NASCAR’s Xfinity Series drivers are eager to resume the race schedule on Thursday with the Toyota 200 (Noon ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) from Darlington Raceway – the second major NASCAR race to take place since a two-month long pause in action during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Youth certainly served notice in the early portion of the season with 19-year-old Harrison Burton scoring top-five finishes in the opening four races to date, scoring his first career Xfinity Series victory at Auto Club Speedway in March. The driver of the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota holds a three-point edge atop the standings over Chase Briscoe, who drove the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 98 Ford to victory at Las Vegas Motor Speedway and has a pair of top-five finishes himself.

RELATED: Xfinity Series standings | Darlington starting lineup

Austin Cindric, driver of the No. 22 Team Penske Ford, is third in the standings – 21 points behind Burton – with a pair of top-five finishes, including a season-best runner-up to Briscoe at Las Vegas. Brandon Jones, the series most recent winner – March 7 at Phoenix Raceway – is fourth in the standings, only 28 points off Burton.

Popular driver Ross Chastain is fifth in the championship with three top-10 finishes in the Kaulig Racing No. 10 and 21-year old Noah Gragson, the JR Motorsports driver who won a dramatic season-opener at Daytona International Speedway, is only 33 points off the standing leader’s pace, sharing sixth place with Ryan Sieg.

The top nine drivers are only separated by 38 points heading to Darlington, where that ninth-place driver, veteran Justin Allgaier holds an enviable track resume. The 33-year-old perennial championship contender has six top-10 finishes in nine starts there, including the last three years. And his 140 laps out front in the No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet is the high mark of the 2020 season.

MORE: 2020 Xfinity Series schedule

None of these talented drivers has ever won at Darlington before. And in Burton’s case, he’ll be making his Darlington debut with absolutely no practice. As with the NASCAR Cup Series, the race lineup was set by a draw. Burton will start 12th, alongside Briscoe. Gragson drew the pole position and will start on the front row alongside his JR Motorsports teammate Michael Annett.

“I had that conversation with my team trying to figure out how we could keep momentum rolling and kind of stay in the swing of things,” Burton said. “And we came to the conclusion we kind of just had to be ourselves and do what we were doing right in the beginning.

“The more we focused on trying to just over-analyze everything and focus on just trying to come back with the same momentum and all this, it would probably be detrimental. We figured if we can start the season good the first time, we can re-start it good the second time. We’re going to approach it that way.”

Cole Custer, now a rookie in the NASCAR Cup Series, is the most recent Darlington Xfinity Series winner – earning the trophy last Fall over fellow 2020 Cup Series rookie and eventual 2019 Xfinity champion Tyler Reddick. Briscoe’s sixth-place finish last year was best among those competing this weekend.

“What makes it tough is it’s just so different from every track we go to,” Briscoe said. “The groove, the surface and the shape are unlike any on the schedule, and it’s so narrow. You’ve got to take care of your tires or you aren’t going to be able to make any moves for position and move around on the racetrack to find speed. Under the lights at Darlington is going to be different, for sure. It’s easy to make mistakes – we saw that on Sunday – so patience is going to be the most important thing.”

Reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Busch will roll off 26th on Thursday. He’s scheduled to race in all seven of NASCAR’s first races back – three at Darlington (NASCAR Cup Series and Xfinity) and four events at Charlotte Motor Speedway next week (two NASCAR Cup Series races and one each in the Xfinity and Gander RV & Outdoors Truck series).

He’s a two-time winner (2011 and 2013) in the Xfinity Series at Darlington.

Celebrity chef Guy Fieri will be the grand marshal for the NASCAR Cup Series Toyota 500 night race on Wednesday at Darlington Raceway (6 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN, Sirius XM NASCAR Radio).

This will be the third time Fieri has served as the grand marshal for a Cup Series race, which included the 2015 NASCAR All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway and the Pennsylvania 400 at Pocono Raceway in 2016. He has also attended the season-ending awards banquet in previous years.

RELATED: Singer-songwriter Jewel to sing national anthem for Darlington

Fieri has played a significant role supporting the restaurant industry as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to impact businesses across the country, setting up the Guy Fieri National Restaurant Employee Relief Fund program.

According to the National Restaurant Association, four in 10 restaurants have closed and more than eight million restaurant workers have lost their jobs. Thanks to major brands like TikTok, Netflix and Uber Eats, the program has raised nearly $22 million in commitments, including donations from every-day Americans who have contributed $1.5 million to the fund.

