CONCORD, N.C. (March 7, 2019) – The race known for making superstars into legends will feature one of music’s rising-star performers, as platinum recording artists AJR will headline the pre-race festivities for the 35th running of the Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race on May 18 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

AJR – a multi-instrumentalist indie pop band based in New York – is comprised of multi-instrumentalist brothers Adam, Jack and Ryan Met, who have written and produced hit songs including “Weak”, “I’m Ready”, “Burn the House Down” and “Sober Up”. The group combines elements of multiple genres, including pop, doo-wop and electronic music to offer a truly unique musical experience for fans gearing up for the biggest all-star event in sports.

The 60-minute concert, located at the speedway’s “party island” near the Fan Zone outside Turn 1, will take place at approximately 2 p.m. on race day. The show headlines pre-race action for the Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race: a no-holds-barred, non-points dash for $1 million cash among luminaries including Kyle Busch, Kevin Harvick, Kyle Larson and Chase Elliott. With a new rules package offering closer, wheel-to-wheel battles throughout the field, only one driver can escape with the victory – but each fan will feel like a winner.

RELATED: Buy tickets for the Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race

“We’re thrilled to showcase such a talented group in AJR before the stars shine on NASCAR’s biggest names,” said Charlotte Motor Speedway Executive Vice President and General Manager Greg Walter. “There’s really something for everyone on All-Star weekend at America’s Home for Racing.”

CONCORD, N.C. – The word on the street is that if you want to find Jay Fabian at the race track, don’t look in the NASCAR hauler. Fabian, the new Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Managing Director, likely won’t be there.

If you want to find Fabian, head for the garage. Look under a few hoods. Check out the underside of a few cars. Chances are, that’s where he’ll be found.

He’s here, it seems, to get his hands dirty. And to help keep the sport clean.

“The series director’s role now is definitely hands-on,” Fabian said from his office at the NASCAR Research & Development Center. “Out in the garage, 24/7.”

His focus, he said, “is being out in the garage when it’s open. I’ll literally be one of the inspectors.”

RELATED: Fabian named Monster Energy Series Managing Director

The 48-year-old has a pretty good eye and a strong background when it comes to cars and inspections. Prior to taking his new post earlier this year, he was managing director of technical integration for NASCAR.

In layman’s terms, Fabian said he “did all the suspension, steering and brakes rules for all three national series (Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, Xfinity Series and Gander Outdoors Truck Series) and I did the post-race inspections for whichever series brought their vehicles back here.”

Those Tuesday teardowns that were once a staple of NASCAR were his domain.

Teardowns still are, but these days they happen at the track, beginning as soon as the checkered flag has fallen.

Go back a bit further and Fabian was a shop foreman at Michael Waltrip Racing from the time it began competing full time in 2007 until it closed in 2015. He is a native of Everett, Pennsylvania, and he grew up racing go-karts and motorcycles, which in turn meant he had to learn to work on them as well.

“And that evolved into muscle cars and drag racing, some circle track stuff,” he said. “I worked at a garage that had a dirt car and I’d gone with them a little bit.”

RELATED: Competition model for 2019 alters post-race inspection

He has served as an over-the-wall crewman as well, as a tire changer and occasionally as a jack man in the Xfinity Series.

“One of the things you hear in the garage often when you talk about people is that he or she ‘is a racer,’ ” said Steve O’Donnell, Executive Vice President and Chief Racing Development Officer for NASCAR. “Jay is a racer. He grew up in racing; he’s been on all sides of racing.”

That background should help immediately, O’Donnell said, and as NASCAR officials plot a course for the future.

“He’s spent a lot of time over the last year and a half back at the R&D Center, looking at the cars, getting to know the trends and where we may want to go from a racing perspective, or maybe where we don’t want to go,” O’Donnell said. “He’s going to bring that knowledge of all the things he saw back at the R&D Center to the track.

“He’ll be intimately involved with the post-race teardown, so I don’t expect Jay to be the most well-liked person just because of some of the rulings he may have to make. But Jay is an extremely fair guy and an extremely confident guy and … we feel like he’ll be a great addition to the team at-track.”

There have been tweaks to the at-track inspection process, in addition to the full-blown post-race teardown, but Fabian said the average fan likely won’t notice much of a difference.

