While we wait for the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series season to resume, we can find comfort in knowing there will be plenty of trophies for drivers to chase once we get back to the race track.

But is there one trophy that stands out above all the rest?

NASCAR.com’s Jonathan Merryman and Chase Wilhelm debate which piece of hardware awarded to race winners throughout the year might look best in every driver’s trophy case.

RELATED: The best trophies in NASCAR, ranked

MERRYMAN: The best trophy in NASCAR has got to be the famous Grandfather Clock from Martinsville Speedway. It’s only fitting NASCAR’s oldest track, a track that has stood the test of time, awards its winner a classic timepiece.

There is no denying the prestige of winning the Daytona 500, the Southern 500 or the Brickyard 400, but there is something about a trophy that every hour on the hour is a reminder of success at the toughest bullring in the NASCAR Cup Series. The clock was first awarded in 1964 to Fred Lorenzen. Back then, the Ridgeway clocks were built right down the road from the track, further engraining the history of the venue into the hardware the drivers took home.

There are a few added bonuses to the unique trophy as well. First off, it’s useful. Secondly, you can put it just about anywhere in your house and don’t have to worry about your wife second-guessing its placement.

WILHELM: Of course the Rustburg, Virginia, native is going to rally around the home-state trophy. Yeah, it’s a cool piece of hardware to strap atop your SUV like the Clampetts (shoutout to Clint Bowyer) and take home after a victorious day in Southern Virginia, but I think Harley J. Earl would probably clean your clock if you thought it was better than the one earned in Daytona Beach, Florida, each February.

The renowned Harley J. Earl trophy awarded to the Daytona 500 champion each year is not only arguably the most iconic in motorsports and sleek in design, its namesake is rich in both NASCAR and automobile history.

Earl served as a car designer for General Motors before becoming NASCAR’s second commissioner. NASCAR founder Bill France Sr. named the Daytona 500 trophy after Earl out of respect for his hard work and dedication to stock-car racing and the automotive industry. The car that sits atop the trophy is Earl’s Firebird I concept car design, and the base is shaped like the 2.5-mile superspeedway.

While drivers receive a replica of the Harley J. Earl trophy, the actual trophy stands over 4-feet tall. Each year, a driver gets his or her name etched onto it and can forever be called a Daytona 500 champion. I’d definitely want that trophy the most among those in my display if I wheeled a NASCAR Cup Series car every Sunday.

DEBATE: Which driver is the biggest early surprise outside the top 10?

The interruption to the 2020 NASCAR season as the country and world manages the COVID-19 pandemic has been understandably disappointing and disconcerting for racers, fans, teams and the industry as a whole. But instead of completely retreating during this time of general uncertainty, NASCAR and the racing industry at large have responded immediately with exactly the kind of pick-me-up that is making a legitimate life-saving difference.

The NASCAR Research & Development Center, located outside Charlotte, has turned its high-tech capabilities into real-life medical assistance, manufacturing face shields with its 3D printers and even a prototype human head that Wake Forest University doctors and scientists are using to research better treatment supply options.

RELATED: Latest schedule, timeline updates related to coronavirus

CORE Autosport, a team in IMSA’s WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, is similarly committed to helping out. Its team shop is manufacturing thousands of face masks for distribution across the country. Technique Inc., a Michigan-based company that normally supplies chassis components to NASCAR teams, has turned its efforts during this pause in racing to making face shields for medical distribution and ramped up production to 20,000 shields per day.

Roush Fenway Racing has developed a special prototype “transport box” that helps provide a safe, workable barrier between COVID-19 patients and the many medical personnel treating them in hospital rooms and transporting them on hospital floors.

When it comes to innovation, rapid response and answering the call, the sport of NASCAR is all in.

“I think NASCAR is in a unique position across the industry and especially at the Cup (Series) level where you have some of the best fabricators and engineers in the world and we have all this capability to make all these parts for cars, parts for testing, so you have a high talent pool and then you have the machinery and the people needed to kinda do all this now,” said Eric Jacuzzi, senior director of aerodynamics at the NASCAR R&D Center. “That’s what really puts us in a unique spot to be able to help out.”

Unlike any other major sports, the very essence of NASCAR racing involves cutting-edge technology conducted – literally – by rocket scientists, engineers and tech geniuses who would normally be putting their minds around new racing innovations. Instead of making cars go faster, they are now helping a nation try to fight a historic global medical pandemic.

