AJ Allmendinger won the rain-drenched NASCAR Xfinity Series’ inaugural race at Portland International Speedway in 2022.
That was Allmendinger’s 12th of 17 victories in the series, 11 of which have come on road courses.
Ordinarily, Allmendinger would be an odds-on favorite in Saturday’s Pacific Office Automation 147 (4:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
This year, however, Allmendinger has an equally formidable rival.
His Kaulig Racing teammate and three-time Australian Supercars champion Shane van Gisbergen is running a full Xfinity Series schedule, and his road-course prowess is indisputable. Last July, SVG won the inaugural Chicago Street Race in his Cup Series debut.
Neither Allmendinger nor van Gisbergen have won a race this season. Allmendinger is relatively comfortable in his quest for a playoff berth (58 points above the current elimination line), but van Gisbergen is three spots out of the postseason, 34 points behind Anthony Alfredo in the last playoff-eligible position.
A victory for SVG would be the perfect remedy. For Allmendinger, who also won at the 1.97-mile road course in the CART Series, it would ensure his participation in the postseason.
“Always great memories at Portland for so many reasons,” Allmendinger said. “From winning my first IndyCar race there and having a crazy Xfinity race and then being able to win that race.
“It’s definitely a unique race track when it comes to road courses, but it’s always a fun event. Hopefully, we can go there and have a smoother race than we did in 2022 but have the same result.”
When the NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2025 was announced on May 21, Carl Edwards was on a flight and had no inkling his name would be read by sanctioning body president Steve Phelps.
After Edwards’ landed, his wife told him to check his phone for the news about his election.
“I thought about it. I thought, man, I can’t build my day around that because it’s not going to happen,” Edwards said Thursday in a Zoom media availability. “I called Randy Fuller (former Roush Racing and Joe Gibbs Racing senior media relations manager), and I was just blown away. I knew Randy wouldn’t mess with me like that. I was shocked, and I still am at how much it means to me. I wasn’t expecting to feel this way. It’s very humbling.”
A 72-time winner across all three of NASCAR’s national series, Edwards was one of the sport’s most successful drivers from the mid-2000s until his retirement at the end of the 2016 season.
Edwards was never able to lay claim to a Cup Series championship but came so close on a handful of occasions with runner-up results in 2008 and 2011, the latter of which was a tiebreaker won by Tony Stewart after Stewart outdueled Edwards in the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
Despite coming up short in reaching the pinnacle of NASCAR, Edwards didn’t hesitate to share the appreciation he has for competing.
“The longer I’ve been away, I appreciate the sport more and more,” Edwards said. “Last year, just the honor of being part of those 75 (Greatest) drivers, it shocked me how much fun it was to come back to Darlington to be a part of that, and I guess what I’m trying to say is the longer I am away, the more I appreciate it. This honor is over the top. I did not expect this in any way. I was shocked. It’s been a huge deal to me, much bigger than I ever would have expected.”
Since his retirement, Edwards’ presence in NASCAR has been minimal as he continues to focus and make his family top priority. Edwards is also very active in serving communities in his home state of Missouri, specifically in disaster relief following severe weather outbreaks in the Midwest.
For Edwards, it still hasn’t set in that he will be officially inducted into the Hall of Fame on Feb. 7, 2025, and to the 44-year-old, he feels like he’s just one of the guys.
“The paradigms we live in. I mean, we all have our like, what we think of ourselves, how we see ourselves, and I can’t help but to just … I see myself as someone who … I won the lottery in racing,” Edwards said. “I mean, I wanted to drive race cars more than anything in the world, and I got to do it. I felt like these things happened. Then, when I stepped away, I guess looking back on it, I feel like, man, I hope that people in the sport don’t think I’m being disrespectful. I hope they know how much I appreciate it.
“But I guess my point is that I always felt like a guy who just got to come be a part of it. The sport gave me so much. The people in the sport gave me so much that … I don’t know. I think of a Hall of Fame person as someone who gave more, and so I guess that’s why it shocks me. It’s hard to explain.”
HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. – Denny Hamlin wanted 23XI Racing’s new headquarters to be different and a major leap forward for new NASCAR team facilities. He also wanted the details to matter, and the 43-year-old driver — a team co-founder with friend, associate and NBA legend Michael Jordan — saw to those details personally.
The greenery hanging above the lounge area in the team’s break room? Hamlin spent hours placing them, at the cost of an aching back. The 45 Air Jordan shoes arranged to form the No. 23 in a meeting-room wall display? All are extras that Hamlin pulled from his storage. The tiles, wood and other surfaces – down to the choice of laminate style in the bathroom stalls? Hamlin sorted through scads of samples and swatches to find the right fit.
“I wanted it to feel like the Google of race shops,” Hamlin said during a tour last week, and indeed there’s a Silicon Valley feel to the 114,000-square-foot building. But “race shop” is not what those involved are calling it, since that almost downplays what the place is aiming to achieve. And if there were a version of a “race shop” swear jar at the front desk in the lobby – the one with the bespoke elephant-print backdrop plucked from the Jordan Brand color palette looming behind it — it wouldn’t seem out of place.
With those ground rules understood Airspeed opened its doors to the public last week, welcoming fans and giving them a glimpse at the operations involved with one of stock-car racing’s growing teams. When the organization launched in 2020, the team’s name was a composite of Jordan’s uniform — No. 23 — and Hamlin’s car — No. 11 — the latter stylized in Roman numeral form. The name of the headquarters – coined by longtime Jordan business manager Curtis Polk – is also an amalgam, combining Jordan’s “Air” nickname with Hamlin’s on-track speed.
“This is not a race shop. It’s a place that we work, yes, we put cars on the track, but it’s so much more than that,” Hamlin says. “Would you say sitting right here, we’re in a race shop? No, it certainly doesn’t feel that way. So I think what we were in — in Mooresville, in the old Germain (Racing) building — was a race shop and a garage. This is not. This is something that is different, and so it needs to be named appropriately.”
The unique name and surroundings seem to fit for a team born on the cusp of the sport’s Next Gen era. Hamlin went to work in 2021 with the first concept sketches of what the organization’s new home might look like. Working with Charlotte-based design firm Merriman Schmitt Architects and Choate Construction, the first walls went up just over a year ago. Facing and meeting a firm deadline of Jan. 1, the team remarkably moved in eight months later to prepare for the season.
23XI Racing
What greeted fans at the premiere was not just an interactive video wall and windows into the various departments, but an innovative work-bay space that feels like an arena below the square, raised concourse one floor up. Hamlin drew inspiration from the Mercedes-AMG Petronas Formula 1 team’s work area, among other influences, and the 23XI cars for drivers Tyler Reddick and Bubba Wallace pop with color against the sterile, hospital-white floors.
Other charming details abound, from the serendipitous 23 interior paint choices exclusively with colors from the Jordan Brand catalog to the intentional 23-degree tilt of the windows that ring the building and create an airy space. “A lot of us have worked in dungeons in racing,” says Mike Wheeler, former crew chief and now 23XI Racing’s senior director of planning and operations, noting the contrast. This building is no dank warehouse, and Hamlin has maximized the open floor plan, which gives him panoramic views of the different departments and the ability to locate personnel quickly across the building.
“It’s nuts. What we were in, compared to what we have now, it’s almost incomparable,” Reddick said last weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway. “It was crazy we were doing the things we were out of the space that we had. We were split in different buildings and we were all just kind of spread out, and it’s great to be under one roof like we are now.”
Other intentional design choices have a direct impact on 23XI’s competition prep. Cars roll from department to department along a purpose-built workflow line before loading and unloading in the team’s haulers, parked aat the far end from the main entrance. Like most tier-one teams, 23XI has a race-day war room staffed by roughly a dozen competition staffers for a given event. “I’m amazed, being a past crew chief, how much calmer it is here than on the pit box,” Wheeler says from the theater-style rows of workstations facing a bank of flat-screen displays.
23XI Racing
Crew chiefs and engineers shunned traditional offices to work at desk clusters that make direct communication easier. “We want to just be able to do this right here, talk right to each other,” Hamlin says. “That’s really, really important for us as how we run as a team, and for each team to be able to just talk right over and discuss strategy.”
