“The NASCAR family like so many others is hurt and angered by the immensely troubling events that have taken place across our country in recent weeks. For us to heal and move forward as a nation, we all need to listen more and be united in the stand against racism, hatred and senseless violence and loss of life. And we must all hold ourselves accountable to driving positive change.

While our sport has made progress over the years, there remains much work to be done and we fully embrace our responsibility to help bridge the racial divide that continues to exist in our country. We must do better and our commitment to promoting equality and inclusion continues and will never waver.”

Name: Paul
Current City: Moody, Alabama
Member Since: 2016

Getting to know Paul:

Q.  How did you first become interested in NASCAR?
“My grandfather took me to a Talladega race when I was 8 years old in the fall of 1988. I was of course a Davey fan being from Alabama, but someone handed me a Mark Martin poster and I hung it on my wall when I got home and pulled hard for him ever since. After that first race, I spent every Sunday afternoon when I could in my grandfather’s living room glued to the TV watching the race with him growing up.”

Q. What is your favorite part about NASCAR?
“The speed, the history, and watching it evolve with time. The different personalities and paths drivers take to make it. Watching someone come into trucks and trying to predict where they will be in a few years. Watching drivers grow and become dominant or struggle to finally succeed. There is so much more to it than just “going in circles” as some say. The whole world of NASCAR is what I enjoy, not just the races.”

Q. What is your favorite NASCAR memory?
“There are so many to choose, sitting in the orange recliner at my grandads growing up watching races, standing in a Walmart electronics center in the 90’s watching nearly a whole race while my family shopped. But my favorite is probably my most recent. Darlington was always on my bucket list of tracks and I finally got to go to a race there 2 years ago. Since Martin Truex Jr. started in the Busch Series, I had been pulling for him to make it. I have been to many races but never got to watch one of my favorite drivers win while there. So, seeing Martin pull off that win at one of my favorite tracks was one of the happiest times watching racing.”

Q. Do you have a favorite in any of the following categories?
Drivers: “Martin Truex Jr, Ryan Blaney, and Landon Cassill.”
Tracks: “Talladega, Darlington, Watkins Glen, Atlanta.”
Sponsors: “I don’t have one single favorite, but a few that pop into my head when I think NASCAR like STP, Bass Pro, and the old Valvoline and Havoline cars.”

Q. What are some of your hobbies?
“Hunting and fishing when I am not at the softball fields watching my daughter.”

FROM ALL OF US AT NASCAR, WE THANK PAUL FOR HIS CONTINUED SUPPORT AND LOOK FORWARD TO HEARING FROM HIM IN 2020!

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

Bristol Motor Speedway has long been built on atmosphere. The eggshell-anticipation that comes with the Colosseum theme of full-contact racing. The noise that echoes off the grandstands and surrounding hills, giving it the Thunder Valley nickname. The roar that erupts from the bleachers when tens of thousands react to the almost inevitable short-track drama.

The speedway — no dummies — markets that bottled-up emotion to the hilt. Sunday, with COVID-19 safety restrictions still in place, there was no admittance save for essential personnel. It didn’t stop a handful of hearty faithful from parking outside to soak in a whiff of it — sounds only and sights unseen.

RELATED: Keselowski prevails | Elliott, Logano clash

Sunday’s Food City presents the Supermarket Heroes 500 brought back many familiar ingredients to the “It’s Bristol, Baby” formula that built the place. Never mind that the track was very nearly built in the nearby Piney Flats community, and that the slogan “It’s Piney Flats, Baby” wouldn’t have quite the same ring.

Digressions aside, shades of the Bristol that brought people clamoring for more emerged Sunday. Crumpled sheet metal and equally damaged egos were commonplace, and winner Brad Keselowski was one of the few who left the .533-mile bullring smiling.

It was dynamic, just far, far quieter.

“Early on in the race everybody was hitting each other. It carried in all the way to the end,” said Keselowski, who sprang up to lead the final three laps. “Some people ran me over. I probably ran some people over. Everybody is mad at everybody going into Atlanta next week.”

NASCAR’s five-race return since the pandemic outbreak has been heavy on drama and subplots. Besides the unique situation of racing under new public-health protocols, the addition of shorter midweek races has ramped up the urgency to gain ground wherever possible. Darlington’s second event erupted with a Chase Elliott vs. Kyle Busch confrontation, and Charlotte’s pair of races came loaded with heartbreak then redemption for NASCAR’s Most Popular Driver.