“Sitting at home for a day or two is great, but I think most people are starting to look at what they can do,” Jacuzzi said. “And the crew we have here working on this stuff is all volunteer. People are volunteering to come here at 9 o’clock at night and stay until midnight – all different types of departments. It helps having people do that, and even people are taking some parts home and having their teenage children help with cutting things out. So it’s even giving students at home right now the opportunity to contribute.

“We’re used to working hard and being on the go all the time, so it’s a big adjustment for us to kind of have this pause. But this is helping us keep going and really just from an education side, more people are learning about how to run these machines and all that so it’s good for everyone to feel like they are contributing and helping out and they certainly are.”

At the NASCAR R&D Center, Jacuzzi said the idea to mass produce the face shields came from a random homeowners association post on a Facebook page.

It was a similar connection for Roush Fenway Racing, said the team’s operations director, Tommy Wheeler. Dr. Brian Palank, the brother-in-law of Roush simulation director Marcus Marty, reached out to see if Roush operations had the capability to help both conceptualize and manufacture a device that would provide another line of defense for the medical professionals treating virus patients.

“I said, ‘Yes, of course we can. Let’s do this now,’ ” Wheeler said. “That was around lunchtime (last Thursday), so we mobilized here so we could make some prototypes, which we did that afternoon and got them delivered to Brian (Palank) to see if they worked.

“What ensued from there was a round of tweaks and things that the doctors and such wanted. He started sending pictures and discussing with his network of physicians and anesthesiologists around the greater Charlotte area. We then did approximately three more prototypes and by Friday – a day later, which I’m pretty proud of – we were online with what we call our Version 2 Box. They were impressed by that.”

RELATED: How industry, drivers, partners are responding to coronavirus

Since then, Roush Fenway Racing has delivered 58 units to hospitals from Wake Forest to Miami. Wheeler describes the devices as something similar to a “sneeze guard” at a salad bar. The clear guard is placed over the patient in bed, covering his or her upper body from head to about chest level. There are two holes that allow physicians and nurses access, but the protection helps prevent the kind of immediate exposure that has spread the virus.

“When they are intubating people, it can be a messy and high-risk environment, because there’s coughing, there’s fluid, it can become an aerosol,” Wheeler said. “That’s why they’re called aerosol boxes because there’s pressurized air effectively spewing small droplets into the atmosphere. Imagine you’re in critical care in the ICU or something: What was happening was you’d have two or three healthcare professionals standing around the patient as this (intubating) occurs and wipes out all their personal protection equipment that as we know is already in short supply right now.

“What this does is contains it, so now it moves their outer garments from being the first line of defense to now a secondary or third line of defense. It means we’re wiping out less face masks, less goggles, and effectively, the only thing exposed to the threat is their gloves and sleeves.”

What’s telling is all these organizations – plus many more in the auto-racing industry – were immediately willing to offer their help. In many cases, teams turned their facilities into impromptu manufacturing hubs, absorbing the costs themselves in the name of providing a greater good.

CORE Autosport, whose Porsches finished second and third in the GT Class of IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Series’ 2020 Rolex 24 at Daytona International Speedway season opener, is making thousands of face masks daily to help the supply, improving the product as they go.

“As the word has gotten out about these face masks the demand has been increasing every day and we will continue to produce these face masks as long as there is a need in this country,” CORE Autosport team manager Morgan Brady said.

It’s a common and assuring theme for so many in the racing industry: all willing to be all-in.

“I am very proud of our guys and what we’ve been able to do for our community,” Wheeler said. “This is a great example because the thing that makes NASCAR and Roush Fenway employees unique compared to the real world is that we have very highly skilled craftsman and fabricators and engineers. What really makes it unique is our ‘whatever it takes’ attitude and our time to market expectation far exceeds what the real world is accustomed to. That’s what allows us to go from concept to production to release in less than 36 hours. This was my rallying speech to my staff working on this project: No one else can do this in this amount of time except us, and we’re going to. We’re glad and proud to be asked to do it.

“What can we do? Here’s something we can do, so let’s do it and help everyone.”

NASCAR officials announced Thursday that the planned 2021 debut of the Next Gen car has been delayed until 2022.

