NASCAR and World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway are partnering with the Jackie Joyner-Kersee Foundation to launch an iRacing league that commenced last week in East St. Louis. The center, located less than four miles from the track, provides after-school, summer and academic programming for youth in underserved communities. NASCAR provided iRacing rigs to the center as well as the required equipment and software for iRacing and NASCAR Heat 3.

iRacing is the leading simracing software. Developed as a centralized racing and competition service, iRacing organizes, hosts and officiates races on virtual tracks all around the world. NASCAR launched eNASCAR in 2018, including three main series’, the eNASCAR PEAK Anifreeze iRacing Series, featuring virtual replicas of Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series cars, the eNASCAR Ignite Series, the first-ever youth racing competition on iRacing to attract and identify young talent and the eNASCAR Heat Pro League, featuring 14 of the top NASCAR teams battling for supremacy on NASCAR Heat 3, a racing video game developed by Monster Games and published by 704Games.

The efforts of the NASCAR Drive for Diversity program are on full display here at the Jackie Joyner-Kersee Center,” said Curtis Francois, owner and president of World Wide Technology Raceway. “This provides an incredible opportunity for World Wide Technology Raceway to fully engage with our local community and couple the excitement of racing with STEM education. Our intent is to build a STEM development structure for the kids that can be duplicated and used across the country in areas where there are similar opportunities.”

NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series driver Jordan Anderson met with a group of summer camp participants. A NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series truck provided by the track was also on display. Additionally, 250 tickets were provided to the youth, chaperones and families to attend both the ARCA and NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series Race.

Jackie Joyner-Kersee, a highly respected, world-class Olympic athlete in the St. Louis community and beyond, has been personally involved with the partnership and is excited about its expansion.

“Having the partnership with Gateway and NASCAR allows us to expose our kids to different fields,” said Joyner-Kersee. “We talk about STEM and what greater way to have simulators where they can really figure out speed and distance while also having fun. This partnership will allow us to continue to grow what we’re doing in the community.”

The center consists of 150 children ages six to 14 and all have access to the simulators. The iRacing league runs from June to August and is divided into three age groups. The top three in each group will receive a trophy and be recognized at the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race at World Wide Technology Raceway on August 24.

The plan for Chris Clyne at the beginning of the season was to just run the first three super late model races at the Bullring at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

If he and his team were having fun after those three and leading the points, they’d run the next three. If they were still leading after those, and still having fun, they’d finish the season.

The first three races were definitely fun, as has the rest of the season. Clyne has won seven of eight races this season, and nine of the last 11 at The Bullring , a .375-mile asphalt oval. Clyne currently leads the tracks NASCAR Whelen All-American Series super late model points by 53.

The Bullring at Las Vegas Motor Speedway | Facebook | Twitter

“I haven‘t raced full time in a long, long time,” Clyne said. “We‘ve been having fun and we‘re leading the points so we‘re going to keep going.”

Chris Clyne

With so much going on for Clyne, racing full time has been tough to pull off the last few years. But when he’s not behind the wheel, he’s helping others who are, mentoring two young drivers, coaching, and serving as a crew chief or spotter for other friends.

Clyne also runs a business that restores, buys, and sells antique, classic cars.

He’s also on the board of Speedway Children’s Charities, an organization that puts on eight to 10 events per year, all designed around cars and racing, that raise money for over 50 different children’s charities around Las Vegas.

Clyne is in charge of a car show with the charity, which has sold out the last two years. They also do a PJ 5K, where people run around the speedway in their pajamas, and have a laps for charity event, where Clyne drives the pace car and allows fans to follow him around the track.

“My first one I went two maybe about four or five years ago, they were giving the money out and you see the little kids with cancer and Down syndrome and different illnesses and you see how emotional they get and you see what it means to them,” Clyne said. “Knowing they know that money is going to help them feel better or live a better life, that really fired me up to want to get involved more. It‘s really a special deal and I‘m proud to be a part of that too.”

