Investing in a return to the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour was something Chris Pasteryak felt he was ready for.

After years of running in New England’s tour-type modified ranks, Pasteryak decided to return to Whelen Modified Tour action for the first time in eight years last season, running 14 of the 16 races driving for his family-owned operation, and scoring six top-10 finishes along the way.

He had been successful running in New England with two championships in the Valenti Modified Racing Series, and running up front in the Tri Track Open Modified Series before his return to NASCAR’s ranks.

“I had gone and helped out Gary Putnam a few times in 2017, and I really liked the way (NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour director) Jimmy Wilson ran the show,” Pasteryak said. “I really liked everything NASCAR was doing and it seemed like something I really wanted to be a part of. We decided to get a spec motor and give it a shot, but we didn’t think it was going to be easy.”

He was right.

Just like anything else in racing, there was a bit of a learning curve during his return. Prior to 2018, Pasteryak ran 30 races spanning across six years, with a best finish of third. But, returning almost a decade later required the team to take a little bit of a different approach compared to some of the shows he was used to running. Instead of changing no tires, or just one tire, the team had to prepare for changing multiple tires during Whelen Modified Tour races on most occasions.

But why was it the right time?

“It was a little bit of everything, I’m getting older so I figured if I was going to give it a shot with my own guys and my own team, it was time,” Pasteryak said. “The schedule worked its way into something that we could do almost all of the races and now this year we can do all of them. The guys were really ready for it. It’s not like running Tri Track races are easy, they are really hard. The Tour races are really hard to be competitive, but we were ready for live pit stops, ready to take the next step.”

That next step saw him grab a best finish of eighth in the NAPA Fall Final at Stafford Motor Speedway, and even though their certainly was that adjustment period, Pasteryak went through the process with the same core group of crew members, friends and family, that he had been working with for years.

“I took all of the same guys that had been helping me through the years, a few other guys came on, but it was the same group of guys that had been going to the races. It’s been cool because we have all grown together and the Whelen Modified Tour races are a lot more of a team deal than some of the others,” he said. “The schedule is usually compact. You really have to have guys that know what they are doing with the race car.”

RACING-REFERENCE: Chris Pasteryak’s Career Statistics

At the end of last season, Pasteryak had watched Justin Bonsignore dominate the series — winning eight races and the championship — and doing it all driving a chassis from the LFR camp. The chassis department actually won 11 of the 16 Whelen Modified Tour races, and that was enough for Pasteryak to decide to make the move and purchase one.

“We were watching and saw what the LFR guys had going on, and the track support they give really seemed to help out. Over the winter, we went and got a car from Rob Fuller and LFR,” Pasteryak said. “For the World Series at the end of last year, we rented a car from Rob just trying to get a head start for this year. We figured we should just start the notebook. We finished ninth, but we had a learning curve and some limited practice. But after the first two races this year, we’ve been a fifth- to a 10th-place car.”

His success with an LFR car in his own garage seems to be trending him in the right direction. He qualified seventh in the opener at Myrtle Beach Speedway and finished seventh, then started 11th at South Boston Speedway, and brought the No. 75 Dawley’s Collision Chevrolet home in the sixth spot. Although it’s early, through the first two races, he sits fifth in the championship standings.

“I really don’t think we are doing a whole lot different than last year, other than that we have a whole year under our belt as a team running the races and making the calls,” Pasteryak said. “But Myrtle Beach is its own animal and South Boston was really its own deal because it’s hard to compare it to anything else we run. We are off to a better start. We’ve been a little bit better off the truck, and having a little bit of speed in practice puts you in a little bit better qualifying group. We’re qualifying a little bit better.”

But, now, Pasteryak feels like the regular season begins at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park this weekend, with the 45th annual Icebreaker weekend. The Whelen Modified Tour will run four events at Thompson this year, so having a successful setup and putting together races at a difficult, .625-mile oval is going to be important.

“It’s a lot higher than it was last year coming out of Myrtle Beach with an 18th,” Pasteryak said of the anticipation heading into the weekend. “We’ve done tour races this year, but we aren’t even at the first chapter of the book, we are only through the prologue. I’m definitely way more confident than last year, but if I can get to the end of Thompson and we are on the same straightaway as the No. 51 (Justin Bonsignore), I’ll call that a success.”

