NASCAR announced Thursday that it will manage the racing operations at Bowman Gray Stadium, the historic North Carolina short track with origins that date back to stock-car racing’s earliest years. The move is meant to preserve the future of the longest-running NASCAR-sanctioned venue, with the sanctioning body assuming a lease with the City of Winston-Salem through December 2050.

The quarter-mile track has hosted weekly grassroots events since 1949 at the city-owned stadium under the leadership of multiple generations of the Hawkins family, operating under the company banner of Winston-Salem Speedway, Inc. The earliest race meets were promoted by NASCAR founder Bill France Sr. together with Alvin Hawkins, the sanctioning body’s first flagman and a NASCAR Hall of Fame Landmark Award nominee.

RELATED: Bowman Gray through the years

Austin Shuford was named the new general manager of the stadium racing operations, bringing a wealth of experience from Track Enterprises, promoting events at the Nashville Fairgrounds and other venues across the country. The Hawkins family, however, will remain active in the preparations and other managerial duties as Bowman Gray gets set to open its 76th season of racing Saturday, April 20.

NASCAR Chairman & CEO Jim France and Bowman Gray promoter Gray Garrison shake hands
A ceremonial handshake between NASCAR Chairman & CEO Jim France and Bowman Gray promoter Gray Garrison, the grandson of Alvin Hawkins. Credit: Susan Wong | NASCAR.com

“There’s a lot of history of the families working together, and a lot of history that we’ve had with that stadium,” said Ben Kennedy, NASCAR senior vice president of racing development and strategy. “Especially over the next few years in particular, we want to stay super close. … They’re going to continue to stay involved with us as we kind of get our feet underneath of us because they know every nook and cranny of that entire facility. They know how things operate, and they have relationships in the city that are priceless. We’ve got to make sure that we’re shepherding that into the next generation.”

Kennedy said that talks with Gray Garrison — the stadium’s promoter and grandson of Alvin Hawkins — began informally nearly two and a half years ago, when Garrison approached him during a test of NASCAR’s Next Gen car at Bowman Gray. Those conversations about the track’s future gradually built steam in the months that followed.

The stadium has held a special place for Garrison, who first helped to park cars there at the age of 12, then touted souvenir programs in the horseshoe-shaped grandstands before he was big enough to carry a whole stack. “Everybody in the family did a tour of duty there,” the 62-year-old Garrison says now. “That’s what everybody did.”

But Garrison said he also recognized the importance of the facility to the NASCAR family. Bill France Jr. met his future wife — then Betty Jane Zachary, a Winston-Salem native — at the track in 1957, and Kennedy joined the list of all-time feature winners with a victory in what is now called the ARCA Menards Series East in 2013 with his family in attendance to celebrate the achievement. That long list of winners reads like a who’s who of stock-car racing pioneers, with NASCAR Hall of Famers from the Cup Series and Modified Division earning checkered flags. Tim Flock, a 2014 NHOF inductee, was Bowman Gray’s first track champion, and Richard Petty’s 100th Cup Series victory came at the stadium, which hosted premier-series events from 1958-71.

“We all realized, at some point in time, we’ve got to pass it on to someone else,” Garrison says. “And we felt like what a better partner coming in than you can do with NASCAR. Our big thing is, we really care about the drivers, the competitors, the fans, and they’re like family to us. So we wanted to make sure if we did do something, we wanted to make sure somebody would come in have the same love for the sport and the same vision that we did, and we feel like NASCAR would be the best choice to come in and take this over.

“A lot of these things are not about money. It’s about relationships. I think NASCAR, they’re definitely not getting involved at Bowman Gray for the money. It’s the relationship that’s the full circle of things. … It’s pretty unique, we think, how it ties back in 70-some years later, how it comes back around, and we feel like it’s going to be in good hands.”

Key members pose following a historic signing at one of NASCAR's most impactful tracks.
A historic signing at one of NASCAR’s most impactful tracks. From left: Dale Pinilis, Johnnie Pinilis, Lesa Kennedy, Ben Kennedy, Jim France, Gray Garrison, Jonathan Hawkins, Loren Pinilis. Credit: Susan Wong | NASCAR.com

Kennedy acknowledged that NASCAR’s increased involvement in Bowman Gray’s operations, combined with Next Gen testing there in recent years, may fuel speculation over a possible national-series return to the stadium. He said the potential exists for the track to be used as a proving ground for new technologies in future tests. As for its appearance on future schedule for the Cup Series or other circuits, the idea isn’t unfounded, but for now remains just scuttlebutt.

“Potentially. I certainly wouldn’t rule anything out, and I’d be lying to say if we haven’t talked about it before,” Kennedy said. “We’ve talked about hundreds of tracks. … So obviously nothing to report today. Our focus is really getting up and running on April 20 this year with weekly Modified racing.”

Kennedy said to expect little change for fans and competitors taking in the racing experience, which packs roughly 15,000 fans — give or take a couple thousand, depending on who you ask — into the stands on any given Saturday night. Each season traditionally begins in the second half of April, then ends after three weekends in August so that nearby Winston-Salem State University may begin its home football schedule on the track’s grass infield.

The close-quarters “Madhouse” style of racing has risen to prominence in recent years through a pair of reality TV series, plus weekly broadcasts on FloRacing, living up to its longtime billing as “still the most exciting of them all.” Adult admission at Bowman Gray has held steady at $12, a relative bargain, and the track regularly adds themed meets to the schedule with Ladies’ Night, demolition derbies and monster-truck exhibitions.

