Hailie Deegan puts NASCAR in
rearview mirror as she fails to find funding for top Xfinity seat
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[January 29, 2025]
By JENNA FRYER
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Hailie Deegan has left NASCAR behind for
open-wheel racing this season and it could be for good.
She's been one of NASCAR's most marketable drivers — she has nearly
5 million followers across ger social media platforms — but hasn't
had the performance or funding to land a top ride and advance her
career.
Deegan doesn't want to race in the Truck Series anymore and because
any opportunities to advance required cash she doesn't have, she's
taken another route: Deegan will drive this year for HMD Motorsports
in Indy NXT, which is IndyCar's top development series.
No, she does not have any Indy experience. But she also doesn't have
the means to fund a proper move to the Xfinity Series. Deegan
attempted to move up last year in a multi-year deal with AM Racing
but she departed the team in July after 17 races and a best finish
of 12th.
She started attending IndyCar races with her new free time last
summer and put together a deal to drive for one of Indy NXT's top
teams. For now, NASCAR is in her rearview mirror.
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“I'm not actively trying to look for a ride or anything, but if a
couple million dollars falls in my lap, awesome," Deegan said
Tuesday. "Same thing for everybody. Not many opportunities come
unless you got deep pockets. I think a lot of people fail to realize
that on the NASCAR side of things, it is such a crazy number. So if
$6 million to run for a quality Xfinity team just came out of
nowhere, fell off a tree, for sure I'd do it.
“But the reality of things is in this economy right now, sponsorship
and marketing budgets have been cut. It makes it a lot tougher. It’s
already tough to find money to go racing.”
Her biggest issue is selling herself with a guaranteed return on
investment. In three full seasons of Truck Series racing, Deegan
logged just five top-10 finishes in 69 races. In her limited time in
Xfinity, she just couldn't compete with the top-funded teams.
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Driver Hailie Deegan waits for the start of an SRX Series auto race
Saturday, July 17, 2021, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Mark
Humphrey, File)
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“It's hard to to say to a sponsor, ‘You spend a
couple 100 grand for this race, you’re going to get your value.’ You
can’t promise that to people,” she said. “So it’s very tough from
that side. Obviously, I would have loved to run Xfinity full-time,
but in a good car. The reality of that is, it takes a lot of
sponsorship to do that.”
So now she will give open-wheel cars a shot and begin a 14-race Indy
NXT schedule in March on the downtown streets of St. Petersburg,
Florida. She's only tested so far but has found the transition
enjoyable.
Deegan also recognizes she's diving into a deep unknown. She had
never even been to an IndyCar race last year until she attended the
event at Iowa Speedway last July, and she also went to Nashville
Speedway in September.
Now she's paired with a development team that has won dozens of
races, several NXT championships and advanced David Malukas, Linus
Lundqvist, Benjamin Pedersen, Christian Rasmussen, Nolan Siegel and
Kyffin Simpson to IndyCar.
“I feel like I've been learning so much and having a blast doing
it,” Deegan said. “It's just trying something new. It's been a big
change, but a fun one. I know I'm not going to go out there and win
my first race. I'm realistic. I haven't really set any finishing
goals because I want to see how I do at the first race. I have no
clue how everyone races. I have no clue how many wrecks there are
going to be.
“I just don't know what to expect because it's all so new. I want to
be competitive and I really want to see a big progression when I hit
the ovals. As long as we constantly progress on the road courses and
then we get to the ovals, that's where I think my strong suit is
going to be.”
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