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Motorsport

Yes, it’s that time of the year when eligible Playoff drivers who haven’t booked their Championship 4 ticket yet usually leave things to the last minute during the last Round of 8 Cup race. However for some when they were fortunate enough to get that golden ticket opportunity, it’s within good reason thanks to Ryan Blaney’s win today in the No.12 Ford Mustang for Team Penske at Martinsville Speedway. 

Now there’s going to be not one but two Team Penske cars alongside a 23XI Toyota (Tyler Reddick) and a Hendrick Chevy (William Byron) on what could be yet another golden Team Penske Championship year for the third straight time ahead of next weekend’s season-finale race at Phoenix Raceway.

You just couldn’t believe the time has come for Team Penske to dominate this three-week semis swing even though we haven’t heard much from them beforehand. But hey, they’ve been there and have done before with huge success and it would no surprise if either the defending champ Ryan Blaney or Joey Logano take home that championship trophy once the 2024 season is done.

First of all, Christopher Bell would’ve easily been the other last two favourites to book into Phoenix – provided if he can provide a good enough finish – as one of the championship front-runners like it was back in 2022 and 2023. But then he made an illegal wall move towards the end there on Byron (the actual Championship 4 contender instead) that got himself DQ’d and NASCAR fined him with a penalty there on the spot post-race. He’ll have to wait till next year now for his next championship opportunity as still plenty to offer in the No.20 Gibbs Toyota at age 30.

Also, feeling sorry there for experienced veteran Denny Hamlin who overcame yesterday’s crash to force his way back up through the field with a spare No.11 Toyota Camry in 6th – the best placed Toyota/Gibbs car today at Martinsville.

Unfortunately, it’s still not quite enough to book in his championship shot yet again for season 2024 when a win was still required that began with the Team Penske’s championship glory back in 2022. Yes, he also could’ve done it last weekend at Homestead if it wasn’t for that poor last restart & also if the last yellow didn’t come out when other eligible Championship 4 contenders already have better Playoff form than him it as seen with the Team Penske duo & even one or the other Toyota team-mates like Bell and his 23XI employee of course in Reddick.

Although there’s lots more to come from Denny as a co-owner for 23XI Racing with Reddick still in the fight, but as a driver, he really needs a big impact all along at Playoffs time next year like winning all these set of races if he wants to finally win the championship so badly.

What else? There’s also some Ford cars in and out of the Top 10 with Brad Keselowski who finished 9th in his co-owned No.6 Ford for RFK Racing as well as Noah Gragson 11th as the highest Stewart-Haas Ford finisher ahead of a few other team-mates down the Top 15 mark for his No.10 crew. And don’t forget New Zealand’s Shane Van Gisbergen in 12th for Kaulig Racing’s No.16 Chevy Cup team. Yes, I know Austin Dillon aka AD finished 7th for the No.3 Childress Chevy but he was there for the wrong reasons unfortunately when it comes to that late race radio drama.

And if I was going to choose a championship winner for next Monday’s season finale for Cup, it’s going to be a touch one for sure. Now based on regular season form then it would be William Byron; if not, going with Logano to get this done for a 3rd Drivers’ Championship.

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What a race and what a comeback with Marc Marquez who just shut down Jorge Martin on time to take home that 2024 Australian Motorcycle Grand Prix win for Gresini Racing (Ducati) at Phillip Island. 

He may had a bad start over from 2nd to 10th when he forgot to tear off his visor sheet that could’ve been so costly had M. Marquez spun out of control, which was so, so close. But fast forward over the next 20-25 odd laps, M. Marquez made up so much lost time by closing in on the race leader Martin before he finally got around him for 1st with only a few laps to go, and he too has defended really well that saw the best of the Spaniard once again…in a Ducati at Phillip Island. This is his 4th win Australian Motorcycle Grand Prix win here since 2019 when he was with the Honda Factory Team back then with a big move ahead to the Ducati works team next season alongside an up-to-date bike rather than a year old bike.