“The inspection lines going around the garages, that visual will still be there,” he said.

Competitors have noticed a more stringent process, one that begins as soon as the garage is opened. According to Fabian, teams could potentially find themselves in hot water as cars come off the haulers.

“Before, that kind of didn’t happen as much,” he said, “but this year we are pushing hard on the teams to show up right, show up legal. We’re going to be looking at it as it comes off the lift gate all through the inspections.

“We’re geared up to dig our heels in and give penalties before they even get to the inspection line if they show up with stuff that isn’t in compliance.”

RELATED: Life in fast lane takes on new meaning for Kennedy

Why the hard line? Perhaps because for the past couple of years, some teams have had to make several trips through the inspection process before passing. That in turn created backlogs in some areas and led to teams not making it to the grid for qualifying or delays on race day.

The inspection process, which shouldn’t be a story, became a story as officials found themselves grappling with teams who were pushing the limits of the rule book.

“You have to change the culture, right?” said Fabian. “There’s just this pride in being not legal, what you can get away with and it’s hard to get your head around all that. I’ve worked for teams that were going by the rule book. And other ones that were saying, ‘We’re going to push as much as we can, just like everybody else is.’

“On this (NASCAR) side, you see people working in areas that just aren’t helpful for their relationship with us getting through the inspection line, and it often doesn’t even match the teams they’re trying to compete with.”

NASCAR historically has been heavy-handed when infractions have involved the engine, tires or fuel. Fabian said he wants the garage to feel the same concern for the car going forward.

Aero is crucial, but horsepower still rules, he said, “and I think that anyone in racing would tell you they would take 10 more horsepower if they could get it. But they know that they’re not going to get away with it because we will react. And I think that’s what we’re looking to do with the car.”

Being hands-on and consistently involved keeps him attuned to the goings-on in the garage. That experience and knowledge provides a bit of comfort when dealing with teams.

“The one message I will continue to drive home all year is we are the only ones that know what everyone has,” Fabian said. “There is a perception of what people are racing against. But it gives me comfort looking at Truck and Xfinity cars and Cup cars when people say ‘Hey, they’re doing so-and-so’ and you can say ‘No, they’re not. That’s not what you’re chasing.’

“To have the confidence to look at the vehicles and be able to give that answer, it’s important to me to be able to do that. I don’t want to just say that and not know.”

Fabian knows. Because he’s out there. Under the hoods and beneath the cars.

Which channels have NASCAR programming this week? We answer that and give you the weekly NASCAR television listings here in the NASCAR TV schedule.

Note: All times are ET.

MORE: Get the NBC Sports App | How to find FS1 | Get FOX Sports App | How to find NBCSN

Monday, March 11
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR The Decades: The 1990s, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6:30 p.m., NASCAR The Decades: The 1990s, NBCSN/NBC Sports App

Tuesday, March 12
5 p.m., Dale Jr. Download, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App
10 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series TicketGuardian 500 (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App

On MRN:
9 a.m., The Tough Truck of NASCAR: Episode 4
7 p.m., NASCAR Live with Mike Bagley

Wednesday, March 13
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App

Thursday, March 14
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App

On MRN:
1 p.m., NASCAR classic race

Friday, March 15
3:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition, FS1/FOX Sports App
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series final practice, FS1/FOX Sports App (Canada: TSN App)
5:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Busch Pole Qualifying, FS1/FOX Sports App (Canada: TSN2)

On MRN:
1 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice
5:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Busch Pole Qualifying

Saturday, March 16
11 a.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Busch Pole Qualifying (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
Noon, Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice, FS1/FOX Sports App (Canada: TSN2)
1 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series qualifying, FS1/FOX Sports App (Canada: TSN App)
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition, FS1/FOX Sports App
3:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series final practice, FS1/FOX Sports App (Canada: TSN App)
4:30 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay, FS1/FOX Sports App
5 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Auto Club Speedway, FS1/FOX Sports App (Canada: TSN1)
11 p.m., Unrivaled: Earnhardt vs. Gordon (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App

On MRN:
Noon, Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice
3:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series final practice
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Auto Club Speedway

Sunday, March 17
Midnight:, NASCAR Presents: The Adventures of Janet Guthrie, FS1/FOX Sports App
12:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Classics: 1994 Coca-Cola 600, FS1/FOX Sports App
3 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Auto Club Speedway (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App
6 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Auto Club Speedway (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
2 p.m., NASCAR Race Day, FS1/FOX Sports App
3:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Auto Club 400 at Auto Club Speedway, FOX/FOX Sports App (Canada: TSN5)

On MRN:
2:30 p.m., Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Auto Club 400

NASCAR Digital will stream live the opening practice for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series TicketGuardian 500 at ISM Raceway when teams take to the 1-mile track for the first time this season. 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.