PIT BOX: Jimmy Blewett Looks To Continue Hot Start at Icebreaker

Bonsignore was the dominant force at Thompson last year, sweeping the four races en route to his crown. But Pasteryak is going to be one of many in the same situation as Bonsignore, with an LFR car, heading into the weekend. The Icebreaker is one of the most prestigious races in short-track racing, as the Connecticut oval officially kicks-off the New England racing season in style with 11 different divisions over the course of two days of competitive action.

“I enjoy the two days shows to get the year going. Where else would you rather be after being inside all winter,” Pasteryak said. “It’s nice to watch all of the other races and see some of the new cars.”

Overall, running on the Whelen Modified Tour has opened eyes for Pasteryak, who moved to the series hoping to be competitive and run up front. He’s inching closer on accomplishing his ultimate goal of running consistently at the front and putting himself in position to win.

“If you want to go win, it’s a lot of work. Effort equals results,” he said. “You just try to do the best job with what you can and what you have to work with. You love doing it, that’s why we do it. It’s nice to get in a routine where we are going racing. If it wasn’t fun, we wouldn’t take the time, effort and money to go do it. We really enjoy it and it gives us a reason to work.”

PIT BOX: Jimmy Blewett Looks To Continue Hot Start at Thompson

But, is the Lisbon, Connecticut, driver ready to carry the checkered flag? Or is there still a bit more of adjustment left to go?

“Not quite yet. Maybe by the end of this year,” Pasteryak said. “You can’t just go from running 10th or 12th to winning, it happens in steps. I think we are now about a seventh or eighth place car, maybe fifth on a good day. If we can consistently be in the final group of qualifying and qualify consistently in the top 10 each time, I’d say we’re ready. We’ve got a little bit of work left to go. I think with the help we are getting, we can get there. The mountain is bound to a hill, but it’s still there.”

Whelen Modified Tour News & Notes:

  • As Pasteryak mentions, Justin Bonsignore seems to have become a master of Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park, but he has his work cut out for him entering the weekend. Bonsignore, the defending series champion, has two finishes outside the top 10 to open the new year and is mired deep in the championship standings as he begins his repeat effort. Thompson could be the right place for him to turn it around, though, as the Holtsville, New York, driver has nine wins in 33 starts at the track.
  • Jon McKennedy came up just a few short laps dry on fuel in last year’s Icebreaker. He was leading in the final stages when the tank ran dry, but the speed under the hood of the Tommy Baldwin prepared No. 7NY Ultra Wheel Chevrolet has been in the car each time they have hit the track. He qualified inside the top six in all four races there last year.
  • Fresh off his first win in nearly three years, Ron Silk will look to go back-to-back at a place where he is no stranger to success. Silk has four wins in 49 starts at Thompson, and has finished third in two of the last four races he’s run there.
  • Thompson’s five NASCAR Whelen All-American Series divisions will also open their season as part of the annual Icebreaker, along with five other touring series divisions in New England. All of Thompson’s 10-race Whelen All-American Series schedule this year will air live on FansChoice.TV.

Thompsoncandid

Racing at Bristol Motor Speedway lately seems to come down to the Kyles.

Kyle Busch and Kyle Larson.

Busch has two wins in his last three races at the 0.533-mile track … and Larson has been nipping at his heels, finishing second in the last two.

In all, the two drivers have finished 1-2 eight times in their careers in both the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series and Xfinity Series according to Racing Insights — with four of those 1-2 finishes coming at Bristol.

A look at every Kyle 1-2 finish:

Series Date Track Winner Second
Xfinity 3/16/13 Bristol Kyle Busch Kyle Larson
Xfinity 3/15/14 Bristol Kyle Busch Kyle Larson
Cup 3/23/14 Auto Club Kyle Busch Kyle Larson
Xfinity 8/21/15 Bristol Kyle Busch Kyle Larson
Xfinity 2/27/16 Atlanta Kyle Busch Kyle Larson
Cup 9/24/17 New Hampshire Kyle Busch Kyle Larson
Cup 4/15/18 Bristol Kyle Busch Kyle Larson
Cup 7/1/18 Chicago Kyle Busch  Kyle Larson

You might notice a bit of a pattern — Busch has won every race where he and Larson have finished 1-2.

But Larson’s recent track record at Bristol shows that he might be on the verge of overturning his second-run status.

According to Racing Insights, Larson has led 489 laps in the last four races — more than any other driver. He is also the only driver to finish in the top 10 in every stage in each of the last four races.