For Martin, commiserations on finishing 2nd for Pramac Racing (Ducati) when he was leading out in front for the most part, having seen him take home the Sprint race yesterday. But this feature race is so different though where no front running rider will give one away lightly as M. Marquez’s brilliant late race fight proved so difficult for Martin to shut him down towards the end there, especially with little time remaining. The good news is though that not only he’s happy to take home 2nd but Martin still has a 20-point lead in the riders’ points ahead of Francesco Bagnaia (who finished 3rd for Ducati) with three rounds left this season.

What else? Plenty of Ducati success also to fill up the Top 6 alongside some Aprillias a bit down the order including two x KTM Red Bull factory bikes, with South African rider Brad Binder in 7th & Aussie’s own Jack Miller in 11th respectively. For Miller, we may not seen much of him this season but at least he will have a ride next year at Pramac albeit in a Yamaha satellite bike.

That’s it from Phillip Island as best of luck over the rest of this season and most of next year before all the world’s best riders come back here for another edition of the Australian Motorcycle Grand Prix. And last but not least, great to see a few other well-known people during this weekend – such as two legendary Australian motorsport icons in former 5 x 500cc World Champion Mick Doohan & former Formula 1 driver Mark Webber as well as New Zealander Simon Crafar who will be leaving his seasonal pit reporting post for the World Feed at season’s end after 7 years to become the chief steward.

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The 2024 Bathurst 1000 race weekend have seen some familiar media faces back on TV with the likes of Molly Taylor, Chris Stubbs & Aaron Noonan at least for Seven who covered this race as Supercars’s free-to-air partner alongside Fox Sports. 

We all know Stubbsy has just came back from a huge year himself covering the Grand Slam Daily Tennis shows and also reported the recent Summer Olympics in Paris for Stan Sport as he will continue to do so next year starting with the Australian Open at Melbourne Park since he’s freelance. Plus, Molly came back to TV duties after all since the SpeedSeries season finale event nearly a year ago at this same track also for Stan & 9Gem before Seven regained the rights at season’s end. She wasn’t required to stay on alongside Matt White & Fabian Coulthard, having done some rallying/rallycross driving work since then.

It’s also nice to see her contribute to some pit reporting on the shared broadcast commentary feed at the Mountain alongside Greg Murphy, Mark Larkham, Chad Neylon and Riana Crehan.

Then there’s always versatile sports hosts in Mel McLaughlin & Emma Freedman once a year at our greatest race when Mark Beretta and Jack Perkins continues to steer the ship whenever Seven is allowed to air select Supercars events live every year with everything else being highlights (usually six out of 12/13).

Next Supercars TV rights deal from 2026-2030

Now even though we will see a three-race Finals series for the first time late next year – similar to NASCAR’s Playoffs albeit a much simpler & shorter version, the next TV rights contract from 2026 is still up for grabs that should take another few years to at least around the end of 2030 – coinciding with the arrival of Toyota as the 3rd Supercars manufacturer using Supras.

First of all, the paid TV package will always stay as Supercars’s primary financial source since Seven previously left following the 2014 season as an exclusive broadcaster before Seven came back to replace Network 10 a few years ago as the competition’s secondary TV partner to Fox Sports. There’s also the benefit of watching every event live and on-demand without ads during racing but when it comes to the free-to-air part, it still needs some work. Okay, there’s no way we will get to see all Supercars races live again like it once was a long time ago. It would be great though if they had at least all other Sunday afternoon Supercars-only races live on top of six full event major event races every year – similar to NRL and AFL every week with 3/4 weekly games on free-to-air while the rest being via Pay TV.

Whoever retains or takes over the rights remains to be seen, but hopefully Supercars can get a bit more free-to-air content that is well balanced likewise with the other major sporting codes while still maintaining Pay TV as the competition’s primary source – it should be a win/win for all motorsport people involved here at the end of the day.

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Great to hear from one-time NASCAR Cup Series driver Brodie Kostecki today with his Bathurst 1000 win for the first time alongside co-driver Todd Hazlewood at Mount Panorama. He first already won the Supercars Championship drivers’ title last year & now he gets to add another major honour in his trophy cabinet with the Bathurst win – all of which he’s achieved with Erebus Motorsport (Chevy team).

He didn’t look out of place at all from start to finish when he led the line from pole position with the team pit stops being absolutely flawless including the one late yellow before Kostecki was able to pull well clear of Triple 8/Red Bull Racing Australia’s Broc Feeney (No.88 Chevy with co-driver Jamie Whincup) during the final restart with 15 laps to go & there he goes safe and sound towards the finish line following a long 161 laps throughout today.

