The NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series returns to action Friday night with the Rackley Roofing 200 at Nashville Superspeedway (8 p.m. ET, FS2, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) – the first race for the series since June 1 when Tricon Garage driver Corey Heim claimed his season-leading fourth win of the year.

That victory moved him within 31 points of championship leader McAnally-Hilgemann Racing’s Christian Eckes and placed him 22 points ahead of third-place Rev Racing’s Nick Sanchez with only four regular season races remaining to set the 10-driver playoff field.

MORE: Truck Series standings | Nashville schedule

Eckes, Heim, Sanchez and Rajah Caruth are the only championship-eligible drivers with wins and automatic playoff bids to date.

None of the series championship contenders have ever won a Truck Series race on the 1.33-mile Nashville oval. Cup Series rookies Carson Hocevar and Zane Smith finished 1-2 last year with Sanchez in third place after winning pole position and leading 37 of the 150 laps. Heim was fourth.

Eckes, with wins at Bristol and Martinsville earlier this season, didn’t lead a lap at Nashville last year and finished 23rd after being involved in two accidents in the race’s closing laps. The 23-year-old New York native does bring an impressive statistic to Nashville, however.

At tracks measuring between 1.25-1.5 miles – like the 1.33-mile Nashville oval – Eckes is a perfect 6-for-6 in top-10 finishes; four of those have been top-five efforts. He was runner-up to Heim at the 1.25-mile World Wide Technology Raceway.

Friday marks the conclusion of the exciting Triple Truck Challenge with $50,000 to a new race winner or $150,000 paid to either Sanchez (Charlotte) or Heim (Gateway) – winners of the first two races in the incentive program.

Of note, popular NASCAR on FOX broadcaster Clint Bowyer will make his first race start since retiring from full-time NASCAR competition in 2020. A race winner in all three of NASCAR’s national series, Bowyer will steer the No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet in Friday night’s contest.

Popular Hollywood actor-turned-stock car driver Frankie Muniz is hoping to make his Truck Series debut this weekend in the No. 22 Reaume Brothers Racing Ford. Former Motocross star, Japanese racer Akinori Ogata, 50, is also hoping to make the field, driving the No. 20 Young’s Motorsports Chevrolet.

There have been 13 different winners in the 16 Truck Series races at Nashville. The pole winner has hoisted the trophy seven times.

Practice is Friday at 4:30 p.m. ET, with qualifying following at 5 p.m. ET. Both sessions will be televised on FS2.

Florence Motor Speedway has seen more than 20 drivers compete in the track’s Mini Stocks division this season, and even though the competition is stiffer than in year’s past, the same name is still at the top of the division’s standings.

Matt Briggs is the two-time and defending Mini Stocks champion at Florence, a NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series track in Timmonsville, South Carolina. He’s been the model of consistency throughout his career, a trend that has continued this summer. With three wins and eight top fives in eight races, Briggs currently leads the track standings by 28 points.

Briggs has seen other drivers improve over the last three years, which drives him to get better himself.

“The competitors definitely got faster compared to last year,” Briggs said. “The competition is definitely stiffer than what it was the year before. I feel like everyone worked on their stuff and got better.

“One thing that keeps me motivated is everyone else getting better and closer now.”

Briggs came into this weekend 34th in the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division IV national points standings.

The South Carolinian grew up around the race track. His dad was a regular at South Carolina’s Summerville Speedway. When he was young, Briggs would go with his dad to practice on Wednesdays and races on Saturdays, and ever since, “I’ve been hooked to it,” Briggs said. “So he inspired me to do this.”

Briggs ran his first race when he was 12. After just racing here and there for a while, about five years ago he decided to get into the sport full-time. He won his first title at Florence in 2018. He won another at Myrtle Beach Speedway in 2020, then returned to his home track where he was again champion in 2022 and 2023.

“Within the last five years or so, we’d go get a car and just work on it and try to get a little better with it,” he said. “Then we got better equipment over the years. We started off small, and I feel like now we have pretty decent equipment… We do all right for what we have.”

It’s a family operation for the Briggs Motorsports team. Briggs’ brother, Shane, also competes in Florence’s Mini Stocks, while their dad, Douglas, helps both of them with their cars.

They race out of a small shop at Briggs’ home.

Matt Briggs
Matt Briggs celebrated his third track championship in the Mini Stock class at Florence Motor Speedway in 2023. (Photo: Florence Motor Speedway)

“It is hard,” he said. “I feel like we’re more of the underdog team, you know? It’s just me, my pops, and my little brother … And we race against some guys that they’ve got a lot of support from a lot of big, big companies. And I feel like we do pretty well for what we’re working with.”

Briggs tries to be a mentor to his younger brother, who got his first win earlier this season.

It’s Shane, however, who has been the teacher and coach on the Briggs family team.

“He’s definitely helped me with like our tires and teaching me to not be scared to try different things,” Briggs said of his brother. “He does a lot of iRacing, so he’s pretty good with like the tire side of that. He understands it, I feel like, a little more than me. So he’s definitely helped me with the tire selection and placement and tire size and stuff like that. He’s definitely helped me improve on that side of my racing.”

Getting to work with family is why Briggs enjoys racing so much. They all three spend a lot of time together, and Briggs said, “We have a ball doing it.”

He’s racing for a third straight title this year for his dad.

“It would mean a lot, especially because I know my dad. That’s the main reason I’m doing it is for him,” Briggs said. “I just want to make him proud, and I know that doing that would.”

This year’s title will be anything but easy as the second half of the season heats up, but if there’s anyone who knows how to win at Florence it’s Briggs. No matter who they’re up against, he’s ready to take on any competitor who comes his way.

“I feel like those guys got a lot of support this year and we’re kind of in the same old spot where we’ve been, but it is a very rewarding feeling,” he said.

“You’ve just got to be consistent. Even if you’re not the fastest that week, you’ve just got to make the best of it and don’t give up, and it’s never over until the checkered flag waves. Anything can happen.”

Briggs thanked his sponsor, Smok’n Meats and BBQ, for the support this season.

Racing will return to Florence on Saturday with two Limited Late Models races, SC Vintage, Mini Stocks, Chargers, and Thunder & Lightning, all beginning at 7 p.m.

Kyle Busch is a two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion, the winningest NASCAR national series driver in history and one of the greatest talents to ever climb behind the wheel of a race car. You don’t earn that reputation without the me-against-the-world attitude Busch has carried with him throughout his career — and along with it, the determination to rise above adversity again and again.

But the stretch run of the 2024 regular season might be Busch’s biggest test yet. Sitting 17th in the standings — tracking to be his lowest placement since 2005 — and 45 points out of the last playoff spot, Busch is in real danger of missing the postseason. The good news? He’s always broken out of slumps before, with a vengeance. And he’ll have a few prime opportunities coming up at tracks where he always excels. However, before the turnaround can begin, Busch simply needs to stop the skid.

It’s hard to think of a Cup Series driver who’s had a more miserable May and June. Starting on May 12 with a 27th-place showing at Darlington, Busch has zero top 10s with four finishes outside the top 25 in his past six races — including crossing the line 35th in three of the past four events. He’s lacked pace some weeks, and even when he hasn’t (such as Gateway, where he led 15 laps), he’s wrecked out or otherwise suffered mechanical failures. At New Hampshire, a frustrated Busch ended one of the worst days of his career by wrecking from 30th place on the pace laps before the rain-delay restart, leaving his No. 8 car to be towed off track.

Statistically, this has been the worst year of Busch’s career so far. In fact, it’s the only full season of his career in which he’s been a below-average Cup Series driver, according to my Adjusted Points+ Index metric — which gives points to drivers for their finishes in each race, then compares their per-race performance to the average driver (scaling everything such that average is 100, while a rating of 120 is 20% better than average, etc.):

Busch is so great that even in the worst season of his career (with a Pts+ index of 95), he still rates better than 18 full-time Cup drivers. This is what made Busch’s comment to Ricky Stenhouse Jr. after their fight at the All-Star Race — “I suck just as bad as you!” — so telling: Busch has, in fact, been significantly better than Stenhouse by Pts+. But his standards for success are just that much higher — which makes Busch’s recent slump all the more frustrating.

Within his worst season, the past six races also rank among the worst stretches of Busch’s long career. The only six-race spans in which he had a lower Pts+ index than his current 46 mark since Darlington were the first six races of his career, as a 19-year-old in part-time duty with Hendrick Motorsports in 2004; a slump to close out the 2014 regular season that saw him drop from No. 6 to No. 17 in the points ahead of the playoffs (though he still qualified); and a stretch late in 2022 that got him knocked out in the first round of the playoffs — and coincided with the news that he would be departing from Joe Gibbs Racing after the season.

One of the great testaments to Busch’s fortitude as a driver, though, is how he responded after each of those slumps.

