With five races left to set the 12-driver NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoff field, Friday night’s Wawa 250 Powered by Coca-Cola at Daytona International Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET on USA Network, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) could produce a surprise winner and new playoff entrant on the historic high banks.
There are only three former Daytona race winners in this weekend’s field, led by three-time winner Austin Hill of Richard Childress Racing. Also with Daytona wins are Jeremy Clements Racing owner-driver Jeremy Clements and JR Motorsports’ Justin Allgaier — who is the defending winner of this Daytona summer 250-miler.
While those closer to the top of the standings have either solidified their positions with victories or good points days, drivers near the elimination line arrive in Daytona racing for their playoff lives.
Big Machine Racing’s Parker Kligerman is ranked 11th with a 16-point margin to the playoff good after being levied with a penalty post-Michigan. JR Motorsports’ Sammy Smith holds only a single-point lead on RSS Racing’s Ryan Sieg for that last playoff position.
Eight drivers have already earned playoff bids with victories, led by popular New Zealand driver Shane van Gisbergen, who has three race wins in his first full-time NASCAR season. Allgaier, Hill, Joe Gibbs Racing’s Chandler Smith and Allgaier’s teammate at JR Motorsports, Sam Mayer all have won twice.
Defending series champion Cole Custer, his Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Riley Herbst and RCR’s Jesse Love all have earned playoff berths with a win. Veteran Kaulig Racing driver AJ Allmendinger currently holds a 102-point advantage on the elimination line while JGR’s Sheldon Creed is a healthy 70 points up. Kligerman and Sammy Smith round out the current dozen in the playoff standings.
Hill won the season’s first two races and now aims for a rare Daytona double. A win Friday would give him the track season sweep, meaning he would join NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr. as the only competitors to sweep a season’s two NASCAR Xfinity Series events at Daytona.
Creed, who just set a record for most runner-up finishes (11) in the series without a win, has finished runner-up in the last two Daytona races.
Asked what it would take to hoist that elusive first trophy this weekend, Creed said, “A good push and even better luck. It’s been feast or famine at Daytona for me so far and that’s helped me realize the importance of making it to the end. If things go our way, I feel good about our ability to put ourselves in contention. From there we just have to hope that the cards fall in a way that give me a chance to execute in the final laps. If that happens, I like our chances.”
Allmendinger’s average finish of 10.7 in seven starts is the second-best average finish to Jordan Anderson Racing’s Parker Retzlaff (4.7 in three starts) among active drivers.
There’s no practice this week. Qualifying is set for Friday at 3 p.m. ET (USA Network).
The stats show that Saturday night’s Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway (7:30 ET, NBC, Peacock, MRN Radio, SiriusXM, NBC Sports App) is set to be a wide-open thriller.
Who knows what we’re in store for at the “World Center of Racing,” a driver’s luck could change at any time. In Daytona’s last seven races, the driver who won led for 10 laps or fewer in six of those events. On the flip side, the driver who led the most laps often fell short, finishing 22nd or worse in five of the past six races. Proving Daytona’s wild nature is a recipe for thrilling upsets and unexpected twists.
Additionally, in four of the last six summer Daytona races, the winner earned their first victory of the season, which is crucial given that Chris Buescher and Bubba Wallace are only separated by 16 points in the playoff standings. Not to mention former Daytona winners such as Kyle Busch, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Erik Jones and Justin Haley are in must-win scenarios for their playoff hopes.
While there’s still plenty to watch on the playoff bubble, the race for the Regular Season Championship is also leaving the top drivers with no margin for error as Tyler Reddick, Chase Elliott, Denny Hamlin and Kyle Larson are separated by 32 points — second-closest battle ever at this point in a season. Currently, the early projections only have Elliott and Reddick landing top fives, while Hamlin rounds out the top 10 and Larson is a projected 14th.
The advanced metrics favor Ryan Blaney to win at Daytona. Given he has an 11.3 average finish on drafting tracks in the Next Gen era — best of all drivers — it’s easy to understand why Racing Insights is high on the No. 12 driver heading into the weekend. Blaney is tied with William Byron, Wallace and Elliott for the third-best betting odds to win. He has four wins in drafting-style races and finished in the top two in 33% of the last 24 races on drafting tracks. Still, at Daytona, it’s anyone’s game.
DRIVERS TO WATCH
TYLER REDDICK: Reddick took over the regular-season points lead after his Michigan win. When factoring in his Duel win before the season at Daytona and his triumph at Talladega, Reddick could extend his points lead and remain in control going to Darlington.
