Carson Hocevar
Carson Hocevar (born January 28, 2003) is an American professional stock car racing driver who competes full-time in the NASCAR Cup Series, driving the No. 77 Chevrolet for Spire Motorsports.[1][2] A native of Portage, Michigan, Hocevar began racing at age seven in local events supported by his father, progressing through quarter midgets, late models, and ARCA Menards Series before advancing to national NASCAR series.[3][4] Hocevar earned the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Rookie of the Year award after posting one top-five finish and multiple top-10 results in his debut season with Spire Motorsports, building on prior success as a four-time winner in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, including a victory at Kansas Speedway.[2][5] His rapid ascent included dominant performances in late model racing, such as multiple feature wins and national championships in quarter midgets.[4] Entering his second Cup Series season in 2025, Hocevar has continued to show promise with competitive runs at tracks like Atlanta Motor Speedway, where he secured a runner-up finish amid scrutiny for his on-track aggression.[6] Hocevar's driving style, characterized by bold and physical racing tactics, has generated both praise for its competitiveness and controversy, including fines for a safety violation involving tire spinning under caution and team-imposed penalties following critical remarks about logistical challenges at the inaugural Mexico City event.[7][8] Incidents at Iowa Speedway and Atlanta have fueled debates among veterans and officials, positioning him as a polarizing figure akin to past aggressive talents who matured into contenders.[9][10] Despite these challenges, his talent and Michigan roots have endeared him to local fans, as evidenced by his headline role at Michigan International Speedway.[11]Early Life and Background
Family and Upbringing
Carson Scott Hocevar was born on January 28, 2003, in Portage, Michigan, to parents Scott and Amy Hocevar.[12][1] Scott Hocevar owns and operates Scott's Sports Cards, Coins & Jewelry, a collectibles business located in Portage.[13] Raised in Portage, Hocevar grew up in a household that initially prioritized traditional sports over motorsports, as his parents were not avid racing enthusiasts prior to his birth.[14] However, Scott Hocevar's involvement in local racing as a crew member and sponsor for various teams provided early connections to the Michigan stock car scene, including exposure to notable drivers during Hocevar's childhood quarter midget activities.[3] By age six, Hocevar began attending live events at nearby tracks such as Kalamazoo Speedway and Berlin Raceway alongside his father, which introduced him to the mechanics of speed and competition in a hands-on environment.[14] This proximity to local racing circuits, combined with his father's purchase of his first quarter midget kart, marked the initial environmental influences that aligned family support with Hocevar's developing interest in the sport.[13][3]Education and Initial Interests
Hocevar attended Gull Lake High School in Portage, Michigan, graduating in 2021 via the school's virtual partnership program, which provided scheduling flexibility amid his burgeoning racing schedule.[15][16] During his high school years, he participated in online classes to balance academic requirements with travel demands from early competitive racing.[17] From a young age, Hocevar's primary interests revolved around motorsports rather than conventional schoolwork, which he regarded as secondary to his enthusiasm for racing.[18] He began competing in quarter midget cars around age six, drawn initially to the sport after attending his first live race at Michigan International Speedway at age five.[14][11] This early fixation on racing over academic pursuits effectively steered Hocevar away from postsecondary education, channeling his efforts into skill development and track time as the most direct route to professional advancement in the field.[18] By age seven, he had logged initial track sessions in junior categories, solidifying motorsports as his dominant hobby and long-term focus to the exclusion of other extracurriculars.[3][4]Racing Career
Late Model Racing and Early Development
