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Pocono Raceway Shakes Up 2026 Weekend Schedule with Major Changes
- Teams start bringing out their cars after the weather starts to calm down at Pocono Raceway on June 22, 2025.

The gears are shifting at Pocono Raceway, and race fans better mark their calendars differently for 2026. The legendary Tricky Triangle just dropped some news that’s got everyone talking – and honestly, some of it stings a little.

NASCAR’s Cup Series is heading back to Long Pond a whole week earlier than expected landing on Sunday, June 14, 2026. That’s seven days sooner than this year’s June 22 date, and while it might not sound like much, it’s actually a pretty big deal for anyone planning their summer racing pilgrimage.

But here’s the catch. The CRAFTSMAN Truck Series won’t be there at all. Yeah, you read that right. For the first time in years, Friday night won’t feature those beloved trucks tearing around the 2.5-mile triangle. Instead, we’re getting the ARCA Menards Series on June 12, which is fine, but it’s not the same heart-pounding action truck fans have come to expect.

The Truck Series Gets Benched

Let’s be honest – losing the Truck Series hurts. These aren’t just any races we’re talking about. The Truck Series has been delivering some of the most competitive, wheel-to-wheel racing in all of NASCAR. Those Friday night battles under the lights have become sacred for many fans who make the trip to Pennsylvania.

Pocono’s official statement says it’s due to a “scheduling conflict,” which is corporate speak for “things didn’t line up this time.” They’re promising the trucks will return in 2027, but that’s cold comfort for folks who’ve already started planning their 2026 race weekend.

The reality is that NASCAR’s schedule is more complicated than ever. With 23 weekends of Cup Series racing and multiple series trying to coordinate dates across dozens of tracks, something had to give. Unfortunately, it was Pocono’s truck race that got squeezed out.

Track president Ben May isn’t sugarcoating the situation, but he’s staying optimistic. The man knows his business. He’s been juggling these scheduling puzzles for years, trying to find that sweet spot in the calendar that works for everyone.

Why June 14 Makes Perfect Sense

Moving the Cup Series race to June 14 actually brings Pocono back to familiar territory. The track hosted races in mid-June for decades before the recent shift to late June. May has always preferred anything after mid-June, and this date fits right in that window.

“We did early June for a long, long, long time, and it was a tight fit,” May explained earlier this year. “Then you get deep into August, and kids go back to school. So, there’s really about six weeks where we fit.”The math is simple but crucial.

Too early in June, and you’re competing with school schedules and graduations. Too late in the summer, and families are dealing with back-to-school preparations. That narrow window from mid-June through July is prime time for NASCAR, and Pocono wants to stake its claim right in the heart of it.

Weather-wise, June 14 should be ideal. The Pennsylvania mountains are gorgeous that time of year, with comfortable temperatures and typically clear skies. It’s racing weather at its finest, which matters when you’re dealing with a track that’s already challenging enough without weather complications.

O’Reilly Auto Parts Takes Over

The weekend won’t be completely unfamiliar, though. The second-tier series is still racing on Saturday, June 13, but it’ll have a new name. What we’ve known as the Xfinity Series for the past decade is becoming the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series starting in 2026.

This isn’t just a cosmetic change. It represents NASCAR’s continued evolution and the ever-shifting sponsorship landscape that drives the sport. O’Reilly Auto Parts stepped up with a multiyear commitment that NASCAR announced in August, proving that major brands still see value in stock car racing’s secondary series.

For fans, the name change doesn’t alter the on-track product. The same drivers, teams, and competitive racing will still be there on Saturday afternoon. It’s just another reminder of how much business considerations influence every aspect of modern NASCAR.

What This Means for Race Fans

If you’re planning your 2026 Pocono trip, here’s what you need to know: arrive Thursday instead of Friday if you want to catch all the action. The ARCA Series on Friday will provide solid racing, but it’s a different beast entirely from the Truck Series.

The weekend still offers plenty of racing value. Cup Series practice and qualifying sessions will keep Friday and Saturday busy, leading up to Sunday’s main event. The O’Reilly Auto Parts Series race on Saturday should deliver the same competitive racing that’s made NASCAR’s second tier so entertaining in recent years.

But let’s not pretend losing the Truck Series doesn’t change the weekend’s character. Those trucks have provided some of the most memorable moments at Pocono in recent years. The close racing, aggressive driving, and unpredictable finishes have become a massive draw for fans who appreciate pure competition.

Looking Ahead to 2027 and Beyond

Pocono’s confidence that the Craftsman Truck Series will return in 2027 suggests this is genuinely a one-year scheduling hiccup rather than a permanent change. The track has invested heavily in facilities and fan experience improvements, and losing a major series permanently wouldn’t make business sense.

The date shift to June 14 could become the new normal if it works well for everyone involved. NASCAR is constantly evaluating its schedule, looking for dates that maximize attendance, television ratings, and overall fan engagement.

Final Thoughts

For now, Pocono race fans need to adjust their expectations and their calendars. June 14, 2026, will mark another chapter in the track’s long NASCAR history. Only this time with a slightly different supporting cast than we’ve grown accustomed to seeing.

The racing will still be spectacular, the atmosphere will still be electric, and the Tricky Triangle will still test every driver’s skill and courage. Some things about Pocono never change, even when the schedule does.

This article first appeared on Total Apex Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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