Debate around NASCAR’s approval system has picked up pace, with more voices weighing in on how drivers earn a spot on the grid in the sport’s lower divisions, especially after Cleetus McFarland signed a two-year deal with RCR to compete in the NASCAR O’Reilly Series. After comments from Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, and Kyle Petty, Brad Keselowski has now joined the discussion, raising questions about how the sanctioning body issues green lights to drivers outside the NASCAR Cup Series.

Busch took a swing at the situation by pointing to the path drivers once traveled before reaching the Cup level. He noted that Hamlin probably logged thousands of races before landing a ride in NASCAR’s top tier, while McFarland’s record on track remains thin. Busch even joked that his son, Brexton Busch, might have run more races.

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Hamlin later addressed the subject on his podcast, arguing that attention should fall on the system that clears drivers to compete. In his view, the approval process should draw a harder line before handing out permission slips. Keselowski echoed that line of thinking, though he framed the issue around the structure of NASCAR’s ladder. “I just think it has to connect to the strategy of what they want the series to be.”

“Obviously NASCAR has four tiers. The Arca series is the bottom, the truck series, the Xfinity series. And I think if you zoom out and look at the picture and say where we want those series to be, then the approval process should connect to that accordingly.”

“I don’t know if that’s necessarily the case right now. Because I think a lot of the focus probably gets put on the Cup Series, rightfully so. I think the Cup Series approval process is actually quite good. But the other series, there’s questions that are probably fair to ask,” he continued.

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