WILLIAM BYRON: Byron has four drafting track wins, with two of those coming at Daytona and three being in the Next Gen car. In his last seven drafting races, he’s tallied six top 10s and has an average finish of 6.14 — both a series-best over that stretch.
KYLE BUSCH: Busch rallied to a top-five finish at Michigan, and while it’s been hard for the No. 8 crew to string together solid weeks this year, Busch has the experience to navigate a wild superspeedway race.
TODD GILLILAND: Seventy-four of Gilliland’s 121 laps led this year have been on superspeedways. With the career year he’s having and the speed Front Row Motorsports has shown on superspeedways, Gilliland could shock the field.
JOHN HUNTER NEMECHEK: Nemechek holds a 9.67 average finish at Daytona — 10th-best all-time. He also has finished 11th or better in five of his last seven drafting track starts.
RACING INSIGHTS’ PROJECTIONS FOR THE COKE ZERO SUGAR 400
Racing Insights’ advanced statistical formula includes current track, current track type, recent performance, team data and pit-crew data to arrive at a projected winner and full race results.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Aug. 22, 2024) — Today marks a moment worth savoring, as America’s No. 1 motorsport and the nation’s No. 1 meat snack brand join forces to help race fans feed their wild side. NASCAR and Jack Link’s together announced that the U.S. meat snacks market leader has become an Official Partner of NASCAR through a multi-year agreement set to begin in 2025.
“Much like NASCAR, Jack Link’s built itself from a determined pioneer into a household brand committed to delivering quality to its customers while having some fun along the way,” said Michelle Byron, NASCAR executive vice president and chief partnership and licensing officer. “Jack Link’s fits perfectly as an Official Partner of NASCAR and we’re eager for everyone involved to enjoy the benefits of catering to the most passionate and loyal fans in all of sports.”
As the Official Meat Snack of NASCAR, Jack Link’s will activate across multiple areas of the NASCAR ecosystem including at-track, social and digital media, and radio and television. Jack Link’s will also leverage the NASCAR relationship at retail, as the company continues offering consumers a wide amount of real, high-quality protein snack options that span multiple flavors, formats, sizes and sub-brands.
“Jack Link’s is thrilled to partner with NASCAR, a true icon in American motorsport, and share our passion for quality snacks with their loyal fan base,” said Matt White, senior vice president of sales & commercial strategy at Jack Link’s. “This partnership allows us to bring our delicious meat snacks to life at the racetrack and in retail locations nationwide, fueling fans’ adventures with bold new flavors. We’re excited to satisfy cravings and enhance the fan experience both on and off the track.”
Before this delicious new partnership takes effect, the 2024 NASCAR season rolls on, with the penultimate race of the NASCAR Cup Series regular season taking place from the iconic Daytona International Speedway at 7:30 p.m. ET this Saturday, Aug. 24 (NBC, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Two weeks later, the 10-race NASCAR Playoffs get underway at Atlanta Motor Speedway at 3 p.m. ET on Sunday, Sept. 8 (USA Network, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
NASCAR will mandate a new right side rear-window air deflector beginning with Saturday’s Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona International Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET, NBC, Peacock, NBC Sports App, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
Following wind-tunnel testing this week, the added component to the Next Gen car increases the liftoff speed of the car in the early part of the spin, making it less likely get airborne.
The mandate comes in response to Corey LaJoie’s flip at Michigan International Speedway after the No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet went in the air and landed on its roof shortly after spinning down the backstretch.
NASCAR will supply teams with the part, and it will match what is currently run on the left side rear window.
1. What will Daytona have in store as the next-to-last regular-season bout?
With the regular season nearing its end, Daytona will act as the penultimate race before the 2024 NASCAR Playoffs begin.
A wild, weather-filled race weekend at Michigan International Speedway saw Tyler Reddick conquer his Irish Hills demons and jump 10 points clear of Chase Elliott in the points standings. Then, there was the playoff bubble, which saw several drivers tally double-digit totals that could be all the difference in clinching a coveted playoff berth.
Next up is Daytona. And when speaking about Daytona, it’s best to be frank: Reputations speak for themselves sometimes, and the “World Center of Racing” is no exception. But in the case of 2024, Daytona will not act as the regular-season finale. Instead, the 2.5-miler will be the next-to-last venue on the docket.
