Ryan Millington came out of the gate swinging, winning six races and leading the national points when they were released for the first time in August.

Even though Millington and his late model team fell off a bit in the final couple of months, he still finished with the highest national points of his career, coming away third in the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series standings.

“We, I‘d say, had the best first half of the season out of everybody,” Millington said. “We just didn‘t really have the manpower and equipment and everything to keep up with them boys. It was still a really good year. We worked hard and made a lot of progress all season long. I‘m just really thankful for the season we had this year.”

Ryan Millington

Millington also won his second track championship at Hickory Motor Speedway in North Carolina. He finished the year with six wins and 20 top-five finishes in 26 starts.

Running for national points for the first time proved to be more stressful than Millington had anticipated. He got a new car for the final four races, which he said kind of threw his team “a little curveball”.

The pace of the season, knowing the team had to be at the top of their game every week, added pressure.

“You can‘t really sit here and think about it too much, you‘ve just go to the track every week and keep racing because it can change in an instant and it definitely did just that,” Millington said. “Points racing is an all year long thing. Just being able to put 14, 18, 20 races together, it‘s really tough. Being able to go out and do that all year long, it takes a lot. That is the stressful part, but you can‘t sit there and be comfortable with where you‘re running until really the points are done at the end of the year.”

Now that Millington has gotten the chance to run for a national championship, he‘s ready to fight again and try to do even better in 2021. He plans to travel around to rack up points at more tracks.

He‘s looking forward to going into next season with everything he and the team learned in 2020.

“I think we‘ll really be able to have an excellent year next year and better this year‘s result,” he said. “Try to be more prepared next year instead of deciding at the last minute to do it. Just having equipment ready is the big thing, so we‘re working hard on that, trying to put a new car together. Just have a better year next year than this year.

“The one thing about finishing third is you‘ve always got progress to get better. We‘ve been working hard the past month. We‘ve been at the track 10 or 15 times just trying to get better, find speed, and really improve on what we learned this year, and I think we‘ve made our stuff better so we‘re just going to keep working all offseason and hopefully chase a national championship next year.”

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A year after winning a national championship, Jacob Goede went into 2020 racing for a repeat.

While early struggles held him back from a second title, Goede was still able to get into the top five, finishing fourth in the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division I standings.

The coronavirus pandemic forced Goede away from Elko Speedway, his home track in Minnesota, for the first few months of the season. Traveling several hours away to La Crosse Speedway in Wisconsin, Goede said he didn‘t run quite as well as he would have hoped to start the year.

“It threw us all for a little bit of a loop,” Goede said of trying to find tracks where he could race this season. “It was a different year, that‘s for sure.”

Once he got back to Elko in August, though, Goede bounced back, winning five races at the track on the way to a seventh straight track title.

In all, Goede had eight wins and 24 top-5 finishes in 32 starts this season between Elko, Lacrosse, and Madison International Speedway in Wisconsin.

“Honestly the season could have went better overall. We missed out on some wins and just didn‘t have the car quite good enough,” Goede said.

“Overall it was a good year…can‘t complain too much, but I always know there is room for improvement.”

Trying to repeat 2019‘s success proved to Goede just how special that season was.

“2019 was super special. I didn‘t ever think it would really be possible to do, so doing that, that was a really amazing year,” he said. “So then trying to repeat it was like, well how do we even top that? We came close, so overall it was good but at the same time I wanted more. Yea, a top five is good, but we want to be in the top three. If we‘re going to work that hard you want to try to make it pay off. We worked hard and did everything we could, but sometimes things just don‘t work out.

We missed it a little bit, we weren‘t quite as good as we needed to be all the time and that‘s what it takes. The guys are good and they racked up an amazing season, so it‘s hard to compete with that. You‘ve got to be on your game and we just missed it a little bit.”

Even though Goede didn‘t finish in the top 3 in the nation like he hoped, he did keep an important streak alive. He won a seventh straight Minnesota NASCAR title.

Adding an eighth title to that streak is at the top of Goede‘s list in 2021.

“It could end at any given time, but we‘re going to enjoy the streak while we can,” he said. “But at the same time I don‘t want to be done yet. I don‘t want the streak to be done quite yet. I would like to get to 10 and then maybe call it quits or something… We‘re going to keep working hard to see if we can make it.”

Goede thanked his sponsors and help for their support this season: Suburban GM Parts and Chevrolet Performance, TJ Exteriors, The Car Lot of New Prague, Getz Trucking, Northern Racing Products, Murgic Racing Engines, HEI Collision, Lefthander Chassis, and Baby Gowdy.

