NASCAR levied L1-level penalties to two Xfinity Series teams after parts modifications were discovered in pre-race inspection last weekend at Talladega Superspeedway.

The No. 87 Jordan Anderson Racing Chevrolet and No. 99 Viking Motorsports Chevrolet were both found to be in violation of Sections 14.4.A: Body; 14.4.11.C&D in the NASCAR Rule Book, having to do with rear bumper covers.

RELATED: Race results | Xfinity Series standings

As a result, the teams were each fined $25,000 and assessed with the loss of 20 driver and owner points and five playoff points.

Austin Green did not qualify for the main event at Talladega in the No. 87, while Matt DiBenedetto finished the race a season-best fifth in the No. 99. DiBenedetto remains 24th in the standings, while Green goes from 48th place to last.

The Xfinity Series is back in action on Saturday at Texas Motor Speedway (2 p.m. ET, The CW, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. — Joey Logano arrived at North Wilkesboro Speedway on Tuesday afternoon to discuss and promote next month’s NASCAR All-Star Race, which he won for the second time last year.

An All-Star from another part of the professional sports world, though, had caught his attention just a few hours earlier.

Logano learned Tuesday morning that former Atlanta Braves power hitter Chipper Jones had weighed in on last Sunday’s Cup Series race at Talladega Superspeedway, using social media to aggressively denounce the three-time NASCAR champion’s actions during the Jack Link’s 500. Jones was critical of Logano’s team radio transmissions, where he tore into teammate and eventual race winner Austin Cindric for going against the strategy plans at the end of Stage 2, costing the team a stage victory and points. “Good teammates are hard to come by,” Jones said, among other pointed critiques.

RELATED: Cup Series standings | Power Rankings

Logano became aware of those comments during a Tuesday morning appearance on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, looking them up after host Pete Pistone had filled him in. Later that day, from North Wilkesboro, Logano said, “I have no clue” what prompted the backlash, saying he’d never met the former big-leaguer, who attended the 2018 Daytona 500 as an honorary race official and was born in DeLand, Florida – about a half-hour’s drive from Daytona International Speedway.

“I found out he really doesn’t like me,” Logano said from the track’s Turn 4 hospitality area. “So I’m surprised that a professional athlete would act in that manner, because he’s been through it, right? Like, I say it all the time. I am very careful to form an opinion on an athlete by their emotions or the way they play the game, because I know from being in that position, when there’s that much on the line in a competitive environment, you act a certain way, because you’re out there to win, right? And then you’ve got to be able to shut that off. I would have assumed him being the athlete that he is and was that he would understand that and not mouth off on social media like somebody that’s never played the sport before or a sport.

“It’s surprising to me. All I can think is he’s just trying to be relevant still or something like that. I don’t really know exactly why. Like I said, I’ve never met him. I don’t have a reason to dislike him outside of now, but oh well. Guess I’m not rooting for the Braves anytime soon. I don’t know what to tell you.”

The disagreement among the Team Penske teammates stemmed from their tactics in the last lap of Stage 2 at Talladega. Cindric’s No. 2 Ford led the outside line with Wood Brothers Racing’s Josh Berry pushing him in the affiliated No. 21 Mustang. When Logano shifted his No. 22 Ford up a lane, in an effort to stall the momentum of race leader Bubba Wallace and form an all-Ford line to charge to the green-checkered flag, Cindric moved a lane higher. His decision not to push Logano disrupted their formation, and Wallace’s No. 23 Toyota cruised to the stage victory.

Logano told SiriusXM that, in retrospect, he probably shouldn’t have keyed his microphone to air out fiery remarks that became public knowledge in an instant. But the 34-year-old veteran said his view of the Stage 2 moves hadn’t wavered, even after talking it through with his teammate.

“My perspective is the same, hasn’t changed a bit,” Logano said. “I don’t think TV captured exactly what upset me, and I’m not here to air dirty laundry either or to talk about what our internal rules of going at it on superspeedways are. At this point, you know, there’s sometimes a straw that breaks the camel’s back. May have been at that moment. We’re out there in the heat of battle, and when something that was set to be a certain way doesn’t go the way that we all agreed to, and maybe not the first time, then yeah, you’re going to get a little frustrated about it.

“At this point, we talked, we communicated. We’re still teammates, right? You’re brothers, right? You’re going to sometimes not see eye to eye. Everyone wants to stick up for their side, obviously, but we just have to come to some kind of common ground and move forward, because no matter what, he’s still my brother, right? He’s still my teammate out there. We’ve still got to figure it out, and we will, and we did, right? We went through it all, we talked about it, and, yeah, you move on. So there’s a lot of lessons learned, and we move on.”

