DARLINGTON, S.C. (Dec. 11, 2020) – As Darlington Raceway will host two scheduled NASCAR Cup Series race weekends for the first time since 2004, the award-winning Official Throwback Weekend of NASCAR will move to the new spring race weekend, May 7-9, 2021, and the famed Southern 500® will continue to launch the NASCAR Playoffs over Labor Day Weekend, Sept. 4-5, 2021.

“Darlington Raceway is grateful to our loyal race fans and the entire industry for their unwavering support for the Official Throwback Weekend of NASCAR since its inception in 2015,” said Darlington President Kerry Tharp. “It is this support that allows us to now prepare for two scheduled NASCAR Cup Series race weekends next year. As we rally around the return of our new spring race weekend, we will continue to share the history and tradition of our great sport with the Official Throwback Weekend of NASCAR.”

RELATED: 2021 Cup Series schedule | 2020 Darlington paint schemes

With the Official Throwback Weekend of NASCAR moving to its new dedicated weekend, The Lady in Black will unite generations of race fans to celebrate on Mother’s Day as part of a memorable weekend of action-packed racing featuring all three premier series.

Darlington first hosted Cup races in May in 1952, 1960-1965, 1967-1971 and 2005-2013. This year the track hosted three Cup Series races, including two in May, as part of NASCAR’s revised schedule on account of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Tradition Continues as the famed Southern 500® will launch the NASCAR Playoffs for the second consecutive year. The NASCAR Cup Series Playoff race will run once again on Sunday night of Labor Day weekend. The heated competition to start the NASCAR Playoffs has never been more dramatic than under the lights in one of the sport’s marquee events, the Southern 500®.

Darlington first hosted the Southern 500® Cup race on Labor Day weekend on Sept. 4, 1950. The track added the NASCAR Convertible Series to its spring schedule in 1957-59; the series eventually became a part of the Cup Series. From 1960 to 2004, Darlington annually hosted two Cup Series race weekends – one in the spring and one on Labor Day weekend. In 2015, the Southern 500® returned to its traditional date on Labor Day weekend.

To learn more about the Official Throwback Weekend of NASCAR, visit darlingtonraceway.com/throwback.

NASCAR announced on Friday the 2021 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour calendar, and the slate includes 14 races across six states – from Maine to Virginia.

The schedule is a mix of historic Modified staples, the return of a pair of tracks and an inaugural trip to an upstate New York venue.

The 2021 season will open at Martinsville Speedway on Thursday, April 8, as part of the NASCAR Cup Series weekend. It will conclude with the traditional Fall Final race weekend at Connecticut’s Stafford Motor Speedway.

The NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour will also race on the national series weekends at Virginia’s Richmond Raceway on Sept. 10 and New Hampshire Motor Speedway on July 17.

RELATED: Whelen Modified Tour To Visit Martinsville and Richmond In 2021

Stafford, which has hosted 132 races for the tour since tour began in 1985, will have three dates, including the season races of the season as part of its annual Spring Sizzler weekend.

RELATED: Stafford Motor Speedway 2021 Schedule Includes Three Tour Dates

The tour will also visit Riverhead Raceway on Long Island three times: May 15, June 19 and Sept. 18. The quarter-mile bullring has hosted 64 tour races since 1985 but was unable to in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

In addition to the tour’s first race at New York International Raceway in Lancaster, New York, on July 31, upstate New York will see a pair of races at Oswego Speedway — on June 12 and Sept. 4.

Beech Ridge Motor Speedway in Scarborough, Maine, will have a tour race for the first time since 2005 with an Aug. 21 races. The tour has run at the third-mile oval, a long-time part of the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series, five times between 1995-2005. Jerry Marquis won the most recent race there.

Pennsylvania’s Jennerstown Speedway, which returned to the schedule last year and had two events, will bring the tour back on May 29.