“Due to challenges related to the coronavirus pandemic, the debut of the Next Gen car will be delayed until 2022,” said John Probst, NASCAR Senior Vice President of Racing Innovation. “The decision was made in collaboration with the OEMs and team owners. We will continue to develop the Next Gen car, and a revised testing timeline will be shared when more information is available.”

NASCAR Cup Series drivers had been testing the Next Gen model at a variety of tracks since October 2019, prepping for its initial planned debut at the 2021 Daytona 500.

The Next Gen car was on track for its fourth formal test in March, when William Byron took the wheel at 2-mile Auto Club Speedway. Previously, Austin Dillon (Richmond, .75 miles), Joey Logano (Phoenix, 1 mile) and Erik Jones (Miami, 1.5 miles) took their turns testing the car and providing crucial feedback to NASCAR officials.

MORE: Pictures from Auto Club

Earlier this year, NASCAR announced the Next Gen prototype’s new features include 18-inch, single center-locking lug wheels designed by German wheel manufacturer BBS.

Other features include a new body design, a shorter rear spoiler, a raised splitter and larger brakes, giving the Next Gen model a closer correlation between a highway-going consumer vehicle and its NASCAR counterpart, a move that also means increased brand identity.

Drivers who have piloted the car come away with plenty of learnings – and positive reviews.

“It’s not about what drives the best, what’s the easiest to drive … we don’t want that,” Joey Logano said after testing the car at Richmond. “We want something that’s challenging that will show that the best driver and the best team will prevail. … So we’re trying things on different extremes.

“We’re still in the preliminary stages, but we definitely have some cool pieces to the car.”

MORE: Logano talks ins, outs

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (April 2, 2020) – Just days after breaking its own record for staging the most-watched eSports event in television history, NASCAR today announced a slate of new fantasy and prop betting offerings on the eNASCAR iRacing.com Pro Invitational Series, created courtesy of NASCAR’s official gaming partner, Penn Interactive.

In February, NASCAR and Penn Interactive, a subsidiary of Penn National Gaming, Inc. (PENN: NASDAQ) (“Penn National” or the “Company”), announced a new multi-year partnership that led to the creation of a brand new, free-to-play, mobile game named NASCAR Finish Line, which offered users the chance to win a $50,000 jackpot every race. Now, today, courtesy of Penn Interactive, the app is being relaunched to include eNASCAR contests – thus providing fans of the fast-growing eNASCAR iRacing.com Pro Invitational Series with even deeper ways to engage with the sport.

MORE: NASCAR Finish Line

Alongside the launch of the game, Penn also announced that it would serve as the entitlement sponsor of the upcoming eNASCAR iRacing.com Pro Invitational Series event from virtual Dover International Speedway on Sunday, May 3 . The event will be entitled by the eNASCAR Finish Line app. It also will feature special integration from Barstool Sports’ personalities – with more details slated to come at a later date.

“During this time of uncertainty, eNASCAR has provided sports fans around the world with an exciting form of sports entertainment that is helping restore some normalcy to the weekend,” said Scott Warfield, NASCAR managing director of gaming. “Now, courtesy of our partners at Penn Interactive, fans can foster an even deeper connection with the new series and have even more incentive to tune into eNASCAR on FOX and FS1.”

The newly relaunched eNASCAR Finish Line mobile game is available now across iOS and Android phones and tablets and can be downloaded on the App Store and Google Play store. Players can win a $5,000 jackpot by accurately predicting the top two finishers and the highest finishers across six different groupings of four drivers.

RELATED: Full eNASCAR coverage

In addition to the gamification elements that fans will be able to enjoy alongside eNASCAR, more fans than ever before will be able to engage with the fast-growing eSport courtesy of NASCAR.com.

eNASCAR.com has been freshly updated to reflect the addition of the eNASCAR iRacing.com Pro Invitational Series – providing fans with a centralized hub for information surrounding the world’s most watched eSport series.

Fans can tune in this weekend to watch a full slate of eNASCAR iRacing.com Pro Invitational Series events from virtual Bristol Motor Speedway, with the  main event, the “Food City Showdown,” being televised live at 1 p.m. ET on FOX, FS1 and the FOX Sports App, while a separate event from virtual BMS, Saturday Night Thunder, will be live-streamed on eNASCAR.com on Saturday night.

