Xfinity Series standout Christopher Bell says he’ll be back with Joe Gibbs Racing next season, though he’s unsure which NASCAR series will be his focus.

Bell, 24, confirmed that he extended his contract with the Toyota-backed team, which has fielded his cars on the Xfinity circuit since he joined the tour part-time in 2017. Bell’s remarks came Thursday at Chicagoland Speedway before the opening of on-track activity for the Xfinity Series.

“It’s really good that I have a job,” Bell said. “Driving for Joe Gibbs Racing is where I want to be at, so I’m thankful that I get to go for another year.”

RELATED: Chicagoland weekend schedule

Bell has 12 wins in 55 Xfinity starts, including four victories already this season. Bell’s rise has fueled the sense that he is primed for a career in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, though where he might land is unclear. JGR’s current premier-series roster includes Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, Erik Jones and Martin Truex Jr., and the organization is maxed out at a rules-mandated four teams.

“It’s a little too early to tell,” Bell said when asked about which series would be his home in 2020.

Bell prevailed in the Xfinity Series’ most recent race June 16 at Iowa Speedway. He enters Saturday’s Camping World 300 (3:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM) ranked second in the Xfinity standings behind points leader Tyler Reddick.

MORE: Xfinity Series standings

Bell, who still competes regularly in the sprint-car ranks, has been in the Toyota pipeline on the NASCAR national-series level since 2015. He claimed the championship in the Gander Outdoors Truck Series in 2017, driving for Kyle Busch Motorsports.

NASCAR’s Short Track Summer kicks off this weekend, and FansChoice.tv will broadcast more than 20 events from June 28-30 — including local racing at the famed Bowman Gray Stadium on June 29 and the K&N Pro Series West race at Douglas County Speedway in Oregon later that night.

Starting at 8 p.m. ET on Saturday, FansChoice.tv will stream the entire Bowman Gray Stadium card, which includes a 100-lap feature in the McDowell Heating & Air Sportsman Series. This Saturday’s card also features twin 25-lap races in the iconic modified series, plus races in the street stock and stadium stock series.

RELATED: FansChoice.tv live coverage

A local short track racing landmark, Bowman Gray Stadium is NASCAR’s longest-running weekly track. Bowman Gray hosted 29 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series events between 1958-1971. Despite the Cup Series’ departure, Bowman Gray has thrived as a grassroots racing institution.

In the K&N Pro Series West, Hailie Deegan and Derek Kraus enter the seventh race of the season separated by just one point in the standings, with Kraus sitting first. The two most recently battled for the win at Colorado National Speedway on June 8, which Deegan won after she initiated contact with Kraus on the final lap.

The K&N West race in Oregon is just one of several local NASCAR races this weekend. Four premier events across four regions of the United States will kick off the Short Track Summer celebration — the NASCAR Whelen All-American Series at Stafford Motor Speedway in Connecticut, the Virginia Late Model Triple Crown event at South Boston, the Super Late Model Race at Evergreen (Wash.) Speedway and the Freedom Classic dirt racing at Salina (Okla.) Highbanks Speedway.

MORE: Short Track Summer content

Other live streaming events from this weekend include events at Berlin Raceway, Langley Speedway, Myrtle Beach Speedway and more. Get the full schedule here.

Getting a win at Grandview Speedway was about more than just a win for 22-year-old Parker Guldin.

“It‘s like, you’re watching a show on TV and you‘re a fan of the show. You love that show, you have the posters on your wall, you have the t-shirts. Everything,” Guldin said. “And one day you get a chance to be in that show and you become the main star. It‘s not about being famous, it‘s about being a part of something you dreamed of being a part of your entire life. It‘s something that‘s on a whole nother level of reward.”

On June 16, Guldin took the checkered flag at Grandview, a third-mile banked clay oval in Bechtelsville, Pennsylvania, that has seen the likes of Darrell Waltrip, Rusty Wallace, Sterling Marlin and Kyle Petty in the past. As he crossed the finish line for a win in the track’s TP Truck Equipment Sportsman division, Guldin’s mind went blank. He slammed the brake in excitement and almost accidentally put his car in the wall.

Standing in Victory Lane, he heard someone in the crowd yell “get up!”, so he climbed to the top of his car.