Congratulations to Brodie as sure he’s sticking around here for more with Supercars going into 2025 including a big switch to Ford power at Dick Johnson Racing. As far as his NASCAR ambitions is concerned, again, he could’ve done a few more starts at Cup level had Brodie not gone through a really tough off-season that saw him miss the first few races of 2024. 

It remains to be seen as to whether or not if he will be back racing in the US at least part-time again. However, it looks like Brodie won’t be leaving Supercars or Australia anytime soon unlike Shane Van Gisbergen, who is currently enjoying every minute of it at Kaulig Racing in the Xfinity Series level, with a full-time Cup ride coming his way next year at Trackhouse.

Not even former team-mate, current Triple 8 driver & also fellow NASCAR one-time racer Will Brown is willing to go full-time either when he’s also happy living here with family still around him. Also unsure about Cam Waters either at Tickford Racing’s Ford outfit when he competed two Truck races and one Cup road course race earlier this year & while he will definitely come back next season, it’s still too early to tell depending on Ford Performance wanting another SVG-like impact for Waters to begin with maybe at Ryan Sieg’s team or even AM Racing.

For now, there’s still better days ahead for Brodie Kostecki while there’s also always going to be another Supercars driver – preferably young/early-mid 20s – willing to follow SVG’s footsteps by racing NASCAR full-time in the US in the near future.

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It’s been a long time coming for a new manufacturer to finally enter in one of motorsport’s most prominent competitions in Australia as Toyota will enter the Supercars Championship from 2026, with Walkinshaw Andretti United being their works team. The model/chassis Toyota will race will be the Supra sports car under its 5.0 litre Hilux Truck engine from the Dakar Rally where they’ll go head-to-head with Chevy Camaro and Ford Mustang.

First of all, thanks to Toyota Australia and its performance arm Gazoo Racing on trying their hand in Supercars. They have an iconic history with Motorsport here before with the likes of Neal Bates & Coral Taylor (although her daughter Molly is more of a Subaru person) that passes on to Harry Bates today in the Australian Rally Championship. Plus, they’ve also built a good brand of grassroots Motorsport with their one-make series over the last decade that produced future Supercars stars and race winners involving its compact 86 sports car.

I’m sure these youngsters competing today would love to hop on a Supra V8 Supercar one day and WAR is providing a great pathways platform to help them towards achieve that goal by competing at the top level of racing in Australia.

Furthermore, if anyone like Chaz Mostert or Kiwi Ryan Wood would like to have a crack in NASCAR across the US – Toyota can help them out to arrange at least a road course or Trucks oval race deal to begin with either for Gibbs or any of Toyota’s satellite Cup, Xfinity or Truck Series teams.

It remains to see what Toyota can do to find a second Supercars team in order to support Walkinshaw. Maybe a small-customer run team would be an ideal candidate like PremiAir Racing or Team 18 for Toyota’s first Supercars attempt.

Other than that, we thought Toyota could be the perfect 3rd manufacturer when they launched the TRD Australia performance division back in 2007 thanks to their Aurion sedan. Yes, that high performance sedan may not be exactly be V8 but it still gave some excellent competition that would send shockwaves to Holden (Commodore) and Ford (Falcon). But it was unfortunately short lived by the end of 2008 off the back of poor sales and the global financial crisis.

Also the timing wasn’t right either even before the 2000s when the large Toyota Avalon sedan went out at the time with V8 Supercars being simply happy with just Holden & Ford whose arch-rivalry was so synonymous with our Aussie motorsport fans that goes back to the 60s-70s via the Australian Touring Car Championship.

But that doesn’t mean Toyota would want stay away from being fast altogether as you can see with their World Endurance Championship Le Mans entry over the last decade as well as their return to World Rallying that marked the steady rise of the Toyota Gazoo brand. Now it’s the right time for them to their Supra into the fray against two of America’s iconic muscle sports cars at our race tracks including the famed Mountain in Bathurst like the (Chevy) Camaro and (Ford) Mustang.