2021 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Schedule

Date Venue Location Laps Size
Thursday, April 8 Martinsville Speedway Martinsville, VA 200 0.533
Sunday, April 25 Stafford Motor Speedway Stafford, CT 150 0.5
Saturday, May 15 Riverhead Raceway Riverhead, NY 200 0.25
Saturday, May 29 Jennerstown Speedway Jennerstown, PA 150 0.522
Saturday, June 12 Oswego Speedway Oswego, NY 150 0.675
Saturday, June 19 Riverhead Raceway Riverhead, NY 200 0.25
Saturday, July 17 New Hampshire Motor Speedway Loudon, NH 100 1.058
Saturday, July 31 New York International Raceway Lancaster, NY 150 0.5
Friday, Aug. 6 Stafford Motor Speedway Stafford, CT 150 0.5
Saturday, Aug. 21 Beech Ridge Motor Speedway Scarborough, ME 200 0.333
Saturday, Sept. 4 Oswego Speedway Oswego, NY 150 0.625
Friday, Sept. 10 Richmond Raceway Richmond, VA 150 0.75
Saturday, Sept. 18 Riverhead Raceway Riverhead, NY 200 0.25
Sunday, Sept. 26 Stafford Motor Speedway Stafford, CT 150 0.5

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Dec. 10, 2020) – NASCAR, in collaboration with FOX Sports and NBC Sports, today announced 2021 race start times and networks for the NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR Xfinity Series and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series seasons.

Twenty-three total races will air on FOX and NBC this year, a two-race increase over 2020. Eleven of those will air on FOX, including the first seven NASCAR Cup Series races of the season beginning with the DAYTONA 500 (Sunday, Feb. 14, 2:30 p.m. ET). The first premier series race on dirt since 1970 will also air live on FOX when the Cup Series rolls into Bristol Motor Speedway (Sunday, March 28, 3:30 p.m. ET).

RELATED: On the Move — All the changes for 2021

Another 12 races will air on NBC, including the debut of the NASCAR Cup Series at Road America (Sunday, July 4, 2:30 p.m. ET). The NASCAR Cup Series Championship from Phoenix Raceway (Sunday, Nov. 7, 3 p.m. ET) highlights five NASCAR Cup Series playoff races airing on NBC.

Five NASCAR Xfinity Series tilts will air live on broadcast television in 2021, highlighted by the series’ first visit of the season to Talladega Superspeedway (Saturday, Apr. 24, 4 p.m. ET, FOX) and three consecutive playoff races: the Charlotte Roval (Saturday, Oct. 9, 3 p.m. ET, NBC), Texas Motor Speedway (Saturday, Oct. 16, 3 p.m. ET, NBC) and Kansas Speedway (Saturday, Oct. 23, 3 p.m. ET, NBC).

Martinsville Speedway will host a pair of primetime events in the spring with both the NASCAR Xfinity Series (Apr. 9, 8 p.m. ET, FS1) and NASCAR Cup Series (April 10, 7:30 p.m. ET, FS1) taking the green flag under the lights on consecutive evenings.

2021 SCHEDULES: NASCAR Cup Series | Xfinity Series | Camping World Truck Series 

The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series will be primetime viewing 13 times in 2021, highlighted by the first-ever NASCAR race on the dirt at Knoxville Raceway on Friday, July 9 (9 p.m. ET, FS1).

Additionally, the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and NASCAR Xfinity Series will take part in six Saturday day-night twin bills, including Atlanta Motor Speedway (March 20, 2:30 and 5 p.m. ET, FS1), COTA (May 22, 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. ET, FS1) and the penultimate playoff races in both series at Martinsville (Oct. 30, 1 p.m. ET on FS1 and 6 p.m. ET on NBCSN, respectively). A Saturday Camping World Truck Series and Xfinity Series double dip in Texas (June 12, 1 and 4 p.m. ET, FS1) will set the stage for FOX Sports’ NASCAR Cup Series finale, which will be the debut of All-Star festivities under the lights at Texas Motor Speedway (Sunday, June 13, 6 p.m. ET, FS1).

Finally, CNBC will be home to the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Watkins Glen International (Saturday, Aug. 7, 4 p.m. ET) as NBC Sports wraps up its coverage of the 2021 Olympics.

Complete times and network schedules for all three national series are below. All times eastern and schedule subject to change.

