhanced Loop Data from Win The Race for Chase Briscoe on Road/Street Courses in 2025

At Win The Race our 100,000 simulations have Chase Briscoe finishing in the Top 10 this weekend over 54% of the time. That translates to fair odds of -118. At Caesars Briscoe is +110 to finish inside the Top 10 which translates to implied odds of 47.62%. This means that we have quite a lot of room to be over optimistic on Briscoe and still have value on this bet. I would bet this down to even money.

Fair Market Odds for Chase Briscoe from Win The Race
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NORTH WILKESBORO, NORTH CAROLINA - MAY 18: Christopher Bell, driver of the #20 Mobil 1 Toyota, poses with the one million dollar check in victory lane after winning the NASCAR Cup Series All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway on May 18, 2025 in North Wilkesboro, North Carolina. (Photo by James Gilbert/Getty Images)

NASCAR Reveals Controversial Changes to All-Star Format

What’s Happening?

NASCAR is making even more changes to its All-Star race ahead of the event’s inaugural running at Dover Motor Speedway this season, with a new format that includes a full field of cars.

Ahead of the 2026 season, NASCAR and Speedway Motorsports have reshuffled the deck when it came to their All-Star event, again moving the race to a new track, Dover Motor Speedway, while lending Dover’s race weekend to the event’s former host, North Wilkesboro Speedway.

This move was controversial for a number of reasons, as it gave another points-paying race weekend to a North Carolina race track, stripped Dover of its final points race, and essentially confirmed the race would take place during the daytime, as Dover does not have track lights.

The changes haven’t stopped here, with NASCAR announcing a drastically altered and somewhat complex format for the 2026 All-Star Race on Wednesday afternoon.

What’s the Format?

This year, NASCAR’s All-Star Race features three key events: Qualifying, the Pit Crew Challenge, and the All-Star Race.

Qualifying will take place on Saturday, May 1, concurrent with the Pit Crew Challenge. Drivers will take three laps, a hot lap, a pit stop on the second lap, and then a final lap, with their qualifying time the combined total from start to finish.

The pit Crew Challenge pit stop on lap two will be four tires, no fuel, and will determine Pit stall selection for Sunday’s All-Star Race.

The full field of qualifiers will make the 350-lap main event on Sunday. This means that drivers make the race regardless of their resume; however, after two 75-lap segments, after segment one, the Top 26 drivers are inverted.

After segment two, only former Cup Series Champions, 2025/20226 race winners, All-Star Race winners, the fan vote winner, and any remaining slots in the 26-car final segment will be filled by the lowest combined finishes of segment one and two.

What’s the Same?

Very little of the event from 2025, and even those races before then, remain, as NASCAR has scrapped things such as the open race and even expanded the field to 26 drivers, and technically beyond that (which we will get to in a moment).

A welcome return from NASCAR fans is the Pit Crew Challenge, which has led to some interesting battles in the years the race occurred at North Wilkesboro, and with the Next Gen car’s issues on short tracks, pit stall selection could be a make-or-break for any driver.

What’s New?

There is a lot of new information about this format, most of which is controversial.

Many fans are already focusing on the removal of the All-Star Open (a last chance qualifier race for non-qualifying cars), the expansion of the race from 125 miles in 2025 to 350 miles in 2026, and, most importantly, the expansion of the field.

While some are calling this the “All-Car Race” and mocking the end of the race’s “elite” nature, others are pointing out that NASCAR has essentially created another full race weekend that is packed with gimmicks and will not award any championship points.

Nonetheless, others are theorizing that NASCAR could have something else in the works, using this exhibition race as a testing ground for new setups or a new package to help its improving yet still ailing short track package.

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.

Zilisch vs. SVG Head-To-Head? | Analyzing COTA Contenders

Eric Estepp is joined by Ryan Stevens from WinTheRace.info as left turns give way to left and right this weekend as the Cup Series heads to Circuit of the Americas. With road course racing back on the schedule, the big question is simple: Can anyone stop Shane van Gisbergen?

  • Is SVG really a 30% favorite, or is that somehow still too low?
  • Does Tyler Reddick slot in as the clear next-best at COTA?
  • Why can’t Christopher Bell be overlooked on any track type right now?
  • And how quickly can Connor Zilisch turn elite road course talent into a Cup breakthrough?

There are proven winners here, rising stars with massive upside, and veterans looking to reclaim momentum. Add in extra horsepower this year and meaningful practice and qualifying, and the variables only stack higher. From data-driven projections to bold predictions, this COTA preview covers the favorites, the sneaky contenders, and the drivers who could shake up the early-season narrative.

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