Weather not suitable for real racing? iRacing’s got your back. It worked for Christopher Bell this weekend, at least, with the NASCAR Xfinity Series taking a week off and his extracurricular racing events rained-out.

Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series driver Bubba Wallace talked about his enjoyment of iRacing and the differences between virtual racing and turning laps in a real race car.

 

NASCAR PEAK ANTIFREEZE IRACING SERIES UPDATE

While the NASCAR PEAK Antifreeze iRacing Series had no points-scoring event scheduled last week, many of the series’ drivers held an unofficial All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Logan Clampitt, winless in points-paying races this season, grabbed the victory, though not without a dramatic finish. Clampitt was running in fourth position when the three leaders tangled on the backstretch of the final lap, knocking them out of contention, leaving Clampitt to benefit.

For a good time, check out Clamp’s on-board reaction. (And crank up the sound!)

The series races 200 laps at Charlotte Motor Speedway Tuesday for Race 7 of the season. Ray Alfalla leads the championship points and holds the title of defending race winner.

RELATED: Full iRacing schedule | Watch iRacing | Power Rankings

 

IRACING PAINT SCHEMES OF THE WEEK

Johnny Sauter won the North Carolina Education Lottery 200 at Charlotte Motor Speedway in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, and thanks to Erik Le, you can race a replica of his winning truck in iRacing.

Tyler King re-created one of Paul Menard’s Wood Brothers Racing Fords, which looks sharp even in pixel form.

 

DON’T TRY THIS AT HOME

One of the biggest appeals of iRacing is that you might end up racing against a real NASCAR driver — many of them hop on the sim to get their racing fix throughout the week, after all.

But, when you’re racing head-to-head against your favorite drivers, try not to spin them out.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qpG9Q1ib1jU

Hear the regret in YouTube user Jason Jacoby’s voice when he bumps Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series rookie William Byron while racing three-wide at Michigan. Oops!

Numbers mean plenty when it comes to building out your Fantasy Live teams each week. NASCAR.com will examine the stats outlook for each track in advance to help give you an edge as you set your lineups and bonus picks ahead of the race weekend.

Don’t forget to check back on NASCAR.com for additional insight from fantasy expert RJ Kraft, and watch Fantasy Fastlane with Jessica Ruffin and NBC Sports’ Steve Letarte for even more advice.

RELATED: Play Fantasy Live now | How the new Fantasy Live works | Driver stats

Top five average running position (per loop data from 2005 to present):

Driver Average running position
Jimmie Johnson 8.019
Kyle Busch 10.069
Denny Hamlin 11.165
Matt Kenseth 13.139
Martin Truex Jr. 13.751

Top five in stage points earned at Charlotte in 2017:

Driver Stage points Stage wins
Matt Kenseth 34 0
Martin Truex Jr. 33 1
Kevin Harvick 32 2
Kyle Busch 32 1
Kurt Busch 22 0

Top five in points earned at Charlotte in 2017

Driver Race points Race wins
Martin Truex Jr. 107 1
Kevin Harvick 95 0
Matt Kenseth 93 0
Denny Hamlin 86 0
Kyle Busch 75 0

Most laps led in 2017 races at Charlotte:

Driver Laps led
Martin Truex Jr. 324
Kevin Harvick 194
Kyle Busch 85
Denny Hamlin 55
Jimmie Johnson 35

Average starting position for last 10 winners: 10.3

Active drivers to win pole: Ryan Newman (9), Jimmie Johnson (4), Kyle Busch (2), Denny Hamlin (2), Kevin Harvick (2), Matt Kenseth (2), Aric Almirola (1), Brad Keselowski (1), Martin Truex Jr. (1)

Active drivers to win at Charlotte: Jimmie Johnson (8), Kasey Kahne (4), Kevin Harvick (3), Matt Kenseth (2), Jamie McMurray (2), Martin Truex Jr. (2), Clint Bowyer (1), Kurt Busch (1), Austin Dillon (1), Brad Keselowski (1), Joey Logano (1)

Most recent pole winner: Denny Hamlin, fall race of 2017

Last time pole-sitter won here: Martin Truex Jr., spring race of 2016

Where stage winners started from: 2nd, 3rd (twice), 6th, 8th

Winning manufacturers of last 10 races: Chevrolet-5, Toyota-3, Ford-2

The White House honored Martin Truex Jr. on Monday to celebrate a presidential toast to his 2017 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series championship.

