For sale free: Custom-built and supercharged Ford Mustang GT race cars, designed and built by one of your favorite Team Penske drivers and several of the world’s most well-known performance car builders.

Interested?

Well, MoneyLion and Team Penske drivers Joey Logano, Ryan Blaney, and Austin Cindric — along with Ford Performance — have your back. They’ve all teamed up to custom build three Ford Mustang GT race cars, and three lucky fans will get to drive them home as part of prize packages valued at $240,000!

Want to feel the roar? Enter the HERE WE ROAR Sweepstakes now.

RELATED: HERE WE ROAR Sweepstakes Sponsored by MoneyLion

MoneyLion will introduce the first car up for grabs during Talladega race weekend, which features the MoneyLion 300 on Saturday. The muscle machine was designed and built by Logano, the 2018 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion, and world-class drifter Vaughn Gittin Jr., founder of RTR Motorsports.

The brand-new 2019 Ford Mustang features a Ford Performance supercharger making 700 horsepower and showcases the modern-aggressive styling of RTR’s complete exterior Design Package and 20-inch Aero 7 wheels wrapped in Nitto NT555 G2 tires.

“When you think about awesome Ford Mustangs, one of the first names that comes to mind is Vaughn Gittin Jr.,” Logano said. “Vaughn (Gittin Jr.) and I have gotten to work together with some really cool projects before and this custom Ford Mustang project has been a lot of fun. It’s good to have a partner like MoneyLion get on board with this and give this thing away to a lucky fan. I can’t wait to unveil this thing at Talladega and let someone take home some sweet Ford Performance thanks to MoneyLion.”

On top of those features, it includes an adjustable suspension package that offers poised street driving, while keeping the car ready for energetic driving and track-day fun. The design was a collaboration of Ford Performance teammates Logano and Gittin Jr., the RTR Vehicles’ team and MoneyLion.

The lucky HERE WE ROAR Sweepstakes winners will be flown, with a guest, to Homestead-Miami Speedway for Ford Championship Weekend on Nov. 15-17 to receive their car.

“By combining three of the sport’s best drivers, with three of the most well-known custom car builders and influencers, and one of America’s most iconic cars, MoneyLion is delivering on its promise to bring excitement and unbelievable experiences to motorsports,” said Dee Choubey, CEO and co-founder of MoneyLion.

Logano has been sporting the MoneyLion logo on his fire suit throughout the 2019 season and will continue to do so at each race throughout the year. He will drive the No. 22 MoneyLion Ford Mustang on April 28 at Talladega Superspeedway for the GEICO 500 and again on Aug. 4 at Watkins Glen International for the Go Bowling at The Glen.

Later in the season, MoneyLion will unveil two more Ford Mustangs designed by Blaney and Cindric. They will partner with two top custom builders that have not yet been revealed. Those custom cars will be revealed at Watkins Glen International and at the 1000Bulbs.com 500 on Oct. 13 at Talladega. Make sure to keep an eye out for more details in the coming months.

Want your chance to win your very own custom-built Ford Mustang GT? Here’s how you can enter: Visit https://roarsweepstakes.moneylion.com enter or send a text message with the word “ROAR” to 95615. The sweepstakes will offer participants bonus entries and be open through Oct. 20. Sponsored by MoneyLion.

It’s safe to say that fans tend to expect the unexpected during a race at Talladega Superspeedway. But there’s one thing that’s not unexpected deep in the heart of Alabama — last-lap passes for the win.

Talladega, the biggest track on the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series circuit at 2.66 miles, has long produced exhilarating and exciting races — but the white-flag lap has served up some climactic, edge-of-your-seat, hold-your-breath thrillers through the years.

RANKING: Top 10 drivers at ‘Dega

Diving into the statistics, 26 of the 99 total races at the superspeedway have ended with a last-ditch pass en route to the checkered flag — or nearly 26% of total races. In fact, three of the last four races have concluded with such an occurrence, including both races in 2018, when Joey Logano won in the spring and Aric Almirola arose victorious in the fall playoff race.

According to Racing Insights, only three times has the eventual winner led only the final lap, including Almirola. Then-teammate Kurt Busch was the leader when the white flag waved in last year’s showdown, but Almirola passed him as the No. 41 sputtered in need of just a few more drops of fuel.