Logano drove on to take the checkered flag in fifth place behind Cindric, but his hardships mounted in the hours after Sunday’s event. The No. 22 Ford was disqualified after post-race inspection, where competition officials said they found an infraction in the rear-spoiler braces, which were not securely fastened. Team Penske officials did not appeal the penalty, saying that one of the 18 bolts on the spoiler’s surface had unintentionally come loose where it connects to the base.

The result would have been Logano’s first top-five finish of the season. Instead, what would have been a productive 41-point Talladega tally was relegated to a one-point day in last place in the 39-car field.

Logano was reminded that a playoff-clinching victory in the coming weeks could go a long way toward softening the damage done by Sunday’s disqualification. He said, though, that the penalty still stings on multiple levels.

MORE: NASCAR’s Sawyer on Preece, Logano DQs | How Preece, Logano shake out in standings

“There’s a lot of bad things that come along with the penalty,” Logano said. “And, you know, Team Penske, we’re not the people that, like, blatantly are going to go out there and cheat. It’s not who we are. It was a mistake that essentially, the nut came off the bolt back there on the brace, and the bowl was still in there, but it does — and I said on the radio show this morning — it does cause a little deflection, I’m sure, in the spoiler. Does it give you a competitive advantage? I’m sure it does a little bit. Did it change where we finished in the race? No, because everyone was locked down two-wide, so it doesn’t make a difference, but it doesn’t change the fact that it’s not by the rules, so you’ve got to accept the penalty. And the penalty, I mean, it hurts. There’s no doubt.”

Among the implications: Logano was up one position to eighth place in the Cup Series standings based on his initial finishing spot. After the DQ and the 40-point swing, he dipped two places to 11th.

“Not to mention the financial impact as well, from finishing fifth to last,” he said. “So there’s a pretty big impact there, and then the image of it’s not good, either, so you’ve got to navigate that, too. So it’s not ideal, by no means. But, you know, I kind of had the analogy earlier on the show is that it’s the same thing as if you were to wreck someone and you say you’re sorry, it’s like it makes it a little bit better, but it doesn’t change the result, right? Same thing here. We made a mistake, the nut came off, we’re sorry, we didn’t mean to, but it doesn’t change the result. We still have to own up to what happened there, so all we can do now is just understand the process of how it happened and create a new process to make sure it doesn’t happen again, and then we just move forward. That’s all we can do.”

Rick Martin never had grand ambitions when it came to racing. After watching his dad compete for 21 years, the sport was just something he wanted to try.

“Me and one of my friends bought a $50 car and went out there,” Martin said. “The other cars went by us so fast, I thought to myself, ‘I ain’t never gonna go that fast, I’m going to just quit now.’

“But I just kept at it, kept at it, and I guess it was the challenge that I enjoyed.”

Martin has kept at it for 50 years and amassed one of the most impressive resumes of any driver in the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series.

In his 50th season last year, he won his eighth championship at Massachusetts’ Seekonk Speedway.

RELATED: Rick Martin on MyRacePass

Martin won four races in the track’s Chaz’s Auto Body Sports Truck division last season. Unlike other local short tracks, Seekonk’s championships are awarded much like the NASCAR Cup Series. The top four in points on championship night race against one another, and the highest finisher of those four takes home the title.

Martin won the last race of the season for his third straight Sport Truck title.

“I’ve never had not one problem with the truck,” he said. “Nothing. Just sometimes things just go as planned, sometimes they don’t.

“There’s a lot of stress. You can do great, but just one little thing — you got a flat tire running over a nail or something — and it’s all over. It’s a lot of pressure running for points at the end. It was running good. I felt good about it. I looked at it like it wasn’t going to change my life any if I won or I didn’t win it. There was so many sponsors and stuff that were behind me that I like to do it for them and the crew. The only payback I really get to give to the crew is when we win it.”

In addition to his championship, just before the final race of the season, Martin was inducted into the Seekonk Wall of Fame.

In November, he was inducted into the New England Auto Racers Hall of Fame. The Hall said of Martin: “Over a 40-year plus career Martin has raced across New England in all sorts of different cars, but he stands out as one of the greatest ever to race at Seekonk (Mass.) Speedway… Martin also was known as one of the best fabricators in New England.”

In addition to his three Truck division championships, Martin also has four track titles in Seekonk’s Pro Stock division.