When you think of Jeff Gordon and Rusty Wallace, the thrilling 1997 Food City 500 finish is quite possibly the first thought that comes to mind.

Bristol Motor Speedway served as the site for a few intense battles between the two NASCAR Hall of Fame drivers, who had finished first and second there twice before. Gordon edged out Wallace in the 1995 spring race, while it was Wallace who took victory over Gordon at the night race in 1996. But it was this particular race in 1997 that doused all the fuel on the proverbial fire.

RELATED: Full race results | Watch more Classic Race Replays | All-time winners at Bristol

After starting on the pole, Wallace appeared to have victory easily in hand with a dialed-in No. 2 Penske Racing Ford, but a late-race charge by Gordon turned the tide. Wallace had led 155 laps before Gordon took the lead for the second time in the race on Lap 355 of the 500-lap event at the .533-mile concrete oval.

But Wallace didn’t let Gordon get very far, taking the lead back from Gordon on Lap 415 after the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet led 60 circuits. Wallace would go on to pace the next 85 laps for a total of 240, but it was the final one that gave him trouble.

Once both drivers took the white flag, Gordon’s fate appeared to be sealed with about a four car-length deficit behind Wallace. That was until Wallace caught a gaggle of lapped cars in Turn 2, allowing Gordon to run right up to the back bumper of the “Blue Deuce” coming down the backstretch.

At that moment, it was now or never for Gordon. Both drivers sailed into Turn 3 where Gordon made his infamous move, laying the chrome horn on Wallace just enough to push the No. 2 up the race track in Turn 4.

Gordon flew under the checkered flag for his 22nd career NASCAR Cup Series victory, while Wallace was able to salvage a second-place result by fending off Gordon’s teammate Terry Labonte.

Check out Jeff Gordon’s Bristol Motor Speedway victory after knocking Rusty Wallace out of the way coming to the checkered flag with this Classic Race Replay of the 1997 Food City 500.

STAMFORD, Conn.April 2, 2020 – Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin headline a group of 18 drivers that will compete at virtual versions of iconic and short tracks across America next week on NBCSN, as NASCAR America presents the NBC eSports Short Track iRacing Challenge beginning Monday, April 6, at 7 p.m. ET.

From Monday-Wednesday, six different drivers will compete in two timed races in Cup Series cars at an iconic track at 7 p.m. ET on NBCSN. The top two finishers from each night will advance to the championship race at the virtual Martinsville Speedway on Thursday night on NBCSN.

Monday – Rockingham Speedway
Tuesday – Lucas Oil Raceway at Indianapolis
Wednesday – Myrtle Beach Speedway
Thursday – Martinsville Speedway (Championship Race)

The following drivers will compete in the NBC eSports Short Track iRacing Challenge:

Monday at Rockingham Speedway – Kyle Busch, William Byron, Austin Dillon, Parker Kligerman, Tyler Reddick and Bubba Wallace
Tuesday at Lucas Oil Raceway – Justin Allgaier, Christopher Bell, Chase Briscoe, Harrison Burton, Denny Hamlin and Kyle Larson
Wednesday at Myrtle Beach Speedway – Landon Cassill, Matt DiBenedetto, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Timmy Hill, Ryan Preece and Myatt Snider

“We’re proud to continue our successful collaboration with iRacing and NASCAR, which began last year, to produce the NBC eSports Short Track iRacing Challenge,” said Jeff Behnke, vice president, production, NASCAR on NBC and NBCSN. “Thanks to all the drivers from the NASCAR Cup and Xfinity Series for joining in what should be four consecutive nights of entertainment and fun for all the great race fans and viewers.”

RELATED: Complete eNASCAR coverage

“Of all of the events we’ve been putting together for real-world pros, the NBC eSports Short Track iRacing Challenge should be one of the most fun,” said Steve Myers, iRacing executive producer. “So many of the top drivers in NASCAR have honed their skills on both local short tracks and iRacing, and combining the two for a virtual week-long showdown should deliver plenty of excitement. We can’t wait to see who takes the checkered flag and bragging rights!”

