DiBenedetto first showed an interest in auto racing after receiving a little league trophy around age 8. His father, Tony, who raced an Opel Manta in SCCA and IMSA in the late 1970s and early 1980s, noticed he preferred watching automobile racing on television over baseball.[2] DiBenedetto's father knew that another player on his son's little league team was competing in mini kart racing so he bought him a used kart which a young DiBenedetto drove to his first victory. He later moved up to the UARA-Stars series, racing late models.[3] In 2007, DiBenedetto's family sold all their equipment due to financial stress, from then on starting in 2008 Dibenedetto drove for Fat Head Racing Driver Development Program in the UARA-Stars as a teammate to Darrell Wallace Jr., Brennan Poole, and FHR team owner Jamie Yelton. There, he caught the attention of Joe Gibbs Racing, and later ran in the NASCAR Camping World East Series for them.[4]
His first race of 2010 came at Nashville Speedway. DiBenedetto had a solid car and ran well all night. Eventually scoring a 10th-place finish. His next race came at Road America. While running 11th he had an axle problem due to running over the curbs too hard, and that led to him falling many laps down. DiBenedetto ran six races for Joe Gibbs in 2010, with two top-ten finishes.
Nine years after his last start in the series with JGR, he returned to the team in August 2019 for the Road America race.[5] He led the most laps and was in second position, when he spun off the track on the final lap at the final corner of the race.
Multiple teams: 2012–2016
After being forced out of K&N Pro Series East team X Team Racing due to lack of sponsorship, DiBenedetto then joined The Motorsports Group midway through 2012 and ran as a start and park driver for seven races finishing 79th in points.
In 2013, DiBenedetto joined Vision Racing to drive the No. 37 car part-time in the Nationwide Series[6] and also started and parked the few races he was in. Dibenedetto later looked back at the start-and-park time as valuable for the seat time it gave him, which paid off later in his career.[7]
During the 2014 season's Subway Firecracker 250 at Daytona, DiBenedetto replaced Jeffrey Earnhardt in the No. 4 JD Motorsports Chevy during the first caution due to Earnhardt suffering a fractured collarbone in a motorcycle accident during the week.[8] For the second race he joined The Motorsports Group, where he start-and-parked the No. 46 Chevrolet for 12 races and raced the rest with the No. 40. He scored two top-15 place finishes at Road America and Mid-Ohio. DiBenedetto finished a career-high 21st in points.
In 2016, he made his return in the Xfinity Series driving the No. 10 Camry for TriStar Motorsports at Fontana, where he started 33rd and finished 40th after starting and parking. DiBenedetto would compete as a start and park driver in various other races throughout the year. At the Fall Texas race, he crashed into the outside wall in turn 4 ending in a concussion and not racing in the Cup race the following day.
RSS Racing/Viking Motorsports: 2024
On March 20, 2024, it was announced that DiBenedetto would drive for Viking Motorsports for five races through the No. 38 entry with RSS Racing, starting at Richmond Raceway.[9] He would finish 18th at Richmond followed by a 21st place run at Martinsville, 20th at Texas, and 8th at Talladega. On May 1, 2024, it was revealed that DiBenedetto would continue to be the team's primary driver for the remainder of the season.[10] However, a few days later, it was announced that DiBenedetto will run the rest of the season with the team.[11] DiBenedetto scored 2 more Top 10 finishes both being 7th place runs at the 2024 Hy-Vee PERKS 250 at Iowa Speedway and the 2024 Cabo Wabo 250 at Michigan.
Viking Motorsports: 2025
On December 13, 2024, Viking Motorsports announced that they would be switching from Ford to Chevrolet with a technical alliance with Richard Childress Racing, officially ending their partnership with RSS Racing. It was later announced that DiBenedetto would return to the team to drive the newly renumbered No. 99 full time.[12]
Cup Series
BK Racing: 2015–2016
DiBenedetto moved up to the Sprint Cup Series in 2015. He was originally intended to drive the No. 83 Dustless Blasting and No. 93 Toyotas for BK Racing on a part-time basis; he split the No. 83 during the year with Camping World Truck Series driver Johnny Sauter. After Sauter drove the No. 83 in the Daytona 500, DiBenedetto failed to qualify in his first two attempts at Atlanta and Las Vegas before finally qualifying for his Sprint Cup debut at Phoenix. When Sauter eventually decided not to race at any other Cup race after the Daytona 500, DiBenedetto took over the No. 83 full-time and declared for ROTY contention.
