Do you ever get that gut feeling something’s off, but you can’t quite pin it down? That’s where Ryan Blaney’s at with Homestead-Miami Speedway right now. It’s March 23, 2025, and NASCAR’s back in South Florida for the Straight Talk Wireless 400, the sixth race of the season. Homestead’s brutal track worn-out asphalt, and 18-to-20-degree banking sort out the real title contenders early. William Byron calls it “one of NASCAR’s most competitive tracks,” and Blaney himself says, “It’s a tough place to get around… one of the most fun places we go to.” Yet, with wildfires smoking nearby and playoff rumors heating up, Blaney remains skeptical.
This isn’t just another weekend. Homestead’s got a history of 18 years as the championship finale spot until Phoenix took over in 2020. Now, local officials are pushing hard to reclaim that crown with a formal proposal possibly coming next month as per The Athletic’s Jordan Bianchi. Homestead-Miami Speedway president, Guillermo Santa Cruz, is also hopeful that the track will host the season finale soon. The real question that’s staring at Blaney is whether NASCAR keeps Homestead’s legacy alive or let it fade.
All is well till NASCAR keeps coming back to Miami
Kyle Larson too is hinting at a rotating finale. Change is brewing, and Blaney’s not buying it! He said, “It’s something I want to see happen. And I’m hopeful in the not-too-distant future the championship will come back.” Fans want Homestead back in the playoffs, fed up with Phoenix. Blaney is not blind to it as he nearly won here last fall, leading 47 laps before Tyler Reddick edged him out. Second place, 48 points, no Championship 4 gotta hurt. He’s back chasing redemption, starting P9, having topped practice at 32.344 seconds. He wonders if this track’s magic will stick around.
Ryan Blaney spilled it raw to the media. He said, “It doesn’t matter to me when we come here [Homestead-Miami Speedway]. Whether it’s spring, fall, in the playoffs, championship race, like, as long as we’re coming here. I think, yeah, some guys, like, they should come here twice. You know, like, maybe one in the spring and one in the fall. You know, where that race in the fall kind of lays, I don’t care. Do I think, like, (the) championship race should rotate between a few tracks? Yeah, I think this should be one of them. But this place puts on a great show no matter what. No matter what it is.”
“I wish [Homestead] had two dates.”@Blaney is in favor of racing an additional race at Homestead. He also talked about what might change between racing in the spring versus in the playoffs.
: @stephen_stumpf pic.twitter.com/zVcXgvTbzc
— Frontstretch (@Frontstretch) March 22, 2025
Homestead Vice Mayor, Sean Fletcher wants the NASCAR championship race back in his city by 2026. “We really hope Homestead gets the championship,” he says. “It’s huge for us. Drivers love this track—it’s all about skill. Plus, November’s a great time here.” He’s pushing hard for it. While NASCAR’s COO Steve O’Donnell isn’t so sure. In a Sports Business Journal report, he said Phoenix works well as the spot for the final showdown. “Phoenix has been good,” he explained. “If we move it, Miami’s not the only option—we’d look at other tracks too. For now, we’re happy with Phoenix and want to keep growing the playoffs.” He’s not sold on changing things.
Denny Hamlin, racer and 23XI co-owner, sees it differently. “I’d love for Homestead to matter more in the championship,” he said. “Playoffs, finale, whatever—it’s a track where drivers shine, not just cars.” He wants the race to feel big again. But Homestead’s future is still up in the air. Fans echo it loud. “Homestead’s too good for one date,” one X user wrote. Another demanded, “Make it the championship again!” Blaney’s torn whether he’d race here every week, but he’s not sold NASCAR’s verdict will match the hype. Sunday’s a shot at more than a win, it’s a plea.
He’s not wrong Homestead delivers. Josh Berry’s P2 start sets up a stacked field. But with playoff whispers and a spring test, it’s a now-or-never. Will NASCAR hear Blaney and the fans, or let this track slip away? It’s fighting to keep the heart pumping. Apart from that, Blaney’s bluntness has always been talked about. Remember the pre-Daytona interview?
Ryan Blaney shuts down oldest debate about NASCAR
NASCAR drivers don’t always get the “athlete” label. ‘You’re sitting in a car, right? How hard can it be?‘ But when Ryan Blaney heard that question again before the Daytona 500 on February 16, 2025, you could feel his frustration boil over. “Yeah. How do you think we’re not?” he snapped, tired of the same old jab. The Team Penske star wasn’t here to play pretend, so he set it straight once and for all!
Ryan Blaney’s been at this for years with 13 Cup Series wins, seven in Xfinity, and four in Trucks. He’s not just steering a car; he’s wrestling it through heat, G-forces, and split-second calls. “That question gets brought up a lot because I think it just gets such a bad stigma of sitting in a car,” he said. And he’s right as people see the seat and miss the sweat, the strain, the focus it takes to survive 500 miles at 200 mph. His teammate Joey Logano didn’t hold back either: “It’s frustrating… We pour our heart and soul into this sport.” Nobody would like to be dismissed like that.
Blaney’s Daytona prep showed it. He locked in P16, with eyes on that first 2025 win, but it’s more than a race. It’s a fight for respect. “You’re going in circles and that’s not a sport,” he mimicked the critics with sarcasm. There’s that classic Blaney humor that cracks Bubba Wallace up. This isn’t just driving; it’s a battle most folks can’t even imagine. Blaney’s proving it every lap, every wreck, every comeback. So next time someone doubts these guys are athletes, let’s hope they don’t catch Blaney’s glare. He’s done asking nicely.
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