This marks the latest collaboration between NBC Sports and iRacing, which began in 2019 when NBC Sports telecast the first-ever eNASCAR live event on television. NBC Sports and iRacing teamed up to present the 2019 eNASCAR PEAK Antifreeze iRacing Championship in a two-hour event live on NBCSN last October. Earlier this year, it was announced that six races of the 2020 eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series Playoffs will air live on NBCSN later this fall.

NBC Sports NASCAR commentators Rick Allen and Steve Letarte will call the action, including interviews with drivers during the races. Jeff Burton and Marty Snider will host the NBC eSports Short Track iRacing Challenge via Zoom.

As part of free access to racing fans due to the COVID-19 pandemic, TrackPass on NBC Sports Gold is featuring nearly 50 long-form documentaries for your viewing pleasure. Throughout the week, we’ll preview one documentary each day that looks back on some of NASCAR’s biggest stars, venues and stories from the past.

RELATED: Get free access to all nine channels

After previewing NASCAR Decades: The 90s, NASCAR Decades: The 80s  and NASCAR Decades: The 70s, it’s time to go deep on “The Intimidator,” NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Sr. The show looks back at the 10 top moments for the seven-time champion.

Other available content includes full-event replays of all races since TrackPass launched in December 2019. Condensed replays of every American Flat Track, IMSA WeatherTech, K&N and Modified race from the 2019 season will also be made available shortly.

Free access to TrackPass runs through May 1. Fans can learn more about the streaming service here.

RELATED: FAQs on product

It was only one week into the popular and highly competitive eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series, and Hendrick Motorsports driver Chase Elliott knew he wanted a high-tech, high-performance sim-racing rig.

Fortunately for Elliott – and many others – Hendrick fabricator Corey Williams is producing exactly that kind of next-level simulator during the current downtime in the racing world. Elliott’s rig was delivered last week just in time for the iRacing event at virtual Texas Motor Speedway, and with some solid time under his belt to get acclimated to the system now, Elliott should be in fine form for Sunday’s Food City Showdown at virtual Bristol Motor Speedway (1 p.m. ET, FOX, FS1, FOXSports App).

“It’s kind of crazy to think this is where all the NASCAR guys have been sitting these past couple weeks,” Elliott said. “But it’s a tool that not a lot of people have and we’re lucky to have something like it to keep racing.”

RELATED: Comparing drivers’ iRacing setups in Pro Invitational Series

It’s exactly the kind of positive feedback that should keep Williams, a former late-model racer turned Hendrick Motorsports fabricator, busy in the near future as iRacing galvanizes the auto-racing industry that would be otherwise parked during this COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic.

Corey Williams
Corey Williams (foreground) works as a fabricator for Hendrick Motorsports. (Logan Whitton/NKP/Courtesy of NASCAR Media)

Williams, 34, started the Williams Custom Fabricators business more than a decade ago from his native Maine to eventually North Carolina, using the outlet to keep busy, make money and stay challenged after a successful career racing go-karts, legends cars and super-late models. The expense of driving pushed Williams to apply his mechanical skills in order to stay in the sport. He was hired as a fabricator by the championship Hendrick Motorsports team in 2009 and currently works specifically on the team’s superspeedway cars, which have won the Daytona 500 pole position for five of the last six years.

“When my racing started slowing down, I still had to find an avenue to really get that competitiveness out of my system,” Williams said. “So I got into iRacing, and as soon as I got home with a wheel and pedals and kind of was at my desk racing, I started seeing some issues with things moving around and pedals sliding around. I just became quickly frustrated with that, so I’m like ‘There’s got to be a better way.’

“So I went to work, brought my wheel and pedals in there and I just started kind of working away. I built a little rig and brought it home and took some pictures of it, and threw it up on the iRacing hardware forum and just began getting a lot of messages asking if I sold it, or would build it for other people. And I was like, ‘Yeah.'”

One of the first major race names to seek out a Williams design was the late John Andretti, who purchased a sim for his son, Jarett, a decade ago.

“That was pretty cool to sell one to him,” Williams said. “I went over and set it up at his house, and I have a picture on my (Facebook) page of John in the simulator trying to get his son set up in it. That was probably the first real big name I’d say I made one for.”

RELATED: New look for eNASCAR iRacing Pro Series Invitational at Bristol

Williams’ work was well received, and he stayed busy, enjoying the extra opportunities until making the decision to take a break from the sim construction when he started a family. He thinks a 2009 photo of his then-infant daughter, Macie, in a sim he designed was one of the last he made before starting a self-induced sabbatical.