Date Start Finish Stage 1 finish Stage 2 finish Laps led
4/24/17 1 6 1 7 202
8/19/17 2 9 3 6 70
4/15/18 6 2 5 5 200
8/18/18 1 2 6 3 17

 

NASCAR.com’s own @nascarcasm made his maiden voyage onto Reddit’s r/NASCAR community Tuesday evening, answering dozens of fan questions in an AMA (ask me anything) session.

While we’ve curated a few of our favorite responses here, it’s worth your time to check out the entire AMA thread on Reddit yourself, because nobody does it quite like ever-hilarious, ever-humble @nascarcasm.

 

On becoming a NASCAR fan:

 


On Paul Menard having no Twitter account:

 


On his beef with Jamie McMurray:

 


On his Darrell Waltrip tattoo
(context):

 

 


On memes:

 


On his true identity:

 

 

Well, after all these years, we’ve finally determined @nascarcasm’s true identity. He’s been Morgan Shepherd this whole time, disguising himself behind a blurred-out face and a pair of rollerskates.

Check out the Reddit AMA post for yourself to learn more about the man behind some the Internet’s finest content — who, again, is actually Morgan Shepherd.

NASCAR released its 2020 schedule for the NASCAR Xfinity Series and NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series on Wednesday, unveiling an innovative slate that mirrors the work done for next year’s Cup Series schedule and one that brings both series back to iconic Virginia short tracks for the first time in more than a decade.

The announcement also provides a clearer picture of the schedule for a historic Pocono Raceway doubleheader next summer, and a look at the tricky road to the Championship 4 — at a new venue — for both series.

Confirmed last week with the reveal of the Cup Series schedule, ISM Raceway at Phoenix will host a tripleheader championship weekend, beginning with the Gander Trucks title race Nov. 6. The Xfinity Series championship is decided the next night at the 1-mile track.

ISM Raceway at Phoenix recently completed a $178 million renovation project designed to improve the fan experience, and one which included a reconfiguration for the track’s start/finish line. The track has hosted the Round of 8 finale for all three NASCAR national series since the introduction of the NASCAR Playoffs elimination format.

RELATED: Xfinity Series schedule page

Perhaps the biggest change confirmed Wednesday is the return of the NASCAR Xfinity Series to historic Martinsville Speedway, with incredibly high stakes in the penultimate race of the season before the title field is set.

The Xfinity Series has raced at Martinsville just once in the past 25 years — in July 2006, a race won by Kevin Harvick. Martinsville will host the Gander Trucks that weekend as well, setting up the first-ever tripleheader weekend at the track.

Richmond Raceway also plays a prominent role in both schedules. The Gander Trucks will return to Richmond for the first time since 2005, while the newly renovated raceway will play host to the regular-season finale in the Xfinity Series to set the field for the 12-driver Playoff field.

“The NASCAR Xfinity Series and NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series were both built on short-track racing, and it is important that short tracks remain a prominent part of our series schedules,” said Ben Kennedy, NASCAR managing director of racing operations and international development. “We returned to our roots in many ways with today’s announcement. Martinsville and Richmond were part of the original Xfinity and Gander Trucks schedules, and we’re excited for their return as part of a strong overall slate.”

The Xfinity Series schedule has three new tracks in its seven-race Playoffs, and two new elimination races that mirror the Cup Series at a road course and a short track.

The postseason opens Sept. 18 at Bristol Motor Speedway, with a Friday night race under the lights. After a trip to Las Vegas Motor Speedway — both Bristol and Las Vegas are new to the postseason — the series concludes the Round of 12 at the Charlotte Roval.

The Round of 8 sees a Kansas-Texas-Martinsville stretch before ending at ISM Raceway.

The Gander Trucks, meanwhile, open the Playoffs at Gateway Motorsports Park. The 1.25-mile track serves as host for the first Round of 8 race on Aug. 21. A trip to Canadian Tire Motorsports Park, site of the 2019 Playoffs opener, and then Bristol Motor Speedway completes the Round of 8.

RELATED: Gander Trucks schedule page

The Round of 6 starts at Las Vegas, and includes Talladega Superspeedway and Martinsville Speedway before crowning a champion at ISM Raceway.

Announced last week with the 2020 Cup Series schedule reveal, Pocono Raceway will hold the first Cup Series doubleheader in NASCAR history. The Cup Series will race at the 2.5-mile “Tricky Triangle” on Saturday and then again on Sunday, two points-paying races in two days.

It’s officially a tripleheader weekend in Pennsylvania. The Gander Trucks joins the NASCAR Cup Series on a full Saturday of racing, and the Xfinity Series races on Sunday — also with the Cup Series. Yes, that’s four NASCAR national series races in two days.