• 1:35 p.m.-2:25 p.m. ET: Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series first practice

RELATED: Full weekend schedule

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

The Xfinity Series will be in action on Saturday for the iK9 Service Dog 200 (4 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

The TicketGuardian 500 concludes the weekend on Sunday (3:30 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

After having three days to think about it, Erik Jones doesn’t feel any differently about his initial reaction to Ricky Stenhouse Jr.’s aggressive driving at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

Jones and Stenhouse Jr. swapped positions for a number of laps while running in the top 10 toward the end of the first stage of Sunday’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race, but the battle heated up when the two drivers made contact. Jones received light, cosmetic damage to the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota after Stenhouse pinned him down on the apron while racing through the front stretch.

“I think it was just overzealous, probably, on his part,” Jones told NASCAR.com on Wednesday. “It was really early in the race and it was really overly aggressive. At that point, we had a much faster car than he did, and he just made it really hard on us to get around him.

RELATED: Full schedule for Phoenix | Odds to win at Phoenix

“I really don’t know where that stems from,” Jones added. “I’ve never had a problem with Ricky in the past. … At the end of the day, if you’re going to race really hard, you’re going to get it in return.”

Jones didn’t take issue with Stenhouse Jr. racing him hard in general, rather it was the point in the race when it took place that he and his No. 20 team didn’t appreciate, causing them to get fired up on the radio. Jones went on to finish 13th, while Stenhouse scored a sixth-place result.

“It’s fine to race hard,” Jones said. “I would understand if that was, you know, 15 or 20 laps to go, you can race like that. But there was a lot of race left and when you’re banging the doors off the thing with 300 miles left in the race, that’s just a lot. Kind of is what it is and it’s his choice if he wants to race like that.”

Noting that Stenhouse Jr. raced his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Kyle Busch “really, really hard” a few laps prior to his own run-in, Jones said the No. 17 Roush Fenway Racing driver should have thought more logically about the move.

“I know (Busch and I) both had quite a bit faster cars than him at that point in the race,” Jones said. “Most of the time, when somebody catches you with that long to go in the race, that quickly, you’re not going to give them too hard of a time to get by you.”

As the Monster Energy Series heads to ISM Raceway for Sunday’s TicketGuardian 500 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), Jones was persistent in stating that if Stenhouse Jr. can dish it out, he better be ready to take it, too.

“He’s just going to have to expect that in return,” Jones reiterated. “He’s had some fast cars to start the year and I know he wants to have some good finishes, but there’s kind of a happy medium there between racing hard, trying to maintain what you’ve got and giving people a little bit of a break every once in a while.”

Looking ahead to the fourth race of the 2019 season at the 1-mile track, Jones’ confidence level is high after a strong start with finishes of 13th or better the first three events. Jones also has a solid track record in Phoenix, with one top five and three top-10 finishes in five starts.

“Overall, I feel like we’ve adapted well to the rules package,” Jones said. “I think Joe Gibbs Racing is making good changes to what we have car-build wise going forward (and we’re going) to continue to make it better. Phoenix is going to be a lot different. High downforce, but more power like we had last year, so that’s going to be a first experience for everybody. But I think we’ve got a good grasp on which way we need to go with the package and what we need to do to be fast with it, so I think that’s a good sign for us.

The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series heads to ISM Raceway this weekend for Sunday’s TicketGuardian 500 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Teams will have to adjust from their first two races with the 2019 rules package in Atlanta and Las Vegas to this weekend’s stint in Phoenix, where a different-sized tapered spacer — and no aero ducts — are on display for the first time this year.

ISM Raceway has an idiosyncratic layout where it’s nice to have a fast car — but a fast car that handles well is even better.

We explain that, plus much more, below to get you ready for racing in the desert.