One hundred percent of the donations will go to restaurant workers in need. More than 60,000 workers have registered for the grants, receiving more than 40 applications per second when the website for relief initially launched. So far, Fieri’s program has awarded nearly 25,000 grants.

Visit RERF.US to donate to the fund and learn more.

NASCAR issued multiple penalties Monday for lug-nut violations after Sunday’s Cup Series race at Darlington Raceway, including a one-race suspension for Chris Gayle, crew chief of Joe Gibbs Racing’s No. 20 team.

The No. 20 Toyota was found with two lug nuts not safely secured in a post-race check after Erik Jones drove the car to an eighth-place finish in The Real Heroes 400 at the 1.366-mile track. Monday, NASCAR officials fined Gayle $20,000 and suspended him for the next points-paying Cup Series event, scheduled Wednesday (6 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM) at Darlington.

RELATED: Official race results

A Monday update to the entry list showed that race engineer Seth Chavka would replace Gayle on the No. 20 team’s pit box for Wednesday’s Toyota 500.

Five other Cup Series teams were found with one unsecured lug nut each after Sunday’s 400-miler. Crew chiefs for those teams were each fined $10,000 for the safety violation of Section 10.9.10.4 in the 2020 NASCAR Rule Book.

The other teams (and crew chiefs) penalized:

• No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford for race winner Kevin Harvick (crew chief Rodney Childers)
• No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota for Denny Hamlin (crew chief Chris Gabehart)
• No. 22 Team Penske Ford for Joey Logano (crew chief Paul Wolfe)
• No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet for Matt Kenseth (crew chief Chad Johnston)
• No. 95 Leavine Family Racing Toyota for Christopher Bell (crew chief Jason Ratcliff)

Singer-songwriter Jewel, who has sold more than 30 million albums in a distinguished and varied career, will sing the national anthem Wednesday night prior to the Toyota 500 NASCAR Cup Series race at Darlington Raceway (6 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Jewel, also an actress and New York Times best-selling author, is celebrating the 25th anniversary of he multi-platinum breakthrough debut album “Pieces of You” in 2020.

Wednesday’s race at Darlington marks the second event in NASCAR’s return to racing following a pause due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Musical artist Darius Ruckerperformed the national anthem for the series’ return Sunday.

Kevin Harvick found himself pacing on his porch just before sunup Sunday, pondering when to leave for the race track. The usual chronology that drivers use for their race-day routines had been pruned down to the essentials.

Alex Bowman, meanwhile, sat on-site without a public relations rep to help guide him through his pre-race obligations at Darlington Raceway. The situation that reminded him of his earlier tenures with lesser-funded teams, when he virtually served as his own PR handler. With at-track personnel limited, personal directions were replaced by a tree of calendar reminders and notifications that helped him track where to go and when.

RELATED: At-track photos: Darlington | Race results

Joey Logano — like other drivers, flying solo this weekend without family or personal assistants — discovered after his arrival that he’d packed two left shoes for the trip. Two left feet aren’t great for dancing or driving, it turns out. Fortunately, he found a spare pair stowed in the team hauler.

Steve O’Donnell acknowledged the surreal nature of a most unusual race-day Sunday, but NASCAR’s top competition official carried hopes that the well-orchestrated plan for the sport to resume safely would unfold without a hitch. He then found himself in the scoring tower 45 minutes earlier than normal, the anticipation too great after a nearly 10-week layoff.

For all the curves thrown at the typical weekend course of events, racing resumed with its familiar roar in an unfamiliar atmosphere in The Real Heroes 400, stock-car racing’s first race since the coronavirus outbreak placed the racing schedule on hold. The disease’s impact on the sports world and everyday life were palpable, creating images that illustrated how diligently the sanctioning body, the track and state and local officials had cooperated to make things work.

Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

Engine noise rattled off the South Carolina track’s empty grandstands, with only well-spaced spotters in the seats where fans would normally be. Camping and parking areas sat largely unused. Limited numbers of crew members, broadcasters and officials all passed through health screening stations, then maintained their distance for their necessary preparations. The national anthem from country artist Darius Rucker was pre-recorded and piped in remotely. No practice and no qualifying in an effort to limit exposure for the personnel there — just the green flag to the race.

In a further sign of the times, Harvick celebrated in a social-distanced Victory Lane with a facemask — marking both a personal milestone with his 50th Cup Series win and a unique point in NASCAR’s history with a race that didn’t exist before the season began. High-fives and hugs all around from his crew were replaced by isolation and a passing elbow-bump after pictures were taken. Instead of waving to cheering fans after his No. 4 Ford’s burnouts on the frontstretch, he emerged from his in-car bubble to virtual cricket sounds from unoccupied seats.

