Justin Grant is USAC National Driver of the Year for the fifth time
Photo by Josh James Artwork
SPEEDWAY, Ind.—Although his left foot was shattered, battered and tattered for the second half of the 2025 USAC national season, Justin Grant managed to pull through it all to earn the Mike Curb USAC National Drivers Championship for the fifth time in his career.
The Ione, California native collected $15,000 after earning a total of 4,982 points across USAC’s three national divisions in 2025 (Silver Crown, AMSOIL National Sprint & NOS Energy Drink National Midget). In doing so, he became the first five-time titlist of the Mike Curb USAC National Drivers Championship (2017-2021-2022-2023-2025).
“It’s really cool to have done it five times now,” Grant exclaimed. “I’ve been running races for a long time now, and I’m really fortunate to have some success year after year and come up with a few of these. It’s definitely one to keep an eye on throughout the year and one you want to win. When you’re doing all three series, you want to be the guy who does it the best, if you can. It also carries Mike Curb’s name, who’s been such an influence and supporter of our sport, and that makes it special as well.”
Despite leading all drivers with 16 USAC national victories during the 2025 campaign (11 Sprint, 3 Midget & 2 Silver Crown), this one was easily the most challenging Curb title Grant has endured. In late July during the USAC Indiana Sprint Week round at Lawrenceburg Speedway, Grant suffered a broken left foot in a crash that sidelined him for the next four races and put the balance of his season in jeopardy.
“When I broke my foot, I was potentially going to miss some races, and I wanted to know how many I could stand to miss and still be able to maintain my (Curb) lead,” Grant inquired. “I ended up not missing as many races as I thought we might.”
But Grant soon bounced back, and by the second week of August, he was back in the seat of a racecar and running up front, accumulating four more USAC National Sprint Car wins after the injury.
“Every season is challenging in some way at some point, it seems like,” Grant acknowledged. “You have some hurdles to overcome whether it’s performance or management or funding. This year, it just happened to be my foot. There’s always a little bit of something going on, but this one was a little different.”
In the 13 days between the crash and the next USAC race, Grant’s foot had three screws installed to heal his five broken metatarsals and torn ligaments. In the meantime, his Silver Crown crew chief, Dennis LaCava, was busy constructing a piece of metal that resembled a dolly at first inspection. The piece clamped around Grant’s cast and featured a plate on the bottom that could meet up to the pedal. The overarching goal was to alleviate the load off the front half of his foot, thus allowing him to use his ankle and shin to apply the brakes.
“Fortunately, I had a good surgeon who was really supportive of me getting back in the car and I have a lot of good people around me, including Dennis, who really made a lot of it happen for me. All my teams stepped up and filled some of the roles I would normally fill, like my wife, Ashley, and a ton of people who took the load off me, so I could continue to race. Normally, I’m pretty hands on and involved with things, but this year, I really wasn’t able to do that after the injury. I had a bit to overcome, but it was able to be overcome because I have a lot of really good people around me.”
Across the three USAC national divisions in 2025, Grant won his second career Silver Crown title, finished as the runner-up in Midget points and fifth in the Sprint standings. Interestingly, Grant described the distinct differences in the demands each type of car had on him post-injury, and the quest to make each car feel as natural as possible.
“The crown stuff wasn’t so bad, really,” Grant admitted. “We had the brakes rigged up really good to where it got the load off my foot and into my leg. It wasn’t an issue of being able to push on the brake pedal. The crown races are long and physical. I was fresh out of surgery and still healing when I returned. My energy level was a struggle. Just having the stamina to run 100 laps well and remain focused in the heat of the summer, that was the hard part.”
The sprint car, however, proved to be a demanding in its own unique way.
“The sprint car was easy enough to drive, but it jostles and bangs and beats you up so much,” Grant explained. “It would really jostle my foot around and it would get to being pretty sore, especially when you’re running night after night after night, which added up and really took its toll. But the sprint car has enough motor to where you can run in and stand on the brakes and motor through it. You just have to run more throttle pedal and motor through the brake pedal.”
The midget had its own distinct nuances as well.
“You’re doing lighter movements with your foot in a midget,” Grant described. “You’re using a little bit of brake and you’re squeezing a little bit of brake, and it was hard to modulate those small pedal movements. I was really good at being able to run on down there and stand on the brakes. Like a crown car, you slow down and come off it, so that wasn’t too bad. You have to have a little bit of finesse on the brake pedal.”
Across the board, Grant possesses championship teams in Hemelgarn Racing (Silver Crown), TOPP Motorsports (Sprint Car) and CB Industries (Midget). That made the process of wedging his broken foot into the cockpit of a racecar as seamless as it could possibly be.
“Part of the issue was that my ankle couldn’t move,” Grant noted. “With the way you normally use the brake pedal, your foot comes off the heel riser and shoves forward, but the front of your foot and ankle has to move to allow that. We were moving the heel riser up and eight of an inch and adding a few more pounds of spring just to get it to where my foot could swing down onto the brake pedal and back to the heel riser in one motion. All that had to be just right for it to work. Fortunately, my teams are all really, really great to work with at making changes to the brake pedals, springs and heel risers and all the things to help make my foot comfortable.”
This year marked the 27th year of the Mike Curb USAC National Drivers Championship. Curb has offered the reward annually since the 1999 USAC season to honor USAC’s top overall points champion. Once known as the USAC Super License, the title was rechristened as the National Drivers Championship in recent years to more properly represent the accomplishment of achieving the feat, which so few have done. Now Grant will accept the honor once again during USAC’s Night of Champions at the Indiana Roof Ballroom in Indianapolis on Friday night, December 12, 2025.
