Last year’s class of freshmen NASCAR Cup Series drivers led by Christopher Bell, Cole Custer and two-time Xfinity Series champion Tyler Reddick was one of the most buzzed about rookie crops in recent years.

Bell had an up-and-down season peaking with a third-place run in the third-to-last race of the year at Texas Motor Speedway, Reddick showed extremely promising flashes in a fourth-place finish at Homestead-Miami Speedway and a runner-up finish at Texas in the summer. However, it was Custer who nabbed a win with a thrilling restart at Kentucky Speedway in July, made the playoffs and captured Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors. The victory made Custer the first Cup rookie to win since Chris Buescher did so at Pocono in 2016.

Who will be the best in their respective sophomore seasons? Reddick and Custer have continuity on their side as they had the same crew chiefs and rides as last year with Richard Childress Racing and Stewart-Haas Racing, respectively. Bell is on the move to Joe Gibbs Racing to pilot the No. 20 Toyota and will have two-time championship-winning crew chief Adam Stevens atop the pit box.

NASCAR.com’s RJ Kraft and Pat DeCola debate which driver from the trio is most primed to make a jump in their second Cup season.

RELATED: Christopher Bell brings soft-spoken approach to Stevens-led team

KRAFT: Each driver in this group has an appealing reason to choose them. Custer came on in the second half of the season with 12 top 15s (including the Kentucky win) in the final 21 races of the season (after he had just two top 15s in the first 15 races) and Reddick’s high-line, hard-charging style is exciting to watch even if does lend itself to greater variance in his peaks and valleys.

That said, I’m taking Bell as he moves from Leavine Family Racing to JGR for Year 2. Bell was a bit unlucky in his rookie year as the COVID-19 pandemic procedure forced a change from qualifying sessions to a lineup formula that hurt his starting positions for much of the summer. He started 15 races 26th or worse — something that is unlikely to happen a second year in a row. A good starting position can lead to significant stage points — Bell finished with just 75 on the year — and be a major boon in a playoff push and move up the standings.

While Bell finished the lowest in the standings of the three 2020 rookies we are discussing, I believe he has the biggest ceiling. The move in-house to JGR is big for Bell — LFR was affiliated with Toyota and JGR — now being directly linked to the mothership for Toyota. He has championship-winning teammates to lean on in Kyle Busch and Martin Truex Jr. and a driver who has reached the Championship 4 the past two seasons in Denny Hamlin in the same stable as him.

The biggest reason for optimism with Bell’s 2021 season is atop the pit box in Stevens. Paired with Busch, Stevens won 28 races at the Cup level as well as the 2015 and 2019 championships, but is coming off a disappointing 2020 that eventually led to his new assignment. Bell is coming off a season that left a little to be desired as well. Both parties have something to prove — Stevens that he can succeed away from Busch, and Bell that he can get it done at the Cup level.

I liken the Stevens-Bell pairing to when William Byron and Chad Knaus were paired together after Byron’s first Cup season — starting with the 2019 campaign. Byron was coming off a learning-filled rookie year that resulted in four top 10s (Bell had two top fives and seven top 10s in 2020) and a 23rd-place finish in the standings (Bell finished 20th). Byron’s sophomore year produced five top fives, 13 top 10s, a playoff appearance, a berth in the Round of 12 and an 11th-place finish in the standings. Stevens and Bell can certainly follow that blueprint. A more ambitious path would be that of Erik Jones, who won in his sophomore season at the Cup level … in the same ride Bell will be piloting in 2021.

DECOLA: All compelling points per usual, RJ, but I’m going to go with Reddick on this one.

A lot has changed over the past few years, of course, but we’re still not too far removed from Reddick topping both Bell and Custer in two straight Xfinity Series Championship 4 races in 2018 and ’19 — while driving for two different organizations. This season also marks the first time since Reddick’s Brad Keselowski Racing days (2014-16) that he’ll be with the same organization for a third straight season.