Parker Guldin

“I didn’t know what to do with myself,” he said. “I remember looking down as I was celebrating and I was like ‘I’m in Victory Lane with my car. This is nuts.‘”

Getting a NASCAR Whelen All-American Series feature race win at Grandview Speedway was about more than just getting his first win at a new track. Guldin grew up at Grandview. His mom was a scorer there from the time he was little kid, and his dad was a ticket taker. His grandfather and two uncles both raced on its dirt.

Grandview Speedway | Facebook | Twitter

Some of Guldin’s best memories as a kid were at that racetrack, just 20 minutes from his home. When he was really little, he would take a bag of toy cars with him to play with in the stands while races went on.

When he was in high school, he told anyone who would listen that one day he would race there.

“That‘s always a dream racing there,” he said. “I told my whole family, this is when I was in high school, ‘when I graduate high school, you mark my words, I’m getting a job, I‘m getting a car, and I‘m going to run at Grandview.’ Obviously that‘s changed over time, I realized how incredible tough it is.”

Guldin knew he couldn’t start his career at his home track, because he saw with his uncles how tough and cut throat the racing there can be. So he spent his first season at Bridgeport Speedway in New Jersey, racing in their sportsman rookie class. He wanted to get some races and experience under his belt — he won two feature races last season — so he knew what he was doing behind the wheel and developing his own driving style.

That doesn’t mean his first season at Grandview hasn’t been without issues though. Several times this season his car has had to be completely torn apart and put back together, and Guldin said they’ve dealt with a lot of bad luck. At least five weeks in a row they’d show up to the track and realize there was something little wrong with the car that would turn into a major malfunction that would ruin the night.

“In the beginning of the season I told everybody, ‘I just want one feature win.‘ I just want one. But as the year went on I started thinking, ‘You know what, I kind of just want to finish features from here on out.‘ I‘m thankful enough just to be running at this track,” he said.

Parker Guldin

Guldin said he’s had a huge learning curving this season, and he knows his car doesn’t have the same power that a lot of his competitors’ cars have, so he has to be nearly perfect night-in and night-out.

“If I‘m missing a line, if I come into a turn pushing just a little bit, well there goes any little edge I have and I have no power to get back,” he said. “For me it really is cut throat because I have to be on my game 100 percent of the time I‘m out there. It‘s tough, especially at Grandview. Racing anywhere, they want to get to the front, but for me it‘s been a lot more tough.

“In racing, you’re never really 100 percent comfortable because you have to always be changing. With dirt tracks especially, tracks are always changing. With Grandview being so fast, so intense, so in your face, just being constantly aggressive. Every weekend I learn something different.”

All those struggles made the win even sweeter for Guldin, and thankfully he had his family there beside him through it all. When Guldin decided to start racing last year, both his mom and dad quit their positions at Grandview so they could be there for him each race.

Now that he’s back at Grandview, they haven’t returned to their old jobs because now they’re on his crew, standing in the pits during races and providing constant support through the ups and downs.

“She‘s my mom, she’s my biggest supporter I‘ve ever had in my entire life. There‘s no way she could watch me and score at the same time. There‘s no way,” Guldin said with a laugh.

“You can never have enough tools, but your biggest tool you‘ll always need is support, and the support I get from my mom and dad is unexplainable. I can‘t explain to them how important that is and how much it helps everyone. If you have a rough night, the best thing you could hear is, ‘Hey, you did a good job. At least we have a car at the track. We could be sitting in the stands being miserable… so good job.‘ And that‘s what they both do.”

Grandview Speedway Points Standings

Now that he’s got his win, the rest of the season for Guldin is now about moving up in the points some, keeping the car straight, and still having fun. Guldin sits lower than 20th in points, but a fan of his made him promise he can get up into the top 15 by the end of the year.

Whatever happens, though, he just wants to continue having fun and making more memories at his favorite track.

“My crew is God’s gift. I tell everyone I have the best in the business around me,” Guldin said. “They’re there 100 percent of the time giving me 100 percent of their time and 100 percent of their effort, so I owe it to them to give them and myself a strong car every week.. I owe it to them just to have a strong finish to the year and just a relaxing time and enjoy racing like we always were and we always do.

“When it‘s not racing season I walk around like a dog with no lease. I don‘t know where to go on a Saturday night. That‘s what I live for.”

Racing will return to Grandview Speedway this Saturday night with Modifieds, Sportsman, and MASS Sprints beginning at 7:30 p.m.