Truex was joined by longtime girlfriend Sherry Pollex, members of his Furniture Row Racing team and NASCAR senior executives on the South Lawn. The Monster Energy Series champion’s trophy and a display version of Truex’s No. 78 Toyota were stationed alongside.

“Martin, I have to say your car looks truly amazing,” President Donald Trump said. “In fact, I want to get in that thing and just drive it right away. Do you mind?”

The No. 78 Toyota parked outside the White House in Washington, D.C.
Justin Swilling | NASCAR

Trump then recounted details of the championship march for Truex and the No. 78 team, including its eight wins, its 2,000-plus laps led and its often personal fight through adversity. That included mention of Pollex and her campaign to raise awareness and funds in her personal battle against ovarian cancer.

“I want to take a moment to recognize the amazing Sherry Pollex,” Trump said. “She is the love of Martin’s life. Sherry — beautiful. Your determination in the face of adversity has been an inspiration to millions of Americans.

RELATED: Martin Truex Jr.’s season in review

Truex presented Trump with a replica racing helmet with illustrations depicting some of the team’s special moments.

“What an honor to be here today,” Truex said in his brief remarks. “Thank you, Mr. President for having us, for having our whole entire team to represent the sport of NASCAR. My good buddy, (founder) Johnny Morris from Bass Pro Shops, that has been a big part of my career to get me here. Just really proud to be here today to represent the sport, to represent our millions of fans out there across the world.”

Trump then invited team members up for a group photo. The ceremony ended with the White House band playing a rendition of “Rocky Mountain High,” a nod to Furniture Row Racing’s home in Denver, Colorado.

In its first season back as sponsor of the Busch Pole Award, Busch Beer is looking to you — yes, you — for a bit of help.

The prestigious Busch Pole Award trophy, which goes to the driver with the most Busch Pole awards in 2018, is in the hands of fans this year. Busch Beer is asking NASCAR fans across the globe to help design the trophy, with the winning entry to serve as the actual final design one Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series driver will lift above his head at season’s end.

The winning fan also will receive a trip to NASCAR Champion’s Week to present the winning design.

“Busch Beer has returned to our roots with the addition of the Busch Pole Award in 2018,” Daniel Blake, Senior Director of U.S. Value Brands for Anheuser-Busch, said in a press release. “We started our involvement in NASCAR with the Busch Pole Award in 1978 and now we want to celebrate with our fans by asking them to design the year-end Busch Pole Award trophy. Not only do they get to design the Busch Pole Award, but we’ll bring them to the 2018 NASCAR Champion’s Week to present it to the driver with the most Busch Pole Awards of the season.

“We’re excited to see the passion, creativity and enthusiasm race fans have as they design the Busch Pole Award trophy.”

Submissions must be made by Monday, May 28, so check out the official rules and step-by-step instructions at www.busch.com/polecontest.

STATESVILLE, N.C. — GMS Racing officials announced today that NASCAR Cup Series driver Chase Elliott will drive the No. 23 NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS) entry this weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway (CMS) as well as other select races on the 2018 NXS schedule.

Hooters, which sponsors Elliott’s No. 9 Cup Series team at Hendrick Motorsports, will serve as primary sponsor for the No. 23 team at CMS in honor of the restaurant chain’s 35th Anniversary and 22nd Annual Hooters International Pageant. The pageant will be held on Saturday, May 26 at zMAX Dragway beginning at 7 p.m. and will include a concert from country music singer-songwriter Jake Owen.

Elliott, 22, will also drive the No. 23 Chevrolet in the upcoming Pocono (June 2), Chicagoland (June 30), Daytona (July 6) and Bristol (Aug. 17) Xfinity races.

“I appreciate GMS letting me get behind the wheel of the No. 23,” said driver Chase Elliott. “I’m excited to have Hooters on the car for Charlotte. It’s a big week for them and I look forward to representing them in a new way on the Xfinity side.”

