Texas Motor Speedway hasn’t exactly delivered consistent, must-watch racing in the Next Gen era.
NASCAR is hoping a subtle change this weekend might finally move the needle.
It starts with the tires.
Goodyear confirmed it will bring its intermediate-track tire package to Texas for Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race — a setup teams have already used this season at Las Vegas, Kansas, and Darlington. While that might sound routine, the decision could have a meaningful impact on how the race unfolds.
Why this change actually matters
GettyA detailed look at a Goodyear tire on Tyler Reddick’s No. 45 Toyota after a Cup Series race at Kansas Speedway.
This isn’t a brand-new tire — and that’s the point.
Teams already have real data on how this setup behaves over a run, including wear, falloff, and long-run balance. And at other intermediate tracks this season, that same configuration has already created noticeable tire falloff and legitimate comers and goers throughout a run.
That’s critical at a place like Texas.
In recent races, clean air and track position have often dictated the outcome, limiting passing opportunities once the field gets strung out. Tire degradation is one of the few variables that can disrupt that pattern — forcing drivers to manage pace instead of running flat-out from start to finish.
If this tire performs similarly to what teams saw at Kansas and Darlington, it could introduce a level of strategy and movement that’s been missing.
At Kansas earlier this season, multiple grooves and tire falloff created some of the best intermediate-track racing of the year — exactly the kind of balance NASCAR would like to replicate at Texas.
Part of a bigger NASCAR shift
GettyA NASCAR pit crew changes a Goodyear tire during a pit stop, highlighting how tire strategy can impact race outcomes.
There’s also a bigger picture at play.
The tire Goodyear selected for Texas is part of NASCAR’s broader push to standardize the intermediate-track package, creating more consistency across similar 1.5-mile tracks while still producing competitive racing.
“Teams are already familiar with the combination, having run it three times this year, and we are happy with its performance at similar 1.5-mile tracks,” Goodyear’s Justin Fantozzi said in a release.
That familiarity gives teams a baseline — but it also raises expectations.
Because if it worked elsewhere, it should work here.
What to watch on Sunday
GettyThe NASCAR Cup Series field races through a corner at Texas Motor Speedway during the Würth 400.
If the tire behaves as expected, several things could stand out during Sunday’s race:
- Long-run speed will matter more
Drivers who manage their tires early in a run could gain significant ground late. - Strategy could come into play
Pit calls — including two-tire decisions or undercuts — may carry more weight than usual. - Passing could increase
With real falloff, faster cars won’t stay stuck behind traffic as easily.
The bottom line
It’s a small change on paper.
But at a track that’s needed something — anything — to shake up the racing, it might be enough to finally make Sunday feel different.
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This article was originally published on HEAVY
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