RELATED: Full weekend schedule

Keeping up-to-date with the rules

In October, NASCAR officials unveiled a new rules package that would be incorporated into the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, featuring a car with higher downforce and lower horsepower to develop closer racing.

The different packages are tailored to the specific tracks on the Monster Energy Series circuit. On the larger tracks, including superspeedways, cars will use a .922-inch tapered spacer to reduce horsepower and a larger spoiler to add roughly 50 percent more downforce.

Graphic for 2019 rules packages

At tracks shorter than 1.33 miles and at road courses, the Cup cars will use a 1.17-inch tapered spacer, with engines expected to generate roughly 750 horsepower.

This week’s configuration of  a 1.17-inch tapered spacer with no aero ducts will be used in 14 events this year — mostly on shorter tracks and road courses. Cars will feature traditional brake ducts, not aero ducts, at Phoenix and because tracks like this require heavier braking and additional cooling.

Tapered spacers, aero ducts and spoilers — oh my

Beyond the tapered spacers and ducts, the baseline aero elements of the 2019 rules package are a taller 8-inch by 61-inch rear spoiler, a larger front splitter with a 2-inch overhang, and a wider radiator pan that measures 37 inches wide in the front tapering to 31 inches at the rear. Those base changes will be in place at every race season with the intent of adding downforce to stabilize handling, a break from a trend of downforce reduction from 2015-18.

“For us, it’s really a focus on getting back to a true focus on the drivers and what NASCAR is all about — close side-by-side racing and trying to deliver more of that,” NASCAR Executive Vice President and Chief Racing Development Officer Steve O’Donnell said when the rules were announced last year.

Good(year) times

Monster Energy and Xfinity Series teams are going from a 1.5-mile track to a 1-mile desert oval and they will be under a lot of (air) pressure with the new rules package at ISM Raceway. This will be the first race with the 1.17-inch tapered spacer that produces more horsepower. Phoenix is a smoother surface, but is one of the more unique and challenging tracks on the circuit. It differs from other shorter tracks in that aerodynamics will play a more vital role.

ISM Raceway has three distinct corners with a lack of banking, so aerodynamics are more relevant. With this rules package being high-downforce, high-horsepower, the combination should result in higher speeds and increased tire loading, making the level of air pressure a very important factor.

“Teams will be under a new rules package this week at Phoenix, with all the new aerodynamic elements, but with more horsepower than they’ve had over the past couple weeks,” said Greg Stucker, Goodyear’s Director of Racing. “When we tested on this package at Phoenix last fall, teams were considerably faster than we’ve seen in recent years.

“With the extra downforce versus the 2018 rules package, much of that speed comes through the corners, which generates higher loading on the tires. Teams will need to be mindful of our recommended air pressures as they develop their set-ups to optimize grip. Running below our minimums can cause the sidewall of the tire to flex more and over-deflect, generating more heat, higher wear and fall-off, and even damaging the tire to the point of air loss. Finding that balance will be key.”

There will be a brand-new tire compound debuting at Phoenix. Teams in both series will run the same tire compound at ISM Raceway this weekend. This is the first time either of the two Goodyear tire codes will be run. The left-side tire features a construction update that Goodyear will begin displaying at many more tracks this season, while the right-side tire features a compound change designed to introduce more tire wear and run cooler. Phoenix is the only track where either of these two tires codes are scheduled to run.

There was a tire test in Phoenix last year (Oct. 2-3) with this tire combination. Drivers Denny Hamlin, Matt Kenseth, Kyle Larson and Paul Menard were among those at the test. Similar to other NASCAR ovals that are one mile or less in length, they will not run liners in their tires at Phoenix this weekend.

Buckle up, NASCAR fans — the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Awards are headed to Music City.

Nashville is the new host city for Champion’s Week and the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Awards, the annual postseason celebration that sees drivers, industry luminaries and celebrities alike strut the red carpet and formally crown the series champion. The Awards will be held Thursday, Dec. 5, at the Music City Center in downtown Nashville.

Other Champion’s Week events will be announced at a later date, but fans should expect to have more access at the Awards than ever before.

“This year, we set a course to look at everything we do through a different lens, including how we celebrate the champions of our sport,” said Steve Phelps, NASCAR President. “Nashville’s energy, vibrant entertainment scene, and deep-rooted lineage in motorsports informed our decision and we believe our fans and industry will embrace the move to the Music City.”

