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NASCAR meets with Xfinity Series drivers before Darlington

NASCAR meets with Xfinity Series drivers before Darlington

Yahoo05-04-2025

DARLINGTON, S.C. — NASCAR officials met with the entire field of Xfinity Series drivers early Friday morning before any on-track activity at Darlington Raceway — a meeting triggered by an incredibly aggressive showing for the series at the Martinsville Speedway short track a week ago — a race so chaotic that Chase Elliott — a former Xfinity Series and Cup Series champ — called it 'embarrassing' for the sport.
Although aggressive moves characterized much of the second half of the race, a big wreck on the final lap started up front with the then-leaders — Joe Gibbs Racing's Taylor Gray and JR Motorsports' Sammy Smith — precipitated angry confrontations post-race. Gray (off track) and Smith (on track) were both penalized for their actions.
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RELATED: Throwback Weekend schedule | At-track photos: Darlington
Veteran Austin Hill was the big beneficiary of the on-track situation between the two, driving through the melee up front to claim his second win of the year — credited with only leading that last lap. Hill shared that the meeting went well and that he expects his fellow drivers to be more mindful of the way they race going forward, calling NASCAR very 'firm' in its morning message.
'I think it's going to calm down a lot more than you think today,' Hill said ahead of Saturday afternoon's Sport Clips Haircuts VFW Help A Hero 200 at Darlington. 'We'll have to wait and see, but I think we're all going to still be aggressive and trying to win the race, but it's going to be a very respectful race.'
WATCH: Jeff Burton breaks down 'unacceptable' Xfinity finish
The next trip to Martinsville in late October determines which four playoff drivers advance to the Championship 4 with a shot to win the 2025 Xfinity Series title.
'NASCAR made it very clear they don't want to be in the ball-and-strike business, they don't want to be making all these calls, so they said for us to help them with that,' Hill said. 'They [NASCAR] also said if they have to step in and start making calls and black-flagging people and parking people and all those things, they'll do it. I agree with where NASCAR stands with that, but I also think we in the Xfinity Series need to do a better job going forward and not putting it in NASCAR's hands.'

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Luzardo returns to form with 10 strikeouts and Philadelphia Phillies bats come alive to end prolonged slumps
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time3 hours ago

  • CBS News

Luzardo returns to form with 10 strikeouts and Philadelphia Phillies bats come alive to end prolonged slumps

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Tributes Pour In For NASCAR Legend Travis Carter After Death at 75

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Yahoo

time5 hours ago

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Chiefs Announce Retirement of Veteran Coach Ahead of 2025 Season

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