Over a four-year span, Elliott has competed in 73 NXS races, collecting one championship in 2014, five wins, 31 top-fives, 59 top-10s and two pole awards. The Dawsonville, Georgia, native’s most recent Xfinity event was this season at Daytona International Speedway, where he finished 12th driving for JR Motorsports.

Additional drivers for the remaining races will be announced at a later date.

Two weeks ago, Keegan Leahy continued his solid 2018 season with a win at Kansas Speedway. The NASCAR PEAK Antifreeze iRacing Series continues its season at Charlotte Motor Speedway Tuesday night at 9 p.m. ET for the seventh race of the year.

RELATED: Full iRacing schedule | Watch iRacing

1: Keegan Leahy (+2)

After winning two races this season, Keegan Leahy is the only driver within striking distance of Ray Alfalla’s points lead. Leahy is too hot to stop right now.

2: Ray Alfalla (-1)

Ray Alfalla’s No. 2 car finished second at Kansas, so naturally he’s No. 2 in our power rankings, too. Alfalla is the defending winner at Charlotte.

3: Logan Clampitt (+1)

During what was officially an off-week, Logan Clampitt won an unofficial series All-Star Race at Charlotte. While the win won’t make it into the scorebooks, it’s worth considering Clampitt, who led 51 laps at Kansas, as a contender Tuesday.

4: Ryan Luza (-2)

The 2017 champ didn’t race at Kansas, but if he starts Tuesday, he’s one to watch at Charlotte. Luza is still third in points after six races, despite missing the last one.

5: Christian Challiner (+3)

Christian Challiner’s riding a wave of momentum after Kansas, scoring two consecutive top-six finishes.

6: Michael Conti (-1)

Michael Conti finished dead-last at Kansas after an early crash with Bobby Zalenski. Expect a rebound for the No. 5 in the Queen City.

7: Bobby Zalenski (-1)

Bobby Zalenski’s 2018 has been hit-and-miss so far. Kansas was a miss after an early crash, which means Charlotte will have to be a hit, right? Zalenski’s still searching for his first top-five finish of the year, though he’s finished sixth twice.

8: Nickolas Shelton (NR)

Keep an eye on Nickolas Shelton, a newcomer to our Power Rankings. Shelton finished third at Kansas and at Las Vegas. In other words, he’s truly shown a knack for 1.5-mile race tracks like Charlotte. Shelton has vaulted to fifth in the points after his recent string of solid finishes.

9: Zack Novak (NR)

While Zack Novak dominated at Kansas, he settled for a fourth-place finish. It seems this season when Novak’s on a hot streak, he runs into bad luck — but you can expect to see the No. 15 near the front Tuesday.

10: Matt Bussa (-3)

Chicago native Matt Bussa’s never finished in the top 10 at Charlotte in five attempts, but the man who sits eighth in points hopes to make a little Illi-noise this time. Sorry, that was bad.

Having exposure can lead to opportunities, but having potential … that’s something you can’t teach.

Not long after winning the 2018 Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race (and $1 million), Kevin Harvick shared why he thinks the efforts being placed into short-track racing are paying off for cultivating talent.

Especially for two members of the 2018 NASCAR Next class: Will Rodgers and Hailie Deegan — two drivers Harvick expects to make it big if given the right opportunities to succeed.

PHOTOS: Meet the rest of the 2018 Next class

I don’t think anybody would have known Will Rodgers’ name if we hadn’t run the K&N (Pro Series West) race last year,” Harvick said. “I’m proud to be able to take him and bring him on the radio show, talk about him. That’s really the reason that we run those races. I think when we went to Bakersfield this year, running around, Hailie, she has a lot of potential. … I think both of those kids have a ton of potential.”

Rodgers and Deegan have both made appearances on Harvick’s Sirius XM show ‘Happy Hours’ and periodically lean on the 2014 Monster Energy Series champion for advice. In March, the 16-year-old Deegan led Harvick for 10 laps during a K&N race at Kern County Raceway — a moment both drivers have yet to forget.

MORE: Deegan wants to let racing do the talking 

She’s the best female ‑‑ she has the most potential of a female racer because she gets it,” Harvick explained. “She’s very into what she’s doing. It’s not about everything else. It’s really about the race car and how do I drive it faster. She’s just got her stuff together.”