Grandview Speedway schedule

The MLS Chicago Fire won’t be the only thing sporting flames this weekend in the Windy City. That’s because Martin Truex Jr., Kyle Busch and the rest of the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series are headed to town for a showdown at Chicagoland Speedway in the Camping World 400 (Sunday, 3 p.m. ET, NBCSN).

And when it comes to putting down laps along with some really big stats, good luck finding two athletes who are perched higher atop their game than the two Joe Gibbs Racing teammates.

RELATED: Full Chicagoland schedule

For Truex, the last eight races have constituted quite a run including a unique combination of four wins — coming at short tracks (Richmond and Dover), in a test of endurance (the Coca-Cola 600) and at arguably the most challenging road course (Sonoma). His 504 laps led in the past eight races are nearly double that of any other driver, according to Racing Insights.

Meanwhile, for Busch, he is the only driver who has matched Truex’s four wins this season. He is also the only driver with more wins since the start of the 2015 season: 26 to Truex’s 21. Here’s a side-by-side comparison of the two that shows just how big this duo has been in the first part of the 2019 season.

Big 2 anyone?

Driver Truex Jr. Busch
Wins 4 4
Seconds 2 2
Top five 7 10
Top 10 10 15
Laps led 518 766
Avg. finish 10.81 6
Stage wins 2 5
Playoff points 22 25

Adding fuel to the fire is the fact that these drivers are responsible for the past three victories at Chicagoland, with Busch the defending race winner and Truex coming away with the wins in 2016 and 2017. We’ll see what happens this weekend.

Now for the rest of the rundown for Chicagoland:

TRACK

Chicagoland Speedway is a 1.5-mile D-shaped tri-oval speedway located in Joliet, Illinois. Banking is 18 degrees in the turns, 11 degrees on the frontstretch and 5 degrees on the backstretch. The first Monster Energy Series race was in 2001 and won by Kevin Harvick.

TIRES

Goodyear held a tire test in May at Chicagoland Speedway, the results of which led to a right-side tire that provides more grip to help cars potentially get a bigger run on lead cars, according to the manufacturer. Drivers participating in that test included Brad Keselowski, Ryan Newman and Paul Menard.

Each Monster Energy Series team will get three sets of Goodyear Eagle Speedway Radials for practice, one set for qualifying and nine sets for the race (eight race sets plus one set transferred from qualifying or practice).

RULES

The Chicagoland race will feature the 2019 base rules package that has been run at other 1.5-mile tracks this season with an engine that has a tapered spacer and expected horsepower of about 550. Cars will have aero ducts this weekend as well.

TV INFORMATION
TV: NBCSN (3 p.m. ET, Sunday), NBC Sports App
Radio: MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
NASCAR.com: Live leaderboard, Drive, RaceView

Of note: They’re back! NBC that is. This is the kickoff event for NBC’s coverage of NASCAR this season and also includes the NASCAR Xfinity Series race Saturday at 3:30. Join Rick Allen, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jeff Burton, Steve Letarte and a cast of others for another exciting racing season on NBC and its affiliates. Meanwhile, FOX Sports will continue to cover the Gander Outdoors Truck Series with Friday night’s race airing at 9 p.m. ET on FS1. | NBC team fired up for new season

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — NASCAR Salutes Refreshed by Coca-Cola, (#NASCARSalutes) a continued effort to show appreciation for the United States Armed Forces, concludes with two full weekends of military appreciation at Chicagoland Speedway and Daytona International Speedway, where a NASCAR Xfinity Series windshield header salute to military units and installations will take place during the Circle K Firecracker 250 Powered by Coca-Cola.

“For NASCAR as an industry, it’s a privilege to honor the military men and women who protect our country’s freedom,” said Jill Gregory, NASCAR executive vice president and chief marketing officer. “As we culminate NASCAR Salutes in Chicago and Daytona Beach, we remain humbled by the opportunity to recognize our military community and thank service members for the sacrifices made on our behalf.”

Through the NASCAR Salutes Refreshed by Coca-Cola race weekends, “Future” will be the celebrated theme during the Chicagoland Speedway Camping World 400 race weekend alongside the 10th anniversary of NASCAR Troops to the Track hosted by Coca-Cola, a season-long initiative that pays tribute to the men and women of the U.S. Armed Forces by inviting service members from local military installations to a VIP race day experience. At Chicagoland Speedway, NASCAR Official Partners Comcast, MACK and SiriusXM will provide a behind-the-scenes look at their work in the sport and veteran-hiring efforts, showcasing opportunities within the industry as they consider their future transitions to civilian life.