Even though Clyne’s many activities revolve around cars and racing, this year’s schedule at The Bullring allowed him the chance to focus on his own driving. While he’s never been a driver who’s gone out chasing championships, he and his crew have been having so much fun this year he figured they might as well keep going.

“It wasn‘t that I wanted to get back full time, it was just we were having fun and we kept winning so why not keep going?” he said. “I‘ve always wanted to just be a guy who wanted to just win big races and be the threat and this year we‘ve just been having fun and been wining every weekend we show up.”

LAS VEGAS, NV - MARCH 30: Hometown Heroes Night at The Bullring at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on March 30, 2019 in Las Vegas, NV. (Photo by Jeff Speer/LVMS)

Clyne’s dad, Richie Clyne, founded the Bullring when the younger Clyne was just a kid. Since then, he’s been there every Saturday night. Clyne grew up his dad’s footsteps, getting into the antique car business like his father, and developing a love of short track racing from him too.

Given his history at the track, Clyne said winning a championship there would obviously be special. But a track title is about more than just himself.

“It would mean a lot to all my crew guys,” he said. “Because those guys, they work their 40-hour jobs and they get off and they come here for four or five hours a day. It‘s a team deal. It means just as much to them, if not more to them than it would to me. It‘s just special to everybody. To get to go to Charlotte and be up on the stage and represent Nevada. That would be the ultimate proud deal to get to represent our state.”

Seeing the joy wins bring Clyne’s team and sponsors is another reason they’ve kept going. He’s met so many people in the sport who have helped him since he was a kid himself.

“I‘ve got so many stickers on my car from all my friends helping me. Helping me with parts, and knowledge, and information. It‘s cool,” he said. “Over the years I‘ve made so many friends from racing, if I have any questions on any parts of the car I can call a guy at 10 o‘clock at night and they help me. That‘s another thing that really helps with racing too is having good relationships and friendships.”

The Bullring will race one more time, on Wednesday, July 3, for the “Night of Fire”, featuring the NASCAR Super Late Model Spirit of ’76 feature, Super Stocks, Bombers, 602 Modifieds, USLCI Legends and Bandoleros. The track will then take an extended break to avoid the heat of the summer, and return for two more races in August, one in September, and one in October.

Night of Fire race schedule

With the time off, Clyne said the key for keeping up the points lead the rest of the season is simply being smart.

“Bring the car home in one piece, and pick your battles,” he said. “I tell that to the kids I coach. It‘s more important to bring a car home in fourth than try to crash it for third and then you‘ve got to spend two weeks trying to rebuild it. Just pick your battles. July 3rd, if if think I can win I‘ll take it, but I‘m okay with second too.

“That‘s the biggest thing with racing. The long races, the short traces, you‘ve got to know when to go as hard as you can and when to be smart and take what you‘ve got and bring it home and work on it for the next show.”

No matter what happens the rest of the season, Clyne and his team are all in.

“I’m just a car guy having fun and racing on Saturday nights,” he said. “That‘s my passion. I‘m just really grateful for all the people who help me.

“Short track racing is my love, it‘s my passion. I‘m 37 now so racing is not my number one thing in my life, but I sure do enjoy it.”

SOUTH BOSTON, Va. — There are going to be some heavy hitters rolling into South Boston Speedway this weekend for the track‘s huge mid-season Late Model classic. Familiar names like Morris, Pulliam, Sellers, Peters and McCarty.

Poised not far behind that group, flying a bit under the radar is Brandon Pierce. While he may not have the stats and championships of Philip Morris, Lee Pulliam, Peyton Sellers, Timothy Peters or Bobby McCarty, Pierce has to be considered a legitimate contender in the Thunder Road Harley-Davidson Presented By Grand Atlantic Ocean Resort NASCAR Whelen Late Model 200.

RELATED: Short Track Summer | VIDEO: My NASCAR, My Excitement

He finished fourth in last year‘s event and was fifth in 2016. He picked up his first South Boston Speedway win last season and his first CARS Tour victory early this season. He is driving a car prepared by Pulliam this year and he says that partnership has accelerated the learning process.