“In the end, in the big picture of things,” Harvick said, “being able to do what we did today, and that’s race, is what everybody wants to do.”

The oddities of a sparsely populated Darlington were far-reaching. The venerable old oval in the sandhills has drawn crowds since 1950, enjoying a recent revival with its move back to its traditional Labor Day spot on the calendar and the advent of the annual throwback weekend to embrace the sport’s history.

MORE: Harvick prevails in NASCAR’s return

Sunday’s chapter in Darlington’s ledger will stand out not just for its unusual nature, but for what it meant to have the NASCAR industry try to regain its stride and to have sports back to provide a real-world diversion during a time of crisis.

“It was odd with the limited number of people here,” said O’Donnell, NASCAR executive vice president and chief racing development officer. “When you look up in the stands, you certainly missed the fans, that vibe, the energy. Even the music that was playing in the garage area doesn’t do it justice. I think the participants were able to create their own positive vibe knowing this was a big day for the sport, knowing it was a day we could showcase the sport to a live television audience and hopefully give some people a little bit of joy to watch them race.”

No one said it would be easy. Rodney Childers, Harvick’s crew chief at Stewart-Haas Racing, drove to the track Sunday with thoughts not only about how the day might go for his race team, but the logistics of even getting inside. Man, this could be a complete mess, he recalled thinking.

“I get to the race track and everything is just absolutely seamless,” Childers said post-race. “Pulling in, the way it was operated outside the race track coming in, the amount of detail that was in all that, I was kind of blown away by it.”

If the sport has a reliable ball carrier in the R&D realm, it’s the enduring focus on safety — an ever-moving target in a pastime that has inherent dangers. The safeguards shifted Sunday to include public health in an effort to return to work with restrictions in place to limit the spread of COVID-19. As with other aspects of each event, O’Donnell said officials would discuss Sunday’s return and strive to make improvements, collaborating with the tracks and local governments to fine-tune health guidelines.

As with most things, the unusual will become more usual. Six-feet distancing and stay-at-home protocols weren’t a thought during Daytona Speedweeks, and races without fans weren’t on the sport’s collective radar before the season started.

For now, the atmosphere may be surreal. But Sunday showed how the sport could adapt to make a safe, healthy return.

“People were smart, had good distance between each other, respect for what we had to do to perform,” said third-place finisher Kurt Busch. “Just the electric atmosphere, again, of something so new and something so uncharted that once we dropped the green flag, you got to zone in and focus on Darlington.

“Really a special time today around 3:30 p.m. to get belted in and do something we’ve never done as a sport.”

The graduation of last season’s Xfinity Series’ Big 3 to the NASCAR Cup Series this year figured to form another triumvirate for the Sunoco Rookie of the Year race for 2020.

After Sunday’s return to racing at Darlington Raceway, better make room for a fourth.

RELATED: Official results | At-track photos: Darlington

John Hunter Nemechek bolstered his candidacy Sunday with a career-best ninth-place result, his first top-10 finish in eight career Cup Series starts. It was one of two impressive performances by first-year drivers in The Real Heroes 400, with Tyler Reddick charging to the best finish by a rookie this season — seventh — in the No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet.

Reddick was one-third of the 2019 season’s three-pronged attack on the Xfinity Series win column, claiming the championship ahead of fellow Big 3 members Christopher Bell and Cole Custer. All three moved to NASCAR’s top rung full-time this season, highlighting a rookie class that also includes Nemechek, Brennan Poole and Quin Houff.

Nemechek’s result provided his own highlight on a gritty track that typically rewards a veteran’s poise. The effort marked the first top 10 for Front Row Motorsports since 2016 on a non-superspeedway (Daytona or Talladega), when Chris Buescher drove a Bob Jenkins-owned car to fifth place in the Bristol Night Race.

“A solid day, very excited, an awesome day coming home P9,” said the 22-year-old Nemechek, a seven-time winner in other NASCAR national series. “An amazing job by my team and the pit crew. Everybody executed all day with no mistakes. We made the right adjustments. Seth (Barbour, crew chief) and the engineers did a great job. The pit crew was flawless and I couldn’t have asked for a better day. It was great to get kicked off on the right foot for these races coming up. Hopefully, we can continue to build on this and create some momentum and continue to get our cars faster each and every week.”