At the start of 2005, Busch set the tone early with a second-place finish at Las Vegas and ended up being named the Cup Series Rookie of the Year, finishing with the third-best Pts+ index (133) of any driver in a season at age 20 or younger. (Only Chase Elliott in 2016 and Joey Logano in 2010 were better.) In 2014, he rattled off five straight top 10s to start the playoffs, making the second round and looking good to advance further until Austin Dillon rear-ended him at Talladega. And in 2022, Busch closed out his Gibbs tenure strong with four top 10s in his final five races.

Among the 10 worst six-race slumps of Busch’s career before 2024, the only one in which he didn’t have at least an above-average (if not far better) showing over the next six races came in the middle of 2022, a stretch that led into another, even worse slump a few races later. But overall, Busch tended to improve his Pts+ by a remarkable 245% in the six races that followed the rough patches on our list above.

Will history repeat itself this year? Looking at the next six races on the calendar, which will take us most of the way through the end of the regular season, Busch’s best bets are on July 14 at Pocono  (where he’s a four-time winner), the Brickyard on July 21 (where he’s won twice with 12 top 10s in 16 starts) and Richmond on Aug. 11 — a place where he’s won six times and has an average finish of 7.4, best among all active drivers.

And though it’s a small sample, Busch finished fifth at the Chicago Street Course in its debut last year. It’s also worth noting that Busch ranks fourth among active drivers in career Pts+ (175) at road/street courses, trailing only road-course king Chase Elliott (234), reigning Chicago winner Shane van Gisbergen (198 in a 3-race sample) and Tyler Reddick (177).

In other words, there is no shortage of stops on the upcoming schedule where Busch has had a lot of success in the past. And while he may be in the middle of one of the most trying stretches of his career right now, Busch has a knack for making fans forget about those struggles in a hurry.

Because if the NASCAR world has learned anything over the years, it’s this: Betting against Kyle Busch is usually a very bad idea, whether he’s mired in a slump or not.

Neil Paine is a freelance writer whose work also appears at ESPN.com, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Sherwood News and Substack. He is the former Sports Editor at FiveThirtyEight, and was also a consultant for the NBA’s Atlanta Hawks.

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y – Three of the premier road-course competitors in the NASCAR Cup Series – Tyler Reddick, Daniel Suárez and Austin Cindric – took to the historic twists and turns of Watkins Glen International on Wednesday as part of a two-day Goodyear tire test.

The goal of the test is to find the perfect tire setup when NASCAR returns to the famed road course in September for the facility’s first playoff race. Unlike the 2023 season, Goodyear is trying different tire combinations at road-course events in 2024. The tire combination change began earlier this month at Sonoma Raceway. The freshly repaved track had a different tire combination than the previous road-course tire that last ran at Circuit of The Americas in late March.

Goodyear provided the teams with six different tire compounds to complete seven-lap runs. Two of the compounds were used in races at COTA and Sonoma earlier this season, and Goodyear also brought four developmental compounds to the track.

“I had a least favorite; I didn’t have a favorite,” Cindric said of the tires during the test. “I came in after four laps when I was supposed to do eight.”

RELATED: Cup standings

Both Reddick and Suárez looped around during the seven-hour session that got cut one hour short because of rain.

One change to the 11-turn course that caused a challenge was the elimination of the curbing entering the inner loop. The force took a toll on drivers’ bodies last season, so NASCAR elected to get rid of the additional curbing. Drivers wore mouthpiece sensors and ear accelerometers to collect numbers from the impact during the test.

“It’s definitely a lot better in the car,” Cindric said of the entry to the inner loop. “There was quite a big ramp, quite high speed. The cars can still take it, but the fleshy body of water inside the car struggles with that. I don’t think it’s going to affect the racing a whole lot, but it’s way better inside the car.”

The inner loop was also the location of one of Reddick’s spins.

“I had a fun day,” Reddick said with a conspicuous laugh. “I somehow kept my car in one piece, but I spun out a lot and tried to hit a lot of things. Today was a handful for us.”

All three drivers believe they will provide better feedback following Thursday’s session, which will feature 20-lap runs. With a longer run on each set of tires, it will give Goodyear more data points to lean in one direction.

“I do think [Thursday] is going to be more productive with the longer runs,” Suárez said. “There is only so much you can learn with six to eight laps. This was good. It’s always fun to come back here to Watkins Glen. The bus stop is quite different, so we’re learning on that. We were able to make a couple of adjustments in the bus stop, maybe in Turn 1. I think we’re making progress.”

With limited track time throughout race weekends, all three playoff drivers are going to take advantage of the additional laps at Watkins Glen. That has paid off in recent months with Joey Logano leading 199 of 200 laps in last month’s All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway after participating in a Goodyear test there earlier this season.

And the fact that Watkins Glen is a playoff track makes the added track time that much more important.

“I think it’s important for the series, but it’s a great opportunity for all three of us,” Cindric said. “This is a playoff track, all three of us are locked into the playoffs. I would be lying if I told you it wasn’t valuable to just get laps out here and give us an opportunity to have an idea of what to expect. We will try to maximize that opportunity, but at the same time provide the right feedback to Goodyear.”

By spinning twice during the opening day of the test, Reddick didn’t get a great read for when the series will return in September.

“Track time is important, which is what I think made today frustrating for us,” Reddick said. “We’ve had a number of issues that have kept us off track, and when we’ve been on track, we’ve spun and not gotten full tire runs in.

“I’m hoping tomorrow that I can learn more, our team can learn more, but the main part of this entire test is to try and help Goodyear figure out what the path is to put a tire together that isn’t going to be soft or go too drastic one way or another on balance but have more fall off.”

Xfinity Series drivers Jesse Love and Ryan Sieg participated in the test as well, and John Hunter Nemechek piloted a Sam Hunt Racing entry. The series’ session was cut even shorter than the Cup Series’ when Love wrecked early in the afternoon.

Here’s what’s happening in the world of NASCAR with New Hampshire Motor Speedway in the rearview and Nashville Superspeedway (Sun., 3:30 p.m. ET, NBC) right around the corner.

THE LINEUP ️

1️⃣ Imagine that — Christopher Bell back in title-favorite picture

2️⃣ Not in the provisional playoff field yet? You might need to win

3️⃣ Chase Briscoe’s pathway to Joe Gibbs Racing, Coach’s courting

4️⃣ Drivers to beat this weekend — on the surface

5️⃣ Catch the pack — news and notes from around the garage

christopher bell celebrates at new hampshire
Jonathan Bachman | Getty Images

1. Imagine that — Christopher Bell back in title-favorite picture

Christopher Bell just grabbed the New Hampshire weekend by its claws and inserted himself full throttle into the championship favorites tier. 

Sorry to spoil the surprise, but Christopher Bell might just be your 2024 championship favorite.

For those who watched ‘NASCAR: Full Speed‘ on Netflix (and if you haven’t, what are you waiting for?), you’ll know that the reserved No. 20 driver tends to get a little slept on in favor of the more boisterous personalities among NASCAR’s perennial contenders.

Of every driver in the NASCAR Cup Series at the moment, however, there’s but one who can boast (though he wouldn’t) back-to-back Championship 4 appearances the past two years — and he just won his third race of 2024, a mere 18 weeks into the season. At the more micro level, Bell also has the longest current top-10 streak in 2024 with five straight finishes of ninth or better — two of which were wins — with the next closest driver having just two consecutive top 10s.

For whatever reason, the No. 20 driver often is not brought up immediately as a championship favorite in preseason conversations as the winter chatter of late generally centers around drivers like Kyle Larson, Chase Elliott, Joey Logano and Ryan Blaney. Even Bell’s teammates Denny Hamlin and Martin Truex Jr., who combine for 38 full-time seasons to his five — collectively have just one more Cup title than the Oklahoma native. When Bell won the Coca-Cola 600 — one of NASCAR’s most revered races — for the first time last month, even that got overshadowed by the rain-shortened nature of the victory and Larson’s frustrating day attempting the Indy/Charlotte double and subsequent waiver drama.

After the weekend we just saw, where he was the center of attention at the “Magic Mile” for literally three days straight, this feels like the moment he’s emerged as one of the sport’s true megastars. (Not to mention, he makes a pretty decent press conference moderator.)

Bell’s development into a lethal Cup Series contender capable of scraping together double-digit wins in a season hasn’t come as a surprise to one person who’s been behind him every step of the way since his 2017 Xfinity Series debut for the team — Coach Joe Gibbs.

“I just think Christopher … he’s gifted, and the further he goes, we all just really appreciate it. I think he’s a real talented, young guy,” Gibbs said after Bell put on a show to win the New Hampshire race on wet-weather tires. “To be truthful, with him not in (the media center), I’ll tell you, he’s the All-American guy. Sponsors love him. He’s just a kid that everybody loves. So it’s great to see him, too, get the success that I think he deserves. He’s worked hard. He came in (to the Cup Series) during COVID. He got in cars without making a lap that first year and went through all of that. So I really appreciate that.

