Editor’s note: Sunday’s race at Dover Motor Speedway has been postponed to Monday, due to forecasted inclement weather throughout the day. 

Kyle Busch will start first in Monday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Dover Motor Speedway after rain scrapped Saturday’s Busch Light Pole Qualifying session.

The same shower that ended Cup Series practice early brought a cancellation to qualifying, forcing competition officials to set the starting lineup by the NASCAR Rule Book. That elevated Busch’s No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet to the No. 1 starting spot for Monday’s Würth 400 (noon ET, FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

“I’ll take it – starting up front, track position race, number one pit box – that’s super good to have here at Dover,’’ said Busch, whose Chevy was only 29th fastest in Saturday’s practice.

RELATED: Monday’s starting lineup | Updated weekend schedule

Cup Series points leader Christopher Bell will start second in the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota. The next two rows will be occupied by a quartet of Ford drivers — Ryan Blaney, Brad Keselowski, Chris Buescher and Chase Briscoe in that order.

Keselowski was fastest overall in the dual practice sessions that preceded qualifying. His top lap was 158.660 mph on the 1-mile track in the No. 6 RFK Racing Ford.

Practice was marked by three single-car incidents, the most significant involving Austin Dillon’s No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet. Dillon lost control entering the third turn and backed into the outside retaining wall. He was unhurt in the crash and will start Monday’s 400-miler in a reserve car.

WATCH: Dillon crunches No. 3 Chevy in practice

Two other solo spins did not result in contact but occurred in nearly the same area through Turns 3 and 4. Daniel Suárez went for a prolonged slide in his No. 99 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet, and Erik Jones’ No. 43 Legacy Motor Club Chevy also skidded through the same corner.

The second session was halted nearly three minutes short by light rain.

Contributing: Holly Cain, NASCAR Wire Service

Bobby Labonte, the first NASCAR Cup Series champion of the 2000s after holding off runner-up Dale Earnhardt for the 2000 crown, is the latest addition to NASCAR’s 75 Greatest Drivers list.

The Corpus Christi, Texas, native won 21 times in the Cup Series, riding a four-win season to his first premier series title in 2000 just a season removed from a career-high five victories and runner-up standings finish to Dale Jarrett.

RELATED: See who’s on NASCAR 75 team | More on NASCAR 75

Labonte, a 2020 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee, won multiple races in a season six different times (1995, ’98, ’99, ’00, ’01, ’03) as one of the mainstays of the series across full-time or near-full-time seasons spanning from 1993 to 2013, with an additional three seasons of primarily superspeedway racing tacked on at the end through 2016.

The Texan’s first victory came behind the wheel of the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Chevrolet in the 1995 Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway, adding more crown jewel victories later in his career with a Brickyard 400 win at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and Southern 500 win at Darlington Raceway during his championship run. His final win came in the final race of 2003, when he led only the final lap in the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

While all of his Cup wins came with JGR, Labonte also had the honor of driving the famous No. 43 Richard Petty-owned ride and later on the No. 47 JTG Daughterty Racing car during his final full-time seasons.

A success in all three of NASCAR’s national series, Labonte was the first of six drivers to win both an Xfinity Series and premier series championship, with an Xfinity title in 1991 complementing his Cup trophy. At the time of his 2020 induction, Labonte was also one of 41 drivers in history to win a race in all three national series, collecting 10 Xfinity victories and finally cracking through in the Craftsman Truck Series for his first win there in 2005 at Martinsville Speedway.

RELATED: Bobby Labonte through the years

Labonte’s career was intricately tied to older brother Terry, a Cup Series legend and Hall of Famer in his own right — and an original member of this list. The two combined for three Cup Series titles, becoming the first pair of brothers to each own a premier series title, an accomplishment since earned by the Busch brothers, Kurt and Kyle.

Editor’s note: This story originally published on NASCAR.com in April and provides insight into how Front Row Motorsports had to make changes for the 2023 season that are paying off for the team and Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course victor Michael McDowell.

MOORESVILLE, N.C. — Front Row Motorsports has long been viewed as a scrappy team in the NASCAR Cup Series — largely a two-car effort with steady results that would occasionally pull off an impressive, uplifting run … and perhaps even an upset win.

Those middle-of-the-road finishes are quickly surging, though. And while no, neither of the team’s two chartered entrants have cracked into Victory Lane this season, there’s no mistaking — Front Row is clearly on the rise.

RELATED: McDowell wins at Indy | Playoff standings

The shining standout so far has been sophomore Todd Gilliland, the primary driver of the No. 38 Ford who found out in the offseason that “primary” would be a better descriptor of his role than “full-time.” In the last six races, Gilliland has collected five top-15 finishes, a stretch that includes three top 10s — already besting his rookie season total of two.

