On Friday and Saturday, NASCAR Digital will live stream the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series inspection process from a camera inside the Optical Scanning Station on our YouTube channel from 3:30-5 p.m. ET.

Bookmark our YouTube channel here to watch, or come back to this article, where we’ll embed the YouTube stream.

Cars go through inspection inside a black tent with a collection of 16 cameras and eight projectors attached to its inner structure. An additional camera is positioned below the vehicle to measure the underside.

Once a car rolls in, the projectors cast light in a series of lines and dots over the body to create a coordinate system for the cameras. In roughly 30 seconds, those cameras capture the measurements of those light patterns and create a 3-D heat map — also called a point cloud — that helps officials determine whether a car is in compliance.

RELATED: Full schedule for KentuckyLearn about the OSS system

Axalta and the Philadelphia Eagles have unveiled a new paint scheme for the No. 88 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 driven by Alex Bowman, one which celebrates the Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles on the field and STEM educators in the classroom.

Axalta, which is headquartered in Philadelphia, has teamed with the Eagles since 2015 on the Axalta All-Pro Teachers program, celebrating outstanding sixth through 12th grade teachers who focus on science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM).

Axalta Philly Eagles Paint Scheme

The sharp green Chevy will race July 29 at the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race at Pocono Raceway (2:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

“It’s pretty cool to have the reigning World Champion Philadelphia Eagles and the All-Pro Teachers logo on my Camaro ZL1 in Pocono in just a few weeks,” Bowman said in a press release. “That race weekend is going to be a special one with both of these logos on our No. 88 machine, so we’re hoping for a good finish.”

PHOTOS: Memorable Axalta paint schemes

Axalta is an official partner of Hendrick Motorsports and NASCAR, and has long sponsored Hendrick’s fleet of Chevys with splashy and innovative paint schemes.

“Axalta is thrilled to be part of this historic moment and debut the No. 88 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1’s new color scheme, featuring the World Champion Philadelphia Eagles colors and the Axalta All-Pro Teachers logo,” said Axalta Chairman and CEO Charlie Shaver. “The exposure that the Axalta All-Pro Teachers program will receive thanks to Alex Bowman’s No. 88 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 will showcase the campaign to a national audience. We thank the Philadelphia Eagles, Alex Bowman and Hendrick Motorsports for their dedicated support of such a worthwhile program.”

SPARTA, Ky. –The Louisville Slugger knocked it out of the park on Thursday night at Kentucky Speedway.

Ben Rhodes, who grew up less than an hour west of the venue in Sparta, Kentucky, finally won a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at his home track.

A fuel-only gamble by the No. 41 ThorSport Racing team in the closing laps paid off for the 21-year-old Louisville native, who led the final 24 laps of the Buckle Up In Your Truck 225.

Rhodes held off Stewart Friesen by .922-seconds at the line for his first win of the season and the first victory for ThorSport since switching to Ford Performance at the start of 2018.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

“I still don’t have any words,” Rhodes said after his second-career win in the Camping World Truck Series. “This is amazing; a dream come true. This has been such a long time coming. These guys deserved it so much. They’ve been working their butts off and we’ve been having such bad luck this year.

“We’ve had trucks like this all year long, finally we could showcase it. I’m so proud of this team. This is exactly what we needed.”

Friesen came from the rear of the field after the team was forced to change engines prior to the race to finish second – tying his career-best from Texas Motor Speedway earlier this year.

“We had an engine problem during time trials and the whole team stepped in,” Friesen said. “It was awesome. We had less than an hour to go to swap ’em out and we had a good finish. We led some laps. Didn’t get off the way we needed to on pit road at the end and it was the difference of about 100 yards and a lot of clean air. Proud of the guys, but I made a little mistake there and it cost us.”

Matt Crafton, Brandon Jones, John Hunter Nemechek, Grant Enfinger, Todd Gilliland, Noah Gragson, Dalton Sergeant and Justin Haley rounded out the top 10.

Rhodes passed pole sitter Noah Gragson with three laps remaining in the first segment to win Stage 1. Gragson came back to win Stage 2. Parker Kligerman led the field to green for the final segment. Friesen swapped spots with Kligerman and finally gained control of the point by Lap 89.

