Justin Bonsignore is well aware of where he sits on the all-time NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour win list.
He started the 2024 season with 40 victories, just two shy of Ted Christopher for third all-time and four away from Reggie Ruggiero for second all-time.
Following his 41st career victory, which arrived at Richmond Raceway last week, Bonsignore sits just one win behind Christopher for third.
Justin Bonsignore won his 41st NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour race last Friday at Richmond Raceway. (Photo: Emily Morgan/NASCAR)
Conveniently, the next stop on the schedule, Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park, is a track where Bonsignore has 13 Modified Tour victories. He also just so happens to be tied with Christopher for second on the Modified Tour win list at Thompson, two victories behind 15-time Thompson winner Mike Stefanik.
Sunday’s IceBreaker 150, the 50th edition of the legendary event at the 0.625-mile oval, is an opportunity for Bonsignore to both equal and surpass one of the Modified Tour’s most legendary competitors.
It’s an opportunity Bonsignore doesn’t take lightly.
“It’s talked about so much in our series,” Bonsignore said about his standing on the all-time Modified Tour win list. “It would be really cool if we could win at Thompson and surpass him on the all-time win list there for second and then also tie him on the Tour win list.”
Realistically, there is a strong chance that Bonsignore could move into second on the all-time win list ahead of Ruggiero before the end of the 2024 season.
To start the year, he needed to win five races in order to accomplish that goal. Last year he won five times, including at Thompson.
But first, he needs to catch and pass Christopher for third. His first opportunity to catch him comes at 4:30 p.m. ET this Sunday afternoon.
“Those are guys that legends of the sport, especially of our series and our community in the New England area,” Bonsignore said. “To have my name mentioned with those guys is really cool.
“You’ve got to win the next one, but Reggie is not far in front of him if we can continue to run the way we are.”
Trevor Catalano off to a fast start during rookie Modified Tour campaign
Three drivers have finished inside the top five in each of the first two NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour races this year.
Two of them are obvious, defending series champion Ron Silk and Bonsignore. But the third could be labeled as a surprise.
Those results put him fourth in the series standings behind Silk, Bonsignore and Doug Coby, though Coby is not entered in Sunday’s IceBreaker 150.
The youngest of the three Catalano brothers, Trevor will face a tall task at Thompson as he competes at one of the Modified Tour’s most beloved facilities for the first time in his career.
He’ll lean on the notebook his older brother Tommy has put together in his 11 previous starts at the track.
“I am very surprised by the start of the season so far, as we came into this year hoping for top 15s and maybe sneak into the top 10 every once in a while,” Catalano said. “I think Thompson will be one of the harder tracks on the schedule, but we have a decent notebook from Tommy running there, and I am pretty confident we can have a decent run.
“A top 10 would be awesome for my first time at Thompson.”
Jake Johnson, driver of the No. 3 Propane Plus/Lin’s Propane Trucks Modified, during the New Smyrna Beach Area Visitors Bureau 200 for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at New Smyrna Speedway on Feb. 10, 2024. (Photo: Adam Fenwick/NASCAR)
Jake Johnson looks to do one spot better in return to Thompson
Last fall, Jake Johnson put together the best race of his Modified Tour career at Thompson.
Starting sixth in Boehler Racing Enterprises’ Ole Blue No. 3, Johnson marched to the front of the field and led 22 laps around the halfway point of the 150-lap event. He ultimately settled for second behind Silk, but it was still a day of which Johnson could be proud.
Johnson returns to Thompson for the IceBreaker 150 for the first time as a full-time member of the Modified Tour roster after two part-time seasons the last two years.
His goal for this weekend and for the entire season is simple: Get Boehler Racing Enterprises back in Victory Lane on the Modified Tour for the first time in seven years.
Coincidentally, the last time Boehler Racing Enterprises won was on April 9, 2017 with driver Rowan Pennink during the IceBreaker 150 at Thompson.
“I’m defiantly confident going to Thompson when it comes to the BRE crew and car,” Johnson said. “The whole team has deep roots with the facility, and the car has shown great speed there over the years.
“But we all know that confidence is only a piece of the puzzle, and staying humble is just as important.”
NOTES:
The NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour will welcome a new competitor this weekend at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park when Mike Marshall makes his series debut. The Hudson, New Hampshire native is a familiar face at New Hampshire’s Hudson Speedway.
Matt Hirschman is back with the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour this week at Thompson after skipping the event at Richmond Raceway last Friday. It’ll be his first Tour start at Thompson since last August, when he suffered a broken left arm in a crash that sidelined him for a few weeks.
After scoring a top-five finish driving the Advantage Motorsports No. 14 at Richmond, Bobby Santos III will pilot the No. 44 for the Tinio family this Sunday at Thompson.
Matt Swanson will make his first start of the season Sunday aboard his family-owned No. 89. He competed in both events last year at Thompson, finishing 23rd and 11th, respectively.
CONCORD, N.C. — It was a timely reminder of Hendrick Motorsports and its inexorable connection to Martinsville Speedway.
As Alan Gustafson, crew chief for Chase Elliott, explained his team’s long, fruitful and occasionally complicated relationship with the shortest oval on the Cup circuit, one of the track’s famous grandfather clock trophies (among many on display inside the Hendrick Motorsports museum) suddenly was chiming in on the discussion.
Bong. Bong. Bong.
Gustafson, who guided Jeff Gordon to the final win of his career there in 2015 and a championship-saving win by Elliott there in 2020, smiled.
“I’m always optimistic going to Martinsville,” he said.
As he and anyone at Hendrick Motorsports should be after 28 Cup victories, the all-time single-track record for an organization.