2021 NASCAR Cup Series Schedule

Date Location Network Start Time Radio
Tuesday, Feb. 9 Clash (Daytona Road Course) FS1 7:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Thursday, Feb. 11 Duel at Daytona FS1 7:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, Feb. 14 DAYTONA 500 FOX 2:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, Feb. 21 Daytona Road Course FOX 3:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, Feb. 28 Homestead-Miami FOX 3:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, March 7 Las Vegas FOX 3:30 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, March 14 Phoenix FOX 3:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, March 21 Atlanta FOX 3:00 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, March 28 Bristol Dirt FOX 3:30 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, April 10 Martinsville FS1 7:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, April 18 Richmond FOX 3:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, April 25 Talladega FOX 2:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, May 2 Kansas FS1 3:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, May 9 Darlington FS1 3:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, May 16 Dover FS1 2:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, May 23 COTA FS1 2:30 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, May 30 Charlotte FOX 6:00 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, June 6 Sonoma FS1 4:00 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, June 13 All-Star Open (Texas) FS1 6:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, June 13 All-Star (Texas) FS1 8:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, June 20 Nashville Superspeedway NBCSN 3:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, June 26 Pocono NBCSN 3:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, June 27 Pocono NBCSN 3:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, July 4 Road America NBC 2:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, July 11 Atlanta NBCSN 3:30 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, July 18 New Hampshire NBCSN 3:00 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, August 8 Watkins Glen NBCSN 3:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, August 15 Indianapolis Road Course NBC 1:00 p.m. IMS/SiriusXM
Sunday, August 22 Michigan NBCSN 3:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, August 28 Daytona NBC 7:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, Sept. 5 Darlington NBCSN 6:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, Sept. 11 Richmond NBCSN 7:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, Sept. 18 Bristol NBCSN 7:30 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, Sept. 26 Las Vegas NBCSN 7:00 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, Oct. 3 Talladega NBC 2:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, Oct. 10 Charlotte Roval NBC 2:00 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, Oct., 17 Texas NBC 2:00 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, Oct. 24 Kansas NBCSN 3:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, Oct. 31 Martinsville NBC 2:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, Nov. 7 Phoenix NBC 3:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM

2021 NASCAR Xfinity Series Schedule

Date Location Network Start Time Radio
Saturday, Feb. 13 Daytona FS1 5:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, Feb. 20 Daytona Road Course FS1 5:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, Feb. 27 Homestead-Miami FS1 4:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, March 6 Las Vegas FS1 4:30 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, March 13 Phoenix FS1 5:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, March 20 Atlanta FS1 5:00 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Friday, April 9 Martinsville FS1 8:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, April 24 Talladega FOX 4:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, May 8 Darlington FS1 1:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, May 15 Dover FS1 1:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, May 22 COTA FS1 4:00 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, May 29 Charlotte FS1 1:00 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, June 5 Mid-Ohio FS1 1:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, June 12 Texas FS1 4:00 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, June 19 Nashville Superspeedway NBCSN 3:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, June 27 Pocono NBCSN Noon MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, July 3 Road America NBC 2:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, July 10 Atlanta NBCSN 3:00 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, July 17 New Hampshire NBCSN 3:00 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, August 7 Watkins Glen CNBC 4:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, August 14 Indianapolis Road Course NBCSN 4:00 p.m. IMS/SiriusXM
Saturday, August 21 Michigan NBCSN 3:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Friday, August 27 Daytona NBCSN 7:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, Sept. 4 Darlington NBCSN 3:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, Sept. 11 Richmond NBCSN 2:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Friday, Sept. 17 Bristol NBCSN 7:30 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, Sept. 25 Las Vegas NBCSN 7:30 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, Oct. 2 Talladega NBCSN 4:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, Oct. 9 Charlotte Roval NBC 3:00 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, Oct. 16 Texas NBC 3:00 p.m. PRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, Oct. 23 Kansas NBC 3:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, Oct. 30 Martinsville NBCSN 6:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, Nov. 6 Phoenix NBCSN 8:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM

2021 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Schedule

Date Location Network Start Time Radio
Friday, Feb. 12 Daytona FS1 7:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Friday, Feb. 19 Daytona Road Course FS1 7:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Friday, March 5 Las Vegas FS1 9:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, March 20 Atlanta FS1 2:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, March 27 Bristol Dirt FS1 8:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, April 17 Richmond FS1 1:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, May 1 Kansas FS1 7:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Friday, May 7 Darlington FS1 7:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, May 22 COTA FS1 1:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Friday, May 28 Charlotte FS1 8:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, June 12 Texas FS1 1:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Friday, June 18 Nashville Superspeedway FS1 8:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, June 26 Pocono FS1 Noon MRN/SiriusXM
Friday, July 9 Knoxville (IA) FS1 9:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, August 7 Watkins Glen FS1 12:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Friday, August 20 World Wide Technology Raceway FS1 9:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Sunday, Sept. 5 Canadian Tire Motorsports Park FS1 1:30 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Thursday, Sept. 16 Bristol FS1 9:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Friday, Sept. 24 Las Vegas FS1 9:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, Oct. 2 Talladega FS1 1:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Saturday, Oct. 30 Martinsville FS1 1:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM
Friday, Nov. 5 Phoenix FS1 8:00 p.m. MRN/SiriusXM

Stewart-Haas Racing announced Thursday that Riley Herbst will drive its No. 98 Ford full-time in the NASCAR Xfinity Series in 2021.