MIKE CURB USAC NATIONAL DRIVERS CHAMPIONS:
1999: Dave Darland, Lincoln, Indiana
2000: Tracy Hines, New Castle, Indiana
2001: J.J. Yeley, Phoenix, Arizona
2002: J.J. Yeley, Phoenix, Arizona
2003: J.J. Yeley, Phoenix, Arizona
2004: Jay Drake, Val Verde, California
2005: Josh Wise, Riverside, California
2006: Josh Wise, Riverside, California
2007: Jerry Coons Jr., Tucson, Arizona
2008: Tracy Hines, New Castle, Indiana
2009: Cole Whitt, Alpine, California
2010: Bryan Clauson, Noblesville, Indiana
2011: Bryan Clauson, Noblesville, Indiana
2012: Bryan Clauson, Noblesville, Indiana
2013: Tracy Hines, New Castle, Indiana
2014: Tracy Hines, New Castle, Indiana
2015: Dave Darland, Lincoln, Indiana
2016: Brady Bacon, Broken Arrow, Oklahoma
2017: Justin Grant, Ione, California
2018: Tyler Courtney, Indianapolis, Indiana
2019: Tyler Courtney, Indianapolis, Indiana
2020: Chris Windom, Canton, Illinois
2021: Justin Grant, Ione, California
2022: Justin Grant, Ione, California
2023: Justin Grant, Ione, California
2024: Logan Seavey, Sutter, California
2025: Justin Grant, Ione, California
2025 MIKE CURB USAC NATIONAL DRIVERS CHAMPIONSHIP POINTS
PTS/DRIVER
4982-Justin Grant
4491-Logan Seavey
4304-Kevin Thomas Jr.
3568-Kyle Cummins
3439-C.J. Leary
3226-Mitchel Moles
3169-Gunnar Setser
3154-Hayden Reinbold
3088-Kale Drake
2996-Briggs Danner
2928-Jake Swanson
2619-Chase Stockon
2044-Daison Pursley
1693-Robert Ballou
1432-Cannon McIntosh
1383-Jacob Denney
1233-Gavin Miller
1192-Steven Snyder Jr.
1183-Cale Coons
1155-Ricky Lewis
1144-Drake Edwards
1131-Brady Bacon
1111-Carson Garrett
1036-Matt Westfall
985-Kayla Roell
944-Jadon Rogers
726-Kobe Simpson
695-Joey Amantea
616-Saban Bibent
605-Brecken Reese
599-Kyle Jones
581-Harley Burns
559-Chance Crum
541-Jakeb Boxell
521-Kyle Steffens
510-Braydon Cromwell
503-Chelby Hinton
502-Mario Clouser
493-Kody Swanson
457-Brandon Mattox
453-Logan Calderwood
445-Karter Sarff
416-Mack Leopard
411-Todd Hobson
408-Charles Davis Jr.
375-Dave Berkheimer
374-Ethan Mitchell
373-Thomas Meseraull
364-Max Adams
345-Dakoda Armstrong
337-Trey Osborne
327-Zach Wigal
326-Hunter Maddox
314-Colton Robinson
299-Taylor Ferns
273-Gregg Cory
272-Bobby Santos
263-Nathan Byrd
261-Tyler Roahrig
251-Rylan Gray
238-Jake Trainor
237-Kaylee Bryson
236-Zack Pretorius
215-Zach Daum
207-Aric Gentry
198-Corbin Rueschenberg
189-Brandon Carr & Matt Goodnight
183-Tom Harris & Brian Tyler
181-Jackson Macenko
176-Eddie Tafoya Jr.
168-Chase Dietz & Carmen Perigo
160-Troy Carey
156-Danny Jennings & Mark Smith
155-Jimmy Light
152-Abby Hohlbein
137-Zack Merritt
135-Shane Cockrum
130-Travis Mahoney
125-Russ Gamester
112-Garrett Benson & Billy Wease
110-Kip Hughes
107-Frankie Guerrini
106-James Turnbull II
105-Derek Bischak & Jerry Coons Jr.
98-Nic Harris
97-Sam Hinds
96-Jack Hoyer & K.J. Snow
95-Travis Millar & Kyle O'Gara
89-Tom Savage
87-Kyle Robbins
84-Eli Wilhelm
82-Cord Kisthardt
80-Jason Cherry
78-Bradley Cox
76-Casey Buckman & Bryan Gossel
68-Colton Bettis & Brian Ruhlman
66-Korey Weyant
65-A.J. Fike
61-Caiden Warren
59-Trey Zorn
58-Chris Hartman & Ryan Newman
56-Will Armitage
54-Rob Caho Jr.
50-Austin Cory & Steve Justis
48-Kenny Gentry
45-Jake Scott
43-Bill Rose
40-Oliver Akard, Blake Brannon, Shane Cottle, Tom Payet, Mathew Radisich & Jake Robinson
39-Ricky Thornton Jr.
37-Alex Bright
35-Dave Doran
31-Mark Bitner & Chris Urish
30-Dylan Doyle & Jacob Tuttle
27-Steve Gennetten & Joey Moughan
26-Tim Kent
20-Adam Taylor
19-Kyle Wissmiller
18-Ken Schrader & Joe Trenca
10-Mike Adkins & Hunter Wilson