For NASCAR’s greatest team ever, Martinsville is synonymous with myriad moments that made its fame through some of its sweetest triumphs. But it also is stigmatized by one of the sport’s deepest tragedies — an overwhelming heartbreak that could have broken anyone’s spirit.
No track in NASCAR history has been more intertwined with a team’s narrative arc.
As Rick Hendrick celebrates the 40th anniversary of starting a racing powerhouse, the 0.526-mile oval in Southwest Virginia brings all of his team’s roots and rough edges into sharp relief.
It was at Martinsville where Hendrick Motorsports was saved by a Geoff Bodine victory on April 29, 1984 — the first win for a fledgling team of five employees that was within weeks of shutting its doors for good.
And it also was at Martinsville after a victory by Jimmie Johnson on Oct. 24, 2004 that the world learned a Hendrick Motorsports plane carrying key executives and family members had crashed en route to the race, killing all 10 aboard.
The devastating incident didn’t derail the team, which won nine of the next 20 championships in a testament to its legendary adaptability and resilience.
Founded by the son of a Virginia tobacco farmer, Hendrick Motorsports often has been compared with the New York Yankees — NASCAR’s version of an MLB standard-bearer. But this dynasty has been so good for so long in auto racing, a sport where setups, cars and rules have been known to change weekly.
“You just know that when you talk to Mr. Hendrick, there was a journey, there was a lot of work, a lot of grit to get to this point,” said Cliff Daniels, crew chief for Kyle Larson. “And to see him be able to enjoy this year makes it even that much more special. To know the heart and the soul that he and (Linda) Hendrick have poured into it makes it very sweet.
“Part of the reason that the success at Martinsville is so special is because of the tragedy at Martinsville, if that makes sense. When we tell stories about the race wins in Martinsville, it’s always a reminder of what happened on that day (of the plane crash). Yes, the first win was special and the Jimmie wins and the Jeff (Gordon) wins and the 1-2 finishes, but it’s also about what happened on that day. That’s a big part of the Hendrick story.”
That will be evident with the pomp and circumstance this weekend at Martinsville, where the team will run four shiny red cars in honor of its ruby anniversary and Bodine and Gordon will be the grand marshals. It’s also the only track where the owner’s four active drivers have all won.
But despite that success, there are no easy trips to a place where Hendrick’s brother, son and two nieces died trying to reach on a grim day 20 years ago.
“I think there’s a lot of emotions that come with Martinsville for the boss and rightfully so,” Elliott said. “I couldn’t imagine. It’s been a place that has had a lot of highs and certainly the lowest of lows, and I think now you just try to honor the folks that we lost as best we can and try to carry forward things as they would want them to be.”
Said Gustafson: “It’s super polarizing when you go from the success on track, the key to the company’s existence, and then the attachment with the airplane crash and the pain and suffering that came with that.
“So that’s the polarizing thing about Martinsville. When you go there, you never forget, either.”
Todd Warshaw | Getty Images
In its 41st season, Hendrick Motorsports has amassed a record 304 victories (three this season, including a 1-2 finish in its record-tying ninth Daytona 500 win), 14 championships and virtually every meaningful mark in NASCAR’s premier series.
During just the past two of the four generations that NASCAR has existed, Hendrick has become the all-time leader in pole positions (248), top-10 finishes (more than 2,100) and laps led (more than 80,000). The team has won at least once in 38 consecutive seasons and at least three times in the past 30.
Over four decades, the team has excelled through countless iterations of intricate setups and the in-depth processes that govern their assembly.
How does it maintain such a level of sustained excellence? Ask any of its star crew chiefs and drivers, and the answer is the same.
“Mr. Hendrick.”
Gustafson believes the natural fixation on star drivers and their personalities leaves Hendrick’s impact overlooked despite being NASCAR’s all-time winningest car owner.
“He doesn’t get the credit he deserves for the example that he sets, the empathy that he has, the way he leads by example, motivates and empowers people,” Gustafson said. “How unselfish and humble he is. All those characteristics that you see of any of the good employees that have been through this place. I’m not saying he’s the only reason, but he always is additive.
“Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, Chase Elliott and Kyle Larson are great people, but they’re better because they work for him. Significantly better. I feel that happens from the top to the bottom. Everybody I think is ultimately a better person and employee because of how he empowers you to do your job.”
In a method that borrows from his dealerships (where general managers are offered ownership stakes), Hendrick crew chiefs typically are promoted from within and are given tremendous autonomy over team direction.
Since joining the team three years ago, Larson has attended Hendrick dealership events “and I’ve never seen anybody not smiling. Rick has over 10,000 employees throughout his companies, and everybody loves working for him. He’s just a nice, normal person and a good guy.”
But while he might embrace policies to keep his employees happy, Hendrick also can be a hands-on manager willing to shake up his staff. After Johnson won his fifth consecutive Cup championship in 2010, Hendrick reshuffled the crew chiefs of his other three cars. Many of his personnel moves are more subtle.
“He’s just relentless in turning over every rock to make sure everybody has what they need to be successful,” Alex Bowman said. “I think sometimes something won’t make sense. And then you look at it a couple of months later, and it makes perfect sense.”
Joining Hendrick after a stretch of driving for journeyman-level operations, Bowman was initially confused by his new team’s motivational luncheons with all-star speakers. (His personal favorite was David Goggins, a retired United States Navy SEAL.)
“I’m like, ‘What in the world is this? We’re all hanging out listening to this dude talk! We’re a race team,’ ” the No. 48 Chevy driver said. “And a couple months later, I’m like, ‘That was really cool.’ Just like everything he does has a purpose and I feel like everybody in the leadership positions here is that way.”
