Kyle Busch Motorsports announced Monday it has added John Hunter Nemechek to its roster as the driver of its No. 4 Toyota in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series for 2021.
Nemechek, 23, makes the move after his rookie NASCAR Cup Series season with Front Row Motorsports. Front Row said Nov. 16 that Nemechek had informed the organization he would not return to its No. 38 Ford next season. Making that call to return to the truck tour, Nemechek said, wasn’t easy.
“It definitely was a tougher decision, for sure, trying to weigh out the pros and cons of each one of them,” Nemechek said. “But when it comes down to it, I’m a competitive guy. I want to show up to the race track every single weekend and have a shot to win. Definitely, I learned a lot and gained a lot of knowledge. … I’m looking forward to kind of coming back, even though it is somewhat taking a step back, but at the same time you have to look at the positives. We’re here to win races.”
Nemechek takes the place of Raphael Lessard with KBM’s No. 4 team. Lessard’s future with the Kyle Busch-owned organization was not clear, and the team did not mention the Canadian driver in Monday’s news release. Lessard finished 12th in the series standings in his first full year with KBM last season, posting his first career win at Talladega Superspeedway in October.
Nemechek’s first Cup Series season yielded three top-10 finishes, including a best result of eighth place — achieved twice at Talladega. He said he was in discussions with the Bob Jenkins-owned team about a potential return, but “the cards didn’t line up” for a second season.
Nemechek’s latest career move returns him to the NASCAR national series where he has enjoyed the most success. Nemechek has six career victories in Camping World Trucks, where he last competed on a full-time basis in 2017. His last national win came in the NASCAR Xfinity Series in October 2018 during a part-time campaign with Chip Ganassi Racing.
In joining forces with KBM, Nemechek’s ties to Busch have made a full-circle turn. Busch’s first seven starts in the Xfinity Series came carrying the No. 87 long campaigned by Nemechek’s father, Joe.
The younger Nemechek said discussions had been ongoing for “a couple years” to bring the driver and team together. Nemechek cited a strong relationship with both Toyota and Busch, noting he was ready for the sometimes pointed mentoring his team owner has been known for.
“Honestly, if I mess up, I hope Kyle holds me accountable,” Nemechek said. “I hope that Kyle tells me how it is, straight to my face. I like that. I like when somebody tells me that I’ve messed up, so that I go back and fix it. As far as him busting on us or anything like that, I’m not super-afraid of that. I want to learn. I want to be better. If you can learn one thing every single day, you can be better that day and the following.”
Kyle Busch Motorsports indicated a crew chief and a sponsorship lineup would be announced at a later date.
The 2020 NASCAR season is officially in the books, Chase Elliott is the champion, it’s Thanksgiving week, and, well, we’ve decided to sort of phone it in for now. Won’t you help us write an end-of-year recap? Simply fill in the blanks and let your imagination run wild. Just, please, don’t do too good of a job so our editors won’t replace us.
Let me tell you what the 2020 NASCAR season was like as a fan of
.
Man, what a
it was! The season started out with a Daytona 500 that could be described as nothing short of
— and that was just a sign of things to come.
could have predicted how the pandemic would
the NASCAR season in the spring — but, of course, being the fan of the driver I am, switching to iRacing for a few months made me feel totally
.
The eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series was
,
but there’s nothing quite as
as the real thing! When NASCAR returned to the track in May, I felt more
than ever.
NASCAR’s return to the track was
for my driver, especially when
.
The best part of the season, though, was when
— though,
had me
, too.
The 2020 season meant we said goodbye to Jimmie Johnson, a driver I’ve always
,
especially for
.
I wish I could
like Jimmie! We also said goodbye to Clint Bowyer, who’s probably going to
in the FOX broadcast booth next year.
And, of course, we can’t talk about the 2020 season without talking about
.
That’s something that made me feel so
!
There’s certainly a
future ahead. I just hope my driver can
!
Lastly,
we’re crowning a new NASCAR champion in Chase Elliott. Even though people give him a hard time for
,
you have to admit he’s
and
.