“It was me and Paul Newman got inducted in,” Martin said of the Hall of Fame. ‘So just to be in the same sentence with him. … In between that week, we went and raced up in Connecticut, and we won the race up there, so it was like a banner month, really.”

 

Racing hasn’t all been smooth sailing for Martin over the last five decades. He’s seen the sport change so much. He’s been through slumps. He’s changed cars, teams and crews several times. He’s seen all the highs and lows of motorsports.

“There’s just so much work these days,” he said. “Years ago, you got a junkyard car. When you bought it, every gas station you looked in there was an old race car in there. You painted numbers and put a roll cage in it, you had a race car. Now there’s a lot involved. A lot of work, a lot of hours, and a lot of money.”

He’s considered retiring more than once, including in 1990, when he blew the motor on his car and said, “I was done with it.”

Before he could give up, a new team asked Martin to drive its car.

“I ended up jumping in their car and we won the next week,” Martin said. “And then I ended up driving their car for a year. We won the championship the next year in ’92, and then that went on for a while.”

Ten years later came another small slump. In the time since, Martin’s changed teams again several times.

“I’ve done this my whole life as this is my job. If I went out and made a thousand dollars, that was my pay for the week. It was getting too expensive.”

Now Martin is with Ed Silva and Silva Motorsport, with Brightman Lumber as a sponsor, who have been with him for his last three championships.

While Martin has always wanted to race in quality equipment that gave him a chance to win, he’s never raced for himself. The victories and championships are always shared with the people who helped him get there.

“It’s a good time. I enjoyed more seeing him,” Martin said. “Ed’s been to the races his whole life, and he never thought about being an owner, never mind having me drive for him, and this is like the best part of his life right now.

“I do it for the people that help me like that. I mean, one more win to me… ain’t gonna change my life, but to these guys seeing them, I don’t pay nobody to work on a car, so that’s what they get out of it, they wanna help and they enjoy it.”

Given all the accolades he received last year, it’s only natural for Martin to think back on all he’s accomplished as a race car driver. He’s starting to give himself time to look back over the last 50 years.

“Over the years, it’s like I’d win a race, and I’d be back in the garage Sunday waiting for the next race and just never even had time to celebrate a win or think about it,” he said. “I always said, someday I’ll retire and I’ll sit on the rocking chair and I’ll go over everything.

“Lately, it’s been people coming along, saying, ‘Oh, you remember this race? I remember watching you when I was a kid,’ and this and that. To me, talking about it now, that’s all the payback. The people that come up and say, ‘Oh, I’ve been cheering for you. Now, I’m here with my son cheering for you.'”

Fifty years of racing wasn’t enough for Martin. He and his team have already built the truck he’ll race at Seekonk this season. They put in new motors and new bodies, plus fresh lettering.

Seekonk will begin racing on May 4. To Martin, Year 51 can’t come soon enough.

“We just go to have fun,” Martin said. “I mean, we’ll go there, we set up. We’ve got our tables, our tent, and our chairs, and we eat better than they do at most restaurants at the track. We’re always bringing something, lobster rolls or something. We just make a good time, and I enjoy it.

“I’d just like to thank everybody along the way that’s kept me going, cause can’t nobody do this by themselves. I’ve got a great team that works on the truck. They’re there every week with me.”

Ross Chastain’s 20th-place finish Sunday at Talladega Superspeedway — in addition to his NASCAR Insights metric rankings from the race — weren’t illustrious. However, one strategy the No. 1 Trackhouse Racing driver played during Sunday certainly proved to be monumental in how the race finished.

How so? Well, let’s dig into it … and see how the NASCAR Insights data helps paint the picture.

RELATED: Talladega results | NASCAR Insights analysis explained

During the final stage of the Jack Link’s 500, a Toyota cavalcade — including Denny Hamlin, Riley Herbst, Erik Jones and Bubba Wallace — utilized the outside lane during green-flag stops. With dominant speed as the laps waned, it looked as if the Toyota train would speed away, leaving everyone else in the metaphorical (and perhaps literal) dust.

Not if one driver had anything to say about it. Chastain, ahead of the Toyota group but with much slower speed, maneuvered his No. 1 Chevy in front of the Toyota group, led by Hamlin’s No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing machine. As a result, Hamlin — in addition to the Toyotas behind him — checked up, eliminating the speed advantage.

Unfortunately for Hamlin and the bulk of the Toyotas, the speed could not be revived, with Austin Cindric’s No. 2 Ford eventually taking the Talladega victory. In fact, only one Toyota finished the race inside the top 10 (Wallace, eighth). Tyler Reddick and Chase Briscoe were the next best finishers at 14th and 15th, respectively. Among other Toyota finishes included Ty Gibbs (17th), Jones (18th), Hamlin (21st), and Herbst (22nd).