Hocevar began competitive racing at age seven in quarter midget classes, accumulating over 70 feature wins and 15 national championships in youth divisions such as Outlaw before advancing to full-bodied stock cars around age 12.[19][2] This early success in lower-tier equipment highlighted his adaptability and raw speed on short tracks, particularly in Michigan's regional circuits.[20] In 2015, at age 12, Hocevar entered Outlaw Late Model competition at Berlin Raceway, securing a feature win and the division's track championship that season, establishing him as one of the youngest champions in the venue's history.[21][22] He transitioned to Super Late Models the following year, earning his first victory in the class on July 17, 2016, during a 60-lap feature at Berlin Raceway, where he led after lap 17 and dominated the field despite limited prior starts.[23] These results demonstrated his ability to compete against more experienced drivers in higher-horsepower machinery, building foundational skills in car control and racecraft on the 0.438-mile asphalt oval. By 2017, as a 14-year-old rookie in the ZFS Super Late Model division at Berlin, Hocevar clinched the track championship, overcoming tight points battles to finish ahead of competitors like Joe Bush and Terry VanHaitsma.[24] Participation in regional tours, including select events in the CARS Pro Late Model Tour, further honed his consistency across varying track conditions and equipment limitations, paving the way for national-level progression. His early late model record—marked by multiple championships and wins in underpowered, entry-level cars—underscored a trajectory driven by empirical performance metrics rather than hype, setting a baseline for adaptation to professional series demands.[26]ARCA Menards Series
Hocevar entered the ARCA Menards Series at age 15, debuting on May 20, 2018, at Toledo Speedway in the No. 28 Chevrolet fielded by KBR Development, where he qualified competitively but finished 11th after mechanical issues limited his progress.[27][28] His early starts in 2018 were limited to a handful of events on short tracks, demonstrating raw speed in qualifying but facing adaptation challenges to the series' higher speeds and competition depth compared to regional late models.[29] In 2019, Hocevar expanded to a partial schedule of 11 races primarily with KBR in the No. 3 Chevrolet, securing two pole positions—including his first at Berlin Raceway and a second at Salem Speedway on April 13, where he led laps before finishing third amid strong equipment performance.[30][31] He achieved ten top-ten finishes across his 12 career ARCA Menards Series starts through 2019, culminating in a 12th-place points finish despite the selective schedule, attributable to consistent qualifying prowess and improved racecraft that compensated for occasional handling inconsistencies in the team's setup.[31] These results highlighted his transition from regional dominance to national stock car competition, building resilience through minor on-track skirmishes that honed aggressive yet calculated driving without major penalties. Hocevar made one start in the ARCA Menards Series West in 2022 at Phoenix Raceway, finishing outside the top ten as a one-off amid his Truck Series commitments, underscoring the Menards Series East and national tour as his primary developmental path.[32] Lacking wins but with frequent front-running capability, his ARCA tenure emphasized skill in qualifying and top-ten consistency over outright victories, facilitated by supportive equipment from KBR that allowed exploitation of short-oval strengths developed in Michigan late models.[29]NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series
Hocevar began competing in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series in 2019 with select starts, primarily driving for Niece Motorsports in the No. 42 Chevrolet, accumulating experience across dirt and oval tracks without a victory in his initial part-time efforts.[33] By 2023, he transitioned to a full-time schedule with the same team, marking a breakthrough season where he secured multiple wins and advanced to the Championship 4 playoffs, finishing third in the final standings.[34] His debut victory came on April 1, 2023, at Texas Motor Speedway, leading the final overtime lap in the No. 42 to edge out the field by 1.628 seconds amid a late-race wreck among leaders.[35] Over his Truck Series tenure spanning approximately 80 starts, Hocevar recorded five wins, demonstrating strong consistency with frequent top-10 finishes that aided Niece Motorsports' development as a competitive mid-tier operation, evidenced by his 16 top-10s in 46 early starts alone and sustained average finishes around the top 15 in full-season campaigns.[33] [34] This reliability stemmed from adaptive driving on intermediate and short tracks, where he maximized equipment without excessive risk, contrasting with higher-incident peers and enabling playoff contention without diluting focus on series-specific demands.[5] In 2025, amid primary commitments elsewhere, Hocevar made four select appearances for Spire Motorsports in the No. 7 Chevrolet, sponsored by Chili's, at Texas Motor Speedway, Kansas Speedway, Michigan International Speedway, and Pocono Raceway.[36] He clinched his most recent win on May 10, 2025, at Kansas, holding off a last-lap challenge and contact from Layne Riggs to victory in the Heart of Health Care 200, underscoring retained sharpness despite limited Truck exposure.[37] These outings highlighted his role in bolstering Spire's Truck program through veteran input, finishing 11th at Michigan while prioritizing clean, data-driven runs that informed team setups without series bleed from top-tier racing.[38]NASCAR Xfinity Series
Hocevar made his NASCAR Xfinity Series debut in 2023 with Spire Motorsports, competing in four part-time starts aboard the No. 77 Chevrolet as a developmental step prior to his full-time Cup Series commitment.[39] His results included an eighth-place finish at Charlotte Motor Speedway on May 27, a sixth-place run at Darlington Raceway on May 13, and a 32nd-place finish at Michigan International Speedway on August 5 due to mechanical issues, with the fourth start unremarkable in the standings.[40] These outings yielded three top-10 finishes overall in his initial Xfinity efforts, alongside three laps led, reflecting adaptation to the series' intermediate track demands despite limited oval experience at the time.[40] In 2025, Hocevar returned to the series for select fill-in appearances amid his Cup schedule. On March 1 at Circuit of the Americas, he finished 38th in a limited-entry effort, hampered by on-track challenges in the road course format.[41] Later, on August 2 at Iowa Speedway, he piloted the No. 11 Chevrolet for Kaulig Racing, replacing Josh Williams, and secured a sixth-place finish in the Hy-Vee Perks 250, starting from 14th and demonstrating strong short-track pace with no incidents.[42][41] This Iowa run marked his best Xfinity oval result to date, supported by LeafFilter sponsorship, and served as double-duty preparation alongside his Cup start at the same venue.[42] Across seven career Xfinity starts through October 2025, Hocevar posted an average starting position of 14.1 and average finish of 18.0, with no wins or poles but consistent top-10 contention on ovals, underscoring his progression toward higher-series proficiency without pursuing a full campaign.[40]NASCAR Cup Series
![Carson Hocevar in the No. 77 Chevrolet at Las Vegas 2024][float-right]Carson Hocevar began competing in the NASCAR Cup Series in 2023 with a limited schedule, primarily driving the No. 77 Chevrolet for Spire Motorsports. He participated in seven races that season, achieving a best finish of 19th at the Championship race in Phoenix on November 5. Most of his starts ended in did-not-finish results due to incidents or mechanical issues, with finishes including 35th at Talladega on October 1 and 36th at Las Vegas on October 15.[43][44] In October 2023, Hocevar announced he would advance directly to a full-time Cup Series role with Spire Motorsports for 2024, bypassing the Xfinity Series. Over his first three seasons through October 2025, he has contested 72 races without a victory, driving exclusively for Spire in the No. 77 entry. His progression from part-time substitute to full-season competitor reflects rapid advancement for a young driver from a mid-tier organization.[45]
2023: Part-Time Schedule
Hocevar's Cup Series debut occurred late in the 2023 season, with his first start at the EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix in Austin on September 24, where he finished 37th after a crash. He followed with additional outings at Talladega, Las Vegas, Martinsville, and Phoenix, often qualifying in the mid-30s and struggling with reliability or on-track contact. The No. 77 team, which he joined mid-season, concluded the year 33rd in the owner standings, underscoring the challenges of integrating a rookie into a competitive but under-resourced program. These appearances provided Hocevar with exposure to premier equipment and tracks, setting the stage for his full-time opportunity.[44][45]2024: Full-Time Debut and Rookie Honors
Transitioning to a 36-race schedule in the No. 77 Chevrolet fielded by Spire Motorsports, Hocevar adapted quickly to the series' demands, posting an average finish of 18.3—superior to several past notable rookies like Christopher Bell and Ryan Blaney in their debut years. He secured his first top-five finish, fourth place, at Watkins Glen International on September 15, capitalizing on stage points and late-race strategy amid chaos. Hocevar outperformed other novices in 15 races, clinching the Sunoco Rookie of the Year award with an 18th-place result at the Phoenix finale on November 10, amassing 686 points including stage bonuses. Despite no poles or wins, his consistency elevated the No. 77 from 33rd to a more respectable mid-pack standing.[46][45][47]2025: Ongoing Season and Additional Starts
Hocevar returned to Spire Motorsports for the full 2025 campaign in the No. 77, starting with a 30th-place DNF at the Daytona 500 on February 16 due to fuel pressure failure after running competitively earlier. As of October 26, he has completed 35 of 36 scheduled races, earning one pole position and maintaining mid-pack results with finishes like 29th at Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval on October 5 and 6th at Kansas Speedway on September 28 in select strong outings. Sponsors including Modo Casino supported multiple events, such as Daytona in August and Talladega in October. Incidents at Watkins Glen in August highlighted ongoing adaptation to veteran interactions, but Hocevar's experience has yielded incremental improvements in qualifying and points accumulation for the team.[48][49][50]2023: Part-Time Schedule
Hocevar made his NASCAR Cup Series debut on June 4, 2023, at World Wide Technology Raceway, piloting the No. 42 Chevrolet for Legacy Motor Club.[44] Starting 24th after qualifying, he advanced to as high as 16th place during the race's first half, demonstrating competitive pace against established competitors despite limited prior exposure to Cup-level equipment.[51] However, a brake rotor failure in Stage 2 caused the right-front wheel to collapse, sending him into the outside wall and forcing a did-not-finish (DNF) result in 37th position after completing only 90 of 240 laps.[52] This mechanical issue, rather than driver error, highlighted early adaptation hurdles for the 20-year-old, who was primarily focused on a full-time Craftsman Truck Series campaign that season.[53] Later in the 2023 season, Hocevar secured additional part-time starts with the same team and car number, primarily in the playoff period. At the Cook Out Southern 500 on September 3 at Darlington Raceway, he finished 17th, marking his best Cup result to date amid a field complicated by cautions and strategy.[44] He followed with a 20th-place finish on September 24 at Kansas Speedway but encountered setbacks in subsequent outings, including a 35th at Talladega Superspeedway on October 1 due to a crash and a 36th at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on October 15 after another incident.[43] These mid-to-back-pack outcomes and three DNFs across approximately seven starts underscored inexperience with the series' aerodynamics, tire management, and pack racing dynamics, as Hocevar averaged a 23.8 starting position and completed about 85% of scheduled laps.[44] No on-track penalties were issued to Hocevar in these appearances, though peer commentary noted his aggressive Truck Series style required adjustment to avoid overdriving in Cup traffic.[54] The limited schedule served as a proving ground, with team data indicating consistent speed in clean air but vulnerability to mechanical reliability and contact from equipment not optimized for a developmental driver.[45]2024: Full-Time Debut and Rookie Honors
In October 2023, Hocevar signed a multi-year contract with Spire Motorsports to drive the No. 77 Chevrolet full-time in the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series, replacing Ty Dillon.[55][46] The deal included primary sponsorship from Zeigler Auto Group for select races.[56] Hocevar competed in all 36 events, marking his transition from part-time starts to a consistent schedule with the mid-tier organization.[57] Hocevar's season featured improved consistency, with an average finish of 18.3 positions across the races, better than several recent Cup rookies including Christopher Bell and William Byron in their debut years.[47] His best result was a third-place finish, complemented by one top-five and multiple top-10 performances, contributing to a 21st-place points standing with 686 points—the highest championship finish ever for a Spire Motorsports driver.[57][58] This outperformed other rookies like Josh Berry, who tallied 579 points.[59] Hocevar was awarded the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Sunoco Rookie of the Year on November 10, 2024, recognized for his on-track progress and point accumulation despite competing in equipment from a smaller team.[45][46] The honor underscored his adaptation to the series' demands, building on prior developmental experience.[39]2025: Ongoing Season and Additional Starts