“I expect it to be very similar, if not identical to what people have seen,” Kennedy says. “In the past, there might be some kind of small tweaks and upgrades that we might make to the facility, but other than that, the true experience and the uniqueness of it is exactly that. It’s the concession stands and the ticket pricing and the racing on the track and the entertainment off the track. It’s all of that mixed together, and I think that’s what makes it so unique and so special. That’s something that Jim (France, NASCAR chairman) has asked us to make sure that we maintain, and I know the Garrison family wants to maintain.”

MORE: Cup drivers with Bowman Gray experience

Keeping that status quo and mutual support going hits home with Garrison as well.

“I think the biggest takeaway from this is it shows their support for grassroots racing,” Garrison says. “You know, they don’t need to be at Bowman Gray, but it’s a passion they have for weekly racing, and they want to be there to show their support for grassroots racing. And we think that’s very important, not only here in the community of Winston-Salem but in the racing community as a whole. Hey, NASCAR’s still here to stay in weekly racing, they want to be involved, and they want to help it grow, and I think that’s a huge statement on their part.”

Hellmann’s Mayonnaise and JR Motorsports announced Thursday a multiyear extension of the team’s Xfinity Series program through 2026. The extension will mark the 18th consecutive year that the organizations have been paired together.

The partnership details the primary sponsorship of six races per season on the team’s No. 7 Chevrolet — currently driven by Xfinity Series veteran Justin Allgaier — as well as the return of Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the No. 88 at Bristol Motor Speedway for the fall 2024 event.

RELATED: Xfinity Series schedule | Dale Jr. through the years

“We are grateful for Unilever and Hellmann’s continued support and partnership,” Earnhardt Jr. said. “They have played a huge role in our organization and our success ever since the early days of JR Motorsports, both on and off the track. They are a huge component to every part of our company, and we’re looking forward to seeing what the future holds.”

Unilever/Hellmann’s initially made its debut with the Xfinity Series team during the 2009 season, when JR Motorsports was only a two-car operation. Now, 16 years and two more entries later, the Hellmann’s brand has become one of the longest-running partners in NASCAR and the longest-tenured partner of the JRM team.

“On behalf of Hellmann’s and Unilever, we’re honored to continue our partnership with JR Motorsports and Dale Earnhardt Jr., and see the Hellmann’s logo around the track for the 2024 season,” said Chris Symmes, senior marketing director for dressings & condiments at Unilever North America. “Dale has always been a great supporter of our brand and we’re proud to support him as he returns to the racetrack.”

GET TICKETS: 2024 fall Bristol race weekend

Earnhardt’s return to Bristol Motor Speedway in the fall further extends his streak of racing in a Unilever-branded Chevrolet every year since the partnership began in 2009. In 2023, he raced the No. 88 Hellmann’s Chevy at “The Last Great Colosseum,” where he led 47 laps before retiring due to mechanical failure.

Justin Allgaier has also experienced success driving the No. 7 with Hellmann’s on the hood, finding Victory Lane three times in the 2023 season at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Daytona International Speedway, and a thrilling finish at Martinsville, propelling the driver into the Championship 4 race at Phoenix to round out the year.

The team plans to announce the races for Justin Allgaier and the No. 7 Chevrolet at a later date.

Here’s what’s happening in the world of NASCAR with Bristol in the rearview and COTA (Sun., 3:30 p.m. ET, FOX) right around the corner.

THE LINEUP ️

1️⃣ Bristol continues boomin’ start to 2024 season

2️⃣ What will road-course racing look like in 2024?

3️⃣ COTA’s new restart zone, explained

4️⃣ Averages among the elite on road courses

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

cars race at bristol
Getty Images

1. Bristol delivers across the board, continues boomin’ start to 2024

More tire fall-off than expected led to one of the most wild, unpredictable races at Bristol in years, ending with Denny Hamlin putting on a showcase for the ages as others faded.

Another week, another banger.

The 2024 season is off to a raucous start, with Sunday’s stellar showing at Bristol only continuing to deliver the weekly dose of adrenaline we’ve been spoiled with so far this year. There’s always a little extra juice heading to the Tennessee mountains, but, my goodness, did the Food City 500 and the return to concrete prove to be so much more than anybody anticipated.

MORE: Bristol wows with record lead changes, tire strategy

Like, just watch this incredible, delightful madness.

How often do we get the 13th-place driver essentially saying he had a blast of a day at the race track? Literally never.

Bristol’s tire difficulties, while unexpected, led to one of the most popular — among both fans and drivers — races from start to finish in recent memory. Watching all of the different strategies play out, some brilliantly and some catastrophically, while race winner Denny Hamlin reminded everyone that, oh yeah, he’s legitimately one of the best finesse drivers of all time, was a thing of Bristol beauty.

It comes on the heels of what’s already been a memorable season and it legitimately still feels like things are just getting started. We might just be scratching the surface of where this campaign will go, which feels like it could be anywhere, in any direction.

And up next?

One of the premier motorsports facilities in the world — a road-course race at Circuit of The Americas.

denny hamlin celebrates at bristol
Getty Images

2. What will road-course racing look like in 2024?

If you think the 2024 season has been unpredictable so far … well, that likely isn’t going to change with the year’s first road course on tap.

At some point, we’ll start seeing some of the same faces in Victory Lane this year.

Don’t count on it starting this weekend.

Road courses have taken on significantly more importance in the past several years, with the bar raised even higher for 2024 as Watkins Glen International shifts to a September date to mark the postseason’s second twisty track. As such, it’s smoothed out the parity levels across the field as more teams put a heightened emphasis on them.

