Leavine Family Racing became the latest team to announce a commemorative paint scheme honoring Darrell Waltrip’s final race for FOX Sports, revealing a No. 95 Toyota that pays tribute to the driver-turned-broadcaster’s earliest days on the track.

RELATED: Paint Scheme Preview

Matt DiBenedetto will drive a throwback No. 95 ride that resembles the design campaigned by DW in 1974, a year that produced Waltrip’s first pole position in NASCAR’s top division. The car, sponsored by Procore, will hit the track in this Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Sonoma Raceway.

The design was unveiled Wednesday on FOX Sports’ “Race Hub” news program.

LFR’s entry is at least the third organization celebrating Waltrip’s broadcasting career. Roush Fenway Racing’s No. 17 and Front Row Motorsports’ No. 38 will also recognize Waltrip this weekend.

Stage points have gone out the window for the winners of the past two Sonoma races in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series. Both Kevin Harvick and Martin Truex Jr. chose to forgo stage points in order to get track position on the way to their wine-soaked wins in 2017 and 2018, respectively.

According to Racing Insights, Harvick made four pit stops during his 2017 win, with two of them coming two laps before the end of a stage. Meanwhile, Truex took a similar approach last season, pitting a total of three times with two of those stops coming two laps before the end of a stage.

RELATED: Full Sonoma schedule

On the other hand, the stage winners the past two seasons haven’t fared as well. Truex and Jimmie Johnson won the stages in 2017 but finished the race 37th and 13th, respectively. AJ Allmendinger and Denny Hamlin won the stages in 2018 and finished 38th and 10th in the race.

Something to keep in mind as you watch the race on FS1 and when you set your lineups in the Fantasy Live game or place your Props Challenge picks this week.

Now for the rest of the rundown for this Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN, SiriusXM).

IT’S BACK!

After more than 20 years without it, Sonoma Raceway is bringing back the carousel section to help celebrate the track’s 50th anniversary. This means drivers will drop down coming out of Turn 4 and make a big, sweeping left turn through Turns 6 and 6A before popping back up onto what has been the normal layout of late in Turn 7.

Read what some drivers are saying about the carousel’s return.

TIRES

It’s the first chance to break out the Goodyear Eagle Road Course Radials this season. Each team will get three sets for practice, one set for qualifying and seven sets for the race (six race sets, plus one set transferred from qualifying or practice).

Adding the carousel lengthens the track from 1.99 miles to 2.52 miles and will make the technical road course even more tight. As a result, Goodyear is bringing one of its most tractive tread compounds in the entire 2019 tire lineup.

Goodyear will also bring its wet weather radials for Sonoma should NASCAR decide that conditions warrant. But they tell us it never rains in Northern California.

RULES PACKAGE

Sonoma will feature the 2019 rules package for road courses, and that means no aero ducts and a tapered-spacer engine expected to reach 750 horsepower.

TUNE-IN INFORMATION
TV: FS1 (3 p.m. ET)
Radio: PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
NASCAR.com: Live leaderboard, Drive, RaceView
Trackside Live: 11:30 a.m. ET on Sunday

Of note: The FOX part of the 2019 Cup schedule wraps up this weekend, and it will be Darrell Waltrip’s last broadcast, i.e. the last time to hear him utter the famous “Boogity, boogity, boogity” line. He is sure to have something special up his sleeve worth tuning in for, and several drivers will be driving cars paying homage to Waltrip’s former paint schemes. | See the schemes

A member of the National Motorsports Appeals Panel upheld penalties Wednesday against the Niece Motorsports No. 44 team for violations found in post-race inspection after last Sunday’s NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series event at Iowa Speedway.

The Al Niece-owned truck was found to be too low in the front after Ross Chastain drove it to an apparent victory in Sunday’s M&M’s 200 at the .875-mile track. Competition officials disqualified Chastain and the Niece organization, handing the win to Brett Moffitt, who was scored second as the checkered flag unfurled.

RELATED: Moffitt declared winner after No. 44 ruled too low

In filing the expedited appeal, Niece indicated that it planned to argue that minor damage during the course of the 200-lap race caused the No. 44 Chevrolet to fail the minimum height requirement. The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series does not have a ride-height rule, but those guidelines exist in the Xfinity and Gander Trucks tours.