The competition side is one component, but building a strong support staff is another. Hamlin estimates that the 23XI Racing workforce is now roughly 100 people, saying that company-wide “welcome to the team” e-mails introducing new members have arrived in internal inboxes at a regular clip.
Airspeed and its amenities have been used as a recruiting tool, both for sponsorship partners and for its growing list of employees. Hamlin says 23XI Racing has made an effort to reach outside of the NASCAR industry for prospective job candidates, and the organization has earned recognition from a Sports Business Journal survey on its Best Places to Work in Sports list.
“It’s cool to see it all come together, and people are thriving there,” Wallace says. “I think people love showing up to work there, and that’s what you need because these seasons are long, and so you’ve got to have that camaraderie and that sex appeal that we call it, to just show up and want to work.”
The team’s on-track efforts so far are represented in the lobby with the winning cars from 23XI Racing’s first Cup Series victory and its sixth and most recent. Wallace’s confetti-covered No. 23 Toyota faces Reddick’s No. 45 Jordan Brand Camry XSE, with the main doors in between. Both cars are flanked by the sculpted Vulcan trophies – 130-plus pounds each of solid iron – from their Victory Lane visits at Talladega Superspeedway.
Another case with room for more trophies sits upstairs. Hardware from some of Hamlin’s 54 Cup Series wins sits nearby.
“I love empty trophy cases. It’s motivation,” Hamlin says. “Only been around a little while, but we do have a few. This will grow. This will grow, for sure.”
23XI Racing
There’s room for physical growth as well. Airspeed currently sits on approximately nine of the 16 acres that the team purchased off Interstate 77. As for the remaining seven acres, Airspeed is capable of expansion from its back walls, and the land will also be used as a permanent home for its pit crews to practice, replacing the portion of the parking lot where 23XI’s over-the-wall personnel currently get their reps.
Hamlin politely declines to disclose dollar figures when asked how much the venture cost, other than to say, “a lot.” He recalls how the former Kyle Busch Motorsports shop was regarded as “out-of-this-world expensive” when completed in 2010. Airspeed, he says, is “much, much, much more — a few multiples on that.”
Still, Hamlin says the foundation that 23XI has established represents an investment in the sport’s future. That commitment, he says, draws on the passion that he and Jordan share.
“I think Michael said it correctly that we are all-in on the sport,” Hamlin says, “and I think that if you walk through here, there’s no way you can question that. From the performance that we’ve put on the race track to what we’ve built here, I can’t imagine anyone coming in in three years, and spending this kind of investment to be all-in on the sport.”
Growing up in Rehoboth, Massachusetts, Jake Johnson used to ride his bike to a small corner store near his home.
The interior of the establishment offered an array of products like food, drinks or household supplies. Johnson often found more, namely a man called Carl Berghman who frequented the store. Berghman was better known by his racing pseudonym, Bugsy Stevens.
“He was always there eating chicken,” Johnson recalled. “He would harass me every time I went in there. It was probably the only time I really got to meet him over and over again, at that corner store in town. He would see me and give me a hard time.
Then a middle schooler, Johnson had no way to know he and Stevens would someday have much more in common than their hometown.
Stevens, who passed away on May 20 at the age of 90, made a name for himself racing Modifieds, winning countless track championships in the Northeast and three consecutive NASCAR Modified National Championships from 1967-69. He won many of his races and all three of his NASCAR championships driving the Boehler Racing Enterprises Ole Blue No. 3, which is widely considered the most legendary car to compete in NASCAR’s Modified division.
Fast-forward to 2024 and Johnson, now 21, races the same Ole Blue No. 3 full-time on the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour.
It’s appropriate, then, that the next race on the Modified Tour schedule takes place at Seekonk Speedway, the home track for both Johnson and Stevens, this Saturday night (8 p.m. ET on FloRacing).
“Everyone has heavy hearts — the whole team — because everyone was pretty close,” Johnson said. “The history of the No. 3 car is very related to Bugsy. We’re going to put his name on the car for Saturday’s race.”
Jake Johnson qualifies for the IceBreaker 150 at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park on April 7, 2024. (Photo: Susan Wong/NASCAR)
Johnson and Stevens both have victories and championships at Seekonk on their resumes. Johnson is a two-time champion in the Legends car division at the third-mile oval. He’s also won races in the Late Model and Pro Stock divisions, giving him plenty of experience at the track.