Despite Custer being the only one of the three to win in 2020, when I think back to which one of them seemed to find his way to the front and battle the leaders the most … it’s Reddick. His overall stats were the best of the trio as well, landing just behind seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson in the standings and nearly matching him in top 10s (nine to Johnson’s 10) and average finish (17.5 to Johnson’s 17.3). For a rookie to achieve that, I’m willing to bet he’s just scratching the surface of his potential.

Looking at his trajectory within his own organization, Reddick’s rookie season was statistically better than each of teammate Austin Dillon’s first two. AD then broke through for his first playoff appearance in 2016 with his first win coming a year later. After Reddick nearly kept up the pace, stats-wise, with his teammate in Dillon’s seventh Cup campaign, it feels more likely than not that Reddick lands in Victory Lane this year rather than down the road.

Reddick showed consistently throughout the ’20 season — and en route to those back-to-back NXS titles, which feel worth re-mentioning — that he’s not afraid to drive aggressively and battle with the sport’s veterans, a trait that will likely only be fine-tuned in his sophomore campaign.

It’s a little concerning that six of his nine top 10s came in the season’s first half last year, but something tells me he and crew chief Randall Burnett are well aware of this and have focused on bringing more consistency to the Californian’s results this season.

Really, you can’t go wrong with any of these rising stars in the sport, but Reddick stands out to me as the one to make the most noise in ’21.

DoorDash and 23XI Racing, Michael Jordan and Denny Hamlin’s new NASCAR Cup Series team, revealed a 2021 primary paint scheme for Bubba Wallace’s No. 23 Toyota on Thursday.

RELATED: See the new look from all angles

The scheme features the DoorDash logo on the hood and MJ’s iconic No. 23 on the door and will run in the Daytona 500 on Feb. 14 on FOX. Wallace and Hamlin celebrated the new look on social media:

The number of races for which DoorDash will decorate the No. 23 will be revealed at a later date. This will be Wallace’s fourth full-time season in the Cup Series.

Kaulig Racing added detail to its NASCAR Cup Series plans, announcing Wednesday that Kaz Grala will drive its No. 16 Chevrolet in a part-time schedule, starting with a bid for the Daytona 500 next month.

The Matt Kaulig-owned organization had announced Jan. 7 it would focus on road-course and superspeedway races for a limited Cup Series slate in 2021 with aspirations for a full-time Cup effort in the future. The team indicated Grala would compete in several of those events for Kaulig this season.

RELATED: On the Move: Changes for 2021

Grala has some history of success at Daytona International Speedway. He became the 2.5-mile track’s youngest winner in 2017, prevailing in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series season opener at 18 years, one month, and 26 days of age. He also made his Cup Series debut at the DIS road-course layout last season, recording an impressive seventh-place finish for Richard Childress Racing as a late fill-in for Austin Dillon.

“This is a huge opportunity for me both personally and professionally,” Grala said in a release from the team. “I’ve grown up dreaming of reaching the NASCAR Cup Series, so it will be really special to get more chances to race against my heroes, with Kaulig Racing being the perfect team to take that next step with. I can’t thank Matt Kaulig and (team president) Chris Rice enough for trusting me in their Cup program, as well as RCR for helping shape my career the past couple seasons.”

Kaulig Racing is set to field three full-time teams in the Xfinity Series this season, with AJ Allmendinger, Jeb Burton and Justin Haley on its driver roster. The organization made its lone Cup Series start to date last season, with Haley turning in a 13th-place result in the Daytona 500.

Grala, 22, has competed most recently in the Xfinity Series as a part-time driver for the Childress organization, which shares a technical alliance with the Kaulig group. The Massachusetts native ran a five-race slate in each the 2019 and 2020 Xfinity seasons for RCR, producing two top-five finishes — both at Road America in consecutive years.

“We’re super excited to have Kaz join our team in 2021, and we can’t wait to get started with him at Daytona,” Rice said. “He has had some great success in different series and layouts at Daytona, so we think he will be a great addition to our team beginning with the Daytona 500.”