Hocevar opened the 2025 NASCAR Cup Series season with a 30th-place finish in the Daytona 500 on February 16 at Daytona International Speedway, completing 196 of 200 laps before an accident ended his run.[48] The following week, on February 23 at Atlanta Motor Speedway, he posted a career-best second-place result in the Ambetter Health 400, leading briefly and capitalizing on late-race chaos despite on-track contact with multiple competitors.[60][48] In August 2025, during a Twitch stream discussing future schedules, Hocevar inadvertently revealed NASCAR's plans to return to Rockingham Speedway, stating "Rockingham is back" before official confirmation, which led to direct contact from NASCAR officials regarding the premature disclosure.[61] The season has featured multiple did-not-finishes (DNFs), including engine failure in the August Coca-Cola Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona and various crashes or mechanical issues at tracks like Charlotte and Kansas, contributing to inconsistent results amid mechanical reliability challenges for Spire Motorsports.[49][48] To supplement his full-time Cup efforts, Hocevar made select starts in lower series, winning the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series Heart of Health Care 200 at Kansas Speedway on May 10 by holding off Layne Riggs in the final laps for his fifth career Truck victory.[62] He also competed in at least one NASCAR Xfinity Series event, driving the No. 11 Chevrolet for Kaulig Racing at Iowa Speedway on August 2.[42] As of October 26, 2025, following a sixth-place finish in the October 19 YellaWood 500 at Talladega, Hocevar ranks 23rd in Cup points with 680, outside playoff contention but demonstrating progress in top-10 finishes like Talladega without securing a series win.[63][48]Driving Style, Incidents, and Controversies
On-Track Aggression and Penalties
Hocevar's driving style in NASCAR has been characterized by a high degree of on-track aggression, which he acknowledged in a July 2025 interview, stating, "I know 100 percent I'm an aggressive driver."[64] This approach has yielded competitive results, such as his career-best second-place finish at Atlanta Motor Speedway on February 23, 2025, where bold moves, including a push on Ryan Blaney that sent the No. 12 car sliding entering Turn 1, propelled him forward amid a chaotic race but drew post-race confrontations from affected drivers.[60][65] While some peers and observers credit such disruption with enhancing race excitement and challenging established veterans, others, including 2023 champion Ryan Blaney, have criticized instances like Hocevar's aggressive maneuvers at Nashville Superspeedway in June 2024 as reckless, escalating tensions ahead of subsequent events.[66] This aggression has occasionally resulted in self-inflicted setbacks, including spins during early career debuts; for example, in his November 2023 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Phoenix Raceway, Hocevar spun Corey Heim while attempting an aggressive pass, later admitting, "I f*cked up...I'm trying to be better."[67] Similar patterns emerged in his 2023 Cup Series starts, where overzealous moves contributed to mechanical stresses leading to exits, such as a brake failure in his debut at Gateway. In high-stakes environments, where split-second decisions determine outcomes, Hocevar's style reflects a calculated risk tolerance—prioritizing position gains over conservative positioning—but has invited accusations of dirty racing when contact disrupts competitors without proportional benefit.[68] NASCAR has imposed penalties for actions deemed to cross safety boundaries, most notably a $50,000 fine on October 1, 2025, following the Hollywood Casino 400 at Kansas Speedway, where on lap 260, Hocevar revved his engine and spun his tires while safety officials attended to his damaged No. 77 Chevrolet after a crash, endangering workers.[69][70] Hocevar defended the incident as unintentional, citing a possible gear confusion amid frustration, and expressed understanding of the sanction while emphasizing his focus on competitive recovery.[71] Such verifiable enforcement underscores the causal trade-offs in aggressive driving: potential for breakthroughs, as seen in his Atlanta performance, against tangible costs like fines and damaged equipment from spins or retaliatory contact.Off-Track Statements and Team Actions
In June 2025, ahead of the NASCAR Cup Series race at Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez, Hocevar criticized Mexico City during a Twitch livestream, calling it a "shthole" while highlighting issues with travel logistics, personal safety, and urban conditions, stating, "If the travel was better, if getting here was easier, if you felt safer getting to and from everywhere, if it wasn't such a shthole."[8][72] The remarks drew immediate backlash from media outlets and fans, with some labeling them derogatory toward the host city and its residents.[73][74] Spire Motorsports responded by fining Hocevar $50,000 and mandating sensitivity training, emphasizing that the comments fell short of the team's standards and did not reflect their organizational values; the penalty amount was designated for donation to a charity supporting diversity in motorsports.[8][75] Hocevar issued a public apology via social media on June 16, 2025, expressing regret and stating, "I'm sorry Mexico City," while acknowledging the need for more measured language in public forums.[76][77] In July 2025, Hocevar made further off-track comments via media interviews, accusing some Cup Series peers of superficiality and "fakeness" in their off-track interactions, contrasting it with his preference for straightforward relationships amid competitive rivalries.[78] These statements aligned with a pattern of candid, unpolished public expressions that have positioned Hocevar as a polarizing figure outside racing contexts, often eliciting divided reactions from observers who view his directness as either refreshing authenticity or needless provocation.[10][79]Personal Life
Relationships and Support Network
Carson Hocevar maintains a close relationship with his girlfriend, Peyton Lanphear, a stock car racer whom he met through the racing community in 2020. Lanphear, who competes in Late Model events, paused her career after a stage 4 cancer diagnosis but achieved remission by December 2022, an ordeal Hocevar has cited as a source of personal motivation amid his professional challenges.[80][81][82] Hocevar's parents, Scott and Amy Hocevar, have provided foundational support throughout his ascent in motorsports, crediting their guidance and resources for enabling his early opportunities in regional racing circuits. Amy Hocevar has been particularly vocal in her encouragement, with her son publicly acknowledging her role from his initial karting days onward, including dedicating drives to her in cancer awareness initiatives given her influence on his perseverance.[14][83][84] Within Spire Motorsports, co-owner Jeff Dickerson has fostered a mentorship dynamic with Hocevar, adopting a parental stance to address on-track decisions and build resilience, as evidenced by post-incident discussions emphasizing long-term growth over immediate results. This team environment, bolstered by consistent sponsorship alignments like Zeigler Auto Group, reinforces Hocevar's professional network amid his transition to full-time Cup Series competition.[85][86]Hobbies and Off-Track Pursuits
Hocevar maintains a collection of classic NASCAR-themed vehicles, sourcing them through platforms like Facebook Marketplace to fulfill a childhood fascination with racing memorabilia.[87] In April 2025, he acquired a customized pickup truck replicating Dale Earnhardt's signature style, dubbed the "Dale Truck," which he has displayed at events like Darlington Raceway.[88] This pursuit reflects his early immersion in NASCAR culture, where playing with diecast models evolved into acquiring real historical replicas, providing mental respite and reinforcing his competitive drive through historical appreciation.[89] Beyond collecting, Hocevar engages in livestreaming on platforms such as Twitch and YouTube, where he broadcasts sim racing sessions and gameplay of NASCAR video games, amassing over 25,000 Twitch followers as of October 2025.[90] These streams, including sessions with titles like "NASCAR 25" playthroughs, allow direct interaction with fans and offer a creative outlet that hones his strategic thinking transferable to on-track decision-making.[91] His content creation extends to documenting personal projects, such as exploring abandoned tracks or acquiring vintage cars, blending entertainment with his passion for motorsports heritage.[92] Rooted in his Portage, Michigan upbringing, Hocevar's off-track activities emphasize self-directed exploration tied to his racing identity, avoiding unrelated local traditions like hunting or fishing, which lack documented involvement on his part.[93] These pursuits cultivate resilience and fan connectivity, indirectly supporting his aggressive racing mindset by fostering a sense of community and historical continuity.[87]Motorsports Career Results
