We are closing in on the final handful of weeks of the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season, the stock car series’ 75th anniversary campaign. To celebrate, each week through the end of the season, Ryan McGee is presenting his favorite top-five things about the sport.
The five best-looking cars? Check. The five toughest drivers? We’ve got it. Top five mustaches? There can be only one, so maybe not.
Without further ado, our 75 favorite things about NASCAR, celebrating 75 years of stock car racing.
Since we started our NASCAR 75th anniversary celebration of countdowns, our topics have run the gamut from toughness to greatness to weirdness. So, it feels only natural that as we roll into the final turns of this Rova-like journey together, that we have arrived at this week’s topic. One that combines toughness, greatness and weirdness, squeezes them together into a fist … and then uses that fist to punch some fool in the mouth.
So, tape up those fingers, put in a mouthpiece, book Michael Buffer to shout his ready-to-rumble thing and rise from your corners of the ring as we present our five all-time greatest NASCAR fights.
Buddy Baker was known as NASCAR’s Gentle Giant, a nickname that was the most backhanded of compliments. At 6-foot-6 and 249 pounds, he was massive for a racer but a sweetheart of a man, and his disposition tagged with him with a “fast but soft” reputation. That only became worse when the son of three-time champ Buck Baker struggled to win races, with “only” three victories at the close of 1971, his 12th season in the Cup Series.
To change that reputation, Baker’s friend and PR rep, legendary promoter Humpy Wheeler, decided Baker should take up boxing in the offseason. Wheeler, a Golden Gloves champion, started sparring with Baker in his garage. It worked, as Baker lost weight and felt his stamina increasing.
Then, one day, Wheeler landed a little too sharp of a shot to Baker’s face. The Gentle Giant went full Bruce Banner-turned-Hulk. The workout escalated into an all-out brawl that looked like Colin Firth and Hugh Grant in “Bridget Jones’s Diary” as it spilled out of Wheeler’s garage into the driveway and eventually into the yard of his next-door neighbor, who called the police to break it up.
“We ended up laughing about it,” Wheeler recalled last year. “Buddy also won a lot more races after that and ended up in the NASCAR Hall of Fame, so I take full credit for all of that because I punched him in the nose.”
5. Charlotte 2014: ‘That’s Matt Kenseth!’
For as long as I have been covering NASCAR, I have developed something of a knack for finding myself ringside for some very sudden and very unexpected postrace garage brawls. The best was when I was interviewing Dale Earnhardt Jr. at Richmond, and in the middle of it, we both looked up at the giant screen just as Marcos Ambrose punched Casey Mears, and Dale Jr. said to me, “What the hell? Those are the two nicest dudes ever!”
But never have I been as stunned as I was when we were all posted up behind Brad Keselowski‘s hauler after the fall 2014 event at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Why BK? Because he had just ended the 500-mile event by clipping Denny Hamlin‘s car and also bumping Matt Kenseth’s ride during the cool-down lap. When Hamlin barked at Keselowski in the garage, we totally expected that. What none of us saw coming — especially Keselowski — was notoriously mild-mannered Kenseth coming out of nowhere, sprinting past us all to bolt in between a couple of 18-wheelers, an alley where Brad had no escape, and tackle him like Fred Warner taking down a running back.
It was all caught on live TV, with Allen Bestwick speaking for the entire planet when he said, “That’s Matt Kenseth!”
4. Pretty much the entire 2000s: Biffle vs. the world
The only other time one driver essentially ran through me to go after another was following an Xfinity Series race at Bristol in 2002 when Kevin Harvick ran over me and others to go full WWE and leap off the top of a race car to land on Greg Biffle’s head while “The Biff” was giving postrace interviews.
That was only a small fraction of the feuds that the former Trucks and Xfinity champ found himself caught up in during this century’s first decade-plus, including a 2011 run-and-punch of Jay Sauter in the middle of a race at Richmond, grabbing hold of Jimmie Johnson at Martinsville in 2013 and, in the most infamous live interview of my career, a shoving match with Boris Said at Watkins Glen in 2011 in which Said, ahem, said to me, “He’s the most unprofessional little scaredy-cat I’ve ever seen in my life. He wouldn’t even fight me like a man after. So, if someone texts me his address, I’ll go see him Wednesday at his house and show him what he really needs. He needs a freaking whopping, and I’m going to give it to him.”
