
By Brandon White | www.arcaracing.com | August 22, 2025
OREGON, Wisc. — The first time Max Reaves saw Madison International Speedway was during an ASA Midwest Tour race at the facility last month.
Reaves only mustered an 11th place finish that day, but the laps he logged around the half-mile complex provided him a blueprint to utilize for Friday’s Badger 200. No one in the field could match Reaves’ pace in the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 Toyota, as he led every lap from the General Tire Pole to secure his second national ARCA Menards Series win and his fifth on the platform.
RELATED: Complete results from the Badger 200
Any opportunity to gain experience in full-bodied stock cars is something Reaves knows will be beneficial toward his long-term development. Enduring the highs and lows of his ASA Midwest Tour start at Madison helped bolster Reaves’ confidence going into the ARCA Menards Series race.
“That meant a lot just to be able to learn the track,” Reaves said. “We didn’t do too good in that race, but I have to thank my guys here with me, Joe Gibbs, [and] my coach Bobby [Labonte]. This Cook Out Camry was super fast today.”
Tabbed as the replacement for defending ARCA Menards Series East champion William Sawalich when the latter moved up to the NASCAR Xfinity Series, Reaves has easily carried on the efficiency of Gibbs’ ARCA Menards Series program.
In the three East Series events entered by Reaves so far, he did not lose any of them and led a combined 383 of 450 possible laps. While the learning curve in the national ARCA Menards Series has not been as seamless, the results have still been great, with Reaves now prevailing in half his starts.
Reaves needed patience to break through for his first national triumph at Elko Speedway in June. ARCA Menards Series points leader Brenden Queen led a race-high 148 laps that evening, but after losing the advantage, Reaves had to overtake a struggling Lavar Scott with 47 laps remaining to secure the checkered flag.
Madison was nowhere near as arduous for Reaves, especially after he grinded out a sixth-place performance on dirt at the Springfield Mile last week. The only obstacles the young prospect faced during the evening were lapped traffic and a handful of restarts, all of which were handled in an expert fashion.
Without the prior ASA Midwest Tour start at Madison, Reaves does not believe his first ARCA Menards Series outing there would have been as polished. The abrasive, half-mile complex challenged Reaves both physically and mentally in July, but he translated those struggles into another positive chapter on the ARCA Menards Series platform.
Reaves understands he needs to keep learning in many regards with the heavier ARCA Menards Series cars, especially with another dirt race coming up in just over week. Despite this, Reaves enters his remaining starts in 2025 with momentum on his side, along with the experience of Gibbs, Labonte and many others at his disposal.
“There was only] one time where Brenden [Queen] got under me, but we got away with it,” Reaves said. “[Springfield] would have been a lot more fun with practice, but we’ll be better [at DuQuoin]. I like the pavement better and want to stick with pavement.”
Following Reaves home in the second position was Lavar Scott, with Queen, Isabella Robusto and Julian DaCosta completing the top five.
Rounding out the top 10 were Mason Mitchell, Jason Kitzmiller, Kaylee Bryson, Tony Cosentino and Willie Mullins.
The ARCA Menards Series will commemorate Labor Day weekend with a trip to the DuQuoin State Fairgrounds next Sunday evening, the second and last dirt track race on the 2025 ARCA Menards Series schedule. The green flag will wave at 8:30 p.m. ET with FS1 providing live flag-to-flag coverage.