As such, six different organizations won each of the six road-course races we saw last year, while eight different drivers won the last eight road races overall. Granted, for quite some time, there were only two such events per year, but the last time the Cup Series went longer than eight road-course races with different winners was literally in the first 13 such races in series history from 1953-54.

There was a period during the last decade when it routinely felt like a two-driver contest between aces Chase Elliott and Martin Truex Jr., but those days are, clearly, long gone. In fact, we might even be fully at the opposite end of the spectrum. Not only has Elliott not won on a road course in 14 races, 10 different drivers have visited Victory Lane since the last time he did.

A whopping 15 (!) active drivers have a road-course win on their resumé, so that’s nearly half the field right there that you know can get it done. Combine that with the fact that each of the last four first-time winners all earned their maiden victories on road courses — including one at COTA — and you start to look at drivers like Ty Gibbs (more on him below), John Hunter Nemechek, Zane Smith, Josh Berry and Todd Gilliland, among others, as somebody that could break through and you start to really realize how wide open things are.

Sunday’s field will be one of the more decorated and versatile in recent memory, as well.

Per Racing Insights, drivers on the current entry list combine for:

• Nine Cup championships
• 16 NXS championships
• 4 Truck championships
• 330 Cup wins from 25 drivers
• 387 NXS wins from 30 drivers
• 164 Truck wins from 26 drivers
• 5 IMSA wins
• 81 Supercar wins
• 5 Indy Car wins

Consider that part-time Cup specialists and excitement-generators AJ Allmendinger, Shane van Gisbergen and Kamui Kobayashi contribute heavily to those figures and boy, there’s a lot to look forward to for Sunday.

Most particularly its unknowns.  

cars race at cota

3. COTA’s new restart zone, explained

Circuit of The Americas brings a new challenge to the field with the introduction of a new restart zone; FOX’s Larry McReynolds and MRN’s Todd Gordon explain in this edition of “Inside the Race.”

4. Averages among the elite on road courses

Plenty of names you’d expect rank among the sport’s best road racers on average finish, but another — about to make his 10th road-course start — stands out quite a bit.

DriverCarStartsAvg. FinishWins
Chase ElliottNo. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet308.57
Tyler ReddickNo. 45 23XI Racing Toyota2113.053
Ty GibbsNo. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota913.560
Chris BuescherNo. 17 RFK Racing Ford3213.720
Kyle LarsonNo. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet3314.244
Martin Truex Jr.No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota5114.315
Joey LoganoNo. 22 Team Penske Ford4514.471
Austin CindricNo. 2 Team Penske Ford1514.730
Kyle BuschNo. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet5314.774

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

Power Rankings: Chase Elliott set to reclaim road-course crown at COTA?

Paint Scheme Preview: See the schemes for COTA tripleheader 

Analysis: Chemistry of Gabehart, Hamlin shines in Bristol triumph

NASCAR SVP Probst: ‘Would not want to change (Bristol tires) much at all’

Inside the Race: Track temps and how they influence tires wear

Bowman, crew chief Harris dive into ‘nerve-wracking’ Bristol top five

Racing to history: Hendrick reaches 80,000 laps led in Cup Series

Analysis: Bristol wows with record lead changes, unexpected tire strategy

Kyle Petty: Weighing in on Stewart Friesen vs. Nick Sanchez

@nascarcasm: Fake texts to Bristol winner Denny Hamlin

Christian Eckes wins Bristol for first Truck victory of 2024

Which driver is favored to win 2024 title after Bristol?

Getty Images

Jacob Goede will field seven race cars out of his home this upcoming season.

Yes, the 2019 NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series national champion will continue to race his traditional orange-and-white late model at Elko Speedway, the NASCAR Home Track in Elko New Market, Minnesota where he’s won 10 consecutive titles. But the other six cars in his shop will be quarter midgets, two each for his three daughters: 11-year-old Reese, 9-year-old Johanna and 7-year-old Audrey.

The three Goede girls will race at Little Elko Speedway, home of the Minnesota Quarter Midget Racing Association. Reese is in her fourth year of competition and has already set two track records. Audrey, in her third season, is coming off a year in which she finished second in both of her classes and had multiple wins. Johanna was a rookie last year; she showed improvement in one of Little Elko’s most competitive classes.

“It’s been a lot of learning. Reese is getting pretty competitive,” Goede said. “Audrey came a long way again. She won a few races again. Johanna, her rookie season. … By the end of the year she moved into the competitive class and was doing pretty well.

“That’s always the most interesting watching them start from basically barely being able to go around the race track to picking up racing, making passes, lining up correctly, doing all that kind of stuff.”

(Photo courtesy of Jacob Goede)

All three of the Goede sisters are involved in other athletic activities, from softball, volleyball and dance to horseback riding and gymnastics. Even though Goede has been racing for several decades, for his daughters, it was seeing other drivers their own age that made them want to give the sport a try.

Reese, for example, said she wanted to race after watching Goede’s nephew compete in quarter midgets. Goede recalls setting up cones in a parking lot to teach his oldest daughter how to get around in the car. She experienced some setbacks in her first season, including a wreck in which she flipped her car.

With no damage to the ride – and just a sore elbow – she was able to come around and still finish third.

“That was pretty cool,” Reese said. “I knew if I kept on going, I knew how it happened and that doesn’t happen often.”

Reese’s success encouraged her sisters to get behind the wheel, too.

Said Johanna: “Watching people who raced before me like my dad, Reese and Audrey, it looked fun.”

And Audrey: “Watching my dad and Reese and everybody else, it made it just look fun to try, so I got in the car and it was just fun to me.”

The sisters are competitors on the track, but they’re also each other’s biggest cheerleaders.