The first occurrence was in October 2007 when Jimmie Johnson was the leader with one more go-around, but Jeff Gordon’s last-lap pass landed the No. 24 in Victory Lane. The same thing happened in April 2009 when Carl Edwards was the leader, but Brad Keselowski’s last-lap pass (or bump) awarded him the win while Edwards was sent crashing into the fence. Keselowski’s one lap led in the race was also his first career lap led.

MORE: Wildest wrecks at Talladega

Keselowski also holds the most last-lap passes for victory at Talladega. He’s done it a total of three times (2009, 2014, 2017) out of his five career wins at the track. Cale Yarborough is right behind Keselowski with two, along with Clint Bowyer, Dale Earnhardt and Jimmie Johnson. Fifteen other drivers have also recorded wins at Talladega with a last-lap pass.

With the track’s 100th Monster Energy Cup Series race set for April 28 with the GEICO 500 at Talladega (2 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), we’ll have to wait to see whether the same will happen for the third consecutive time.

MORE: Drivers with last-lap pass for win

The anticipation and excitement is through the roof as the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series gears up for Talladega Superspeedway, site of Sunday’s GEICO 500.

Here’s everything you need to know for Sunday’s showdown in Sweet Home Alabama.

RELATED: Full Talladega schedule | Who’s the favorite?

TRACK DETAILS

Talladega Superspeedway is a 2.66-mile tri-oval with 33 degrees of banking in Turns 1 and 2, 33 degrees of banking in Turns 3 and 4, 16 degrees of banking in the tri-oval and 3 degrees of banking at the start-finish line.

RULES PACKAGE

Teams will use the 2019 rules package with new tweaks specifically tailored for superspeedway racing at Talladega. The package includes a 0.922-inch tapered spacer (replacing the restrictor plate), 9-inch rear spoiler, 1-inch bolt-on track bar mount (raising the rear of the car by an inch), a tapered radiator pan, two-inch splitter overhang and aero ducts.

The spoiler and rear-end aerodynamic guidelines were altered after a two-day, three-car test session at Daytona International Speedway following this year’s Daytona 500. Findings from that three-car session prompted NASCAR officials to increase the height of the rear spoiler from 8 to 9 inches, along with the track-bar mount addition to create more drag in an effort to slow the cars down.

Cup Series teams also will participate with a new left-side tire compound for the Goodyear Eagle superspeedway radial, a construction update that makes its debut this weekend. The update was recommended after the two-day test at Daytona in February. Teams will be provided with two sets of tires for practice, one set for qualifying and seven sets for Sunday’s race — six race sets plus one set transferred from qualifying or practice.

“While we actually see some tire wear at Talladega, it still leaves room for some team and pit strategy,” said Greg Stucker, Goodyear’s director of racing. “When to pit, with whom and how many tires to take all come into the equation for teams to consider this weekend. And adding in a rules package that Cup teams will be running for the first time, should make for some interesting racing.”

STATS

Team Penske has seven Talladega wins, with all seven coming in the last 14 races. Brad Keselowski and Joey Logano have collectively won six of the last nine races at Talladega, claiming three apiece.

A Team Penske driver led the most laps in four of the last six races at Talladega, while the organization has also led 412 of the 1,140 laps raced at Talladega in the last six races.

Ford Performance also owns the last seven victories at Talladega dating back to Joey Logano’s win in October 2015 — their longest streak of consecutive wins at the Alabama track.

Stats courtesy of Racing Insights

LIVE COVERAGE

The GEICO 500 will air on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio at 2 p.m. ET on Sunday, April 28. Fans can also follow along on the live leaderboard on NASCAR.com, get in-car audio on RaceView and watch in-car cameras on NASCAR Drive. Be sure to set your Fantasy Live lineup and sub in your garage pick (if needed) before the end of Stage 2 when rosters lock for good.

2018 RACE WINNER

After starting ninth, 2018 Monster Energy Series champion Joey Logano led 70 laps, including the final 48 circuits, to earn his third career Talladega victory in last year’s GEICO 500. Logano held off Kurt Busch and Chase Elliott in the closing laps for the triumph.

