Rico Abreu to Race For Tony Stewart Racing in 2026

What’s Happening?

On Wednesday’s episode of The Dale Jr Download, Kubota High Limit Racing series points leader Rico Abreu announced he will join Tony Stewart’s Sprint Car team for the 2026 High Limit season.

  • This move is more of a coalition than a signing, as Abreu’s team will join TSR and operate the now No. 24 out of their shop in Indiana.
  • Furthermore, TSR will shift it’s operation out of World of Outlaws competition and compete in High Limit with a franchise (similar to a NASCAR Charter) leased from Abreu’s team. While the team is competing full-time in High Limit this coming season, they also announced their intentions to race in major events like the Kings Royal and Knoxville Nationals.
  • Currently, TSR sits sixth in World of Outlaws team points, though their drivers have yet to score a win this season. After years of declining performance, Stewart told Dale Earnhardt Jr. on The Dale Jr Download that the team was due for a major overhaul for next season.
  • Earlier this season, on August 12, the team announced it was parting ways with legend Donny Schatz after 18 years together. Since then, the team has entered Kerry Madsen to pilot the No. 15 for the remainder of the 2025 World of Outlaws season.
  • NASCAR fans may know Abreu from a short stint he had racing in ARCA and NASCAR from 2015 to 2017. During that time, he made 14 ARCA starts in 2015 and raced for Kyle Busch Motorsports in the 2016 Craftsman Truck Series season, finishing 13th in points.

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Michael Jordan’s NASCAR Impact | Driver Approvals Questioned After Decker, Cleetus Crash At Daytona

It wouldn’t be Daytona without some weird, wacky, and headline-grabbing fallout. From viral Victory Lane moments to renewed debates about driver approval, NASCAR’s biggest race once again delivered more than just on-track drama. And with Michael Jordan celebrating a Daytona 500 win, the spotlight burned brighter than it has in years.

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Jordan’s presence mattered. When the most iconic athlete of a generation shows genuine emotion upon winning the Daytona 500, it reminds the wider sports world that this race still matters. That kind of authentic publicity cannot be manufactured. It resonated far beyond the garage. Meanwhile, the O’Reilly Series race added fuel to another ongoing debate. The massive Decker crash, Cleetus McFarland’s Truck debut incident, and past approval inconsistencies have once again raised tough questions. Consistency, transparency, and accountability are now front and center. Add in Austin Hill’s dominance and Ryan Ellis’ career-best sixth-place run to open the season, and Daytona gave fans plenty to talk about on and off the track.

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Adam wasn’t just the grandson of Richard Petty or the son of Kyle Petty; he was a young driver building his own path, fresh off his Cup debut at Texas Motor Speedway and preparing for a future with Dodge and Petty Enterprises. His passing stunned the garage and deeply impacted fans who saw the Petty family as part of their own. From the unanswered mechanical questions to the emotional aftermath that eventually led to the creation of Victory Junction, this is where the Firestorm begins. The fear, the controversy, and the transformation of NASCAR safety all trace back to that Friday in Loudon.

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The O’Reilly series race at Daytona turned into a breaking point. One crash, one late reaction, and suddenly the conversation wasn’t just about race results, it was about standards, accountability, and who truly belongs at this level of NASCAR competition.

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The Decker incident reignited long-standing perception issues, especially when outside commentary from figures like Mike Davis amplified the embarrassment factor. At the same time, NASCAR has stepped in before, blocking Wallace, sidelining others like Jennifer Jo Cobb, yet those interventions feel inconsistent. Wright’s pit road mistake added fuel to the argument that funding can outweigh readiness. McFarland, meanwhile, represents a different case, raw but potentially coachable, with time to develop if he chooses that route seriously. Money has always shaped racing careers, but when sponsorship outweighs preparation, the sport risks its credibility. Should NASCAR tighten its standards, or is this simply the cost of doing business in modern motorsports?

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