The team indicated sponsorship and further schedule announcements would be made at a later date.

Chase Elliott experienced a preliminary qualifying event unlike any other on Wednesday night at the Chili Bowl Nationals.

The 2020 NASCAR Cup Series champion participated in Circle City Raceway Qualifying Night at the 1/4-mile dirt oval at the River Spirit Expo Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma for his maiden stint in the prestigious dirt racing crown jewel. Elliott finished fourth in the fifth heat of the night and seventh in his respective qualifier race. Due to his finish and total passing points in both races, Elliott was forced to start in the second B-Main, finishing eighth after spinning while running in the fifth position. He failed to make the A-Main.

Elliott’s chances to make Saturday’s A-Main finale aren’t over, though. In what is coined as “alphabet soup,” he’ll need to make his way through a set of last-chance qualifying events. He’ll start his long journey in the F-Main for a final crack at claiming a starting position on Saturday.

While Elliott is battling more than 300 drivers for 24 coveted starting spots on Saturday, Elliott’s expectations are very low, serving more as a learning experience above all else. But he wasn’t far off from predicting where he wound up.

“I think making the E-Main would be a great day for most of us,” Elliott joked during an interview with SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. “I’m super excited. I think a lot of my excitement for that event just comes from me not having any background in it and just knowing really nothing about it. Kind of stepping into something new and kind of stepping outside the comfort zone outside of asphalt racing. Really just trying to learn and learn the right way.”

While Elliott turned some initial practice laps during opening day on Monday, the Hendrick Motorsports driver is diving head-first into a motorsports realm with limited seat time. He participated in a dirt midget event at the 1/6-mile Millbridge Speedway near Salisbury, North Carolina in December, finishing third and fourth to Chase Briscoe and Kyle Larson in a pair of A-Main events.

RELATED: NASCAR drivers in Chili Bowl: Give dirt fans ‘more reason to watch on Sundays’

One of Elliott’s biggest takeaways from his experience so far is the fast pace of dirt racing.

“There is no waiting around,” Elliott told NASCAR.com. “I think that is the biggest difference for me is the intensity level is up from the get-go and not just the last 100 miles of one of our normal events, which is really cool. You have to get going and if you have an opportunity you have to take it and I think that’s what makes this type of racing entertaining.”

Regardless of Elliott’s outcome in the Chili Bowl, the event serves as quality practice for the NASCAR Cup Series’ first dirt race at Bristol Motor Speedway on March 28. The 25-year-old will also compete in the Rolex 24 at Daytona International Speedway on Jan. 30-31. Elliott also finished third in the Snowball Derby at Five Flags Speedway in December.

RELATED: Chase Elliott’s road to Rolex precedes Cup Series title defense

The action-packed offseason for NASCAR’s newest title winner has been on his radar for a number of years.

“I’ve always paid a lot of attention to the races that go on throughout the offseason, being the Snowball Derby, the Chili Bowl, Rolex 24; races that I admire and really enjoy watching,” Elliott said. “I had some opportunities to go and be a part of them this year so I just felt like I enjoy them and have a lot of respect for each of these different types of cars and felt like it would be a really cool challenge for me to go do something different.”

When Elliott hits the dirt track on Wednesday night, he’ll be using lessons and advice offered up by highly talented dirt drivers, including his new Hendrick Motorsports teammate Larson.

“I’ve been trying to learn as quick as I can,” Elliott said. “Kyle (Larson) has been great, he’s been super open and honest talking about midget and dirt racing in general. As much as he’s willing to share, I’m certainly going to lean on him at least to help me get going. I’m excited to talk to him and learn some things that might be second nature to him, but that are completely foreign to me.”