Said Daniels: “There’s moments a lot of us take for granted where it may just be he’ll buy lunch for the whole complex one day, come here and tell a story about the 1984 Martinsville race. He’ll just engage with all of the folks, and that goes so far. His daily interaction with the people on the shop floor and his leadership are second to none.”
On the Thursday morning after William Byron became the sixth Hendrick driver to win the Daytona 500, Rick Hendrick rolled his Cadillac Escalade through his team’s pit practice pad and personally thanked each No. 24 crew member. Byron said those pit stops are a good example of how the team adjusts to fix weaknesses, noting the team’s vast improvement last season after a few off years.
“It always seems to cycle back, and that’s pretty amazing because no other race team has done that repeatedly year after year,” Byron said. “He’s just a phone call or one talk away from getting us back on track, and he’s always willing to do whatever it takes and figure out what the next emphasis is.”
The long-term vision was evident to Elliott from their first meeting when he was barely a teenager. Rick Hendrick picked up Bill and Chase Elliott at the airport and drove them to his team’s campus, where he spent the day providing a guided tour of every building — from the chassis and engine shops to his 58,000-square-foot Heritage Center (which holds more than 120 Corvettes parked amid life-size re-creations of the touchstones from his childhood in Palmer Springs, Virginia, about two hours due east of Martinsville on the North Carolina border).
“I just appreciated how personal it was, and I’m sure he’s got much better things to do than tour a sophomore in high school around this facility,” Elliott said. “That’ll always stick with me. I got a guy telling me he wants to help me fulfill my dream at 14, 15 years old. I just took it with a grain of salt and make sure I just didn’t get my hopes up too much and ultimately have them shattered. But Rick is just the kind of guy that everything he says, he does.
“It starts with your leader, and we have a great one. Beyond that we are fortunate to have a lot of really good people in every respective department that wants to do their part, too.”
Rainier Ehrhardt | Getty Images
On its way to Martinsville nearly 20 years ago, a Beechcraft King Air 200 twin turboprop disappeared into the fog shrouding nearby Bull Mountain — and so did several inextricable links to Hendrick Motorsports’ past, present and future.
The 10-passenger manifest included:
— Ricky Hendrick, the next-generation heir apparent to Hendrick Motorsports’ founder;
— John Hendrick, who had run the team as its president while his older brother had recovered from leukemia and battled legal problems;
— Randy Dorton, widely regarded to be NASCAR’s best engine builder;
— Jeff Turner, who had managed the team’s day-to-day operations for two years.
Loss is an unfortunate byproduct of motorsports’ inherent dangers, but this amount of grief sent shockwaves through the NASCAR industry. (“Like a hammer to the chest that takes the wind out of you,” Dale Earnhardt Jr. said at the time about the reaction.)
In the greatest example of his resolve, Hendrick wasted little time in restructuring his management, and the team hardly missed a beat — with Martinsville again serving as Exhibit A of its strength. Gordon and Johnson combined to win seven of the next nine races there after the plane crash.
Though only 8 years old when the accident happened, Elliott has raw memories of its aftermath, and the emotions deepened after he joined the team.
“You probably don’t appreciate just all the details and respect that type of loss as when you get a little older and then especially to understand now just how much of a family environment this is here,” he said. “That made it even that much more devastating as I’ve become a part of that family over the years.”
Larson said the tragedy isn’t discussed much internally, but he understood what Martinsville meant before driving for Hendrick.
“It’s ironic that a place that’s been so good to them but also terrible to them has been their most successful,” Larson said. “It’s always on everybody’s minds anytime we get ready to go to Martinsville. I hoped I would win there to add to the legacy.”
He broke through last year in an emotional win for him and Daniels, who first went to Martinsville as an infant while his dad was racing Late Models.
“That was always a dream to come be here to be a part of this team, this organization one day,” said Daniels, who hails from Smithfield in the Tidewater area near Norfolk.
He is one of many Virginia natives raised to attend races at Martinsville long before winning them for Hendrick — another motivating factor for the team being such a force at the track.
Before becoming Bowman’s crew chief, Blake Harris “spent a lot of years trying to beat those guys at Martinsville and to go outrun a Hendrick car took everything we had.”
Rusty Jarrett | Getty Images
Byron fondly recalls watching at least three Hendrick wins as a fan in the Martinsville grandstands (notably Johnson outdueling Gordon in an intrasquad slam-bang battle in 2007).
“I would always watch in Turn 1, and those cars would come by and hit the chip, and they would set so nicely on the brakes,” Byron said. “They would always be P1 or P2 off the truck. You knew Hendrick cars at Martinsville was what you wanted to drive.”
He maximized his opportunity with a win there in 2022, experiencing the “deep” history with the team during the exuberant celebration.
“It kind of just felt like I had finally done something that was worthy of recognition at Hendrick,” Byron said. “To win a grandfather clock puts you on a list with guys that have won a lot of races. That was one of my biggest wins because it’s a race track that’s really important to this place.”
But of course, it’s not just because of the victories.
Byron also noted the “Always in Our Hearts” tribute graphics that still adorn Hendrick’s cars to memorialize those lost in the 2004 plane crash.
“I think every year Martinsville comes around, it’s never forgotten,” he said. “Understanding the history and all that Mr. H and Linda has gone through there.
“It’s a really important race track.”
Nate Ryan has written about NASCAR since 1996 while working at the San Bernardino Sun, Richmond Times-Dispatch, USA TODAY and for the past 10 years at NBC Sports Digital. He is the host of the NASCAR on NBC Podcast and has covered various other motorsports, including the IndyCar and IMSA series.