” … I think he’s gaining confidence as he goes. It’s great to see a young guy like that, that really and truly deserves it. So it’s a thrill for us to be a part of it, and I joked with people. I said, ‘We can ride him for 20 years.’ ”

Twenty-year talents at one premier organization — that’s rare. That’s Hamlin, Jeff Gordon territory right there. And it truly doesn’t feel out of place for Gibbs to set that high of a bar for Bell — it feels quite evident JGR’s long-term foundation has been mostly set, with Bell, Ty Gibbs and newcomer Chase Briscoe continuing to sharpen under the veteran Hamlin’s tutelage until he’s ready to pass the baton to whoever winds up being the final piece of the puzzle for the Toyota-backed organization’s next decade-plus.

And down the line when the 43-year-old Hamlin does eventually exit the building, it’s obvious whose name will ring out as the team’s new de facto leader.

nashville pylon with fireworks
Logan Riely | Getty Images

2. Not in the provisional playoff field yet? You might need to win
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From this point on in the season, it’s historically been difficult for drivers below the elimination line to race their way into the playoffs on points.

In the history of the NASCAR Playoffs format, the steepest points deficit a driver has overcome with eight or fewer regular-season races remaining is … three.

Read that again, because I couldn’t believe it myself.

It’s actually only been accomplished a total of five times, period — all from a standings position no deeper than 17th at this point. Bubba Wallace was the last one to do it — last year — when he was in a three-point hole with seven to go. After a frustrating end to his New Hampshire race, Wallace is once again the 17th-place driver in the playoff standings, meaning that if he were to carve out a 2024 playoff spot on points, it would be by far the largest hole ever climbed out of at this point, and it’s a modest 13 points.

In other words, historically speaking, the only true remaining path to the playoffs for any driver currently below the elimination line at this point is a trip to Victory Lane.

Anything can happen in NASCAR, and we’ve already seen two mildly surprising winners in the Cup Series this year so far, but looking at the rest of the hopefuls, it’s tough to see any likely to win over the next eight races. Of the 14 drivers in the top 30 currently outside the playoffs, they have 14 total top-five finishes — combined.

Of course, one of those drivers is No. 8 Richard Childress Racing driver Kyle Busch, who has won at least one race in each of the previous 19 seasons. He’s probably the one you look at the hardest, but the two-time Cup champ is also riding a career-long winless streak and is currently mired in a truly dismal last month of races. RCR announced a shakeup to its competition department on Tuesday afternoon, however, which could potentially be a shot in the arm over the final two months of the regular season.

Rowdy is one of seven full-time drivers to win in 2023 and has yet to take a checkered flag in ’24, but one of just three that aren’t in the provisional playoff field, along with Michael McDowell and Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

Team Penske’s Joey Logano was also part of this club before New Hampshire, but he leaped over Wallace with 22 points to No. 23’s total of three despite finishing just two spots higher in the running order. (Stage points matter, friends.)

All that said, this does feel like the kind of year where this trend could be broken. We’ve already seen two of the closest finishes in the history of the sport in one season, so who’s to say another record-breaking moment isn’t right around the corner?

There are certainly some interesting tracks on the horizon with a lot of unknowns, all of them almost entirely different, as well. Here’s what’s left:

Nashville Superspeedway: 1.333 concrete oval
Chicago Street Course: 2.2 mile, 12-turn street course
Pocono Raceway: 2.5 mile “Tricky Triangle”
Indianapolis Motor Speedway: a return to the 2.5-mile oval after a few years running the infield road course
Richmond Raceway: 0.75-mile short track
Michigan International Speedway: 2-mile high-speed oval
Daytona International Speedway: 2.5-mile high-banked drafting track
Darlington Raceway: 1.366 egg-shaped oval

You can’t say those tracks aren’t full of opportunities. It’s just going to come down to who’s going to make the most of them.

3. Chase Briscoe’s pathway to Joe Gibbs Racing, Coach’s courting

On Stacking Pennies with Corey LaJoie, Chase Briscoe details how his contract with Joe Gibbs Racing came to be and his talks with other teams.

4. Drivers to beat this weekend — on the surface

See the active drivers with wins on the series’ three current concrete-surfaced tracks. Does this provide an edge for these drivers, or will they have to dig deeper?

DriverBristolDoverNashvilleTotal
Kyle Busch83-11
Brad Keselowski31-4
Martin Truex Jr.-4-4
Denny Hamlin42-6
Kyle Larson1113
Chase Elliott-213
Joey Logano2--2
Alex Bowman-1-1
Chris Buescher1--1
Ross Chastain--11

5. Catch the pack — news and notes from around the garage

Paint Scheme Preview: Nashville

NASCAR betting: Opening odds for Nashville

Chase Briscoe to join Joe Gibbs Racing in 2025 on multiyear deal

Christopher Bell officially announces Chase Briscoe to Joe Gibbs Racing

Kyle Larson assesses Joe Gibbs Racing’s lineup after Chase Briscoe addition

Andy Petree retires from RCR effective immediately; Keith Rodden named interim competition director

Penalty report: Xfinity Series crew member suspended for axle infraction at New Hampshire

Late-race collision foils Ryan Blaney, Michael McDowell at New Hampshire

HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. — Chase Briscoe will be a Joe Gibbs Racing driver beginning in 2025.

That much is not news anymore, not after Tuesday’s press conference introducing Briscoe at the team’s headquarters. And if we’re honest, it hasn’t quite been “news” since at least last Friday, when Christopher Bell slipped up and tipped the team’s hand in a New Hampshire media availability.

But even after the official announcement in JGR’s auditorium, with direct quotes and reactions from Joe Gibbs, Briscoe and crew chief James Small, the story of Briscoe’s rise to fill the most sought-after seat this Silly Season and replace outgoing champion Martin Truex Jr. seems unbelievable.

MORE: Bell officially introduces Briscoe at JGR

The disbelief does not stem from a lack of confidence in Briscoe’s abilities or credentials — the 29-year-old is a 14-time winner across NASCAR’s three national series and has displayed his winning capabilities throughout his stock-car racing tenure. Rather, it originates from just how unlikely Briscoe’s entire career has been.

It’s so unfathomable, in fact, that even Briscoe has trouble wrapping his mind around it.

“Just the whole thing, right? Like to be driving for Joe Gibbs,” Briscoe said in amazement. “It’s funny. We do our pre-race prep every single week and they have the stats like where everybody stacks up, and I feel like every week it’s the 19 car is the best car. And I’m just in the back of my mind like, man, that’s gonna be the car I get to drive next year. So that’s super cool, right?”

Super.

The circumstances that led Briscoe to NASCAR’s uppermost echelon start where most unbelievable stories begin: Facebook.

After scrolling upon an advertisement back in 2013, Briscoe applied for and became a finalist in the PEAK Stock Car Dream Challenge, a contest that provided entrants with the opportunity to “compete for a chance to join Michael Waltrip Racing as a rookie stock-car driver.” Among those involved in coaching applicants were MWR’s Cup drivers Clint Bowyer, Mark Martin, Brian Vickers, and Truex, who was then piloting the team’s No. 56 Toyota.

Thus, after years of racing dirt micro 600cc cars and sprint cars, Briscoe’s journey to NASCAR was sparked.

“I had nothing going on,” Briscoe recalled. “We had blown our sprint car engine really early in the year. My dad was like, ‘Look, we’re not gonna be able to go race. You need to figure something out.’ I was on Facebook and saw this PEAK Stock Car Dream Challenge thing and signed up for it. Didn’t follow any of the guidelines, somehow got picked for it, and that was the whole reason I ever moved to North Carolina.

“Because when I came down here, that was my first time driving pavement, driving a stock car, any of that. And Ty Norris was the GM of Michael Waltrip Racing and pulled me in his office at the end of it and said, ‘Hey, look. If you’re serious about this, you need to move down here (to Charlotte) because I really think that if you ever did get the opportunity, you could do it.’ ”

Eleven years later, that same Facebook scroller — then an 18-year-old with no clue what awaited him — is now the 29-year-old heir to Truex’s championship-caliber car in the NASCAR Cup Series for Joe Gibbs Racing, one of the sport’s most elite programs.

RELATED: The drivers who have earned JGR’s 214 Cup wins

Of course, there’s another tie from those formative years still integrally connected to all of this: Christopher Bell.

“If it wasn’t for Christopher, I don’t know if I’d even be in NASCAR, period,” Briscoe said.

Hyperbolic as it may sound, Briscoe might be right. He and Bell are just two Midwestern kids who love racing. That common bond connected them from the jump.

“I’ve known Christopher since I was probably 12 years old, I want to say,” Briscoe explained. “We started racing online together and just kind of formed this friendship and then lived together for a little bit.”

Chase Brisoce and Christopher Bell speak ahead of a NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race in 2017.
Robert Laberge | Getty Images

Those days as roommates 10 years ago resulted in Bell’s first helping hand toward Briscoe’s budding career.