Other than going for a state title, Goede isn‘t sure of his own plans for next season. He does, however, know the plans for the rest of his family. His 8-year-old daughter is wanting to get on the track herself, and he plans to help her in her first season racing quarter midgets.

“That‘ll kind of cut into my racing a little bit, and I‘m okay with that,” he said. “I‘m excited. Probably almost more excited than she is.”

Even though he‘ll be helping his daughter on Sundays, expect to see Goede at his home track of Elko Speedway on Saturdays. He has some streaks to protect.

When it comes to racing for another high finish in the national points, though, he‘ll never say never.

“We get enough races at Elko. If I have a really good season there‘s no reason we can‘t compete for a top-3 in the country again just running closer to home,” he said. “We‘ll see how it plays out, and honestly once it gets down to that August time frame or late July and things are looking good maybe we‘ll try to hit a few more, but we‘ll kind of take it one step at a time.”

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Brian Robie has only been racing for five years, but 2020 was by far the best of his career.

Before this season, Robie had only won one championship in his career. In 2020 he won three.

Robie was the Division I track champion at Claremont, Monadnock, and Hudson Speedways in New Hampshire. He won 10 races — tied for second most among any driver in the top 15 nationally — and had 29 top-five finishes in 31 races on the way to a fifth-place finish in the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division I standings.

Robie and his team started the 2020 season with a lot of uncertainty. They lost two engines in their modified the first race of the season at New Smyrna Speedway in Florida. He then went back home to the north and had to race at Hudson in the first year the track hosted modifieds.

It didn‘t take long to get on the right track though. Once he got back to a routine with weekly racing, Robie said “everything just took off from there.”

“We stayed consistent, we got a couple wins early, and then it was a little while before we got back to Victory Lane. Then it was a bunch at the end of the year, but we stayed consistent.”

It was that consistency that Robie said was the key for his team this season. That and going through the cars over the winter and coming into the season more prepared than in years past.

“The learning curve is still pretty steep, but it seemed like we got a pretty decent handle on what we needed to do to the cars at all three tracks to be consistent and finish up front,” he said.

Robie‘s real goal coming into the season was the New Hampshire state championship, an achievement he won by 16 points. Going for a state title was why he raced so many times at three tracks.

“The state championship, to me, is kind of one of those bigger accomplishments that people can be really proud of. I‘ve seen other guys win it and it was just one of those things I felt like I wanted to accomplish as least once. I wasn‘t necessarily sure if we could do it this year, but the way it turned out it played right into our hands and kind of exceeded expectations.”

It just so happened his strong racing week-to-week helped him find his name near the top of the national points, something that wasn‘t his intention and was a nice surprise.

“It worked out great,” he said. “I was really happy we were up in the top three for most of the year. It was kind of surprising, and certainly a neat thing to see.

“I certainly couldn‘t be happier with the way that all turned out.”

Five years into his racing career, Robie said his team has many accomplishments to be proud of. He knows there are a lot of racers who are in the sport a long time and never reach his level of success.

That doesn‘t mean he‘s satisfied, though.

“I‘m definitely proud of what we‘ve done and what we‘ve accomplished. What makes me feel even better about everything is I feel like we have even more left. I feel like we can do even better,” Robie said.

“It seems like every year we get better. If we can improve even a fraction of what we did from this year to next year we‘ll be in really great shape in general, regardless of where we run.”

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As the slick social media video that Kaulig Racing dropped Tuesday morning indicated, AJ Allmendinger could have alternated weekends in his semi-retirement years either dabbling with his spot stock-car starts or duffing golf balls into the second cut of rough.

Instead, the versatile 38-year-old veteran indicated that the competitive juices still flow on the back nine of his career. He’ll go from part-time duty to a full-season campaign for Matt Kaulig’s operation in 2021.

RELATED: On the Move: Sizing up next season | 2021 Xfinity Series schedule

Two main factors are driving him to return and potentially reinvent his career in NASCAR’s Xfinity tour: The appetite for the national-series title that’s so far eluded him and a sense of belonging with the tight-knit Kaulig group, which will expand to three full-time cars for the first time next year.