Herbst, 21, moves to SHR and a Ford affiliation after being a part of Joe Gibbs Racing’s development program with Toyota in recent years. Stewart-Haas Racing indicated that Monster Energy would be Herbst’s sponsor for a majority of the 33-race schedule and that Richard Boswell would remain the No. 98 team’s crew chief.

RELATED: On the move: Changes for 2021

Herbst replaces Chase Briscoe, who drove the No. 98 ride to a series-best nine victories and a Championship 4 berth last season. Briscoe is bound for his rookie season in the NASCAR Cup Series next year in Stewart-Haas’ No. 14 Ford. He succeeds Clint Bowyer, who retired from full-time competition to join the FOX Sports broadcast team next season.

2020 Dec10 Riley Herbst Main Image
Stewart-Haas Racing

“Being on a team with such a strong run of success is the kind of opportunity every driver wants,” Herbst said in a team release. “Expectations are definitely high, but the highest expectations are the ones I’ve set for myself. I’m proud to be a part of Stewart-Haas Racing and I can’t wait to climb into that No. 98 Monster Energy Ford Mustang next year.”

Herbst rose to NASCAR’s national ranks through a mix of go-karting, off-road racing, Legends Cars and eventually Super Late Model competition. He gained He has two victories in the ARCA Menards Series, the most recent of which came last season at Michigan International Speedway.

MORE: 2021 Xfinity Series schedule

After two partial seasons, Herbst’s first full Xfinity Series campaign came in 2020, when he totaled four top-five finishes in Coach Joe Gibbs’ No. 18 Toyota. He qualified for the Xfinity Series Playoffs, but exited after the opening Round of 12.

“Riley has really just scratched the surface of his potential,” said Greg Zipadelli, SHR’s vice president of competition. Zipadelli added that Herbst’s development reminded him of the growth of both Briscoe and Cole Custer, who graduated from Xfinity success to the Cup Series with the organization. “Riley has the talent to emulate what Cole and Chase did in our equipment and we’re going into 2021 with the expectation that we’ll celebrate his first Xfinity Series win together.”

Said SHR co-owner Tony Stewart: “We built the Xfinity Series program to develop talent and ultimately win with that talent. It’s a proven path to the NASCAR Cup Series, and we feel that Riley has the ability to win and grow within our race team.”

What better way to bond than over a common cause.

QqusfczgAlex Bowman is set to be the new driver of the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet in 2021. With that comes not only Ally’s sponsorship but also its partnership. The two must work together on and off the track.

RELATED: Alex Bowman to take over No. 48 in 2021

As their charitable first act together, Ally is donating $75,000 to the Humane Society of Charlotte, the financial services company announced Thursday.

“My dog, Roscoe, is a rescue that I adopted in 2013 and he has been with me ever since,” Bowman said. “Anything to do with animals hits home for me, no matter what it is. Being at the Humane Society of Charlotte last week was really eye-opening when it came to everything they do to help animals in our community.”

Bowman has two dogs. In addition to Roscoe, he has another dog named Finn. Both make frequent appearances on Bowman’s social-media accounts.

Roscoe and Finn were actually spotlighted multiple times during NASCAR’s COVID-19 pause, as Bowman raced in the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series. Bowman jokingly blamed any of his own iRacing woes on the dogs.

“As a fellow dog lover with a pack of three rescue pups at home, I was thrilled to learn that Alex shares my passion for animal welfare,” said Andrea Brimmer, Ally’s chief marketing and public relations officer. “Our donation kicks off our relationship with Alex by being strong advocates for improving the well-being of all of our loved ones, including pets.”

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The Humane Society expects to rescue and transfer more than 600 animals into its shelter in the next two months. Ally’s donation will allow the Humane Society to take in more animals from local transport partners, including those with special medical or behavior needs.