RELATED: Troops to the Track celebrates 10 years

For the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Chicagoland Speedway, a patriotic red, white and blue Comcast NBCUniversal “Salute to Service” paint scheme will adorn Jeffrey Earnhardt’s No. 81 Xtreme Concepts Racing Toyota Supra and raise awareness of Comcast’s military community hiring efforts. Comcast NBCUniversal is committed to hiring 21,000 military community members — veterans, National Guard and reserve members, and military spouses by the end of 2021.

Camping World, parent company of NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series entitlement partner and sponsor of the Chicagoland Speedway race weekend, provided more than 2,500 tickets to the military community for the race weekend. Additionally, local service members with their families will receive grandstand tickets and access to NASCAR Xfinity Series race day activities on behalf of Comcast.

As part of the NASCAR Salutes Refreshed by Coca-Cola “Patriotism”-themed weekend at Daytona International Speedway, NASCAR Xfinity Series drivers will bear the names of active military units and installations on their race car windshields during the Circle K Firecracker 250 Powered by Coca-Cola on July 5 (7:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). The 3rd Infantry Division, 33rd Fighter Wing, and aircraft carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN 69) are among the groups from all five branches of the U.S. Armed Forces that will replace the Xfinity header on NASCAR Xfinity Series race cars for the fourth-consecutive year.

NASCAR Xfinity Series teams were given the opportunity to identify a unit or installation to honor for the Circle K Firecracker 250 Powered by Coca-Cola, while NASCAR worked with Comcast’s Military and Veteran Affairs team to match units with the remaining teams for the tribute. Many teams have connections to the units being honored on their cars, such as Cole Custer’s team, who will honor the 1st Security Force Assistance Brigade stationed at Fort Benning, Georgia, where crew chief Mike Shiplett’s family member serves. The Joe Gibbs Racing No. 19 team will honor the 39th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, Arkansas National Guard, where driver Brandon Jones’ cousin serves.

New for the NASCAR Salutes Refreshed by Coca-Cola race weekend at Daytona International Speedway is a free Coca-Cola fan element in the midway where a local Publix chef will offer food samples, Coca-Cola products and the opportunity to write a “thank you” message to the military community. A VIP section is available for military members and their families by showing their military ID.

For the 11th consecutive year, Daytona International Speedway will honor two Medal of Honor recipients throughout the race weekend. Honorees include Retired U.S. Army Command Sergeant Major Gary Littrell (Vietnam) and U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Ronald Shurer II (Afghanistan). Retired U.S. Army Colonel Hal Kushner, a Daytona Beach resident who served in Vietnam and was held as a prisoner of war for more than five years, will drive the Honorary Pace Truck for the 61st annual Coke Zero Sugar 400 on Saturday, July 6 at Daytona International Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET on NBC, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

In addition, all active, veteran and retired military members and their families will have access to a Midway suite within the Daytona facility on Saturday where they can take a break from the busy day of activities to cool off and enjoy complimentary Coca-Cola products and snacks. The suite will be accessible from 3 p.m. through the end of Stage 1 of the Coke Zero Sugar 400. Throughout the day, various special guests will visit the suite and participate in Q&A sessions including Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series driver Bubba Wallace at 4:45 p.m ET.

Tickets to NASCAR national series events are available at NASCAR.com/tickets.

They’re back, back again.

This weekend’s Camping World 400 at Chicagoland Speedway (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) marks the return of NBC to the broadcast booth, providing insider scoop for the remainder of the season including the playoffs and the finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

The NBC Sports crew of Jeff Burton, Steve Letarte and Dale Earnhardt Jr. is back in action with Rick Allen in the booth, Marty Snider, Dave Burns, Kelli Stavast and Parker Kligerman on pit road while Krista Voda, Kyle Petty, Dale Jarrett and Nate Ryan set the stage for each race weekend.

RELATED: Full Chicagoland schedule

Earnhardt made his first appearance as an NBC analyst last season during the network’s debut at Chicagoland and did not disappoint.

The race ended with Dale Jr. yelling ‘Slide job!’ in the booth as Kyle Busch and Kyle Larson bumped and battled on the last lap for the victory, with Busch ultimately taking home the checkered flag. That moment became almost iconic throughout the NASCAR world for the remainder of the season.