Wednesday’s appeal was heard by Bryan Moss, the former Gulfstream Aerospace president who was appointed as the National Motorsports Final Appeals Officer in 2014. His ruling is final and cannot be appealed. Under this type of appeals process, the burden of proof rested with NASCAR to demonstrate that a rules violation had occurred and that the penalty was appropriate.

Niece Motorsports representatives, including Chastain, released a statement through social media shortly after the hearing’s outcome was announced.

Chastain and Niece were also stripped of their two stage wins, stage points and any benefits from the victory that would apply to playoff eligibility. Chastain was demoted to a last-place finish in the 32-truck field, earning five championship points, and all other drivers were moved up by one position in the finishing order. Officials also redistributed stage wins to ThorSport Racing teammates Matt Crafton and Ben Rhodes.

Chastain recently changed his series eligibility, declaring June 4 that he would collect points toward the Gander Trucks championship after opening the season with a focus on the NASCAR Xfinity Series. That left the 26-year-old driver with the challenge of starting with zero points midway through the regular season, requiring him to win and move into the top 20 in the series standings to qualify for the eight-driver playoff field.

Chastain had already scored a Gander Trucks victory this season, prevailing May 10 at Kansas Speedway for the first win of his career in the series. But that triumph did not carry championship implications as Chastain was eligible for Xfinity Series points at the time.

The last time an apparent NASCAR national-series winner was disqualified was when the Emerald Performance Group’s No. 19 Chevrolet driven by Mike Skinner was found with an unapproved cylinder head in an Xfinity Series race in March 1999 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Three days after that decision, the penalty was overturned in an appeal and Skinner was restored as the race winner.

The last national-series disqualification that was upheld came in August 1995 after Dale Jarrett’s first-finishing No. 32 Ford was penalized for an illegal intake manifold at Michigan International Speedway. Mark Martin inherited the victory.

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As a NASCAR fan, I love road course racing. I also look forward to Sonoma Raceway because I’ve done well betting on road-course races in the past.

Because running well at these types of race tracks requires a different skill set than what is needed to click off fast laps on ovals, drivers other than NASCAR’s usual suspects can find ways to get out front, whether it’s because of raw speed or the unique pit strategies teams execute at road course races.

After perusing betting odds for Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma, I zeroed in on a 100-1 long shot who showed enough speed at last season’s road-course races to jump on now.

Alex Bowman (100-1) to Win

Bowman took well to road-course racing last year in his first full-time season at Hendrick Motorsports, highlighted by a ninth-place finish in this event one year ago.

But what excites me most about Bowman isn’t just the solid run at Sonoma in 2018, but his performance across all three road-course events.

Alex backed up that ninth-place finish with a 14th-place result at Watkins Glen. And while the Charlotte Roval isn’t a typical road course, Bowman excelled there by qualifying third before ultimately finishing fourth.

Bowman certainly wasn’t mixing it up with the leaders in any of these three events, but if he was, he also wouldn’t be priced at 100-1 this weekend.

When it comes to drivers in this price range, we’re simply looking for breadcrumbs as to why one might be able to get out front late due to speed or strategy, and then have the ability to hang on for an upset win.

In Bowman, we’re getting a driver who finished ninth, 14th and fourth at the three road-course races at 100-1 odds.

The entire No. 88 team has been improving all season and is clearly better than it was at this point in 2018, which only adds more value to this big number.

The Kyle Petty Charity Ride Across America went big for its 25th anniversary edition, with the longest route in the history of the philanthropic event. Tuesday, the charity indicated that its impact posted momentous numbers, both in mileage and fund-raising.

The charity ride announced Tuesday that this year’s event raised more than $1.7 million to support the Victory Junction camp for children with chronic illnesses. Additionally, a $2 million donation was provided to the Kyle Petty Charity Ride Trust by the family of late charity rider David Andreas.

MORE: Inside Petty’s plans for 25th charity ride (May 1)

Riders stay in formation with mountainscapes behind them in the Kyle Petty Charity Ride Across America.
Kevin Kane Photography

Petty, the 59-year-old former driver who now works for NBC Sports as a broadcaster and analyst, was among 250 participants in this year’s ride, which stretched some 3,700 miles from Seattle, Washington to Key Largo, Florida from May 3-11. Along the way, ride officials reported being honored by 15 mayoral appearances, making proclamations or offering keys to the city.