It’s just the first act of kindness from Bowman and Ally.

Bowman is replacing seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson, who retired from full-time racing at the end of the 2020 season. Johnson and Ally originally joined forces in October 2018, signing a two-year deal. That contract was then extended into a three-year gig in October 2019, keeping Ally on the No. 48 through the 2023 season.

When Bowman was announced as the new driver, Ally backed him.

“Having a partner like Ally that supports local charities, foundations, businesses, and even more is amazing,” Bowman said. “Ally’s donation will truly help the Humane Society of Charlotte and help save animals in Charlotte and the surrounding communities.”

WELCOME, N.C. (Dec. 10, 2020) — TaxSlayer, a leading online professional tax and financial company, will continue its partnership with Richard Childress Racing and Myatt Snider in the 2021 NASCAR Xfinity Series. The second-year RCR driver will compete full time in the No. 2 TaxSlayer Chevrolet Camaro with returning crew chief Andy Street.

“We’re excited to continue our partnership with Myatt Snider and Richard Childress Racing to engage NASCAR fans across America,” TaxSlayer President and CEO Brian Rhodes said. “It’s our goal to provide taxpayers with a high-quality, low-cost tax prep option so that they can file quickly and get back to the things they enjoy like watching NASCAR. We have been impressed with Myatt Snider both on and off the track and look forward to continuing our success in 2021.”

RELATED: Latest changes for 2021 season | Learn more about Richard Childress Racing

TaxSlayer is a family-owned and -operated company focused on providing customers with a remarkable tax-filing experience. Founded more than 50 years ago in Augusta, Georgia, TaxSlayer has evolved into an innovative tax-preparation and financial-technology company that retains its founder’s commitment to its employees, customers and community.

“We’re proud to be continuing our relationship with both Myatt Snider and TaxSlayer for the 2021 season,” said Richard Childress, chairman and CEO of Richard Childress Racing. “TaxSlayer is a great tax and financial company, who prides themselves on being family-focused, much like RCR. We’re looking forward to showing our fans the benefits of using TaxSlayer, as we approach both the racing season and tax season. I know that Myatt will do a great job representing both TaxSlayer and RCR on and off the racetrack.”

Snider, a talented short-track racer and road-course competitor with experience racing overseas in the NASCAR Whelen Euro Series, accumulated two top-five and three top-10 finishes under the RCR banner in 2020 while competing in a partial schedule for the Welcome, North Carolina-based team.

“I was so thankful last season to run a part-time schedule with RCR, but knowing I’m going to be racing full time now with a chance to compete for a championship in the NASCAR Xfinity Series means the world to me,” Snider said. “I can’t thank Richard Childress, everyone at RCR and ECR, my family and TaxSlayer enough for believing in me. Between the quality of people and resources available to me at RCR and Chevrolet, I will have all the tools I need to succeed. I had a lot of success with the No. 2 early in my racing career, so it’s really special to have the opportunity to compete with that number again, especially with all the history it has at RCR.

“I am so excited and appreciative to have TaxSlayer back on board with us for the 2021 season. Despite how crazy last season was, we were able to still accomplish some incredible feats together, like winning the pole at Daytona (International Speedway) and contending for wins throughout the season. I’m looking forward to seeing what we can accomplish together in 2021, starting at Daytona.”

To learn more about TaxSlayer, visit www.taxslayer.com.

Mike Stefanik. Doug Coby. Tony Hirschman. Jimmy Spencer. Donny Lia.

Those are the drivers who have won multiple championships on the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour.  After a dominant 2020 campaign, Justin Bonsignore can now add his name to that very special list.

A native of Long Island, New York, Bonsignore has gone toe-to-toe with some of those legends during his Tour career. Now, he‘s well on his way to establishing himself as a Modified legend of his own.

The tone was set from the outset of the season, when the series headed to Jennerstown to open things up, more than three months later than initially planned. Bonsignore had never been to the track, and he‘d been out of the driver‘s seat longer than perhaps any point in his career. No matter. Bonsignore sat on the pole and led every lap en route to a win at Jennerstown on June 21. The butterflies Bonsignore had from such a long offseason went away in a flash.

“My personal confidence was sky-high,” Bonsignore said. “You go to another brand-new race track and you‘re like ‘okay, well I just did this a couple weeks ago my first time there, so there‘s no reason we can‘t go to another new racetrack and do the same‘.”