Bristol stood next as a likely candidate to add more pressure in the cooker. The track’s calling card was already close-quarters racing, but NASCAR’s reduced-downforce package for its shorter venues in 2020 meant a greater challenge. Holding the event without practice or qualifying produced more variables, and the addition of PJ1 traction compound to the lower lanes in the turns offered grooves, options and possibilities as the race’s complexion evolved.

As the daytime start progressed to evening, the cream rose and the specter of late-race contact among some of the sport’s heavyweights came through. Elliott was again at the center of that crescendo, with Joey Logano as his rival this time, and both of their cars cramming together into the Turn 3 wall with fewer than five laps remaining. They dismounted and argued, with reasonable social distance and through face masks, but oddly without any crowd buzz to stoke the confrontation. Piped-in cheers and jeers just wouldn’t have done the trick.

That’s where the long-range hopes come in. Bristol’s annual night race remains one of the best tickets on the Cup Series schedule, an event that mixes all of Sunday’s recipe essentials under the glare of bright lights. In a delicious wrinkle, those ingredients move this year from mid-August to a September date in the NASCAR Playoffs with elimination from the postseason picture in the balance. Same formula, higher stakes.

“More of the same. That’s Bristol, man,” said runner-up Clint Bowyer, who likened the place to I-70 Speedway in Missouri, a short track entrenched in his racing roots. “Just like this place. They called it the action track. When you pull in here, you know all hell’s going to break loose. You don’t know where it’s coming from, where it’s going to be, how it’s going to be, who is going to be the benefactor, who is going to leave pissed off.

“That’s short‑track racing at its best. Nobody does it better than Bristol.”

It’s an atmosphere that the faithful fans parked outside Bristol Motor Speedway on Sunday can hopefully feel, hear and see when September arrives.

Ryan Preece finished 12th in the Food City presents the Supermarket Heroes 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway on Sunday after heading into the race with an average finish position of 27.4.

Preece’s result added 25 points to his season total.

Preece started in 33rd position. The third-year driver has collected one top-five and three top-10 finishes in his career.

Sunday marked Preece’s second career start at Bristol Motor Speedway. He’s completed both of those races, but has not had a top-10 finish at the track.

The Berlin, Connecticut native began the race four spots behind his career mark of 28.9, but finished 17 places ahead of his career average of 29.1.

Preece raced against 40 other drivers on the way to his 12th-place finish. The race endured 17 cautions and 102 caution laps. There were 21 lead changes.

Brad Keselowski secured the win in the race, and Clint Bowyer finished second. Jimmie Johnson crossed the finish line third, Kyle Busch secured fourth, and Erik Jones grabbed the No. 5 spot.

Chase Elliott got off to a great start in the race, winning Stages 1 and 2, but couldn’t hang on to secure the race victory.

Ryan Preece Driver Page | Get Preece Gear | Race Center

Bubba Wallace rounded out the top 10 in the Food City presents the Supermarket Heroes 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway on Sunday.

The top 10 finish for Wallace added 27 points to his season total.

Wallace started in 36th position. The fourth-year driver has collected two top-five and five top-10 finishes in his career.

Sunday was Wallace’s fourth career start at Bristol Motor Speedway.

The Mobile, Alabama native began the race 12 spots behind his career mark of 23.8, but finished 12 places ahead of his career average of 22.1.

Wallace’s 10th-place finish came against a field of 40 drivers. The race endured 17 cautions and 102 caution laps. There were 21 lead changes.

Brad Keselowski secured the win in the race, and Clint Bowyer finished second. Jimmie Johnson placed third, Kyle Busch took fourth, and Erik Jones rounded out the top five.

Chase Elliott got off to a strong start in the race, winning the first two stages, but couldn’t hold on to end up in Victory Lane.

Bubba Wallace Driver Page | Get Wallace Gear | Race Center

Christopher Bell finished ninth in the Food City presents the Supermarket Heroes 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway on Sunday to earn his first career top-10 finish.

The top 10 finish for Bell added 28 points to his season total.

Bell started in 35th position.

The Norman, Oklahoma native began the race 14 spots behind his career mark of 21.1, but finished 14 places ahead of his career average of 22.6.

Bell’s ninth-place finish came against 40 other drivers. The race endured 17 cautions and 102 caution laps. Prior to the checkered flag there were 21 lead changes.

Brad Keselowski brought home the win in the race, and Clint Bowyer took second. Jimmie Johnson crossed the finish line third, Kyle Busch took fourth, and Erik Jones grabbed the No. 5 spot.