“Back in 2015, I want to say it was, (Bell) had called me and said that Roush Fenway had offered him a deal for development driver and he wasn’t going to take it,” Briscoe recalled. “So I got the name from him and walked in the front door at Roush Fenway and said, ‘Hey, I need to talk to this guy.’ Somehow got a meeting and that was the whole meeting that really started me ever even getting an opportunity at Cunningham Motorsports.”

That connection to Cunningham Motorsports, a small team in the ARCA Menards Series, propelled Briscoe from a road trip home to Indiana, ready to give up his NASCAR aspirations, instead to the radar of everyone else in American stock-car racing. In his first full-time season driving Cunningham’s No. 77 Ford, Briscoe won six of 20 races in a dominant campaign to win the 2016 ARCA championship. And one year later, he was driving full-time in the Craftsman Truck Series for Brad Keselowski Racing, earning his first NASCAR win in the 2017 season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

A piecemeal Xfinity schedule in 2018 resulted in a Briscoe win at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course that October with Stewart-Haas Racing, leading Briscoe to SHR full-time in 2019. But without funding between ’19 and 2020, Briscoe was again on a path that led out of the sport entirely. But an offseason encounter between Briscoe’s dad and HighPoint CEO Mike Mendiburu on the Las Vegas Strip, as described in a story by The Athletic that Briscoe referenced Tuesday, ultimately resulted in proper sponsorship to keep Briscoe in the car. He went onto win a series-best nine races that year.

“When you hear his story,” Gibbs said, “there was a miracle in there really that happened for him to get a chance for that Xfinity year.”

Fast forward to the present year with Briscoe now in his fourth Cup season for SHR, and Bell is back playing another pivotal role in Briscoe’s ascension.

“Christopher texted me probably, I don’t know, I think it was the week of SHR shutting down and said, ‘Hey, I think Martin might not be coming back. You need to just be wearing them out over there,’ ” Briscoe said. “So I mean, he’s been a huge part of my career.”

Behind the scenes, Bell was going to bat for his longtime friend, amplifying Briscoe’s potential to Gibbs and explaining why Briscoe — a driver with just one Cup win — was the right selection for such a coveted seat.

“It went a lot deeper with (Bell) because he spent a lot of time with Chase when they were coming up,” Gibbs said. “And those were tough years for (Briscoe). They were battling and trying to get a chance and going through all that, and he knew how (Briscoe) sacrificed and at one point he was close to giving up. He spent like three years knocking on doors and nobody would give him a chance.”

Now, Briscoe has what he deemed “the opportunity of a lifetime” to compete for one of NASCAR’s winningest teams of the last 20 years, plugging into a team that will retain crew chief James Small and attempt to recreate the success Truex has built since climbing into the No. 19 car in 2019.

But not without the help of Bell.

“(Bell) had a great way of describing him to me,” Gibbs said. “He compared him to two other drivers that are in the sport. And he said this is where he is, and he compared him to somebody. I won’t give you the name, but he said, ‘This is the kind of guy I think you’re getting.’ And I thought it was really enlightening for me. I know I’ll always remember that. We’ll see. We’ll see if he’s right.”

The mystery comparison remains unknown for now. But at the conclusion of the 2024 campaign, Bell and Briscoe will advance from former roommates to current teammates.

“It’s just gonna be fun to get to work with Christopher and get our relationship back to kind of how it used to be,” Briscoe said.

The temperatures at South Boston Speedway in southern Virginia may have been warmer than usual on Oct. 22, 2011, but the atmosphere inside the venue was scorching.

Nearly 40 cars were set to take the green flag for the short track’s season-ending Late Model Stock Car race. The cast of characters were comprised of an even mix of seasoned veterans and young drivers seeking to one day advance to the top levels of NASCAR.

Two drivers stood out to the South Boston faithful.

One was Philip Morris, a local Late Model Stock legend. Known as “The King” by peers and fans, Morris was preparing to wrap another stellar season with his second track championship and fourth NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series national title.

The other was Lee Pulliam, a relative newcomer from Semora, North Carolina. Pulliam had emerged as one of the brightest young stars in the region, with his passion and consistency rewarding him with his first ValleyStar Credit Union 300 victory at Martinsville Speedway that year.

Both had something to prove to themselves and each other. Morris was doing everything possible to stay on top amidst a changing landscape. Pulliam was determined to establish himself as an elite competitor despite limited funding.

Their shared desire to win every race had already resulted in battles and confrontations. Each chapter served to captivate the weekly crowds in Virginia, everybody curious to witness the development of the Pulliam-Morris narrative.

Everything the two had experienced together over a year-and-a-half time span built to this one day at South Boston. What transpired at the end of the 300-lap race changed the lives of both Pulliam and Morris, and it cemented their rivalry as an iconic piece of lore in Late Model Stock competition.


South Boston Speedway
South Boston Speedway, a NASCAR Home Track in southern Virginia, was the site of one of the most famous and controversial moments of the rivalry between Lee Pulliam and Philip Morris. (Photo: Victor Newman/South Boston Speedway)

Chapter I: The Humble Beginnings

Pulliam’s passion for motorsports developed when he was a spectator at his favorite short tracks, his childhood weekends often spent at either South Boston or North Carolina’s Orange County Speedway. He fell in love with the vibrant culture facilitated by competitors’ passion, which often manifested into heated on-track rivalries and devoted fan bases.

Lee Pulliam
Lee Pulliam’s love for racing started by watching drivers like Philip Morris battle for wins at short tracks. (Photo: Sara D. Davis/Getty Images)

Now 36, Pulliam still considers the drivers he followed in his youth to be his heroes. The names include Barry Beggarly, a four-time Late Model Stock champion at Orange County, along with South Boston heavyweights Stacy Compton, David Blankenship, Wayne Patterson and Frank Deiny Jr.

Those drivers often found themselves chasing Morris, whom Pulliam regarded as a competitor who was equal parts aggressive and efficient.

“If [Morris] had the fastest car, he was going to try his best to lead every single lap,” Pulliam said. “You had some racers who were more methodical, but Philip won a pile of races, and he’d sometimes run his car so hard he would run out of tires at the end. If the tires held on, he was pretty tough to beat.”

Morris’ reputation was ubiquitous throughout the southeast before Pulliam became a teenager, but the journey toward becoming “The King” was a prolonged process.

Morris, now 59, turned his first competitive laps shortly after graduating from Longwood University in Farmville, Virginia. He was tested both mentally and physically throughout his formative years on dirt tracks before transitioning to pavement in 1992.

Philip Morris
Philip Morris was tested by many short track elites on his way to becoming one of the best in a Late Model Stock. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images for NASCAR)

Morris was forced to earn everything when he began in a Late Model Stock. He recalls being a backmarker at Virginia tracks like Southside Speedway and Pulaski County Motorsports Park while doing everything possible to both learn the craft and earn respect from veteran racers.

He began to see results, and by the end of the 1990s, Morris had found his place amongst the upper echelon of Late Model Stock racing with a list of accomplishments that included a track championship at Pulaski County.

Those same drivers Pulliam idolized were the ones Morris was racing on a regular basis.

“David [Blankenship] was old school and politically correct,” Morris said. “He didn’t take damage off the track, but he did the damage on the track. You learn from guys like that and how to do things diplomatically. You can’t help but pick up a few things.”

The challenges Morris endured against fellow veterans, combined with his expansion to other states and NASCAR’s national touring divisions, helped him build an identity as an automatic favorite to win at any short track.

As Morris added NASCAR Weekly Series championships to his resume in the late 2000s, he kept an eye on the young talent rising through the ranks and into Late Model Stocks. By this point, Pulliam had amassed the funding to start a career of his own.

Morris knew how rough and exhilarating pavement short-track racing could be; he’d experienced the rivalries between competitors like Blankenship, Shayne Lockhart, Jeff Agnew, Johnny Rumley and more.

None compared to the relationship he was about to build with Pulliam.


Chapter II: The Rivalry Begins

Pulliam’s first full-time Late Model Stock campaign in 2009 was a lifelong dream coming to fruition.

Like that of Morris, Pulliam’s small operation required delicate time to reach the top of the discipline. He reached Victory Lane once during his rookie year at South Boston, but he had more trouble establishing consistency.

A long winter provided Pulliam time to use his limited budget on improving his silver and blue Late Model Stock. The start of South Boston’s 2010 season saw Pulliam become a more constant factor at the front, each race inching him closer to his goals.

On June 19, 2010, Pulliam turned a childhood fantasy into a reality: He bested Morris for a Late Model Stock win.

“I have a photo in my dad’s shop of my first time beating Philip,” Pulliam said. “I beat him by just a few feet to the finish line at South Boston one night, so that was a huge win for me. To be the best, you’ve got to beat the best, and I wanted to prove to everybody that I was the best Late Model Stock racer and wanted to go head-to-head against Philip.