That‘s exactly what the team did.

Two weeks later, on Independence Day at White Mountain Motorsports Park, Bonsignore passed Matt Hirschman late in the going en route to another win.  Already, Bonsignore was up 17 points on his closest full-time competitor, Coby.


He didn‘t look back.

A third win later that year at Monadnock bolstered Bonsignore‘s stranglehold on the points lead.

The No. 51 team finished no worse than fifth the entire season, an incredible accomplishment. They never trailed in the point standings. It was a good, old-fashioned beatdown.

2020 Justin Bonsignore Race-by-Race

A seventh at the season-ending World Series 150 at Thompson locked up the title.

Bonsignore has matured as a driver throughout his career on Tour. He‘ll tell you that. It‘s a change he‘s noticed in himself this year.

“I think as you get a little older in life, you get smarter,” Bonsignore said. “I think as I‘ve gotten older the last few years, it‘s definitely something I‘ve paid more attention to.

“I thought a lot about it over the offseason last year, and I wanted to make sure I was smarter this year with my calls. I feel like I was noticeably calmer at the racetrack during practice, during the races, making smarter decisions.”

The results? A season so consistent and so dominant that his average finish in 2020 (2.7) was even lower than in 2018, when he won half the races on the schedule. It stands as the best average finish by any champion in Tour history.

Bonsignore credits his close relationship with Massa, now going on 11 years, as being a big part of the success.

“He‘s all I‘ve ever known on the Tour. They‘re like a second family to me,” Bonsignore said. “It‘s not just the racing.

“No matter what, if the years were up or down in the past, he stuck with me, I stuck with him when things were tough on either side. We just stuck with each other. Through thick and thin, he‘s always had my back, whether it‘s racing-related, personal life, financial advice.”

RELATED: Dynasty in the Making: How Kenneth Massa Motorsports turned into a Whelen Modified Tour juggernaut

The chemistry that he‘s had building with his crew, many of whom have remained with the team for nearly a decade, was also crucial in a season with so many curveballs.

“When the schedule comes out, my guys don‘t miss races,” Bonsignore said. “They plan their family vacations, they plan their days off work, they plan everything around our schedule. That‘s a huge commitment.”

But this team had talent in the past. It always had great chemistry, too. The one thing missing? The crew chief.

Enter Ryan Stone, who agreed to join the No. 51 team back in 2018. Since Stone began calling the shots, Bonsignore leads the Tour in wins, top-fives and top-10s.

“It was just instant chemistry between me and Ryan, and Ryan and the whole team,” Bonsignore said. “He fit right in. He‘s a funny guy. He knows when to joke and when to be serious, and the team is behind him one thousand percent. When we‘re at the racetrack, everyone looks to Ryan for direction. Nobody wants to let Ryan down, and Ryan doesn‘t want to let any of us down.”

RELATED: Justin Bonsignore Career Stats | Ryan Stone Career Stats

Joining a select group of Modified greats didn‘t sink in for Bonsignore until the championship celebration after the season finale at Thompson.

“It was really humbling to see the trophy and know we‘re on there twice now, and not that many people are,” he said. “The guys that are are the best of the best of our series.”

With his three wins, Bonsignore sits tied with Coby at 29 — good for sixth on the all-time list. Next up are Jeff Fuller (31) and Tony Hirschman (35). Seventeen of those wins have come in the last three years.

He also has 16 career Mayhew Tools Dominator Pole Awards and is 16th all-time. He’s only 12 out of fifth, a eminently reachable goal considering his recent run of success.

Justin Bonsignore, driver of the #51 Phoenix Communications Inc. Chevrolet, talks to Doug Coby, driver of the #10 Mayhew Tools Chevrolet, after the NAPA Auto Parts 150 for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at Stafford Motor Speedway on September 26, 2020 in Stafford Springs, Connecticut. Photo by Adam Glanzman/NASCAR

After earning the fruits of years and years of labor the past three seasons, you could say that Bonsignore is living the dream. It‘s something he thinks about from time to time.

“There‘s many days you‘re driving home from work and just thinking ‘wow, this is unbelievable what we‘re able to accomplish right now‘,” Bonsignore said. “I‘m sure after all this racing stuff is done, many years from now, we can all get together, and just talk about racing, and the trips, and the fun we had and all the success we‘re having.”