“This year’s Ride was amazing! We had beautiful views, crowds at every stop, police escorts the entire trip, a little rain, fun visits with Victory Junction campers, great food and lots of laughs with friends for nine straight days,” Petty said in a release provided by the charitable organization. “When you get 250 people together that care about kids, want to help others and love to ride motorcycles, it’s going to be fun! Riding corner to corner across America just made it more special.”

The Kyle Petty Charity Ride has raised $18.5 million for children’s charities since it began in 1995. Since 2004, it has primarily benefited the Victory Junction camp, established in Randleman, North Carolina to honor the memory of Petty’s son Adam.

NASCAR officials issued a one-race suspension to Gander Outdoors Truck Series driver Johnny Sauter on Tuesday for his actions during last weekend’s event at Iowa Speedway.

Sauter was involved in an on-track altercation with driver Austin Hill that resulted in NASCAR race control parking him for the remainder of Sunday’s M&M’s 200. Competition officials reported Tuesday that the suspension would not impact Sauter’s postseason eligibility.

RELATED: Sauter crashes into Hill under caution

“We look back at the history of everything we’ve done and try to react with the precedents that we’ve set and then obviously tailoring those to the situation that we have at hand,” said Scott Miller, NASCAR senior vice president of competition. “In this case, we felt like his actions certainly warranted being sat down for an event, but it felt a little too harsh to take him straight out of the championship, so we think we landed on what we feel is fair and a deterrent.”

The penalty will sideline Sauter for this Saturday’s event at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway in Madison, Illinois. On Thursday, the team announced that Myatt Snider will pilot the truck at Gateway with Sauter suspended.

RELATED: Snider to step into No. 13 at Gateway

Trucks driven by Hill and Sauter initially made contact early in the final stage of the race, triggering a retaliatory bump from Hill’s Hattori Racing Enterprises No. 16 Toyota. That contact sent Sauter’s ThorSport Racing No. 13 Ford careening into the outside retaining wall, prompting the last of four yellow flags at the .875-mile track.

During the caution period, Sauter meted out payback with a prolonged ramming of Hill’s truck, carrying both vehicles into the wall. NASCAR officials ordered Sauter off the track, ending his day after 137 of the race’s 200 laps.

“We tend to look at incidents under caution as more of a retaliatory thing,” Miller said. “Obviously, him driving half a track with a smoking truck and winding through a few cars to get to the 16 and then running over him, then bouncing off the wall and running into his door, it was pretty aggressive. It was definitely not anything that could in any way, shape or form be defended as a racing incident.”

Miller said competition officials considered sanctions against Hill for the intent of his bump that sparked Sauter’s flare-up.

“We did talk about that,” Miller said, “and while we haven’t typically reacted in the form of a penalty to those things, there will certainly be further discussions with the driver of the 16 and he will definitely be placed under a little bit more of a microscope as far as us watching his actions on the race track.”

Sauter was scored 27th in the final rundown, while Hill righted his damaged truck to place 12th in the 32-truck field. Both drivers were summoned to the NASCAR officials’ hauler after Sunday’s race for consultation, something Miller said would likely happen again to prevent further escalation of their rivalry.

“Those conversations will take place again before they are placed on the race track again together,” Miller said, “and there will be a pretty good understanding that we don’t want to see any more contact or aggressive behavior out of either one of them  — toward each other or other competitors.”

Sauter ranks eighth in the Gander Trucks driver standings. His victory May 3 at Dover International Speedway virtually clinched a berth in the series’ postseason field, which will consist of eight drivers.

Hill sits seventh in the Gander Outdoors Truck Series standings, just eight points ahead of Sauter. Hill opened his second full-time campaign in the Gander Trucks ranks with a victory in the season-opening event at Daytona International Speedway.

After the penalty was announced, Sauter indicated Tuesday afternoon through his personal Twitter account that he planned to enter the Dick Trickle 99 race for Super Late Model cars at Dells Raceway Park in his home state of Wisconsin.

