SRT is back. That matters.
If you missed it, Stellantis revived SRT (Street & Racing Technology) under Tim Kuniskis over the summer. That’s huge, because SRT historically owns the go-fast parts, motorsports coordination, and the “glue” between engineering and racing. Autoweek covered the relaunch and SRT’s new mandate across Dodge/Chrysler/Jeep/Ram—including performance parts and motorsports. Autoweek
Why you should care: Big-league factory racing programs don’t happen without an internal champion and budget line. SRT’s return is the organizational spine you need if you’re about to scale motorsports… and yes, Cup is the mountain.
What’s official right now: Ram back in Trucks
Ram’s manufacturer return to the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series has been reported by multiple outlets following team announcements, with Ram branding already surfacing on competitive entries and sponsorship rollouts. Reuters and other motorsports trades have noted Ram-backed Truck efforts under new and existing teams as part of Stellantis’ North America push. In short: the entry ramp is built, and the trailer’s backed up to the paddock.
Strategically, Trucks first makes sense. It’s lower-cost than Cup, lets you rebuild pipelines (teams, parts, trackside support), and gives SRT time to align powertrain and aero processes with NASCAR’s tech rulebook. Do Trucks for a season, prove the supplier pipeline works, then scale.
So… when Cup?
This is where I draw a line between confirmed and what I’m hearing.
- Confirmed: SRT is revived; Ram has re-entered Trucks. Autoweek
- Insider read: Cup in the next season window is realistic if the Truck program hits its marks and if NASCAR manufacturer onboarding hits the calendar the way I’m hearing from folks tied into approvals and supplier timelines.
A few reasons the clock looks favorable:
- Brand need: Dodge (and Stellantis NA) want a unifying performance flag. Cup is still the biggest American oval billboard on Earth.
- Leadership & budget: The SRT relaunch didn’t happen to sell just catalog parts. Motorsports is baked into the charter. Autoweek
- Product sync: Parallel reporting points to a broader performance resurgence (TRX, Direct Connection, etc.) timed to 2026+ launch windows. The performance drumbeat around Ram/Dodge aligns with a Cup debut window from a marketing perspective. Road & Track
The Hall-of-Fame driver hint
You heard me in the video: a recent-era Hall of Famer is in the orbit. I’m not putting a name on it—yet. The logic is simple: if Dodge wants a credible, splashy Cup relaunch, you don’t trot out an unproven rookie as your lead card. You anchor the program with a household name who can translate a brand comeback into TV minutes, sponsor comfort, and day-one setup feedback.
No, not Richard Petty. No, not Dale Jr. Think modern HOF with the cachet to legitimize a factory reboot and possibly a stake in the team structure. That’s all I’m saying (for now).
Why Trucks-first → Cup is the right staircase
- Supply chain: Bodies, composites, dampers, brake partners—Cup requires hardened supplier loops. Trucks lets Ram/SRT test how fast they can move parts, fix issues, and scale.
- Human pipeline: Engineers, crew chiefs, and pit systems need reps with a Stellantis/SRT way of working.
- Sponsor runway: Prove speed and reliability with Ram in Trucks, then let sales lock bigger Cup dollars.
Reuters’ coverage of Ram-aligned Truck efforts shows this isn’t theoretical; it’s already in motion.
What I’m watching next (timeline tells)
- Manufacturer registration breadcrumbs: When NASCAR processes a new or returning OEM, you see subtle supplier job postings, CFD/body-in-white chatter, and wind-tunnel rumblings.
- Team alliances: Watch for a current Cup organization to surface as the “works” partner (technical alliance + engine/DRC support) before an official Dodge/Cup car is photographed.
- SRT comms cadence: After the relaunch story cycle, look for SRT to pivot from “we’re back” to “here’s our motorsports portfolio.” That’s when you know the Cup cards are warming. Autoweek
Bottom line
- Fact: SRT is officially revived; Ram is officially back in NASCAR Trucks. That’s the factory foundation. Autoweek
- My sourced call: Cup is next up on the runway, with a headline Hall-of-Famer attached to help launch Dodge’s Cup return—timed to Stellantis’ broader performance push. Road & Track
- What it means: If you wanted proof that Stellantis is done playing small ball in American performance, this is it. The staircase is built; we’re already on Step 1.
Drop your guesses on the driver. I’ll confirm what I can, when I can.
As always—stay petty, my friends.