The block didn’t result in a marquee result for Chastain, and the No. 1’s NASCAR Insights data didn’t pop off the page, either; Chastain finished the race ranked 21st in Passer Rating, 20th in Defense Rating and 15th in Restart Rating.

MORE: Cup Series standings 

But that blocking maneuver did hold off the Toyotas, and if NASCAR Insights’ data is any indicator, such a move might’ve been the X factor that prevented the manufacturer from finding Victory Lane. The key metric is the Restart Rating. Four of six drivers with the best Restart Rating were Toyotas: Reddick (first), Herbst (second), Gibbs (fourth) and Hamlin (sixth).

Toyota’s bread and butter came on the restarts at Talladega, and if not for Chastain’s block, the manufacturer very well could’ve capitalized on this strength as the race reached its conclusion.

Other notables from Sunday:

— Despite having a 24th-ranked Passer Rating, Kyle Larson finished runner-up, thanks in part to a fourth-ranked Defense Rating and seventh-ranked Restart Rating.

— William Byron, Larson’s Hendrick Motorsports teammate, finished third, despite possessing Passer, Defense and Restart ratings all 12th or worse.

— Noah Gragson collected his first top five of the season (fourth) despite having the 11th-worst Restart Rating.

— Hocevar finished sixth; his 22nd-ranked Restart Rating was his highest-ranked rating of the day.

A general graphic depicting NASCAR Insights data.

Cheshire County Clash 200

Monadnock Speedway

  • Entry list
Car No. Driver Team Crew Chief Chassis Mfg. Sponsor
1 Patrick Emerling KPL Racing LLC Dale Hedquist LFR Fleetworks, Inc.
3 Tyler Rypkema Boehler’s Racing Equipment Greg Fournier Boehler Racing USNE; Northeast Drilling
5 Kyle Ebersole Robert Ebersole Bob Ebersole FURY Race Cars Ebersole Excavating, Inc.
06 Sam Rameau Rameau Family Motorsports Jr Boccanfuso FURY Race Cars New England Truck Design; Quality Fleet Services
7 Luke Baldwin Tommy Baldwin Racing LLC Tommy Baldwin PSR Products Baldwin Automotive
15 Joey Cipriano III Fueled Up Motorsports Ryan Plourde FURY Race Cars Dependable Energy; The Bass Plating Company
16 Ron Silk Haydt Yannone Racing Phil Moran FURY Race Cars Blue Mountain Machine; Future Homes
17 Anthony Nocella Michele Davini Chris McTaggart LFR Xtreme Autobody; Sontag Motorsports; Bells Septic
18 Ken Heagy Christopher Fleming Greg Gorman FURY Race Cars Hunter Mechanical
21 Stephen Kopcik Wanick Motorsports Nick Kopcik Troyer Newtown Pools; Wanick Construction Inc.
22 Kyle Bonsignore Kyle Bonsignore Keith McDermott FURY Race Cars MTT; ChaLew Performance; Munns Auto
26 Gary McDonald Lakeland Avenue Landscape Supply Chad McDonald Chevrolet Lakeland Avenue Landscaping Supply
36 David Sapienza Judith Thilberg Greg Kleila FURY Race Cars Sapienza Enterprises; Eastport Feeds
43 Matt Kimball William Kimball Jr. William Kimball LFR J&M Towing; Birch Financial; Central Mass Tree
46 Craig Lutz Goodie Racing Douglas Ogiejko FURY Race Cars Riverhead Building Supply
51 Justin Bonsignore Kenneth Massa Motorsports, LLC Ryan Stone FURY Race Cars Phoenix Communications, Inc.
54 Tommy Catalano Catalano Motorsports Rick Kluth Troyer FX Caprara; USNE Utility Services
56 Trevor Catalano Catalano Motorsports JJ Vece Troyer USNE Utility Services; Catalano Motorsports
59 Tyler Barry Jody Lauzon Billy Michael Chevrolet Pro Systems Integration; BNP Machine
60 Matt Hirschman Pee Dee/Elite Motorsports Mike Stein LFR Elite Towing
64 Austin Beers KLM Motorsports Ron Yuhas Troyer G&G Electrical Supply, Dell Electric, Andrew James Interiors, Lumiere Electrical, Hughes Motors, AP Marquadt & Sons
79 Jonathan McKennedy Jonathan McKennedy Racing TBA FURY Race Cars Christophers Towing
82 Woody Pitkat DWR Racing Corp. Nick Walsh LFR USNE Power; Gunsmoke Stables Racing
112 Brian Sones DW Racing Dennis Wenner Troyer DW Machine & Fabricating Co.; Bergen Industries
120 Max Zachem Zachem Motorsports Ken Zachem LFR USNE; Lu-Mac’s
129 Mike Marshall TLC Performance Kevin Ledoux Troyer MLM Diagnostics; Jusczak Electric