While momentum can certainly translate, it takes a certain kind of momentum to translate in full to Daytona, even if it is no longer the regular-season cutoff contest. From blistering speeds through the straightaways to the oh-so-daunting banking through the turns, racing skill can perhaps only take you so far.
“You can’t make all your own luck there,” 2023 Daytona summer winner Chris Buescher said at Michigan when speaking about the Florida track. “There is a matter of being in the right place at the right time simply by circumstance. Mistakes get made. Everyone is a little bit more desperate as it comes down to it. That race definitely has the ability to get a lot more wild, especially as we get into the closing laps. We’ve had these conversations there through the years of how do you run hard, be smart in the stages, try and capture stage points, but ultimately know that with 10, 15 to go, it’s going to get wild.”
But Daytona’s sheer unpredictability might have a benefit for drivers with sound superspeedway packages, because they’ll have the opportunity to leave a potential race-winning mark.
“Yeah, I mean, it’s definitely more in your hands at Darlington, but Darlington was one of our really bad struggle races earlier this year where, you know, Daytona is kind of that crapshoot race,” Kyle Busch said earlier this season at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. “But we seem to be really fast at the two-and-a-half miles, two-mile tracks, and so you kind of honestly might have a better shot of winning at Daytona than you would at Darlington.”
Daytona hasn’t seen a back-to-back summer winner since 2005-06, when Tony Stewart accomplished the feat. And for drivers looking to go into the postseason on solid footing or perhaps even clinch their playoff berth outright, anything goes at Daytona, regular-season finale or not. If anything, just expect to be surprised.
Talk about a reputation.
2. Which winless driver has the best chance to hoist the Daytona crown?
Although the sport has already seen 13 different winners this season, Daytona’s summer race could produce another.
Make no mistake, the Kyle Larsons, Christopher Bells, Denny Hamlins or William Byrons of the world — among other drivers to already find Victory Lane this season — have just as good a shot as any to prevail at Daytona this weekend. But for the pilots yet to win this season — and thus still at the mercy of missing the playoffs — the incentive to race well is all the more apparent.
Of the four drivers currently without a win in 2024 but above the elimination line — Martin Truex Jr. (+77), Ty Gibbs (+39), Buescher (+16) and Ross Chastain (+1) — Buescher is the easy layup. He won last season’s summer race, and while a driver hasn’t gone back-to-back in the Daytona summer race in nearly 20 years, the benefit of the doubt should at least be considered. Truex, meanwhile, maintains a hearty points lead, and his experience at Daytona overall is nearly unmatched — the 44-year-old’s 38 total races at the Daytona track are tied with Kyle Busch for the most among all active drivers. Chastain has only garnered three top 10s in 12 total tries at the track, and none of those top-10 results came during the summer race.
There are, of course, other candidates to consider. There is Busch (-93), who utilized a two-tire gamble at Michigan to tally his first top five since Dover Motor Speedway in April. The Michigan finish additionally bumped the No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet up a spot in the playoff standings, and his +26 gain was the highest among all bubble drivers. Bubba Wallace (-1), who fell below the elimination line after a 26th-place finish at Michigan, has a knack for producing at superspeedways, as his five top fives at Daytona — including a runner-up during the 2021 summer running — can attest.
The likes of Michael McDowell (-157), Erik Jones (-245) and Justin Haley (-260) have all won at the facility, with the latter two winning summer races there (2018 and 2019, respectively). And while Chase Briscoe (-115), Todd Gilliland (-151), Carson Hocevar (-165) and Josh Berry (-179), among others, don’t have prior winning history at the track in Cup, it only takes being at the right place at the right time to be in a winning position at Daytona.
In other words, there are an abundance of options, and every option is more than capable.
MRN’s Todd Gordon and FOX’s Larry McReynolds dive into the data from Michigan and discuss how Tyler Reddick came out on top.
4. Just how good has Tyler Reddick’s points stretch been?
A victory at Michigan last weekend officially placed the No. 45 23XI pilot atop the regular-season standings. Check out Reddick’s point gains over the last eight contests, dating back to Iowa Speedway in June.
RACE
POINTS BEHIND
POINTS POSITION
FINISH AT TRACK
After Iowa
-64
6th
22nd
After New Hampshire
-60
5th
6th
After Nashville
-53
4th
3rd
After Chicago
-23
3rd
2nd
After Pocono
-15
3rd
6th
After Indianapolis
-15
3rd
2nd
After Richmond
-5
2nd
3rd
After Michigan
+10
1st
1st
5. Catch the pack — news and notes from around the garage
The National Motorsports Appeals Panel upheld the penalty levied against the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing team after a last-lap incident Aug. 11 at Richmond Raceway. However, the panel did reduce the suspension for No. 3 team spotter Brandon Benesch from three races to one.