ACTIVE TALLADEGA WINNERS

DRIVER WINS
Brad Keselowski 5
Joey Logano 3
Clint Bowyer 2
Jimmie Johnson 2
Kyle Busch 1
Denny Hamlin 1
Kevin Harvick 1
David Ragan 1
Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 1
Aric Almirola 1

Former NASCAR Modified champion Carl “Bugsy” Stevens is recovering following a bike-riding crash. The news, released on Tuesday, came via racing journalist Mark “Bones” Bourcier on Facebook.

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“Three-time NASCAR National Modified champion Bugs Stevens phoned to report that he’d fractured a couple of vertebrae (one thoracic, one lumbar),” Bourcier wrote.

The injury came during what Bourcier says was a “slow-speed Florida bike-riding crash.”

Throughout his career, Stevens piled on success in Modified racing, driving the famed ‘Ole Blue’ No. 3 for Boehler Racing, a car that still competes on the NASCAR Modified circuit today with Matt Swanson behind the wheel.

Stevens also was a champion at Connecticut’s Stafford Motor Speedway and Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park, along with Seekonk Speedway, a Massachusetts oval, and multiple other tracks in the New England area.

His success didn’t only come in Modifieds, as Stevens competed in three Monster Energy Cup Series races during his time behind the wheel, all of which in 1970. He finished sixth in the World 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway driving a car for Richard Brown.

He ran the first three years of the modern era in the Whelen Modified Tour, grabbing a best finish of second driving the famed ‘Mystic Missile’ for Bob Garbarino.

Stevens is a member of Seekonk’s Wall of Fame and also was inducted into the New England Auto Racing Hall of Fame in the class of 1998.

Eddie Harvey is no stranger to success in racing.

But, the last two years have seen a bit of a transformation for his team, and he’s along for the ride.

A ride that he has enjoyed since day one, and a ride that he hopes will point him back to NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Victory Lane before long.

Four years ago, the ride was already well underway, while Harvey was celebrating a second straight championship as a car owner on the NASCAR Whelen Southern Modified Tour with Andy Seuss.

It wasn’t anything new for Harvey, who had also been part of championships down south with George Brunnhoelzl III, and has deep racing roots in his family, with his father as a car owner for veteran Jamie Tomaino up north for many years.

“We had one phenomenal year where Andy and George were teammates and we won 11 of the 13 races and won almost all of the poles,” Harvey said. “It was a great relationship. Andy and I were together seven and a half years, and Andy had the opportunity to do some ARCA stuff, and he was able to pursue his dream. My specific vision is the Modifieds, and that’s what I wanted to do going forward, so we mutually agreed to move on but that door is still open even for the future. He stops by every once in a while. I think we won about 17 races together. It was definitely fun.”

CHARLOTTE, NC - OCTOBER 08: Andy Seuss, driver of the #11 Northeast Race Cars/Ideal Finance Chevrolet, celebrates after winning the Championship for the NASCAR Whelen Southern Modified Tour at Charlotte Motor Speedway on October 8, 2015 in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Photo by Sarah Crabill/NASCAR via Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Andy Seuss

After the two parted ways, Harvey tabbed Chase Dowling to drive at Bristol Motor Speedway, finishing fourth in their first effort together. After that, it was current Monster Energy Cup Series driver Corey LaJoie who drove the car at Charlotte Motor Speedway, and it was then that Harvey found the relationship that would set him up for the future.

“It’s a funny story, that’s how Burt Myers and I ended up together. Corey was at a Cup Series race in Dover and said he’d be at the shop on Monday and I told him I needed a seat. He couldn’t quite get one, and he asked me how well I knew Burt Myers, and I called Burt and after Burt had unfortunately destroyed his car at Bristol, he said he had his seat, and he told me to come by and grab it,” Harvey said. “I got it, used the seat for Corey, and then Burt asked me what he needed to do to keep the seat in the car for the World Series at Thompson. Once we left there, we were talking about keeping the seat in there permanently.”

That relationship sparked success towards the end of last year, and the team has rolled it right over to this year, coming just a few short laps away from victory at South Boston Speedway on March 30, and running solidly inside the top five for much of the Icebreaker 150 at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park. Even though Myers finished sixth at Thompson, the combination left there pleased. Myers has finished seventh or better in the first three races of a new year.

“This past race at Thompson was our 13th race together, and since Bristol last year, we’ve pulled off top 10s and top fives with chances to win. Burt hadn’t seen a lot of the tracks, like Stafford and Riverhead. He had never really seen them before we went there. We also had to get used to working together,” Harvey said.