RELATED: Rundown of Chili Bowl Nationals schedule

NASCAR competition officials said they were pleased with the outcome of a brief Tuesday afternoon test of the Next Gen car at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Kurt Busch drove the prototype at the 1.5-mile track as officials worked to sort through adjustments to some of the car’s components. The model is set to debut in the NASCAR Cup Series in 2022, and Tuesday’s closed session marked its first on-track time since a one-day test at Daytona International Speedway last month.

RELATED: Scenes from November’s Next Gen test at Charlotte

“We had a successful test at Charlotte Motor Speedway today and were able to validate some work we’ve done since our recent tests at Charlotte and Daytona,” said John Probst, NASCAR Senior Vice President of Racing Innovation. “We wanted to return to Charlotte with Kurt to collect direct comparisons of data and driver feedback. We’re happy with what we saw on the track today.”

Busch was the first driver to be called upon for a second time shaking down the Next Gen model. In his first stint, he tested alongside Martin Truex Jr. at the Charlotte venue in November, marking the first time two prototypes shared the track at the same time.

“I was honored to get a call to come back and verify things from our last test,” Busch said. “I haven’t been in our current car since then, so it’s good for me mentally to have that benchmark and be able to explain what the car is doing on the track. It’s great to see the progress from November to January and know that we’re headed in the right direction.”

A full schedule for the Next Gen testing in 2021 has not been announced. Probst indicated last month that three or four tire tests with Goodyear officials were tentatively scheduled for the first half of the year.

When the NASCAR Cup Series arrives at Daytona International Speedway in February, three new full-time teams will be hitting the track for the first time.

Bubba Wallace will drive the No. 23 Toyota for 23XI Racing, Daniel Suarez will drive the No. 99 Chevrolet for Trackhouse Racing Team and B.J. McLeod will drive the No. 78 Ford for Live Fast Motorsports.

It’s an exciting time for the sport as new owners and sponsors ready for the upcoming 2021 season, but which organization is the most intriguing? NASCAR.com’s Terrin Waack and Chase Wilhelm share their thoughts.

RELATED: 2021 schedule in photos | Changes to know for 2021

WILHELM: Well, since I go first, I’ll take the easy layup. All eyes will be on 23XI Racing, co-owned by basketball legend Michael Jordan and Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin, when we unload the haulers at Daytona.

Bubba Wallace, driver of the new No. 23 Toyota, outperformed on a number of occasions with limited funding while driving the No. 43 Richard Petty Motorsports Chevrolet. Now the sky is the limit.

Although the brand new team will surely have kinks to work out along the way, Wallace will be expected to perform at a higher level on a weekly basis sooner rather than later. With the star power Jordan brings, Hamlin’s prowess from what he’s learned at Joe Gibbs Racing and Wallace’s ability to get more out of a race car than what it might typically be capable of, this is quite possibly the beginning of something special.

What’s intriguing for me is how competitive Wallace and team will be out of the gate. When the Jordan brand is brought into the mix, success is probable — and expected. That puts added pressure on everyone involved.

Pressure, however, is something Wallace has become accustomed to after a 2020 season that launched him into the national spotlight, both on and off the race track. For that, I feel Wallace is ready for the task at hand. If the 23XI Racing team can put a fast car underneath him, it will finally be his moment to shine.

Wallace said there will be “no excuses” in 2021. Honestly, I don’t think he’ll need any.

RELATED: 23XI Racing welcomes founding partners | Denny Hamlin’s long-term vision for new team

WAACK: Yes, I’ll admit, a Michael Jordan-owned team is beyond exciting for the sport. Exciting being the key word there. I, however, am more intrigued by the Trackhouse Racing Team addition to the NASCAR Cup Series. There are multiple industry veterans in charge of that team.

Trackhouse owner Justin Marks himself has competed in all three NASCAR national series. Marks won a 2016 Xfinity Series race at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, which isn’t all that surprising considering his road-course background via sports-car racing. With seven road courses spread across the 2021 schedule — postseason included — Marks’ behind-the-wheel, left-and-right knowledge surely can help Trackhouse with those events.