In the first Dash 4 Cash race of the 2024 NASCAR Xfinity Series season, the incentive for JR Motorsports drivers is clear. They will be competing for the victory, not the $100,000 prize that goes to the Dash 4 Cash winner, in Saturday’s DUDE Wipes 250 at Martinsville Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
No JRM driver finished high enough last Saturday at Richmond to qualify for the initial Dash 4 Cash bonus, which is available to four eligible drivers: Richmond winner Chandler Smith and runner-up Aric Almirola, both of Joe Gibbs Racing; Sunoco rookie leader Jesse Love of Richard Childress Racing and Parker Kligerman of Big Machine Racing.
Though out of the running for the bonus, JRM’s Justin Allgaier and teammate Brandon Jones are the only former Martinsville winners in the field for Saturday’s race. Allgaier won the 2023 fall race at the 0.526-mile short track.
“It’s great to be returning to Martinsville this weekend,” Allgaier said. “We showed last fall that we were capable of getting to Victory Lane there, and I feel just as confident that we will have a fast Jarrett Chevrolet when we hit the track on Friday (for practice and qualifying).
“(Crew chief) Jim (Pohlman) and this entire No. 7 team has been fighting hard all year long and I know that we will give it everything we have to get a solid finish and be in position for the win come Saturday night.”
Jones hopes to reverse his fortunes after an early engine failure knocked him out of last Saturday’s Richmond event.
“We had great speed in Richmond last weekend, but just had some bad luck come our way,” Jones said. “Martinsville has always been a strong track for me, so I am ready to get there and try to turn our luck around.
“I trust this Menards/Atlas Roofing team will give me a fast car like they have all season, so it’s time to get it done.”
One word of caution: there have been 13 different winners in the last 13 Xfinity races at Martinsville, which didn’t host the series between 1994 and 2006. There was another gap between 2006 and 2020.
Kenny Wallace was the last repeat winner at the Virginia short track (1992 and 1994).
Most college students utilize the summer to unwind from a stressful year and regroup for the future.
Such is not the case for Late Model Stock competitor Cole Bruce.
Amidst his pursuit of a Bachelor of Science in Aeronautics: Commercial/Corporate at Liberty University to become a certified flight instructor, Bruce will also balance out a full year of racing at Langley Speedway, which begins its 2024 season Saturday evening.
Education is a top priority for Bruce, but the Fredericksburg, Virginia native is currently focused on having a great night in Langley’s season-opener so he can set a proper tone for the rest of his year at the facility.
“I feel really confident we’ll have a top-five car,” Bruce said. “Near the end of last season, we had top-five speed and finished fourth in the final race. Our main objective going into opening night this year is to have good speed and continue the momentum so we can start competing for top threes or even wins.”
With college courses set to encompass Saturdays in the summer, Cole Bruce is trying to put equal focus on his education and racing. (Photo: Philip Goodman)
Bruce considers himself fortunate that life will not be overly chaotic at the start of Langley’s season.
Since he is currently taking classes at Liberty exclusively on weekdays, he’s had plenty of time to help his family build up the Late Model Stock program while maintaining a healthy schedule regarding his studies.
That routine gets upheaved for Bruce once May commences.
Bruce’s college schedule is set to include classes on Saturdays from 6-10:30 a.m. during the summer, so he is mentally preparing himself to make regular three-hour drives from Liberty to Langley on race weekends. This will also require Bruce to lean more on his family for setups with his time at the shop and track being reduced.
Although he would prefer to be around his team right when the fight for Langley track championship escalates, Bruce has confidence in his family to prepare fast cars. His father Robert Bruce is a Late Model Stock veteran with a handful of starts in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series and ARCA Menards Series on his resume.
With that experience to count on, Bruce feels more at ease with his racing outlook for 2024 while occupied with his studies. Constant classes at Liberty present their own challenges for Bruce, but he plans to keep excelling by absorbing as much information as possible from his peers and teachers.
“Honestly, I’m just surrounding myself with good people,” Bruce said. “Right now at school, I’m with people who have the same major as me. We have study groups, which help a lot. Currently, I’m a 4.0 student [at Liberty], so being ahead of the ball game helps a lot.”
The proactive mindset Bruce has adopted for college is also being utilized with his team, particularly when it comes to searching for sponsorship.
As soon as his classes at Liberty end for the day, Bruce immediately starts sending emails and making phone calls to companies based around his school, Langley and his hometown. Amassing more funding would allow Bruce and his family to afford crew members to work on the cars while he is away at college.
With every correspondence and pitch, Bruce reiterates his passion for racing and his determination toward becoming successful. He does not plan to deviate from that mindset even after he gets his degree and becomes a CFI.
Despite being occupied with college, Cole Bruce believes he can put together a career year at Langley Speedway. (Photo: Philip Goodman)
Flying has been Bruce’s other primary interest since his neighbor Joe Lavely, a pilot, convinced him to apply his racing skills in a cockpit. Bruce never wanted to settle for a typical desk job and quickly fell in love with aviation after his first Discovery Flight, prompting him to pursue his aeronautical science degree.
Aside from being in the air, one aspect Bruce enjoys about the aviation industry is the flexibility. When he does become a CFI, Bruce will be able to pick and choose his own hours, allowing him to keep racing full-time in Late Model Stocks with almost no conflicts.
Despite this, Bruce does not anticipate many slow days between racing and flying, but that does not bother him in the slightest. Being used to hectic schedules has helped Bruce grow comfortable with shouldering multiple responsibilities in an efficient manner.
“Ever since I was little, I was always running around from school, to playing sports and coming home to do homework,” Bruce said. “I feel like if I’m not busy, even on weekends where I don’t have anything planned, I have to do something to keep myself busy.”
With how inundated he is between school and racing, combined with the limited funding at his disposal, Bruce is keeping his racing plans confined to Langley for 2024.