“It’s because I really wanted a shot to at least go after a championship. In my NASCAR life, quite honestly, I’ve never been in that position,” said Allmendinger, whose career has been largely spent with teams in either start-up or rebuilding mode. “So I’ve really enjoyed it. That’s it. In a way, it’s rejuvenated me of my love of NASCAR racing and being there. I just truly enjoy being at Kaulig Racing. It was like a fun start in 2019 and then this year, I wanted to keep doing more races because I was enjoying it. So when Matt Kaulig gave me this opportunity, I had to do it.”

Fun is the opposite of where Allmendinger seemed to be in September 2018, rounding out his last season in NASCAR’s Cup Series, 24th in the standings and with his departure from JTG Daugherty Racing looming after a five-year run. Back then, he addressed his future at Charlotte Motor Speedway in a press conference that took on a hushed, almost overwrought sense of loss. “You make it sound like I’m dying up here,” Allmendinger said, laughing to break the tension. “I just don’t have a job right now. That’s not my plan. I’m not leaving.”

Allmendinger never fully left motorsports, quickly finding a position with NBC Sports as part of its sports-car racing coverage team. He then linked up with Kaulig for a five-race slate in 2019 and bulked up his schedule to 11 Xfinity Series events last season. That scattering of races produced three wins, performances that synced up with Kaulig Racing’s rise in the circuit’s pecking order.

RELATED: Kaulig’s roster making waves (July 9)

Multiple trips to Victory Lane helped to stoke Allmendinger’s sense of revival, but so have the bonds he’s forged the last two seasons, starting with leadership from the front office of car owner Kaulig and team president Chris Rice. Allmendinger lauded their ability to encourage, but also their tendency not to sugarcoat expectations, sometimes in brutally honest terms — a “tough love” quality that the veteran driver says he freely returns.

The relationship has such a sense of mutual understanding that each side struck a deal with the other before committing to a full 33-race ride with the No. 16 Chevrolet — Allmendinger making sure that Kaulig’s resources weren’t spread too thin with an expansion to three full-time teams, and Rice making certain that Allmendinger had a way to opt out if a full schedule began to resemble drudgery.

“That’s what he wants me to make sure that every weekend, it’s not a job. This is fun,” Allmendinger said. “… I put all the pressure of the world on my shoulders, no matter whether I believe we truly have a shot to win a race or we don’t, it’s on my shoulders I feel like to try to make us better and to go that next step, so I’m still going to have that to a certain degree, but the fact is that if Chris — and he told me right away — he said if he sees it on my face, if he sees it in my demeanor and my actions, then we don’t need to keep doing this on my side of it, and we can go back to part-time and all that. I made that deal with him, and I’m in a different place in my life and I’m enjoying it.

“Sure, when I get to the race track and strap the helmet on, I’m going to put all the pressure on myself, just like I do in the part-time schedule. But away from it, it’s all about improving.”

Improvement has accompanied growth for Kaulig Racing, which fielded just one full-time Xfinity Series team as recently as 2019. Last season’s maturation to a two-car outfit also included Kaulig’s first venture into the Cup Series — a one-off effort for Justin Haley in the season-opening Daytona 500.

Allmendinger says he’s been involved in “small discussions” about a possible future for Kaulig Racing in NASCAR’s top series, but noted that the team’s most recent goals were focused on landing Jeb Burton for the team’s No. 10 ride, sealing Allmendinger’s full-time status for 2021 and concentrating on Haley’s championship bid in last month’s Xfinity Series finale.

In the shorter term, Allmendinger’s own title pursuit next year will face a powerful returning cast of Xfinity Series contenders, including defending champ Austin Cindric of Team Penske, plus stacked established lineups at JR Motorsports and Joe Gibbs Racing among the worthy challengers.

MORE: Cindric honored as 2020 champion

Allmendinger says he doesn’t expect the pressure he places on himself each race to change, but says he anticipates Kaulig, Rice and his teammates to keep the fun factor going — even if some tough love is involved.

“We know at the end of the day, we have each other’s backs, and it’s not finger-pointing against each other, it’s all going the same direction and that’s ultimately to try to win races and try to win a championship, and that’s what I love about it,” Allmendinger said. “But in the meantime, while we do that, it’s very enjoyable — whether we’re at the race track or at the shop or just hanging out, it’s just very enjoyable. And that’s why I love all the men and women at Kaulig Racing.”

It was a season in which the term “new normal” wore out its welcome, but the 2020 NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series crowned 33 Division I track champions, along with 24 U.S. state and Canadian provincial champions.

There were plenty of repeat names, like Keith Rocco, Erica Thiering and Craig Von Dohren — whose title collection has ranged into double digits. There were former national champions such as Rocco, Peyton Sellers and Jacob Goede who continue to reign at their home tracks.