Rhodes came from fifth to second with a bold move taking Kligerman and Brandon Jones three-wide to gain the position. Although Friesen led 37 laps, a problem in the pits with the right rear tire proved costly for the No. 52 Chevrolet on Lap 124. Rhodes gained the lead before pitting on the next lap.

Crew chief Eddie Troconis elected to pit for fuel only and a chassis adjustment. Although he had the lead entering pit road, a fire in the pit ahead of him left a cloud of smoke blocking his view of his box.

“I was really worried,” Rhodes said. “I came in with the pit stall on fire in front of us. I almost missed my stall with all the smoke coming out.”

Still, Rhodes cycled out to the lead with Friesen in second place.

“It was a bold move, but that’s how you win, you win with bold moves,” Troconis said. “That’s what we came here to show them that we’re going to win this championship. This kid has a lot of talent.”

With 15 laps remaining, Rhodes’ lead was just over .32-seconds over Friesen. But after Rhodes settled in he extended his advantage over the Friesen in the closing laps.

“A huge thank you to Ford Performance, ThorSport Racing and Carolina Nut Company,” Rhodes said. “They’ve been behind us 100 percent. This is our first win with Ford this year for ThorSport, so I’m pretty happy about that.”

Johnny Sauter, who suffered a speeding penalty on pit road late in the race finished 15th but retained the points lead by 42 over Noah Gragson.

The only caution other than the completion of stages occurred on the first lap of the race when Tyler Matthews made contact with Nemechek and spun the No. 83 truck.

SPARTA, Ky — Logan Seavey will make his NASCAR debut in the Camping World Truck Series race at Eldora Speedway on July 18.

The 21-year-old Columbus, Indiana, native will pilot the No. 51 Mobil 1 Tundra for Kyle Busch Motorsports under the direction of crew chief Mike Hillman Jr.

Seavey, the 2017 POWRi Lucas Oil National Midget Series champion, comes from the same fertile farm club – Keith Kunz Motorsports – that produced Kyle Larson and Christopher Bell under the Toyota Racing Development banner.

“Running the Truck Series race at Eldora for Kyle Busch Motorsports is the chance of a lifetime and I can’t thank everyone at Mobil 1, Toyota and TRD enough for having the confidence to put me in this position,” Seavey said. “Not many people get the chance to run a stock car on dirt and it’s definitely going to be a big challenge racing something so much heavier than what I’m used to.

“Hopefully, I’ll have a little bit of an advantage just knowing what dirt racing is like and how the dirt changes and I’ve already leaned on Christopher for some advice.”

Seavey, who currently leads the midget standings, has never raced at the half-mile dirt track in Rossburg, Ohio. However, in the five previous Dirt Derby’s at Eldora, KBM trucks have won twice. Bubba Wallace won the second truck race at the Big E in 2014 and Bell won the following year.

“I’ve been able to get Mobil 1 to Victory Lane a few times in my Midget this year and hopefully I can do it again in the Truck Series to reward them for their support of not only myself, but the entire Toyota Racing Development program.”

Reigning Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion Martin Truex Jr. is one of four nominees for Best Driver for the 2018 ESPYS put on by ESPN — an award open to public voting, NASCAR fans.

RELATED: Vote for Best Driver here

In his 2017 championship run, Truex and the No. 78 Furniture Row Racing team won eight races and led 2,253 laps en route to the 38-year-old driver’s first series title. Truex, along with 2016 series champion Jimmie Johnson, also was nominated last season for his breakout 2016 run.

The other nominees in the category are: IndyCar’s Josef Newgarden, Formula One’s Lewis Hamilton and NHRA’s Brittany Force.

Former NASCAR driver Danica Patrick will host the ESPYS, becoming the first woman to have that honor.

The show is July 18 at 8 p.m. ET and will be broadcast live on ABC. So set your calendars to tune in, and keep voting in the meantime.

 

KANNAPOLIS, N.C. (July 12, 2018) – Ned Jarrett amassed many special memories during his racing and broadcasting career in NASCAR, but few equal that hot afternoon on Sept. 6, 1965, when the 2011 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee won the Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway by an astounding 14 laps.

It’s appropriate that the No. 14 Ford of Clint Bowyer will celebrate Jarrett’s emphatic victory 53 years later in the 69th running of the Southern 500 at the 1.366-mile Darlington oval. The No. 14 Carolina Ford Dealers Ford Fusion from Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) will mimic the design Jarrett ran on his race-winning 1965 Ford Galaxie by sporting a royal blue paint scheme with period-specific graphics.