“When I watch Audrey, it’s like, ‘Oh my gosh,'” Reese said. “Obviously there’s stuff she can fix, but at the same time she’s getting really good for how old she is.”

Said Johanna: “Watching Reese be competitive, it makes me want to be competitive.”

Jacob Goede
Jacob Goede, family and friends celebrate his 2020 track championship at Elko Speedway.

Elko Speedway has seen a rise in female racers in recent seasons. Taylor Goldman became the first woman to win a track championship when she took home the Power Stock division title in 2018, and she most recently finished fourth in Elko’s Thunder Cars division. Julie Jorgenson became the second woman to win a title when she won the 2023 Elko championship in the Power Stocks division.

Goldman has become a mentor to the Goede sisters, helping them strap into their cars before races and offering any advice they may need.

“At the beginning of the season, I would not pass right away,” Reese said. “And she told me to pass right away because you’re going to get passed if you don’t pass.”

Added Johanna: “She told me it’s OK to sometimes make mistakes. Don’t be scared to pass. Be confident in yourself to win.”

And Audrey: “She told me I can do this and she cheers us on, too.”

The women who drive at Elko serve as inspirations to young girls in the car. Said Reese: “When they cheer us on, obviously they’ve gone really far, so watching them cheer us on is good because they got to where they are.”

(Photos courtesy of Jacob Goede)

The biggest lesson Goede tries to teach his daughters is how to be competitive, how to win and lose, and take the good with the bad. He wants to make sure they continue to show a desire for racing. He aims to show them that, if they want a successful career in the sport, they can have one with hard work.

All three Goede sisters have big goals they’re working toward in 2024. Reese wants to run for a championship this summer. Johanna wants to get to Victory Lane in an older class.

Audrey said simply she wants to “try to win every race.”

Goede is just looking to see his daughters continue to learn and have fun.

“Lots of learning. That’s how it always goes, I think, every season with kids,” he said. “We’re getting close to being competitive, and we hope to win races.

“They’re picking it up, and I don’t know where it’ll go, but we’re going to enjoy it right now while it lasts.”

Both of Elko’s tracks will open for practice at the end of April. Elko Speedway will open the season on May 25. The first race at Little Elko will take place May 12.

When Josh Williams knew last fall that he would be joining Kaulig Racing for the 2024 Xfinity Series season on a multiyear deal, he also realized it came with a different set of obstacles. For the first time in his racing career, he was paired with a perennial, front-running organization.

Williams, who has worked his entire career toward such an opportunity, raised expectations for the incoming season. Before the 2024 season opener at Daytona International Speedway, he even declared to NASCAR.com, “I’m going to win a race — at least one. We might win more, but at least one somewhere. We’re going to make the playoffs, for sure.”

RELATED: Williams joins Kaulig for full-time Xfinity Series campaign in 2024

Kaulig Racing knew Williams would have an adjustment period. It marked a new era where he would be getting premium information from an organization that expects to compete for championships on a yearly basis. It’s also an organization that prides itself on giving drivers who haven’t given up on their journey an opportunity to succeed.

“I’m not going to lie, it’s going to be super hard,” Chris Rice, president of Kaulig Racing, said of Williams joining the team. “When you’re teammates with AJ Allmendinger, [Shane van Gisbergen], it’s going to be different for him because he’s never had those kinds of guys as teammates. He’s up for the challenge.”

Williams’ happy-go-lucky yet relentless personality jives with Kaulig Racing. Meghan Henriques, his marketing agent for the past decade, said he has a considerable chip on his shoulder to perform at a high level.

“I want him to go out there, have some fun again and show everyone what he is truly made of,” she said, “and stop thinking this is it because it’s not. It’s just the beginning for him.”

Williams is always up for a challenge. Over the offseason, Rice challenged his driver to get in better shape. It was either that or lose his signature mullet. Williams dropped 25 lbs.

Everything is different for Williams in 2024. Kaulig’s preparation for race weekends is far dissimilar from anything he’s had previously. He’s already been on the Chevrolet simulator more this season than the entire 2023 season while driving for DGM Racing.

Williams, who is known to turn a few wrenches and get his hands dirty working on the machines he drives, has even had to step back from that role.

“I try to when I go to the shop, and they get mad at me, ‘You don’t have to do that,'” Williams joked about working on his hot rods. “And I’m like, ‘I know what I’m doing.’ And they are like, ‘We know that you know what you’re doing, but you don’t have to do that.’ A lot of the guys in the shop I’ve known for years, and they give me a hard time and every time I start doing something.”

Simply showing up to the track under the Kaulig banner was a contrast. Entering the 2024 season, Kaulig Racing had 23 Xfinity victories to its name, with the team’s top-10 percentage north of 51% (278 top 10s in 537 starts).

“It changes a lot,” Williams said of his outlook. “Every time they drop the lift gate, we have a shot to win this thing. That’s a huge difference, especially at the tracks that I’m strong at in years past. It’s going to be interesting to see how I run in [Kaulig] equipment compared to what I was in before.”

The first month of the 2024 racing season has been unkind to the No. 11 team. Williams has a best finish of 14th at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, with the other three results outside the top 25. His misfortune kicked off at Daytona when he was involved in an 11-car pileup at the beginning of the second stage. He had three left-rear tires go flat at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Most recently at Phoenix Raceway, Jeremy Clements got into Williams on Lap 6, which grounded the sway bar off his car. He took the checkered flag in 27th position, five laps down.

When describing the first four races with Kaulig, Williams kept it short: “Unlucky.”

No. 11’s misfortune has buried Williams to 30th in the championship standings, earning a mere 37 points. He is already 61 points below the elimination line, but he isn’t even thinking about the postseason.

“Your results are what shows,” Williams said. “The points, I don’t try to chase that. We’re not to that point. Once it gets to playoff time, and if we’ve made up that many spots and have had some solid runs, then we’re going to get to the point where we can watch that stuff and try to chase that stuff and a win.”

Williams remains upbeat despite the current circumstances, believing the misfortune will cycle itself through.

“I know that it’s not a team issue, it’s just something out of our control,” Williams added. “That’s what makes it OK. It’s not like we’re just having bad runs and don’t have any speed – luck just isn’t there. That’s what keeps me positive. It’s something that no one can control.”

MORE: 2024 Xfinity Series standings | 2024 Xfinity Series schedule

Leaning on his teammates Allmendinger and van Gisbergen — two of the best road-course competitors in the field — at Circuit of The Americas will help Williams through the Focused Health 250 on March 23 (5 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Williams has yet to compete at COTA as he’s failed to qualify for the race on two occasions. He was suspended during last season’s event.

Two looming short tracks in Richmond Raceway and Martinsville Speedway follow, which will be the time for Williams to strike.

“It’s super important because those are the types of race tracks that I succeed at,” Williams said. “It’s a good opportunity for me to capitalize on gaining our points back and putting us back into a comfortable position, running well. Once you run good a couple of times, everything changes. The morale of the people, confidence, everything changes. I think we’ve got a good opportunity when we go back racing to have some solid finishes if we can stay out of trouble and the whole thing will change.”

Chase Elliott and Hendrick Motorsports unveiled Wednesday morning the throwback paint scheme the No. 9 driver will run for the Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway on May 12 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

The scheme is a nod to NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s 2014 Daytona 500 victory, in which he led 54 laps en route to his second victory in the “Great American Race” at Daytona International Speedway.

RELATED: See No. 9 throwback from every angle | BUY GEAR: No. 9 throwback 

Chase Elliott’s No. 9 UniFirst Chevrolet Camaro highlights the iconic red, white and blue scheme fans saw leading the field and in Victory Lane four times throughout the 2014 season, with wins in Daytona’s season opener, once at Pocono Raceway and later Martinsville Speedway.

chase elliott darlington throwback scheme
Courtesy of Hendrick Motorsports

The 2020 NASCAR Cup Series champion’s relationship with Earnhardt traces back quite some time, and Elliott first truly broke onto the NASCAR scene as a future superstar behind the wheel of the JR Motorsports No. 9 Chevrolet. He took over that ride full-time in 2014 — the same year Earnhardt won the 500 in this paint scheme — claiming the Xfinity Series championship that season.

Elliott heads to the “Track too Tough to Tame” hoping to capture his first victory at the South Carolina facility. Chase Elliott has 151 laps led, four top fives and seven top-10 finishes through 14 Cup starts at Darlington. The closest that the Dawsonville, Georgia native has come to winning at the “Lady in Black” came in 2023, when he finished third in the month of May.

DARLINGTON: See last year’s classic schemes | Iconic throwbacks over time

There will be no time to rest for Trackhouse Racing development driver Connor Zilisch on Saturday.

Shortly after concluding his NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series debut with Spire Motorsports at Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas, Zilisch will take a short flight to Pensacola, Florida to compete with Pinnacle Racing Group in the ARCA Menards Series East opener at Five Flags Speedway.

Zilisch has no idea how he is going to execute a grueling doubleheader weekend on two different types of tracks, but he has full confidence in his own ability to deliver strong performances for both Spire and PRG.

“I’ve done a bunch of preparation to be ready for both races,” Zilisch said. “I’m ready to make the most of the opportunity with the ARCA car and the truck. Pensacola is going to be the biggest thing, as I’m showing up to the track without practice or qualifying and with no experience in an ARCA car on an oval.

“There’s going to be a lot of new stuff for me, but I’m doing everything I can to be ready for it.”

While most young drivers would see the 3.4-mile layout at COTA as an imposing challenge, Zilisch is entering that race without much trepidation. Road racing encompasses a key part of Zilisch’s identity as a driver. In 2020, he became the first American to win the CIK-FIA Karting Academy Trophy, joining an elite list of champions that includes current Formula One competitor Charles Leclerc.

Zilisch only added to his road course racing prestige when he entered his first Rolex 24 at Daytona International Speedway earlier this year for the LMP2 class. Displaying maturity and resolve, Zilisch played an integral part in leading his team Era Motorsport to the LMP2 class victory and an overall finish of ninth.

The efficiency continued for Zilisch during the 12 Hours of Sebring this past weekend, as he helped put Era Motorsport on top of the LMP2 leaderboard once again after an arduous day of racing.

Winning two consecutive endurance crown jewels has given Zilisch plenty of confidence over the past few months while preparing to tackle a busy oval racing schedule. Along with a full East Series campaign, Zilisch is slated to make several appearances in the Truck Series, NASCAR Xfinity Series and the zMAX CARS Tour.

It did not take long for Zilisch to initially acclimate himself to oval racing. He took home a checkered flag in his debut Pro Late Model race back in 2022 and has since added a CARS Pro Late Model Tour victory to his resume, which he obtained at Ace Speedway last year.

Among the accomplishments Connor Zilisch has already accumulated on oval racing include wins in Limited Late Models and Pro Late Models. (Photo: Ted Malinowski/NASCAR)

There are many aspects of oval racing Zilisch is still trying to ascertain, but the knowledge obtained through heavy braking zones and diverse corners at road courses around the United States were crucial in expediting his early development.