Ty Norris was named the president of racing operations at Trackhouse. Norris used to serve as the executive vice president and general manager at both Dale Earnhardt Inc. and Michael Waltrip Racing. Behind-the-scenes experience: check.

Last but not least, four teams in four seasons? Trackhouse’s driver, Daniel Suarez, may have bopped around the garage in recent years, but he has to know by now what he does and does not like when it comes to organizational chemistry and dynamics. This is an absolutely clean slate for him. And though he’s still seeking his first Cup Series win, Suarez has had success in NASCAR. He holds eight top-five results at the sport’s top level, highlighted by a 2018 runner-up finish from the pole position at Pocono Raceway, where there’s a doubleheader this season. He also has three Xfinity Series victories on his resume, topped off by a championship title in 2016.

These Trackhouse folks may know what they’re doing.

RELATED: Learn more about Trackhouse Racing Team | Live Fast Motorsports launches 

The Kyle Petty Charity Ride announced Tuesday the 26th edition of its annual event has been postponed to 2022 because of COVID-19 concerns.

The charitable organization had originally postponed the event from May 2-8, 2020 to May 1-7, 2021 after the outbreak of the novel coronavirus. Organizers on Tuesday pushed that timetable back again to April 30-May 6, 2022 because of lingering concerns with the pandemic.

RELATED: Charity Ride information | Kyle Petty’s heartfelt second act

“We talked through every ‘what if’ scenario and tried to come up with a way to safely execute the Ride this spring, but ultimately we don’t feel we could safely make that happen,” said Kyle Petty, a longtime analyst now with NBC Sports. “There is still so much uncertainty and risk with the pandemic, which is why we have decided to once again postpone the Ride, now to 2022. The health and safety of our Riders and the communities we visit is of the utmost importance to us and we simply cannot take that risk.

“I hope that we will soon be in a much better place. I’m choosing to cling to that hope and now focus on making our 2022 Ride the best it can possibly be. The camaraderie of the riders, the beautiful scenery of our country and the mission to raise funds to send so many deserving kids to camp at Victory Junction is what the Ride is all about!”

The ride has helped raise more than $19 million for the Victory Junction camp, which was founded by the Petty family in 2004 to honor the memory of Kyle’s son, Adam. More than 8,650 riders have joined the ride’s efforts, which has also benefited other children’s charities.

The route for the 2022 ride — presented by Cox Automotive — remains unchanged from the original 2020 itinerary, starting and ending in Phoenix after a weeklong loop through parts of Arizona and Utah.

CONCORD, N.C., (Jan. 12, 2021) Kohler Generators, a leader in whole-home backup generators and which operates underneath the umbrella of Kohler Co., has partnered with Roush Fenway Racing as an anchor partner, making its debut on the No. 6 Ford with driver Ryan Newman on Feb. 14 at the famed Daytona 500. Kohler Generators will also serve as Newman’s primary partner for races at Atlanta Motor Speedway (March 21), Darlington Raceway (May 9), Charlotte Motor Speedway (May 30), Road America (July 4), Bristol Motor Speedway (Sept. 18), Talladega Superspeedway (Oct. 3) and Martinsville Speedway (Oct. 31).

“We are looking forward to getting back to Daytona (International Speedway) this year, and bringing on Kohler Generators as the primary partner for our biggest race of the season is really exciting,” said Newman, who was seconds away from winning his second Daytona 500 last season. “Kohler is one of the most trusted brands in the world and is a natural fit with Roush Fenway and the No. 6 team. We came very close to winning this race last season, so hopefully this year we can go to Daytona, finish the job and put that Kohler Generators Ford in Victory Lane at what is undoubtedly one of the grandest events in all of motorsports.”