“I definitely think it’ll be a bucket-list item for fans,” Kennedy said. “It’s going to be a unique piece of our schedule for all three series.”

The full schedules below:

2020 NASCAR Xfinity Series schedule

Date Track
Saturday, Feb. 15 Daytona International Speedway
Saturday, Feb. 22 Las Vegas Motor Speedway
Saturday, Feb. 29 Auto Club Speedway
Saturday, March 7 ISM Raceway
Saturday, March 14 Atlanta Motor Speedway
Saturday, March 21 Homestead-Miami Speedway
Saturday, March 28 Texas Motor Speedway
Saturday, April 4 Bristol Motor Speedway
Saturday, April 25 Talladega Superspeedway
Saturday, May 2 Dover International Speedway
Saturday, May 23 Charlotte Motor Speedway
Saturday, May 30 Mid-Ohio
Saturday, June 6 Michigan International Speedway
Saturday, June 13 Iowa Speedway
Saturday, June 20 Chicagoland Speedway
Sunday, June 28 Pocono Raceway
Saturday, July 4 Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Friday, July 10 Kentucky Speedway
Saturday, July 18 New Hampshire Motor Speedway
Saturday, Aug. 1 Iowa Speedway
Saturday, Aug. 8 Road America
Saturday, Aug. 15 Watkins Glen International
Saturday, Aug. 22 Dover International Speedway
Friday, Aug. 28 Daytona International Speedway
Saturday, Sept. 5 Darlington Raceway
Friday, Sept. 11 Richmond Raceway
Friday, Sept. 18 Bristol Motor Speedway
Saturday, Sept. 26 Las Vegas Motor Speedway
Saturday, Oct. 10 Charlotte Roval
Saturday, Oct. 17 Kansas Speedway
Saturday, Oct. 24 Texas Motor Speedway
Saturday, Oct. 31 Martinsville Speedway
Saturday, Nov. 7 ISM Raceway

2020 NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series schedule

Date Track
Friday, Feb. 14 Daytona International Speedway
Friday, Feb. 21 Las Vegas Motor Speedway
Saturday, March 14 Atlanta Motor Speedway
Friday, March 20 Homestead-Miami Speedway
Friday, March 27 Texas Motor Speedway
Saturday, April 18 Richmond Raceway
Friday, May 1 Dover International Speedway
Friday, May 15 Charlotte Motor Speedway
Saturday, May 30 Kansas Speedway
Friday, June 5 Texas Motor Speedway
Friday, June 12 Iowa Speedway
Friday, June 19 Chicagoland Speedway
Saturday, June 27 Pocono Raceway
Thursday, July 9 Kentucky Speedway
Thursday, July 30 Eldora Speedway
Saturday, Aug. 8 Michigan International Speedway
Friday, Aug. 21 Gateway Motorsports Park
Sunday, Sept. 6 Canadian Tire Motorsports Park
Thursday, Sept. 17 Bristol Motor Speedway
Friday, Sept. 25 Las Vegas Motor Speedway
Saturday, Oct. 3 Talladega Superspeedway
Friday, Oct. 30 Martinsville Speedway
Friday, Nov. 6 ISM Raceway

It’s the second short-track race in three weekends as the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series heads to Bristol Motor Speedway for some bumping and banging.

Before Sunday’s Food City 500 (2 p.m. ET on FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), let’s give you the low down on some things to watch.

RELATED: Full schedule for Bristol | Who’s favored to win this weekend?

TRACK DETAILS
Bristol Motor Speedway is known as the “World’s Fastest Half Mile” as a 0.533-mile track. The concrete racing surface is 40 feet wide and the straightaways are 650 feet long. There is 24 to 28 degree banking in the corners. On the frontstreetch, there is 5 to 9 degree banking, while on the backstretch there is 4 to 8 degree banking. In recent years, the track has used PJ1 TrackBite – a custom formulated resin – to bring in multiple grooves on the racing surface. Jack Smith won the first Cup race here on July 30, 1961. In the spring, the track hosts the Cup and Xfinity Series. In the summer, the track hosts all three national series.

RULES PACKAGE
The Monster Energy Series will run the 2019 rules package tailored for short tracks (less than 1.33 miles in length) and road courses. A 1.17-inch tapered spacer will be used, with engines expected to generate about 750 horsepower. Unlike last week’s race at Texas Motor Speedway, no aero ducts will be used. This weekend’s configuration of the 2019 rules package will be used at 14 events in total this season. The 1.17-inch tapered spacer was first used this season at 1-mile ISM Raceway on March 10.