In fact, Johnson made his first start in a Modified at Seekonk in 2021, an experience he said helped him get his foot in the door at Boehler Racing Enterprises a few years ago.
“It’s kind of like a homecoming for us, the whole team, really,” Johnson said. “The team is based out of Freetown (Massachusetts), and everyone’s home track is Seekonk. It’s pretty cool to go back to Seekonk. It’s a short drive, and there is a lot of history there with the No. 3 car. I always love going to Seekonk because I have so much seat time there. It’s a home away from home.”
In his first full Modified Tour season, Johnson is off to an incredible start. Through the first five races, he already has a victory at Monadnock Speedway and sits third in the championship standings behind perennial contenders Ron Silk and Justin Bonsignore.
The victory at Monadnock was notable because it was the first Modified Tour win for Boehler Racing Enterprises since 2017.
Johnson hopes to deliver another Ole Blue victory in Saturday’s J&R Precast 150 not just for himself, but for Stevens’ family, friends and fans.
“It would definitely be special (to win),” Johnson said. “There would be a lot of emotions in the pit area and within the team. Their roots are so deep at Seekonk, and so is Bugsy’s family and the No. 3 car, it’s all kind of smashed together.
“It’s going to be a really important race, but I’m not going to go into it overthinking it. I’m just going to go out and have a nice, smooth weekend at the race track and put on a good show.”
Seekonk Speedway and the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour will pay tribute to Stevens prior to Saturday’s J&R Precast 150. Following the conclusion of Mayhew Tools Dominator Pole Award qualifying, Stevens will be driven around Seekonk for one last ride in one of his old Modifieds.
Stevens’ family will be on hand, and teams and drivers are invited to line the speedway wall to honor the three-time NASCAR Modified National champion. This tribute to Stevens is expected to take place at approximately 5:45 p.m. ET.
Here’s what’s happening in the world of NASCAR with the Coca-Cola 600 in the rearview and World Wide Technology Raceway (Sun., 3:30 p.m. ET, FS1) right around the corner.
To make matters worse, the repercussions from missing the Coca-Cola 600 after rain impacted both ends of his Indianapolis/Charlotte double attempt might be felt for months.
The 2021 champion and ’24 title contender entered the weekend as the favorite to win another Coca-Cola 600 — which would’ve made him the first to do so after also racing in the Indianapolis 500 earlier in the day. That last part happened — Larson finished 18th, on the lead lap in his IndyCar debut — but he didn’t even get a chance to fight for the win at Charlotte; in fact, weather ensured he didn’t turn a single lap at all.
He also entered the weekend with a 30-point lead in the standings over the rest of the field, and exited it in third place, six points behind new leader Denny Hamlin. What was shaping up to be a cakewalk to the Regular Season Championship might now be a path littered with obstacles.
Hamlin claimed the points lead for the first time this season, but with four drivers nipping at his heels — three of which are champions and the other is tied with him for the season lead in wins — you get the sense he may not hold it for long. But then he might take it back. And lose it again. And on and on until we crown a champion. This season’s battle at the top just tightened tremendously.
The door was just blown open for someone to claim the top spot — and its bonus points — before the regular season closes in just over three months. And it’s likely a revolving one.
Of course, it’s entirely possible Larson rebounds in a huge way and just stomps the field en route to a win at World Wide Technology Raceway on Sunday (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1), but the drivers around him also gunning for the Regular Season Championship are the sport’s elite. It’s also entirely possible Hamlin goes on a run himself, or Chase Elliott, William Byron, Martin Truex Jr., Tyler Reddick, et al. There is no shortage of drivers in the upper echelon right now that could rip off two or three wins in a five-or-six-race stretch to start to create more distance between the points leader and everybody else.
It has felt all season that Larson and the No. 5 team surely could’ve had more than two wins at this point, given how strong they’ve looked pretty much from the drop of the green flag at Daytona. With Larson on top of both the world and the standings heading into his marathon day, his 2024 near-misses didn’t seem to hold a ton of weight. Now, they feel illuminated.
There’s a vacuum at the top of the Cup Series, ready for the taking for whomever decides to go on a streak of summer dominance.