Rocco etched his name in the NASCAR record book as his fifth SK Modified Division championship at Connecticut’s Stafford Motor Speedway gave him 18 NASCAR Division I titles for his career. The Wallingford, Connecticut, driver, who also made his ARCA Menards Series racing debut in the fall, had been tied with another former national champion, Nebraska’s Joe Kosiski, for the most track titles in NASCAR’s modern weekly series era (1982-present).

That spot belongs to Rocco alone now.

But there were plenty of new names and faces, raising their first NASCAR championships — from teenagers Dean Thompson in California and Cameron Bolin in South Carolina to 63-year-old John Cote in New York.

Brian Robie was the only driver win multiple track titles – claiming the Sportsman Modified championships at New Hampshire’s Claremont Motorsports Park, Hudson Speedway and Monadnock Speedway.

PHOTO GALLERY: 2020 NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division I Champions

Here’s a recap of the 2020 NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division I champions, by state/province:

Stu Laidlaw had eight top fives in all eight starts to edge former champion Tim Workman by four points for the Alaska championship. Laidlaw, from Anchorage, took home the GCI Late Model title at Alaska Raceway Park.

Thiering won her 11th track championship at Edmonton International Raceway, with five wins and nine top fives in nine Super Stock Division races. The Sherwood Park driver also won her 11th provincial crown.

Kole Raz, the 2019 Arizona rookie of the year, took both the Super Late Model championship at Arizona’s Tucson Speedway as well as the state title. The Lake Oswego, Oregon, driver, had five wins, nine top fives and nine top 10s in 10 starts. He won the state title on a tiebreaker (more wins) over Paul Banghart.

Dean Thompson won five of his first eight starts to the season en route to the LKQ Pick Your Parts Late Model title at California’s Irwindale Speedway. The Anaheim Hills teen also won the state championship on the strength of five wins, 13 top fives and 13 top 10s in 14 starts. Another teenager, Cole Moore, earned the Late Model championship at All American Speedway in Roseville. The Granite Bay driver had seven wins, 11 top fives and 12 top 10s in 12 starts.

Eddie Vecchiarelli won his first state title in Colorado, holding off Jonathan Knee, defending track champion Brett Yackey and seven-time state champion Bruce Yackey. Vecchiarelli, from Brighton, had nine wins and 13 top fives in 13 starts to win the Mountain States Fire Protection Super Late Model title at Colorado National Speedway.

Keith Rocco finished ninth in the national standings — the 13th time in the last 14 years he has been in the top 10. He had six wins, 10 top fives and 14 top 10s in 14 races, clinching Stafford’s SK Modified championship with a race remaining in the season. The 2010 national champion has won 12 of the last 13 Connecticut championships. He has won a track title every year but one (2012) since 2007.

Brad May started off the season winning Super Late Model Division of the the World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing at Florida’s New Smyrna Speedway for the first time in his storied career. He finished by taking home his fourth track title at New Smyrna — on a tiebreaker with Michael Atwell — and his fourth Florida crown. The latter mark tied him with the late David Rogers, whose name now adorns the division at New Smyrna.

Eric Rhead collected nine wins, 17 top fives and 20 top 10s in 20 starts to win the ICCU Modified Division championship at Idaho’s Magic Valley Speedway. The North Salt Lake, Utah, driver also won his first Idaho title by beating out defending state champion Zach Webster. Brendan Fries won six times and had 17 top fives in 17 starts to earn the PitstopUSA.com Modified championship at Meridian Speedway.

Mike Beyer and Jon Reynolds Jr. split the honors in Illinois. Beyer had six top fives and 10 top 10s in 10 races to edge Reynolds by four points for the Machesney Park driver’s first state title. Reynolds picked up his third Late Model championship at Rockford Speedway on the strength of two wins, seven top fives and 10 top 10s.

Jesse Dennis had five wins, 11 top fives and 11 top 10s in 12 starts to win the championships for Iowa and the Poet Bio-Refining Modified Division at Adams County Speedway in his home town of Corning for the second straight year.

Defending national champion Jacob Goede rolled off five wins, 13 top fives and 17 top 10s in 18 races at Elko Speedway to win his seventh straight Late Model title at Elko. The Carver driver also extended his record with a seventh straight Minnesota crown.

Ben Schaller had a win, five top fives and six top 10s in six races at I-80 Speedway in Omaha, Nebraska, to win the Super Late Model championship. The dirt track veteran from Norfolk, also added a state championship to go with the one he won in 2016.

