logo
Kurt Busch, Harry Gant and Ray Hendrick selected to 2026 NASCAR Hall of Fame class

Kurt Busch, Harry Gant and Ray Hendrick selected to 2026 NASCAR Hall of Fame class

NBC Sports20-05-2025

CHARLOTTE — Former Cup champion Kurt Busch headlines the 2026 NASCAR Hall of Fame class that was selected Tuesday.
Busch and Harry Gant were selected on the Modern Era ballot. Modified racer Ray Hendrick was selected on the Pioneer Era ballot. Track promoter Humpy Wheeler was selected as the Landmark Award winner.
Busch and Gant each received 61% of the votes on the Moderan Era ballot. Jeff Burton finished third, followed by Harry Hyde and Randy Dorton.
Hendrick received 31% of the votes on the Pioneer Era Ballot. Bob Welborn finished second.
There were 49 ballots. Forty-eight voters and the NASCAR.com fan vote.
The NASCAR.com fan vote had Ray Hendrick from the Pioneer Era and Kurt Busch and Harry Gant from the Modern Era.
Busch, Gant and Hendrick — who will be inducted Jan. 23, 2026 — will join 67 others in the NASCAR Hall of Fame and represent the Hall's 16th class.
The mercurial Busch was known as much for his success as his temper. He competed in Cup from 2000-22. Busch won at least one race 10 consecutive years. He had a streak of nine consecutive seasons with at least a victory when he was forced out of the car due to a concussion he suffered in a crash at Pocono in July 2022.
Busch scored 34 career victories, including the 2010 Coca-Cola 600 and 2017 Daytona 500.
He had memorable run-ins with Jimmy Spencer, NASCAR officials and media during his career, adding to his reputation as a fiery competitor.
This was the first year on the ballot for the 46-year-old Busch.
This was the sixth year on the ballot for the 85-year old Gant. He won 18 races, including two Southern 500s and was known as 'Mr. September' for winning four consecutive Cup races in 1991.
Gant finished third in balloting for the Class of 2025, a class that had Ricky Rudd and Carl Edwards.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nosek handles the guilt of his costly Game 1 penalty with a little help from his Panthers teammates
Nosek handles the guilt of his costly Game 1 penalty with a little help from his Panthers teammates

Fox Sports

time29 minutes ago

  • Fox Sports

Nosek handles the guilt of his costly Game 1 penalty with a little help from his Panthers teammates

Associated Press EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) — Tomas Nosek had been dealing with the guilt of his puck-over-the-glass penalty ever since the Florida Panthers lost Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final on the ensuing power-play goal by Leon Draisaitl. He's not sure how long it took to get over it. 'It was tough,' Nosek said Friday after an optional morning skate. 'You don't want to be the one guy who costs us the game. But obviously everybody can make a mistake. It happened in a bad time in overtime, and it cost us the game. But it's in the past, and now we're looking forward to just keep doing my job.' Nosek gets to keep doing his job. Coach Paul Maurice said he was not making any lineup changes for Game 2 against the Edmonton Oilers. That means A.J. Greer remains out with an undisclosed injury, though Maurice said the fourth-liner is on track for Game 3 on Monday in Sunrise. The penalty 18 minutes into overtime came when Edmonton's Jake Walman was pressuring Nosek in Florida's defensive zone. Power plays are rare in OT in the playoffs with officials careful about not wanting to have too big an influence on the outcome, but sending the puck over the glass is an automatic call. 'Everybody's making mistakes," Nosek said. "I think it's a part of the game. It's a sport, and you just focus on the next game and preparing yourself for it like every other game.' Nosek, one of several newcomers who weren't around last year when the Panthers won the Cup, is in his second final after helping Vegas get there in 2018. He said teammates have been good about encouraging and supporting him since the costly penalty. "They've been really helpful," Nosek said. "The guys came to me and said, 'Don't worry about it.' It's good.' Linemate Jonah Gadjovich, who reported feeling great after missing some time in Game 1 because of injury, said Nosek shouldn't feel bad about the mistake. 'It happens," Gadjovich said. 'Tough bounce, but he does so many good things for us, no one's mad at him, no one's anything. It's just stuff like that happens in a game.' Coy McDavid Connor McDavid made a pass befitting his status as the best hockey player on the planet to set up the Oilers' tying goal in Game 1, with Mattias Ekholm scoring it. Asked Friday whether the pass from behind the net was intended for Ekholm or winger Evander Kane, he was unwilling to share that information. 'I won't say," McDavid responded. "All that matters is it ended up where it needed to be, and we scored.' McDavid also assisted on Draisaitl's overtime goal, his playoff-leading 28th point in 17 games during this run. Coaching carousel Florida coach Paul Maurice said earlier this week he roots for three teams when he's watching games around the NHL: Vancouver for Jim Rutherford, Winnipeg because he was there for so long and loves the organization and the market, and Dallas for close friend Peter DeBoer. The Stars are probably off that list now after firing DeBoer on Friday following a third consecutive loss in the Western Conference final and comments made about the decision to pull franchise goaltender Jake Oettinger in the decisive Game 5 loss. 'He'll be all right," Maurice said. "He's a good coach. I think you get elite teams, you've got to push them real hard to get to where they get to, and then at some point you need a summer off, pick your spot. He's going to be OK.' DeBoer's dismissal opens a job a day after Boston hired Marco Sturm to fill its vacancy, the last one left in the league. On Wednesday, Pittsburgh went with a little bit of a surprise hiring longtime assistant Dan Muse. Ekholm, who played in Nashville when Muse was on staff there, is interested to see how it goes for a 'super serious guy' with a new school approach. 'I think he's got all the right tools to be a successful coach,' Ekholm said. "It's different to be an assistant than a head coach, so he's got some things to prove but good for him to get an opportunity.' ___ AP NHL playoffs: and recommended