At Martinsville Speedway during a practice session, DiBenedetto was involved in an incident with three-time NASCAR champion Tony Stewart. The incident occurred when DiBenedetto tried to merge on the track behind Carl Edwards and the gap closed ahead of him. With Stewart fast approaching down the backstretch, DiBenedetto moved up the track in turn three to let Stewart pass. "When I got to (turn) three I didn't want to hold him up, so I just pulled up high and let him go by," DiBenedetto told Foxsports.com. "I got completely out of his way, but that wasn't enough. He tried to wreck me a few times, brake-checking me and flipping me off around the whole track." After the incident, DiBenedetto called Stewart "an arrogant prick".[13]
On December 8, 2016, DiBenedetto announced he had parted ways with BK Racing.[24] Two days later he announced that he would drive a single-car effort for Go Fas Racing in 2017.[25] Go Fas is one of the charter teams and as a result, DiBenedetto would make every race in the No. 32 Go Fas Racing Ford Fusion.
Go Fas Racing: 2017–2018
In the 2017 Daytona 500, his first for Go Fas, DiBenedetto finished 9th for his second career top 10. Statistically, DiBenedetto has been Go Fas Racing's best driver since co-owner Frank Stoddard founding the team in 2011, with him picking up several top twenty and top thirty finishes. DiBenedetto had a great race in the 2017 Food City 500 when he picked up a top twenty finish, his best finish since Daytona. At the Monster Energy Open leading up to the All-Star Race, DiBenedetto drove a Reddit-sponsored car; he learned of the site when driver Josh Wise was voted into the 2014 All-Star Race by the community, who nearly voted DiBenedetto into the 2016 race.[26] The community then repeated their near-feat by having another close call in the 2017 Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race. After the campaign, DiBenedetto remained an active member of the community, interacting with its users in the NASCAR subreddit regularly.
At the 2017 Brickyard 400, DiBenedetto qualified near the back of the field. Despite this, he managed to avoid the late-race melee to pick up another top ten finish for the No. 32, finishing 8th. Soon after the race, DiBenedetto, crew chief Gene Nead, and Go Fas extended their contract to the 2018 season, allowing DiBenedetto to remain in the No. 32 for 2018.[27] However, Nead left for personal reasons in late February.[28]
Before the spring ISM race, DiBenedetto reached out on Twitter that his team has no sponsors for that race and needed a last-minute sponsor. Denny Hamlin, Kevin Harvick and Darrell Waltrip began to donate money to fund a sponsor, and the team later received Zynga Poker sponsorship.[29] Go Fas eventually launched #TeamBurrito, a program that allows fans to encourage businesses to sponsor the No. 32 car in exchange for various rewards.[30] Later that season, in July, at Daytona, DiBenedetto drove the No. 32 Zynga Poker Ford Fusion to another top ten finish, this time 7th, for the team's best finish.
On September 7, 2018, DiBenedetto announced that he will not be returning to Go Fas Racing in 2019. On October 10, it was announced that DiBenedetto signed a two-year contract with Leavine Family Racing to drive the No. 95 Toyota Camry starting in 2019.[31] The deal, which was a one-year contract with a possible extension, came after LFR failed to extend Kasey Kahne and after a deal with Daniel Hemric fell through to drive the No. 95 car.[4]
Leavine Family Racing: 2019
In his first race with Leavine Family Racing, DiBenedetto nearly pulled off the victory at the 2019 Daytona 500. DiBenedetto took the lead midway in the race and led a race-high 49 laps before being collected in the Big One with less than 15 laps to go.[32]
For Sonoma Raceway's Toyota/Save Mart 350, DiBenedetto drove a Darrell Waltrip tribute scheme resembling his 1974 car; the race was Waltrip's final as a commentator for Fox NASCAR before his retirement.[33] In the race, DiBenedetto pitted off sequence, completing his stops before the two stages and again with 25 laps remaining to score a fourth-place finish.[34]
On August 15, 2019, DiBenedetto announced via Twitter that Leavine Family Racing had informed him that he would be dropped from the team following the 2019 season.[35] At the time of the announcement, DiBenedetto stood 23rd in the standings. Two days after the announcement, DiBenedetto led 93 laps at the Bristol Night Race, and appeared late in the final stage that he would finally get his first career win, but damage after contact with Ryan Newman would cause him to lose the position to Denny Hamlin with 11 laps to go. DiBenedetto would go on to earn a career-best second-place finish.[36] DiBenedetto scored zero wins, three top 5's, seven top 10's, led 152 laps, had an average finish of 18.3 and finished 22nd in the standings, all of which were career highs up to that point for DiBenedetto.