Clint Bowyer Darlington graphic

“Stewart-Haas Racing and the Carolina Ford Dealers got together and decided to honor someone who’s had such a huge influence in the sport, and we immediately thought of Ned Jarrett,” Bowyer said. “A lot of folks know Ned as a NASCAR champion and a lot of us know him from broadcasting races all those years. He’s had so many roles in our sport and done them all really well.”

Jarrett wheeled his No. 11 Richmond Ford Motor Company Galaxie to a commanding Southern 500 victory over fellow NASCAR Hall of Famer Buck Baker in a race that took nearly 4 hours and 20 minutes and saw only 15 of the 44 entrants still running at the end of the 364-lap race.

“We ran well during the race and led some laps and then things began to turn our way in the last 100 miles or so,” said Jarrett, whose victory was the 12th of his 13-win season in 1965, but first at Darlington. “I had no idea how far ahead we were, but I know the Ford officials that were there came down and camped in my pits, and they knew how much of a lead I had and they tried to get the crew to bring me in. We didn’t have radio communications back then, so they just wrote on the blackboard for me to pit. I knew we didn’t need to pit, but they knew the car was overheating, so I kept going because something told me stronger than the officials of Ford and my own pit crew that I needed to stay out there and keep going.”

Jarrett made it to the end of the 500-mile race and it turned out to be the biggest margin of victory in NASCAR Cup Series history. It marked the 49th of Jarrett’s 50 career wins, and it helped secure his second and final series championship, bookending the title he won in 1961.

Jarrett ran 21 races in 1966 before transitioning to a broadcasting career that began on a radio station in Newton, North Carolina, and included tenures at MRN Radio and in television at CBS, ESPN and TNN. In fact, Jarrett was the first widely known television analyst to work for different broadcast networks at the same time.

He spent 22 years at CBS and 19 years with ESPN while co-hosting the weekly, one-hour Inside NASCAR program on TNN.

Ned Jarrett at Darlington
RacingOne

Darlington and its Labor Day race weekend host “The Official Throwback Weekend of NASCAR” where the industry honors the sport’s history.

MORE: All the Darlington paint schemes

Last year, nearly all the NASCAR Cup Series teams competed with throwback paint schemes in the Southern 500.

“I can’t tell you how much I’m looking forward to the Southern 500,” said Jarrett, who earned the nickname “Gentleman Ned” for how well he treated fans, crewmembers and competitors.

“That weekend is special because you see how far we’ve come as a sport. All the different generations gather there and we celebrate NASCAR.”

SLINGER, Wis. — Erik Jones is having some difficulty during his first foray into super late models in 2018 — and in his return to Slinger Speedway after a two-year hiatus.

Oh, he isn’t having trouble acclimating to the nuances of short-track racing on a quarter-mile oval or to a car with vastly different characteristics than what he drives in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series — though mechanical gremlins will hamper him later.

No, Jones’ issue is he cannot figure out how to start his all-terrain vehicle as he attempts to speed off to the driver meeting prior to the Slinger Nationals on Tuesday night.

RELATED: Jones ready to rise to top

He thinks he found the ignition button, but soon learns that is incorrect.

“Well, we know the horn works,” he quips.

Eventually Jones fired up the metallic orange ATV and is off to the meeting with plenty of time to spare.

In the race itself, there would be no repeat of what he accomplished just days before when the 22-year-old won the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway. At Slinger, he wound up heading to the garage after completing only 66 laps, his night ending with a crew member in the garage literally blowing out a fire emanating from his overcooked engine.

That Jones finished second-to-last was inconsequential. What resonated was that he had reconnected to his roots, doing something that holds special meaning beyond where he may be classified in the box score.

It is moments like these he cherishes — a flashback to his upbringing when he and his family would spend countless nights like this at similar races throughout the country.

Erik Jones at Slinger

•   •   •

The car wasn’t just any car. It was a 1965 Nassau blue Corvette that Jones’ dad, Dave, loved. But to further his son’s racing career, the family needed money to get Erik a super late model — the same style of car he drove at Slinger — and Dave reasoned the best way to do so was to sell his prized Corvette.

Erik, who recalls he was 12 or 13 at the time, says he came home one day and the car was gone. Dave had sold it to allow Erik to continue pursuing his dream.