Stock Car Career Summary
Carson Hocevar progressed through stock car racing ranks starting in super late models as a teenager, advancing to ARCA Menards Series competition in 2018, full-time NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series in 2021 (where he earned Rookie of the Year honors), part-time NASCAR Xfinity Series from 2023, and full-time NASCAR Cup Series debut in 2024 (earning Sunoco Rookie of the Year).[45] In super late model tours such as ASA CRA Super Series and CRA JEGS All-Stars, Hocevar recorded 13 wins across 61 starts, with 31 top-5 finishes, 44 top-10s, and 6 poles; notable victories include the 2020 Winchester 400.[94] Aggregate statistics across major stock car series, as of October 2025:| Series | Starts | Wins | Poles | Top 5s | Top 10s |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ARCA Menards | 16 | 0 | 2 | 7 | 13 |
| Craftsman Truck | 80 | 5 | 1 | N/A | 34 |
| Xfinity | N/A | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Cup | N/A | 0 | 1 | 2 | 9 |
NASCAR Results
Carson Hocevar has competed across NASCAR's three national series—the Cup Series, Xfinity Series, and Craftsman Truck Series—demonstrating versatility through part-time and full-time stints that include five Truck Series victories and a Cup Series rookie award. His Truck Series tenure features a 6.25% win rate over approximately 80 starts, highlighted by a 2023 Championship 4 appearance where he contended for the title but fell short.[34][42] In the Cup Series, Hocevar logged over 70 starts by mid-2025 without a victory, yet achieved competitive finishes including one top-five and six top-10s during his 2024 rookie campaign.[95][46] Hocevar earned the 2024 Sunoco Rookie of the Year in the Cup Series after a full-season effort with Spire Motorsports, finishing 21st in driver points—the best for his team—and becoming the third Michigan-born driver to claim the honor.[45][58] His multi-series participation underscores progression from Truck dominance to Cup challenges, with Xfinity outings providing supplementary experience amid primary commitments. Detailed statistics for each series follow in the subsections below.[5]Cup Series
Hocevar entered the NASCAR Cup Series on a part-time basis in 2023, making nine substitute starts across teams including Legacy Motor Club and Richard Childress Racing.[38] He transitioned to full-time competition in 2024 with Spire Motorsports, driving the No. 77 Chevrolet sponsored primarily by Zeigler Auto Group.[5] In 2025, he continued in the same equipment, recording 35 starts with one pole position but no wins; his season featured a second-place finish at Atlanta Motor Speedway early in the year, alongside eight DNFs, including an engine failure on lap 3 of the Daytona 500 from a 16th-place start.[38] [49] [96]| Season | Starts | Wins | Poles | Top 5s | Top 10s | DNFs | Avg. Finish | Laps Led |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | 9 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | N/A | N/A | 0 |
| 2024 | 36 | 0 | 0 | N/A | N/A | 2 | 13.467 | 455 |
| 2025 | 35 | 0 | 1 | 2 | N/A | 8 | N/A | 122 |
Xfinity Series
Hocevar has competed in seven NASCAR Xfinity Series races as of August 2025, with no wins but three top-10 finishes and a total of three laps led.[40] His average starting position stands at 14.1, with an average finish of 23.4.[40] In 2023, Hocevar made five starts for Spire Motorsports in the No. 77 Chevrolet, supplemented by one additional appearance for SS-Green Light Racing, yielding two top-10 results among those efforts.[99] [100] The three career laps led occurred during these 2023 outings.[101] Hocevar's 2025 Xfinity efforts included a pair of starts. At Circuit of the Americas on March 1, driving the No. 14 Chevrolet for SS-Green Light Racing, he qualified 24th but retired early from the Focused Health 250 due to an accident, finishing 38th.[102] [103] His most notable Xfinity performance came on August 2 at Iowa Speedway, where he piloted the No. 11 Chevrolet for Kaulig Racing to a career-best sixth-place finish in the Hy-Vee Perks 250, starting from third and completing all 250 laps without leading any.[38] [104] This result highlighted his adaptation to Xfinity cars on short ovals, building on Truck Series experience with cleaner runs and stage-point contention.[5]| Year | Races | Wins | Top 5s | Top 10s | Poles | Laps Led | Avg. Start | Avg. Finish |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 3 | 13.8 | 20.5 |
| 2025 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 13.5 | 22.0 |
| Total | 7 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 3 | 14.1 | 23.4 |