Maybe that’s why he’s
!
Whenever that si-reen sounds in the Dawsonville Pool Room, I’m filled with
.
Anyway, I can’t wait for
next year! Even as a
fan, I think
is the driver to beat next year — as long as
doesn’t get in the way. At the end of the day, though, I think everybody can agree
.
Never before has a NASCAR postseason been so pressurized. With COVID-19 procedures in place, there’s no practice or qualifying. Teams have no margin for error and few chances to fix mistakes. For those who raced their way into the playoffs, it’s also an opportunity to prove they belong with the championship contenders.
Ride with Austin Dillon and Matt DiBenedetto as they experience some of that playoff pressure in Episode 4 of MotorTrend’s docuseries, “NASCAR 2020: Under Pressure.”
Enjoy this episode, but come back every week, from now until to Dec. 12, to see an all-new episode of “NASCAR 2020: Under Pressure,” an inside look at the unforgettable 2020 NASCAR season.
Plus, with your free trial to the MotorTrend app, you will also get access to more than 3,600 hours of automotive entertainment, including shows from MotorTrend, Discovery Channel, live events and more. Start watching “Under Pressure” today.
It was a passing-of-the-torch moment for the Bowyer family on Saturday night.
Cash Bowyer, son of former NASCAR Cup Series driver Clint Bowyer, earned his first victory in a go-kart race, according to his father’s Instagram post. The 7-year-old driver met his dad, mom Lorra and 3-year-old sister Presley in Victory Lane.
Clint competed in his final full-time Cup Series race in the season finale on Nov. 8 at Phoenix Raceway. He earned 10 victories at NASCAR’s top level and the NASCAR Xfinity Series championship in 2008. Bowyer will join Mike Joy and Jeff Gordon in the FOX NASCAR television booth to call Cup Series races beginning in 2021.
Probably the most proud I’ve ever been. Different level to watch your kid listen, watch, learn, and then be determined to go after what he wants. Winner!!! 💪 https://t.co/LtvAp8tggu
Justin Bonsignore won his second NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour title. Craig Lutz, Ron Silk, Doug Coby and Bobby Santos III went to Victory Lane.
All these moments, and more, will be celebrated online and on social media in December as part of the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Virtual Championship Celebration. The spotlights will include interviews presented by MRN Radio‘s NASCAR Coast To Coast, videos and photo galleries.
The season spotlight will run from Dec. 7-10 on NASCAR.com, and NASCAR Roots on Facebook, Twitter and Instragram.
Hey Modified fans … we’re got plenty to celebrate ud83cudf8aud83cudf89
Before we turn the page to 2021, we’re going to honor the best of the best in 2020. pic.twitter.com/EuhNOM1sCa
Among those that will be recognized are Bonsignore’s championship car owner Ken Massa and crew chief Ryan Stone.
In addition to Bonsignore’s title campaign, the celebration will cover special award winners and key moments, as well as Sunoco Rookie of the Year Tyler Rypkema.
The 2020 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season began June 21 at Jennerstown Speedway in Pennsylvania and concluded the nine-race slate on Oct. 11 at Connecticut’s Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park.
Vinnie Miller remembers one particularly tense moment from his NASCAR Xfinity Series debut, an encounter he thought had the potential for physical harm. Then a 20-year-old rookie in September 2017, Miller had just completed final practice at Chicagoland Speedway, clocking his best lap on his final lap of the session before parking for the day.
After exiting his JD Motorsports No. 0 entry, Miller saw a dark, hulking figure walking his way. Oh jeez, he’s big, he thought, realizing his all-black wardrobe was the fire suit of a fellow driver.
As a first-timer, Miller’s weekend was as much about figuring out his way around the track as it was learning who people were in the garage. The second learning experience was coming quick, with steely eyes and an intimidating stance. Miller’s mind rewound: Did I cut someone off? Did I mess up someone else’s run?
Then B.J. McLeod broke the tension.