There are plenty of milestones Bruce is seeking to obtain against the Langley regulars, especially the track’s crown jewel event in the Hampton Heat. Bruce has been happy with the speed shown in his first two Hampton Heat appearances but did not record finishes that reflected the strength of his cars.
Already comfortable with Langley’s tight layout, Bruce feels ascertaining key fundamentals in endurance events like the Hampton Heat can serve as a crucial step toward becoming a championship contender at the track.
“I want to learn tire management and throttle control,” he said. “Hopefully we can bring a lot of momentum into the Hampton Heat this year. Luck hasn’t been on our side the last couple of years. This year I’m hoping we can be more towards the front pack so we can understand how much to push and be there at the end for a really good finish.”
Even though his studies are about to become more paramount in his already busy life, Bruce has never felt more confident in his ability to succeed behind the wheel.
During Liberty’s Spring Break, Bruce worked closely with TORP Chassis owner Craig Oliver by hanging a body on his Late Model Stock and taking in a copious amount of information. Bruce considers Oliver’s tutelage invaluable, and he’s eager to show off what he learned when Langley’s first green flag waves Saturday.
Bruce is grateful to be in an environment where he can thrive as both a racer and student despite having to make some sacrifices. Nothing is going to come easy for Bruce over the following months, but he believes prosperity will find him in both avenues with principled values and a rigid support system on his side.
“If you’re truly passionate about racing and the career you’re in, you’ll find a way,” Bruce said. “Luckily, I’ve had people who have supported my racing since day one and they know how much I put into the sport. I can’t give it my all in racing right now, so I have to rely on them a bit, but don’t give up and don’t underestimate yourself.”
Determination has guided Bruce in his quest to obtain two successful career paths. The upcoming challenges in the summer are not fazing Bruce, who is ready to take flight and reach his maximum potential on and off the track.
NASCAR officials issued an indefinite suspension to part-time driver Gray Gaulding on Wednesday evening.
The Charlotte (N.C.) Mecklenburg Sheriff’s Department listed Gaulding among its arrest records Tuesday. According to department records, the Cornelius Police Department arrested Gaulding on Tuesday morning on misdemeanor domestic violence charges. Gaulding was released from custody later that afternoon.
Gaulding has made 158 career starts across all three NASCAR national series, none of which have come this year.
His most recent start was in the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Daytona International Speedway in August 2023.
Everything changed in the blink of an eye at Richmond, and instead of Martin Truex Jr. claiming win No. 1 of 2024, his teammate Denny Hamlin doubled up.
Given his consistent blazing speed through seven races — Truex Jr. leads the series in both average finish (8.1) and average running position (7.2) — we probably would’ve been talking about the No. 19’s potential championship favorite status had things gone slightly differently at the end of Richmond and Bubba Wallace never makes contact with Kyle Larson to send the race to NASCAR Overtime.
Instead, MTJ left Virginia as “mad as hell” as anybody we’ve seen since his former Big Three member Kevin Harvick at Bristol Motor Speedway that one time, and his teammate Denny Hamlin got to celebrate with the trophy in his home state.
The way Richmond’s final moments played out was fascinating, and it added just so many wrinkles and percolating story lines to follow from here on out, with some of them potentially sparking back up this weekend at Martinsville.
Hamlin and Truex have been racing each other in the Cup Series for nearly two decades, much of that time as teammates or as part of a technical alliance; but will Truex feel like he’s “owed” after this? Will we see different restart-zone tactics late in races moving forward based on a strategy that clearly worked for Hamlin and saw one of Truex’s more dominant runs fade to fourth on the results sheet?
Wallace joked to Larson on pit road that “whatever’s coming my way, I expect it” after spinning the No. 5. Larson isn’t quite the retaliatory type and it was a pleasant exchange, but this isn’t their first run-in and likely would’ve been a different conversation if Larson didn’t rebound to finish third … with another short track on tap, could something be coming Wallace’s way?
Bigger picture, Hamlin has now won two of the past three races and seems to be the driver from the “old guard” most suited to doing whatever is necessary to get wins in the Next Gen era so far. Past champions Truex, Brad Keselowski, Chase Elliott, Joey Logano and Kyle Busch — some of the biggest names in the sport — are riding a combined 235-race winless streak. There’s seven Cup titles between them and yet they’re consistently getting beat by the driver who notoriously has zero.
2. Last short track for months on tap — what will we see?
Martinsville feels like the blockbuster finale to a three-race short-track series after raucous recent trips to Richmond and Bristol.
Another short track? Yes, please.
We’re closing in on two months into the 2024 season and things are really starting to take shape, but what stands out is just the pressure and intensity already becoming increasingly apparent before we even hit April.
Sure, Sunday’s result was the latest extremely frustrating happenstance for Truex, but zooming out a little — he’s still the points leader, the best driver/car on track on a consistent basis and should have just as good of a shot to win this weekend.
But, boy, was he Big Mad.
You really get the sense that every race and every point really and truly matters (because, well, they do) and we’re seeing drivers just push, push, push to get everything they can with so much at stake and on the line each week. For whatever reason, everything just feels amplified already and a big part of that is likely just because the competition level is arguably as high as it’s ever been. Every opportunity to win matters that much more, because there are just fewer of them.
This is all to say — who’s up for a paperclip-shaped pressure cooker?
We’ve seen almost exclusively nothing but Hendrick Motorsports and Joe Gibbs Racing winners thus far in 2024 and truth be told it feels more likely than not Sunday’s winner comes within that eight-driver group. After all, all four Hendrick drivers have won at Martinsville in the last seven races there, and Hendrick/JGR have combined to win eight of the last nine overall at the Virginia short track.