But Macie, now 10, and her brother, Corey Jr., 9, are older, and Williams has even found ways to let them be a part of his recently reinvigorated business. Since last fall, Williams has been making new sim rigs. And now with the hold on on-track activity, the demand for them is booming – from high-profile clients to next-door neighbors.

“It’s kind of funny because the last one I built was when I first started at HMS and I remember I had to go and ask permission to build it, but it was for Roush Racing,” Williams said. “I built one for them and that was the last one I’d done. I didn’t know if iRacing would continue to grow like it was. I kind of thought it may be a quick little fad. Just recently, I realized it’s picking up speed so I was like, I need to get back in.”

RELATED: Power Rankings for Pro Invitational Series’ third race

Williams estimates it takes about a day to produce one of his high-quality customized sim rigs while working at home – with Macie and Corey Jr. occasionally helping out to make sure the assembly is spot-on.

“It’s pretty funny,” Williams said. “I have a two-car garage, and my vision when I came back to this in October was I would clean everything out and put it in storage, but instead, I just ordered tools. I had tools delivered in two weeks and by that time had designs in my head. As soon as the tools showed up, we plugged them in and started throwing sparks.

“I’m trying to keep my simulators the same, but I also want to create a place where people can come and a la carte say, ‘I want this set-up with this wheel and pedal. I want that keyboard tray, but I don’t want that shifter mount.’ So I’m just building them to what the customer requests. That’s what I’m trying to keep it at.”

As more racing series choose the iRacing option, Williams’ business looks to accelerate.

“It’s just crazy how this whole thing went,” he said. “I got back into it and was kind of just building at night and on the weekend. With everything shut down, I really have nothing left to do right now except try to focus on this and that’s what I’ve done.

“Between everyone having to be home and cooped up, it’s just exploded, and I’m looking forward to it.”

Country music singer Justin Moore will perform a virtual pre-race concert Sunday before the third eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series race, the Food City Showdown presented by M&Ms. Moore will join NASCAR Cup Series driver Austin Dillon and NASCAR.com digital host Alex Weaver for the online event.

Moore, an award-winning singer/songwriter who has released five albums since his 2009 debut, will perform a couple of his songs and chat about the upcoming race at the virtual Bristol Motor Speedway. The race, which is set to air at 1 p.m. ET on FOX/FS1 (subject to change) and the FOX Sports App, will feature some of NASCAR’s biggest names.

MORE: New No. 1 in Power Rankings | Viewing Guide

The Arkansas native joins the list of virtual pre-race acts since the Pro Invitational Series was conceived and developed in advance of the Dixie Vodka 150 at virtual Homestead-Miami Speedway on March 22. Tim Dugger played a virtual pre-race show for that event, with Cole Swindell taking the reins last week.

Fans can catch the virtual pre-race concert Sunday at 12:30 p.m. ET on NASCAR’s YouTubeFacebook and Twitter.

Name: Blane
Current City: Sumter, South Carolina
Member Since: 2017

Getting to KNOW Blane

Q: How did you first become interested in NASCAR?
“I can remember going to my great-granddad’s house when I was young, and he would have the races on TV on Sunday afternoons. I loved Thomas the train, there were trains named Rusty and Gordon, and my dad convinced me that trains were racing while we would listen on the radio.”

Q: What is your favorite part about NASCAR?
“I just loved the competitive aspect of it and pulling for my favorite drivers to do well. The entertainment of sitting back on a Sunday afternoon and just watching TV is great.”

Q: What is your favorite NASCAR memory?
“I loved taking one of my best friends to his first race a few years ago at the Southern 500. We had pit passes, saw the drivers up close as well as the Governor, saw a fantastic race with lots of spins, and a Carl Edwards win and flip!”

Q: Do you have a favorite in any of the following categories?
Drivers: “Kyle Busch and Ryan Blaney.”
Tracks: “Martinsville.”
OEM: “Toyota.”
Sponsor: “M&Ms- they’ve been very loyal to the sport, they are delicious, and they sponsor Rowdy!”

Q: What are some of your hobbies?
“I love to spend time in Clemson, go golfing, go to sporting events, and hang out with friends!”

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

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