But Bonsignore wants to put the emphasis on “many years from now.” Unfortunately for the rest of the Tour competition, Bonsignore hasn‘t spent too much time dwelling on the winning he‘s done. After all, there‘s another title to be won in 2021 and onward.

“It just makes me want to be the guy that can get to three now,” Bonsignore said.

Only 32 years old, Bonsignore has a lot of racing ahead of him. More important to him than going down as an all-time driver, however, is making sure the entire No. 51 operation itself goes down as an all-timer.

“I don‘t need the people to say that I‘ll go down as a great driver,” Bonsignore. “I don‘t care for that type of brag. I want to go down, as a group, as one of the best teams, because they deserve the credit just as much as me.”

No matter what happens next, it‘s pretty clear that Bonsignore and the No. 51 team have already cemented themselves as one of the most unstoppable forces in Modified history.

Justin Bonsignore, driver of the #51 Phoenix Communications Inc. Chevrolet, takes victory lap during the Independence Day 200 for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at White Mountain Motorsports Park in North Woodstock, New Hampshire on Saturday, July 4, 2020. (Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)

As the calendar shifts closer to 2021, teams are starting to reveal 2021 paint schemes for the upcoming NASCAR Cup Series season.

MRN: Five drivers in the spotlight for 2021

Joe Gibbs Racing offered a sneak peek Wednesday night at Christopher Bell’s No. 20 CRAFTSMAN Toyota.

Bell is embarking on his first season at JGR after spending his rookie campaign at Leavine Family Racing. In 2020, Bell notched two top fives and seven top 10s with a season-best finish of third at Texas Motor Speedway in October.

Last month, JGR revealed two-time Cup champion crew chief Adam Stevens would serve as Bell’s crew chief in 2021.

Hendrick Motorsports and Liberty University debuted their 2021 look for the No. 24 Chevrolet on Wednesday, unveiling the Liberty-sponsored ride for William Byron in the NASCAR Cup Series next year.

Liberty has been a primary sponsor of Byron at each stage of his NASCAR national-series career, following him from the Camping World Truck Series to the Xfinity Series and eventually the Cup Series with HMS for his rookie year in 2018. Liberty was the primary sponsor of the No. 24 Chevy for 11 races last year.

RELATED: William Byron’s 2020 paint schemes in review

Byron has been a student at the Lynchburg, Virginia-based school, studying online as he balances his course load with his racing career. The Liberty University News Service indicated Byron has targeted a December 2021 graduation.

Byron, 23, notched his first Cup Series win last season, carrying the dark blue and red Liberty colors to victory at Daytona International Speedway in the regular-season finale.

The Whelen Modified tour completed a successful season in the midst of a pandemic, visited new tracks, saw Justin Bonsignore roll to his second championship, and the Modified community lost a legend and a friend. The 2020 Whelen Modified Tour season will be memorable for many reasons.

Starting up the season

The COVID-19 pandemic forced the cancellation of numerous races, including the season-opener at Virgina’s South Boston Speedway, the Icebreaker at Connecticut’s Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park and Spring Sizzler at Connecticut’s Stafford Motor Speedway. Events at Wall Stadium in New Jersy, Riverhead Raceway and Oswego Speedway in New York were also cancelled due to the pandemic.

The Tour was scheduled to visit two new tracks in 2021: Martinsville Speedway and Iowa Speedway. While the COVID-19 pandemic forced the cancellations of those events too, NASCAR was able to devise a back-up plan thanks to collaboration with, and cooperation of, short tracks across the Northeast.  Jennerstown Speedway in Pennsylvania, Monadnock Raceway and White Mountain Motorsports Park in New Hampshire each agreed to host the Tour at their facilities. With Thompson Shosting two dates, New Hampshire Motor Speedway’s Musket 250, and Stafford with the Fall Final, a nine-race schedule was put together over the course of the season.

When the haulers arrived at Jennerstown to finally start the season on June 21, things looked very different. No fans were allowed to attend, teams were limited to eight crew members, and mask-wearing and social distancing were both enforced. As the season progressed, a reduced number of fans were allowed to attend races.

2020 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Results | 2020 Championship Standings

Tour community mourns loss

The Modified community lost a longtime competitor back in March, when Wade Cole passed away after an accident at his home.

“Just an absolutely great guy that you always looked forward to seeing pull through the gate,” NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour series director Jimmy Wilson told RaceDayCT at the time. “I‘m just absolutely shocked.”