“I got a lot of my driving style from him, being aggressive at the right times and not taking a lot of crap from people.”

Lee Pulliam
Lee Pulliam formally entered the ring as an equal to Philip Morris once he started winning at South Boston Speedway and Pulaski County Motorsports Park. (Photo: NASCAR)

One of the first to congratulate Pulliam in Victory Lane that day — beyond crew members — was Morris.

Long before that checkered flag, Pulliam had started to earn Morris’ respect. Pulliam backed up his aggression on the track with his conviction in the pits. Morris watched Pulliam regularly go the extra mile to fix a problem or make an adjustment that might gain him a precious thousandth of a second.

Pulliam’s passion convinced Morris the younger driver would be a mainstay in motorsports.

“I looked at Lee as somebody who was destined to be great,” Morris said. “Even when we were having success during that period of time, I was still going to South Boston on 100-degree days by myself testing just like a couple of other guys would do, and Lee was one of them. With him being the one under the car in a pool of sweat, I knew he was going to be tough.

“If you’re tough like that, you’re going to be tougher on the track.”

Morris understood that Pulliam’s capabilities meant he was under more pressure to remain efficient at every short track in Virginia.

Chad McCoy, who at the time served as Morris’ mechanic, had watched his driver deal with countless challenges from Late Model Stock stalwarts, but he admitted to being surprised by Pulliam’s sudden emergence. Despite this, McCoy said Morris’ own dedication defined his greatness.

“If you look up racer in the dictionary, there would be a picture of [Philip Morris],” McCoy said. “He is the quintessential stock-car racer. He can assemble a car, fabricate, weld, build shocks and could probably build an engine. He’s one of the most super-talented guys behind the wheel you’d ever want to meet. The guy has a work ethic like no other.

“His success is driven solely by his work ethic, and you’d have to race with him to understand it.”

Pulliam mirroring Morris’ mindset only reinforced McCoy’s prognosis that the two would go blow-for-blow nearly every weekend.

That prediction materialized almost immediately after Pulliam’s first triumph over Morris. With Pulliam’s talent regularly exceeding his budget and Morris relying on years of trial and error, they proved to be evenly matched by trading wins between South Boston and Pulaski County.

Philip Morris
For every victory Lee Pulliam obtained, Philip Morris had an answer, which only elevated their burgeoning rivalry. (Photo: NASCAR Regional)

For a brief period of time, late in the 2010 season, Pulliam and Morris both competed out of the same garage at Sellers Racing Inc., which further complicated an already intense situation. With Pulliam being extended family, H.C. and Peyton Sellers let the young upstart operate on their property. Morris, meanwhile, piloted the Sellers brothers’ primary No. 26 Clarence’s Steakhouse car.

McCoy knew Pulliam’s and Morris’ ambitious natures would result in tension amongst everyone.

“You can’t have two stallions in one barn stall,” McCoy said. “It became obvious pretty quick they were very competitive and were always racing each other for the win. Everywhere in the Virginia Late Model Stock scene during those years, it was usually them who were going to be your contenders.”

Peyton Sellers, who had engaged in his fair share of on-track battles with Morris and Pulliam to that point, did everything possible to keep the two composed off the track. Doing so was a constant challenge.

Despite the drama starting to bubble under the surface, Sellers saw the shared passion of Morris and Pulliam as a net positive.

“They had been competing week in and week out, and they were elevating their game, which made them good for each other,” Sellers said. “Philip was at a point in his career where he needed that kind of competition, and Lee was at the point where he was going to do whatever it took to put his name on the map.”

As hard as Sellers and the rest of the team tried, the aggressive-but-clean nature of the Pulliam-Morris duel was never going to remain status quo. The first escalation of their conflict occurred in 2010 at South Boston.

During the track’s 300-lap Late Model Stock feature in October, a typical battle between Morris and Pulliam concluded with the two making slight contact on the last lap and knocking Pulliam out of the groove. Morris prevailed and claimed a $10,000 paycheck; an agitated Pulliam settled for second.

Pulliam considers this the start of his rivalry with Morris, but the moment also served as motivation to put every ounce of energy he possessed into keeping Morris behind him — no matter the cost.

“We’re coming out of the same shop, so I’m not real happy,” Pulliam recalled thinking. “I vented pretty heavily about it, and at the time, I decided I was going to do things on my own. We moved into a different shop, and the rivalry consumed us in 2011. I wasn’t happy with the way he raced me coming to the checkered, so coming into 2011, I was hellbent on beating him every single week.”

Pulliam’s promise to himself transformed his battle with Morris into an all-out war, one of which the consequences extended far beyond the track.


Chapter III: The Flashpoint

In 2011, the Commonwealth of Virginia ended up becoming the battleground Pulliam envisioned after his encounter with Morris at South Boston the previous year.

Neither driver pulled punches during their bouts across the state. For all the punishment Morris dealt on the track, Pulliam delivered his own. Every race saw Pulliam fight for validation and survival. Winning would allow him to use the prize money to sustain his team and continue his regular clashes with Morris, ensuring his place as one of the best in a Late Model Stock.

“When [Morris] came to [Pulaski County], I’d wear him out, but when he came to South Boston, he was wearing me out that year,” Pulliam said. “We beat, banged and drove each other as rough as we could drive. He’d drive me rough, and I’d drive him rough the next corner. It was kind of getting ugly.

“I felt like I was the guy who didn’t belong there because I didn’t have any money and wanted to beat the other guys that much worse because of that.”

Pulliam’s efforts won him both trophies and praise from the local fans, but they were not enough to procure him the 2011 NASCAR Weekly Series title. Morris competed more regularly against big fields and built enough of an advantage to claim another title. Pulliam finished third in the standings.

Although Morris won the war, Pulliam found himself satisfied with the battles he claimed. They included his maiden ValleyStar Credit Union 300 crown, which he obtained after moving Matt McCall in Turn 3 coming to the checkered flag.

Lee Pulliam
Lee Pulliam in 2011 joined Philip Morris as a winner of the prestigious ValleyStar Credit Union 300 at Martinsville Speedway. (Photo: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)

A victory in Late Model Stock racing’s equivalent to the Cup Series’ Daytona 500 led Pulliam to believe he was on the verge of his breakthrough into NASCAR’s top ranks.

“I’m sitting on top of the world in a Late Model Stock,” Pulliam said. “I’m thinking that Joe Gibbs, Richard Childress, Rick Hendrick or somebody else was about to call me. I’m winning all these races; I’m a young guy with a lot of success but not a lot of money. I was just waiting on that phone call.”

As he pondered his trajectory, Pulliam turned his attention back to where his feud with Morris began. In the year that had passed since the October dust-up at South Boston, Pulliam and Morris’ on-track excursions had resulted in hurt feelings and torn up race cars. Their adventures had also provided each a loyal, passionate fan base.

All these factors created a palpable tension when teams arrived at South Boston for the track’s 2011 finale, the last chance for fans to watch Pulliam and Morris hash out their differences before the rivalry cooled over the winter.

The afternoon immediately lived up to the hype. Morris and Pulliam hardly left each other’s sight lines throughout the day, dominating a race consisting of Late Model Stock stalwarts like C.E. Falk, Deac McCaskill and Tommy Lemons Jr. by exchanging the lead several times, much to the delight of the exuberant crowd.

Pulliam was confident he had the upper hand on Morris, but one fateful restart with 73 laps to go changed everything.

As the two raced for the lead, Morris made slight contact with Pulliam in Turn 3 and spun him around. Pulliam avoided major damage, but he was left with a limited amount of laps to work back toward the front.

He was enraged. Pulliam considered Morris’ move an act of disrespect, adding that he was bewildered the national champion would spin him at his home track. Running on adrenaline and fury, Pulliam wanted nothing more than to get back to Morris’ bumper.

“I drive an extremely desperate and mad race trying to get back toward the front,” Pulliam said. “Unfortunately, I spun out a lapped car to bring out the yellow [I needed], because that’s how mad I was at the time. I didn’t have anybody in my ear trying to calm me down, but they were enjoying watching me drive mad because I was up on the wheel.”

Pulliam’s furious drive came up short; he finished third while Morris took the checkered flag. Morris ended a stellar year on top of the Late Model Stock world. Pulliam felt like he’d been knocked back to the bottom.

The thought of Morris being gratified by another victory intensified Pulliam’s anger, and even with the race decided, Pulliam was not going to let Morris enjoy the moment. In his mind, at that juncture, retribution was in order.

Just like he did on track, Pulliam pulled no punches against Morris as he sought vengeance.

Pulliam initially showed his displeasure with Morris during the cooldown lap by spinning him into the inside wall on the backstretch. He then finished off his vitriol by driving back around and crashing head-on into Morris, destroying both cars.

Morris was taken aback by Pulliam’s decision to junk Sellers’ equipment and his own. He never expected a hard-working competitor like Pulliam to take such a drastic action over a spin that meant nothing in the long term.