Literally all of those wins, however, have had to go through the two-time champ Logano, as his current nine-race top-10 streak at Martinsville is by far the best with teammate Ryan Blaney and Stewart-Haas Racing’s Chase Briscoe turning in four apiece to tie for second.
After a rough start, No. 22 is picking up a head of steam and is probably next on the list behind Hamlin in the “aggressive veteran who knows how to make a win happen” department. Feels very much like he could re-enter the title picture this weekend after somewhat being written off a month into the season by some.
And Hendrick drivers Larson and William Byron have combined for 14 race victories since either Chase Elliott or Alex Bowman have won. They’re both due and running well, while each presents super interesting story lines of their own should they win. On an extremely important weekend for the team, no less.
Alright, time for hot dogs.
3. Where’s the beef? None to be found — for now
Another seemingly unintentional incident between Kyle Larson and Bubba Wallace late at Richmond adds to a long history between the two, who smoothed things over after the race.
4. Short-track stars: Next Gen masters of Martinsville
Drivers with the most points at Martinsville in Next Gen era. Will Chase Briscoe or Ross Chastain spoil the Hendrick/Gibbs party and pick up their first Martinsville win?
Driver
Car
Points
Total Martinsville Wins
Ryan Blaney
No. 12 Team Penske Ford
176
1
Denny Hamlin
No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyots
158
5
Chase Briscoe
No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford
157
0
Joey Logano
No. 22 Team Penske Ford
157
1
Kyle Larson
No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
142
1
Aric Almirola
No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford*
139
0
Chase Elliott
No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
139
1
Christopher Bell
No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
134
1
William Byron
No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
127
1
Ross Chastain
No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet
123
0
*Aric Almirola no longer drives the No. 10 SHR entry and instead is competing part-time for JGR in the Xfinity Series in 2024.
5. Catch the pack — news and notes from around the garage
THORNBURG, Va. — You can catch a glimpse looking to your right while traveling north on Interstate 95, right around mile marker 119. Or, while fueling your car at the Sheetz off Exit 118, you can peek over the adjacent landscape and see the teaser that is “NASCAR” in bold letters distinguishing the top of an otherwise unsuspecting building in the distance.
The venue is relatively hidden to passersby. The view from the interstate is mostly obstructed by a line of trees. The rolling northeastern Virginia terrain conceals what’s located at the bottom of a hill off nearby Route 606.
Once discovered, though, Dominion Raceway leaves an incredible impression.
Dominion Raceway is many things to many people. To NASCAR, it’s a top-of-the-line home track that hosts Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series competition. The 4/10-mile asphalt oval with uniform banking is prime for thrilling racing from the featured Late Model division, as well as Virginia Modifieds, Dominion Stocks, Legends, Bandoleros and more.
To others, Dominion Raceway is the area’s hub for entertainment. Yes, it’s Disney World for racing lovers, as the venue in addition to its short track features a two-mile road course and a 1/8-mile drag strip, that latter of which offers street racing every Friday night. Dominion also hosts concerts in its Groove Music Hall. Above that music hall is The 118 Bar & Grill, a full-service restaurant and bar.
The amusement factory is the brainchild of co-founders Jerry Evans and Steve Britt, the latter of whom managed Old Dominion Speedway in nearby Manassas before he sold the old track in 2012 in order to lay the groundwork for what would be called Dominion Raceway and Entertainment.
Britt, his wife Cari and his son Will all work events at Dominion, with Will being the venue’s do-it-all handy man. A large chunk of those who work with the Britts to manage operations at Dominion are life-long friends. They all had smiles on their faces throughout the night of March 30, their 2024 Weekly Series season-opener.
For the second year in a row, Dominion’s short-track racing schedule began with the Dickie Boswell Memorial. The 200-lap Late Model feature headlining the show offered $7,500 to the winner, with the purse of special awards a result of donations from businesses and fans.
Such a special race at such a magnificent venue is the perfect tribute to the late Boswell, a veteran short-track competitor and legend of the region who scored more than 50 wins at Old Dominion Speedway. Boswell passed away in 2021.
The 2024 running of the Dickie Boswell Memorial was arguably more special than the first, as it featured an appearance from Dickie’s son Richard, who serves as Chase Briscoe’s crew chief in the NASCAR Cup Series. Briscoe was in attendance Saturday signing autographs.
(Photo: Parker Michels-Boyce/NASCAR)
“Richard had asked if I would be willing to go and just support the race,” Briscoe said. “Anything I can do to help the Boswell family, I want to do. They’ve been so good to me and super important to me.
“I’ve been with Richard since 2018, and I got to know Dickie. I just know how much Richard’s dad meant to him. How much he talks about him and how much losing Dickie affected them.”
Briscoe noted he actually wanted to run the 200-lap Late Model feature, but he wasn’t able to arrange a ride in time.
Even if he would have raced, the driver of the No. 14 Ford Mustang for Stewart-Haas Racing in the Cup Series likely would have struggled to beat Doug Barnes Jr., the short-track racing star who’s won both Dickie Boswell Memorial 200s to date. Barnes utilized patience to surge to the front in the second half of Saturday’s race and cruise to the checkered flag.
“Air Doug” is one of several who compete at Dominion on a somewhat regular basis. The track is challenging, but it attracts many of the best short-track racers along the East Coast. It’s also the home track of ARCA Menards Series team Mullins Racing.
The 118 Bar & Grill, located on the second floor of Dominion Raceway’s tower, overlooks the 4/10-mile oval. (Photo: Parker Michels-Boyce/NASCAR)
Dominion will continue to attract visitors like Briscoe, as well.