Brian Robie rolled in New Hampshire, piling up 10 wins, 29 top fives and 10 top 10s in 31 starts en route to Sportsman Modified titles at Claremont Motorsports Park, Hudson Speedway and Monadnock Speedway. The Sunapee driver also won the state title. Frankie Eldredge claimed the Rodfather Late Model Sportsman title at Lee USA Speedway. The Portsmouth driver had 10 wins and 11 top fives in 11 races.

Tom Rogers Jr. won his fifth track title at Riverhead Raceway and finally earned his first New York championship. The Modified driver had three wins, 10 top fives and 11 top 10s in 12 starts and edged Dylan Slepian by just six points for the state honors. John Cote, who has more than 100 feature wins on the dirt at Bethel Motor Speedway, added three more wins and 13 top fives in 13 starts. The New Milford, Connecticut, driver, has multiple Bethel championships over the years and won his first NASCAR title.

Josh Berry won the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series national title thanks to his success in North Carolina. He won 19 of his 22 races in the Tar Heel State, adding 27 top fives in 27 starts between Southern National Raceway Park in Kenly and Hickory Motor Speedway. A 2012 track champion at Virginia’s Motor Mile and 2017 champion at Hickory, the Statesville driver added his first NASCAR state title to his resume. Ryan Millington used six wins, 20 top fives and 21 top 10s in 23 starts to win the Late Model Stock Car title at Hickory. The Washington driver also won the Hickory championship in 2017, when he became the youngest champion in track history. Mason Diaz took his second track title at Southern National, with a win and 12 top fives in 12 races. The Manassas driver also won the title at his home track in 2017.

Like Illinois, Oklahoma had split champions. Greg Skaggs had four top five finishes and eight top 10s in 13 starts to win the Lakeland Real Estate NE OK Modified champion at Salina Highbanks Speedway. The Broken Arrow driver edged Jared Russell by 18 points. Russell, though, won his first state title with three wins, 10 top fives in 12 starts.

Brody Montgomery used two wins and 12 top fives in 12 starts to sweep the America’s Mattress Super Late Model Division at Coos Bay Speedway and the Oregon championships. The Brandon driver also won the state title in 2018.

Craig Von Dohren had two wins, 10 top fives and 13 top 10s in 14 starts in the TP Trailers Modified Division at Grandview Speedway in Bechtesville, Pennsylvania. It was enough to give Von Dohren his 11th track championship at Grandview and his fifth state title. The Oley driver won the latter by just four points over five-time track champion Duane Howard.

Sam Yarborough and Cameron Bolin won track honors, while Will Burns took the big prize in South Carolina. Yarborough had six wins in seven races in winning his sixth title at his home town track, Myrtle Beach Speedway, in the track’s final year. Bolin had three wins, 15 top fives and 17 top 10s in 17 races at Greenville Pickens Speedway as the Sharon, North Carolina, driver added his name to the wall of champions at the historic track. Burns, the 2017 Greenville champion, from Simpsonville, had three wins, 11 top fives and 12 top 10s in 13 starts between Greenville and Myrtle Beach.

Kres Van Dyke had a record-breaking year at Kingsport Speedway. The 40-year-old Abingdon driver closed the year with 15 straight wins. He easily won the Late Model Stock Car championship at Kingsport and his fourth Tennessee title.

Jake Wright celebrated Houston Motorsports Park’s return to NASCAR with the Advance Auto Parts Pro Truck Series championship. The Waxahachie driver had four wins and top fives in all seven races to also win the Texas title.

Former national champion Peyton Sellers has five track titles at South Boston Speedway. The Danville driver turned his attention to another Virginia track, winning 10 times and picking up 24 top fives and top 10s in 25 stars at Dominion Speedway for the track and state championships. Brendan Queen won the year’s biggest event at Langley Speedway, the Hampton Heat, and then closed out the Taylor Waste Services Late Model Stock Car championship with a win, 14 top fives and 15 top 10s in 15 races.

Daniel Moore and Tyson Lang split trophies in Washington. Both had a win and six top fives in six races at Evergreen Speedway. Moore won the state title by six points over Lang. Lang, the son of five-time track Naima Lang, won his first Speedway Chevrolet Pro Late Model championship by 16 points over Moore and Dario Retych.

Nick Murgic has won plenty over his career, including the Dick Trickle 99 Super Late Model race at LaCrosse Fairgrounds Speedway last year. The son of former NASCAR regional series champion Steve Murgic, Nick had three wins, 14 top fives and 17 top 10s in 18 starts at Lacrosse to take the Kwik Trip Late Model championship over multi-time champion Steve Carlson. Nick Murgic also won his first Wisconsin title.

 

 

 

Kaulig Racing announced Tuesday that AJ Allmendinger will return to full-time competition in the NASCAR Xfinity Series next season, driving the No. 16 Chevrolet in all 33 races.

The move brings the Matt Kaulig-owned organization up to three full-time entries in the Xfinity Series. Allmendinger, 38, joins fellow full-timer Justin Haley and newcomer Jeb Burton on the team’s driver roster for next year.

RELATED: Key figures in Silly Season | 2021 Xfinity Series schedule

Allmendinger indicated in a video posted from his social-media accounts Sunday he would return to Kaulig Racing in 2021 but said he didn’t have “a set schedule next year” for his driving workload. The campaign will mark Allmendinger’s first full NASCAR season since 2018, when he competed in the Cup Series for JTG-Daugherty Racing.

“As a part-time driver for Kaulig Racing in the Xfinity series, I have really enjoyed working with all the women and men in the organization these past two years,” Allmendinger said in a statement provided by the team. “The love of showing up to NASCAR races has returned for me, and I truly have enjoyed myself on and off the race track. It starts with Matt Kaulig and (team president) Chris Rice. I can’t thank them enough for giving me a call at the start of 2019 and offering me races that continued into 2020.

Sean Gardner | Getty Images
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

“More than anything, I have really loved being part of the team and watching the growth of the organization, and because of that, the opportunity to come back full time in 2021 was something I just could not pass up.”

Allmendinger won twice in Kaulig equipment last season, competing in 11 events — an increase from his five-race slate for the team in 2019. Those victories included his first national-series victory on an oval track as he prevailed at Atlanta Motor Speedway in June, then a repeat triumph in his road-racing wheelhouse on the soggy Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval in October.

“Having AJ race full time for Kaulig Racing will only elevate our program to another level,” said Rice, who has been team president of Kaulig Racing since February 2019. “I truly believe his veteran experience has helped us in every race he has ever run with us, and that is evident in his finishes. I’m sure he will complement our other two great drivers we already have, as he’s been a great teammate since day one. I love the challenge in front of us to go after the championship in 2021 with all three of our drivers.”

Kaulig Racing started as a single-car operation in 2016 and grew to two full-time entries last season. Allmendinger has produced three of Kaulig Racing’s seven Xfinity Series wins, with Justin Haley (three wins) and Ross Chastain (one win) scoring the others.

Kaulig Racing indicated sponsorship for Allmendinger’s No. 16 Chevrolet would be announced at a later date.

DARLINGTON, S.C. — Seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson is the winner of the 2020 National Motorsports Press Association’s Myers Brothers Award, the NMPA announced Tuesday.

Presented annually since 1958, the award, named in honor of former NASCAR competitors Billy and Bobby Myers, recognizes individuals and/or groups who have provided outstanding contributions to the sport of stock car racing. Each year, the NMPA Myers Brothers Award winner is selected by a vote of the NMPA membership.

“What an honor!” Johnson said when he learned of the award. “The Myers Brothers have been such a big part of this sport. Every year as I sat through the luncheon at the banquet, I was always so proud of the winners of this award, and to be the recipient of the 2020 award truly humbles me.

“I’m so proud and thankful and appreciate those who voted. What a great surprise.”

As he retires from his role as a full-time driver for Hendrick Motorsports, Johnson also leaves behind a legacy that includes a record-tying seven Cup titles and 83 victories in NASCAR’s premier series, tied with Cale Yarborough for sixth on the all-time list.

But Johnson will be remembered equally for his consummate grace under the intense pressure of competition, his friendly and accommodating manner and his engagement with the communities he has called home through the charitable works of the Jimmie Johnson Foundation.

“I think the thing about Jimmie through all that, he’s the same Jimmie Johnson,” team owner Rick Hendrick said when asked to reflect on Johnson’s 20-year career. “Never a cross word with him. Never asked him to do anything that he didn’t do.

“He’s just a guy, never hear him say anything about anybody else. He’s as close to perfect as you can get to be a competitor that can do what he can do on the race track. Just a super individual.”

