Ram is putting its most aggressive factory pickup on the biggest stage in truck racing. The Ram 1500 Rumble Bee SRT has been named the official pace truck for the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series 'NAVY 250' at Naval Base Coronado in San Diego — and with that, Ram returns to NASCAR pace-truck duty for the first time in roughly 20 years.That two-decade gap makes this more than a promotional appearance. It's a statement. The Rumble Bee SRT is Ram's high-performance pickup truck variant, built with SRT-level attitude and hardware, and dropping it in front of a full NASCAR Truck Series field is the kind of high-profile motorsports moment that reminds everyone what the brand can build when it's not playing it safe. A Two-Decade Wait Ends at Naval Base Coronado StellantisThe 'NAVY 250' at Naval Base Coronado is the venue for Ram's return, and the setting fits the truck. Naval Base Coronado, just outside San Diego, gives the event a distinct character — not a traditional oval, not a conventional race weekend. The Rumble Bee SRT leading the field out there carries real symbolic weight for Ram loyalists who've watched other brands hold the pace-truck spotlight for the better part of two decades.Ram confirmed the pace-truck role through Stellantis, making this an official factory appearance rather than a one-off sponsorship deal. The Rumble Bee SRT will lead the NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series field — a grid of purpose-built racing trucks — which puts Ram's performance pickup in direct visual conversation with the most truck-focused series in American motorsports. What the Rumble Bee SRT Brings to the Grid StellantisThe Rumble Bee name has history. Ram has used it before to badge performance-leaning pickups with attitude to match, and the SRT designation on this generation signals that the factory took the build seriously. SRT — Street and Racing Technology — is Stellantis's in-house performance division, the same group responsible for Hellcat and Demon hardware. A Rumble Bee wearing that badge isn't a trim-level marketing exercise.For performance-truck fans, the pace-truck role is meaningful precisely because it's earned through the truck's credentials, not just a fleet deal. The Rumble Bee SRT gets to do what pace trucks are supposed to do: set the tempo, command the grid, and give tens of thousands of race fans a long, close look at what Ram is building right now. Why This Moment Matters for Ram's Performance Identity StellantisPace trucks don't win races, but they shape perception. When a manufacturer puts a specific model in front of a NASCAR field, it's making a claim about that truck's place in performance culture — and Ram hasn't made that claim at a NASCAR event since the early 2000s. Two decades is a long time in truck culture. A lot has changed: the performance-truck segment has gotten more competitive, SRT hardware has gotten more serious, and the audience watching the NASCAR Truck Series has only grown.Returning with the Rumble Bee SRT rather than a standard 1500 trim is the right call. It tells the crowd — and the camera crews — exactly what Ram wants to be known for. Gearheads who've been waiting for Ram to flex its motorsports presence again finally have their moment. Let's hope this is the start of something more sustained than a one-race cameo.Source: Stellantis