Austin Dillon made contact with Joey Logano and Denny Hamlin in the final turns en route to his win at the Virginia short track. The panel agreed with NASCAR’s ruling that the totality of Dillon’s actions were significant enough to warrant penalties; the win stands, but the benefits from the win — namely eligibility for the Cup Series Playoffs — were revoked.
The penalty concerns Sections 4.4.B NASCAR Member Code of Conduct Penalty Options and Guidelines; 10.1.A General Procedure; 12.3.2.1.B Eligibility. Benesch was cited for violating 4.4.D and 10.1.A.
Dillon and the No. 3 team were also docked 25 points in the drivers’ and owners’ standings in the penalty handed down Aug. 14.
The appeals panel, consisting of Tom DeLoach, Kelly Housby and Tommy Wheeler, reached the decision with the following explanation: “NASCAR represents elite motorsports and, as such, its drivers are expected to demonstrate exemplary conduct if its series’ championships are to be validated. In this case, the ‘line’ was crossed.”
Richard Childress Racing released the following statement: “Richard Childress Racing is disappointed in the results of today’s hearing in front of the National Motorsports Appeals Panel. We respect the NASCAR appeals process, but we do not believe that today’s outcome reflects the facts presented. We plan to appeal the decision to the Final Appeal Officer.”
Tanner Tallarico is a self-described “iRacing nerd.”
When he isn’t racing at Michigan’s Berlin Raceway, he’s racing against his Berlin competitors on iRacing.
Every winter he and other Berlin drivers have the same conversation – why isn’t the famed NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Racing Series short track on the simulator?
“It’s such a unique track,” Tallarico said. “It’s got great publicity. There’s a lot of big names that have come out of that place. They host really big events… And we’ve always just thought that they were more than deserving of at least having a shot of getting put onto iRacing.”
Last offseason, Berlin drivers knew Tallarico was the guy to go to to make getting their track on the system happen. He started a petition on iRacing’s website and is looking to complete the 1,000 signatures needed to get the attention of the company. When Tallarico spoke with NASCAR.com, he said they had about 800 signatures.
“It’s just to kind of give myself and a couple of guys that are helping me try to get this deal done a little bit of firepower to put in front of the iRacing staff,” Tallarico said.
“Just to say, hey, we’re pulling from a really small pool of people and if we can have this big of an impact and all this feedback and stuff, with just a thousand signatures, imagine what we could do with this huge platform that iRacing has that’s worldwide now, and what that would do to Berlin. If it wasn’t on the map before, that would definitely put it on the map if we could get it on the sim, for sure.”
Berlin has meant a lot to Tallarico’s racing career, especially this year. In April, at the start of his third season there, he picked up his first NASCAR win at the track on opening night.
Tanner Tallarico (1) races a fellow Sportsman competitor during a recent event at Michigan’s Berlin Raceway. (Photo: Courtesy of Tanner Tallarico)
Since then, he has five top fives and 11 top 10s in 15 races, and is currently eighth in the track’s Sportsman division standings.
“That set the season off really good to win on opening night,” he said. “Berlin is really, really tough… The saying is, it takes three years to win at Berlin, and it’s kind of ironic that three years almost to the day we won our first feature up there. It started off the season really good. I went through a lot of ups and downs to kind of get to that first win, but really since then, knock on wood, the season’s been going really strong for us.”
Racing has taken Tallarico all over the Midwest since he began competing in quarter-midgets at 6 years old in 2004. After two championships, he and his family team built a street stock they raced around Michigan and Indiana.
Tallarico made one start in the ARCA Menards Series, but he faced a lack of funding and decided to he look at options closer to home where he could go race against the best competition. That brought him to Berlin, which is two hours from his house.
“It, at the time, was the only NASCAR-sanctioned track even close to where I’m living,” he said. “I knew the exposure level up there would be huge, and we just went up there in the sportsman class and started running, and we’ve been having a blast ever since.”
Tallarico said he and the team kept racing at Berlin because, “It’s a premier short track facility.”
“I’ve been fortunate enough to race at a lot of different short tracks all around my area … they really do a really good job with the way they run the facility,” he said. “The staff there are phenomenal. The race control are phenomenal. And then really for me as a driver, the biggest thing for me is the competition level in my class, specifically in the Sportsman division, is incredible.