“Well, when I was hollering slide job, I was yelling it at Rick Allen, I wasn’t talking to the audience as much as I was Rick,” Earnhardt explained. “So, when we’re in the booth, when it’s great, I think is when it’s us four having a conversation with each other and we’re just talking racing and about what we’re seeing. In that moment, I’m hollering at Rick, ‘Hey, here comes a slide job!’

“Rick is tasked with calling the final lap of the race and I was just like, ‘Hey buddy, look what I see, this is what I see.'”

RELATED: Relive Dale Jr.’s slide job call

Burton, Letarte and Allen have years of experience announcing from the booth and used their knowledge to help rookie Dale Jr. get acclimated.

“It was a tribute to Rick (Allen) and Jeff (Burton) and Steve (Letarte) getting me that comfortable that quickly,” Earnhardt said. “I’m really a shy guy and a bit of an introvert, to be honest, and they worked really hard as a group of three guys, to help me get comfortable as fast as I could. We had a lot of mock broadcasts last year that helped me a ton. We talked a lot, communicated together a lot and they all went out of their way to help me get comfortable quickly.”

Don’t let Dale’s natural persona in the booth fool you, though. The retired driver claims that it wasn’t always smooth sailing from that debut broadcast.

“Not every broadcast got better after that, from my point of view, from what I was doing in the booth,” Earnhardt said. “I remember one race, in particular, at Pocono, in the first stage, we got done and I told them, I said, ‘I was awful, I couldn’t figure out when to speak.’ And they’re like, ‘Look, get aggressive. We’re not going to hold your hand here and stop talking so you can come in here and say what you need to say. You’ve got to work your way into this conversation.’ ”

NBC’s coverage last season included the first race for the inaugural Charlotte Roval, where Jimmie Johnson crashed into leader Martin Truex Jr. in the final chicane, handing Ryan Blaney the victory from the third position. The close battle within the Championship 4 provided compelling story lines and the crowning of a new champion in Joey Logano.

Executive Producer Sam Flood is looking forward to the next 20 weeks and continuing to give the fans what they want week in and week out, while incorporating new ideas and promotions in the booth. He also gave FOX Sports a nod for its increase in ratings throughout the first half of the season.

“We’re going to keep having fun and mixing it up,” Flood said. “Steve Letarte told me when we were first talking about Dale Jr., he said, ‘Dale likes to be challenged, if it’s just kind of make the donuts and the pattern stays the same, he’s not going to be as engaged.’ ”

“But, we engaged the heck out of him last year and I think we learned something, that we’re better when we’ve got challenges with new techniques and new groupings.”

Dale Jr.’s booth co-hosts enjoyed what he brought to the broadcast last season and the group is just as excited, if not more, to get this season going.

“I am so fired up about getting back going,” Burton said. “We have a good time together; we just love what we do. If I could have a race right now, I would.”

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The Bojangles’ Southern 500 has become the red carpet of NASCAR. No one wants to show up on the worst dressed list.

David Ragan may have secured a spot on the best dressed for NASCAR’s most historic weekends and one of its oldest tracks. Ragan’s No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford will throw back to David Pearson’s 1969 Championship Ford Torino Cobra prepared by Holman-Moody. The title was Pearson’s third and final one in the premier series.

RELATED: Darlington throwbacks for the 2019 race

David Ragan Darlington throwback
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

“When you think about Darlington, if you think about any driver you think about David Pearson right off the top. He’s from South Carolina,” Ragan said after the look was unveiled on Wednesday at the NASCAR Hall of Fame. “He was dominant at that place and the throwback weekend is honoring all of those people that made a big impact in our sport.”

Pearson notched 10 wins at Darlington Raceway and won the Southern 500 three times in his career.

Ragan’s paint scheme will feature Shriners Hospitals for Children, an organization that Ragan has been affiliated with since 2012. Pearson, a NASCAR Hall of Famer, was also a Shriner.

Being so closely tied to the Shriners gives Ragan some extra incentive to avoid the famous “Darlington stripe” and bring his No. 38 Ford Mustang home in one piece.

BUY TICKETS: See the Darlington race live and in person

“Darlington is such a narrow track,” Ragan said. “You don’t have much wiggle room, you have to run right against the wall to make speed. You don’t have room to slip and slide and get loose and correct yourself. The wall finds you really quick.

“It’s a tough night but it’s very rewarding when you can have a good run at Darlington. You feel like you have earned it.”