Larson might be the one to do that. But for the first time in several weeks, it feels like it’s possible he might not be.
Jeff Curry | Getty Images
2. Is a winless past champion about to break through at Gateway?
Several stars are still in search of win No. 1 in 2024 — and a few of them are well positioned to make it happen in St. Louis.
So much of the focus coming out of the 2024 All-Star Race was, understandably, on Kyle Busch, after he and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. fought in the infield at North Wilkesboro Speedway following the race.
Perhaps this is the weekend all eyes should be on Rowdy, however.
Still in search of his first 2024 win and in a tenuous-at-best playoff position, Busch enters the weekend at 15-1 odds to win at World Wide Technology Raceway, according to DraftKings. That puts him at 11th-best on the oddsboard, despite entering the weekend as the defending winner of the race that saw him pick up his most recent Cup Series trophy.
That can be credited, of course, to his somewhat down season to date — Busch, 14th in points, is on pace for his worst average finish since 2010 — but his chances to walk out of the St. Louis area with a provisional playoff berth feel much greater than his betting line. He was riding all that mojo coming out of North Wilkesboro into Charlotte, another race he was expected to compete for the win, but was ultimately stopped short of going the full distance due to weather. That might make the itch to return to Victory Lane grow even more.
And Gateway is arguably an even better shot.
Not only did the two-time champion win this race a year ago, but he was runner-up in its debut a season earlier — with a different team and manufacturer. He’s won there in the Xfinity Series before and has led more than 38% of all Gateway laps run in the Cup Series.
On the verge of tying his career-long winless streak of 36 — he sits at 35 now — this lines up as his best chance to snap the skid perhaps until mid-summer.
That said, almost all of that can be echoed for Busch’s longtime competitor in Joey Logano, one of the other handful of drivers with experience at Gateway before 2022 and the winner of the inaugural Cup race there two years ago. No. 22 finished third there last season and picked up some recent momentum — along with $1 million — by winning the All-Star Race two weekends ago.
Logano is another strong bet to make it happen — and enters the weekend with slightly better odds, at 14-1 — but there are some overall larger concerns with Team Penske’s performance of late, with the premier Ford organization not placing any of its cars in the top 10 in the last three points-paying races and just one total over the past six. The team is the two-time defending Cup Series title winner with Logano and last year’s champ Ryan Blaney — who has only two top 10s in the last 10 races — but things aren’t quite clicking at the moment and none of its drivers are in the top 10 in points.
It’s tough to go out on a limb and say that one of them will win, but it does feel notable that there are only four drivers (Busch, Logano, Blaney, Martin Truex Jr.) to land a top 10 in each of Gateway’s two Cup races — and they are all both winless in 2024 and former champions.
After the All-Star Race and Coca-Cola 600, we’re now solidly within that middle portion of the Cup Series slate, with just 12 races remaining before we set the 2024 NASCAR Playoffs field. All four of the aforementioned feel just about ready to strike and make their move on the postseason and it’s entirely possible we see some more shifting and re-positioning in the standings as the early-season dominators are caught up to and some fresh faces land in Victory Lane.
You shouldn’t be shocked if one of these four makes it happen this weekend.
Kim Coon and Skip Flores break down why World Wide Technology Raceway is essential for drivers looking to break into Victory Lane in this week’s episode of Around The Track.
4. How many more new winners will we see before the playoffs?
With eight different drivers taking a checkered flag so far in 2024 — including a repeat winner at Charlotte — how many more fresh faces will take a trip to Victory Lane?
Season
No. of Winners Races 1-13
No. of Winners Races 14-26
Total Regular-Season Winners
2017
9
5
14
2018
6
4
10
2019
6
5
11
2020
8
3
11
2021
10
4
14
2022
11
5
16
2023
9
5
14
5. Catch the pack — news and notes from around the garage
Clint Bowyer will suit up for Spire Motorsports and drive the No. 7 Chevrolet truck in the Rackley Roofing 200 on June 28 at Nashville Superspeedway (8 p.m. ET, FS2, MRN Radio, Sirius XM NASCAR Radio).
The team announced Wednesday afternoon that Bowyer will be the seventh different driver to wheel the No. 7 Spire truck this season.