“There’s a handful of guys up there that have been up there for a really, really long time, and were kind of the ones to beat week-in and out, and I’m finally starting to get into that point where I feel like I can compete with those guys week-in and out.”
When Tallarico isn’t racing at Berlin, he’s up in the press box as a commentator for FloRacing’s broadcast. Two years ago he was invited by Berlin’s play-by-play announcer to join the booth and give a driver’s perspective. He fell in love with announcing so much he jokes he almost has more fun in the booth than in the car.
A general track scene during the Tekton Battle at Berlin 250 at Berlin Raceway in Marne, Michigan on August 7, 2024. (Photo: Julia Schachinger/NASCAR)
“It’s a lot less pressure and it’s a lot different kind of point of view and perspective,” he said. “I race like 12-15 times a season and I’m probably up there 10-12 times a season hanging out with those guys, so that’s really fun as well… They mentioned it’s nice to have kind of a driver input and it just kind of changes the dynamic at home for people watching. We can kind of hit on things that the cars might be doing, what the drivers might be feeling or how they’re going to adjust to the track and the weather, whatever’s going on. If there’s a situation I can kind of inject the driver’s point of view into it and just kind of make the broadcast a little more interesting to the people watching at home.
“So I enjoy doing it. It’s fun. Sometimes I have more fun doing that than I do actually driving. It just kind of depends on the day, but it’s really fun to do. I’m glad that those guys let me go up there and do that with them.”
Tallarico will get back in the race car at Berlin for championship night on September 7. He’s hopeful to have the 1,000 signatures needed for iRacing by then and maybe work can be done this offseason.
If so, the “iRacing nerd” can use his hobby to get better on his new home track, and show the rest of the racing world what they’re missing.
“I’ve not really raced at many tracks on iRacing at all that I’ve actually had the opportunity to go and race them in real life,” he said. “I think it would be a great tuning tool, definitely for myself, but the other drivers as well.
“So yes, it would help me immensely to have the sim at my house where I can just get on there and run a couple hundred laps every single night, because I would. I’m that nerd. But at the same time it would be cool to just give that opportunity to the people that are at home and let them get on there and kind of play around with it and see how cool Berlin actually is.”
The No. 48 Big Machine Racing team was hit with an L1-level penalty after findings from pre-race inspection last weekend at Michigan International Speedway.
The Chevrolet, driven by Parker Kligerman, was found to have violated sections 14.4.10.A of the NASCAR Rule Book, which deals with modifications to the rear spoiler. Stated in section 10.5.2.2.A&B of the Rule Book, L1-level penalties include team-sourced parts not meeting the NASCAR Rule Book, failure to meet minimum weight post-race or failure to submit and receive approval of parts.
Kligerman and the No. 48 team were docked 20 driver and owner points and five NASCAR playoff points. Crew chief Patrick Donahue was fined $25,000.
The team left Michigan 36 points above the Xfinity Series Playoffs elimination, but the penalty decreases the gap to 16 points ahead of Friday evening’s race at Daytona International Speedway (7:30 ET, USA, NBC Sports App, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). There are five races remaining in the 2024 regular season.
Corey Heim and Christian Eckes enjoy some separation from the rest of the field as the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series enters its seven-race postseason. Between them, the two drivers have won half of the regular-season races, and they sit 1-2 in the reseeded points — Heim first as a five-time winner with a stockpile of playoff points, and Eckes tucked behind him as a three-time victor but with a bonus points haul as the Regular Season Champion.
A third driver’s recent surge has made it a trio at the top, and for Ty Majeski, there’s extra motivation in opening the playoffs strong.
NASCAR playoffs season officially gets underway this weekend as the Craftsman Truck Series heads to The Milwaukee Mile for Sunday’s Liuna! 175 (4 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM). It’s anybody’s race among the 10-driver field, but Majeski has some serious headway as the winner of the series’ last two races (Indianapolis Raceway Park, Richmond). The setting for Sunday’s first playoff race of 2024 also holds some home-state appeal.
Majeski hails from Seymour, Wisconsin — just outside of Green Bay and nearly a two-hour drive north from Milwaukee. So while there’s some sentimental value in keeping his performance rolling in front of a partisan home crowd, the 30-year-old driver of the No. 98 ThorSport Racing Ford is still aiming to thrust his name into the conversation with Heim and Eckes as title favorites when the season concludes Nov. 8 at Phoenix Raceway.