“What’s going through my mind is that he snapped,” Morris said. “This guy has really snapped, because this is a kid that worked really hard to get to this spot, and for whatever reason, because of how he felt about me, he was getting ready to change his whole career. He had been around long enough to know how NASCAR was going to feel about it.

“Some guys are really good in the seat until you shake them.”

As Morris limped his battered car toward South Boston’s Victory Lane, he encountered a scene of pandemonium on the frontstretch.

Pulliam had parked his car in the pit stall of Austin Wayne Self, who competed under the Sellers Racing banner with Peyton as his crew chief. This resulted in a brawl that ended up spreading into the grandstands between the Pulliam and Morris fanbases. The altercation lasted several minutes before the local sheriff’s department restored order.

Peyton Sellers was angry at Pulliam for demolishing a car Morris had piloted to so many victories in 2011. For as much bedlam as Pulliam’s post-race crash caused to both programs, it also sent a message to Sellers and other competitors that he was not someone to anger.

“It basically showed the determination Lee had,” Peyton said. “He was not willing to sit there and take it, but it showed the differences in the two drivers. Philip was a driver who knew exactly where his car was and put it in a position where Lee had to come down on him. Lee just had a boiling point in a weak moment where he took his frustrations out.

“We all have those points.”

Philip Morris
The 2011 finale at South Boston may have ended in chaos, but Philip Morris maintained control as the most dominant Late Model Stock driver at the time. (Photo: NASCAR)

McCoy didn’t engage anyone during the scrum, but he did witness punches get thrown and a couple people get escorted out of South Boston. He was disappointed to see the post-race melee since he held everyone involved in high regard, but McCoy did find enjoyment in celebrating with Morris and his torn-up car in Victory Lane.

What impressed McCoy was the composure Morris displayed under the circumstances. He knew the veteran driver would be fine; McCoy only hoped Pulliam would be able to handle the fallout and return more efficient.

“There were a few people in our group who did badmouth Lee, and you’re going to get that in racing,” McCoy said. “We had a mutual respect, Philip especially. I’ve never heard Philip badmouth Lee in any way, even after that happened. Nothing ever came out of his mouth along those lines.”

Once Pulliam got his emotions under control, he began to realize the ramifications of his actions.

The impending punishment Pulliam expected from NASCAR was not the only thing on his mind; he was concerned any major organization like Hendrick, Gibbs or RCR would be trepidatious about bringing him into its development program. Pulliam spent many winter days and nights unsure whether his career would recover.

“That was probably the worst decision of my career,” Pulliam said. “Looking back, I regret that day, and I wish so badly I could do so much of that over. I regret how mad I was after the race. It was a mess, and there was a lot of spotlight on me because I was so fast and was winning so many races.

“It bothers me to this day. I thought my career was over before it even began.”

With one of the worst moments of his career behind him, all Pulliam could do was focus on the future and how to rebuild from the destruction at South Boston.


Chapter IV: The Aftermath

Pulliam received the dreadful phone call not long after South Boston. He was suspended indefinitely from all NASCAR-sanctioned events.

The news emotionally devastated Pulliam, who faced a newfound uphill battle to repair his reputation and get his program back into a competitive rhythm against Morris.

Pulliam admits he was scared over the circumstances he created for himself, but he was willing to go through every necessary step of the reinstatement process. This included attending a hearing that featured many prominent industry figures such as Robert Yates and former Charlotte Motor Speedway general manager Humpy Wheeler.

Some of the people Pulliam admired most were the ones scolding him for the South Boston incident. Yet he admitted the constructive criticism helped him become a better person both on and off the track.

“I got chewed up one side down the other, but I needed it,” Pulliam said. “What I did was wrong, but I paid the price for it mentally and with having my career paused. There was going to be a second chance to get things right, so we prepared very hard for our return.”

Pulliam received support from other Late Model Stock drivers who understood he made a mistake and were optimistic NASCAR would rescind the suspension at some point in 2012.

One of Pulliam’s biggest advocates was Morris.

The rivals spoke frequently during Pulliam’s suspension to compartmentalize every aspect of their feud. These conversations allowed Morris insight into Pulliam’s frame of mind. He understood how some of his actions led to Pulliam’s retaliation.

Morris knew the best solution going forward was to keep his rivalry with Pulliam healthy for both parties.

“I was experiencing stuff I never experienced before, like getting wrecked under a caution in a head-on collision,” Morris said. “I had already unbuckled, so you know it was unexpected, but it’s not until a point like that you have to look at yourself from other people’s perspectives and figure out how someone could get that angry.

“From that point on, I had to take on a different mindset. If you entice people into bad things, bad things will follow you.”

McCoy said Morris’ previous adventures in short-track feuding is why he was able to sympathize with Pulliam.

In the 1990s, Morris came into conflict with several competitors as he attempted to find a comfort zone on pavement. One of his most heated rivalries came with the Grubb brothers Kevin and Wayne, with the action occasionally escalating from hard racing to post-event altercations.

Lee Pulliam
Lee Pulliam was at a crossroads following South Boston in 2011, unsure if his career would continue. (Photo: Bob Leverone / Getty Images)

The roles of youth and experience were reversed for Morris when he found himself on the receiving end of Pulliam’s anger. McCoy said Morris could easily comprehend Pulliam’s emotion and was able to advise him on how to better handle future scenarios.

“Philip went through it with the old-school Late Model guys,” McCoy said. “That was the point of Philip’s career where he would have been equal to where Lee was at in the 2011 timeframe. Philip understood why it happened. There’s so much effort poured into this stuff. It’s your heart, your soul and your guts.”

Pulliam credits Morris’ support during the suspension as a key component behind his reinstatement, which the sanctioning body granted in May of 2012. Pulliam and his team went to work immediately upon his clearance to do so.

Pulliam’s original plan was to make his Late Model Stock return at Pulaski County, but he pivoted to South Boston when inclement weather canceled on-track activity at the former. Regardless, he had no intention of wasting his first race back behind the wheel, and the same facility that yielded one of Pulliam’s worst days as a driver ended up being the site of one of his best.

Nobody in South Boston could match Pulliam’s speed that day. He led all 150 laps and found himself back on top of the Late Model Stock world immediately after his extended absence.

By the end of 2012, Pulliam had equaled Morris in another regard. Despite starting the year so far behind because of his suspension, Pulliam’s dominance allowed him to join an elite list of NASCAR Weekly Series national champions, wrapping up the title with a month left in the year.

Lee Pulliam
Lee Pulliam’s first NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series national championship was a culmination of all the hard work he undertook to improve himself following his indefinite suspension. (Photo: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)

Sellers, who also was suspended for his role in the South Boston fight until it was overturned on two appeals, said the efficient run Pulliam managed in 2012 highlighted his reinvigoration.

A more confident and composed Pulliam meant the Sellers brothers needed more emphasis on improving the equipment at their shop, yet Peyton expressed satisfaction knowing one of his team’s toughest competitors had found himself and was focused on leaving South Boston in the past.

“[The suspension] put [Lee] in a low spot, but it built a lot of character,” Peyton Sellers said. “Before that, he had a feeling deep within that he had to prove himself and prove he could beat Philip Morris. That was a humbling spot for him, and he said, ‘I’m an equal to this guy; I just have to beat him now.’ It was a good growing point for Lee, truthfully.”

Although his mindset on motorsports was refined, Pulliam knew Morris would be the primary obstacle standing in the way of additional success.

The difference compared to the year before — aside from Pulliam being the champion — was that the battles were more cordial. Both learned their lessons after South Boston and were committed to fostering a relationship that was less toxic and more beneficial for all parties involved.

Neither driver gave the other breathing room on the track, of course, but the mutual respect they’d expressed over their conversations made those grueling duels more enjoyable.

“He never wanted it to get to the point that it got to, either,” Pulliam said. “He believed in me as a race-car driver. Throughout the process, there were some things that happened only me and him know about. He advocated for me more than most people realize, and off the track, he was a fan of mine.

“When you’re a legend like he is and a wannabe legend like I was, it just created [an environment] where when we put those helmets on, we became two monsters out there on the race track.”

The 2011 South Boston finale was now history for Pulliam and Morris, who continued their rivalry into the remainder of the decade on more diplomatic terms.


Chapter V: The Kings of the Southeast

Even with Morris stepping away from full-time racing during the 2010s, Pulliam ensured the NASCAR Weekly Series championship stayed nestled in the southeast.

Pulliam acquired insight into how a national championship is earned when he lost to Morris in 2011. He used that knowledge, plus his momentum from his first title, to add three more championships in 2013, 2015 and 2017, tying Morris’ total.

Lee Pulliam
As the 2010s progressed, Lee Pulliam became a dominant force with four NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series titles, including three between 2012-15. (Photo: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)

Morris wasn’t content during his sabbatical as he watched his longtime rival dominate. He returned in full force for 2018 with a vintage season reminiscent of his campaigns in the 2000s. Morris accumulated 23 wins that year, enough to break his tie with Pulliam and earn a fifth Weekly Series national title.