“He came over and told me, ‘Hey, man, nice lap. That’s impressive as a rookie,’ ” Miller recalled about his first encounter with the one-time acquaintance who would later become his car owner and friend. Relieved, Miller thanked him and asked for pointers, which were freely given.
That moment was Miller’s introduction not only to NASCAR’s national scene but to one of its busiest and hardest workers. McLeod has carved out his own niche as the owner of a scrappy three-car organization in the Xfinity Series, a driver for another Xfinity outfit, a part-time driver in the Cup Series and somewhat improbably the leading figure behind a start-up Cup Series team that bears his name, born during a worldwide health crisis.
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images
And McLeod has done it all with a skull-and-pinstripes appearance that’s a blend of Harley-Davidson chic and hard-rock couture.
“He looks like he ought to be in a metal band, which stands out a lot in our series,” said Tommy Joe Martins, who drove for McLeod on a part-time basis the last three seasons. “We’re doing this for sponsors, clean-cut and all this. I think B.J.’s just being himself. He showed me — that’s just how he’s always looked. This is not an act. He’s not going through a phase. This is just B.J. That’s just who he is. And he is the same B.J. with you when he’s happy, and he’s the same when he’s mad. He is a genuine person. I really mean that.”
It hasn’t been a passing phase for McLeod, who says he didn’t realize his look was distinct until his later teenage years. He laughs when he recalls one of Martins’ other assessments, telling him he would fit in alongside Sylvester Stallone with the cast of bruising special-forces mercenaries in the 2010 film “The Expendables.”
“I have definitely always been this way,” McLeod said. “I’ve had black hair, pink hair, red hair, blue hair, blond hair. I have worn chains, worn baggy jeans. I’ve done all kind of different combinations, and it’s literally just because it’s what I want to do. I’ve never done anything for attention; I didn’t even know all the way through school that I would really be that different as far as wardrobe and stuff. It’s just something I’ve always done. I’m definitely happy to still dress the way I do and have fun as far as the way I look.”
The raised-eyebrow reactions he’s after now are less about his dress or his slicked-back, now nearly shoulder-length hair than how his B.J. McLeod Motorsports group has strived to make incremental gains in a competitive field, how he has managed to fulfill an ambitious childhood dream as a former stock-car prodigy and about how he’s branching out in hopes of cultivating ever-deeper roots in the sport he has always loved.
‘The real Boy Wonder’
When you ask drivers how long they have been racing, more than one will usually say “as long as I can remember.” McLeod’s history actually predates his memory. He can recollect fuzzy details of powering a four-wheeler on a flat dirt track against a field of preschoolers at age 2 1/2. The 70-cc Honda he rode required him to fumble with the gears to shift up and down. Or so he has been told.
“I have never known life without looking forward to a race,” said McLeod, who followed an accelerated path in racing growing up in the central Florida community of Wauchula, about 50 miles southeast of Tampa. ATVs led to go-karts by age 5, and eight state championships came after. McLeod made the sizable step to driving a Super Late Model by 12 and winning in the division at 13 at Orlando Speedworld. He then shattered another youth mark with a start on the competitive American Speed Association (ASA) circuit just before his 14th birthday. The series’ previous record-holder: an 18-year-old Mark Martin.
The rise drew notice from the area press. An offseason feature in the Jan. 8, 1998, edition of The Orlando Sentinel featured a smiling McLeod with checkered flag in hand beside his black No. 78 car above a headline reading: “The real Boy Wonder.” The banner was a not-so-veiled reference to the concurrent heyday of Jeff Gordon, another young star who had claimed his second premier-series championship just two months earlier.
The headline may have alluded to Gordon’s ascent with a passing wink, but the 14-year-old McLeod embraced the comparison with brimming confidence. “My goal is to be the best,” McLeod told The Sentinel then. “Just like Jeff Gordon, all the way through. But better.” The article also included McLeod’s teenage blueprint for how he’d get there: Xfinity Series regular by 18, Cup Series driver full time by 20, Cup Series champion by 23.