“I think we’re one of those top three contenders for sure, especially coming off these two wins,” Majeski said during Tuesday’s rounds of media interviews at Craftsman Truck Series Media Day. “I think we’re probably carrying the most momentum in the series right now. I feel like maybe our valleys have been a little bit lower than the 19 (Eckes) and the 11 (Heim), but I feel like our peaks have been similar, so as long as we can just peak at the right time and keep this momentum going, there’s no reason why we can’t be a competitor when we get to Phoenix, hopefully. So I feel good about where we’re at. Our team is in a really good spot, working really well together right now. Obviously, coming off two wins is a huge deal. Our 98 team always seems to peak right about playoff time, so yeah, we’re ready for another good playoff run.”
Heim, Eckes and Majeski are all returning drivers to the postseason field, and Heim enters as the No. 1 seed on the grid for the second consecutive year. The rest of the field includes three first-time playoff qualifiers in Rajah Caruth, Daniel Dye and Taylor Gray, and other returning vets in two-time and defending champion Ben Rhodes, and multi-time qualifiers Tyler Ankrum, Grant Enfinger and Nick Sanchez.
Heim, 22, made the Championship 4 field last season and started from the pole position in the Phoenix finale before his race unraveled in a bumping contest with fellow title contender Carson Hocevar. He returned this year to the No. 11 Tricon Garage team and has already doubled his career win total in the regular season. He’s been in near-lockstep with Eckes, who is in his second year with the McAnally-Hilgemann Racing No. 19 group and who he perceives as one of his most formidable foes in the seven races ahead.
“I think the 19 has been really good. Especially in the last few weeks, he’s been putting up a lot of points,” Heim says. “It kind of reminds me of my season last year, where he may not have gotten the wins that he may have deserved throughout the year, but they’ve been just lights-out consistent and in contention every single week. I feel like we’ve been really good, too. We’ve had our good days and we’ve had our great days, and our good days are typically right around the top five, and our great days we typically can lead a lot of laps and win the race. So I think for us, it’s just about making all of our days great days in the playoffs. We’ve only got two rounds, and it all goes by pretty quick. They’ve kind of already checked that box, as long as they keep it going. I think we’ve got maybe a little bit of work to do to make sure every single race is great.”
Eckes’ consistency this year has been noteworthy. The 23-year-old ace has registered top-three finishes in each of the last five races, and his regular-season record reflects that he’s finished among the top 10 in all but one of the 16 events so far.
The sticking point for Eckes has been clearing a nagging hurdle to reach the final four, and he’s come agonizingly close the last two seasons. In a bitter irony, his title eligibility had already expired when he won last year’s Phoenix finale. Asked what would be key to reaching the championship-race goal, Eckes managed some self-deprecating laughter.
“Not choke in the Round of 8? That’s a fair assessment,” Eckes cracked. “I’ve done that the last two years, so yeah, just execution. That’s our biggest thing is just to work on is execution. I feel like we’ve done a better job of being consistent in executing this year, so I feel like we’re more than capable to go do it. We’ve just got to go do it.”
Only one former champion is in the postseason field: Rhodes, who qualified as the ninth of 10 drivers. The ThorSport racer’s statistics have sagged this year, and he’s aiming to extend his streak to five consecutive seasons with a win in the races that remain. A factor that stokes his optimism is his experience; this season marks his seventh playoff appearance, the most of any title-eligible driver.
“Just the fact that we’ve done it. I think that’s going to tell us we can do it again, and I don’t mean that rude in any way, it’s just that we have the blueprint,” said Rhodes, who reached the 200-start milestone earlier this year. “We’ve done it twice, and we’ve done it when our backs’ been against the wall. We’ve done it when we’ve had to get in on tiebreakers, where we had to do crazy strategy, and we’d get in on a point. We’ve been put through the crucible, we’ve gone through the wringer, and somehow we’ve found a way to still make it to the next round. So I can thoroughly say the pressure doesn’t get to us at all. If we make any mistakes, it’ll just be from sheer incompetence, not from nervousness or feeling any sort of pressure. I can say at the race track now, I feel pretty locked in with all of my guys.”
Enfinger joins Heim and Rhodes as drivers with a shot at returning to the Championship 4 field. Enfinger finished one spot behind eventual champ Rhodes in last year’s curtain-closer at Phoenix, and he’s back in the playoff rotation with a new team this season in CR7 Motorsports.
