WELCOME, N.C. – Richard Childress Racing will welcome current championship contender Tyler Reddick to its 2019 NASCAR Xfinity Series program. The Corning, California native is a two-time winner in the series and holds the closest margin of victory (0.0004 seconds) in NASCAR history with his 2018 win at Daytona International Speedway.

Reddick, who began racing at age four, built his skills on the dirt track and competed in everything from mini sprints and midget cars to dirt late models and sprint cars. The 22-year-old driver made the jump to asphalt racing in 2012, during which he competed in the ARCA Racing Series and won his debut race in the NASAR K&N Pro Series East at Rockingham Speedway.

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From 2013 through 2016, Reddick competed in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. During his tenure in the series, he secured three wins, three pole awards, 25 top-five and 40 top-10 finishes. Reddick made the jump to the Xfinity Series in 2017, running a partial schedule that year before returning for a full season in 2018. He has made trips to Victory Lane during both of his Xfinity Series seasons and is currently third in the Xfinity Series Playoff Standings.

“Tyler has had a lot of success so far in his racing career, and we intend on continuing that success with him in 2019,” said Richard Childress, Chairman and CEO of RCR. “I’m confident that he will do a great job representing RCR on and off the track. Tyler is a talented driver who’s not afraid to go after wins, and I look forward to seeing that drive to win on the track with us next season.”

“I’m really looking forward to joining RCR in 2019,” said Reddick. “RCR has had a stout Xfinity program throughout the years with a lot of talented team members and resources available to its drivers. I want to thank JR Motorsports for what they’ve done this past year to help me advance my career and skills behind the wheel. Ultimately, my goal is to race on Sundays and I feel that by joining RCR, I can continue to race up front in the Xfinity Series while also learning from one of the top Cup programs in the garage.”

Additional information on Reddick’s crew chief, sponsorship and car number will be announced at a later date.

For additional information on today’s announcement, and all that’s happening at RCR, please visit rcrracing.com.

Art may imitate life, but in the case of “The Last Race” documentary, director Michael Dweck is using film to try to save life — at least a slice of it on Long Island. A slice of life found in small communities across America where local race tracks light up when steel, fuel and sparks collide on Saturday nights.

Opening Nov. 16, the documentary is about preserving Riverhead Raceway, a space where quintessential regular Joes shape shift into dauntless immortals beating and banging their way to the ultimate prize of a checkered flag and the pride that comes with it.

“You watch them transform into heroes,” photographer and now filmmaker Dweck says of the local racers. “You watch their body language change. All of a sudden, they become 18 years old again.”

Sitting about 90 minutes east of Brooklyn, the raceway in Riverhead, New York, is under siege from real estate developers. A Tanger Outlets mall is nearby, as are all the hallmarks of suburban Long Island. But the track is holding onto its historic stake.

Riverhead is one of the oldest race tracks in the country. Built in 1949, the track opened in 1951 and is a quarter-mile asphalt oval with high banking and sports a unique Figure 8 course. Home to NASCAR Whelen All-American Series racing, Riverhead also hosts demolition derbies, enduro races and the Rusty Wallace Racing Experience.

It’s the only small track remaining in the New York metro area, where Dweck recalls having 40 similar tracks within driving distance in his childhood.

“The Last Race” has layers of competition and battle — man vs. man, man vs. machine and man vs. the shifting culture in 21st century America. At the heart of the cultural clash is the racing.

A scene from The Last Race film

Dweck studied racing films such as “Grand Prix,” “Senna” and “Rush.” But he also wanted to surpass them. With his first feature-length film being selected for the 2018 Sundance Film Festival, his goal is in hand.

“I was trying to beat these films,” Dweck said. “I was trying to figure out a way to have better racing footage than all these films. To do that I ended up welding 20 cameras around the race car. Not little cameras. Movie cameras around the race car.

“So when you watch the film and you see bumpers smashing, they’re smashing my cameras. Same with sides because in this division you can make contact. So when you see the film on a giant, 100-foot screen, a car taking up the screen crashing and just ‘boom, boom,’ you look at their grilles and all of these beautiful welded pipe cages and chains loose … you know it’s like ‘Mad Max.’ You get the feeling like you’re at the race track, like ‘Mad Max.’

Dweck poured the same care into the sound.

“I had 15 microphones placed all around the race cars. Everywhere, meaning the bumper, the carburetor, all along the tail pipe … on the brakes, on their feet, inside their helmets. You can hear the breathing when he puts on his helmet.

“So you get the feeling of what it’s like to be the car, to be the driver and to be the audience.”