“Everybody knows about all of Lee‘s success overall and especially at South Boston. There is always something you can learn from someone of his caliber,” Pierce said of the four-time NASCAR Whelen All-American Series national champion. “I‘ve asked him so many questions; he has taught me so much, about driving and about the car.”

Although Pierce hasn‘t raced at South Boston this year, he says he‘s learned so much about the .4-mile oval by watching Pulliam‘s performances at the track closely this season.

“I always thought I did pretty good at South Boston,” said Pierce, who ran at the track full time in 2016 and 2017, his first full seasons in Late Model. “But I‘ve learned so much about it this year. I‘ve been with Lee every week he‘s raced there this year, watching his car and his driving style.

“I‘ve taken a lot of notes. I‘m really looking forward to practice on Friday so I can put all of that to use.”

Pierce said he believes there is more buzz than normal about Saturday‘s race among both fans and drivers. There are several reasons, he said. The larger first-place payout, up from $6,500 in 2018 to $10,000 this year, has contributed, he says. So has the fact it is the first race in the Virginia Late Model Triple Crown, the coveted three-race series that includes stops at Langley Speedway and Martinsville Speedway.

“If you win this one, you‘ve definitely accomplished something. If it lives up to its billing, if everyone shows up that I hear is coming, the best of the best are going to be there.”

Pierce has been running the CARS Tour fulltime the past two seasons, but South Boston Speedway remains special to him.

“I definitely have this one circled because South Boston always feels like home to me. I ran there two years full time,” said Pierce, who is sponsored by Thunder Road Harley-Davidson, Grand Atlantic Ocean Resort, Fremont Properties, Discount Oil Company, Bondurant Brothers Distillery, Amanzi Marble & Granite and Mincey‘s Graphics.

“I love the track. I love everybody there. I developed some fan base there and it‘s always good going somewhere you‘ve got experience.”

Pierce and Pulliam have only raced head-to-head once this season. He ran in the top five most of that day with his boss and teammate Corey Heim. It was good, clean, fun racing, Pierce said. But what would happen Saturday night if Pulliam is leading and he is running second on the final lap?

“I‘d definitely give him a shot (in the bumper) and he would be mad if I didn‘t. I‘d give him big enough of a shot to get side-by-side. He‘d be grinning ear-to-ear. I‘d love that opportunity. And he‘d do the same to me.”

Saturday‘s Thunder Road Harley-Davidson Presented By Grand Atlantic Ocean Resort NASCAR Whelen Late Model 200 is going to be a celebration of racing and family fun. There will be racing in four divisions, a huge fan appreciation event on the track prior to the race and a spectacular fireworks display after the final race.

In addition to the 200-lap Late Model race, there will be a 75-lap Limited Sportsman race, a 40-lap Budweiser Pure Stock race and a 20-lap Budweiser Hornets race.

Advance tickets are $15 and may be purchased at the South Boston Speedway office or by calling 877.440.1540, Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. On race day tickets will be $20 for adults. Children 12-and-under will be admitted free with a paying adult.

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Unlike recent weeks in which the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series visited unique tracks like Pocono, Michigan and Sonoma, we should have a solid amount of data to help make our Props Challenge selections this weekend.

For the first time since the Coca-Cola 600 in May, the Cup Series heads to a 1.5-mile racetrack for Sunday’s Camping World 400 at Chicagoland Speedway.

To make my NASCAR Props Challenge picks this week, I’ll be leaning heavily on performance from the five previous races run at 1.5-mile tracks (Atlanta, Las Vegas, Texas, Kansas and Charlotte), as well as historical race trends from Chicagoland Speedway.

1. Will a different driver win Stage 1, Stage 2 and the race? Yes or No?

There have been only two Monster Energy Series races at Chicagoland since stage racing was introduced, so there’s not much of a sample of data here to analyze.

As a result, I’m going with my gut and will say that Sunday’s race follows last year’s with different drivers winning Stage 1, Stage 2 and the race.

Pick: Yes


2. O/U 17.5 lead changes?

This average is skewed by 24 lead changes in last year’s Cup Series race at Chicagoland, while the previous three races finished with 12, 17 and 17, respectively.