Enfinger, 39, was a bit slow out of the gates in his first handful of races with the No. 9 Chevrolet group, but since mid-May, the team’s performance has clicked. The Alabama native has top-five finishes in five of the last seven events, including the last three races to close out the regular season. Plus, Enfinger heads to Milwaukee as the defending race winner.
“I think there’s probably more of a confidence level from how our team has performed this middle third of the season,” Enfinger says. “As a driver, you always have tracks that fit your driving style or whatnot. As drivers, our job is to be good at every track we go to, right? But there’s certain ones that just kind of fit your style, and I feel like definitely Milwaukee fits my driving style, so I’m excited from that standpoint. But so much just evolved so quickly in our series and at this level of racing, the advances are continuous. I don’t know if we took everything identical to what we had last year, I don’t know if that would win the race this year. But definitely, from a driver’s standpoint, I’m looking forward to the place.”
With North Carolina’s capital of Raleigh continuing to grow every year, it would be easy for a non-motorsports fan to assume no race track lies within the sprawling city limits.
Yet nestled on Simpkins Road, between Lake Wheeler and U.S. Highway 401, is Wake County Speedway, a hidden gem of a quarter-mile paved oval that has been in operation since it opened as a dirt track in 1962.
One of the people responsible for keeping the gem polished is William Brown, who considers himself the primary handyman of Wake County. When he first assumed his role in 2019, Brown put his vast knowledge as a builder to use by outlining a series of goals he believed would bring Wake County into the modern era.
The process is ongoing, but Brown is more than satisfied with the improvements made to Wake County over the past six years.
“From where I started to where we are now, we’re at about 60-70 percent of what I envisioned this place to be,” Brown said. “We’ve done a lot of heavy lifting working on the infrastructure, and we’re going to do some electrical work once the season ends.
“This is some of the hardest work I’ve ever done, but the fruit of our labor has paid off.”
Were it not for his son Zack, a Legends competitor, Brown likely would have never seen the potential Wake County had to offer.
The two were at the facility on a practice day when Brown came across Charlie Hansen, who had just signed a long-term lease to operate the facility. Having worked at Wake County himself since 1997, Hansen was seeking any kind of assistance on how to maintain the dream started by the track’s original owners in the Simpkins family.
A conversation between Hansen and Brown resulted in the latter officially joining the Wake County staff. A thorough analysis of the facility gave Brown an idea of the undertaking ahead of him, but he was ready to fully commit to Wake County’s modernization.
“It was like stepping in chewing gum and trying to get it off with your other foot,” Brown said. “Then you reach down to grab it and get it all over you. On that day, I said [to Charlie] that I’d help, and I have not quit.”
Weekly racing at Wake County Speedway consists of multiple divisions that include Late Model Stocks, Legends and Bandoleers (pictured above). (Photo: Yem Sanlaeid/NASCAR Regional)
The renovations Brown has overseen at Wake County have been ubiquitous to nearly every aspect of the facility. They range from minor-but-important components like re-plumbing the bathrooms and installing a new sound system to repaving the surface, which stemmed from money received by the North Carolina Motorsports Relief Fund.
A personal project of which Brown is particularly proud is the restoration of the inside wall at Turn 2. Prior to Brown’s arrival, the inner barrier was comprised of used telephone poles that frequently caused significant damage to cars that hit them.
With a limited amount of funding at their disposal, Brown and Hansen had to get creative with their approach to the wall. The solution ended up being a replacement of the poles with repurposed, high-pressure gas lines Hansen happened to discover by pure chance.
“Charlie spotted some pipe on his way to Southern National [Motorsports Park] one day,” Brown said. “He sent me a picture and said ‘what do you think about this?’. I said I would check it out. It took me two days to get to the right person, and they said to come get all we wanted.
“It was their trash, but our treasure.”
Once Brown got the gas lines installed, he had them painted yellow to match the rest of the retaining walls around Wake County. At the beginning of the gas line barrier is one of the old telephone poles, which Brown kept in place as a reminder of all the progress made.
While Brown stays occupied with new projects at Wake County, Hansen is equally busy ensuring the facility still thrives from a presentation perspective. He wants the facility to be family friendly and has organized special kid-themed events such as quarter-mile marathons, bike races for children and candy drops.
Taking care of the drivers is another part of Hansen’s plan. With costs continuing to rise throughout motorsports, Hansen stressed the importance of minimizing the financial strain on his competitors so that car counts can stay reasonable every week.
