Hailie Deegan
Hailie Deegan, the daughter of motocross legend Brian Deegan, races in the NASCAR Truck Series in the No. 1 truck for David Gilliland Racing.
Before joining the Truck Series in 2021, Deegan competed in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West 2018-19, where she won three times in two seasons, becoming the first female driver to win a race in the series.
In 2020, she competed with the ARCA Menards Series and had 17 top-10 finishes in the 20-race schedule.
Since 2021, Deegan has raced full-time with the Truck Series and found limited success, earning a single top-10 finish in her rookie season. While she hasn’t yet excelled on the track, she’s one of the sport’s most popular figures with a social media presence that has millions of followers.
Manufacturers have been shuffling truck series relationships, and the latest move appears to give Hailie Deegan a landing spot for 2023.
David Gilliland's switch to Toyota is official, which will mean a change of address for NASCAR's best-known female driver.
Hailie Deegan's debut in an Xfinity Series car went better than the first time out for every champion since Kyle Busch.
Hailie Deegan talked about her successful Xfinity Series debut at Las Vegas, where she finished 13th, and also took a shot at drivers in the Truck Series.
Kyle Busch and David Gilliland are moving their truck series teams to new manufacturers, causing a shakeup in driver lineups.
Hailie Deegan is moving up. Though it's only a one-race deal, it's an important race for the drivers around her.
Hailie Deegan entered her pit box too hot at Talladega, hitting her carrier and sending the wheel bouncing across pit road. And things went downhill from there.
Hailie Deegan took a wicked hit while driving Crown Victorias in a recent race at Bristol.
Hailie Deegan is getting a new crew chief for the remainder of this season, raising the question of whether she's at risk for losing her ride in 2023.
Todd Bodine ended his race and career in an incident with Hailie Deegan at Pocono and suggested she was paying him back for an incident at Texas.