“I was like, ‘Man, why did you do that?’ ” Erik said. “He’s like, ‘Well, we’ve got to fund the racing somehow.’ ”

Getting Erik in a super late model proved to be the catalyst that has him where he is today. Behind the wheel of a super late model owned by his father, Jones beat Kyle Busch to win the 2012 Snowball Derby. Impressed by what he saw, Busch signed Jones to drive for his own short-track team and touted him to team owner Joe Gibbs and Toyota, both of which would sign Jones to developmental driver contracts.

MORE: Busch sends classy tweet

Jones has had a meteoric rise ever since. He won the 2015 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship, nearly won the NASCAR Xfinity Series championship the following year and earned Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors in the Monster Energy Series in 2017.

Last weekend, he earned his first career Cup victory. It is likely to be the first of many.

•   •   •

As Jones celebrated his Daytona win there was someone missing. He couldn’t share in the achievement with his father, who undoubtedly would’ve taken pride in his son narrowly beating defending Cup champion Martin Truex Jr. in a thrilling finish.

Dave was diagnosed with lung cancer in March 2016. It was terminal; he died from the disease just months later on June 7 at age 53.

“He was so supportive, and (his death) was just a horrible thing,” Gibbs said Saturday night at Daytona. “It was just terrible. … I think, winning tonight, obviously, it’s an emotional thing for him because his dad would have absolutely loved it.”

Everything his parents did in paving the road for him to reach Daytona’s Victory Lane is not something Erik has forgotten. Shortly after Dave’s death, Erik set out to reclaim the car that symbolizes what his parents sacrificed.

The quest to track down his father’s Corvette began with Erik calling one of Dave’s former coworkers. What he learned was the guy who purchased the car had been a salesman at the same company, making it easier to obtain the contact info.

Erik cold-called him, asking if he wanted to sell the Corvette. Initially, the answer was no. The two ended the conversation with the understanding if the guy ever wanted to sell, he would let Erik know. Six months later he did just that.

The car is now with Jones in North Carolina. And as often as he can, he likes to take it for a drive.

“It’s just cool to have it back,” Jones said. “I remember a lot of memories of me with my dad in that car and when I get in it, it smells the same, feels the same. It brings back a lot of good memories.

“It reminds me of what they did. That car is the epitome of that. And to have it back is just a great family memory.”

Trackside Live is packing some extra horsepower this weekend with two shows from Kentucky Speedway. The first show will be on Friday, July 13 at 3 p.m. ET, while the second show will be on Saturday, July 14 at 4 p.m. ET.

WATCH: Trackside Live | MORE: Full schedule for Kentucky | Buy your tickets

Don’t miss your chance to meet your favorite drivers ahead of the final 1.5-mile race of the regular season. Watch the video above and get excited for the Bluegrass State showdown! It’s going to be a good one.

Enjoy!

There is probably no one more ready to pull into Kentucky Speedway than Team Penske’s Brad Keselowski. A three-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series winner at the 1.5-mile track – best among his peers – Saturday night’s Quaker State 400 (at 7:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) may be just the kind of panacea his season could use.

The 2012 Monster Energy Series champion remains surprisingly winless through the opening 18 races, but his record in Kentucky gives him every rightful reason to be optimistic.

In addition to Keselowski’s three premier series wins here (in 2012, 2014, and 2016), he has three NASCAR Xfinity Series race trophies too.  He won the pole position and led a record 199 of the 267 laps in his 2014 Cup triumph.

It may be just the motivation and expectation to right the ship for Penske’s No. 2 Ford team. Although he was involved in an accident Saturday night in Daytona Beach (his fourth DNF of the year), Keselowski had five top-10 finishes in the previous seven races leading into Daytona. Importantly, he has four top 10s in the six 1.5-mile tracks the series has run already in 2018. And his runner-up finish on the Atlanta mile-and-a-half is his best showing of any race this year.

Keselowski, 34, has won at least one race in the last seven seasons – and he’s won in eight of the past nine years leading into 2018.

He has the second-best driver rating at Kentucky (109.6) and is ranked among the top-10 in all major statistical categories. He’s finished seventh or better in five of the seven races at Kentucky. And he’s tops in one that’s not official – he’s won the last three races in even numbered years. It’s 2018.