Kohler 2021 6 Mustang Front
Courtesy: Roush Fenway Racing

Newman, the 2008 Daytona 500 Champion, enters his 20th full season in the NASCAR Cup Series and third behind the wheel of Hall of Fame owner Jack Roush’s iconic No. 6 entry. The 43-year-old veteran was seconds away from winning the 2020 edition of The Great American Race before a horrific crash at the finish line. Newman, who was hospitalized after the accident, was released less than 48 hours later and made a miraculous return to the track after having missed only three events.

MORE: Ryan Newman through the years

Roush Fenway boasts a pair of wins at the Daytona 500, taking the celebrated checkered flag in 2009 and 2012, with the latter serving as Roush’s historic 300th NASCAR victory. Overall, RFR has won seven times at the World Center of Racing in NASCAR’s premier series, most recently in the 2017 summer race.

“We are pleased to welcome Kohler to the Roush Fenway Family,” Roush said. “We share the same pursuit of high performance in both of our fields, and I cannot think of a better place to kick off the partnership than Daytona.”

This will mark Newman’s 20th Daytona 500 start. In addition to scoring a seventh-place finish in his inaugural run in 2002, the South Bend, Indiana, native has finished in the top 10 six total times, including the victory in 2008. Overall, Newman enters the 2021 campaign with 263 career top 10s, 115 top fives, 18 wins and 51 poles.

RELATED: All of Ryan Newman’s Cup Series wins

Kohler 2021 6 Mustang Driver
Courtesy: Roush Fenway Racing

“Our partnership with Roush Fenway Racing and driver Ryan Newman provides new opportunities to showcase the leading-edge design, technology and reliability of Kohler Generators with passionate and loyal NASCAR fans. Jack Roush’s Hall of Fame career and championships speak to his hard-earned reputation of excellence,” said Brian Melka, group president – power at Kohler Co. “Bringing together Roush Fenway Racing and Kohler, along with a highly decorated competitor in Ryan Newman, is exciting and reinforces our shared commitment to power and technology and an inner drive to always achieve the highest level of performance. We are thrilled to unveil the sleek blue Kohler Generators No. 6 car at the Daytona 500, as well as Road America, which is less than 20 miles from our world headquarters in Kohler, Wisconsin.”

Daytona 500 qualifying is set for Feb. 10 to determine the front row for the 63rd running of The Great American Race. The Duels — the twin 150-mile events that determine the remainder of the starting lineup — are slated for the next night, with the Daytona 500 to follow Feb. 14 at 2:30 p.m. ET on FOX.

If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em.

That appears to be the mentality most NASCAR Cup Series team owners have now regarding their superstar drivers participating in other forms of motorsports. This year, it especially holds true for the Chili Bowl Nationals.

The amount of NASCAR’s own participating in this week’s Chili Bowl in Tulsa, Oklahoma, is as big as it has ever been, with 11 active drivers from the Cup, Xfinity and Camping World Truck Series slated to take on the 1/4-mile dirt oval at the River Spirit Expo Center. Those drivers include Justin Allgaier, Chase Briscoe, Christopher Bell, Chase Elliott, Ryan Ellis, Kyle Larson, Brett Moffitt, Ryan Newman, Garrett Smithley, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and JJ Yeley. Alex Bowman owns a team in competition, as well.

RELATED: Chili Bowl tune-in information | Night 1 recap

For Briscoe, the Cup Series rookie set to take over the No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford in 2021, the positives of competing in grassroots levels of motorsports outweigh any negatives that could be a cause for concern.

“I think if you even looked at five years ago, for sure 10 years ago, it was kind of forbidden to go run sprint-car stuff because obviously it’s dangerous and our day job is to run the NASCAR stuff,” Briscoe told NASCAR.com. “That’s our No. 1 priority. The last two or three years, a lot of these team owners have noticed how much better it honestly makes us on Sundays. Anytime when you can go from racing 36 races a year to running 60 races a year and not only running the Cup car, but sprint cars, winged, non-winged, midgets, dirt late model, it makes you a better race car driver.”