The racing comes alive, as do the racers. But the drivers aren’t the only heroes in this tale. Barbara and Jim Cromarty are in their 80s, and the five-year time span captured in the film spans the years they transformed from owners who were physically active to a couple suffering physical ailments and finally selling the track to a trucking company owner with the agreement that he would keep it open.

A scene from The Last Race film

“They were worried that if they retired, they would die,” Dweck said of the Cromartys, who had operated Riverhead since 1977 and owned it since 1985. “Most of their friends who retired had died. They didn’t want to be one of those. Their story is a beautiful story of resilience, of tenacity, of conscience – doing something greater than yourself. Because they could have walked away with a lot of money.

“I was there in a little trailer at the race track that’s the office … when a developer would knock at the door and they’d say ‘Hi, I’m from the shopping mall across the street, I’d like to talk to you,’ and she’d yell, ‘Get out!’ ”

The Cromartys rejected offers of up to $10 million from developers, as the film documents colorfully. In the end they sold it for much less – reportedly $4 million – in order to try to keep the lights on and engines roaring on Saturday nights.

Several drivers in NASCAR’s top series have been doing similar work, promoting dirt-track and small-track racing – the grassroots of stock car racing and birthplaces of legendary NASCAR driving careers.

Notably Denny Hamlin modeled his Darlington throwback paint scheme on his very first race car paint scheme for this year’s Southern 500. Hamlin drove at Langley Speedway and Southside Speedway in Virginia in his youth. Langley is a .397-mild paved oval that opened in 1950, and Southside is a .333-mile asphalt track that has been a locally owned family business since 1959.

Dweck’s labor of love is his effort to feed the recent surge in interest in these small local tracks, particularly on Long Island.

“I’m trying to do what I can to keep big box stores from taking over places like this all over the country,” he said. “The track is the last stronghold for their way of life.”

NASCAR officials penalized two Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series teams Wednesday for lug-nut violations following Sunday’s race at Martinsville Speedway.

The No. 2 Team Penske Ford driven by Brad Keselowski and the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford of Kevin Harvick were both found with one lug nut not safely secured in a post-race check.

RELATED: Playoff standingsMartinsville results

Keselowski’s crew chief Paul Wolfe and Harvick crew chief Rodney Childers each were fined $10,000 for the safety infraction. The violation falls under Section 10.9.10.4 of the 2018 NASCAR Rule Book.

Keselowski led 41 laps and finished fifth in Sunday’s First Data 500. Harvick, one of eight drivers who remain championship-eligible in the NASCAR Playoffs, finished 10th.

Ahead of Sunday’s AAA Texas 500 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series playoff race at Texas Motor Speedway, the second race in the Round of 8, we’ll analyze the four drivers below the cutline. Next up is Clint Bowyer, who sits seventh in the standings.

RELATED: Aric Almirola’s chances | Updated playoff standings

Points below cutoff: 42

Reason for optimism at Texas: Clint Bowyer has a spotty record at Texas, but he did have a 13-race stretch where nine times he finished in the top 10. That included a second and fourth, along with a race were he led 44 laps, representing the most he’s ever led in a single race at Texas.

Reason for pessimism at Texas: This isn’t Bowyer’s worst track statistically, but it certainly isn’t near his best — especially in recent years. He has led all of one lap in the past 14 races and while he qualifies well — third in the spring — more often than not it has been a struggle come race day.

Reason for optimism at Phoenix: Anything can happen in an elimination race, particularly when a Championship 4 berth is on the line. And for a driver and team with nothing to lose and likely in a position where anything short of a win means being knocked out of the playoffs, Bowyer and crew chief Mike Bugarewicz can be as aggressive as they want without concern for the repercussions. That is not a bad thing in a race expected to be chaotic.

Reason for pessimism at Phoenix: Similar to Texas, Bowyer hasn’t had much success at Phoenix. His 18.4 average finish is his lowest among the 10 playoff tracks, and he has led only a single lap in the previous 24 races; worrisome statistics for someone who may need a win to advance.

Outlook: Considering his points deficit and how Texas and Phoenix have often flummoxed him, Bowyer winning one of the next two races appears doubtful. This doesn’t mean it’s impossible, just that his best hope requires circumstances working in his favor to create an opportunity for an upset win. Otherwise, in all likelihood he’ll be eliminated.

Joey Logano might have ruffled the feathers of Martin Truex Jr. and the No. 78 team in Martinsville, but he’s simply backing up what he’s said in the past.

In January during NASCAR Media Day in Charlotte, Logano was asked what competitors do on-track that gets under his skin.