Cole started 371 races across his Tour career, eighth-most all-time, competing in every season of the Tour‘s existence, save for 1986. He earned seven top-10 finishes, his last coming in 2017 at Seekonk.


It was the second gut punch to the Modified scene in six months, as Mike Stefanik had passed away in a plane crash the prior September.

Tracks and teams paid tribute to Cole throughout the 2020 season, putting No. 33 decals on their cars. Jennerstown renamed its first race the Wade Cole Memorial 133 as homage to his impact on the community.

Bonsignore tears it up

On the track, Justin Bonsignore and the No. 51 team came firing out of the gate. Bonsignore sat on the pole at the season-opener at Jennerstown and led every lap in a wire-to-wire victory.

The opening-day win was a sign of things to come the rest of the way. Bonsignore won two more races and another pair of poles, finishing no lower than fifth throughout the entirety of the campaign. He led laps at eight races, and the most of any driver in the field.

Only five drivers have won multiple championships since the Tour was formed in 1985: Mike Stefanik, Doug Coby, Tony Hirschman, Jimmy Spencer, and Donny Lia. After 2020, Bonsignore can add his name to that very prestigious list.

Since Ryan Stone jumped aboard the No. 51 team in 2018, they have utterly dominated: of the 41 races won since then, the team has won 17 of them, finishing in the top-five 31 times and finishing outside the top-10 only four times.

Coby runs his own show

When it was announced after last season that Mike Smeriglio, owner of the No. 2 car driven by Doug Coby, would be retiring, it threw the Modified world for a loop. The two had won five of the last six championships. What would Coby end up doing?  Where would he go? Perhaps most important: could he succeed? Rest easy, Modified fans. Doug Coby appears to be doing just fine.

Coby made the decision to buy a car from Smeriglio, and was able to bring most of his crew to what became Doug Coby Racing.

While 2020 did not bring a seventh championship, Coby did win a race at White Mountain. That gives him 10 consecutive seasons with at least one win, the longest such streak of active drivers. Coby also won two poles and finished in the top-five in six races, with the third best average finishing position of all drivers.

New team? Owning and driving? It sure doesn‘t seem to be a problem for Coby.

Santos and Silk play spoiler

In his only race of the 2020 season, 2010 champ Bobby Santos came to New Hampshire Motor Speedway for the Musket 200 and did what he always does: win. It was his second consecutive Musket victory. Over the last seven times the Tour has visited the Magic Mile, Santos has won five of them. The only other driver to win five races in that tight a window came from 1992 to 1994, when the great Reggie Ruggiero won five straight at the track.

Meanwhile, Ron Silk and the No. 85 Kevin Stuart-owned team became arguably the hottest Tour team in the second half of the year. After championship hopes were essentially dashed by a 27th-place showing at White Mountain, the team chose not to compete the following race at Jennerstown before returning at Monadnock.

The break clearly helped. Silk went on a tear over the final five races of 2020, winning at Thompson and Stafford and finishing no worse than third. It continues a career resurgence for Silk, who won only once on the Tour from 2013 to 2018. Over the last two seasons, he‘s won five times. Watch for the No. 85 team to once again challenge for the Tour crown in 2021.

Rypkema rides hot streak to ROTY

 While it wasn‘t Tyler Rypkema‘s first season on the Whelen Modified Tour, it was his first crack at running the full schedule.

Driving the Rypkema Racing No. 32 and running equipment bought from Mike Smeriglio III after his retirement, Rypkema performed quite well, finishing every race and running inside the top-10 in five of them.

RELATED: Tyler Rypkema Exceeds Expectations & Nets Sunoco Rookie Honors

The Owego, New York-native and 23-year-old finished the final four races of the season in the top-10 to earn the Sunoco Rookie of the Year award.

What‘s next?

 The 2021 Whelen Modified Tour schedule is starting to take shape.

Stafford will play host to its three Tour events in 2021, along Jennerstown making a return to the Tour next year. The Martinsville Tour race cancelled due to the pandemic will make its delayed debut in April, Richmond Raceway makes a return to the Tour calendar in September, marking the first time the series has raced there since 2002. Another new track on the schedule is Lancaster Speedway, a place that has never before hosted a Tour race.

The full schedule will be released at a later date.

It‘s a time to stay safe, celebrate the best the Tour has to offer, and gear up for what should be a thrilling 2021 season.