Pick: Under


3. Will Sunday’s winner start inside the top five?

Over the last 10 Cup races at Chicagoland, the winner has started inside the top five just once — 2017 race winner Martin Truex Jr. started third.

Pick: No


4. O/U 35.5 race points for Kyle Larson?

In last year’s race, six drivers scored at least 36 race points, including Larson who finished with a race-high 52 points.

Download the FREE Action Network app to finish reading this article and get the rest of PJ Walsh’s NASCAR Props Challenge Picks.

Martin Truex Jr.’s Sonoma spectacular win will honorably earn most of the headlines coming out of the weekend’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series’ first road course race of the season.

He joins NASCAR Hall of Famer Jeff Gordon as the only two drivers in Sonoma Raceway history to win back-to-back races. And, equally as important to the 2017 series champion, the victory was No. 4 on the season, tying him with Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Kyle Busch for most in the series.

Busch now trails defending series champion Joey Logano by a single point in the championship standings. And while Truex is ranked fifth in points – 100 behind Logano – he would move to second place if the playoff rankings (based on victories) were reset today.

RELATED: Series standings

But it was another group of competitors in Sunday’s field that find themselves immersed in a race-by-race, high-stakes battle to stay among the NASCAR Playoff Top 16 as the series moves to Chicagoland Speedway for this week’s Camping World 400 (Sunday, June 30 at 3 p.m. ET on NBCSN, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron, who finished 19th at Sonoma, is currently ranked 14th in the Monster Energy Series driver standings with a 29-point advantage over his Hendrick teammate, 17th-place Jimmie Johnson, who fell just outside the championship cut-off despite a 12th-place run at Sonoma. Chip Ganassi Racing’s Kyle Larson, who finished 10th at Sonoma, moved into 15th in the series driver standings and trails Byron by 11 points.

Roush-Fenway Racing’s Ryan Newman, who finished seventh at Sonoma, moved into the 16th and final playoff transfer position. He has the slimmest-of-slim, 1-point advantage over Johnson, who was 12th at Sonoma. Joe Gibbs Racing driver Erik Jones, who finished eighth on Sunday, is ranked 18th in the series driver standings, only five points behind Newman in the cutoff position with 10 races left to settle the playoff field.

There has been substantial movement between 15th and 18th place in the standings in just the last seven weeks. Newman, Johnson and Jones, for example, have changed points positions six times in the last seven races. Larson has moved four times.

There are 10 races remaining to set the 16-driver NASCAR Playoff field – naturally creating a sort of Playoff “Chase” within the playoff push. And it’s go-time.

RELATED: Monster Energy Series schedule

Byron, the second-year Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series driver, scored only a pair of top-10 finishes at the 10 tracks ultimately setting this year’s playoff field. He was sixth at Pocono and eighth at Watkins Glen in his maiden Cup season (2018). However, he does have a pair of past NASCAR Xfinity Series and NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series wins at both Daytona and Indianapolis – important venues in this next 10-race group.

Larson has fared very well at the upcoming venues – scoring 20 of his career 48 top-five finishes at one of these next 10 tracks. And he has a career best three wins at Michigan.

Judging by statistics, Newman should feel very optimistic about this stretch of the schedule, too. He certainly was enthused by his work at Sonoma. His seventh-place finish was his best showing since a seventh in 2008 at the famed road course – 11 years ago.

“We had good strategy and good pit stops, good everything,” Newman said. “We just didn’t quite have the speed to be able to get up there and pass those guys that were in front today.”

He’s equally as hopeful about the upcoming summer months – having earned half of his career 18 victory total at tracks in this next 10-race stretch of venues. And the winning has been diverse. He’s won at six of the tracks – three times at New Hampshire, twice at Michigan and once at Daytona, Indianapolis, Chicago and Pocono.

Of course with 83 trophies and seven series championships in his wheelhouse, Johnson cannot be counted out to qualify for the playoffs either. He is hoping to break a two-year-plus winless streak and surely likes his chances. He’s a former multi-time winner at Daytona, New Hampshire, Pocono, Bristol, Darlington and Indianapolis. He has a win at Michigan too. This week’s venue in Chicago, plus Kentucky (July 14) and Watkins Glen, N.Y. (Aug. 4) are the only tracks on the entire schedule where he’s yet to celebrate in winner’s circle.