“It took us about five races together and we just had to build a little bit of a notebook. We had to use about five races to pretty much throw away it felt like just learning, but it worked out. The strategy and the tires were much different for us. Down south, we only got one change tire. Up north, you can get some more changes. Down south, you do a lot of riding and you don’t race until the end, but at these tracks up north, you race hard right from the start. Once we got a handful of races together, it started becoming fun.”

And even though that relationship is steered in the right direction with the combination hoping to continue that success for days to come, it’s on hold for now. Myers will begin his quest for a 10th track championship at Bowman Gray Stadium this weekend in their Modified division, meaning he won’t be making the trip to Stafford Motor Speedway for the annual NAPA Spring Sizzler 200.

Instead, Harvey will have Jeff Rocco sit behind the wheel, another driver who has joined the stable, run some previous races and is enjoying the ride.

RELATED: PIT BOX: Whelen Modified Tour Headlining NAPA Spring Sizzler Weekend at Stafford

“I get it, but it sucks that we have to stop that momentum,” Harvey joked of Myers heading to Bowman Gray. “Jeff wasn’t doing anything at Stafford for the Fall Final last year and he just jumped on board as a crew member. All of a sudden, he became a full EHR guy, coming to the tracks and doing whatever we needed him to do. With Doug Dunleavy in the mix, we put a deal together last year and put him in the car at Seekonk; then at Langley, Brian Loftin couldn’t show up there for me to drive the car and Jeff drove through the night and got in it there and ran inside the top 12.”

“He offered over the winter to put the new car together for me and help take some of it off my plate. He really has jumped right into this deal 1000 percent, he gets along great with all of us.”

Harvey says Rocco will drive at Stafford, followed by Danny Bohn returning to action at Wall Stadium Speedway on May 18. From there, Harvey will take a look at the situation and figure out the immediate future.

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“It isn’t just a driver and owner relationship, we have become great friends. We text every single day and it’s important to have that relationship outside of racing as well. If we can’t go at this and have fun doing it, I don’t really want to do it,” Harvey said of his drivers. “We win and lose together as a team. We just try to put our minds together to figure out how to get faster.”

Outside of racing, Harvey is also back on track after some health issues forced him to make a pit stop late last year.

His motor is fired back up, screaming like never before.

“I dealt with some cancer a few years ago, got through that, then all of a sudden about eight months ago I started having some heart issues and I had a few stents put in, and then I had a blood clot and they had to get rid of it. But everything is really good now,” Harvey said.

“I’m fully working out again, back to pushing as hard as I can with this whole racing deal looking to move forward. It’s allowing me to go after this full-time if all of the stars align for us.”

NAPA SPRING SIZZLER 200: RACE CENTER | ENTRY LIST |SCHEDULE & TICKETS

Whelen Modified Tour NAPA Spring Sizzler News & Notes

  • Stafford Motor Speedway regulars Joey Cipriano (SK Modified) and Mark Bakaj (SK Light Modified) will both make their Whelen Modified Tour debuts Sunday. Cirpriano will drive for Steve Greer, a car owner he ran some tour-type Modified races with at Stafford last year. Bakaj will wheel a car for Jason Nogiec driving with his family company as the sponsor.
  • Doug Coby, who leads all active drivers with 11 career Stafford wins, leads the series standings entering the half-mile. Coby has one win already this season, and led the most laps in the Icebreaker at Thompson before a pit road penalty ended his chances of returning to Victory Lane.
  • Sam Rameau, who will make his first start at Stafford this weekend, leads the Sunoco Rookie of the Year standings at the end of the first three races. Timmy Catalano, the brother of defending Sunoco Rookie of the Year Tommy Catalano, trails by 16 points.

NASCAR.com will live-stream the first three practices at Talladega Superspeedway — two Xfinity Series practices and one Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice — in advance of the weekend races in Alabama. Bookmark https://www.nascar.com/live, the destination for all live practice streams this year. You can also catch the practice on NASCAR Mobile.

For Friday specifically, the live-streaming schedule is as follows for users in the United States. Full practices will be posted to NASCAR’s YouTube channel later in the day for fans who can’t watch live.

12:35 p.m. ET: NASCAR Xfinity Series first practice
1:35 p.m. ET: Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series first practice
2:35 p.m. ET: NASCAR Xfinity Series final practice

RELATED: Full weekend schedule

The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice is the first practice session with the full field that will see cars with a smaller tapered spacer instead of restrictor plates as has been the custom for the past 32 years for races at Talladega and Daytona International Speedway.

FOX Sports will feature a multi-hour block of Fast Friday programming each race weekend, beginning at 3 p.m. ET; practices before 3 p.m. will be live-streamed on NASCAR.com.

It’s a doubleheader weekend at the 2.66-mile-long Talladega track with Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series MoneyLion 300 (1 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) and Sunday’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series GEICO 500 (2 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series is set to return Sunday from its off-weekend in a big way at Talladega Superspeedway, the gigantic Alabama speedrome that’s celebrating its 50th anniversary season this year. But as soon as Monday rolls around, with campers packing up the pieces of their revelry and other visitors making their way home, another race is set to begin.

Billed as “The Transformation: The Talladega Superspeedway Infield Project,” the roughly $50 million renovation of the 2.66-mile track’s grounds will enter its second phase after the running of Sunday’s GEICO 500 (2 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM). The initiative, announced last July, is due for completion before the circuit returns for its Oct. 11-13 race weekend in the NASCAR Playoffs.

RELATED: Full schedule at Talladega

The infield overhaul is the final major act of track chairman Grant Lynch, who plans to retire shortly after the project’s completion after 26 years at the Talladega helm. With plenty of earthmoving and hard-hat areas due up on the sprawling speedway complex, Lynch isn’t exactly coasting into his post-Talladega life.

Talladega Superspeedway's "50 Years of Speed" logo, celebrating its anniversary season
Talladega Superspeedway

“I’ll be going out in November, but I get to build one last big project for the Frances,” says Lynch, who received the 2018 Buddy Shuman Award for his efforts in advancing the sport of stock-car racing. “I got to build some others, but I’m looking forward to doing this as kind of my swan song. Then I’m going to go do what I want every day. We’re going to be very, very busy.”

The facility has already been plenty active in completing the first phase of the renovation project ahead of the circuit’s springtime visit. Among the enhancements in place for this race weekend: a new oversized vehicle tunnel, a revamped race control tower and additional premium RV parking. Lynch himself assisted with the final touches of the tunnel, helping to repaint stripes on the redone race surface.

PHOTOS: Talladega tunnel construction

If Sunday’s race creates carnage — given the track’s tendency for field-thinning multi-car wrecks — there’s more demolition on tap for Monday, when construction crews plan to start leveling several infield buildings to create new fan zone amenities. Those improvements include new garage areas with fan viewing platforms, an open concessions plaza, garage and pit-road suites, plus a new, more accessible Victory Lane.

The re-imagined Talladega infield follows similar renovations at Richmond Raceway and ISM Raceway near Phoenix. Lynch says that his venue has been taking notes.

MORE: Renderings of new Talladega garage area

Talladega chairman Grant Lynch points out amenities for the Talladega Superspeedway transformation project.
Talladega Superspeedway

“You learn things from them about what they did and can put those things into your design, so I think we’ve learned a lot,” Lynch said. “I think the difference between us and them is that we’re so much bigger that we’ve got all this land that they just don’t have inside their facility. We’ve got 242 acres inside. You can do a lot of stuff with all that acreage. We’re excited about the project and looking forward to getting it done and running that first race.”

That first new-look race in October will come after the track’s 100th race for NASCAR’s top division. Lynch will provide the command to start engines as the event’s grand marshal.

Lynch has seen plenty since taking the superspeedway’s reins in January 1993, but one of the common threads has been the lengths that fans go to soak in the Talladega experience. Just more than 70% of the ticket buyers come from out of state, their average distance traveled hovering around the 290-300-mile range.

“That’s just amazing that the track has that much pull,” Lynch says. “Everybody calls it a ‘bucket list’ race track, and I say that may be true because it’s surely something you should go see.”

PHOTOS: Talladega Then and Now

MOORESVILLE, N.C. – Justin Haley will make his Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series debut for Spire Motorsports in Sunday’s GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway.

Haley, a three-time NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series winner, will pilot the No. 77 Fraternal Order of Eagles (F.O.E.) Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 at the famed 2.66-mile Alabama track.