We all like to think of Jeff Gordon as Mr. Mild-Mannered, the gentleman racer with the nice hair and the rainbow-colored car. If you really paid attention, though, you know he also raced with a fire akin to the flame stickers that covered that car later in his sport-altering career. See: his 2011 on-track fight with Jeff Burton that Texas Motor Speedway still uses in its promotional material, his 2006 “helmet-on” shove of Kenseth at Bristol and his 2014 pit road melee with Keselowski, also at Texas.
But nothing tops his dramatic duel with Clint Bowyer at Phoenix in 2012, when Gordon believed contact with Bowyer had ended his title hopes, so he returned the favor by hooking Bowyer later in the race. When he exited the No. 24 Chevy back in the garage, Bowyer’s crew was waiting, but Gordon’s crew was ready and a “West Side Story”-level fight broke out. Meanwhile, Bowyer ran the length of pit road and into the garage with ESPN cameras in tow, attempting to bolt into Gordon’s hauler to reignite the fight.
The tension between the two drivers lingered for years, finally set aside when they ended up as broadcasting teammates at Fox Sports.
2. The post-1989 NASCAR All-Star Race bunkhouse stampede
All due respect to those crews, the Battle Royale of team throwdowns will always be what took place in Charlotte Motor Speedway’s Victory Lane following the 1989 NASCAR All-Star Race.
With the white flag in sight, Darrell Waltrip was leading by a few feet over Rusty Wallace, whose Pontiac slid up into the left rear corner of DW’s Chevy and sent it spinning into the infield grass. As Wallace’s team chased the car up the hill to the winner’s circle, their path was blocked by Waltrip’s crew. What followed was an endless series of shoves, punches, at least one biting of fingers and a crewman nearly losing both ears when his headset was ripped off.
The fight was eventually broken up by the police, but the impact of lasted for years. Waltrip decried that Wallace had “let greed overcome speed” and instantly went from bad guy to good guy in the eyes of a grandstand that had long booed him. For Wallace, it was the opposite.
“The next morning there were fans parked on the lake in their boats by my house just screaming at me,” Wallace recalled. “And when my kids woke up there were police cars in my driveway. I was like, ‘Dad had a rough day. I’ll explain it to you when you’re older.'”
1. 1979 Daytona 500: ‘And there’s a fight!’
You knew this had to be the No. 1 fight, right? It’s the one where, even now all these decades later, you can still hear Ken Squier on CBS shouting, “And there’s a fight!”
The short version of this story: Cale Yarborough and Donnie Allison wrecked each other while running 1-2 on the final lap of the Great American Race, opening the door for Richard Petty to slip by and take the victory. When their cars came to rest in the rain-saturated infield grass between Turns 3 and 4, Yarborough and Allison got out and started shouting. That’s when Bobby Allison, still mad about being knocked out of contention early in the race, pulled over to check on his brother … and ended up fighting with Cale, too.
As Bobby likes to say, “Cale questioned my ancestry and then he commenced to beating on my fist with his face.” CBS cameras cut to the fight live as it happened, the blood-red cherry on top of the first ever flag-to-flag coverage of the Daytona 500, an audience of millions boosted by the fact that a snowstorm had most of the East Coast stuck indoors with nothing else to watch.
Days later, NASCAR president Bill France Jr. called Yarborough and the Allisons onto the carpet at sanctioning body HQ and slapped them with massive fines … that he never collected. “Hell,” Yarborough said years later, “he should have paid us extra for what we did for the sport that day.”
Bell led only the final lap in his Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota and had a slight edge on the outside when the caution light came on in overtime after a wreck by Josh Berry.
“That last lap of the race we were at our best,” Bell said.
The 30-year-old Oklahoma driver has 10 career Cup victories.
Austin Cindric led in his Team Penske Ford before he and William Byron, the Daytona 500 winner last week, wrecked with three laps remaining, setting up the overtime.
Kyle Busch finished seventh, ending his hopes of snapping a winless streak in the Cup Series. Busch won the Atlanta Truck Series race Saturday but is still looking for his first Cup win since 2023 after having his NASCAR-record 19-year streak with at least one win end last year.