Rodgers, who is 23 years old, also caught the eye of Harvick last season during a K&N race at Sonoma Raceway. Although the veteran held off the fellow California native for the victory, Rodgers’ second-place run was nothing to look past — and Harvick thinks the next move for Rodgers could be his biggest one yet.

He just needs an opportunity to come out and show what he’s got,” Harvick said. “When the road-course stuff shows up, Will is probably capable of being in an Xfinity race or a Cup race in the right equipment on a road course. He’d be a top-10 competitor in the right stuff, in the right situation on any road course in any series.”

CONCORD, N.C. — Steve O’Donnell says he woke up with anticipation on All-Star Saturday morning, hours away from an evening of racing with an experimental NASCAR rules package.

 

There were no points at stake for the Monster Energy Series, but for O’Donnell and the rest of the competition department down the road in Concord, plenty was riding on the made-for-TV invitational beyond the $1 million payday. The combination of aerodynamic and engine alterations was part of a bold play for fan interest in a showcase event in the sanctioning body’s hub, and Friday rain did NASCAR few favors in offering a preview.

 

“A lot of prayers this morning, probably,” O’Donnell was able to wise-crack after a largely successful Saturday night at Charlotte Motor Speedway. By nightfall, the NASCAR Executive Vice President and Chief Racing Development Officer and his team had reason to smile after an exhibition event with plenty of passing and close-quarters racing on one of the circuit’s most finicky tracks.

 

“A lot of anticipation for the race because I knew how much work went into it, especially from our team,” said O’Donnell, who made a point to thank those team members individually in his initial remarks. “So was certainly cautiously optimistic, but you never know, all kinds of things to look at. Really just wanted to see it play out. Knew that either way we would have a direction from this. We would know that this is something we want to continue to pursue or we would also know that we collectively tried something and it’s not a direction we want to go.

 

“I think all in all, was excited at the beginning of the race, honestly was excited throughout the race. I thought every lap had something to watch out there on the track.”

 

RELATED: All-Star Race results

Competition officials found the ideal petri dish in the Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race, working with teams, manufacturers and the speedway’s management to develop a package that traded top-end speed for tighter racing within a pack. Lap times were noticeably slower with drivers only periodically lifting off the throttle, and while outright slingshot passes were difficult to muster, this year’s All-Star Race lapped its predecessors in changes to the running order.

 

Several statistics were at or near a six-year high, the most telling being green-lap passes, which reached 38 this season compared to 2017’s zero. But O’Donnell measured the race with something more intangible — the vibe he gathered from his perch in race control

 

“I think no, we’re not high‑fiving because we got to control ourselves up in the booth. I think you judge it by the fans,” O’Donnell said. “I think you look down the last 10 laps, everybody is standing up. Marcus (Smith, SMI president) has a suite next to us. I can say that last year’s All‑Star Race was fairly silent. Don’t know if everybody stood or everybody was even still there, but it was packed. We heard screaming in the suite next to us. People were enthused.”


RELATED: Smith: Mission accomplished with rules package | In-depth look at aero package

Though there was plenty of initial applause, O’Donnell and Co. said they would take a measured approach to potentially implementing the rules package — with restrictor plates, air ducts and revised spoilers and splitters — at other intermediate-sized tracks. Saturday night’s assessment was more of a snap analysis for a process that was months in the making, and future packages with an eye toward 2019 would likely take a similar course.

 

“I would never say never,” O’Donnell said when asked if the package could reappear before season’s end, “but our intent is we’ve talked coming into this, was to try this here, then really take a deep dive into how do we make this the best package possible for 2019 if we liked what we saw. Again, it’s still very early. You all watched the race, we just watched the race as well, so we have to digest a lot of information and see where we go from there.”

 

For the drivers, Saturday night’s event — which spilled over from a scheduled 80 to 93 laps with Stage 3 overtime — presented a hybrid of restrictor-plate competition commonly seen at Daytona or Talladega with the more traditional racing characteristics of a 1.5-mile track.

 

“It was a mix of the both,” said fourth-place finisher Denny Hamlin, “Obviously I thought it was a great show and I thought the racing was fun to watch and be a part of. We’ll see where it takes us in the future.”