Teams will have nine sets of Goodyear Eagle Speedway Redials for the race as well as three sets for practice and one for qualifying. This is a new tire setup that both the Cup and Xfinity teams will run this weekend and this is the only track where this tire will be run. Compared to last year’s Bristol tire, this setup features a compound change on the left side and construction updates on both sides of the car.

“While Bristol is only a half-mile in length, it races very much like a speedway,” said Greg Stucker, Goodyear’s director of racing. “The steep banking generates a lot of speed and a high amount of loading, even more so with the 2019, high downforce rules package. The tire set-up that we bring takes that into account while enhancing the stability and handling of the cars through the corners.

“The other factor at Bristol is the concrete track surface. It is important to lay rubber down on the surface and create the opportunity for teams to use all three lanes. There will be a four-foot-wide line of the PJ1 grip compound laid down in the bottom lane in the corners, so that application and subsequent wearing off of the compound will change racing throughout the weekend and keep it exciting for the fans as drivers potentially move around the track to find maximum grip.”

STATS
Much has been made of Jimmie Johnson’s winless streak – a stretch that is now at 66 races as his last win came at Dover in June of 2017. The seven-time champion is fresh off a top-five result at Texas Motor Speedway. He has two wins at Bristol – one of which came in 2017 – and has a stretch seven top 10s in his last nine races. This track, in particular, has knack for snapping Victory Lane droughts especially in recent years.

Driver Streak# Date snapped
Benny Parsons 67 7-8-1973
Kurt Busch 58 8-18-2018
Matt Kenseth 56 8-27-2005
Kevin Harvick 55 4-3-2005
Matt Kenseth 51 4-19-2015

LIVE COVERAGE
This Sunday’s race will be televised on FS1, with radio coverage on PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. Log onto NASCAR.com for coverage, including in-car cameras on Drive and in-car audio on RaceView. Be sure to follow your Fantasy Live team and make your garage decision by the end of Stage 2 when rosters are final. Of note: Opening Cup practice will be streamed on NASCAR.com starting at 1:35 p.m. ET on Friday afternoon.

2018 RACE WINNER
Kyle Busch beat Kyle Larson by .628 seconds for the race win last spring. It was Busch’s second straight win at Bristol and his second in a row in 2018. For Larson, it was the first of two runner-up finishes at the track in 2018. Busch comes into Bristol on the heels of a strong start to the 2019 season as he is the points leader and also has two wins. He also has the longest active top-10s streak dating back to ISM Raceway in 2018 – a stretch of nine races. The 2015 champion’s 3.7 average finish is the sixth-best all time through seven races of a season.

ACTIVE BRISTOL WINNERS
Kyle Busch (seven), Kurt Busch (six), Brad Keselowski (two), Jimmie Johnson (two), Kevin Harvick (two), Joey Logano (two) and Denny Hamlin (one).

PHILADELPHIA, Pa. (April 2, 2019) — With the popular four-race Dash 4 Cash program returning to the NASCAR Xfinity Series this weekend at Bristol Motor Speedway (April 6, 1 p.m. ET on FS1, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Ch. 90), Comcast today announced that $120,000 in grants will be distributed to one Veteran Services Organization (VSO) in each of the four race markets to build an Internet Essentials Digital Rally Point for local veterans.

The contribution triples the amount donated during the 2018 Dash 4 Cash, when Comcast introduced the charitable component of the program by providing grants to local organizations on behalf of Internet Essentials, the largest and most comprehensive broadband adoption program for low-income households in the U.S.

“We had an overwhelmingly positive response to the charitable component of Dash 4 Cash last year, and this year we hope to make an even bigger difference by tripling the contribution and focusing on our local military heroes who have given so much to our country,” said Matt Lederer, Comcast’s Vice President for Brand Partnerships. “Like all of us, the veteran community depends on the internet to succeed and stay connected. These Internet Essentials Digital Rally Points will be technology hubs where veterans can get online to take digital skills classes, apply for health benefits or jobs, file claims, access medical information, or find support networks.”

This year’s grantees are focused on helping the veteran community obtain the skills they need to be successful in today’s digital world. Each one is located in a Dash 4 Cash market, near Bristol Motor Speedway, Richmond Raceway, Talladega Superspeedway and Dover International Speedway. The grants will support the creation of a computer lab, expand the availability of online training programs created in partnership with PsychArmor, and fund the ongoing management of the Digital Rally Points over a three-year period. The PsychArmor curriculum includes 10 veteran-specific digital training videos covering a range of topics, including basic digital literacy and VA benefit access.