 

TALLADEGA, Ala. — NASCAR officials disqualified cars driven by apparent top-five finishers Ryan Preece and Joey Logano from Sunday’s Cup Series race at Talladega Superspeedway after finding technical violations in both cars’ rear spoilers in post-race inspection.

RELATED: Talladega race results | At-track photos

Preece’s No. 60 RFK Racing Ford took the checkered flag in what was initially a career-best second place, half a car-length behind race winner Austin Cindric’s No. 2 Team Penske Mustang in Sunday’s Jack Link’s 500. Officials, however, discovered unapproved shims in the rear spoiler area.

Logano had driven the No. 22 Ford to an apparent fifth-place finish, a result that would have been his first top-five result of the season. Officials, however, found the No. 22 to be in violation of Section 14.5.8.E, which covers spoiler braces that are used as superspeedway events, and Section 14.1.P under General Vehicle Assembly, which states, “All fasteners must be securely fastened at all times during an Event.”

“The No. 22 Team Penske Ford Mustang was disqualified following post-race inspection at Talladega today,” Team Penske released in a statement. “One of the 18 bolts on the surface of the spoiler that connect to the base was found to be loose, and NASCAR penalized the team as a result. This was not intentional and happened throughout the course of the race event. Team Penske accepts the disqualification.”

On Monday, RFK Racing announced on social media that it also accepts the penalty and will not file an appeal.

“RFK Racing acknowledges and accepts NASCAR’s decision to disqualify the No. 60 Ford Mustang following post-race inspection at Talladega and will not appeal the ruling,” the team’s statement said. “The infraction stemmed from an unintentional adjustment during pre-race inspection to correct a spoiler angle issue. While the change did not provide a competitive advantage, it did not meet the approved compliance method. We respect the ruling and remain committed to integrity and adherence to NASCAR’s standards.”

Preece was relegated to 38th in the 39-car field, with Logano placed last in the official results. Both drivers also earned just one point in the championship standings, with the disqualification erasing what would have been a 40-point day for Preece and 41 points for Logano.

The outcome rounded out a dismal day for RFK Racing, which suffered early retirements by Chris Buescher (34th place) and owner/driver Brad Keselowski (36th) because of Stage 1 crashes. Logano joined teammate Ryan Blaney, who was 37th after being caught up in the Keselowski crack-up, near the bottom of the order.

NASCAR officials also indicated that four cars would return to its Research & Development Center for further inspection. The No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet (driver Kyle Larson) and No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford (Josh Berry) will have a full inspection and engine dyno tests. The No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet (Ty Dillon) and No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota (Bubba Wallace) will also be observed on the engine dyno.

The NASCAR Xfinity Series rolls into Texas Motor Speedway for the Andy’s Frozen Custard 300 on Saturday (2 p.m. ET, The CW, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

TEXAS ENTRY LISTS: Cup Series | Xfinity Series | Craftsman Truck Series

Katherine Legge makes her third Xfinity start of the season, once again piloting the No. 32 Jordan Anderson Racing Chevrolet. Forty cars are on the entry list, but only 38 cars will start Saturday’s event, meaning two teams will fail to qualify.

Take a look at the full entry list for Saturday’s event:

The NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series returns after an off week for a trip to Texas Motor Speedway this weekend for the SpeedyCash.com 250 (8 p.m. ET, FS1, NASCAR Racing Network Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

TEXAS ENTRY LISTS:  Cup Series | Xfinity Series | Truck Series

See the full entry list for the race in the Lone Star state:

The NASCAR Cup Series travels to the Lone Star State this weekend, where the field will do battle this Sunday at Texas Motor Speedway in the Würth 400 presented by Liqui Moly (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

TEXAS ENTRY LISTS:  Cup Series | Xfinity Series | Truck Series

Jesse Love, who made his Cup Series debut at Bristol Motor Speedway, suits up for his second start in NASCAR’s premier series, wheeling the No. 62 Beard Motorsports Chevrolet.

See the full entry list for the 267-lap event at the 1.5-miler: