Atlanta, GA
Legacy Motor Club seeks to build off Daytona 500 success at Atlanta and beyond
One night won’t change things for Legacy Motor Club, but the finish of last weekend’s Daytona 500 was a much-needed boost for a team that has struggled on the track and made significant changes off it in the past six months.
Jimmie Johnson’s third-place finish and John Hunter Nemechek’s fifth-place result in the Daytona 500 equaled the number of top-five finishes Legacy Motor Club had the previous two seasons combined.
With Erik Jones falling inches shy of winning his qualifying race and then finishing 12th in the Daytona 500, the first points race of the season was a success for the team owned by Johnson. The key is to carry that momentum into Sunday’s race at Atlanta Motor Speedway and beyond.
“We already really know that we’re better than 2024,” Nemechek said this week. “I mean, we couldn’t have got much worse, for sure.”
The top three national series will race at Atlanta Motor Speedway this weekend.
Last year was difficult for Legacy Motor Club in its first season with Toyota and switching from Chevrolet. Unlike fellow Toyota team, 23XI Racing, Legacy Motor Club was not as closely aligned with Joe Gibbs Racing. Without those resources, performance proved challenging.
Jones had two top-10 results last year. Nemechek collected four top 10s. Johnson had none in nine starts. The three combined to finish 25th or worse 50 times last season.
Such performances led to several management changes.
“One of the worst parts I’ve experienced as an owner is termination and trying to move on from an individual or a department of people and bring in someone new,” Johnson said. “I’m not sure I’ll ever get comfortable with that. So that’s been tough, and we went through a lot of that over the course of last season.”
Among the key moves:
Jacob Canter was hired Aug. 9 as director of competition. He spent nearly 16 years at Joe Gibbs Racing, going from race engineer to Research and Development Team Manager. Canter was the engineering manager of vehicle performance at General Motors before joining Legacy Motor Club.
Brian Campe was named the technical director on Oct. 4. He had multiple roles at Team Penske after being at Hendrick Motorsports. Campe rejoined Hendrick Motorsports in 2021 and eventually became the organization’s technical director before he went to Legacy Motor Club.
Chad Johnston was named the team’s manager of race engineering on Nov. 15. He had been a crew chief for several organizations, including Stewart-Haas Racing, before he joined Legacy Motor Club.
Ryan Blaney and Joey Logano have been among the best drivers at the reconfigured Atlanta track.
The team announced Jan. 27 that Johnson had become the majority team owner and that Knighthood Capital Management had acquired a minority stake in the organization.
“On the competition side, we’ve really restructured, reorganized the department, and, you don’t have a choice, but we started in the late spring of 2024 and started making changes, evolving and ultimately trying to recruit individuals to our company,” Johnson said.
“That process is tough, on top of people who are available, on top of contracts and when they’re going to be free and come and work for us. So really, mid-November, maybe even the first of December, we had everyone in-house that we recruited. So, there’s been various steps along the way with people coming in.
“I’d say Jacob Cantor was probably the earliest one to come in and his presence, trying to put processes into place and organize the competition department. He at least got a head start on it. We’re still playing catch up and we’re not totally where we want to be, but we’ve made a lot of massive steps forward.”
Jones knows it will take time to build Legacy Motor Club.
“One thing we can’t hire or buy is time,” he said. “We’re competing against time right now to build out our sim program and that side of things. Build out our aero program and car builds. That’s just a process that’s going to take time and experience.
“Along with that, these guys are very sharp but are in new roles. New roles that are more involved than what they’ve done in the past. Not to take anything away from them, just bigger roles so it’ll take some time as well.”
Thrity-five of the 41 cars in the Daytona 500 were involved in an incident.
Even with the success at Daytona, it is clear that work remains.
Both Jones and Nemechek failed to advance to the 23-car Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium.
While Johnson secured a starting spot for the Daytona 500 in single-car qualifying, he was 29th on the speed chart. Jones was 36th and Nemechek was 38th among 45 cars that made an attempt.
“We didn’t have the speed in qualifying, but they drove really good in the draft and we know kind of some of the areas that we need to work going back superspeedway racing,” Nemechek said.
“It’s a testament to everyone that is working hard and a lot of long hours during the offseason in the shop and just trying to get the place running smoothly and like we want it to be able to be contender one day.
“Brick by brick we want to build this place to be able to try to win races and have the opportunity to win championships.”
Atlanta, GA
Emerald United Foundation to Bond Out Nonviolent Fathers from Fulton County Jail Ahead of Father’s Day
As Atlanta welcomes the world this summer, a coalition of community organizations is working to make sure some of the city’s fathers are home in time for Father’s Day.
On Tuesday, June 16, the Emerald United Foundation, in partnership with Atlanta City Councilmembers Antonio Lewis and Byron Amos, will lead the Father’s Day Freedom Initiative — a citywide effort to bond out low-level, nonviolent fathers currently detained at Fulton County Jail. The action begins at 4 p.m. at the jail, located at 901 Rice Street in northwest Atlanta.