The Bojangles’ Southern 500 is scheduled for Sunday, Sept. 1 at 6 p.m. ET on NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

 

STAFFORD, Conn. — Teams and drivers are busy preparing for the 6th Annual NAPA Auto Parts SK 5K 100 lap SK Modified event, scheduled for Friday, June 28. In 5 year‘s time, the $5,000 to win event has become the event every driver wants to add to their resume. The event, which has been won by 5 different drivers including last year‘s SK Modified track champion Ronnie Williams, historically has been one of the best races of the season and with posted awards over $34,000, the 2019 event is no different.

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

We caught up with a few of the SK Modified drivers to get their thoughts on the event:

Glen Reen — #17 Avery Construction Chevrolet
NAPA SK 5K Stats
Starts: 3
Best Finish: 5th (2014)
Average Finish: 7.7

“I‘m looking forward to the 5k. We‘ve got Dan‘s [Avery] car put back together so it‘ll be fun to have us both back racing at the same time. I‘ve missed that. There is no better place to race than Stafford and that‘s why people show up to Stafford. I‘ll put Stafford‘s SK‘s up against any single weekly division anywhere in the country and I‘d bet it‘s harder to win an SK race at Stafford than anywhere else. It‘s awesome to have a track like Stafford with the Arute family putting their time and effort into the weekly show and having a huge event like the SK 5k with great sponsors like NAPA Auto Parts and Doug Dunleavy. I think it‘s going to be a great time for the racers and the fans who come to watch the race.”

Eric Berndt — #54 Cos‘ Central Auto Chevrolet
NAPA SK 5K Stats
Starts: 5
Best Finish: 4th (2018)
Average Finish: 9.0

“We have a good car we just need to get some more consistency in it. The car has been fast and if everything works out we should be there at the end. That‘s the game plan but this is racing and anything can happen. This race is great. Doug Dunleavy has been a big supporter of short track racing, it‘s awesome to have someone like that supporting us as well as Stafford kicking in for a big payday race. This race shows that they appreciate us and are willing to put money up for us to put a show on. We‘re definitely appreciative of both parties and hopefully we can have a good race for ourselves and put on a great show for all the race fans.”

Ronnie Williams — #50 Les‘s Auto Center Ford
Starts: 5
Best Finish: 1st (2018)
Average Finish: 7.4

“We‘re looking forward the 5k. That‘s the race that we always circle on the calendar and the #50 team has been pretty good at that race the last 2 years winning with Chase [Dowling] two years ago and myself last year. We‘re looking forward to getting back to that race and I think we have a fast car, we‘ve just had some crap luck this year. Hopefully we can get our season turned around at that race. Stafford always does an amazing job and having someone like Doug Dunleavy putting up the Gambler‘s Challenge is great. Seeing the graphic that Stafford posted on Facebook about the SK 5k, it‘s a lot of money over the years and we‘re not really used to racing for that kind of money. It‘s always a lot of fun racing for the extra money, the big trophies, and the big check at the end of the night.”

Todd Owen — #81 Cooker Construction Chevrolet
Starts: 5
Best Finish: 4th (2017)
Average Finish: 12.0

“The NAPA SK 5k is an awesome race that Stafford, NAPA, and Doug Dunleavy put on. It‘s a nice long distance race where I can be patient, stay out of trouble and be smart. We hope to be in contention at the end of the race.”

 

Keith Rocco — #88 Wheelers Auto Chevrolet
Starts: 5
Best Finish: 2nd (2015 & 2018)
Average Finish: 4.0

“I‘m looking forward to the 5k. We‘ve been so consistent the last couple years but we‘ve come up a little short. Hopefully this year we can wrap it up. We try hard to run good in this race every year and it would be great to get the monkey off our back and finally get a NAPA SK 5k win. It‘s really cool for all the racers to have the opportunity to take advantage of the Gambler‘s Challenge bonus that Doug Dunleavy puts up for us and we all look forward to the big payday. We‘re really looking forward to the race.”

Discount tickets for the June 28 NAPA Auto Parts SK 5K are now available at your local NAPA Auto Parts Store. Tickets include a pre-race barbeque on the Stafford midway. Full list of participating NAPA stores is available by clicking the PARTICIPATING NAPA STORES link found at the top of the www.staffordspeedway.com homepage.

