NASCAR’s historic Viva Mexico 250 at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez on June 15, 2025, marked a bold step forward for the sport, delivering a thrilling spectacle that showcased its global ambitions. Shane van Gisbergen dominated, leading 60 of 100 laps to secure his first win of the season and a playoff berth, while Mexican fans electrified the stands with passion rivaling Daytona. Bubba Wallace, swarmed by adoring crowds, praised the “f***ing awesome” atmosphere, and Daniel Suarez’s Xfinity Series victory the day prior cemented Mexico’s embrace of NASCAR. Despite logistical hiccups—haulers endured a 2,300-mile trek from Michigan—Ben Kennedy’s vision for international expansion proved a resounding success, with 90% of attendees hailing from Mexico.
Yet, this triumph was overshadowed by a contentious 2025 season and an ill-judged social media spat led by podcaster and former driver Kenny Wallace.
NASCAR’s year has been fraught with controversy: a legal battle between 23XI Racing, Front Row Motorsports, and NASCAR over charters threatens team stability, while fans have bristled at the sport’s shift to streaming platforms like Prime Video, alienating traditional viewers. The Mexico City race, broadcast exclusively on Prime, amplified these tensions, with some decrying NASCAR’s departure from its Southern roots.
Enter Wallace, whose podcasting prominence and NASCAR affiliations cast him as a de facto mouthpiece for the sport’s establishment. On Twitter, he clashed with fans nostalgic for the “good old days” of oval tracks and cable broadcasts, dismissing their concerns with a patronizing refrain: the past is gone, and fans must “move on.” His tweets, dripping with condescension, ignored the legitimate frustrations of a fanbase grappling with rapid change. Wallace’s assertion that Mexico’s packed stands and blaring horns signaled a flawless future glossed over the sport’s growing pains, including travel woes and scheduling strains that even drivers like Jeff Gordon criticized.
NASCAR’s got a problem with its fanbase interactions in 2025. The higher ups have no respect from the fanbase anymore and vice versa. Something’s got to change. NASCAR’s out of touch and the problem is not getting fixed anytime soon.
Wallace’s tone-deafness—amplifying NASCAR’s narrative while belittling dissent—paints him as state media, more cheerleader than critic. His refusal to engage with fans’ yearning for tradition undermines his credibility, especially as NASCAR navigates a delicate balance between innovation and heritage. The Mexico City race was a triumph, but Wallace’s Twitter feud highlights a deeper rift. NASCAR must heed its fans, not lecture them, to ensure its global dreams don’t fracture its core.
In the meantime, check out Le Mans here.
NASCAR’s Mexico City Triumph Marred by Kenny Wallace’s Tone-Deaf Tweets