“Well obviously, I didn’t get better than Jeff Gordon,” McLeod, now 36, said with a chuckle. “I couldn’t even come close to that, but I think at that point at that age, I just really wanted to set really high goals and work toward them. If I went back then or looked from now, I’m still very happy with where we’ve been able to get to. I had to do it a little bit different way than what I thought I would end up doing it, but it’s been a fun journey and met a lot of good people and had a lot of fun getting where we are right now.
“I think I just wanted to push myself to be better, even though just being the same would’ve been great.”
As with most journeys, his path to NASCAR’s national ranks wasn’t a straight line. After his teenage years, McLeod found no shortage of work with his family’s construction business once a particularly rough hurricane season tore through his home state in 2004. Gander Trucks or Xfinity Series rides didn’t come calling until 2010, but he continued to stay sharp by winning on local tracks and serving as a top instructor at FinishLine Racing School, a proving ground for aspiring racers outside of Orlando, Florida.
Becoming a driver-owner operating on a budget wasn’t part of the plan that the 14-year-old McLeod ambitiously detailed back in 1998. But having auto racing become his livelihood? He could see that coming for as long as he can remember.
“I’ve done a lot of cool stuff at a young age in racing and have always been working toward that,” McLeod said. “It’s been a lifelong deal. It didn’t start at 15 or 18 or any of that stuff. I’ve been in this forever. I never wanted to make a living any way other than racing.”
Building blocks
McLeod’s first steps into the Xfinity Series as a driver/owner in 2016 meant carrying reasonable aspirations, placing the team’s goals at the opposite end of what his 14-year-old self had imagined and maybe even a notch lower. He told a trusted member of his crew what his humble target would be — 35th place in the 40-car field. McLeod was told he could do better, but he wanted to keep his hopes on the modest side and build from there. He ran every race that year, cracked the top 20 four times and — buoyed by his persistence — took 20th in the series’ final standings.
McLeod adjusted the goal the next year, but only by a few spots.
Twitter: @tommyjoemartins
“I started driving for them in 2017 with B.J.,” Martins said, “and I’ll say right now I thought that they were probably the worst team in the Xfinity Series, and I would tell him that, and he knew that when he called me. … That’s where we’re at. And so I drove for them the first three races and he literally was like, ‘Let’s maybe finish top 30.’ That was our goal, and if we did that, it was great.”
After a 29th at Pocono Raceway and a 28th at Michigan International Speedway, Martins kicked off the summer with B.J. McLeod Motorsports with a career-best 11th at Iowa Speedway — a finish that kept him in the fold and that helped the team realize some of its earliest performance benchmarks.
“He has been very smart and now he’s got his organization up to three cars and he’s able to start building, but it’s been a plan,” Martins said. “It’s been a long-term vision that he’s had.”
The process has been methodical, but it has gradually built to where McLeod can propose placing stakes among the top half of the Xfinity Series field on a week-to-week basis. It has helped having a keen eye for talent from his years as a driving instructor, identifying drivers who outrun better-funded names they maybe shouldn’t. It’s why he took a chance on Martins and part of how he made the choice to field full-time cars for Miller and teammate Matt Mills.
The goal now: Turning the stray top-15 finishes into more frequent occurrences before eventually trying to chip away at the top 12 or top 10.
“I’ve had to work and it will take longer than it would some, because we did come without that much of a budget, and I’m still happy with the way we’ve done it and the progress we’ve made because we literally have a top-15 team, give or take, almost each week right now and that’s something I’m very happy about,” McLeod said. “I’m telling you, you can watch it on TV and look at it and think about it, this series is hard. It’s unreal how hard it is to be able to run in the top 20, top 15. And it’s fun for me knowing that side, as a driver and an owner.”
One of the first pushes toward that goal came before the coronavirus shutdown with Miller’s Leap Day run at Auto Club Speedway. His No. 78 Chevrolet started last after an issue in qualifying, but Miller gained ground and stayed on the lead lap, still riding the used, scuffed-in tires the team had to rely on all day.