Morris felt a sense of pride seeing Pulliam control the standings in the 2010s. Pulliam’s unimpeded resolve reminded Morris of his own journey to the top of Late Model Stocks, which is why he wanted to see Pulliam win as many races as possible.

“There were times when I’d get knocked out of a race, [Lee] would still be racing, and I actually rooted for him,” Morris said. “You want to see that hard work pay off. If a guy is willing to do what he’s been willing to do, which is to really dedicate himself, that’s the guy you wanted to pull for.

“Unless he took me out … in which case I wanted him to go windshield deep into the wall.”

One of the few instances when Morris was not a Pulliam supporter came in April of 2019 at, of course, South Boston. After winning the first of two 75-lap Late Model Stock races scheduled that day, Morris found himself in another battle with Pulliam for second while they chased Sellers with fewer than five laps to go. Pulliam’s crossover attempt in Turn 3 turned Morris hard into the outside wall and knocked him out of the race.

Morris’ crew chief Forrest Reynolds responded during a red flag by attempting to climb into Pulliam’s car from the passenger-side window and rip out his ignition wires. Pulliam started his car and sent Reynolds tumbling onto the racing surface. Reynolds was escorted out of the track with no serious injuries.

Pulliam took the scenario in stride by placing a “no passengers” logo on his door following that race. He defended his decision to gas up his car with Reynolds still inside, adding that such a situation was never going to end favorably for either party.

“I had that done to me in the past by Peyton Sellers,” Pulliam said. “I’m sitting there strapped in, so I can’t defend myself at all. It’s a vulnerable situation to be put into, so I don’t regret taking off at all. When somebody is raging like that, you don’t know what could happen.”

The chaos garnered Reynolds an indefinite suspension from NASCAR events, which put Morris, McCoy and the rest of the team in a bind as they ascertained how to progress with a busy slate of upcoming events, including the Virginia Late Model Triple Crown.

Lee Pulliam and Philip Morris
South Boston Speedway remained a constant battleground for Lee Pulliam (5) and Philip Morris (01) long after the two had settled their differences. (Photo: NASCAR)

McCoy said the red-flag antics had no longstanding impact on the relationship Pulliam and Morris had built. He knew each would remain focused only on the next race at that point in their respective careers.

“It doesn’t matter whose fault it was; we ended up with a totaled race car,” McCoy said. “It was hard racing, and I don’t know where to lay the blame. Through all that, Philip never once bashed Lee, and he didn’t really talk about it a lot. That incident was nowhere near as bad [as 2011]. We just moved on.”

Morris echoed McCoy’s sentiment. He saw no point in reigniting old tensions with Pulliam over one inconsequential race, adding that both had grown as drivers and people.

“There were people thinking I should have done more to retaliate,” Morris said. “As a driver, if you don’t retaliate 10 times worse than what the other person did, you get picked on. That’s how I was brought up with guys that had raced Late Models from years past. [South Boston] was just a product of crew members and fans getting involved with our rivalry.”

Everybody who attended South Boston that day and was familiar with Pulliam and Morris’ backstory saw the “No Passengers” incident as another chapter in their ongoing rivalry with many more bound to be written.

What no one in the industry realized was that it would be the last chapter of the saga.

Pulliam by the end of the decade had scaled back his schedule so he could spend more time with his growing family. But he wanted to remain involved with Late Model Stocks and put more emphasis on driver development.

A reinvigorated Morris was determined to claim a sixth Weekly Series title. He formed a partnership with R&S Race Cars, led by veteran crew chief Marcus Richmond and his business partner Steve Stallings, to pilot their house car starting with the 2020 season.

The sudden passing of Morris’ son Blake that April made motorsports an afterthought. He never attempted a race with R&S.

The absence of Morris or Pulliam on entry lists brought about a reality many drivers and fans were unsure would materialize.

The opposition that had encompassed Late Model Stock competition for more a decade and spawned countless iconic moments was gone.


Chapter VI: After the Rivalry

Pulliam finds himself busier than ever as a car owner.

His vision of a thriving driver development program came to fruition, as he’s guided numerous young competitors to success in Late Model Stocks and beyond. Among the names that have raced for Pulliam include Brenden “Butterbean” Queen and Corey Heim, the latter of whom made his Cup Series debut at Dover Motor Speedway in April.

Pulliam has brought in as much help as possible to sustain the program’s growth. He hired McCoy, who now works as a mechanic and car chief on Queen’s car.

McCoy after Morris’ sudden retirement had been assisting various short-track operations to stay involved with racing. While working for Mike Darne Racing in 2022, he received a surprise call from Pulliam.

“It was out of the blue, and I didn’t even have his phone number,” McCoy said. “One of Mike Darne’s customers, [Aaron Donnelly], was going over to drive a Late Model for Lee Pulliam. I did some spotting for the kid, and he wanted me to go along with him. I didn’t really want to leave Mike, but Lee calling was very flattering.

“We talked like we had gone so far back, which I guess we do.”

Lee Pulliam and Brenden Queen
Lee Pulliam has remained atop the Late Model Stock world following his retirement, guiding drivers like Brenden ‘Butterbean’ Queen to Victory Lane. (Photo: Adam Fenwick/NASCAR)

Pulliam and McCoy’s mutual admiration developed into a strong friendship. When they’re not deliberating over how to improve Queen’s car, they reminisce on their own histories, especially the intense battles Pulliam and Morris had on track.

Pulliam doesn’t contact Morris as much as he’d prefer, but he touches base regularly to check in and provide updates on his own life. Morris jokingly encourages his old rival to keep his former longtime crew member in check.

Morris is grateful for the continued communication with Pulliam, adding that he still passes down wisdom to Pulliam whenever applicable.

“It’s a small community,” Morris said. “It’s easy to keep up with each other. As things have happened in Lee’s life, especially with marriage and the addition of family members, you just stay in touch. It means a lot when someone is going through many of the same things and you reach out to try and make a difference.

“You would never know there was a rivalry if you saw us standing side-by-side anywhere.”

Pulliam has not forgotten the compassion Morris showed during the lowest point of his career, and he’s done everything feasible to reciprocate that gratitude. Pulliam nearly had the perfect manner to do so when Morris approached him about housing his own car out of Pulliam’s shop. In Pulliam’s eyes, the former rivals teaming up to dominate the southeast would have brought their story full circle.

Such a concept still crosses Pulliam’s mind every so often.

“It almost happened,” Pulliam said. “We were in the contract negotiations, and we still talk about what would have happened if he raced for me and how that would have blown people’s minds. Me and Philip are a lot alike both off the race track and on the race track. We’re both stubborn and don’t want to lose, so that would have made a deadly combination.”

Morris took everything into consideration regarding a potential alliance with Pulliam, including the possibility that he might have to battle his rival once again. After careful deliberation, Morris decided the best decision was to keep a respectful distance from racing.

“After I lost my son, who had just started racing Late Models, I just had to get away from the sport and figure things out,” Morris said. “When you lose someone that’s close, you try to look back and see if I missed out because I was over-invested. It would have been crazy, because the fans saw [Lee and I] as two people who would go at it in a UFC ring.

“In the end, I had to stay away from racing altogether, other than what we do to honor my son.”

Philip Morris and NASCAR president Steve Phelps
Philip Morris ended his illustrious career in Late Model Stock racing with five NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series titles, three ValleyStar Credit Union 300 victories and numerous other accomplishments. (Photo: NASCAR)

With that, the hypothetical Late Model Stock dream team never formed. Pulliam fully shifted his efforts to ownership after running his last race in the 2020 South Carolina 400. Morris’ one-off attempt in the 2021 ValleyStar Credit Union 300 with Mike Looney resulted in a DNQ.

Their time as drivers may have passed, but Pulliam and Morris consider themselves fortunate they have more good memories to reflect upon than bad ones.

Nothing about racing in the late 2000s and early 2010s came easy for Pulliam. Every race was a meticulous grind toward the top of the Late Model Stock pedestal against drivers who had their own devoted fanbases and were never going to tolerate getting pushed around.

At the center of everything was Pulliam’s rivalry with Morris. The hard battles, the psychological warfare and the passion of each man to win made for what Pulliam still considers the most exhilarating period of his career, a chapter he wishes he could have appreciated more contemporarily.

“Looking back on it, that was racing,” Pulliam said. “That was something we’ve both missed. We didn’t realize how special those moments were when we were in them. We were so focused on winning that things we were doing that were legendary just went over our heads at the time. People would pay an arm and a leg to watch that kind of entertainment every week.

“It was like having a couple of Intimidators out there, and neither one would back down.”

For Morris, Pulliam’s presence as a rival forced him to continue learning after decades of experience. Constantly being pushed allowed Morris to self-reflect and subsequently push himself to improve in nearly every aspect.