“With oval racing, you have two corners you need to perfect, while road racing has about 15 corners you need to get good at,” Zilisch said. “Road racing has prepared me very well, and I feel like I can adapt to a lot of different cars. No matter what track I go to, I’m always prepared for it.”

Zilisch showcased that versatility in his ARCA Menards Series debut with PRG at Watkins Glen International.

Connor Zilisch
Despite his inexperience in stock cars, Connor Zilisch is confident he can turn in two solid performances between Circuit of the Americas and Five Flags Speedway. (Photo: Susan Wong/NASCAR)

Nobody in the field could match Zilisch’s pace for most of the day, as he led a race-high 34 laps after starting on the outside pole. A potential victory for Zilisch evaporated during a one-lap shootout in the rain, as he was moved by Jesse Love in the final corner, forcing him to settle for a disappointing second.

Zilisch is hoping for an even better outcome in his NASCAR national debut at COTA. A driver affiliated with Spire won the first three events on the Truck Series schedule, so Zilisch intends to keep that trend going Saturday by relying on previous road course experience and the stellar equipment at his disposal.

PRG also carries an efficient track record in ARCA outside of what Zilisch nearly accomplished in his debut. Luke Fenhaus led the organization visited Victory Lane twice on the ARCA platform in 2023, and they are expected to be favorites for the East Series title with Zilisch behind the wheel.

Barring a prolonged ending to the Truck Series event, Zilisch believes he can arrive in Pensacola at a reasonable hour and debrief with PRG about their plan for the East Series feature. The turnaround will be quick between the two states, but Zilisch intends to stay composed and focused on one race at a time.

“It’s going to be tough, especially with how much is going on,” Zilisch said. “I just have to stay calm and let others do all the hard work. Racing is not easy, but I need to recover from the Truck Series race even though it’s not going to be that long or that hot.

“Mentally, I need to get myself in the right headspace to race on an oval after I’m finished with COTA.”

A two-state, same-day doubleheader may be a new challenge for Zilisch, but he is no stranger to dealing with adversity. Facing plenty future NASCAR and Formula One stars through his developmental period has matured Zilisch into a driver capable of winning in any discipline at 17 years old.

Despite this, Zilisch is trying to set both high and reasonable expectations for himself between COTA and Five Flags. He knows Spire and PRG are going to prepare race-winning equipment, but Zilisch will consider the marathon day a success if he keeps each vehicle in one piece and obtains valuable knowledge for future starts.

 “With the amount of experience I have in NASCAR’s national series, which is basically none, any kind of success would be cool,” Zilisch said. “This year I’m trying to learn as much as I can and not really focus on where I finish. Hopefully we can get some good results [on Saturday].”

The 2024 season has already been a strong one for Zilisch with his accomplishments on road courses. A great weekend between COTA and Five Flags could be crucial for Zilisch to carry that momentum into stock car competition for the rest of the year and beyond.

SOUTH BOSTON, Va. — Plenty of excitement, a high level of competition and another intense chase for the South Boston Speedway Sentara Health Late Model Stock Car Division title are in store as teams prepare for the 100-lap race that will be part of South Boston Speedway’s season-opening URW Community Federal Credit Union Race Day event Sunday.

“We enjoy racing at South Boston Speedway,” said Peyton Sellers, who will be searching for a record-tying seventh South Boston Speedway track championship. “It’’s home for us. I feel as good about our chances as any of the past few seasons.

“NASCAR hasn’t made a lot of changes in the cars during the off-season. Our cars are kind of dialed in. Things we have been doing are working.”

Sellers, who has scored 11 wins in 36 starts at South Boston over the past two seasons, pointed out he is expecting another competitive season at the 0.4-mile oval.

“The competition is always good at South Boston Speedway,” he said. “This place is unique enough to where the cars are constantly changing, and it’s a hard place to get around. That breeds good competition.”

Mike Looney of Catawba, Virginia is one of the drivers expected to compete for the track championship. Looney won 10 races last season and is only eight wins shy of the 100-win mark. He made seven starts at South Boston last season, scoring four top-five finishes, which included a pair of second-place finishes and a pair of third-place finishes.

“We didn’t get to race here as much last year as we wanted to,” Looney noted. “It’s a great place to race. We’ve got a pretty good notebook. I’ve got the tools to be successful, and that’s all I can ask for. I’ve got some fans down here and we’re looking forward to it. We’ve been working hard. Race time is upon us.”

Looney, the 2023 track champion at Pulaski County Motorsports Park (formerly known as Motor Mile Speedway) noted that the competition level is always high at South Boston.

“I’d say this is the best weekly track in the country as far as car count and competition,” Looney said. “It’s a whole experience with the fans down here. There are a lot of people and a lot of energy. You make a pass for the lead here, and you can hear it in the car. It’s really fun.”

South Boston Speedway
(Photo: Susan Wong/NASCAR)

Jacob Borst is optimistic about his chances to be a title contender this season, too. Borst finished third in the South Boston point standings last season. He had one win and 14 top-five finishes, which included five second-place finishes in his 18 starts.

“It’s surprising to me that this is our fourth year of racing Late Models at South Boston Speedway,” Borst said. “I’m looking forward to it. I think a lot of my guys are looking forward to it. I’ve always looked forward to racing at SoBo because you’re racing people that race with respect and will race you hard without wrecking you.”

Borst characterized his 2023 season as a learning year.

“Last year we struggled a little bit trying different things,” the Elon, North Carolina resident explained. “It definitely was a learning year for us. Everybody has to try something different. If you don’t try something different, you’re never going to get any better. That’s what we did last year. We took that knowledge of what didn’t work and what did work and put it all together. I felt like at the end of the year we were a lot better.