Jones would be understandably enthusiastic about his summer slate. He scored his first career Cup win last July in the Daytona summer night race. And 11 of his career 18 top-five finishes have come at tracks in the calendar’s next 10-race stretch. He was runner-up at Bristol, Tenn. in the summer of 2017, leading 260 laps and he was runner-up at Indianapolis’s Brickyard 400 just last year. His four top-fives this season is already nearly half his career best season total (nine) set last year.

“It was good,” Jones said following his eighth place effort on Sunday at Sonoma. “We passed a lot of cars. I am just happy we were able to come out of here with a solid day.

“Wish we could have gotten some more stage points, but it was nice to get a good finish.”

And, he added: “We just needed track position. I think we were probably a few spots better than that, but it’s still good. It’s nice to get back on track. Hopefully this is good momentum for next week in Chicago.”

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (June 20, 2019) — International Speedway Corporation (“ISC”) announced today its Proud Partner status with the Veteran Tickets Foundation (Vet Tix), an organization providing event tickets through its Tickets for Troops program to all branches of currently serving military and veterans, including immediate family of troops killed in action. ISC’s Proud Partner designation spans across its 12 motorsports entertainment facilities throughout the U.S. that host NASCAR events.

“Patriotism in our sport runs deep and this is just another way that we can thank and honor our military members,” said Frank Kelleher, ISC VP, Sales and Marketing. “NASCAR embraces families and we look forward to helping military and veterans strengthen those family bonds with race experiences.”

ISC’s partnership includes hosting military service members and veterans and providing unique event experiences for them as well as at-track activation beginning with Chicagoland Speedway and its Camping World 400 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race on June 30, and running through the DAYTONA 500 at Daytona International Speedway in February 2020.  Through the agreement, ISC tracks will participate in a social media campaign where fans may nominate a military member to win a race day experience.

“We are very excited for our military and veterans to experience NASCAR racing at ISC’s tracks,” said Mike Focareto, Founder and CEO, Vet Tix. “We have been connected to motorsports for many years and currently enjoy a great relationship with Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series driver Kurt Busch and his KB100 Ticket Giveaway. This is just another way we can further our mission to help service members and veterans to reduce stress, encourage community building and build life-long memories.”

Vet Tix is a national 501(c) (3) which has provided over six million event tickets to more than one million members. The nonprofit organization spends over 95 percent back on its programs, giving back to those who have given so much. To learn more or to donate, please visit VetTix.org or 1stTix.org.

NASCAR Salutes Refreshed by Coca-Cola, the NASCAR industry’s expression of respect, appreciation and reverence for members of the U.S. Armed Forces past and present, continues with the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series’ Camping World 400 at Chicagoland Speedway on Saturday, June 30 at 3 p.m. ET on NBC and the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway on Saturday, July 6 at 7:30 p.m. ET on NBC.

SONOMA, Calif. – Martin Truex Jr. hit Sonoma Raceway’s pit road on Lap 63, handing the lead to teammate Kyle Busch. Truex re-took it when Busch pitted three laps later.

And, thus, the chase was on.

With 22 laps remaining in Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350, Busch’s No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota trailed Truex’s No. 19 by 8.3 seconds – seemingly insurmountable without a caution.

And then it was 6.3 (Lap 71).

Then 4.3 (Lap 73) …

… 3.1 (Lap 75)

… 1.9 (Lap 78).

The caution never flew, but Busch got to within 1.5 seconds of Truex with 10 laps remaining and appeared set to run down his equally talented, equally competitive teammate.

But this is Martin Truex Jr. we’re talking about. Late-race mistakes aren’t exactly part of his repertoire.

The No. 18 managed to get within 1.3 seconds of Truex – on the final lap – but was unable to reach his teammate’s bumper to even think about making a move, with the 2017 champ wheeling it flawlessly on the final run of the race to hold off perhaps his best competition going these days. The win was Truex’s fourth of the season and second in a row at the road course.