Wood Brothers Racing: 2020–2021
On September 10, 2019, Wood Brothers Racing signed DiBenedetto to drive for the No. 21 Ford full-time for the 2020 season, following Paul Menard's announcement that he will retire from full-time racing after the 2019 season.[37][38] DiBenedetto started the season with a 19th place finish at the 2020 Daytona 500, but he rebounded a week later to tie a career-best second place finish at Las Vegas.[39] In the later weeks of the regular season, DiBenedetto battled with seven-time Cup champion Jimmie Johnson and William Byron for the final spots in the playoffs. DiBenedetto would ultimately qualify for his first playoffs when he finished 12th in the regular-season finale at Daytona and edged out Johnson for the 16th and last seed by six points.[40] He was eliminated following the third race of the opening round at Bristol.[41]
DiBenedetto tied his career-best finish of second the following week later at Las Vegas for the third time in his career and the second time in a row at the track; this time to Kurt Busch. The next week at Talladega, DiBenedetto would run in the top 15 for the majority of the day, and made heavy gambles on fuel mileage to get to the top five for most of the final ten laps, and would make the pass on Chase Elliott to get the race lead with two laps to go, before Bubba Wallace would trigger the Big One. On the final restart, DiBenedetto would hold his line and maintain the lead until turn 4 on the final lap, when a block he would make on William Byron would give Denny Hamlin enough room to pass him on the bottom lane, with Hamlin winning over DiBenedetto by only twenty-three one-thousandths of a second (.023). DiBenedetto would be penalized later for forcing Byron below the yellow-line, relegating him to a 21st place finish. He ended his first season with the Wood Brothers 13th in the final points standings with a career-high 11 top tens.
DiBenedetto returned to the Wood Brothers in 2021 in what would be his final season with the team as Harrison Burton would take over the No. 21 the following year.[42][43] He missed the Playoffs and finished 18th in the final standings, with a season high finish of 4th at Kansas.
At the NextEra Energy 250 at Daytona, in only his first Truck start, DiBenedetto dodged many wrecks en route to a tenth place finish, the second one ever for Rackley W.A.R.. He would follow with a sixth place finish at the Victoria's Voice Foundation 200 at Las Vegas. It was his second top ten in his second start, and the best finish ever for Rackley W.A.R. in the Truck series.[45]
DiBenedetto struggled the next few weeks falling out of the Top 10 in points with a 30th place at Atlanta Motor Speedway after hitting the wall on the first lap falling 11 laps down due to damage. He scored a 31st place finish the next week after running Top 10 late in the race before a rear gear failure ended it at Circuit of the Americas followed by a 15th place run at Martinsville Speedway then a 35th place finish at the 2022 Pinty's Truck Race on Dirt at Bristol Motor Speedway after getting stuck together with Austin Wayne Self's truck. He fell 2 laps down with a flat tire during the 2022 Dead On Tools 200 at Darlington Raceway but got back on the lead lap scoring 10th before he was sent back to 11th when Matt Crafton's penalty was appealed. He finished 7th at Kansas Speedway followed by a 10th at Texas Motor Speedway scoring his 4th Top 10 of the season. He would go on to score 2 more Top 10 finishes at Gateway International Raceway and Sonoma Raceway. In the 2022 Rackley Roofing 200 at Nashville Superspeedway, DiBenedetto was running in the Top 10 when ThorSport Racing driver Ty Majeski took Matt and 2 other trucks 4 wide coming into Turn 3 causing him and the 2 other trucks to crash ending DiBenedetto's day and putting him in a must win to make the playoffs. DiBenedetto after being interviewed was unhappy and said "Some of these guys race with such disrespect." On July 23, Rackley WAR announced that DiBenedetto would return to the No. 25 for the 2023 season.[46] On October 1, DiBenedetto achieved his first national series win in the Chevrolet Silverado 250 at Talladega Superspeedway. DiBenedetto would finish the year 13th in the standings. [47]
DiBenedetto started off the 2023 season getting caught up in 2 wrecks at the 2023 NextEra Energy 250 at Daytona finishing 20th followed by a 12th place finish in the 2023 Victoria's Voice Foundation 200 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. He would rebound at Atlanta Motor Speedway in the 2023 Fr8Auctions 208 with 6th but would struggle, finishing in the Top 10 only twice in the next 6 races. He would then go on to finish in the Top 10 6 times in a row starting at the 2023 Tyson 250 at North Wilkesboro Speedway. Despite finishing 17th in the 2023 Worldwide Express 250 at Richmond Raceway, DiBenedetto was able to qualify for the 2023 Truck Series Playoffs. On August 30, it was announced that DiBenedetto would be leaving Rackley WAR after the 2023 season.[48] DiBenedetto was eliminated from the playoffs at Kansas. After the Bristol night race, Rackley WAR removed DiBenedetto from the team and announced plans for a replacement driver for the final three races of the season. Prior to this announcement, DiBenedetto had stated that he was "exploring all options in all series."[49]
In 2015, DiBenedetto married his childhood friend Taylor Carswell. They currently reside in Hickory, North Carolina. They own a dog named Brian.
In 2018, he made a cameo in the television series Lethal Weapon (S2, E13) as a character named Carl Edwards, which DiBenedetto noted was coincidental and not a nod to the driver of the same name.[50]
In 2021, DiBenedetto was baptized by fellow Cup Series driver Michael McDowell.[51]
Motorsports career results
NASCAR
(key) (Bold – Pole position awarded by qualifying time. Italics – Pole position earned by points standings or practice time. * – Most laps led. ** – All laps led.)