As far as his outlook on this week, Briscoe isn’t sure what to expect after running a significantly smaller number of dirt races in 2020 due to his Xfinity Series schedule and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

“I feel like every year you go there, and you want to run good, but with 330 something (entries) and only 24 making it, everything’s gotta go your way,” Briscoe said. “Everything has to go your way, you have to be fast, you gotta have a little bit of luck.

“You show up at Tulsa and you really have to be 110% from the get-go. You can’t struggle with the car. You can’t struggle as a driver. You gotta go because on Monday, you’re going to get four laps for practice and then on your prelim night, you’re going to get another three laps and then you go heat racing, which really determines how your whole week goes.”

Elliott, the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series champion making his first appearance at the event, has used Briscoe to get up to speed in the dirt-racing realm. The No. 9 driver cut his teeth on asphalt short tracks across the southeast where late-model racing is more prevalent than open-wheel dirt racing. He has shown the interest and willingness to learn a new trade with dirt midgets and been a quick study, finishing third and fourth to Briscoe and Larson in a pair of A-Main events at the 1/6-mile Millbridge Speedway near Salisbury, North Carolina, back in December.

RELATED: Elliott impresses in Chili Bowl prep

Briscoe was impressed with not only his gumption to learn something new but also how quickly he was able to adapt to a car so foreign compared to his background. But between the Chili Bowl’s competitive nature and Elliott’s lack of experience, Briscoe also admitted the learning curve for Elliott will be steeper this time around.

“Tulsa is another animal than Millbridge,” Briscoe said. “Regardless, he’s going to have a really good time, a lot of fun and hopefully this will be the first of many years that he’ll come and do it because having a guy that caliber, just the popularity and the recognition he has, to bring that to the Chili Bowl is great for short-track racing, the dirt-racing community and bridge that gap to NASCAR.”

In the past, there was a notion among those in the grassroots racing community that some drivers had forgotten where they came from, maybe not as willing or even unable to take the time to go back and pay respect. It’s the participation of Elliott, Briscoe and other drivers with NASCAR ties in recent years that has shrunk a gap between the highest level of stock-car racing and the grassroots racing that helped elevate them to that level.

NASCAR Hall of Fame driver and three-time champion Tony Stewart initially helped pave that way, finding joy in showing up at a short track when he wasn’t busy with his NASCAR obligations. Stewart competed in sprint-car events across the country throughout his NASCAR career, a passion he still pursues to this day after his retirement. Stewart is also a two-time Chili Bowl Nationals champion, winning in 2002 and 2007.

Now it’s Larson who has taken over the reins and took his participation on dirt tracks across the country and even internationally to new levels. Larson will pilot the new No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet in 2021, and in doing so, he appears to have warmed up to team owner Rick Hendrick enough to let him continue to roam free in other forms of racing.

“I’d say Larson being the first guy that’s really kind of bridged that gap for everybody because he’s so competitive on each side, truthfully, he wins everything on dirt,” Briscoe said. “I think it allows dirt fans to have a lot more reason to watch on Sundays because in the past you really only had Tony, where now you have Larson, you have Christopher Bell, you have myself, you have Tyler Reddick. There’s a lot of people to choose from and root for, you don’t just see them on Sunday. I think the biggest thing that’s bridged that gap is that it’s so much more accessible.”

SPEED SPORT: Daily schedule for Chili Bowl Nationals 

Larson has also played a huge role in helping new Hendrick Motorsports teammate Elliott get up to speed before the Chili Bowl.

“Kyle has been great, he’s been super open and honest talking about midget and dirt racing in general,” Elliott said. “As much as he’s willing to share, I’m certainly going to lean on him at least to help me get going. I’m excited to talk to him and learn some things that might be second nature to him, but that are completely foreign to me.”

While Briscoe grew up racing sprint cars and other forms of dirt competition in Indiana and across the Midwest, he thinks Elliott’s participation has the potential to make even greater strides since it has stemmed from his own initiative.