“I want us to continue aligning [the Dickie Boswell Memorial] with the Richmond [Cup Series] race,” communications director Brandon Fuller said. “We coordinated to get Richard Boswell at [Dominion] with his family, so maybe we can get a few more Cup drivers for an autograph session or in the actual race.”
Saturday’s event was a success in every regard. The parking lot that covers the massive stretch of land between the oval track and the service road was packed; overflow parking was required along that service road. The grandstands, suites and infield spots were full, as were the parking spaces for tailgaters outside the fence of Turns 3-4.
There were food trucks. There was music. There was a t-shirt cannon. One didn’t necessarily need hundreds of laps of racing to be entertained. The sensory overload was in full effect regardless.
That’s what makes Dominion Raceway so unique. There’s a something-for-everyone vibe that becomes immediately evident upon arrival. It’s the manifestation of the vision with which Evans and Britt operated as they cleared land for construction of the facility they opened in 2016.
Now they have the perfect place to honor a man like Dickie Boswell, who loved being part of the racing community. The communal nature of Dominion Raceway in itself is a tribute.
Brad Keselowski sits in an unfamiliar position these days, with a winless drought that stretches nearly three full years — a span of 105 NASCAR Cup Series races. It’s an unaccustomed spot for a veteran driver who had a streak of at least one victory each season for 11 consecutive years.
Times are different for Keselowski, who was in his last season driving the No. 2 Ford for Team Penske when he recorded his most recent Cup Series win — April 25, 2021, at Talladega Superspeedway. He’s now in his third season as the driver and part-owner of RFK Racing, and while the scope of his roles has changed, Keselowski says his approach has not.
“I just focus on the process, not the outcome,” Keselowski said Tuesday in a roundtable discussion at the NASCAR Productions Facility. “I’m focused on doing all the right things, trying to help everybody I can and obviously execute on my end, and when I’m not driving the race car, being a servant leader to help everybody else build the best they can. Then you kind of let the results speak for themselves. So I’m just really process-focused, and in that light, you don’t get too high or too low.”
Keselowski’s next opportunity comes Sunday at Martinsville Speedway, site of Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM) and the second straight short track on the Cup Series schedule. Keselowski is a two-time Martinsville winner, and he enters the race weekend with top-10 finishes in three of his last four starts.
The process that Keselowski has relied on paid dividends in the stretch run of last season, with teammate Chris Buescher prevailing three times in a five-week span and providing both teams under the RFK banner with playoff momentum. Rediscovering that performance standard and catching up to the early speed shown by Joe Gibbs Racing — winners of three of the Cup Series’ last four races — is the current target.
“Well, week to week that obviously varies. Right now I’m focused on Martinsville and what it’s going to take to have the lap time and speed to compete with the Gibbs cars,” Keselowski says. “Right now, I think they’re dominant. They’ve won, is it four of the last five or something to that effect? And they’ve won them all honest. They haven’t really kind of stole a race. They’ve had the speed throughout the whole race with one of their cars to just control it, and that’s where I want to be. I want to see our team in the spot where we have the speed and control races.
“I thought toward the middle, the end of last year, we had that a couple times, and Chris was able to capitalize with a win, and I wasn’t able to capitalize with a win, but I was able to score a lot of points and make a strong playoff push. So that’s where we want to be. We’re not as strong right now as we were at that time, but I feel like it’s on the tip of our tongue and I want to go get that.”
Last Sunday’s event at Richmond Raceway offered encouragement, with Ford teams placing five drivers in the top 12. Team Penske’s Joey Logano led that charge in second place, and Keselowski did his part with an eighth-place effort.
While Ford teams are still sorting out the nuances of the new Mustang Dark Horse early in its first season of competition, Keselowski noted how well JGR drivers — particularly Christopher Bell — have fared with new Toyota bodies that also debuted this year.
“I thought that the Fords executed really well. I don’t think they had the raw speed the Gibbs cars had,” Keselowski said in summing up Richmond’s results. “The 20 car (Bell), the last two or three races, has had significantly more raw speed than the field, and he’s been able to win one of them but he probably should have won the last two. That’s the level that I think … if we had our execution with their speed, we’d be winning multiple races.”
Win or lose, RFK Racing has already experienced a measure of growth this year, adding David Ragan to the roster in the No. 60 Ford for the Daytona 500 and fielding three cars in a Cup Series race for the first time since 2016. That start represented a one-off — so far — for RFK’s “Stage 60” initiative. As for a more sustained expansion effort to perhaps field three full-time teams, Keselowski says a handful of factors would need to converge to make it happen.
“I mean, we would need the right kind of storm to brew with charter availability and partner availability,” Keselowski said. “I think there’s some opportunities with some talent out there, but the other two pieces really have to come first.”
Joey Gase was fined $5,000 for a safety violation after throwing his rear bumper at a competitor’s car during Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Richmond Raceway, NASCAR officials announced Wednesday in their penalty report.
Gase, driver of the No. 35 Joey Gase Motorsports Chevrolet, was penalized for violating Sections 8.8.8K of the NASCAR Rule Book, which states: “A safety violation may be imposed for any action or omission by a Competitor or vehicle that creates an unsafe environment or poses a threat to the safety of the Competitors, as determined by NASCAR.”
The 31-year-0ld Iowa native was bumped on corner entry to Turn 1 by Dawson Cram at Lap 173 during Saturday’s event at Richmond, sending Gase’s No. 35 NCPC Race Against Crime Chevy rear-end first into the outside SAFER barrier. To show his displeasure, Gase climbed from the car, ripped the already-dangling rear bumper from the vehicle, walked toward traffic and threw the fiberglass bumper at Cram’s No. 4 Chevrolet — striking the car directly in the windshield.