As for the Big 3 hubbub, Nemechek acknowledged hearing the preseason chatter.

“I definitely feel like all the talk was about the Big 3. It was like the Big 3 and me, like what about me over here?” Nemechek said in a Monday conference call. “So, definitely trying to make a name for myself as far as part of the rookie class, and I feel like we’ve been able to do some of that and we just have to continue to try to do that, but the Big 3 definitely aren’t going away. They’re hard to compete with and they’re all really good. To be able to continue to compete with them and to race them week in, week out with the circumstances that we have at Front Row, it definitely makes myself feel good and makes our team feel good. I hope to continue to build momentum through the runs that we’ve had.”

Reddick’s day included a rally from a Lap 156 pit-road penalty for an uncontrolled tire, but he quickly regained his status inside the top 10. The two-time Xfinity champ was able to stay there, building on the progress he showed in the Cup Series’ previous two races (Auto Club, Phoenix).

Reddick has been the top-finishing rookie in three of the five races so far this season.

“Our first day back in the No. 8 Caterpillar Chevrolet was a little rough around the edges at times,” Reddick said, “but starting out in the 29th spot and racing our way into the top five in about the first 125 laps was just an outstanding kickoff to our race. It felt like we were bouncing right back from our good momentum that we had at Phoenix Raceway before this break.”

Kevin Harvick won his 50th career NASCAR Cup Series race Sunday at Darlington Raceway in NASCAR’s return to the track after 70 days away.

The drivers of NASCAR reacted on Twitter following the race — here are some of the best tweets.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr.’s return didn’t go quite as planned, considering he crashed on the first lap. At least there’s always Wednesday night’s race! 


Seven-time series champ Jimmie Johnson looked stout early until a crash on the final lap of Stage 1 — while leading the race — snarled his hopes at returning to Victory Lane.


Fontana winner Alex Bowman finished runner-up, continuing a run of solid finishes. 

 

Here’s how the afternoon went for the other drivers.


And, perhaps one of the best sights of all from Sunday was watching Ryan Newman make his first start since his last-lap crash in the Daytona 500. 

Sunday night, on Lap 210 of 293, Matt Kenseth did something he probably would have never expected to do in 2020. The 48-year-old from Wisconsin raced his way into the top 10 during a NASCAR Cup Series event at Darlington Raceway.

Kenseth last competed in NASCAR’s top division at the end of the 2018 season. The Real Heroes 400 was his first race back since that November finale. And he finished 10th come checkered flag.

“That was awesome,” said teammate Kurt Busch, who came in third with his No. 1 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet. “When I got out of the car in the infield, they have an old-school pylon of where the top-10 finishers are with their car number. There’s old Matt Kenseth, No. 42, finishing 10th. That’s what he will do every day, all race tracks. I mean, that’s Matt.”

RELATED: Official results | At-track gallery | Race recap

Chip Ganassi Racing announced back in April that Kenseth would take over the No. 42 Chevrolet entry. Its previous driver, Kyle Larson, was released from the team after using a racial slur on an iRacing stream during the COVID-19 on-track pause.

Kenseth and the No. 42 team had less than a month to be prepared for NASCAR’s comeback. Thankfully for both parties, Kenseth isn’t just any driver. He’s the 2003 champion with 39 victories to his name, including one at the South Carolina track considered “Too Tough to Tame.”

“Here’s the thing about Matt Kenseth: He should have never quit,” said Kevin Harvick, driver of the race-winning No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford. “Matt Kenseth was winning races when he retired. … I mean, experience and skill go a long way in our sport. If you have those two things, like Matt does, you’re going to be successful. You don’t just forget how to do that.”

Kenseth wasn’t alone, either. Ryan Newman also made his competitive return after sitting out the last three races while recovering from injuries sustained during his last-lap crash in the season opener. The driver of the No. 6 Roush Fenway Racing Ford came in 15th at the 1.366-mile egg-shaped oval, recovering from a late-race spin with 39 laps to go that drew the 10th and final caution.

NASCAR granted both Kenseth and Newman postseason waivers, so they are eligible for the 2020 NASCAR Playoffs. In order to make the eventual 16-driver field, they’ll have to either win a race or be among the top points earners without a win. The two have a ways to go, considering Newman is currently ranked 28th and Kenseth sits 34th in the standings. Their next chance to make up ground is Wednesday’s Toyota 500, back at Darlington (6 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

“Overall, great to be back in the race car,” Newman said. “Proud of how everybody worked, not just our team but everyone in NASCAR to break the ice on getting the world back in motion.”