Spire Boss Takes Parental Tone with Carson Hocevar After Nashville Clash
Spire Boss Takes Parental Tone with Carson Hocevar After Nashville Clash

Newsweek

timean hour ago

  • Newsweek

Spire Boss Takes Parental Tone with Carson Hocevar After Nashville Clash

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Spire Motorsports co-owner Jeff Dickerson has revealed a unique parental approach to deal with his 22-year-old driver, Carson Hocevar, who crashed into the rear of Ricky Stenhouse Jr.'s car in Nashville. Hocevar has made news in the world of NASCAR through his stellar performances, but his aggressive driving doesn't go unnoticed. Hocevar finished the Cracker Barrel 400 in second place despite the incident, while Stenhouse Jr. came last. What made Stenhouse Jr. more furious was the fact that Hocevar did not approach him after the race, and thus, the Hyak Motorsports driver hinted at a payback in the future. Stenhouse Jr. even escalated the matter to Dickerson. Dickerson made it clear to Hocevar that the clash was unnecessary. Speaking on the Door Bumper Clear podcast, he said: Carson Hocevar, driver of the #77 Zeigler Auto Group Chevrolet, looks on during qualifying for the NASCAR Cup Series Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway on May 31, 2025 in Lebanon, Tennessee. Carson Hocevar, driver of the #77 Zeigler Auto Group Chevrolet, looks on during qualifying for the NASCAR Cup Series Cracker Barrel 400 at Nashville Superspeedway on May 31, 2025 in Lebanon, Tennessee."Full transparency here's what I said: 'Man, you didn't need to do that. You know, you just didn't need to do that.' It wasn't going to cost him anything to let Ricky back in line." He added: "I just wish he would have cut him a break. I have a personal relationship with Ricky, and so I don't want that to cloud it. I'm like, 'S**t man.'" Dickerson then admitted that he counsels Hocevar like a parent. Revealing his mature approach that most likely offers his driver a unique perspective, he said: "There's plenty of times I go to Carson and I'm just like, '35-year-old Carson is not going to be cool with what you just did, or what you just said.' This isn't a Carson thing I think it's in general, they're too young to know that it's cool to be like, 'Man, I f***ed that up.' Know what I'm saying? "And that's where I wish they would help themselves more. But again, I want to teach Carson how it is, quote, unquote. "I'm not trying to change him. I certainly don't want to get in car-crashing contests out there, right? And Ricky to me is a guy that, like, he's not going to wreck our car, he's going to go beat the hell out of him. You know what I'm saying? Which is how it probably should be, you know what I mean? But you can't get it until you go through it, right? So, it's like being a parent, sometimes your kid just wants to shut his hand in the car door to see if it hurts, right? Sometimes you just gotta let them."

Samantha Busch, wife of NASCAR champion driver Kyle Busch, in images
Samantha Busch, wife of NASCAR champion driver Kyle Busch, in images

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Samantha Busch, wife of NASCAR champion driver Kyle Busch, in images

Samantha Busch, wife of NASCAR champion driver Kyle Busch, in images Kyle Busch is on his way to a Hall of Fame career in NASCAR. He has won numerous races at every level, Craftsman Truck, Xfinity and, of course, Cup Series. Wherever Kyle Busch goes his wife Samantha has been seen for years. She is a familiar presence cheering on her husband as he looks to notch victories. Television cameras gravitate to Samantha Busch as she sits atop the box hoping her husband captures checkered flags. Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch Samantha Busch

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store