Additionally, three Xfinity teams were found with one lug nut not properly installed after the checkered flag of Saturday’s ToyotaCare 250:
No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet driven by AJ Allmendinger
No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota driven by Taylor Gray
No. 26 Sam Hunt Racing Toyota driven by Corey Heim
The teams’ respective crew chiefs — Alex Yontz, Seth Chavka and Kristoffer Bowen — were each fined $5,000 in violation of Sections 8.8.10.4a in the NASCAR Rule Book.
The Xfinity Series returns to action Saturday (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Martinsville Speedway in the Dude Wipes 250.
Josh Berry will make just his 20th NASCAR Cup Series start this weekend at Martinsville Speedway. The measured progress he’s made in the early portions of his first full year at this level comes with a bit of a perspective — one he admits to and references — that Kevin Harvick, the Hall of Fame-caliber driver he succeeded at Stewart-Haas Racing, retired with 826 starts.
Sunday at Richmond Raceway, the track where Harvick scored the last of his 60 Cup wins, Berry played to his short-track strengths and turned in one of the best performances of his rookie Cup Series campaign. His 11th-place finish in SHR’s No. 4 Ford was marked by early charges into the top five, and only a miscue on a late-race stop kept his result from being better.
It’s all been part of the adjustment period to a new role, fostering chemistry with veteran crew chief Rodney Childers and growth within a new-look Cup Series roster at Stewart-Haas.
“It’s just a little bit of momentum building,” Berry said Tuesday during an availability at the NASCAR Productions Facility. “I think we’re working together, figuring each other out a little bit more. I’m getting more comfortable getting reacclimated to the Next Gen car, but more than anything, I think we’ve just had good cars the last couple weeks. I feel like, especially at the short tracks. It’s just going to take time.
“I told Rodney this not too long ago, Kevin was 800-and-something starts into racing, and I’m only in the teens, so it’s going to take a little time for me to get acclimated to eliminate some of the mistakes I’ve made at the start of the season. But I think we’re already seeing the potential’s there, the speed can be there, we’ve just got to start executing that and figuring out how to be more consistent, and I think we’ll be fine.”
Berry’s opportunities should be present again this weekend when the Cup Series convenes for more short-track racing at Martinsville Speedway for Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). The historic venue was the site of Berry’s breakthrough victory in the Xfinity Series in 2021, and Stewart-Haas Racing has had glimmers of improvement there, with teammates Chase Briscoe and Ryan Preece each leading 100-plus laps in this race last spring.
Richmond may have provided a springboard for Berry, who was a runner-up there a year ago in just his sixth Cup Series start, filling in for an injured Chase Elliott in Hendrick Motorsports’ No. 9 Chevrolet. Sunday, his rise on the leaderboard — first on wet-weather tires, then slicks as the weather cleared — prompted an attaboy from spotter Eddie D’Hondt after Stage 1: “You came to play today, buddy.”
Berry’s bobble on an attempted pit-road entry for his last green-flag stop hampered the final result, and the 33-year-old driver radioed his crew to say he’d neglected to adjust his brake bias to the proper setting. A re-rack of the field for an overtime restart also kept him on the fringes of the top 10.
Alex Daus | NASCAR.com
“It’s part of that learning curve and figuring this stuff out, and what can we help him with on all those kinds of things — reminders and different things like that. But he was awesome all night,” Childers told NASCAR.com, noting how few adjustments the team needed to make during the course of the weekend. “I was hoping that we could get some on that last restart and get back up there where I felt like we deserved, and it just didn’t work out. It was like a roadblock, but overall, he did a great job.”
Berry is still writing this chapter of his racing career, but so is Stewart-Haas Racing in the first season of the post-Harvick era. The contributions by Harvick — both in leadership and the win column — were invaluable to the organization during his 10-year run with the No. 4 team, but his retirement and transition to the FOX Sports broadcast booth have forced the group to move forward without relying on his expertise.
“Honestly, it was really great to lean on him, but at the same time, there’s been some really productive conversations that we’ve had this year in our group, between the four of us,” said Preece, who — like Berry — is a client with Harvick’s sports-marketing agency. “I feel like that’s, between the vibe and some of those conversations, also going to help us. It was time … I don’t know how to really put this, but man, he carried it for so long, right? How are we supposed to carry it? How do we find our direction? I know Josh and I both, we talk to Kevin and we race for Kevin, but this is sink or swim. Figure it out. You can’t always keep going back to Dad, right?”
Berry, even in his brief time under the SHR roof, has seen a notable shift.
“I just feel like just the philosophy itself has changed, and everybody just seems like they’re more motivated to work together and being open-minded,” Berry said. “I mean, everybody’s done a really good job of that, I feel like. Like Ryan said, what we want to see is just the consistency. Everybody’s searching for the balance and speed and to get better, so one car might hit it better than others because we’re not all the same. We’re working together but it’s, ‘Hey, you try this. Hey, you try that,’ from what I see. I’m sure it’s a lot different, but I think change was needed.”
The other side benefit to Berry’s showing last weekend was a tangible boost in the Cup Series standings and the Sunoco Rookie of the Year race. Berry jumped five spots to 23rd in the points, leapfrogging fellow first-year driver Carson Hocevar to grab the lead in the rookie standings.
“That definitely was a goal of ours, for sure, so we want to get as many points as we can and give ourselves the best opportunity to win that award,” Berry said. “Like I said before, I think the potential’s there. We felt like what we had Sunday night and what we had at Bristol, we feel like those nights are in front of us. We’ve just got to figure out how to get there, week in and week out, and it’s going to take some time to get there, but I feel like the potential’s there to keep getting better and running well. Just got to figure it out and go do it.”