We wish Toyota Australia and Walkinshaw the best of luck on-track and also off-track with their future performance-oriented editions together for the road car business like the big Tundra pick-up & that sporty compact Corolla hatchback for example. 

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After three seasons, it looks like SpeedSeries will be no more going into 2025 with a like-for-like replacement national racing series being helmed by SRO’s Australia division. So that means Motorsport Australia won’t be in charge going forward after only one season when they previously controlled SpeedSeries from the Australian Racing Group, although they will continue to contribute this in some way like it was last season.

As it stands, GT World Challenge (GT3) will come right in first with the GT4 Australia and the Australian Production Cars race categories next in-line, as seen with the stand-alone GT Festival event last month at Phillip Island. 

What does it mean for TCR Australia and Trans-Am? Safe to say that they’re both not going anywhere. For Trans-Am, they might join the Supercars support bill for the most part while TCR Australia may be looking to form an Asia-Pacific competition with TCR’s Asia series. 

But that doesn’t mean both TCR & Trans-Am are going to be left out of SpeedSeries’s replacement competition altogether as they may still play a role with SRO in some events.

Don’t forget also the TCR World Tour will be back in Australia after all next year after a year-long absence, but they won’t be racing at Mount Panorama again for sure when the annual Bathurst International event will wrap up for the last time this November.

Plus, one thing we know for sure that the S5000 open-wheel category won’t be back at least for the foreseeable future when that race series was shut down at the end of last season.

Looking at the race calendar (not final just yet), what’s new about this SpeedSeries replacement comp is they’ll be heading over to New Zealand for the first time at Hampton Downs that will round out the series late next year. Other than that, there’s nothing much apart from the usual six-round event that will take place a few times throughout the year likewise with other racing series across the country. 

And last but not least, the media rights deal. The question is who will be covering SRO Australia’s newly expanded competition? Right now, SpeedSeries is currently on 7 under Motorsport Australia’s control until the end of this season before SRO Australia will be taking over from Motorsport Australia next year.

Whatever that may be, let’s hope they can keep it free-to-air at all times.

For now, we wish SRO Australia the best of luck by taking the step up to make their sports cars roar against the likes of the current Supercars comp we’ve got here.

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While the on-air talent and silly season rumour talk is ongoing, there has been some progress as of late when it comes to NASCAR’s International ambitions. Off the back of several International drivers coming here over the last 1-2 years mainly on road courses, they would like to hold an International Cup series race as early as next year. We’ll find out where that might be? And what does it mean for Australia.

If hosting NASCAR races off shore isn’t enough, we got two Cup racers looking to get some extra race time elsewhere that will appeal to local race track promoters and race fans. There’s one who is set for a one-off outing in an International NASCAR-sanctioned series coming up soon while another is set for a return to Australia to race some sprint cars like most other US racers when their respective seasons usually finishes in November.

Time will tell but for now, great to see the sport taking some right steps in order to promote to stock car racing worldwide rivalling Formula 1, MotoGP & IndyCar .

NASCAR’s International Cup Series plans update this week beginning with Mexico and Canada

The 2025 NASCAR Cup Series schedule hasn’t been fully released yet other than a couple of important races and some of the in-tournament summer events that will be on both Amazon Prime & TNT – such as February’s season-opening Daytona 500, May’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway, and the Championship 4 Finale in Phoenix in early November.

While there’s still ongoing talk as to which of the current races will stay or go, there’s no surprise that NASCAR wants to host at least one if not two Cup races outside the USA. However, those two overseas races they’re looking at will likely be just within the North American border for a start.

We’ve heard so far that Mexico City in Mexico and Montreal in Canada are the key destinations, although Montreal would more likely be a realistic target for 2026. 

NASCAR has been there and done that before in the mid 2000s-early 2010s with the second-tier series with Mexico City between 2005-2008 followed by Montreal between 2007-2012 where both of these venues are usually home to their respective Formula 1 Grand Prix races like the Mexico City & Canadian Grand Prix.

I, for one, would like to see this happen with the sport doing an excellent job on being serious about their International footprint. It’s been going on over the last few years alongside a couple of International drivers coming in to race for a couple of occasions, especially on road courses where these drivers have been usually specialists there for so long.

What’s not going away though is taking some Cup events off on Sundays to accommodate their International ambitions, even if it’s going to be held in Mexico City and/or Montreal. 