Nashville
Photo credit: Music City Center

The formal postseason Awards is a tradition that stretches back to 1981, when the event was held in New York City. It relocated to Las Vegas in 2009 and will now call Nashville its home for 2019.

NASCAR and Nashville have a history, too. Fairgrounds Speedway in Nashville hosted 42 Monster Energy Series races from 1958-1984, with the circuit visiting twice a year from 1973-84. Tennessee native Darrell Waltrip made the venue his own personal playground, winning eight races there — including four in a row from 1981-83, and five of the last seven Cup races held there. Nashville also hosted what is now the Local Series Awards for a number of years.

“Nashville’s history with NASCAR is indisputable, and coupled with our event experience we are a perfect match for NASCAR Champions Week,” said Butch Spyridon, President and CEO, Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp. “We look forward to welcoming NASCAR back home to Music City.”

Additionally, dates for the NASCAR Xfinity Series, NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series and NASCAR Regional, International and Local Awards will shift and be held before the Monster Energy Series Awards. Once again held at the Convention Center in Charlotte, North Carolina, the 2019 Xfinity Series and Gander Outdoors Truck Series Awards are Friday, Nov. 22, following by the Regional, International and Local Awards on Nov. 23.

Those events will be held the week after the NASCAR national series crown three champions in Miami, but before Thanksgiving.

Ryan Newman hasn’t won a race in two years, a span of 71 races where the 41-year-old has gone without lifting a trophy in Victory Lane. He also is in his first season driving for Roush Fenway Racing.

And those two factors are precisely why Newman should be considered among the favorites to win this weekend at ISM Raceway in Phoenix.

RELATED: All of Newman’s Cup victories

Consider the following stats from Racing Insights:

Newman has two wins at ISM Raceway in his career, one in 2017 and one in 2010.

The 2017 victory snapped a 127-race winless streak. It was his first win with Richard Childress Racing, which he had been driving for since 2014.

The 2010 victory snapped a 77-race winless streak. And it was his first win with Stewart-Haas Racing, the team he drove for from 2009-2013.

Sound familiar?

A long winless streak. A new team. ISM Raceway.

Sure sounds like a recipe for success for Newman.

MORE: Drivers who ended long winless streaks in the desert

The racing dream for late model drivers Austin McDaniel and Connor Mosack both started at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Now, both drivers will be competing just an hour up the road at Hickory Motor Speedway.

Hickory Motor Speedway, a .363-mile semi-banked oval asphalt track located in Hickory, North Carolina, has become a jumping off point for many young late model drivers in the south. McDaniel started racing limited late models there in 2010 when he was just 16 years old.

Now, nine years later, the 24-year-old feels like a veteran.

“Age-wise, I’m probably at the top of the age group now,” McDaniel said. “As I’ve raced over the years there’s been more and more kids, and more and more younger kids, at that, that have kind of started racing at Hickory.I’m probably one of the older ones there, and one of the most experienced, but the kids, by the time they move up to late models they’ve been racing in general for so many years they’re pretty tough coming right out of the gate.”

Hickory Motor Speedway will open the 2019 season on Saturday with Twin 40 lap late model races, limited late models, street stock, super trucks and renegades.

HMS Season Schedule

McDaniel grew up in Charlotte, where he said it was impossible to not fall in love with racing. It’s become a lifelong love too. He studied mechanical engineering at UNC Charlotte, and works full time at GMS Racing.

“Just growing up in the area that I did, I lived two or three miles from Charlotte Motor Speedway, so just being around the area definitely helps, and you grow up with it so much around you you just kind of grow into it,” he said. “There’s a lot of opportunities with being so close to so many race teams and shops. It just kind of caught my attention early and I’ve been hooked ever since and had the bug.”

The bug caught Mosack at a later age, but Charlotte had a lot to do with it for him too. Mosack did a Mario Andretti racing experience at CMS for his 16th birthday, and fell in love with the sport instantly.

Now 19, he will be one of those younger drivers on the track at Hickory this year. He drove legends cars the last two years, but will run a full season at Hickory this year in a late model for the first time.

“I’ve been doing it since and started having a little bit of success last year and and wanted to take it on to the next level,” he said.