Bowyer retired from full-time competition after the 2020 Cup Series season and is currently a race-day analyst for NASCAR on FOX.
The 44-year-old will reconnect with crew chief Brian Pattie, who was atop the pit box for Bowyer from 2012-2015 at Michael Waltrip Racing. Bowyer is a 10-time winner in the Cup Series and a three-time winner in the Truck Series.
After 11 races, the No. 7 team sits fifth in the 2024 Truck Series owner point standings after earning two wins, five top fives and seven top-10 finishes.
Kyle Busch earned the team’s two victories at Atlanta Motor Speedway and Texas Motor Speedway. Last weekend, Connor Mosack finished eighth in the No. 7 Truck at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
Front Row Motorsports announced Wednesday that it will expand to three chartered cars in the NASCAR Cup Series in 2025.
The Bob Jenkins-owned organization currently fields two Ford Mustang Dark Horse entries in the Cup Series for Michael McDowell and Todd Gilliland. Front Row has entered a third car in select Cup Series events in years past, but the 2025 campaign will mark its first season since 2019 with three full-time efforts after purchasing a third charter for Cup competition.
The organization also indicated that announcements regarding its 2025 driver lineup would be made at a later date.
“It is good to get the news out now as we have a lot of work to do to prepare a new team,” said Jerry Freeze, FRM’s general manager, in a news release from the team. “All of us on the leadership team will be working through that, obtaining the parts and pieces needed for the new team. And, most importantly, adding to the dedicated and talented staff and culture that exists today within our organization.
“Starting a new team from scratch is always a challenge, but with the opportunities in front of us, the talent we have in our leadership, and a bit of a runway to get there, I am confident that we can produce three competitive programs out of the box for the 2025 season. We haven’t lost sight of what our goals for 2024 are, to get our teams into the playoffs for both series. If we can keep up the speed on track and have a little bit of luck to come our way, we can achieve our objectives.”
Wednesday’s news marks another sizable jump for the team that began as a part-time entry in 2005 and moved to full-time competition four years later. Front Row Motorsports strengthened its commitment to Ford in the offseason, also forging a technical alliance with Team Penske.
“We have a very positive outlook on the future of NASCAR and as the sport plans for success, so do we,” Jenkins said. “Today that means having a plan for expanding back to three cars in the NASCAR Cup Series. I always have the vision to continue to grow and improve our team and that commitment and desire never changes. I am committed to the sport and its passionate fans and partners.”
Even before Wednesday’s news, changes were already afoot for Front Row’s driver roster for next season. McDowell has been with FRM’s No. 34 team since 2018, but announced that he would shift to Spire Motorsports in 2025 with a multiyear deal. Todd Gilliland has been with the Front Row No. 38 team since his rookie season in 2022.
McDowell accounts for two of Front Row Motorsports’ four Cup Series victories, including its two most recent triumphs. Those include wins in the 2021 Daytona 500 and just last season with McDowell’s dominant drive at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course. Veteran David Ragan provided Front Row with its first victory (Talladega, 2013), and Chris Buescher added another tally as a rookie winner three years later at Pocono.
Gilliland ranks 22nd in the Cup Series standings, with McDowell 23rd as the circuit heads to World Wide Technology Raceway for Sunday’s Enjoy Illinois 300 (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM). McDowell’s points stature has been hampered by four DNFs in 14 races, but his two Busch Light Pole Awards from this season (Atlanta, Talladega) are career-firsts.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. and CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Beginning Wednesday on NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports and NASCAR Studios bring fans the latest edition of the three-time Sports Emmy-Award-winning short-form documentary series, “Beyond the Wheel.”
The first film, titled “One Team, One Dream: 40 Years of Hendrick Motorsports,” depicts how the organization’s culture has led to its numerous wins and championships. It premieres today during NASCAR Race Hub on FS1 at 6 p.m. ET.