“We have done a lot over the winter, and we will have a good piece for this year. I’m just hoping we can have that breakout season and end up on top.”

Blake Stallings of Danville, Virginia said he is “super excited and glad” to be back at South Boston this year. “I’m in better shape physically and mentally,” he added. “I’ve been in the gym and have also been working on my diet and working on our racing program.”

As for his racing program, Stallings is optimistic about the 2024 season. Last season at South Boston Speedway, Stallings had a pair of top-five finishes and nine top-10 finishes in 14 starts.

“We’ve got some pretty big plans this year,” he said. “The car will be fielded by R&S Race Cars. They are going to maintain the car and handle the setup. Myself, my dad, and my crew will be at the track like normal.”

Stallings has a two-pronged goal for the 2024 season: win the South Boston Speedway track championship and win his first career race at the 0.4-mile oval.

“The goal is to compete for the championship,” Stallings explained, “but ultimately, we would like to win some races here this year. I’ve never won a race at South Boston Speedway, and I would love to win a race down here. That’s been a goal of mine and a goal my dad has wanted for me for a long time.”

South Boston Speedway
(Photo: Susan Wong/NASCAR)

Trevor Ward of Winston-Salem, North Carolina, the winner of last year’s ValleyStar Credit Union 300 at Martinsville Speedway, is looking forward to South Boston Speedway’s March 23 season-opener. Ward made six starts at South Boston Speedway last season, scoring four top-five finishes that included a trio of third-place finishes.

“We’re out to win races and put on a good show,” Ward said. “We had three third-place finishes out of the six races we ran here last year. We just could never pull off a win, but that is one thing on the bucket list that we want to do. My father has won a handful of races here and that’s something that has always been on my bucket list. South Boston is a prestigious racetrack, and I would like to check winning here off of my bucket list.”

Landon Pembelton’s goal when he races at South Boston Speedway this season is simply to win races. In his six starts at South Boston Speedway last season, Pembelton had a win, a pole, four top-five finishes and five top-10 finishes.

“We’re going for multiple wins this year,” he pointed out. “We’re always trying to chase after that trophy when we come. We’ve just got to make sure our stuff is on point every time we come to the racetrack. I have pretty high expectations this year.”

Advance tickets for Sunday’s URW Community Federal Credit Union Race Day event at South Boston Speedway are priced at $17 each. Tickets may be purchased online on South Boston Speedway’s website, www.southbostonspeedway.com, or by calling the speedway office at 434-572-4947 or toll free at 1-877-440-1540 during regular business hours.

Tickets at the gate on race day will be $20 each. Seniors ages 65 and older, military, healthcare workers and students (with ID) can purchase tickets for $17 each at the gate on race day.

The URW Community Federal Credit Union Race Day event schedule has practice running from 8:30 a.m. until 11 a.m. Qualifying begins at 11:45 a.m., a SMART Modified Tour driver autograph session is set for 1:15 p.m., a last chance qualifying race for the modifieds is set for 2:10 p.m., and the first race of the day is set to get the green flag at 3 p.m.

Goodyear tires were the topic of many a NASCAR conversation Monday after a thrilling, unpredictable classic Sunday afternoon at Bristol Motor Speedway.

The severe tire wear around the 0.533-mile track in the Food City 500 threw everyone for a loop, including Goodyear, its director of racing Greg Stucker told SiriusXM NASCAR Radio on Monday afternoon. The result was an exciting battle of tire management, but Goodyear is looking into what led to the Sunday surprise.

MORE: Recap Hamlin’s Bristol win

Tires used in Sunday’s race were the same tire code that Goodyear provided for teams in September, leading to more confusion in figuring out why it behaved so differently Sunday than it did during the playoff race last fall.

“Yesterday was a drastic departure from what we expected,” Stucker said Monday on SiriusXM. “The goal now is to just try to figure out why that happened, but I think we’re approaching it it really positively.”

That positive reaction stems from fan, driver and NASCAR sentiment alike. John Probst, NASCAR’s senior vice president of innovation and racing development, called Sunday’s race “one of the best short-track races I’ve ever seen.”

“For the past year or so,” Stucker said, “the drivers have been pushing us to be more aggressive in our recommendations to be more aggressive in tire wear and let them manage the tires over the course of the run. And I think that’s what we saw yesterday. Tire management was key. It was probably the most important thing of anything in the race.

“Now, I’m not advocating that we have tire wear as severe as we saw yesterday every race. But I think it’s a place where we could draw a line in the sand and I think we can learn from that.”

NASCAR Cup Series drivers pit for tires at Bristol Motor Speedway.
Jonathan Bachman | Getty Images

The next steps have already begun, which center on why the tires wore after approximately 50 laps Sunday as opposed to lasting a full 130 laps back in September.

“I mentioned before that this was the same tire that we raced last in September of last year. It’s the same D numbers; it’s a different production line,” Stucker said. “So we’re not taking anything for granted. It’s the same spec, but is there anything that could stand out that could create a difference? A couple of drivers after the race told us, ‘Look, you can’t convince me that was the same tire the way it behaves,’ and we get that. I mean, there’s no question that the tire didn’t wear the same. It didn’t put rubber down like it did in September. It just behaved differently.

“Now was that because of the tire itself? Was that because of the race track? Obviously, resin was put down on the race track instead of the PJ1 which was done last year. We haven’t really decided if that could be a factor yet. That’s one thing that we’re looking at. … Was there anything they did differently washing the race track or anything like that?