Larson failed to finish the past four and five of the past six Atlanta races and was involved in accidents in each of the six.
Larson’s Hendrick Motorsports teammates claimed the spotlight in NASCAR’s first two weeks. Chase Elliott won The Clash on Feb. 2 before Byron avoided late wrecks to win the Daytona 500.
Larson’s string of bad luck ended Sunday after he qualified only 17th. Larson, the 2021 Cup champion, surged late to win the second stage.
WRECKS FOR ELLIOTT, SUAREZ
Elliott was in the top 10 when his Hendricks Motorsports Chevrolet hit the wall late in the second stage and then hit Brad Keselowski‘s RFK Racing Ford, ending Keselowski’s race. Elliott finished 18th.
Daniel Suarez, who edged Ryan Blaney and Busch in a thrilling three-wide finish in Atlanta’s 2024 February race, had his hopes for a repeat win end when he was involved in a seven-car crash early in the third stage. Cole Custer, Ty Gibbs, Cody Ware, Noah Gragson and J.J. Yeley also were involved.
Blaney was in contention before his late one-car spin caused a caution, but he rallied to finish fourth.
SHARP DRESSED MAN
Billy Gibbons, the lead guitarist and singer for the rock group ZZ Top, served as the grand marshal and gave the “start your engines” command.
NEW DEAL FOR HEIM WITH 23XI
The 23XI Racing team announced a multiyear deal with Corey Heim as a development driver. Heim will drive a limited number of Cup Series races in the No. 67 Toyota and also will compete in Xfinity races, including next week at Circuit of the Americas. His first Cup race with the new deal will be at Kansas Speedway on May 11.
Heim made three Cup starts for 23XI last year and has a Truck Series win at Daytona this year. He finished 23rd in Saturday’s Truck Series race in Atlanta.
UP NEXT
The Cup Series moves to Austin, Texas, and Circuit of the Americas next Sunday.
HAMPTON, Ga. — The Atlanta Motor Speedway is Austin Hill‘s home track, and the Georgia native proved again Saturday night that he absolutely “owns it.”
Hill dominated the NASCAR Xfinity Series’ Bennett Transportation and Logistics 250 on the Atlanta high banks, leading 146 of the 163 laps to claim his first victory of the early 2025 season while driving the No. 21 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet sponsored by the race’s title sponsor.
Hill has won four of the past six Atlanta races — the last three consecutively and five in all — including a sweep of both events last year. Although his laps led total is impressive, he really had to work for this trophy after losing the lead briefly on a restart with three laps to go.
With a timely tap on the rear bumper of Hill’s Chevrolet from Parker Retzlaff, Hill was able to push forward and take the lead entering the first turn on the final lap. He held on to the win by 0.216 seconds, having to fend off reigning series champion Justin Allgaier of JR Motorsports and Joe Gibbs Racing’s veteran Aric Almirola, who both led at various times on the final restart.
“Thank you to Parker Retzlaff for giving me that push, and then once I got clear and into [Turn] 1, I was just wide open and I was hoping they weren’t going to build up momentum,” Hill said. “To be able to do this is something special.”
Hill’s five Xfinity Series wins at Atlanta tie a record set by former Cup Series champion Kevin Harvick. His eight wins at drafting tracks tied a series record with a pair of NASCAR Hall of Famers: Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Tony Stewart.
Hill swept the two stage wins for the second time in as many races this year.
With teammate Jesse Love fastest in qualifying, RCR swept the pole and race wins for the second time. No other team has won a pole position or hoisted a trophy in 2025. It also marks the 99th Xfinity Series victory for NASCAR Hall of Famer Richard Childress’ team.
Hill and Love led all but four laps in the race.
This is Hill’s 11th career win, and after holding the point for the vast majority of the race, he ultimately earned it the hard way — a last-lap pass.
“He definitely had the dominant car, but I thought we might snooker one away,” Almirola said of racing Hill in those final three laps. “But it just wasn’t meant to be.”
JR Motorsports’ Sammy Smith and Big Machine Racing rookie Nick Sanchez rounded out the top five.
A final-lap accident on the backstretch created chaos for several of the night’s most consistent top-10 front-runners.