The following documentaries comprise the ninth season of “Beyond the Wheel:”
One Team, One Dream: 40 Years of Hendrick Motorsports– “One Team, One Dream: 40 Years of Hendrick Motorsports” tells the story of NASCAR’s most successful race team in their 40th anniversary season. The wins and championships are well known, but this film digs deeper to gain an understanding of how Rick Hendrick’s leadership and the team members’ dedication built an unrivaled culture of excellence and perseverance. Structured around the team’s 40th anniversary at the April 2024 race at Martinsville Speedway, the film focuses on Hendrick’s leadership philosophy, empowering talented people to give their best effort. Featuring exclusive behind-the-scenes access with Jeff Gordon at Martinsville, and brand-new interviews with Hendrick, Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, Chase Elliott, and more, “One Team, One Dream” is a celebration of where Hendrick Motorsports has been and where it’s headed in the next 40 years.
Die-Cast Mania – “Die-Cast Mania” is a behind-the-scenes look at the world of die-cast collectible NASCAR race cars. Go inside the process of designing and creating these unique pieces of memorabilia, the history of how die-casts became the must-have item for fans, and the lengths collectors will go to build their collections. The film takes viewers back to the early 1990s to meet Fred Wagenhals, the man who convinced Dale Earnhardt and Rusty Wallace to turn toy cars into high-end collectibles, sending the souvenir market into the stratosphere. “Die-Cast Mania” also goes behind the scenes at Lionel Racing, the team behind today’s ultra-detailed models that sell out at every track. Die-cast cars are unlike any other sports memorabilia and “Die-Cast Mania” celebrates that passion.
Steve Park: Destined – “Steve Park: Destined” tells the story of Steve Park, a modified driver handpicked by Dale Earnhardt as one of the next big stars in Cup racing. Park proved him right, earning multiple wins and a devoted fan base. He also helped Dale Earnhardt Incorporated navigate Earnhardt’s death by winning the very next race. But Park’s career was derailed by a freak accident crash and a series of concussions. He worked hard to return to racing but still carried the stigma of injury. With insight from Park’s friends, teammates and fans, as well as through an emotional interview with the man himself, “Steve Park: Destined” is a story of what might have been … and coming to terms with what comes next.
“One Team, One Dream: 40 Years of Hendrick Motorsports” premieres Wednesday, followed by “Die-Cast Mania” on June 5 and “Steve Park: Destined” on June 6. All will air at 6 p.m. ET on FS1’s NASCAR Race Hub, simultaneously live streaming on the FOX Sports App.
Blake Stallings entered the 2024 season with two goals: One, win a race at Virginia’s South Boston Speedway, and tw0, compete for a title in the track’s Late Model division.
Stallings completed the first goal early in the year. Now he’s working toward the second.
The Danville, Virginia driver entered the year with one Limited Late Model victory on his resume at South Boston; he had never found Victory Lane in 10 years racing at the NASCAR Home Track. That changed during the second race of the season. After qualifying fourth, Stallings stayed near the front until about 10 laps remained. From there, he ran down leader Peyton Sellers.
“When we caught him, we got a run on him in the middle of [Turns] 3 and 4,” Stallings said. “I gave him just a little bit of a nudge in the middle of 3 and 4 just to get a run up beside him, and the race was on from there. After racing side by side for 2 or 3 laps, we were able to clear Peyton and get us a win.”
Stallings said finally getting a win at South Boston was not only a dream of his, but his dad’s, as well.
“We stayed consistent and stayed true to try and accomplish it, and we put a ton of work in, so it really means the world to us to be able to go there and win at a place that my dad, Steve Stallings, and my great uncle, Barry Begley, have raced for many, many years,” he said. “ My dad always wanted to get a win there, and he’s always wanted us to get a win there. It just meant a lot to me, my team, my family, as well.”
Through six races this season, Stallings has four top fives and six top 10s. He’s third in the South Boston points standings, 14 points behind the leader. He’s also leading the Late Model points at North Carolina’s Ace Speedway.
Stallings credits a lot of his success to a new car his team built late last season, the one he ran to his best qualifying effort at Martinsville Speedway last fall, coming in 16th.
He has also put an emphasis this year on his health and fitness. He sees being physically fit as a difference maker in a tough Late Model division.
“Just trying to be prepared more physically, just because in today’s time everything is so competitive,” he said. “All the cars are close. You look at any of the NASCAR short tracks or the CARS Tour, anything in a Late Model Stock, it’s always very, very tight, especially qualifying.