It’s the best part business and fan-centric wise of finishing the race weekend as always with most of their viewers coming from across the county in the US while some do come from Canada as well as Europe. So they’re happy where they’re are when their main focus these days is the West Coast market & race day starts tend to fall in the early afternoon rather than putting it at midday like it used to be or else fans who live in the West Coast will miss out the start first thing at 9am PST.

What does it mean for NASCAR in Australia? 

While we continue to see more and more of our Supercars drivers trying their hand in NASCAR since last year with New Zealander Shane Van Gisbergen now racing the Xfinity Series for Kaulig Racing full-time, it looks like we won’t see a big NASCAR race weekend here anytime soon since they want to keep most of the focus locally and domestically across the USA.

Sure, never say never but it’s gonna be a long shot for management to consider in the rear view mirror. Yes, we also had an IndyCar race in the Gold Coast, QLD a long time ago until 2008. But don’t think IndyCar would also want to sacrifice its domestic audience either when racing only within the North and South America other than Toronto, Canada is the series’s only realistic International hotspots right now. 

We can always dream and even having an NASCAR-sanctioned Australian series would help just like they do to Mexico, Canada, Brazil and Europe. But we’ve always got Supercars and even SpeedSeries, so no room at all unfortunately in the meantime for NASCAR to sort out contracts with race tracks as well as suppling their fleet of stock cars to a customers wanting to take part here – which does cost the time of travel & $$$.

If NASCAR isn’t enough to keep you updated here when we all got work on a Monday morning unless you’re a big SVG fan of course in Xfinity level, there’s always highlights and replays to look back in the evening or in a few days whenever you can. Plus, Hendrick Motorsports driver Kyle Larson is coming to Perth at the end of this year to race in sprint cars – a discipline he knows all too well growing up while still racing some mid-week for fun.

Daniel Suarez to compete in a one-off race in Brazil for NASCAR’s sanctioned domestic series there

And lastly, another NASCAR Cup Series driver is going to get another race elsewhere – this time during the two-week break while the Olympics is on – in none other than current Trackhouse driver Daniel Suarez. He will arrive in Brazil next week to get married first with fiancé Julia Piquet, who is the sister of former NASCAR & Formula 1 driver (also Formula E champion) Nelson Piquet Jr. & daughter of 3 x Formula 1 champion Nelson Piquet. 

Then he’ll stay in Brazil a bit longer to compete on a one-off outing at Interlagos in São Paulo in NASCAR’s sanctioned Brazilian series on August 2-4 before they will return home together in Charlotte after this in time for the 2nd half season, with a Playoffs berth already sealed due to his win in Atlanta earlier this year (February).

Congratulations to Daniel on getting to marry the love of his life Julia while he’s able to score some extra race seat time at his future wife’s home soil in Brazil like he did during the Busch Clash weekend back in February at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in the Mexico Series – a series he regularly competed a long time ago before he went on to make a name for himself in America in which he’s just been an naturalised citizen there last month. No doubt this will hopefully put him on the map when it comes to the upcoming Playoffs in the same way that helped him win his next Cup a couple of weeks later. He ended up 10th in drivers’ points two years ago off the back of his first ever Cup win at Sonoma back in June and what he needs to now is to close in on team-mate Ross Chastain to provide better competition for Trackhouse before looking at the top teams.

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This weekend’s IndyCar Series race doubleheader at Iowa Speedway will be Leigh Diffey’s last race on the call after just over a decade, even though there’s six events left on the calendar this season before NBC Sports will bow out on a high with Fox Sports set to take it from here going into 2025 and beyond where they will show all races live including the annual Indianapolis 500 race on free-to-air. We all know he will be calling Track and Field during the 2nd week of the Summer Olympics over in Paris, France in early August for the network, which is a position that is so legendary since he first called the races at a Olympic event four years ago in Tokyo, Japan on top of various top-level races like the World Champs in the past.