Myers Brothers Award Winners

2019, Darrell Waltrip; 2018, Jim France; 2017, Martin Truex Jr., Sherry Pollex; 2016, Betty Jane France; 2015, Darlington Raceway; 2014, Dale Earnhardt Jr.; 2013, Tony Stewart; 2012, Jeff Gordon; 2011, Drs. Joseph & Rose Mattioli; 2010, Jim Hunter; 2009, Barney Hall; 2008, T. Taylor Warren;

2007, Bill France Jr.; 2006, Benny Parsons; 2005, Rusty Wallace; 2004, Kyle and Patti Petty; 2003, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.; 2002, Mike Helton; 2001, Dale Earnhardt; 2000, Kyle Petty; 1999, Junie Donlavey; 1998, T. Wayne Robertson; 1997, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.; 1996, Rick Hendrick; 1995, TNN: The Nashville Network;

1994, Brickyard 400/Indianapolis Motor Speedway; 1993, Goody’s Manufacturing Co.; 1992, Richard and Lynda Petty; 1991, Harry Gant; 1990. Dick Beaty; 1989, Bill France Jr.; 1988 Richmond International Raceway; 1987, ESPN; 1986, Hayride 500; 1985, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.; 1984, Charlotte Motor Speedway;

1983, CBS-TV; 1982, MRN; 1981, Junior Johnson; 1980, STP & Champion Spark Plug Co.; 1979, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.; 1978, Busch Beer; 1977, First National City Travelers Checks; 1976, Junior Johnson; 1975, Bill France Sr.; 1974, H. Clay Earles; 1973, Wood Brothers;

1972, Winston Cigarettes; 1971, Richard Petty; 1970, Richard Howard; 1969, David Pearson; 1968, Wood Brothers; 1967, Richard Petty; 1966, Norris Friel; 1965, Ned Jarrett; 1964, Richard Petty; 1963, Marvin Panch; 1962, Hank Schoolfield; 1961, Ned Jarrett; 1960, Russ Catlin; 1959, Lee Petty; 1958, Bob Colvin.

Name: Darin
Current City: Marlton, New Jersey
Member Since: 2018

Getting to KNOW DARIN:
Q.  How did you first become interested in NASCAR?
“A coworker asked me to join a NASCAR fantasy league before the ’04 season. I knew practically nothing about NASCAR except while growing up my stepdad used to listen to it on the radio. I joined anyway and the coworker told me to that to really get into it you need to pick a driver. So, I went through them all and found Ryan Newman; same birthday month and year, engineer like me, drove the #12 … sold.  Then I went to my first race in Dover (Delaware) in September of ’04 and Ryan Newman won! I’ve been hooked ever since.”

Q. What is your favorite part about NASCAR?
“I love the track atmosphere! From traveling to the different tracks (I’ve been to 12 different ones), tailgating, walking around the merch trailers, the various other festivities, and watching the races; this sport cannot be beat. The smell of the grills and the cars doesn’t hurt, either. My goal is to visit all of the tracks, eventually.”

Q: What is your favorite NASCAR memory?
“My favorite memory is meeting Ryan Newman, and many other drivers, at Darlington in 2018. I had garage passes and there was a rain delay so the drivers were walking around the garage and I got a bunch of pictures and autographs. Great time!”

Q: Do you have a favorite in any of the following categories?
Current driver: “Ryan Newman.”
Up-and-coming driver: “Ryan Preece.”
Track: “Talladega Superspeedway.”
OEM: “Ford.”

Q. What do you like to do in your free time?
“Travel (before Covid-19), go to the 4×4 beach in Brigantine, New Jersey, live life, and give back to others.”

FROM ALL OF US AT NASCAR, WE THANK DARIN FOR HIS CONTINUED SUPPORT AND LOOK FORWARD TO HEARING FROM HIM IN 2021!

Look for Darin on the Official NASCAR Fan Council page on NASCAR.COM.

At one point this summer, Sam Butler was watching a Facebook Live video with media members and who they would consider the “Big 3” drivers at Hickory Motor Speedway.

Two of the three were obvious choices. Josh Berry went on to win the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division I national championship, and Ryan Millington finished third while also winning the late model track championship.

The other driver in the Big 3 though came as a surprise to 16-year-old Butler. It was his name in that conversation.

In his first year in a late model, Butler proved to be a force to be reckoned with at Hickory, finishing third in the track‘s late model points and seventh in the national Division I points. His three wins and 13 top fives in 23 starts were enough to help Butler to a Jostens Division I Rookie of the Year and UNOH Youth Achievement Award, given annually to the top driver in the country under the age of 16.