RELATED: Reaction to the 2018 Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race

Said Scott Graves, crew chief for the No. 19 Toyota for runner-up Daniel Suarez: “I think it’s got some positives and you look at it maybe at tracks like this or the more recent repaves — a Michigan or a Kansas — that kind of format. I think the short-track racing we’ve had this year with the regular package has been great, so I don’t think you really need to do anything there. And at an Atlanta-type track where you have so much (tire) fall-off, I don’t know that you need it there. I mean, the races are fun to watch there. But I can see some of these newer tracks where it might be a good idea to try it out at some of them.”

 

Which led to the question of whether race officials would potentially re-use the package for next weekend’s Coca-Cola 600 — a question that O’Donnell fielded with SMI’s Smith grinning while making eye contact from the back of the media center. An encore in eight days for the sport’s longest race of the year seems unrealistic, but O’Donnell said the door was open for change in NASCAR’s long-range plans.

 

“If this is something the fans liked, hopefully we’ll hear that,” O’Donnell said.  We’d continue in that direction. But that’s ultimately how you dial in.  If it’s 36 different packages or if it’s three, you want to end up on the right one.

 

“We believe we can keep it simple with the number of race packages we put together. We want to be as efficient as possible. Ultimately it’s about the fans and putting on the best race we can.”

Kyle Larson and Joey Logano made contact — twice — with two laps remaining in the Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race. The first was unintentional, the second perhaps less so.

In the waning laps of the annual All-Star event at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Larson’s No. 42 Chevrolet skipped up the track and sent Logano’s No. 22 Ford into the outside wall. Logano collected his car and drove back down into his groove and hit Larson from behind, sending the No. 42 spinning through the infield grass and bringing out the caution flag.

WATCH: Logano, Larson tangle

Logano didn’t outright say he dumped Larson intentionally, although his voice inflection and body language indicated he did.

“He just ran me into the wall, and we collided after that. So that’s his fault. Oh well,” Logano said on pit road after the race.

When pressed later, Logano’s answer was similar.

“He shouldn’t have fenced me,” said Logano, who finished third. “I got all tangled up off the wall and back loose sideways here and there, and there he is. What do you want me to do?”

Larson, who drives for Chip Ganassi Racing, said his car got tight, which led to the initial contact. And although he didn’t like the shot from Logano and felt it was intentional, he understood it on some level.

RELATED: Full race results

“I was just trying to carry as much throttle as I can,” Larson said. I just got really, really tight. I tried to bail. He tried to leave me as much room as he could … but I shoved him into the wall, and he obviously retaliated. It is what it is I got. I want to be frustrated because I got wrecked on purpose, but I put him in the wall, too.”

Larson’s crew chief, Chad Johnston, was a little more direct when asked about the incident.

“I think Kyle’s probably taking too much of the blame because it looked like he had plenty of room up there and he ran it into the wall,” Johnston told NASCAR.com. “But for some reason, those guys over there don’t like it when you race ’em. Pretty sure that’s what we get paid to do, and they get paid a lot of money to do it, so I’d say suck it up and let’s go race, you know?”

Contributing: Zack Albert

CONCORD, N.C. — Kevin Harvick’s answer to NASCAR’s new competition package was the same old song—another victory in a season that already has produced a surfeit of success.

This time it was Saturday night’s Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway, with a restrictor-plate limiting the horsepower and a large blade on the rear of the cars providing downforce and maneuverability.

Harvick’s No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford was still the strongest car in the field, and the driver who already has five points wins this season added another in the marquee exhibition race, taking control of the event with an overtime surge at the end of the 20-lap third stage and sealing the victory by outrunning Daniel Suarez in the final two-lap drag race to the finish.

RELATED: Full race results
SHOP: Harvick gear 

With lane choice on the final restart, Harvick picked the top lane in front of eventual third-place finisher Joey Logano. The choice paid off, as Logano gave the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford a strong push off the second corner, allowing Harvick to clear the No. 19 Toyota on the backstretch.

“I thought on that last restart that my best opportunity was Logano,” Harvick acknowledged. “He’s one of the best on the restarts. I knew he would work with me as good as possible, because that’s just the way that most of us do it from Ford. We were able to just stay even through (Turns) 1 and 2, and I really thought once we got to the backstretch we could clear him.