Note: NASCAR cited the No. 88 of Matt Crafton for one lug nut not safe and secure for the Iowa race. Crew chief Carl Joiner was fined $2,500.

Darrell Waltrip will wrap up a prolific broadcasting career as NASCAR on FOX closes out its portion of the NASCAR schedule this weekend at Sonoma Raceway and the tributes are starting to come in.

Roush Fenway Racing showed off its No. 17 Ford Mustang driven by Ricky Stenhouse Jr. with a special message and paint scheme for DW on Tuesday.

The car is a nod to Waltrip’s No. 17 Western Auto/Parts America Darrell Waltrip Motorsports Chevrolet that he ran in the early to mid-1990s. Stenhouse also honored Waltrip in the 2016 Southern 500 at Darlington for its throwback weekend program.

MORE: Leavine Family Racing No. 95 to offer DW tribute

Waltrip will wrap up 19 years in the broadcast booth after Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN, Sirius XM NASCAR Radio).

Later on Tuesday, Front Row Motorsports unveiled their offering to the NASCAR Hall of Famer, which pays tribute to a 1997 scheme of Waltrips.

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partner with NASCAR. Check out more NASCAR betting analysis here.

If you’re looking for a unique take on stock car racing, Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway is for you.

For the first time this season, the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series will go road racing, which means turning both left and right.
Obviously, the skills needed to perform well at road courses differ from those at traditional ovals, making both the racing and strategy quite different. With this in mind, here are my NASCAR Props Challenge picks for Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350.

1. The last two Sonoma winners did not score any stage points? Will this trend continue? Yes or No?

Because of strategy at road courses, it makes sense for drivers to pit when they hit their fuel windows instead of trying to stay out and earn stage points.

As a result, I think the winner will once again fail to score stage points.

Pick: Yes


2. O/U 11.5 lead changes?

Over the past six races at Sonoma, just two events have finished with 12 or more lead changes.

Pick: Under


3. Which driver will score more race points at Sonoma? Chase Elliott or Denny Hamlin?

Since 2016, Hamlin has clearly been better than Elliott at Sonoma. Denny has the better finish and average running position while running considerably more fast laps.

Pick: Hamlin


4. O/U 1.5 drivers lead 25 laps?

Two of the past three races at Sonoma finished with just one driver managing 25 laps led, so let’s go under.

Pick: Under


5. Will the polesitter lead the first eight laps of the race? Yes or No?

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get the rest of PJ Walsh’s NASCAR Props Challenge Picks.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – New venue, new winner. First stop. First win. That’s certainly what a substantial portion of the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series field is hoping for this weekend at the season’s first road course event at Sonoma Raceway in Sonoma, California.

The series returns from a Father’s Day off-weekend and heads West to California’s scenic wine country for the Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway (Sunday, June 23 at 3 p.m. ET on FS1, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). And while the season’s four-time winner Kyle Busch and three-time victors Martin Truex Jr. and Brad Keselowski have been collecting trophies left and right, the season’s first true test of left-and-right may be just what some other of the consensus championship contenders need to score that first win of 2019.

Joe Gibbs Racing driver Martin Truex Jr. arrives in Northern California as the defending race winner and his JGR teammate Kyle Busch has a pair of wins at the track as well. But there are four other drivers ranked among the Playoffs Top 16 who have won at Sonoma before, still looking for a first sip of winner’s wine this weekend as they march towards the Fall Playoffs.

RELATED: Full Cup standings

Four former Sonoma winners – Kevin Harvick, Clint Bowyer, Kurt Busch and Jimmie Johnson – are all winless on the season, but ranked inside that Playoff’s Top 16 arriving in California. By their standards a win this week isn’t just do-able, it’s over-due.

Harvick won at Sonoma in 2017 and was runner-up to Truex last year. The driver of the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford Mustang earned eight wins a year ago in his valiant challenge for the 2018 title and had scored five trophies by Father’s Day. But this season, Harvick shows up in his native California eager and highly motivated to earn his first victory of the season and restore his championship mojo.

Harvick has finished in the top-10 or better in four of the last five Sonoma races. His Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Clint Bowyer boasts the same favorable statistic – in fact, the 2012 Sonoma winner was third last year, runner-up in 2017 and third in 2015. His eight top-five finishes are most in the field this week.