“That’s the coolest thing,” Briscoe said. “That’s where there’s a lot more respect to be had. … Chase genuinely wants to go run dirt and get better at it. I don’t know how much of that is because of the Cup race (on dirt at Bristol) getting added, but a lot of this was in the works before the schedule got announced, or obviously before he won the championship. He could have easily backed out, but he still wanted to do it. That shows a lot about his character.”

ATTLEBORO, Mass. —  JDV Productions, led by Josh Vanada and his team of experienced professionals in motorsports, will return to grassroots short-track racing to promote three NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour events in 2021.

As part of the tour‘s 37th annual season of competition, which includes a 14-race schedule in six different states, JDV Productions will promote races in three states — Pennsylvania, New York and Maine. Races at Jennerstown Speedway Complex (May 29), Oswego Speedway (June 12) and Beech Ridge Motor Speedway (August 21) will be led by the JDV team.

RELATED: 2021 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Schedule

All three events will be $10,000+ to win for drivers, including the Whelen Winner of the Race bonus award, and each will have a full purse structure throughout the field. JDV is committed to assisting the Whelen Modified Tour group to continue the deep history of NASCAR‘s oldest touring series.

“I‘m glad to be back involved with motorsports and promoting the incredibly talented drivers, car owners and race teams of the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour,” Vanada said. “We‘ve selected three venues steeped in Modified history, with raceable surfaces and eager fans. I‘m looking forward to seeing everyone at Jennerstown, Oswego and Beech Ridge this summer.”

Vanada is no stranger to motorsports promotions. As the former General Manager of Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park, Vanada assisted in coordinating some of New England‘s most historic events — including the Icebreaker weekend and Sunoco World Series of Speedway Racing. Both of those events included the Whelen Modified Tour — along with the annual June and August stops at Thompson during Vanada‘s tenure at the Connecticut oval.

To be announced at a later date, there will be a challenge for competitors who elect to compete in all three tour races promoted by JDV.

“I‘m really excited to have both Oswego and Jennerstown back on the schedule — we ran really well at both tracks and I just really enjoyed both facilities,” two-time Whelen Modified Tour champion Justin Bonsignore said. “I always enjoy seeing new tracks added to the schedule, and look forward to going to Beech Ridge and seeing how we stack up against the competition.”

The tour returns to Jennerstown, a .522-mile asphalt track in Pennsylvania, for a Memorial Day weekend special. In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, Jennerstown hosted the season-opener for the series without fans, won by eventual two-time champion Bonsignore. The track also hosted a second date in August, won by rising star Craig Lutz. It will be the 17th tour race in the history of the oval.

In June, NASCAR‘s Modifieds will return to the “Steel Palace” of Oswego for their first of two dates during the 2021 season. JDV‘s part in the June event marks the earliest the Whelen Modified Tour will visit Oswego during a season in the 12-race history. Last year, there was no tour event at Oswego, with the doors shuttered due to COVID-19. Doug Coby, Ryan Preece, Matt Hirschman and Bonsignore were the four drivers in Victory Lane between 2016-2019.

Beech Ridge Motor Speedway returns to the tour schedule for the first time since 2005 on August 21, bringing rolling thunder back to the NASCAR-sanctioned oval in Maine. Beech Ridge has seen Modifieds through the years, but when the tour rolls into town, fans can expect a tight-quarters racing battle at one of New England‘s oldest venues.

“Josh has a proven track record of producing high-quality, entertaining events for our race fans. He has a passion for promoting events that bring an emphasis on both the racer and fan experience,” Jimmy Wilson, Director of the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour said. “We are looking forward to working together with him and his team to bring the excitement and adrenaline that is the hallmark of the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour. After a year of challenges with the current pandemic, we are proud of the diverse schedule and the opportunity to bring the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour to the variety of legacy and historic tracks on tap this year.”

More information regarding all three events will be released closer to the day of race events. For more information on JDV Promotions, visit https://www.facebook.com/JDVProd.