RELATED: Talladega schedule | Cup entry list | See every spring race winner 

The F.O.E. is an international non-profit organization uniting fraternally in the spirit of liberty, truth, justice, and equality, to make human life more desirable by lessening its ills and promoting peace, prosperity, gladness and hope.

The F.O.E. donates more than $10 million a year to local communities, fundraisers, charities and more. As part of its philosophy, the F.O.E. gives back 100 percent of monies raised in the form of grants. Fundraisers are conducted for eight major charities, including kidney, heart, diabetes, cancer and spinal cord injury funds, a children’s fund, memorial foundation and the Golden Eagle Fund.

“Our members are incredibly excited to take the next step with Justin in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series,” said F.O.E. Grand Worthy President Carl Burnett. “Justin and the Eagles have been together for many of his career firsts and we can’t wait to experience yet another this weekend in Talladega. This is our third year together and we’re proud to continue to break new ground as a team.”

Haley made his professional stock car debut in 2014 and has gone on to record wins in the ARCA Menards Series, NASCAR K&N Pro Series East and the Gander Trucks. Last season, Haley parlayed three wins, nine top-five and 18 top-10 finishes into a third-place championship effort behind the wheel of GMS Racing’s No. 24 Chevrolet Silverado.

Meanwhile, all three of his Gander Trucks wins came with the F.O.E. livery showcased aboard his entry.

The Indiana native, who will turn 20 on Sunday, currently races full time in the NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS) for Kaulig Racing where he’s notched six top-10 finishes and sits 11th in points. In his most recent NXS start two weekends ago at Richmond Raceway, Haley started 14th and finished 10th.

“This is a dream come true,” explained Haley. “I couldn’t be prouder than to make my Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series debut with Spire Motorsports and the Fraternal Order of Eagles. The F.O.E. has supported my career since the beginning and it feels like our program will come full circle when I make my debut on NASCAR’s biggest stage this weekend at Talladega. I’m incredibly grateful to both Spire Motorsports and the F.O.E. for this opportunity. I’m excited to get on track and see what we can do.”

“Justin Haley is a proven winner and a future super star,” said Spire Motorsports co-owner T.J. Puchyr. “Justin has won at several levels and knows what it takes to compete with the best in the business. He’s a very talented, smart racer so we’re confident he’ll do a good job this weekend.”

The GEICO 500 from Talladega Superspeedway will be televised live on FOX Sunday, April 28 beginning at 2 p.m. ET. The 10th of 36 races on the 2019 MENCS schedule will be broadcast live on the Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

After a decade of racing, Bryan Reedy very seriously considered getting out of the sport altogether after the 2017 season.

Reedy, a regular at Motor Mile Speedway in Radford, Virginia, ran in the late model race at Martinsville Speedway in October 2017, and “ended up basically destroying the race car.”

The following season, Motor Mile took the year off, and so did Reedy. He didn’t race at all in 2018.

But when Motor Mile opens the season this Saturday, Reedy will return with it.

“We kind of held on to it for a little while, then talks of Motor Mile reopening started again so we decided to put it back together and we’re ready to go racing,” Reedy said.

Motor Mile Speedway, a 0.416-mile paved oval racetrack in Radford, Virginia, took the 2018 season off for what general manager Michelle Vaught called “a kind of a reset.” They’ll race for the first time since 2017 this Saturday night with NASCAR Whelen All-American Series Division I Late Model Stocks along with Limited Sportsman, Modified 4 Cylinders and Super Street Division.

RELATED: Motor Mile Looking Forward to 2019

After taking a year off, Reedy said he’s had to shift his way of thinking when it comes to getting back into the car.

Bryan Reedy

“I’ve lost about 30 pounds.” he said. “The preparation, we basically started with a bare chassis, and from there we built it up. It’s funny when you don’t race for a year how much stuff kind of goes away and you don’t even realize it. Just every day stuff. Like you go in the shop and you’re looking for brake cleaner and there isn’t any because we haven’t raced in a year so we haven’t had any. We don’t have the stock piles we had before. So there’s been a lot of ramping up to get ready fore this year.”

Thankfully, Reedy will return to a familiar race track, which will help him get comfortable again quickly. He began driving at Motor Mile in 2007 in the Mod-4 division. He has 12 career wins at his home track, 10 in a mod-4 and two in a limited sportsman. He raced in the Division I late model division full time for the first time in 2017, finishing in third in the track’s points standings.

