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A Corvette GT3 race car parked in its pit box

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Cover of The Mechanic’s Tale by Steve Matchett

The Mechanic’s Tale

Steve Matchett

1999

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The Daytona truck race went as expected

Results for the promotional stars of the Daytona truck race were pretty poor.

Lawrence Garrett “Cleetus McFarland” Mitchell spun and wrecked himself after six laps. He was crestfallen and contrite and embarrassed in his care center interview, and he clearly has love of the game. I’ll give him that, but what I won’t give him is how seemingly surprised he was by being taken three-wide at Daytona. The dude is just not ready for this.

As for Tony Stewart, his truck was also destroyed, but by someone else losing control next to him and sandwiching him into the wall. It was not a very good debut for the RAM/Kaulig program overall.

I was excited to see Carson Hocevar commanding the race early, but he ended up losing track position over and over again due to repeated punctures.

Chandler Smith won in a finish that was certainly exciting, but it was also goofy. They were crawling all over each other. In short, it was the Daytona truck race.


All-Supercars Mercedes-AMG crew takes Bathurst 12 Hour pole

I said this yesterday after practice, and I was right:

Waters/Mostert/Randle is an unfair Bathurst car

— Jon 🛞 (@jon.turningfortune.com) Feb 13, 2026 at 7:08 PM

Sure enough, they’re on pole, and there are two more AMGs behind them. That car is as much a part of the Mountain as any other at this point.

This was a blindingly fast qualifying session. Expect an amazing race.

Sources


Motorcycle drag racer Dystany Spurlock switching to stock cars

This program looks pretty potent to me. She’s starting in late models and doing some ARCA races this year. She has broad backing, including by Carl Long’s MBM Motorsports. No Black woman has ever competed at any level of NASCAR in its 77-year history. And she intends to make it to the Cup Series.

Sources


Bart Simpson will wave the green flag at the Daytona 500

Once again, the dorky PR-speak in which the news is delivered masks the fact that NASCAR is figuring out a way to be funny and chill in this very un-funny and un-chill century.

I love shit like this, they used to always to this type of stuff when I was watching this sport growing up so it's neat to still see it being done these days!

— Shoogy Racing 🏁 (@shoogyracing.bsky.social) Feb 13, 2026 at 2:44 PM

IGTC is going up a notch this year

Last year, the International GT Challenge races — Bathurst 12 Hour, Spa 24 Hour, the newly revived Suzuka 1000km, and the Indianapolis 8 Hour — felt like standalone race events with some things in common (including attracting the cream of the crop to drive). This year, it feels like it’s gelling into one big thing. Ford has committed at least one Mustang to the full season, JMR Johor has staked out two grid spots for its Corvettes at Indy, and Chevrolet is marking its Bathurst 12 Hour debut with a special Bathurst 12-Hour edition Corvette you can own and drive, of which I would like two, please.


Katsuta takes lead of Rally Sweden

I always have to check myself when I get into a new motorsport because I can easily mistake the epicness of watching something for the first time with universal epicness, however I feel like the 2026 WRC season has been one for the ages so far. I feel safe saying that about Monaco because everyone is, but Sweden is also very cold and very snowy, and it’s leading to moments like this:


Daytona 500 duels: Logano and Elliott win, Mears and McLeod race in

I may have hoped for an instant vibe shift in NASCAR after the trial and the end of the Playoffs, but the energy at Daytona is still rather weird. Nothing horrible happened in the Duels (unless you’re Corey LaJoie or Anthony Alfredo), but the people who raced in did so under pretty weird conditions.

Anthony Alfredo pulled it off in duel 2 but was disqualified in tech, handing his starting spot to B.J. McLeod, which we love because a significant prize money take for him could lead to more Katherine Legge drives during the season. As for Casey Mears, he was very much out until he was in, thanks to an incident that seemed dumb to me at first, but the more times I watch it, the more impressive I find Mears’ maneuvers:

Sources


Pascal Wehrlein wins on his 100th Formula E start in Jeddah

Pretty good race. I think the pit stop thing is working; there’s still a little bit of a strategic lull at first, but it eases you into it, and then the complexity of the minute strategic differences leads to a pretty snappy racing section midway through the race. Porsche and Wehrlein really schooled everybody strategically this time, though. It looked like he was out of it for a little while, and he ended up winning with a big gap.


NASCAR partners with biofuel company POET

What this partnership looks like is not at all clear, but it is at least interesting that NASCAR is making decarbonization noises. The messaging says NASCAR will use the “zero-carbon bioethanol” fuel, but it will be “in combination” with Sunoco gasoline, whatever the hell that means. It probably means the pace cars or the jet dryers or something will use it. So far, I take this to be just another hand-wavey sponsorship, but it will insert itself all over NASCAR in places fuel is mentioned, so let’s keep an eye on it (and the fan reaction to it, which might be funny).