Nearly 77% of the individuals currently held in Fulton County Jail have not been convicted of a crime. Many remain incarcerated pretrial — separated from their children and households for weeks or months at a time — not because they pose a danger, but because they cannot afford to post bond.
“A family is not whole without its father,” said Brittany Brewster, founder and chair of the Emerald United Foundation. “Thousands of fathers remain detained for minor, nonviolent offenses — not because they are dangerous, but because they cannot afford to come home. As Atlanta welcomes the world this summer, we have a chance to show what this city’s values truly are. That starts with bringing fathers home.”
Building on the Mother’s Day Freedom Initiative
The June 16 effort builds on the momentum of EUF’s inaugural Mother’s Day Freedom Initiative, held May 7, which freed nonviolent mothers from Fulton County Jail and connected them to long-term wraparound support.
This time, coalition partner A Seat at the Table is making a landmark contribution, bonding out 11 fathers in coordination with EUF and the broader coalition — a demonstration, organizers say, of what becomes possible when community partners move together.
The timing carries added weight. The initiative unfolds as FIFA World Cup activities are underway at Mercedes-Benz Stadium and Juneteenth observances approach — a moment of unprecedented national and global attention on Atlanta.
More Than a Bailout
Organizers stress that the initiative is designed not only to secure release, but to support full restoration, with onsite services available to participating fathers the moment they walk free.
Those services include emergency healthcare and transportation through Healthcare & Emergency Solutions; housing support through PAD Atlanta; additional housing and realty resources through Head of Household Realty; workforce placement through First Step Staffing; opioid recovery and treatment referrals through Men and Women of Excellence; mental health and therapeutic care through Mindful Discovery Therapeutic Solutions; violence prevention through the Emory Hillandale Hospital Violence Prevention Program; family reunification and reentry support through Motherhood Behind Bars; bonding services through AAA Assured Bonding Co.; and additional community support through A Seat at the Table, 11th and Co., and Mothers Against Gang Violence.
“The household is only as strong as the man that leads it. How can he lead behind bars?” Brewster said. “Every father returned home is a household made whole again — and that is what restoration looks like.”
Pain Transformed into Purpose
Brewster founded the Emerald United Foundation following the personal loss of her mother and brother. Built on the belief that pain can be transformed into purpose, the Atlanta-based nonprofit is dedicated to empowering youth, strengthening families, and restoring hope in underserved communities through strategic partnerships, direct services, and community-led programming.
A community engagement and economic development professional with more than a decade of experience, Brewster currently serves as Community Engagement Manager at Atlanta BeltLine, Inc., and has held leadership roles within three offices of the City of Atlanta Mayor’s Office. Over the course of her career, she has raised more than $1.5 million in funding and launched citywide initiatives in partnership with organizations including Amazon, Coca-Cola, and UNCF.
How to Get Involved
Community members interested in supporting or participating in the Father’s Day Freedom Initiative are encouraged to register at EmeraldUnited.org or by contacting [email protected]. Space is limited, and confirmed participants will receive additional event details upon registration.
What: Father’s Day Freedom Initiative
When: Tuesday, June 16, 2026 — 4 p.m.
Where: Fulton County Jail, 901 Rice Street, Atlanta
The Atlanta Voice is a media partner of the Father’s Day Freedom Initiative.
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Atlanta, GA
All About Zephyr Southern Brasserie, a Stylish French Arrival for Centennial Yards — Resy | Right This Way
2. There’s some top culinary talent in the kitchen.
What makes the team at Zephyr unique is that, like the railways that intersect Atlanta, many of the powerhouses that have made this newcomer their hub have done so by changing tracks.
Taking a unique tack, director of food and beverage, Omari Buncum (formerly of The Forth, home of Elektra and Il Premio) says, “We weren’t looking at titles — we were looking for strong leaders.”
It was this philosophy that led him to invite Carelys Vazquez to take the reins as the founding executive chef for all of the hotel’s outlets, including Zephyr — a massive and unusual pivot for an accomplished pastry chef with a history of award-winning programs in her specialty. With her pledge to build and inspire teams, and create an environment where “chefs can feel empowered,” it became clear that she was the right conductor to get growth on track, laying the foundation for current executive chef Christian Quiñones to take over.
A Puerto Rico native who completed his culinary studies in Florida and the Basque Culinary Center in San Sebastian, Spain, Quiñones was recruited similarly for the people-first culture he brings to his projects. And serving as chef de cuisine is Jonathan Mailo, in addition to executive pastry chef Stephen Huang, most recently of the lauded Atlas Restaurant at The St. Regis Atlanta hotel in Buckhead.
Last but not least is nationally acclaimed mixologist Thandi Walton, who is both curating the beverage program in addition to pivoting to a new role as general manager here.
Atlanta, GA
Roaring crowds in the afternoon wave at the FIFA Fan Festival
The temperature isn’t the only thing hitting triple digits in the downtown core. The international passion is completely boiling over as the city reaches the final 24-hour stretch before its historic stadium introduction. The afternoon window has brought a big wave of international supporters straight into the festival gates.
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