Reedy Racing  | Facebook | Twitter

Reedy is a third-generation driver. His grandfather drove late models, sportsman, and some in the NASCAR Busch Series in the 1970s and ’80s. His dad also raced throughout the ’80s and ’90s, and won championships at Franklin County Speedway and Motor Mile, then named New River Valley Speedway.

Once Reedy was old enough he was helping on crews and accompanying his dad every weekend. It was 2007, when he bought his first mod-4 and raced out of the same shop as his dad.

“I’ve basically been racing all my life. I have not been driving all my life, but I’ve been racing all my life,” he said.

Racing is a hobby for Reedy, who is a systems engineer at a community college during the day.

“That’s my day job. I leave here and go to the shop and work on the race car for several hours and then go home,” he said.

Motor Mile Speedway | Facebook | Twitter

Motor Mile Speedway has always been the best option for Reedy when it comes to racing. It’s about 45 minutes from his house, and has that family history. He said he’s coming back to racing this season partly because he missed it so much last year, but the return of his home track kicked the return into gear.

Bryan Reedy

“Motor Mile really kind of made it happen,” he said. “We’re close enough to go to places like South Boston and Southern National, but it really costs us a lot more to go there because you end of staying the night and that kind of thing because it is so much further.

“You race all day and they’re just a little bit too far to really be able to do it week in and week out. So Motor Mile re-opening really kicked it in gear for us. Like, ‘O.K. We’ve got somewhere we can go race that’s close enough. We don’t have to stay, we don’t have all this additional cost.’ So it helps out a lot.”

Returning to the race car will be a change for Reedy this season, but it’s one he’s excited for, just like all the other changes at Motor Mile this season.

“I am excited to be back in the race car and back into the racing in general,” he said. “Motor Mile has done a lot of stuff with their re-opening that makes me excited more so for the fans. Just the format their coming with and allowing the fans to be fans. The changes that they’re making at the race track itself I think are fantastic.”

Motor Mile Speedway Schedule

Brenda Jackson, mother of Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kelley Earnhardt Miller, died at age 65 after a battle with cancer, JR Motorsports announced Monday afternoon.

Jackson was a longtime employee of JR Motorsports, joining her son’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race team as an accounting specialist in 2004. Her sarcastic sense of humor injected a brand of humor at JR Motorsports that became part of the company’s fabric as it grew into a full-time NASCAR racing operation in 2006 and a championship-winning organization in 2014, according to the team.

Along with a 15-year career with JRM, Jackson also was one of four children to legendary NASCAR fabricator Robert Gee, who built cars for a number of high-tier drivers, including Dale Earnhardt.

Brenda Gee and Dale Earnhardt married in 1972, having two children over the span of their marriage. After the couple separated, their two children stayed with their mother while Earnhardt continued to get his racing career off the ground.

After a house fire that left Brenda, Kelley and Dale Jr. homeless, Brenda moved back to Virginia. She re-married in 1985 to Willie Jackson, a firefighter in Norfolk. After Willie’s retirement, the couple moved back to North Carolina with stepdaughter Meredith to work with Kelley and Dale at JRM.

“I’m a very, very lucky woman, as I get to interact with my kids almost every day,” Jackson said last year according to JRM’s official announcement of her passing. “I’ve got two bright, beautiful kids that I am very proud of. Kelley’s standards are very high. She conducts herself that way and she expects that of everyone else. Dale Jr. just gets bigger and bigger. I am very proud of his accomplishments, but as a mother I am proudest of the way he handles himself with honesty and the way he cares about his family and his friends.”

Jackson was preceded in death by her parents, Hazel May Overton Clark and Robert Edward Gee, and her sister Sandra Gee.

She is survived by her husband of 33 years, William M. Jackson Jr.; children Dale Earnhardt Jr. (wife Amy), Kelley Earnhardt Miller (husband L.W.), stepdaughter Meredith Davis (husband Jonathan); grandchildren Karsyn Elledge (18), Kennedy Elledge (13), Wyatt Miller (7), Callahan Davis (16), Claudia Davis (13) and Isla Rose Earnhardt (11 months); her brothers Robert Gee (wife Beverly) and Jimmy Gee; and her Pekingese dog, Scully.