Hendrick Motorsports picked up Sunday where it had left off with its early season performance, pouring on the speed it had shown in the four NASCAR Cup Series races completed before the coronavirus pandemic placed the sports world on hold. By day’s end at Darlington Raceway, Alex Bowman — the driver with the freshest ink on his contract — carried the banner on a wildly mixed day for the organization.

Bowman placed a strong second behind winner Kevin Harvick in The Real Heroes 400, leading 41 laps in Rick Hendrick’s No. 88 Chevrolet. He also sits second in the points standings behind Harvick, who battled closely with Bowman in the laps after the final restart.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos: Darlington

“That’s tough. You’re racing one of the best in the business and one of the most technical hard race tracks we go to,” Bowman said. “Just to have the opportunity to get to race him hard and clean like that was a lot of fun.”

The day had the makings of a memorable day for the Hendrick operation, which has 14 Darlington victories but none since Jimmie Johnson’s most recent triumph at the historic South Carolina oval in 2012. Bowman and Johnson carried that charge early, taking turns at the front as all four Hendrick cars formed up in the top 10.

That Stage 1 delight abruptly went sour, when Johnson made an uncharacteristic miscue in traffic that pushed him out of control and into a race-ending impact on the last lap of the opening segment. The error handed the stage victory to lurking teammate William Byron, but his time at the front was a short-lived three laps. Before Stage 2 could get underway in earnest, Byron’s No. 24 Chevy careened into the outside retaining wall in Turn 3, then skidded to a halt at the track’s opposite end.

MORE: Johnson exits early in Stage 1 crash

Byron limped to a 35th-place finish, the damage leaving him 14 laps off the pace. Johnson completed just 89 of the 293 laps and wound up 38th in the 40-car field.

“We had such a fast car today,” Byron said. “We just had a vibration that kept getting worse and the wheel finally came loose. I really appreciate me team sticking with it today and for all the hard work they have put in to unload with such a fast Axalta Chevy. Good thing we can rally and do it all again on Wednesday. We’ll be ready.”

The double-shot of early exits from the realm of contenders left the burden to Bowman and teammate Chase Elliott, who grinded out a fourth-place result in the No. 9 Chevrolet. Though Elliott didn’t bloom until the late going at Darlington and also didn’t reach the top of the scoring pylon, both he and Bowman continue to rank solidly among the top five in the Cup Series’ lap leaders for the 2020 season.

Hendrick Motorsports was not unlike other teams affected by the pandemic shutdown of the sports world, with stay-at-home orders bringing a temporary halt to race-shop production. But as NASCAR took its first step back toward resuming the season, the steps Hendrick made to regain some of its long-held competitive edge have kept that early stride.

Any extra spring in Bowman’s step could be attributed to his contract status. The 27-year-old driver ended any lingering notion of uncertainty by revealing Saturday he had re-signed with the organization for next season — quite an opening act for what was almost a winning effort Sunday.

“Obviously not having to talk about 2021 anymore and just focus on the task at hand and going and contending for a championship is really good,” Bowman said. “Gotta thank Mr. Hendrick and everybody at HMS. Obviously, my career has changed significantly since coming over to HMS and they gave me a big break and I’m very appreciate for that, so really enjoying it, glad to have that squared away and just ready to go try to win some more races.”

The No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford of Kevin Harvick passed post-race technical inspection Sunday after winning The Real Heroes 400 at Darlington Raceway.

Harvick’s race-winning car was found to be compliant with the 2020 NASCAR Rule Book after the 293-lap event at the 1.366-mile track.

RELATED: Official results

These cars were found with at least one lug nut not safely secured in a post-race check: Harvick’s No. 4 SHR Ford, Joey Logano’s No. 22 Team Penske Ford, Denny Hamlin’s No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, Erik Jones’ No. 20 JGR Toyota, Christopher Bell’s No. 95 Leavine Family Racing Toyota and Matt Kenseth’s No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet. Jones’ car had two lug nuts not safely secured.

With post-race teardown complete, the race results are official.

This is the second year of a post-race process to bring a more timely approach to inspection for all three NASCAR national series. Competition officials announced before the 2019 season thorough post-race inspections would take place shortly after the checkered flag at the track instead of midweek at the NASCAR Research & Development Center. Those inspections come with a stiffer deterrence structure that includes disqualification for significant rules infractions.

NASCAR will still inspect cars at the R&D Center as needed to monitor trends and parts compliance.