MORE: Truex holds off Busch for Sonoma win | Full results

“He was beating us pretty good there for a while. I just had to try to manage my car the best I could to not burn the tires off trying to go faster than it wanted to go,” Truex said. “I knew if we could just maintain a decent gap for long enough, we would start to equal out. With 10 to go, we were equaling lap times. From there, all right, you got to run 10 perfect laps and not screw up. Was able to do that fortunately and hang onto it.”

Despite the unsatisfying second-place run, Busch was in an upbeat mood – a quick post-race, self-dousing with a water bottle in the 90-plus-degree temps certainly helped there – joking about his disdain for getting beat by his teammate.

“I hate him,” Busch quipped with a wide, toothy grin on pit road following the race. “I mean, yeah, I guess you could say there’s sibling rivalries, there’s teammate rivalries, whatever you want to call it. Truex and I, we’ve always had a good relationship with one another, ever since the (Xfinity) Series days when we were rookies together … now he’s on my team and I know he’s got the same stuff, so no excuses.

“ … He’s one of the best here. Year in, year out he’s kind of the guy to beat. Last few years he’s been the guy to beat.”

RELATED: All of Truex Jr.’s career wins | All-time road course winners

With fellow “Big 3” member Kevin Harvick still winless as the season reaches its halfway point, the top tier of talent thus far in 2019 firmly lies with the pair of former champions.

At this point, it’s hard to envision both of them not making runs all the way to the Championship 4 at Homestead-Miami Speedway, pushing each other hard as months tick off the calendar. You have to go back to 2016 for the last time both weren’t racing for the title, and 2014 for the last time neither was. They’re even better now.

The friendly rivalry will burn slowly all year before it all gets put on the line.

They’re good with it.

I consider anyone that you have to beat to win races and championships a rivalry. I think it’s a good rivalry,” Truex said. “We’re obviously teammates. … We’ve known each other a long time. We’ve been racing together a long time. We’ve raced each other really hard, but with respect. I think that’s part of what’s made us good teammates is that we have that mutual respect for each other.

“Kyle hates to lose. Everybody knows kind of how he is. For me, to me, he’s just been an amazing teammate. He’s really smart about his race car, gives great information, helps the team make the cars better. We’re all better for it. … We have that mutual respect where we know we’re both fast, we both have great teams, we can push each other to be better. It really elevates the whole company. We race hard as we can possibly race on the race track and respect each other off it. It works out pretty good.”

The pair has now combined to win exactly half – four apiece – of the season’s 16 races thus far, with no signs of slowing. In fact, they might even be getting stronger.

As the arms race between teammates continues as the regular season winds down and playoff season ramps up, it’s evident they’re going to continue to pile up wins.

Only question now – do they keep score?

“I don’t. I don’t know if he does. I do know they told me in Victory Lane we have finished 1‑2 seven times (in our careers). I beat him four out of the seven, so I got the upper hand right now. I had no idea till they told me that.

“No, I don’t keep track of it. I don’t know if he does or not. He might,” Truex joked.

RELATED: Every  1-2 finish from Busch and Truex Jr.

As the series now shifts to next weekend’s Chicagoland Speedway – where Busch and Truex have combined to win the past three races – it’s all knotted up.

Game on.

SONOMA, Calif. — Even though he ran a distant third to Martin Truex Jr., Ryan Blaney’s fortunes at Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series road courses have been looking up.

In last year’s playoffs, Blaney won at the Charlotte Roval after Truex and Jimmie Johnson collided in the final chicane. And in Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway, he enjoyed a stress-free race running behind the leading pair of Truex and Kyle Busch.

“Kind of smooth day for us,” acknowledged Blaney, who leaves the 2.52-mile road course ninth in the series standings and well inside the playoff cut line. “Qualified decent. The way the stages are, you can either choose to finish the stage out, get stage points, but you have to restart way in the middle of the pack.

“Or (you can) pit early. That’s kind of the strategy we wanted to do.”