By the time a caution flag flew with 23 laps left, Miller was eager to add to the team’s steady progress, even if came out of his own wallet.
“I was talking on the radio and I was telling someone to go buy me a set of stickers,” Miller said, hoping for fresh rubber for the final green-flag run. “I didn’t care what it would cost, I’d pay for it right after the race. I could’ve sworn to God that the set they put on were stickers, but when I got out of the car, they swore up and down it wasn’t. It was literally a mismatched set from four different sets we had on the ground.”
The result: 15th and on the lead lap, outplacing teams with Cup Series-level backing and all with pre-worn tires.
“I think we’ve proven that we want to be here a long time,” McLeod said. “I plan on being here decades as an owner and for a long time as a driver, and I want to be one of the mainstays for a long time in NASCAR as far as an organization. That’s what we’re working on making it happen, and I think everybody sees that and knows the effort we’re putting in. It’s going to take a little time, but we’re going to keep working and making progress.”
‘A racer down to the bone’
Who starts a race team during a pandemic? McLeod had already made 42 starts in NASCAR’s top division before the COVID-19 shutdown, but he and his wife, Jessica, always held visions of seeing the No. 78 from his Late Model days on a Cup Series car he owned, even if it only happened once.
McLeod’s group had already put its Xfinity Series operations on solid footing with a built-out fleet. Once stay-at-home orders lifted, it created almost another offseason for McLeod’s team to prep. He turned focus to making the Cup Series idea a reality, enticed in part by budget-friendly single-day shows without the wear and tear of practice or qualifying.
Chris Graythen | Getty Images
That first voyage in The Real Heroes 400 at Darlington Raceway ended after an unlucky 13 laps with a failed radiator hose, one of the perils of competing with used parts. But McLeod still sees the opportunity to run approximately 15 Cup Series races this season, taking care not to divert any resources from his Xfinity Series program.
McLeod said he aims to field the Cup Series car only when he’s able, both time-wise and budget-wise. With expansion of an already busy operation, spare time is in short supply.
“He’s just a racer down to the bone, man. Down to the heart,” Miller said. “He loves racing. It’s his passion, his business and that’s what he loves to do. I don’t think there’s a single moment of the day that he won’t pick up the phone or answer the phone to do business and make sure everything’s going right to expand his business. We’ll hang out on the lake a lot and even then, he’ll probably answer five phone calls an hour with something to do with the shop or getting to the track. Then when he’s at the track, you hardly ever see him. He’s always out trying to get tire deals for us and work on parts deals. He’s just always working at it.
“He does have a strong work ethic. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a team owner run and do as much stuff as him.”
That hustle is fueled as much by his desire to race as the relationships he has built along the way, whether it’s with sponsors, fellow competitors or series officials. Those bonds have made driver-owner partnerships feel more like family for Miller and Mills, and they’ve kept him friendly with Martins, even after he amicably left to drive elsewhere last season.
“I learned at a young age that networks are everything,” McLeod said. “You’re only as powerful as the people around you and able to make things happen because people like you. I’ve always thought instead of how do I get somebody to like me, I just thought, ‘You know, I’ll just treat ’em right and if they like you, they like you, and if they don’t, they don’t.’ If you keep treating people right and you’re up front and you say what you’re going to do business-wise, and if you can’t abide by it, then you look them in the face and say, ‘Hey, I made a mistake or I did this wrong.’ As long as you communicate and treat people right, I’ve found it very simple to build networks and be able to make stuff happen further than what my reach would have been from where I started out. That’s absolutely key to getting from where I was born to what I’m able to do now.”
That means making inroads up the Xfinity Series pecking order, expanding his team’s impact and walking the delicate balance between being a driver and a car owner. The kid in McLeod still enjoys the thrill of speed each week, but the ownership side of “moving the chess pieces” has its own appeal, of doing a lot with a little.
Either way, he’s savoring the ride — rock-star vibe and all.