Full-time NASCAR Xfinity Series drivers Michael Annett, Christopher Bell, Chase Briscoe and Tyler Reddick are competing for a bonus $100,000 in prize money this Saturday at Bristol Motor Speedway after qualifying in last Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Texas Motor Speedway. The highest-finishing Dash 4 Cash eligible driver at Bristol receives the bonus and will move on to have a shot at the prize at Richmond Raceway, along with the top three finishing series regulars from Bristol. This format continues for the races at Talladega Superspeedway (April 27) and Dover International Speedway (May 4).

Comcast Internet Essentials has an integrated, research-based, wrap-around design meant to address each of the three major barriers to broadband adoption. These include a lack of digital literacy skills, a lack of a computer, and the absence of a low-cost Internet service. The program is structured as a partnership between Comcast and tens of thousands of school districts, libraries, elected officials and nonprofit community partners. For more information on Internet Essentials, visit www.internetessentials.com

A bad start to the season didn’t stop Darren Robertson from winning his second straight championship at Colorado National Speedway last year.

Now, the veteran super late model driver is looking to do what no one has done at the Dacono, Colorado track since it was paved in 1989 — win three straight track titles.

Robertson describes his team’s track title last year at Colorado National — a 0.375-mile asphalt oval near Denver — as “lucky.” The first two races of 2018 did not get the team off to a championship start.

RELATED LINK: Colorado National Speedway

“After 2017 we built a new car. We sold our old car that we won a championship with, so we started last year off with a brand new car and we didn’t have it ready for the first race of the season,” Robertson said. “So we borrowed a car from a good friend of ours and a customer of ours. And we were running third and blew a radiator hose and ended up finishing 19th in the first race with that car. The second race of the season we missed completely and we didn’t even think we had a shot at the championship. And once we got our car out there and going we were fortunate enough to run good every week.”

Darren Robertson

Coming from behind is nothing new for a lifelong racer like Robertson. He grew up watching his dad, Jerry Robertson, race on dirt before moving over the Colorado National when the track switched to asphalt. Darren Robertson said it was only natural that he would also race himself. He never even considered anything else growing up.

“Growing up I always wanted to race so I kind of just knew when the time was right I would start racing,” he said.

It was 2004 when he started racing a modified at Colorado National, winning one main event and finished second overall in the points on the way to a rookie of the year title.

A year later, Robertson’s dad started Furniture Row Racing with Barney Visser. That same year, Robertson started driving his dad’s super late model, winning a second rookie of the year title.

Robertson worked for Furniture Row for about three years before moving to North Carolina to work for Kevin Harvick’s KHI team. He moved back to Colorado after the team shut down, continuing to work in racing with his dad for a business they now run that works on and builds race cars and shocks and maintains short track cars.

Being in the business of race cars has made Robertson more successful with his own.

“It helps when you’re working on them everyday and we’re in the loop of technology being in the business,” Robertson said. “That helps for sure rather than somebody that had a normal daily job and then they do the racing after work on the side. So for sure that helps with being on top of the technical side of it. And also fabricating-wise and building stuff, that gives you a lot of experience. You’re able to get better and better at it everyday.”

RELATED LINKS: Robertson Racing | Facebook

Robertson returns to his home track looking to make history this season, but he admits it won’t be easy, with a lot of cars there he expects to run consistently well and really challenge him.

DarrenRobertson Hero

After traveling across the country to race though, for him there are not many places that stack up to Colorado National.

“There’s a lot of good cars, there a lot of talent out at Colorado National and I think it’s because there’s not a lot of NASCAR local tracks around here so all the talent goes to one track in the better part of the region here,” he said. “The first thing I noticed going to those other racetracks was the fan count wasn’t nearly what we have out here at Colorado National. They do a really good job of packing the stands out here and getting a good fan base. So I feel really fortunate to be part of a track that can get the fans out there like that. It makes the racers have something more to race for when they see the grand stands are packed full.”

Colorado National Speedway will open the season this Saturday with the Sunoco Race Fuels High Octane Icebreaker featuring super late models, modifieds and superstocks beginning at 5:30 p.m.