There were more bumps and torn up cars than Morris can count, but through all the heartbreak, tempers, jubilation and respect, he’s confident both parties came away as winners.

“In the end, someone like Lee would be able to tell you what the score is,” Morris said. “He’s on it, whether it’s three cars to four cars totaled, or ‘I owe you one straight into the wall’ or two rear clips. That’s how you keep score. Standing back and looking at what happened, I’m way ahead on every category in that I came out of this with a really great friend.

“I’d say we’re even and that it was all worth it.”


Epilogue

Pulliam and Morris haven’t run a race together in nearly five years, yet their historic rivalry remains fresh in the minds of witnesses.

Sellers said Morris filled the role of Dale Earnhardt, who had proven himself against established veterans and was pitted against the young Jeff Gordon in Pulliam. Just like the Earnhardt-Gordon rivalry at NASCAR’s highest level, the involvement of the fans added an element that made Pulliam and Morris’ duel legendary.

“Timing and history all have to mix together,” Sellers said. “The fact that both of those guys had fast cars that were well-funded at the time, and they were racing between South Boston and [Pulaski County] every week, they were just the two doing it full-bore. The fans loved it because half of them were Philip fans and half of them were Lee fans.”

McCoy hopes the new generation of Late Model Stock competitors takes lessons from the impact Pulliam and Morris made on the discipline. Learning from both has left a significant impression on McCoy, who said he’ll always hold a deep appreciation for their driving styles and work ethic.

“How many people get to work with two of the best that have ever done it?” McCoy said. “Everybody’s got their opinion, and that’s my own. Philip is probably my hero in all of racing, but Lee Pulliam is right there with him. I feel blessed to have known both on the level that I do, and it’s all come full circle for me.

“I don’t know how much cooler of a situation you could be in.”

The possibility remains that McCoy could one day assist Pulliam as both a car owner and driver.

Philip Morris and Lee Pulliam
When the dust finally settled on their rivalry, Lee Pulliam and Philip Morris left a legacy as two of the most determined and successful competitors in the history of Late Model Stock competition. (Photo: NASCAR)

Being around his growing Late Model Stock program, Pulliam occasionally feels an urge to grab his helmet and get back behind the wheel. He hasn’t closed the book on a return to racing and would love to do it with Morris in the field.

“It would be cool to strap in and do it one more time with him,” Pulliam said. “If I ever race again, I’m going to try and talk him into doing one more race. Just one more for old times’ sake, and have a good battle, at that.”

Given the increasingly competitive nature of modern-day Late Model Stock racing, Morris does not anticipate immediate success should he race again. Such a proposition would require time to catch up, but “the King” has never been one to back down from a challenge.

“If I ever said I wasn’t going to do something, I would get tested on it,” Morris said. “I’ve been trying to stay busy like Lee just in case the call comes to do it again. The door is still open, and I feel as good as I did during the last championship we won. I feel younger, actually, so you never know.

“It could happen.”

Pulliam and Morris made their mark on Late Model Stock and NASCAR history with a combined nine Weekly Series national titles, five ValleyStar Credit Union 300 wins and so many more accomplishments. On paper, they have nothing more to prove.

But if the right circumstances materialize, there could be one more chapter to write in one of short-track racing’s greatest stories.

LEBANON, Tenn. – NASCAR Cup Series driver Michael McDowell recently visited Fort Campbell to experience a day in the life of a soldier while engaging with our nation’s finest ahead of Nashville Superspeedway’s Ally 400 NASCAR race weekend (June 28-30). The visit generated exposure for the NASCAR Salutes Together with Coca-Cola initiative to more than 250,000 people affiliated with the military in the Clarksville area.

Fort Campbell, the Army post at the Kentucky-Tennessee border, organized a day of activities for McDowell. The day featured lively discussions between McDowell and the soldiers, highlighting the strong connection between the military and NASCAR communities. McDowell also shared racing stories and life advice with young soldiers, and he signed memorabilia.

During McDowell’s visit, he visited the Gabriel Field memorial, toured the base and participated in shooting practice at the firing range. He also got a firsthand look at some training by the 101st Airborne Division, the only air assault division in the U.S. Army.

Nicknamed the Screaming Eagles, the 101st has demonstrated the highest standards of military professionalism since its activation in 1942. The 101st is recognized for its unmatched Air Assault capability, its ability to execute any combat or contingency mission anywhere in the world and is still proving its mettle as “tomorrow’s division in today’s Army.”

McDowell got a little taste of those futuristic methods by using the Virtual Combat Training System to virtually drive military vehicles and shoot select artillery. A little more old-school was his work on conquering his discomfort with heights — by rappelling from a 30-foot Air Assault tower.

Honoring history

One purpose of McDowell’s visit was to reconnect with the 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne). Special Forces soldiers are renowned for their ability to deploy in small teams, operate independently and conduct their mission in austere environments.

The 5th Special Forces and McDowell already share an incredible relationship and history. In 2019, during the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway, drivers in the race carried the names of fallen service members on their windshields.

Chief Warrant Officer 2 Jonathan R. Farmer, a fallen 37-year-old father of four was McDowell’s co-pilot for the race. McDowell was able to reunite at Fort Campbell with those who continue to honor the memory of Farmer. He served proudly with the 5th Special Forces Group.

“It’s a really special, humbling time to go hear stories and to see their faces light up when they talked about memories. Officer Farmer had four children. He was a few years older than I am. He gave up watching his kids grow up. He gave up watching them graduate high school and get married and he did it for us. That makes it very real,” McDowell said of his visit with Farmer’s comrades in 2019. “None of this would be available to us if we didn’t have the freedom we have in the United States and that freedom isn’t free.”

Farmer, a distinguished Special Forces assistant detachment commander, died Jan. 16, 2019, of wounds sustained during an attack while conducting a local engagement in Manbij, Syria.

Farmer was with the 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne) throughout his career and exhibited unwavering commitment and expertise during his extensive and varied combat experience. He completed nine overseas combat tours, including missions in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom, Operation New Dawn, Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Inherent Resolve.

Farmer, a native of Boynton Beach, Florida, dedicated nearly 14 years of exemplary service to the U.S. Army. His legacy is one of exceptional service, sacrifice, and dedication to his country.

NASCAR Salutes Together

Throughout its 75-year history, NASCAR has partnered with numerous groups and organizations. But perhaps no collaboration has carried more significance than the sport’s relationship with the United States military. From pre-race flyovers to the annual Coca-Cola 600 Memorial Day Weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway, NASCAR and the armed forces have seemingly been joined at the hip.

The sport celebrates its close ties with the military thanks to the NASCAR Salutes initiative, paying homage to some of those close ties this weekend during the Ally 400 race weekend:

NASCAR Troops to the Track, presented by Chevrolet, honors and pays tribute to the men and women of the U.S. Armed Forces by inviting service members from local military installations to VIP experiences at NASCAR races, including hosting military personnel at Nashville Superspeedway.
Ford Motor Company will pay tribute to veterans and active service members in a special pre-race moment, including several specially wrapped vehicles ahead of the Ally 400 at Nashville Superspeedway.

NASCAR Salutes Together with Coca-Cola officially kicked off last month during the NASCAR Cup Series All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway. The campaign culminates celebrating the service and sacrifice of U.S. military members and their families through a multitude of at-track integrations, original content features and fan engagement opportunities through the Ally 400 at Nashville Superspeedway on June 30. Fans can visit NASCAR.com/salutes to learn more.

NASCAR officials issued a penalty Tuesday for a rear-axle violation in the Xfinity Series stemming from last weekend’s events at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

Following Christopher Bell’s victory in Saturday’s SciAps 200, No. 42 Young’s Motorsports crew member Dennis Powell has been suspended from the next Championship Series event, through and including Nashville Superspeedway.

RELATED: Xfinity Series standings | Weekend schedule: Nashville

The specific safety infraction states there was a violation of Sections 10.5.2.5.G: Loss or separation of an improperly installed rear axle from the vehicle. No. 42 driver Leland Honeyman wrecked in the race and finished 37th.

The Xfinity Series races at Nashville Superspeedway on Saturday in the Tennessee Lottery 250 (5 p.m. ET, USA Network, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

MORE: No. 38 disqualified at New Hampshire

On Tuesday, NASCAR announced the following penalty has been issued:

NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour driver Andy Seuss has been fined $500 and suspended from NASCAR until the fine is paid. He will remain on probation until December 31, 2024.

The rule infraction is as follows:

12-8.1 Member Conduct Guidelines

1. Heat of the moment actions or reactions, either on or off the race track.

E. 1. Actions by a NASCAR Member that NASCAR finds to be detrimental to stock car racing or NASCAR.

9-4.2.1 On-Track Incident Procedure

A 3 After being directed to exit the vehicle, the driver must immediately proceed to either the ambulance, other vehicle or as otherwise directed by safety personnel or a NASCAR Official.

5 At no time should a driver or crew member(s) approach another moving vehicle.