“Our tire program is probably one of the least expensive in the country,” Hansen said. “We do a lease program where we give the competitors the tires at cost, and they turn them back in at the end of the night. We then re-lease the tires back. We try to do everything we can to keep the expense down.”
Maintaining healthy fields is a constant battle for Hansen amidst an always dynamic industry, but his policies have earned Wake County a loyal group of regulars across all its divisions. Among them is Clay Jones, the current Late Model Stock points leader who is chasing his fifth track championship.
Jones’ father and grandfather both turned plenty of laps at Wake County during their respective careers, so it only made sense for him to continue the family tradition starting in the late 2000s. Many changes have befallen Wake County since Jones’ first race, such as the track receiving NASCAR sanctioning in 2020, yet he believes the facility is currently enjoying one of its best eras.
The diligence of Hansen and his staff to promote the hard-nosed action associated with Wake County is why Jones believes packed grandstands are a constant. He does not recall a single evening this decade when Wake County was nowhere near full capacity.
“When Charlie and all those guys took over, they put extra effort in to get the word out,” Jones said. “A lot of people in Raleigh don’t even know there’s a race track right here less than 10 minutes from downtown. Once people come for the first time and enjoy it, they come back.”
One of the local heroes at Wake County Speedway is Clay Jones, who has four championships in the Late Model Stock class. (Photo: Yem Sanlaeid/NASCAR Regional)
Spreading the word about Wake County and its vibrant culture is something Jones believes will be imperative toward the track’s longevity, especially since the urbanization of Raleigh is spreading right to the track’s doorstep.
A neighborhood has been developed less than a quarter mile away, right off Simpkins Rd. More houses are being built in the subdivision every week, meaning it will be imperative for Wake County to maintain a sound reputation with noise ordinances.
Hansen said established legal precedents provide Wake County some protection from the encroaching urbanization, but he’s also doing everything feasible to co-exist with his new neighbors. Other tracks have lived on through similar scenarios; Hansen is confident Wake County will do the same.
“There’s definitely a delicate balance being that we’re five miles away from skyscrapers just like Richmond [Raceway],” Hansen said. “We try to be a good neighbor, be finished by 11 p.m. ET and not start any engines before 11 a.m. ET. We try to minimize the noise as much as we can, but we’ve been here 62 years. They might want to call their realtor, not the race track.”
An increase in residents near the track presents an opportunity for them to learn more about Wake County and why Jones, along with so many others, consider the track to be so special.
For Jones, Wake County’s influence on motorsports is immeasurable with names like Benny Parsons, Ken Schrader, Dennis Setzer and others all having turned laps there. He added the sense of community and the exciting weekly action only further showcase the impact Wake County continues to have on short-track racing in the modern era.
“There’s non-stop excitement [at Wake County],” Jones said. “You go to these bigger tracks, and everybody gets in a line. It’s boring, but you can take five cars out here, no matter what class, and it’s going to be a good show. Something is going to happen. The track itself promotes good racing.
“Everybody helps each other and works together, so this is a great thing we have going and hopefully it keeps going for a long time.”
With a focus on being friendly to both fans and drivers, Wake County Speedway looks to achieve long-term sustainability amidst encroaching urbanization. (Photo: Bryan Regan/Wake County Speedway
Brown plans to keep doing his part to maintain Wake County’s momentum. His next big project involves improving sightlines by removing the overhead wires on the frontstretch and helping install a video board for fans to watch the FloRacing broadcasts at the track.
There have been many long days for Brown as Wake County’s handyman, but he has considered the experience rewarding in numerous regards. Numerous people have approached Brown to express their satisfaction about Wake County and how the renovations have made the facility more friendly for fans and spectators alike.
Looking back on the last several years, Brown can not help but be proud of what Wake County has turned into. The final version of Brown’s outline has yet to materialize, but he takes pride in knowing he played a crucial role in revitalizing one of North Carolina’s longest-running short tracks.
“I thought Wake County was a diamond in the rough that needed some polishing,” Brown said. “The more we polish it, the more results we get with kind remarks about what people are seeing. My goal was to make the people who came here happy. When I do something, I set my bar really high, and we try to keep everyone pumped.
“It’s a rock and roll thing. You have to dream on and dream until your dreams come true.”
Brown’s dream of a thriving Wake County did come to fruition. When his work is complete, all he hopes for is to see that passion sustained for generations of motorsports fans and drivers to enjoy.