Connor Mosack

Being so close to Charlotte, Hickory provides a good spot for McDaniel, Mosack and other young up-and-comers to live out their racing dreams less than 60 miles from the city. McDaniel will only run a partial schedule there, while also traveling to other tracks like Myrtle Beach, Tri-County and South Boston. But to him, Hickory will always be home.

“For the most part the competition is really good, especially at some of the bigger races that Hickory has. We really like Hickory,” he said.

“I’ve got to race with a lot of different people in a lot of different age groups and experience levels. Over the years the guys who have moved up to the higher ranks of racing, just getting to race against all sorts of experience levels, different car counts, I have grown over the years as a driver in myself. The competition has not gotten any easier the more I’ve gotten experience. There’s still a big challenge, cars are getting better, crews are getting better, the kids are learning as they go on. So even though I feel like we have an upper hand having a lot more experience at Hickory, the competition is still just as tough.”

Those experiences will be new for Mosack this year. So far, he’s only tested at Hickory a couple of times, and he’s still getting used to the bigger and more powerful car and learning how to conserve tires.

He’s used to learning curves though. He attributes his age to helping him learn how to deal with issues better.

“The first year that I raced it wasn’t on the best team. I didn’t have the best equipment so I had to deal with a lot of the car not being how I like it, so dealing with that the first year and getting used to how to drive it when the car is not good,” Mosack said. “And then this past year I got with (team owner) Dennis Lambert, he’s the best there is in legend cars, so making that transition I was able to use his coaching and learn from bad cars and do well in the good cars. And me being a little bit older than other kids helped me have a faster learning curve because I was able to understand things faster.”

Hickory Motor Speedway | HMS Facebook | HMS Twitter

This season, Mosack is just focused on getting better as the season goes on. Starting with just completing all the laps early on, getting experience, and working his way towards the front.

“Then hopefully by the middle of the summer we should be upfront most of the time and hopefully get a couple of wins,” he said. “I think if I can do well there it will pay off at other places and help me out the most.”

Racing is just a hobby for McDaniel, but that doesn’t mean he isn’t also working to get to Victory Lane this season.

“Having such a good time at it is what’s kept me around. Just really enjoying it, getting to work and go to the track with my family. We’re a family owned team, we own all our own stuff, and besides a couple of guys who help with us it’s all our family helping us,” he said. “The biggest thing this year is to just be competitive every week and being upfront in the top 3. Because once you’re in the top 3 anything can happen, and hopefully end up in victory lane a couple of times this year.”

OTHER OPENINGS THIS WEEK:

Southern National Motorsports Park in Lucama, North Carolina, will also open its season this weekend with the CARS Tour Solid Rock 300, featuring late model and super late model 150 races on the .4-mile oval.

Southern National Motorsports Park | SNMP Schedule

Southern National’s first NASCAR Whelen All-American Series event is the Easter Bunny 240 on April 20, which will be headlined by twin 40-lap Late Model Stock Car features.

Out West, California’s Irwindale Speedway and Nevada’s Bullring at Las Vegas Motor Speedway get their seasons underway.

Irwindale is a half-mile with graduated banking and located just outside Los Angeles. It will host the City of Irwindale Night highlighted by two features for its Division I LKQ Pick Your Part Late Model class.

The Bullring, a .375-mile banked oval on the grounds of Las Vegas Motor Speedway, holds four classes of Whelen All-American Series racing, led by Super Late Models.

NASCAR cited a pair of Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series teams for violations incurred following Sunday’s race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

Post-race inspection revealed that the Nos. 41 (of Daniel Suarez) and 95 (of Matt DiBenedetto) each had one lug nut not properly installed. NASCAR fined crew chiefs Billy Scott and Mike Wheeler, respectively, $10,000 each, per Sections 10.9.10.4: Tires and Wheels of the NASCAR Rule Book.

RELATED: Las Vegas results | Standings

Suarez finished in 17th place and is in 18th place in the standings during his first season with Stewart-Haas Racing. DiBenedetto, meanwhile, finished in 21st place and is 24th in the standings in his first season with Leavine Family Racing.

The series now heads to ISM Raceway in Phoenix for Sunday’s TicketGuardian 500 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, Sirius XM NASCAR Radio).