Bumping someone in the final corner of the final lap was not one of them.

RELATED: Debate: To bump or not to bump? | Is Truex too nice of a driver?

“When I see a competitor do something, besides straight up dumping somebody, I understand why they did it,” Logano said nine months ago. “I don’t really get too mad at them because I’ll be guilty of the same thing in two laps, I’m sure.

“I’d be a hypocrite if I’d get mad at somebody for doing something I’m going to do the same thing to, or already have done the same thing to,” he added. “We’re all out there with one goal. I don’t think it really gets under my skin, it’s just a part of the game.”

Moments after Sunday’s thrilling finish, Truex was adamant that Logano “ain’t winning the damn war.” He added, “what goes around, comes around.”

Based on Logano’s comments in January, he knows to expect it.

Ahead of Sunday’s AAA Texas 500 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series playoff race at Texas Motor Speedway, the second race in the Round of 8, we’ll analyze the four drivers who find themselves below the cutline. First up is Aric Almirola, who sits eighth in the standings.

RELATED: Playoff standings | Power Rankings for Texas

Points below cutoff: 50

Reason for optimism at Texas: The No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing team has exhibited speed in nearly every race on 1.5-mile tracks this season and there is no reason to think that won’t again be the case Sunday.

Reason for pessimism at Texas: Although Almirola and his team have been among the fastest on 1.5-mile speedways they’ve been unable to parlay that into corresponding finishes. His best result in eight such races this season is a sixth in the playoff opener at Las Vegas. That’s not going to cut in a round where Almirola absolutely needs a win to ensure advancement.

Reason for optimism at Phoenix: There are similar characteristics between Phoenix and New Hampshire, with both being flat, 1-mile ovals featuring sweeping corners. This is encouraging for Almirola, who nearly won at New Hampshire in July until a slow pit stop and poor restart led him to a third-place finish.

Reason for pessimism at Phoenix: Despite the similarities there are no assurances that what Almirola accomplished at New Hampshire will carry over to Phoenix. And it’s worth noting as good as he was on that afternoon, Kyle Busch and Kevin Harvick were equally strong.

Outlook: It’s been a terrific season and Almirola has made it further in the playoffs than many expected. He has a sizable challenge ahead of him, however. And if his Cinderella postseason run is to continue he’ll need a win in the Round of 8. That’s a big ask.

Martin Truex Jr. hinted at payback for Joey Logano after their final-lap altercation at Martinsville Speedway, a shove that left his Furniture Row Racing No. 78 Toyota without the win and the automatic Championship 4 spot.

Tuesday, having had two days to cool off from the First Data 500’s frantic finish, Cole Pearn — Truex’s crew chief — suggested that the best path to exacting revenge and contending for the title Nov. 18 at Homestead-Miami Speedway might be a different road than purely returning fire with fire.

MORE: MTJ’s crew reacts to bump | Pearn, Gordon exchange post-race words

“I mean, right now our plan is to make it to Homestead and race for the championship,” Pearn told SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, when asked if retaliation was a viable option. “I think the best way to keep them from winning the championship is win it ourself. It’s kind of like a ‘beating them on the scoreboard’ mentality, so I think that’s our plan at this point.”

RELATED: Power Rankings | Full schedule for Texas

Though the victory bid slipped through Truex’s hands Sunday, Pearn’s group has two more chances — Texas and Phoenix — to fortify their hopes for a repeat Monster Energy Series crown. Pearn said the Denver-based team still hopes for a fulfilling swan song and has strived to stay upbeat.

“Everybody’s just proud of their effort. Everybody, every second breath, wants to count us out of it, and we were able to keep the intensity up and keep bringing good cars,” Pearn told SiriusXM. “It’s difficult keeping everybody motivated right now, but the fact that everybody is staying motivated and you’re able to go and put that kind of effort together at one of your perceived least (favorite) tracks, it’s definitely a good feeling even though you didn’t get to Victory Lane.”

Goodyear made a presentation spanning multiple sports Sunday at Martinsville Speedway, providing select Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series drivers with a special throwback gift.

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Goodyear offered vintage-style basketball jerseys to Denny Hamlin, plus members of his recreational hoops league — Ryan Blaney, Ty Dillon and Bubba Wallace — to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Akron Wingfoots.

The team began its life as a recreational club among Goodyear factory workers, but later grew into the professional ranks. The Wingfoots captured the 1938 championship in the National Basketball League, a predecessor to today’s NBA.

Goodyear chairman, president and CEO Rich Kramer presented the four drivers with the personalized jerseys after the drivers’ and crew chiefs’ meeting before Sunday’s First Data 500.