Sources


Romain Grosjean finally announced for second Dale Coyne seat

Surprising absolutely no one, Dale Coyne has beaten the whatever-holiday-is-next (right now it’s Valentine’s Day) by one day, announcing that Romain Grosjean will return to full-time competition in the other DCR car alongside Dennis Hauger, who I predict is going to kick his ass. This, of course, deprives Conor Daly of a ride, but I’m sure we’ll see him at the 500. I am also sure that the unbelievable delay — and the choice of Grosjean itself — has everything to do with the sketchy Todd Ault crypto stuff that’s backing it financially.


Tokyo Formula E doubleheader will be held at night

This sounds incredible. Formula E is in need of a signature event like any enduring racing series has. Sometimes I joke that it should be Monaco because Formula E is so much better there than Formula 1 lately, but that can’t be it. A doubleheader on the streets of Tokyo at night, though, now we’re cooking without gas.


Supercars is majorly refreshing its broadcast

I’m a little sad about the departure of Neil Crompton and Mark Skaife because I enjoyed feeling like the era in which I became a fan of Supercars was contiguous with the classic era because the voices in the booth were the same. There are a lot of talented folks on the team, and I’m sure it’ll be great. I am pretty worried about that graphics package, though.


BMW running amazing Group A art car tribute at Bathurst 12 Hour

A couple days ago, I thought the TF Sport Corvettes were going to be the hottest sports cars of the year, but I may have been wrong.

(And they’re quick, too)

Livery of the year contest gets an exceptionally strong early contender

[image or embed]

— Luke (@luke.turningfortune.com) Feb 11, 2026 at 6:05 PM

Sources


Alpine pulling out of Hypercar after 2026

As expected, Alpine is ending its Hypercar program after this year, although it is still making noises about staying in Formula 1 and not closing the Viry-Châtillon facility. I do not rule out the likelihood that they’re just sprucing it up to sell, though.

I would be sad about this, but Renault just seems to suck too much at management of motorsports programs, so I’ll get over their absence.

Sources


Honda and Chevrolet staying in IndyCar with factory charters

Marshall Pruett was all over this story, and I’d say it’s the biggest story in IndyCar since Roger Penske bought the series. It’s the first development that really seems like it augurs growth and success, like a much bigger version of the news last year that FOX would buy a stake in the series. Incentives rule everything around us. It is very important to have mission-critical partners like broadcasters and engine manufacturers with skin in the game, so IndyCar’s success is their success.

The push for the first new IndyCar since 2012 has been excruciating, but clearly satisfying the engine manufacturers was the central issue. They’ve finally done it. The new formula is good, but giving them charters to field factory-backed cars is even better. That will let Honda and GM (and hopefully some more, eventually??) have their own engineers work directly on race cars. Honda is already talking to Meyer Shank about entering the factory car with them, which is a beautiful parallel to how the MSR Acura GTP program is run in IMSA. I love this. It’s all upside.


Max Verstappen hates the new F1 cars

Early in the Bahrain test, journalists noticed Max Verstappen shifting all the way down to first gear when rolling through corners, evidently to charge his battery with the extra revs. This is exactly the sort of thing pundits imagined people doing under these new electric-heavy regulations, and Max is the best at doing weird stuff with race cars, so clearly he tried it. The back of the car squirmed around a lot, but, again, Max is the best. He can handle it. The other drivers started to copy him, but I have no doubt Max will dominate this year if that sort of trickery is necessary.

The problem is, he absolutely hated doing it. He was miserable. He called it “anti-racing.” He also called it “Formula E on steroids,” which sounds amazing, but clearly he meant it disparagingly. He doesn’t think driving a Formula 1 car should involve this much systems management. Lando Norris, who is the reigning Formula 1 world champion, later gave a rather champion-ly rebuttal, saying he’s perfectly willing to deal with the new car given that he gets to be a Formula 1 driver for a living.

Look, I want Max to quit and go sports car racing — and I’m sure Lando does, too — so we’re obviously biased, but I’m actually glad Max is unhappy. There tends to be an inverse correlation between how much fun drivers are having and how much fun it is to watch them.


Pit Wall

A Corvette GT3 race car parked in its pit box

Now reading

Cover of The Mechanic’s Tale by Steve Matchett

The Mechanic’s Tale

Steve Matchett

1999

Peruse Jon’s racing library