CNS Schedule | Facebook | Twitter

SOME OTHER OPENINGS THIS WEEK

I-80 Speedway, a 0.4-mile semi-banked dirt track in Greenwood, Nebraska, will hold practice night on Thursday for any and all classes. The track will open its season with back-to-back nights of the Spring Meltdown, with sprints, super late models and compacts on Friday, and NE360s, super late models and hobby stocks on Saturday.

I-80 Speedway will begin its NASCAR weekly series on April 26.

RELATED LINKS: I-80 Speedway | Full Schedule | NASCAR Weekly Schedule

Thunderbird Speedway, a half mile dirt oval in Muskogee, Oklahoma, will hold its first NASCAR Whelen All-American Series points race on Friday with A and B modifieds, super stocks, factory stocks and nex gens.

RELATED LINKS: Thunderbird Speedway | Schedule

There are three certainties in life: Death, taxes and Denny Hamlin speeding on pit road.

Or so say the jokes on social media platforms following each of Hamlin’s transgressions. The driver of the No. 11 Toyota Camry, popped for speeding last Sunday on Lap 64, has become a popular subject for witty one-liners, but his prominence near the top of the list of frequent pit-road offenders has been exaggerated.

For one, he wasn’t the most frequent speeder among Joe Gibbs Racing drivers in 2017 or 2018. Matt Kenseth (seven) and Daniel Suárez (nine) led JGR in that category the last two seasons. Hamlin incurred 12 such penalties over the last three seasons, in line with current stablemate Kyle Busch’s 11. While JGR drivers aren’t pacing the field for yearlong totals — Michael McDowell earned 13 speeding penalties in 2018 alone — they are among the most penalized. But there’s good reason for it.

RELATED: See full Texas results

It’s an occupational hazard of a deliberate game plan — entering and exiting pit road to the very limit allowed by NASCAR — stemming from the organization’s never-ending quest for clean air and optimal track position.

Busch’s effectiveness in getting on and off pit road during the 2016 season was so much of an advantage, that it stands to reason why all JGR crew chiefs would want their drivers to emulate his effort. Hamlin’s most recent crew chiefs, Mike Wheeler and Chris Gabehart, have reputations for being aggressive on pit strategy. Wheeler proved a contrarian long-pitter early last season, while Gabehart is often credited for encouraging Busch’s knack for pushing the pit road pace while the two were paired together in the Xfinity Series.

As a whole, the four-car operation was caught speeding 48 times dating back to the beginning of the 2017 season, a strategic design apparently still in effect as of two days ago.

MORE: JGR makes history at Texas

Why the willingness to accept a penalty? Monster Energy Series race wins nowadays symbolize automatic berths into the playoffs, making every weekend a zero-sum game. They’re so valuable that the advantage of testing pit road’s speed limit comes with an opportunity cost for which JGR will happily pay. The organization’s resolve in the matter makes sense considering the speed of its cars — at least three of its cars ranked inside the fastest 11 in the series since the end of 2016, fast enough to reacquire most of the positions lost — and the notion that equal penalties have different ramifications.

The timing of a penalty matters more than the maliciousness behind the act in question. A driver caught speeding on pit road under caution is banished to the tail end of the longest line on the ensuing restart with an immediate opportunity to win back the positions lost within a close-proximity pack. Hamlin wasn’t an elite restarter in years past, but he ranked among the top 15 for position retention on preferred groove restart attempts in each of the last two seasons. That’s possibly a good enough stature to green light the gamble.

A speeder under green-flag conditions must come back to pit road during the green-flag run, not only forfeiting track position but also valuable distance from cars higher in the running order, without the safety net provided by a restart.

While Hamlin’s speeding penalty at Texas occurred under green, it was just his fourth such penalty on non-drafting ovals in the last three years — pit-road speeding cost him 15 spots under green in the 2017 Coca-Cola 600, six spots in the first Las Vegas race last year and 15 positions in last year’s spring race at Texas — giant losses, to be sure, but rare instances among 120 total stops during green-flag runs.

It should be noted that during this span he did not receive such a penalty in a playoff race. Perhaps higher stakes prompt a more conservative approach?

Regardless, the impact of Hamlin’s pit-road speeding pales in comparison to its perception, even with the organization-wide modus operandi considered. It must not be a concern for Joe Gibbs Racing or else it would’ve been jettisoned from his team’s playbook. As long as his team’s speed remains consistently great, it shouldn’t be.

Hamlin and JGR likely will provide material to the social media comedians for years to come. The real joke, though, as long as Hamlin’s deliberate aggression helps game track position out of pit cycles, will be on his team’s surrounding competition.