“I have a lot of things going on every weekend that are a lot of fun to look forward to, whether it goes good or bad,” McLeod said. “It’s a lot of living, and I want to be alive. I love living life, trying to do everything I can with every day that I’m blessed with living.”
When racing runs deep in a driver’s blood, there’s only one way to live — fast.
That’s the mentality Matt Tifft and B.J. McLeod are looking to bring to their newly announced NASCAR Cup Series entry in the No. 78 Live Fast Motorsports Ford Mustang, unveiled Friday by the pair.
The two drivers have each driven at the Cup level in recent years but will venture further into the NASCAR ownership model in a full-time 2021 campaign and beyond. McLeod will pilot the entry under the charter obtained in October alongside longtime NASCAR owner Joe Falk. The charter came on behalf of Go Fas Racing owner Archie St. Hilaire’s ownership interest of Circle Sport Racing’s charter.
“It’s literally decades of dreaming, decades of work, decades of being focused,” McLeod said. “Just a lot of relationships being built to get us to this point. You can’t sum it up in one or two or three words, even. I guess the biggest thing to say is, just really looking forward to continuing to work the way that I have the last couple decades to get to where I’m at now and see what we can make with this deal together. Matt, he’s going to make me stronger. He’s got some really good qualities about him that I’m excited about, helping some of the weaknesses that I might have. Just what we can do together, I just can’t wait to get going.”
Before his rookie season was cut short in 2019 by a seizure he experienced at Martinsville Speedway that October, Tifft competed full time in the NASCAR Xfinity Series in 2017 and ’18. He was with Joe Gibbs Racing in 2017 and moved to Richard Childress Racing the next season, where he notched career highs in top fives (six), top 10s (19) and points finish (sixth).
McLeod has owned cars and raced in the Cup and Xfinity ranks for several years, with another 39 starts under his belt in the Camping World Truck Series. He started 16 Cup races this year and has 57 career series starts. He ran in 31 Xfinity races in 2020, with a best finish of 11th at Bristol Motor Speedway in the spring. In a Friday news conference, McLeod indicated he still plans to field three cars in the Xfinity Series next year, keeping that operation separate from the Live Fast organization.
In addition, LFM has entered a strategic partnership with Stewart-Haas Racing, a 10-time Cup Series winning organization in 2020, “to assist the team in competition and navigating the difficulties of developing a successful NASCAR Cup team,” per the team’s release.
“Live Fast Motorsports is excited to be joining an incredible group of owners, as well as the new teams and ownership coming into the sport,” the release stated. “NASCAR’S Next Gen car and model for teams will provide opportunities for new teams to compete at a higher level. Live Fast Motorsports and its partners are ready to take on the challenge to grow and develop as a team.”
The pairing between the 24-year-old from Ohio and 37-year-old from Florida is certainly a unique one at first glance — but it’s a business partnership rooted in a friendship that’s more than a decade in the making.
“I think a lot of people don’t realize the relationship we’ve had over the years,” Tifft told NASCAR.com. “When I was 12 years old, I went down to a stock car driving school in Florida and (McLeod) was one of the instructors. … I ended up being the best in the class there, so he and my dad started talking. He hadn’t owned a team yet but … lo and behold, the next year we did World Series of Asphalt at New Smyrna (with him) and that was his first time owning a late-model team. But basically we started together then and my first Truck Series race was with him at Martinsville (in 2014) and we finished in the top 10 for his first top 10 as an owner there.”
The pair’s mentor-mentee bond helped Tifft accelerate all the way to a full-time Cup ride at the ripe age of 23 last year, running in the top 30 in points for Front Row Motorsports before being sidelined. It’s now time for that relationship to take on a new wrinkle, with the veteran McLeod aiming to put in a full season’s worth of Cup racing for the first time in his career as Tifft flexes his executive muscle.
“Really, I couldn’t do it with anybody else. The experience part is what makes it work,” Tifft said. “We want to put it out there that we’re trying to not be a backmarker team. We don’t have a huge budget, but we’re trying to be competitive.”