Chase Elliott got off to a great start in the race, winning the first two stages, but couldn’t hold on to secure the race victory.

Christopher Bell Driver Page | Get Bell Gear | Race Center

Erik Jones finished fifth in the Food City presents the Supermarket Heroes 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway on Sunday.

Jones’ top five finish added 35 points to his season total.

Jones started in 15th position. The fifth-year driver has collected two career victories, with 25 top-five finishes and 52 results inside the top 10.

In his career at Bristol Motor Speedway, Jones has compiled two top-five finishes and his fifth-place result marks the second top 10.

The Byron, Michigan native began the race two spots behind his career mark of 12.8, but finished 12 places ahead of his career average of 17.4.

Jones raced against a field of 40 drivers on the way to his fifth-place finish. The race endured 17 cautions and 102 caution laps. There were 21 lead changes.

Brad Keselowski finished first in the race, and Clint Bowyer finished second. Jimmie Johnson placed third, with Kyle Busch bringing home fourth place. Jones rounded out the top five.

Chase Elliott got off to a great start in the race, winning the first two stages, but couldn’t hold on to end up in Victory Lane.

Erik Jones Driver Page | Get Jones Gear | Race Center

Jimmie Johnson finished third in the Food City presents the Supermarket Heroes 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway on Sunday.

Johnson’s top five finish added 35 points to his season total.

Johnson started in 24th position. The 20th-year driver has secured 83 career victories, with 228 top-five finishes and 367 results inside the top 10.

Victory Lane at Bristol Motor Speedway is a familiar place for Johnson, who has two career wins at the track. His third-place finish also marks the 12th time he has finished in the top five at Bristol and his 21st top 10.

The El Cajon, California native began the race 11 spots behind his career mark of 12.7, but finished 11 places ahead of his career average of 14.1.

Johnson took on 40 other drivers on the way to his third-place finish. The race endured 17 cautions and 102 caution laps. There were 21 lead changes.

Brad Keselowski earned the victory in the race, followed by Clint Bowyer in second place. After Johnson’s third-place finish, Kyle Busch brought home fourth, and Erik Jones rounded out the top five.

Chase Elliott got off to a great start in the race, winning both of the first two stages, but couldn’t hang on to secure the race victory.

Jimmie Johnson Driver Page | Get Johnson Gear | Race Center

The No. 2 Team Penske Ford Mustang of Brad Keselowski passed post-race technical inspection Sunday after winning the NASCAR Cup Series Food City presents the Supermarket Heroes 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway.

RELATED: Official race results

Keselowski’s race-winning car was found to be compliant with the 2020 NASCAR Rule Book following the 500-lap event at the .533-mile concrete Tennessee short track. The fifth-place finishing No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota of Erik Jones was found to be missing one lug nut.

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 that 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.

Chase Elliott and Joey Logano crashed out of contention in a heated battle for the lead with three laps remaining in Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Bristol Motor Speedway.

RELATED: Official race results | Keselowski prevails

With laps ticking down in the Food City presents the Supermarket Heroes 500, Elliott’s No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet charged low in Turn 3 and drifted up into Logano’s  No. 22 Team Penske Ford. The two cars clanged together and squeezed into the outside retaining wall, handing the lead and eventual victory to Logano’s teammate, Brad Keselowski.

“Just going for the win,” said Elliott, who led 88 laps in a bid for his second straight Cup Series win. “Trying to get a run underneath him and got really loose in, and I don’t know if I had a tire going down or just got loose on entry. As soon as I turned off the wall I had zero chance in making it, so I’ll certainly take the blame. …

“I hate we both wrecked, but we can’t go back in time now.”

RELATED: Elliott: ‘Going for the win’ | Logano says Elliott ‘wrecked me’

Logano finished 21st and Elliott 22nd as the final two drivers on the lead lap. Elliott and Logano discussed the late-race exchange on pit road after the 500-lap event, a chat that left Logano dissatisfied with his foe’s explanation.

“He wrecked me,” said Logano, who led two laps, including his final spike to the top of the leaderboard on Lap 497. “He got loose underneath me. The part that’s frustrating is that afterwards a simple apology — like be a man and come up to someone and say, ‘Hey, my bad.’ But I had to force an apology, which, to me, is childish. Anyways, man, we had a good recovery with our Autotrader Mustang and had a shot to win. That’s all you can hope for. I passed him clean. It’s hard racing at the end, I get that. It’s hard racing, but, golly, man, be a man and take the hit when you’re done with it.”