RELATED: Official race results

Sacrificing stage points by pitting early proved beneficial at the end of the race.

“Today, even though you hate giving up stage points, you just get yourself ahead of all the mess,” said Blaney, who finished more than 33 seconds behind the race winner. “You can kind of get in your own rhythm, do your own thing, not have to worry about someone behind you and in front of you all the time.

“A real decent day for the PPG Ford Mustang. Those top two guys were just gone. All the Gibbs cars looked pretty good. They got something figured out.”

The race-winning Joe Gibbs Racing No. 19 Toyota of Martin Truex Jr. has passed post-race inspection at Sonoma Raceway with no issues.

The No. 19 Toyota was found to be compliant with the 2019 NASCAR Rule Book after Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350. No other issues were reported from technical inspection or the post-race lug-nut check.

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

RELATED: Official race results | Truex repeats at Sonoma

The post-race process is part of a new, more timely approach to inspection for all three NASCAR national series. Competition officials announced in February 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 in Concord, North Carolina.

Those inspections come with a stiffer deterrence structure that includes disqualification for significant rules infractions — “a total culture change,” according to Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR Executive Vice President and Chief Racing Development Officer. In the past, race-winning teams found in violation of the rules were penalized with post-race fines, points deductions and/or suspensions, but victories were allowed to stand.

Competition officials introduced the quicker post-race inspection timetable in an effort to make the results official on race day, aiming for a 90-minute target time frame to complete their scrutineering. The new post-race inspection process was also designed to deal with potential violations more promptly, avoiding any midweek news that might cloud the previous week’s results or the build-up to the following week’s event.

NASCAR will still inspect cars and parts at the R&D Center as needed, but the more comprehensive at-track inspection will take priority.

The first NASCAR national-series organization to run afoul of the new inspection system was Niece Motorsports, which absorbed a disqualification on June 16, stripping Ross Chastain’s No. 44 of an apparent Gander Outdoors Truck Series victory at Iowa Speedway. The first-finishing Niece truck failed to meet the minimum ride height, an infraction that was upheld after an appeal.

According to NASCAR statistical archives, the last time a premier series driver was disqualified occurred in 1973, when early retiree Buddy Baker was demoted to last place in the National 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. The last time an apparent race winner in NASCAR’s top division was disqualified came on April 17, 1960, when Emanuel Zervakis’ victory at Wilson (N.C.) Speedway was thrown out because of an oversized fuel tank on his No. 85 Chevrolet.

SONOMA, Calif. – In the last 11 laps of Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway, Matt DiBenedetto passed seven-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson for fifth place and 2014 champion Kevin Harvick for fourth.

When the race ended, the driver of the No. 95 Leavine Family Racing Toyota was closing on third-place finisher Ryan Blaney before running out of laps. But DiBenedetto nevertheless scored the best result of his career, eclipsing the sixth he posted at Bristol on April 17, 2016.

RELATED: Official race results

“I’m just so lucky to be doing this,” an elated DiBenedetto said after the race. “My path to get here has been so out of the ordinary and old-school, and I’m so thankful. I can’t tell you how many people took a chance on me to have this opportunity.”

One of those people was the late J.D. Gibbs, the former president of Joe Gibbs Racing who was inducted into the West Coast Stock Car Hall of Fame on Thursday night.

“It was so much fun — my home state,” DiBenedetto said of his run. “This one is for my buddy, AJ Allmendinger, for helping me so much.”

DiBenedetto also had some parting words for NASCAR Hall of Famer Darrell Waltrip, who on Sunday at Sonoma called his last race as an analyst for FOX Sports. DiBenedetto drove a throwback No. 95 Toyota with a retro design to honor one of Darrell Waltrip’s earliest rides.

“DW, this one’s for you, brother,” DiBenedetto said. “I’m glad we got you a good finish. You’ve done so much for me. You’re the best.”

DiBenedetto’s first top-five finish came in his 156th premier series start. The 27-year-old driver’s personal best helped to stem some of the rough patches in his first season with Leavine Family Racing’s No. 95 operation.

Contributing: Staff reports