With the victory, Hill takes a one-point lead over Haas Factory Team driver Sheldon Creed, who was eliminated from a top-10 finish in that multicar accident on the last lap and placed 14th. Love, last week’s Daytona winner, finished 16th.
The Xfinity Series returns to competition next Saturday in the Focused Health 250 at the Circuit of the Americas road course. Former Cup Series champion Kyle Larson is the defending race winner.
HAMPTON, Ga. — A massive fine left Chase Briscoe facing a huge points deficit heading into Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Atlanta Motor Speedway.
Even so, Briscoe insists he feels no new pressure. He said he already felt an urgency to win this week because those are the expectations at Joe Gibbs Racing, his new NASCAR home.
“I feel like I’m in a must-win situation just starting at JGR,” Briscoe said Saturday. “Like you need to be winning at JGR. … So yeah, I don’t feel like it changes anything from that standpoint.”
Ryan Blaney won the pole on Saturday for Sunday’s race. Two other Team Penske drivers, Austin Cindric and Joey Logano, will start second and fourth, respectively.
“Hopefully the first stage you can control, but it’s not going to stay that way the whole race,” Blaney said of the potential for the teammates to help each other.
Briscoe won the pole for last week’s Daytona 500 and finished fourth before NASCAR announced Wednesday that its inspection found Briscoe used a modified spoiler on the No. 19 Toyota in time trials. Joe Gibbs Racing was docked 100 driver/owner points and 10 playoff points and fined $100,000. Also, crew chief James Small was suspended for four races.
Small is still coordinating Briscoe’s plan for Sunday’s race as the team appeals the devastating penalties. Briscoe was left with negative 67 points and dropped from 10th to 39th in the standings.
“You know, if we don’t win the appeal, you’ve kind of used up your mulligans,” Briscoe said.
Briscoe acknowledged that he “bummed” on Wednesday before realizing he had to approach the Atlanta race with the same goal for his No. 19 Toyota.
Daniel Suarez won in Atlanta last February, edging Blaney and Kyle Busch in the race’s closest finish. Suarez beat Blaney by only 0.003 seconds, the narrowest margin at any 1.5-mile track.
Logano won Atlanta’s second race last year in the opener of the NASCAR playoffs.
Briscoe qualified 25th in his Toyota. Suarez will start 29th.
Josh Berry qualified third as Ford drivers earned 10 of the top 11 spots in the lineup. Busch qualified sixth in his Chevrolet for Richard Childress Racing.
Hendrick drivers aim for 3 straight wins
Chase Elliott, who won in Atlanta, his home track, in 2022, opened this season by winning the Clash. Byron will start 16th, Kyle Larson will be 17th and Elliott 19th as Hendrick Motorsports drivers will be looking for a third straight win to launch the season.
The last year a team won the Clash and the first two points races was in 1997 when Hendrick Motorsports’ Jeff Gordon swept the first three races.
Preece looks to stay grounded
Ryan Preece, who will start 11th, said “I feel fine” following a scary crash at Daytona in which his No. 60 Ford became airborne and flipped. It was the second time his car flipped at Daytona, following another terrifying crash in 2023 that left him with two black eyes the following week.
Preece had no black eyes Saturday but said he hopes he doesn’t have another similar scare.
“I joke with my wife that I’m like a cat with nine lives right now,” Preece said. “You don’t want to use all nine of them.”
New iron man
Martin Truex Jr., who retired from full-time racing after last season and finished 38th in the Daytona 500, will have his Cup Series-leading streak of consecutive starts end at 685, the sixth longest all time. The streak began at the 2006 Daytona 500.
Logano will take over the longest active start streak in the Cup. Atlanta is his 578th consecutive race.
TV ratings slam dunk win
NASCAR celebrated its TV ratings win for last week’s Daytona 500, despite a lengthy rain delay. The Daytona 500 telecast on Fox earned a 3.42 household rating with an average of 6.8 million viewers to finish ahead of the NBA All-Star Game and the NHL’s 4 Nations Face-Off game between the United States and Canada.
The rating excluded the rain coverage during the delay of more than three hours. NASCAR said the rain delay coverage averaged 4.95 million viewers and if considered as a separate event would have ranked as the week’s No. 2 telecast, behind only the Daytona 500.