Live Fast Motorsports will make its debut at Daytona International Speedway this coming February. When it does, the organization will be carrying the No. 78 that McLeod used in his earliest racing days. The car number was last used on a full-time basis by Furniture Row Racing, with Martin Truex Jr. flying the No. 78 to a Cup Series championship in 2017 for team owner Barney Visser and general manager Joe Garone.
“Basically I’ve had that number since I was on four-wheelers at 3 years old. We were just very fortunate,” McLeod said, adding he asked for the blessing of Visser and Garone to use it. “… I asked NASCAR first. I was like, ‘Make sure Barney and Joe are good with us using this number, and let them know if they ever need it that we’ll work it out to where they can have it or whatever we need to do,’ because they did win a championship with it. I’m extremely proud of what those guys were able to do, and it’s one thing that allows Matt and I to dream and think we can one day pull that off.”
The NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series year-end awards will feature a new look this year.
The champions of short-track racing across the United States and Canada will be recognized over five days (Nov. 30-Dec. 4) on NASCAR.com in a Virtual Championship Celebration.
A full slate of features, including interviews it the national champions presented by MRN Radio’s NASCAR Coast To Coast, videos and photo galleries will be shared online and NASCAR Roots’ social channels.
Josh Berry, the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division I national champion, will lead the honorees. The week will also include recognition for national champions David Greenslit of New Hampshire (Division II), Utah‘s Jon Quinton (Division III), Oklahoma‘s Brady Walsh (Division IV) and Nebraska‘s Chris Vannausdle (Division V). Jostens Division I Rookie of the Year and UNOH Youth Achievement Award national champion Sam Butler will also be profiled.
In addition to the national champions, the week will also spotlight the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series track champions, the Division I U.S. state and Canadian provincial champions, the Wendell Scott Trailblazer Award winner as well as the NASCAR-sanctioned tracks that hosted Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series racing in 2020.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Nov. 19, 2020) – NASCAR today announced the 2021 schedule for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series™. The schedule is highlighted by trips to traditional and new tracks alike, including a new battle in the dirt at an iconic NASCAR track and a second dirt contest at another storied – yet brand-new – venue.
The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series’ first dirt affair will take place at Bristol Motor Speedway (March 27), joining the NASCAR Cup Series for an action-packed weekend on the short track’s return to dirt.
Then, on July 9, trucks will roll into Knoxville Raceway for what will be a highly anticipated contest on one of the most storied tracks in the country.Located in Knoxville, Iowa, Knoxville Raceway hosted its first race in 1901 but is best known for a long, rich history of Sprint Car racing. When the Camping World Truck Series hits the dirt surface in the Hawkeye State, it will mark the first time a NASCAR national series has competed at Knoxville.
“The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series provides some of the most intense and entertaining competition in all of racing,” said Ben Kennedy, NASCAR vice president of racing development. “The 2021 iteration of the schedule will build upon that intensity through a wide variety of long-tenured race tracks and new venues like Knoxville Raceway. The variety of disciplines will increase the demand on drivers and culminate with a truly battle-tested champion at Phoenix.”
The Camping World Truck Series will kick off 16 national series tripleheader weekends in 2021, including at Circuit of the Americas (May 22) and Nashville Superspeedway (June 18). In addition, the Camping World Truck Series will return to fan-favorite Watkins Glen International for the first time since 2000 on Aug. 7.
The series will also share the stage with the NASCAR Cup Series on June 26 at Pocono Raceway, as all three national series take part in the NASCAR Cup Series doubleheader weekend at the “Tricky Triangle.”
As was originally scheduled in 2020 prior to the pandemic, World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway will return to host the start of the playoffs (August 20). Two historic short tracks will determine which drivers continue their playoffs run, as Bristol Motor Speedway (Sept. 16) trims the field to eight and Martinsville Speedway (Oct. 30) decides which four drivers will race for a championship at Phoenix Raceway (Nov. 5).
Broadcast times and networks for all three national series will be announced at a later date.
Below is the full 2021 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series schedule (playoff races in italicized font):