Bowman Gray Stadium — the historic quarter-mile bullring in Winston-Salem, North Carolina — has been confirmed once again as the host of the NASCAR Busch Light Clash in 2026. The short track made its modern NASCAR debut earlier this year in February 2025, and the event’s success has already led to a renewal.
Now, all eyes turn to the virtual side: Is Bowman Gray finally coming to iRacing?
The Case for an iRacing Bowman Gray
Few tracks fit iRacing’s style more naturally than Bowman Gray. Known as “The Madhouse,” the venue is tight, intense, and full of personality — traits that translate perfectly to sim racing. With its tiny 0.25-mile layout built inside a football stadium, every lap is pure chaos: bumping, banging, and strategy condensed into a small asphalt arena.
iRacing has already proven it can recreate this type of short-track venue. The L.A. Coliseum, another stadium-based circuit, was built virtually by iRacing before NASCAR constructed it in real life. Given that NASCAR used iRacing to model that event, it’s only logical that the company might already be digitally testing Bowman Gray as well.
iRacing’s History of Building NASCAR’s Concepts
The partnership between iRacing and NASCAR goes far beyond eSports. The sim has become a development tool for real tracks, helping NASCAR design and test new event formats long before cars hit the pavement.
Recent examples include:
- L.A. Coliseum – modeled entirely in iRacing before the first real Clash in 2022.
- Chicago Street Course – designed and tested in iRacing by Cup drivers.
- San Diego Naval Base Street Circuit – built virtually for NASCAR before its 2026 debut.
That track-record (literally) makes an iRacing Bowman Gray version seem inevitable — especially now that the Clash is returning there for a second year.
Why Fans Want It
The demand is clear. Every time NASCAR visits Bowman Gray, iRacing’s community lights up with requests to drive it in the sim. Racers want to experience the same tight quarters, fast restarts, and rough contact that define real-world Bowman Gray nights.
The venue’s atmosphere — grandstands on top of the racing surface, walls just inches from the groove, and the ever-present risk of payback — makes it one of the most famous grassroots ovals in the country. For short-track enthusiasts, it’s a bucket-list track.
How It Could Look in iRacing
If iRacing adds Bowman Gray, expect a laser-scanned recreation of the entire stadium. That would include the football field in the infield, the historic grandstands, and the stadium lighting that gives the track its signature Saturday-night vibe.
The racing itself would be relentless. Cars would run laps in the 13-second range, with constant lapped traffic and contact. Expect late-race chaos, bent bumpers, and the kind of short-track tempers that make Bowman Gray famous.
When Could It Happen?
No official timeline exists, but recent iRacing updates suggest a growing focus on regional short tracks. The sim added Hickory, Slinger, and an updated North Wilkesboro in recent builds — all of them part of NASCAR’s grassroots revival.
If iRacing follows its usual rhythm, Bowman Gray could appear in late 2026 or early 2027, possibly as part of a Stadium Short Track Pack alongside the L.A. Coliseum.
A Track That Belongs in iRacing
Bowman Gray is NASCAR’s oldest weekly racing venue. It’s legendary for both its history and its chaos — and its connection to modern NASCAR through the Clash makes it more relevant than ever.
Adding it to iRacing wouldn’t just satisfy fans; it would celebrate one of racing’s purest forms. Short-track roots. Close racing. Tempers flaring. The essence of NASCAR — all inside one concrete bowl.
For iRacers, it’s not a question of if Bowman Gray is coming. It’s a question of when.