David Smith is the founder of MotorsportsAnalytics.com and co-host of Positive Regression: A Motorsports Analytics Podcast. Follow him on Twitter at @DavidSmithMA.

New iRacing modified on the way?

iRacing teased a scan of an all-new NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour race car, much to the delight of the community, including modified standout and Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series driver Ryan Preece.

 

Bristol Xfinity Practice

Todd Gilliland, Christian Eckes, and newly-announced Xfinity Series driver Harrison Burton have spent some time preparing for NASCAR’s visit to Bristol Motor Speedway this weekend.

 

Luza wins PEAK iRacing Series race at Texas

The eNASCAR PEAK Antifreeze iRacing Series made its fourth stop of the season Tuesday at Texas Motor Speedway.

Hometown driver Ryan Luza took the checkered flag, his second of the season, after a wild final lap.

Tuesday’s race marked the debut of Team Dillon eSports and Letarte eSports.

Check out the video remix recap of the event:

Full race recap on eNASCAR.com

 

Quadruple Duty for Timmy Hill

Timmy Hill had a busy week at Texas Motor Speedway, competing in the weekend’s three NASCAR national touring series races.

However, Hill also started Tuesday’s eNASCAR PEAK Antifreeze iRacing Series race, meaning he was the lone driver to do the quadruple. Unprecedented!

Hill exited the iRacing race early and finished 39th, while FlipSid3 Tactics teammate Ryan Luza had slightly better luck, winning the race.

 

NASCAR Heat World Challenge @ The Glen

With two weeks before the NASCAR Heat World Challenge World Finals, NASCAR Heat racers will show off their road course prowess this week at Watkins Glen International using NASCAR Xfinity Series-style cars.

Plus, 704 Games is giving away prizes to random participants, even if you’re no road-course ringer.

Last week’s fastest racers at Eldora placed themselves into the World Finals.

Xbox:

  1. CURSEDLOBSTER40
  2. REDDOT MODZXX
  3. EDRL TWISTED
  4. STERLOOOOOO
  5. CGM X ROSE

PS4:

  1. AJT_17
  2. CHARLIESUPERD059
  3. X_HYP3R_X69
  4. HEADLINE_22
  5. SCOUTBONK18

 

eNASCAR Heat Pro League Preparation Continues

With the draft in the books, drivers and teams continue to prepare for the launch of the eNASCAR Heat Pro League.

 

iRacing Paint Scheme of the Week

Sometimes, you just want to stay out of trouble. Dan DeNayer assembled this very clever and eye-catching “Don’t Wreck Me” car to warn competitors to steer clear. Does it work? Maybe.

 

Video of the Week

Bobby Zalenski went for a wild ride on the final lap of Tuesday’s eNASCAR PEAK Antifreeze iRacing Series race. Just how insane was it?

Well, iRacing’s video editors may have embellished a tiny bit what happened when Zalenski’s Joe Gibbs Racing machine was launched into the air when racing for a top-10 finish at Texas.

Joe Gibbs Racing announced Monday the newest addition to its NASCAR Xfinity Series team as Harrison Burton will join the organization for eight races in the No. 18 Toyota, starting in this weekend’s Alsco 300 at Bristol Motor Speedway.

RELATED: Full Bristol weekend schedule

Burton is currently running full time in the No. 18 Toyota for Kyle Busch Motorsports in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series. This is the NASCAR NEXT alum’s first full season of Gander Trucks competition, and he has already produced a top-five finish at Las Vegas Motor Speedway and a top-10 finish at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

Sponsorship for Burton’s efforts will come from DEX Imaging. The JGR No. 18 Supra team has already scored three Xfinity Series wins this season, with Kyle Busch at the wheel.

“I am so pumped to be going to a team that has had so many accomplishments, and great drivers to look up to as I continue to grow in my racing career,” Burton said as part of a news release provided by the team. “I am really grateful for this opportunity.”

Not only will the 18-year-old Burton run double duty in Xfinity and Gander Trucks, but he also competes in the ARCA Racing Series, where he won the Lucas Oil 200 in February at Daytona International Speedway.

Leading up to Burton’s start in the NASCAR national series, he made history in 2014 by being the youngest Division I driver to win in the NASCAR Whelen All-American Series. A year later, he became the youngest to compete in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West (15 years, eight days old).

Burton is the son of former Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series driver Jeff Burton and nephew of 2002 Daytona 500 Champion, Ward Burton.