Frankie Muniz, former child star of Malcolm in the Middle, joins NASCAR as a race car driver
- Frankie Muniz revealed that he has signed on to drive for a NASCAR "minor league" team.
- Muniz has been racing cars for more than 16 years and wants to reach the NASCAR Cup Series.
Frankie Muniz will soon be in the middle of NASCAR races as he moves another step closer to his dream of driving at stock car racing's highest level.
The actor and former "Malcolm in the Middle" star announced that he was joining Rette Jones Racing as a driver in the ARCA Menard series for the 2023 season. The ARCA Menard series is considered a "minor league" of stock car racing, often used to develop drivers for the top-level Cup series, and it ranks just below NASCAR's second and third tiers, the Xfinity and Truck series.
After the announcement, Muniz's new team shared photos and videos from Daytona International Speedway, where he was testing his new wheels.
During a July interview with Dave Moody of SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, Muniz revealed that he was in talks to join teams at various NASCAR levels.
"I want to be realistic," Muniz said. "Obviously, I haven't done a ton of oval racing. So everywhere I am going to go next year is going to be new. So in that same sense, I want to move up quickly, I [also] don't want to throw myself off the deep end.... I want to make sure I am ready. It's all about putting the best deal together with a truck ride or ARCA ride ... That is the goal, to be in a truck or do ARCA national or both."
Muniz, 37, grew up a race fan and has been driving competitively since 2006.
"I like to say now that I am acting on the side," Muniz said during an appearance in the FS1 booth during the NASCAR All-Star Open race last year. "I want racing to be my focus. It's one of those things you have to do 100%. You can't just do it halfway. If I want to make it to any level of NASCAR — ARCA, Trucks, whatever it is — I'm racing against people who have been doing it since they were six years old, and I've gotta do it quickly."
Both Muniz and fellow "Malcolm in the Middle" star Bryan Cranston have confirmed that there are talks to reboot the show, possibly as a movie.
Moving to oval racing is not as easy as some may believe
Muniz was most recently racing pro late models on short tracks to learn oval racing, admitting it is an entirely different beast from the open-wheel and road racing he had been competing in. Some of the best drivers in the world have noted that the transition is more challenging than it sounds.
Formula One racer Daniel Ricciardo, who grew up a NASCAR fan in Australia, spoke to Insider earlier last season about how tough it would be to make the switch to oval racing.
"I'd like to drive an oval just to kind of see what it's like, but I probably wouldn't want to compete because I just, I don't think I'll be competitive and wouldn't probably do it justice," Ricciardo told Insider. "A road course or something would be fun, but I'll walk before I can run. It's such a different discipline that I'll want to do some testing and kind of see where I'm at. And let's say if that all went well and I had good confidence in the car, then, you know, I might put my hand up, but I wouldn't jump to conclusions. It's a very different beast."
In a recent interview with Dan Katz of "Pardon My Take," F1 champion Max Verstappen revealed that he likes to race NASCAR stock cars on his simulator, though he admitted it would take a long time to get good at the sport in real life.
"It is a completely different discipline," Verstappen said. "For [F1 drivers] to get good at it, it will also take quite a bit of time. You know, it's not easy," later adding that a driver really needs "to grow up with it" to get good.