“So there’s a lot to go through. But we’re certainly looking at every piece of the puzzle from our perspective and make sure there was nothing in our raw materials or any of our processes that would create any sort of difference.”

Ultimately, Stucker credited the wheelmen and their teams for navigating the situation with grace to get to the checkered flag without further issue, concluding the record-breaking race on a 121-lap green-flag run.

“Kudos to the drivers,” Stucker said. “That’s what they’ve been saying. Again, it was extreme yesterday, but I think what transpired just reinforced what they’ve been saying and how important it is to put some of the control of the car back in the hands of the drivers because it really does make a difference. And I say drivers, but it’s also in the hands of the crew chiefs. The crew chiefs had to go to work yesterday also, right, and try to make adjustments with a race car so the drivers could keep the tires underneath them. And so I think if you poll the garage, most everybody had a pretty darn good time, even in a challenging situation because it was fun behind the wheel; it was fun for the crew chiefs to make adjustments.”

RELATED: Chemistry of Hamlin, Gabehart shine at Bristol

Stucker said there will likely be another Goodyear tire test held at Bristol before returning to “The Last Great Colosseum” in September for this year’s playoff race. But any adjustments will be made within the hopes of maintaining notable tire wear while better understanding and expecting the tire behavior.

“With the feedback we’ve gotten and hearing some of the comments, we don’t have to go too terribly far, I think,” Stucker said. “We don’t want to go back and go too hard. But I think we have to understand what happened, and we have to go back and try to replicate that and make sure that it doesn’t happen again. We’ve got to understand why we were surprised and what we can do to fix it so we can go back with the expectation of 80% or so (of Sunday’s wear), go back with that in September and deliver exactly what we expect.”

Heading into Sunday’s Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway, no one truly knew how the NASCAR Cup Series cars would react upon the concrete surface of the 0.533-mile bullring oval.

Not after Saturday’s practice, anyway, which resulted in track conditions and tire-wear patterns that were confusing at best, or otherwise befuddling.

And yet the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing team spotlighted by driver Denny Hamlin and crew chief Chris Gabehart rose above any adversity thrown at them in the 500-lap chess match that struck Thunder Valley on Sunday afternoon.

MORE: Bristol wows in concrete return | Cup Series standings

If you’ve been watching NASCAR racing since 2019, it should be no surprise that this duo’s chemistry was perfectly matched yet again. Their Bristol triumph marked their 20th win together — plus one with former lead engineer Sam McAuley in Gabehart’s relief in 2022. Hamlin’s 21 victories since the start of 2019 are the most of all drivers, equating to an 11.4% win rate in those 185 points-paying races.

No matter the situation, Hamlin and Gabehart appear unfazed by misfortune, oddities or distractions. So when Goodyear’s tires began wearing to their cords early and often on Bristol’s concrete, Hamlin and Gabehart evaluated, adapted and conquered.

“He did a great job of just updating me with every pit stop what was going on with the tires,” Hamlin said Sunday. “‘Hey, this was this amount of run, how many laps. This tire was corded; this tire was corded.’ Just letting me make adjustments from there. That’s really what he did great. It allowed me to do my job at a high level when you have that kind of information. Certainly, he just kept making the car better, as well.

“It’s not all driver. You have to have a car that is easy on the tires, as well. They just did a great job building me that today.”

Bristol provided perhaps the most unpredictable 500 laps ever run around “The Last Great Colosseum,” a bold claim to be sure, but not unfounded after a track-record 54 lead changes among 16 drivers while each competitor figured out how best to maximize their equipment in real time.

“Again, it’s so far off the playbook from what anyone was expecting when the lift gates opened Saturday morning,” Gabehart said. “No one. There’s not a single driver, single crew chief, engineer that planned on this. You calibrate your entire world around a certain set of parameters for Bristol. It was pretty clear right after practice, again pretty clear after 80 laps into the race, all of that had to go out the window.

“Now it’s instincts. A lot of your prep work, tools and planning, for the most part, are invalid. It’s still a race car. It’s still got an engine, driver, four black things on it for a while ’til they turn gray. It’s way different. You have to go off instinct every part of the race. That’s everybody. That’s the tire guy, the car chief, the mechanics helping. …

“Every 40 laps those guys are having to get data off the tires, get the information to me so I can get it to him, get the next set ready to go. Goodyear released another set. We have to go get it, match that set up. We don’t just bolt them on the car. There’s a lot that goes into what did we get, how does it match up with the tires we have, when do you want to use these, use your qualifying scuffs. It had it all, and that really makes it fun.”

Denny Hamlin, left, and Chris Gabehart speak before a NASCAR Cup Series race.
Zack Albert | NASCAR.com

That fun — the exuberance of winning a race that necessitated mental strategy, different techniques and quick processing — glowed upon their faces Sunday evening as they sat in the Bristol media center.

And that the track demanded abnormal approaches to its corners as opposed to different years? That only added to the thrill Hamlin experienced in Victory Lane.

“I know I had such a huge role in the result,” Hamlin said. “If the car was not good, I wasn’t going to win. But I feel like I played a huge factor in the result. It’s really a proud one for me. Certainly one of the more proud ones I’ve had in my career, no question.”

How fitting, too, one week after explaining that more tire management would put the results of the race more into the drivers’ hands at Phoenix Raceway. In fact, Phoenix proved another example of Gabehart and Hamlin overcoming obstacles after Hamlin spun while battling Tyler Reddick for the race lead, rallying back to an 11th-place finish.

With a series-best 8.46 average running position and 272 laps led, it’s been a rock-solid start for the No. 11 group. Don’t be surprised if the team only gets better from here.