The 6th Annual NAPA Auto Parts SK 5K is set for Friday, June 28. Tickets for the NAPA SK 5K are available and on sale now at the Speedway Box Office. Tickets are priced at $30.00 for adult general admission tickets, $5.00 for kids ages 6-14, and kids 5 and under are admitted free of charge when accompanied by an adult. Reserved seating is priced at $32.00 for all ages. All ticket prices include 10% CT Admission Tax. Stafford Speedway offers free parking with free overnight parking for self-contained RV‘s available. There will also be a barbeque taking place on the midway with some great food available to race fans for only $10.

For more information, contact the Stafford Motor Speedway track office at 860-684-2783 or visit us on the web at www.staffordspeedway.com.

The Action Network specializes in providing sports betting insights/analytics and is a content partner with NASCAR. Check out more NASCAR betting analysis here.

Prior to the season the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series introduced a new aero package designed to encourage more passing and make the racing more exciting.

Because of this, much of the historical data NASCAR bettors typically use to identify value became much less predictive, which therefore made betting on this year’s early-season races more challenging.

However, now that we’re entering the dog days of summer, there is finally a decent sample of races to analyze from this season that can help us project which drivers will perform well (and poorly) going forward.

In fact, this weekend’s Camping World 400 will take place at Chicagoland Speedway, a 1.5-mile racetrack. Why is this important?

The Monster Energy Series has already visited five 1.5-mile tracks (Atlanta, Las Vegas, Texas, Kansas and Charlotte), giving us a nice base of data to analyze.

And after looking at the results from those five races, one head-to-head driver matchup is already popping as one being grossly mis-priced by oddsmakers.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (-110) over Austin Dillon

I just don’t get this matchup. Stenhouse has dominated Dillon at 1.5-mile racetracks this season, yet oddsmakers at the Westgate SuperBook in Las Vegas have priced it as a pick’em.

Not only is Stenhouse’s average finish of 11.2 significantly better than Dillon’s 21.2 at these five tracks, but Ricky’s average running position of 11.6 (compared to Austin’s 17.4) shows that the Roush Fenway Racing driver isn’t just lucking into good finishes, but he’s consistently running up front at each of these races.

There’s plenty of value to warrant taking Stenhouse right now, and I’ll consider betting it again should Dillon qualify better and reopen as a favorite on race day.

Joe Gibbs Racing is off to one of the hottest starts in Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series history — a start on pace with the historic opening run from Hendrick Motorsports during the 2007 season.

Through 16 races, JGR drivers have reached Victory Lane a combined total of 10 times, placing them in a tie for second-most wins all time in that span — Hendrick Motorsports (2007) and Peter DePaolo Racing (1957) also reached the 10-win mark. Only the Carl Kiekhaefer Racing team has bested that total, winning 12 out of the first 16 races during the 1956 season.

RELATED: Power Rankings | Monster Energy Series standings

During the 2007 Hendrick Motorsports run, eventual 2007 Monster Energy Series champion Jimmie Johnson and teammate Jeff Gordon each picked up four wins through 16 races — a number that both Kyle Busch and Martin Truex Jr. have matched this season. Kyle Busch and Casey Mears also raced their way to early-season victories in 2007 for Hendrick Motorsports, while Denny Hamlin picked up two more checkered flags for JGR this year at Daytona and Texas.

The 2007 Hendrick Motorsports team set new marks with 24 top fives and 36 top 10s through the first 16 races. They ended that season with 18 wins and still hold the current record for most wins by a team in a single season in the modern era. With a strong start to the 2019 season, JGR has secured 28 top fives and 42 top 10s, breaking the decade-old records for most all-time in each category and is on pace to match the record 18 wins.

Truex picked up his fourth victory of the 2019 campaign Sunday at Sonoma, solidifying the JGR duo with the Hendrick pairing as the only two sets of teammates to have at least four wins apiece in the first 16 races in Monster Energy Series history. Busch last won at Pocono and secured victories at Bristol, Auto Club and Phoenix earlier in the year.

With a quartet of race wins already in his pocket, Truex is only trending upward in the “rivalry” with Busch. Truex has come out on top of the field in four of the last eight races, leading a series-high 504 laps over that span. No other driver has more than a single victory in that time frame.

RELATED: Teammate ‘rivalry’ between Kyle Busch, Truex

As the series heads to Chicagoland Speedway for Sunday’s Camping World 400 (3 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), history is trending toward another JGR celebration. The last four Monster Energy Series races at the track have been won by Busch (2018), Truex (2017, ’16) and Hamlin (2015).

Statistics courtesy of Racing Insights