Lots more to come when he will be back calling the Olympics Track and Field once again for the 2028 edition in Los Angeles followed by his hometown reunion for the Brisbane edition come 2032 – the time when NBC’s current Olympic contract will be expiring by then unless they renew for a lot more down the track from the last time the network signed their big Olympics renewal with the IOC that dates back to May 7th, 2014. There’s even more exciting news for Leigh post-IndyCar – even though it still hasn’t been made official but close to 100% likely – is that he will be well and truly expected to replace Rick Allen as NBC’s lead NASCAR Cup Series announcer once the Olympics is done alongside Steve Letarte and Jeff Burton. This won’t affect his other commitments such as Supercross and the early season IMSA races when NBC is not doing NASCAR, although he might miss the a rare Cup race or two for the World Championships in Track & Field if required during the odd years.

We don’t know when he will be begin calling the NASCAR races again but most likely when the Playoffs start around September with Leigh getting the promotion. Meanwhile, Rick Allen – who is currently calling the Cup races at the moment – will only keep his Xfinity Series gig for The CW – whether if it’s just the short term under NBC’s production just for the Playoffs or on a permanent basis ahead of its first full-time season next year with all races also free-to-air.

Seems like having a three-man booth suits the network’s style more off the back of good banter and chemistry that Leigh forged with James Hinchcliffe and Townsend Bell in IndyCar rather than the four-man group they’ve done with NASCAR for several years until the end of last season. Then at a time when they’ve renewed their commitment to air NASCAR for another few years not long later but only at Cup level; like the Premier League, NBC would want to go differently without Dale Jr. & now Rick.

For now, things won’t be the same without Leigh calling the open-wheel races at all once he wraps up NBC’s IndyCar coverage at Iowa with Kevin Lee expected to take the baton until the finale at Nashville Superspeedway. He’s been great presenting/calling these races firstly with Formula 1 of course before he got the chance to call the Formula 1 & IndyCar races for NBC at the same time back in 2013 while being the first overseas announcer to call the Indianapolis 500 when NBC had full rights to IndyCar for another few years from 2019 until the end of this year. We’re glad that he’s had one hell of a ride to see it for himself and the wider motorsports community as we can’t wait to hear what Leigh soon enough after the Olympics.

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NBC Sports may have lost the IndyCar rights to FOX Sports last week ahead of next season under the series’ new multi-year TV rights cycle, but they did successfully retain the IMSA SportsCar Championship rights however for another few years. Nothing much will change other than the fact there will be up to 17 hours of screen time on the free-to-air NBC channel per year (50% up from what we see right now) with the rest including its support categories and on-demand content being on Peacock.

So it looks like most of the races including the 2 hour and 45 minutes ones and key portions of the long-distance endurance races – such as the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona, 12 Hours of Sebring, 6 Hours at Watkins Glen and 8-Hour Petit Le Mans at Road Atlanta will all be happening on NBC. Although nothing is guaranteed like FOX promised to IndyCar when they will have all races live free-to-air from next year while NBC wanted to keep the IndyCar rights by having nearly all races for free & only a handful ending up elsewhere in which the series said no, there’s still a possibility that we could see just a handful Premier Class races going behind a paywall on Peacock and maybe on cable via USA Network like we see with IndyCar at the moment.

Speaking of IMSA on cable, they still should get some air time with some of long-distance endurance races as above but no word at this stage as to whether or not if the taped support race encores/highlights will continue during the following weekend of each round, etc – especially for viewers who is still around as some have already cut the cord in recent years for streaming. They used to do it quite frequently when NBCSN was there a few years back before it was shut down two years ago & the network barely shows motorsport encore/highlights these days with USA Network & CNBC already have their own time filler like USA’s endless marathons of second-run syndicated dramas as well as CNBC’s daily financial/business coverage.

And lastly who will still be around for NBC’s IMSA coverage? Leigh Diffey is one of them who has been around sportscars for a long time and will be back to commentate the early rounds of next season including the 24 Hours of Daytona but is expected to be given the reigns though as the network’s leading NASCAR Cup Series announcer during the second half season. Yes, they haven’t made the announcement yet as official but still likely to happen after the Olympics in September with Rick Allen to fully focus on Xfinity when the CW gets the early Playoff access and for Diffey to come in at the right time during Cup day.

