If you haven’t heard of Dystany Spurlock yet, that is about to change.
On Saturday at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kan., the 29-year-old became the first Black woman to compete in a national NASCAR ARCA Menards Series event, capping a milestone with a performance that left little doubt she belonged there. Starting from the very back of a 29 car field, Spurlock worked her way through traffic, survived multiple cautions and a late race collision, and brought home a top 10 finish that was as hard earned as it was historic.
A race that had every reason to go wrong and didn’t
The odds weren’t exactly in her favor at the start. Dead last on the grid, Spurlock had the longest road ahead of her. Within the first few laps, though, she had already climbed to 16th, navigating a crowded field with the kind of focus that doesn’t come from one good day but from years of doing the hard work before anyone was watching.
Multiple cautions and restarts followed the kind of chaotic, high pressure moments that can unravel an inexperienced driver but Spurlock stayed composed and out of trouble. Late in the race, a caution triggered the free pass rule, a provision that returns the highest placed lapped car to the lead lap. Spurlock used the opportunity well, passing two more drivers and securing a spot in the top 10.
Then, within sight of the finish line, another car struck hers from behind and sent her into a slide. She brought the car back under control and crossed the line anyway.
A career built on firsts
Saturday was a milestone, but it wasn’t the first time Spurlock found herself making history somewhere she wasn’t expected to be.
Before transitioning to stock cars, she spent years competing in motorcycle drag racing, a world with even fewer women at the front. In that arena, she became the first woman to win the Real Street class in the XDA series and set a world record in the process. She then moved into NHRA competition, where last year she became just the second Black woman to compete in the Pro Stock Motorcycle category.
Her journey has been the subject of a docuseries, Driven by Dystany, The Road to NASCAR, which has followed her path through each new chapter of a career defined by finding a way in and then proving she deserves to stay.
Chris Harris, co-owner of Foxxtecca, the team that supported her ARCA debut, described Spurlock as someone whose performance reflects not just natural talent but deliberate preparation and the right support system around her. He also made clear that her presence is about more than one driver it’s a signal to others that they belong in these spaces too.
What comes next for Spurlock
Saturday was just the beginning of what looks like a packed and purposeful season. Her next ARCA Menards Series start is scheduled for May 8 at Watkins Glen International, a 2.45-mile road course in upstate New York a significantly different challenge from the oval at Kansas Speedway, and another opportunity to show versatility behind the wheel.
Later in the year, Spurlock is set to return to NHRA competition with Arana Racing, with appearances planned at the U.S. Nationals in Indianapolis in September and the Texas NHRA Fall Nationals in Dallas in October.
She is competing across two disciplines at the highest levels of motorsport, managing transitions between oval tracks, road courses, and drag strips all while carrying the weight and the honor of being a first.
Black women have always belonged in rooms that have been slow to welcome them, and motorsports is not exempt from that truth. Dystany Spurlock didn’t wait for an invitation. She showed up, started last, and finished in the top 10. The rest of the sport is just catching up.