Monster Energy Series and Xfinity Series teams will compete on a new tire set-up this weekend at Texas Motor Speedway, hoping to promote natural tire wear and better racing.

Goodyear Racing officials said Tuesday that teams in both series will compete on the right-side rubber that has been used previously at Michigan International Speedway. The move was made to foster traction fall-off on the 1.5-mile Fort Worth track’s relatively new surface, which was repaved and reconfigured in time for NASCAR’s April 2017 events.

RELATED: Full schedule for Texas

“Texas has been a big priority for Goodyear this year after having held tests there in both January and August,” Greg Stucker, Goodyear’s director of racing, said in a release provided by the tire manufacturer. “When tracks go through a repave and reconfiguration, like Texas did for 2017, it’s important to keep up with the track surface and how it changes over those first several years.

“When we tested in August, with the goal of introducing more tire wear on the smooth surface, we decided upon the Michigan right-side tire for the Cup and Xfinity cars. Michigan also had a repave in the recent past and this tire has done a nice job of generating tire wear there, and will be a good fit for Texas.”

The tire configuration was decided after the most recent Goodyear test at Texas, held Aug. 14-15. Alex Bowman, Kurt Busch, Austin Dillon, Joey Logano and Martin Truex Jr. participated in the test session.

Goodyear officials also indicated that the Texas speedway staff had been prepping the track surface by dragging tires, helping to build up rubber in sections of the asphalt, for nearly two weeks.

The new tire combination will be in place for Sunday’s AAA Texas 500 (3 p.m. ET, NBCSN, PRN, SiriusXM) for the Monster Energy Series and in Saturday’s O’Reilly Auto Parts 300 (4:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, PRN, SiriusXM) for Xfinity Series cars. The Camping World Truck Series will keep the same tire set-up from its event in June for Friday’s JAG Metals 350 (8:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM).

Fred Rogers made a living out of being a nice guy. Put on a soft sweater, change into some comfortable shoes, sprinkle some food in the fish tank, say hello to Lady Elaine. Just try to get angry while you are watching “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood,” or the recent documentary on him, “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” It’s impossible, you just can’t do it.

But what if Mr. Rogers were in the heat of a short-track battle at Martinsville Speedway? Would he still live by the Golden Rule? Or would the competitive juices start to flow and eventually boil over?

By no means is Martin Truex Jr. a Mr. Rogers clone, but Truex does have the reputation of being one of the nicest guys in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series garage. Try to recall not seeing him with a smile beneath that beard of his. It’s pretty impossible to imagine.

However, now that Joey Logano pulled his bump-and-run move to win at Martinsville and Truex has hinted at revenge, is change in the air? Should there be no more Mr. Nice Guy from the reigning Monster Energy Series champ the rest of the season?

NASCAR.com’s Jonathan Merryman and George Winkler debate whether it’s high time for Truex to change his racing style and demeanor.

MERRYMAN: This past weekend we raced at one of the oldest and prestigious short tracks in the United States, known for producing hard-nosed competition. It was located in Martinsville, Virginia, not Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood.

Some of the biggest houses on the “short-track block” are owned by guys with the last names of Earnhardt, Gordon and Busch — three drivers you most certainly don’t want in your rearview mirror going into Turn 3 at Martinsville, Richmond or Bristol.

Martin Truex Jr. is a nice guy and a very clean race car driver. He also has a zero in the short-track win column. I believe there is a direct correlation between the two.

There is a reason Dale Earnhardt had 20 short-track wins at the Cup level at the three tracks mentioned, Jeff Gordon earned 16 and Kyle Busch — who is far from done — has 15 to his name.

I don’t think Truex Jr. will ever get to the point of retaliation, but it’s time for him to start using the chrome horn if he wants to finally get that coveted short-track win. After all, we call them bumpers for a reason.

WINKLER: What’s more important: Getting that first short-track win, or winning a second championship? I’d vote for the latter because when it’s all said and done, fans are going to remember how many titles Truex won over whether he was a short-track tough guy.

Despite getting bumped out of the way at Martinsville, Truex is right where he needs to be — 25 points above the playoff cutline with another shot at a championship well within his sights. This is not the time to lose your mind and try to get revenge.

Furthermore, there aren’t any beating-and-banging short tracks left on the schedule, so why worry about changing your style? Sure, Phoenix is 1 mile, but it doesn’t race like a true short track. Truex should focus on getting his 1.5-mile program back to where it was in 2017 and dominate at Texas and Homestead and carry home another big trophy.

If Truex keeps his cool, he will show yet again that nice guys can finish first.