Put Your Name
On A Real Race Car.
Student motorsports is the only on-ramp the motorsports industry has left. The kids in these paddocks are tomorrow's engineers, drivers, and team principals — but they're running on consumables money, sleeping in trailers, and welding their own roll cages. The Collegiate Racing Series has made it possible for every university in the world to create a motorsports program and race team. Backing a university team isn't charity. It's putting your livery on a car for legacy.
90 Seconds · The Cars, The Schools, The Stakes
“College motorsports will challenge college football within a few years.”— Atlanta Trend · May 2026
What It Could Look Like
Examples — the shape university race programs take when there are resources behind them. Not a roster. Not a brochure. Just the texture of what's possible.








Pictured: examples of what university racing looks like at scale. The cars you'd actually be backing are CRS Spec NDs — the sealed-spec Mazda MX-5 platform built so university programs can race each other on equal footing.
What Backing Looks Like
A full year for the team. No other options. All in or nothing.
The 2026 season is in motion and there are still seats open for backers. A team needs to know who's behind them for the year — no weekend sponsorships, no logos on a one-off panel, no tier system. Your livery runs on a CRS Spec ND through the remainder of the 2026 season and every round on the calendar. The conversation sets the number. The commitment is always the same shape: one team, all in.
What You Actually Get
- Your name, colors, or logo on a real race car for the season — not a hospitality tent, not a banner, not a stat line in a deck.
- Paddock access at every race weekend — bring family, bring clients, walk the grid before formation lap.
- Direct relationship with the team — texts from the pit during the race, debriefs after, real engineering students who'll remember the person who made the season possible.
- Trophy room invite — when the car wins, you're in the photo.
- Annual paddock dinner with backers across all programs — the room of people who decided to do this.
Not charity.
A way to put racing
back in the right hands.