MORE: Active road course winners 

Kurt Busch, who drives for Chip Ganassi Racing, won at Sonoma in 2011 and has finished in the top-10 in seven of the last eight races there – including runner-up to his younger brother Kyle in 2015.

Perhaps no driver in the top 16 is more motivated to sip a glass of winner’s wine and hoist a trophy then seven-time series champion Jimmie Johnson, who is looking for his first victory in over two seasons. He won at Sonoma in 2010 and had top-10s in 2014 and 2015.

It’s an interesting evolution for road racing in NASCAR. In the early days of the sport, drivers tended to be all-in or way-off when it came to the non-oval venues. Some certainly adapted well to the road course challenges, others worked hard at it and even attended Bob Bondurant race schools to bone up. Some had previous road course experience in other series.

Ricky Rudd, who always liked road course racing, won the very first Sonoma race in 1989 and NASCAR Hall of Famer Rusty Wallace – another who took to this form of racing well – won the next year. Each of the two drivers won twice at Sonoma over their careers. Ernie Irvan, another Californian, scored two wins at Sonoma in the early 1990s and NASCAR Hall of Famer Mark Martin won at Sonoma in 1997.

RELATED: All-time road course winners

Even in the years thereafter, renowned road racers such as Robby Gordon (2003), and Juan Pablo Montoya (2007) scored Sonoma trophies and set the bar. And new NASCAR Hall of Famer Jeff Gordon, who was born minutes away from the Sonoma course, also took to that brand of competition, winning a track record five times in his career – including three consecutive times from 1998-2000.

But as the sport evolved and the championship format changed – essentially shortening the regular season by 10 races to make way for the Playoffs – it became essential for all the Monster Energy Series drivers to shift their road course game into a higher gear.

At the series’ other traditional road course track, the historic Watkins Glen (N.Y.) International, there have been five different winners in the last five races from A.J. Allmendinger in 2014 (his first series victory) to first-time road course winners Joey Logano in 2015, Denny Hamlin in 2016, Truex in 2017 and Chase Elliott in 2018. Ryan Blaney scored his first non-oval series win on the Charlotte ROVAL’s debut last year – a hybrid course of infield turns and the Charlotte Motor Speedway banking.

The unique challenges presented by Sonoma’s road course – including the reintroduction of the famed “Carousel” turn – present a prime opportunity for some of the sport’s biggest names and championship hopefuls to break into the Busch-Truex-Keselowski “Big Winner’s” party this season. And it makes this week’s stop even more crucial in the championship setting.

Editor’s note: On Tuesday, we’ll showcase the best and most iconic drivers from Nos. 91-09 in the final week of our Driver by Number project. The selection of the No. 99 will be unveiled Monday at 6 p.m. ET exclusively on “NASCAR Race Hub” on FS1.

Who wore it best? As it applies to NASCAR, that age-old question might refer to fire suits, driving gloves or helmets.

This summer, NASCAR.com is taking a different tack — with car numbers. Our Driver by Number project will ask: Which driver either had the most success or was most emblematic with the closest association to every car number ever run in NASCAR’s top division.

MORE: All Driver by Number content

We’ll be counting up all summer long with weekly Tuesday morning reveals and features, from Nos. 1 to 99 and all the aughts (No. 0, 00, 01 … ) taken 10 at a time. Check in every Tuesday to see who made our Driver by Number list, determined by statistical analysis and research from our archives. Then feel free to chime in with your picks and join the time-worn debate of who wore each car number the best.

Sample some of the content from Driver by Number and be sure to return to NASCAR.com every Tuesday for more:

Photos: Best drivers, Nos. 1-50
Debate: Best 4? Harvick or White?
Debate: Best 2? Wallace or Keselowski?
Debate: No. 17, Kenseth or Pearson?
Insight: Hemric on No. 3 and No. 8
Debate: The best in the No. 11?
Insight: No. 21, Pearson and the Wood Brothers
Insight: Gordon’s impact with No. 24
Debate: No. 28’s links to Allison, Lorenzen
Insight: Hailing Harvick at No. 29
Photos: ‘Handsome’ Harry Gant through the years
Photos: Iconic No. 43 paint schemes
Photos: Janet Guthrie’s historic career
Photos: Key wins in the No. 88