I didn’t want to be on the bottom. I didn’t feel my car was stable enough to be under someone when they were on my right side. I had to take my lumps through 1 and 2 and hope that the guy behind me was still with me when we got to the exit of 2, and we were able to win.”

The third-stage victory also proved critical. In the second attempt at overtime, Harvick passed Kyle Larson for the top spot and held on to win the stage. That gave him lane choice for the final stage, and he never relinquished the lead.

“We needed to be in control of the race to have a chance at winning,” Harvick said. “If we were third or fourth, we would have been in big trouble. We needed to be on the front row with clean air, because that was the only chance our car would handle good enough. It was so fast.”

RELATED: See every All-Star Race winner

Harvick picked up his second victory in the All-Star Race, the first won coming in 2007. The winner of the previous two points races, at Dover and Kansas, Harvick didn’t earn championship points for his victory at Charlotte, but he did claim the $1-million prize that goes to the winner.

Leading every lap of the final 10-lap segment of the scheduled 80-lap event, Harvick crossed the finish line .325 seconds ahead of Suarez, who came close to clearing Harvick off the second corner after the final restart but didn’t have enough room to slide up in front of the No. 4.

Denny Hamlin was fourth, followed by Chase Elliott, who earned the last spot in the 21-car main event via the Fan Vote. Jimmie Johnson, Kyle Larson, AJ Allmendinger, Kyle Busch and Kasey Kahne completed the top 10. Kahne rallied from four laps down after contact with the frontstretch wall on Lap 56.

Suarez got a push from Hamlin on the final restart, but the Joe Gibbs Racing teammates didn’t stay connected as long as Harvick and Logano did.

“The 11 (Hamlin) was doing a very good job as much as he could to push me,” Suarez said. “For whatever reason, he just disconnected a little bit, and I couldn’t keep the run with the 4 (Harvick) and the 22 (Logano).

“They stayed connected for the entire corner, and after that I knew it was going to be tough. After that, I started just playing defense. I tried to slow them down, and I just didn’t do a good job or I just couldn’t do it enough.”

A six-car wreck that started near the apex of Turns 3 and 4 on Lap 75 — during the first attempt at overtime at the end of Stage 3 — eliminated the strong cars of Martin Truex Jr. and Brad Keselowski, both of whom led laps in the event.

RELATED: Eight-car wreck takes out several contenders

Truex entered the corner four-wide with Ricky Stenhouse Jr. below him, Clint Bowyer to his outside at Kurt Busch at the top of the track. Contact with Stenhouse’s Ford sent Truex’s Toyota up the track into Bowyer’s Ford, trapping Busch against the outside wall. Kyle Busch’s Camry also sustained damage in the wreck.

“We had a really strong race car and felt like we maybe had a shot to win it,” Truex said. “Just four-wide going into (Turn) 3 there, and we all just ran out of room. The 17 (Stenhouse), I had him squeezed down so low, I just don’t know that he could hold it down there.

“I was trying to keep the 14 (Bowyer) to my outside and just one those deals at the end of the race. I knew we had to get through that green-white-checkered to have a shot to win, but I also knew if I lifted there, I would have been the only one that lifted, and the others would have went on and passed me, and we wouldn’t have won this thing.”

Fans got their first look at the new competition package in the Monster Energy Open, which produced scintillating racing and multiple lead changes in each of the three stages. Race winner Allmendinger advanced to the main event, along with Stage 1 winner Alex Bowman and Stage 2 winner Suarez, who fell one spot short of the rare feat of winning the All-Star Race after transferring from the Open.

RELATED: Allmendinger, Suarez, Bowman race their way into All-Star Race

Notes: Harvick led the final 25 laps of the first stage. All told, he led 36 of the 93 laps (with the race extended 13 laps by the Stage 3 overtimes)… Kyle Busch led the final 19 laps of Stage 2 as the only driver other than Harvick to take a checkered flag on Saturday… Harvick’s pit crew climbed the frontstretch catch fence en masse after the victory… Truex led three times for 17 laps before being wiped out in the Lap 75 wreck.