“If the car is the best it can be, it puts it down to the driver, and you’ve got to try and be in the best shape to do your job as well behind the wheel. So upgrading equipment and then me taking the time to put in some effort to getting in better shape I think has been a blessing to us and allowed us to be more competitive at different places.”
(Photo: Joe Chandler/South Boston Speedway)
Being physically fit to race helps Stallings with the mental side of being behind the wheel.
“It’s definitely not so much that I used to get tired or anything like that, but you don’t realize how much you actually have to hold yourself in there, how much energy you’re expending to not be able to focus on the job at hand,” he said. “Being able to be more relaxed, have less strain in the car, allows you to have more mental focus on what’s going on around you, what’s going on with your car, which you need in order to be competitive. It’s definitely, definitely been a game changer.”
Stallings has been racing with largely the same group of people for the better part of a decade, including his dad, friends Casey Smith, Lee Wyatt, Mark Atkins and Cody Jensen, and spotter Joey Conner. All of the crew Stallings said he’s known since he was at least a preteen.
Getting to work with his dad every week is “the best thing in the world to me,” Stallings said.
“He’s always loved racing and always been around racing,” Stallings added of his dad. “Ever since we started with go-karts, that’s kind of been our thing. That’s how we spend our father/son time together is working on cars and being at the racetrack. Having a dad that wants to be that involved in what I’m passionate about as well is definitely a blessing.”
Having a crew that has been around his career since the beginning makes getting wins with them by his side more special, too.
(Photo: Joe Chandler/South Boston Speedway)
“I think it’s definitely well-deserved for them because they take time out of their life to help me try to accomplish a goal. All their hard work and effort that they put in, I really do try my best to get the finishes for them because I know how much they sacrifice to support me,” he said. “Being very, a very family oriented team, it definitely means a lot to me to be able to show up on Saturday or Friday and perform so that way they can see that their efforts are being put to good use.”
Stallings and his team weren’t able to compete in every race at South Boston last season, but having some momentum starting off the year with the win and good finishes has definitely, he feels, put them in a good spot to hopefully be a contender for the remainder of this summer.
So far this season, five different drivers have won in six late model races at South Boston. With an incredibly competitive division, Stallings said the key moving forward is just staying consistent.
“We’ve got to knock off more top three finishes,” he said. “Some more wins would be great, as well.”
Stallings gave a thank you to his friends, family, fiancé Jordan, and sponsors R&S Race Cars, Stallings Classic Cars, Southside Disposal and Gutter Works.
Racing will return to South Boston Speedway on June 8 for the Oak River Realty Race Night, featuring Late Models, Limited Sportsman, Pure Stock and Hornets races beginning at 7 p.m. ET.
NASCAR officials penalized Austin Hill on Wednesday for his actions while racing fellow driver Cole Custer in last weekend’s NASCAR Xfinity Series event at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
Hill was fined $25,000 and was docked 25 points in the Xfinity Series driver standings under Section 4.4B in the NASCAR Rule Book. That section deals with NASCAR’s Member Code of Conduct, with penalty guidelines that include:
Wrecking or spinning another vehicle, whether or not that vehicle is removed from Competition as a result.
Any actions deemed to compromise the safety of an Event or otherwise pose a dangerous risk to the safety of Competitors, Officials, spectators, or others.
Hill and Custer crashed with 17 laps remaining in Saturday’s BetMGM 300, when contact between Hill’s No. 21 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet and Custer’s No. 00 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford resulted in a cut tire for Hill. Hill lost control through Turns 1 and 2, collecting Custer, and Hill continued to initiate contact as the two cars reached the backstretch. The repeated contact eventually forced Custer’s car into the inside retaining wall.
Hill continued and finished two laps down in 25th place. Custer was sidelined by the crash and placed 32nd.
The points penalty knocks Hill out of the lead in the Xfinity Series standings, dropping him to third place behind new leader Chandler Smith and second-place Custer.
Competition officials also penalized two teams in the Craftsman Truck Series for lug-nut violations after Friday’s race at Charlotte. Crew chiefs for the two teams were fined $2,500 each for one unsecured lug nut on their trucks:
No. 5 Tricon Garage Toyota (crew chief Derek Smith)
No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford (crew chief Dylan Cappello)