When Leigh is on other commitments, Dave Burns has been filling in every now and then including Brian Till who is also an analyst having competed in CART back in the early 90s. Calvin Fish has always been a mainstay as the leading sports car analyst also for a long time as no doubt he and Leigh will continue their long-running partnership together for another few years. It remains to be seen though if Townsend Bell and James Hinchcliffe will stick around where both of them have always been around in IndyCar but it looks like they will both likely move on considering Hinch has also done some Formula 1 work from time to time & Townsend barely appeared on the network beyond IndyCar. Then on pit road, there’s no doubt Matt Yocum will be there for the most part including some from NASCAR on an occasional basis like Dillon Welch and Marty Snider.

All in all, it wasn’t a difficult deal for NBC to renew their commitment with IMSA when the US sports car series is also run by NASCAR. You could tell they could get the World Endurance Championship rights that includes the prestigious 24 Hours of Le Mans race but it seems TNT Sports via Warner Bros Discovery has kept them in great hands for the time being, especially when they use their sister Eurosport English-language commentary feed from Europe for every round on Motor Trend.

If IMSA did move to TNT, they would be the whole home of sports car racing but then it wouldn’t go down well when it comes to the overall reach with no free-to-air presence while the series has so many different manufacturers in the books & there’s no way IMSA would want to accept that. For now, NBC still has the 2nd half NASCAR Cup races, IMSA & dirt bike racing.

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The big Saturday night of sports isn’t done just yet off the back of the Super Rugby semi-finals weekend and the end of the Australian Swimming Olympic Trials where the Olympics might not have started in France just yet, but there’s an annual Endurance race going on right now in the 2024 24 Hours of Le Mans Endurance Race from Circuit De La Sarthe & it’s back on free-to-air 9Go for another year through the first two hours window. Glad to see Nine have the authentic sports logo watermark with the Olympic Rings on it which looks really nice, especially during an Olympic year like this. I hope they can keep on doing this by having the WWOS badge more often like they do to other sports by treating their free-to-air limited LIVE motorsports coverage better should they be back airing the World Endurance Championship and 24 Hours of Le Mans next year. It’s been a long time coming since Nine didn’t put the WWOS logo at all for their former SpeedSeries coverage including the previous 24 Hour of Le Mans race last year – despite wearing one before at times two years ago until Motorsport Australia re-took the SpeedSeries media rights off ARG that ended the mixed paywall/free experiment & Seven came back to air the races once again from earlier this year. Seven also didn’t have any issues when putting on their sports logo unlike Nine.

Looking at the race itself, it’s been a Ferrari race so far where one car has been leading up front over the first 30 mins-1 hour before another works Ferrari of the same Hypercar factory team got away with the lead after the leading car just couldn’t hold onto outright 1st on the outside. But don’t forget they’ve got greater competition from the US such as the No.31 Porsche Penske team as well as the No.3 Cadillac while we wouldn’t rule out Alpine as well with Mick Schumacher’s (one of the Alpine F1 frontrunners alongside Australia’s own Jack Doohan to replace Esteban Ocon for next season) No.36 running in between 10th-15th for Signatech. If you wish to watch the rest of the 24 Hour Endurance event, Stan Sport is the only place to see all along until the end of Sunday night. For new viewers, it’s a seven day free trial and if you like it, it will cost you $25 a month.

From there, you can also watch on-demand replays and highlights at any time as well as every other World Endurance Championship race LIVE uninterrupted without having to break away with an ad-break or two at all. Although you can watch IndyCar there in the meantime at least until the rest of this season, but keep an eye out for 2025 as they could end up on Foxtel/Kayo once again since the US rights have just changed hands recently where it’s now heading to FOX from NBC.

We also know Leigh Diffey, who called the 24 Hour of Le Mans for Eurosport last year, will be staying with NBC having called the Indianapolis 500 over the last seven years & he’s still expected to replace Rick Allen for their NASCAR Cup Series coverage as their main announcer after the Olympics is over with Track & Field. His first Cup race full-time would be straight after the network finishes its IndyCar tenure at Nashville while The CW will begin airing the Xfinity Series races relatively early at the same time during the Playoffs with Allen it before the network takes full control at least the next seven years going into 2025.

For now, it’s a Ferrari 1-2 up front (No.50 over No.83 a few mins ago) under wet weather going into the evening, then darkness and hopefully bright weather into the next day where both cars really want to win that one ultimate prize.

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