Butler made a weekly 10-hour trip from his Indiana home to Hickory, North Carolina this season to race against the top competition in the country. His goal at the beginning of the season was to just win rookie of the year at the track, but there was a point about midway through the summer when he started to dream a little bigger.

“We started running up front with Josh Berry and Ryan Millington, and I was like, wow, I would have never thought coming into this year I would be running with them ahead of everybody else. It was just kind of an insane thing that I couldn‘t really wrap my head around until the end of the year,” Butler said.

Butler has been driving for about eight years, starting out in a quarter midget then moving on to a legends car. He‘s the first in his family to giving racing a try.

“I‘ve always been into cars since I was little, but never really understood why,” he said. “It was kind of weird growing up just liking cars. I was trying to get into basketball and football and everything but it didn‘t click with me, but I saw the bandolero on TV and I was like, ‘I want to do that.‘ And my dad looked up racing around me and we found quarter-midgets.”

Butler is used to traveling the country to race, having gone to Arizona and Las Vegas in previous years, so the trips to Hickory weren‘t too far out of his comfort zone. For him, the traveling was so he could learn the ropes in a late model at one of the toughest short tracks on the East Coast.

“It was definitely a learning curve, especially saving tires and everything because you have such a bigger car with a bigger tires that can get hot a lot faster. It‘s a lot different from the previous car I drove. These kind of just float in, they kind of drive themselves honestly. It‘s more of a mental learning curve with the late model because of all the laps you have to drive and the tires you have to save.”

Butler said he and his team didn‘t start the year as well as they finished, but he learned a lot from the late model veterans he raced against. He talks to Millington on a daily basis, and would watch him and Berry during practices and races.

“It was a lot easier to learn the track when you have two really good drivers to work off of,” Butler said. “Ryan and Josh, I would talk to them between practices and qualifying and just kind of ask them what they‘re doing, how‘s their car, what do you think I have to do to improve, stuff like that. Especially just being in the car during the feature, if I can‘t figure something out then I‘ll probably just kind of look ahead and see what Josh is doing and try to learn from what he‘s doing, or Ryan. They definitely helped a lot.”

Finding success and gaining national recognition gives Butler confidence as he moves into 2021.

He‘ll stay in the same car with his team, including car owner Zach Bruenger, crew chief Steven Civitarese, and crew members Zach McDaniels and Zach Wyatt, racing with PRW Chassis and Triple R Racing.

“They‘ve done an outstanding job for me this year,” Butler said of his team. “They‘ve worked their butts off. I was down there for three weeks and how much work they put into my car was insane so I would just like to thank them a lot.

“Coming into next year I feel like we have a really good car and I have a really good team to do it with. Unlike other years, I have a lot of confidence going into this next year. I feel like we‘ll be able to run up front and be competitive.”

From a young kid watching racing on TV to doing it himself, Butler plans to be in the sport for a long time to come.

“It‘s mind-boggling for me just to think that a few years ago I was just racing for fun and racing with my buddies that I still have today, and now I‘m racing and NASCAR is calling me,” Butler said. “I would have never thought that. It‘s so hard to put it in words. It‘s just been a huge part of my life and truly I don‘t think I could live without it.”

Corey LaJoie will drive the No. 7 Chevrolet for Spire Motorsports in a multi-year agreement for the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series season, the driver announced on his “Sunday Money” podcast on Monday.

Previously, LaJoie competed in two full-time seasons driving the No. 32 Ford for Go Fas Racing. On Aug. 21, LaJoie announced he would not return to the organization, and in October, Go Fas Racing revealed it would scale back to a part-time operation next season.

RELATED: Corey LaJoie driver page | Silly Season news

Spire Motorsports agreed to purchase assets from Leavine Family Racing for the No. 7 team and will move into the former organization’s old shop. Spire will announce the driver of their second full-time entry, the No. 77 Chevrolet, at a later date.

LaJoie earned three top-10 results for Go Fas Racing, including a sixth place at Daytona International Speedway and seventh place at Talladega Superspeedway in 2019. In 2020, LaJoie kicked off the season with an eighth-place finish in the Daytona 500. LaJoie has 129 career Cup Series starts.

LaJoie has made “stacking pennies” a personal mantra for overachieving in Go Fas equipment. Spire Motorsports owns one Cup Series victory with Justin Haley in the 2019 Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona.

LaJoie, who finished the 2020 season 30th in the Cup Series standings, is the son of two-time Xfinity Series champion Randy LaJoie.