Gilliland and McDowell race at Atlanta
Jonathan Bachman | Getty Images

But not to be forgotten is his veteran teammate and Front Row’s sixth-year incumbent Michael McDowell. The 2021 Daytona 500 champion, McDowell enjoyed a career year in 2022, notching or tying bests in every major statistic last year except wins and final ranking. For all the glory that shined on his bright yellow No. 34 Love’s Ford last season, the Arizona native is off to a better start this year in some respects: His average finish through 10 races is 18.8, as opposed to 20.3 through the same number of events in 2022.

Ryan Bergenty, first-year crew chief of Gilliland’s No. 38 Ford, served as McDowell’s car chief in 2022. The Connecticut native previously worked at other winning organizations such as Furniture Row Racing and Chip Ganassi Racing. But since joining FRM in 2021, he’s seen a considerable change in mentality within the relatively small shop, one that has opened the door to more success.

“It’s a little bit of a culture shift,” Bergenty told NASCAR.com. “It’s not one person but I think a group of people that came in over the last couple months and year and a half that have just changed the culture. And now the level of expectations from the ground floor up has changed.”

GLORY TO GILLILAND?

Gilliland’s rise to recent relevance nearly goes against the odds. His rookie season featured flashes of excitement — leading four laps at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course and exiting with a career-best fourth-place finish before fighting for the lead at Watkins Glen through wet-weather conditions all stand out — but those were exceptions to his norm, punctuated by an average finish of 23.2.

His average finish now sits at 19.0 after two handfuls of races this year, an improvement he credits to crew chief Bergenty.

Todd Gilliland sits with his helmet on
James Gilbert | Getty Images

“I think my second year of experience has definitely been better,” Gilliland said. “I feel like I show up more prepared and even started the year just in a more correct headspace. I didn’t really know what I was getting into last year. But I certainly think Ryan and his leadership on this team has been a huge, huge benefit for us. It’s a lot of the same guys working on the car, but he’s elevated everyone to another level, just pushing everyone — me included, right? He sends me stuff all the time about just constantly getting better and I think that’s the biggest thing.”

That dynamic has become an important piece of the puzzle as Gilliland and Bergenty figure out how each ticks. In the past six weeks, Bergenty said he feels the two have crested their “honeymoon phase of learning each other,” with Bergenty “a little more brash around the edges” and pushing Gilliland “as hard as I think he can handle.”

“In my head this year, it’s just been lion mode,” Bergenty said. “You go to the race track, and it’s you vs. everybody, right? That’s just how it is and so you just have to have that mindset that you’re there to attack, you’re there to be aggressive. You’re there to be the best, right? And I just pushed that weekly and weekly and weekly with him.

“Are we getting to the point where we’re consistently contending for wins? Absolutely not. But are we consistently better than we’ve been? Yes.”

Gilliland’s performance has improved despite unusual circumstances, discovering this offseason that he would be moved from the No. 38 Ford for six races this season in place of 2022 Craftsman Truck Series champion (and Gilliland’s groomsman) Zane Smith, a situation Gilliland said has been tougher to navigate than he expected.

Todd Gilliland races Chase Briscoe and Riley Herbst at Talladega
James Gilbert | Getty Images

His lone race outside the Front Row umbrella so far came with Rick Ware Racing at Phoenix, finishing 32nd in the No. 15 Ford. The experience wasn’t fun for Gilliland, he said, as he had just three races with Bergenty and was trying to build momentum. But his return to FRM sparked his current six-race hot streak, including a 10th-place Talladega finish with FRM’s part-time third car, the No. 36 Ford. There wasn’t a conscious moment that motivated the 22-year-old or changed his preparation.

“I was doing all this stuff before,” he said. “But I don’t know, it definitely seems like stuff has clicked since then. So for better or worse I guess, that’s a good turning point for us. But yeah, it is really tough just going forward knowing that there’s going to be more races that I have to miss when we’re on a roll right now.”

Still, Gilliland has made it his top priority to improve as a leader for his No. 38 team — even if he is only a second-year Cup driver.

“Last year, there really wasn’t that person on our team that was like, go out and be vocal and push each other,” Gilliland said. “I (would) get out, I’m like, ‘Man, I could have done better. But I think everyone else knows they could have done better, too. So we’ll just move on.’ Where Ryan really gets to it and figures it out when we have something go wrong. So I think that’s the biggest thing. For him being the type of leader he is, I think it’s a great opportunity for me to learn from him and definitely be a lot better from that.”

MCDOWELL REBUILDING — AND SUCCEEDING — AGAIN

Given his recent surge in the No. 34 Ford, it might be easy to forget McDowell has been a part of the Cup Series since 2008. From Michael Waltrip Racing to Phil Parsons Racing to Leavine Family Racing, he was the definition of a journeyman driver, plugging along and piecing together his NASCAR career.

Michael McDowell looks on at Talladega
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

That, in part, made his 2022 season so special. While he didn’t record another victory, the consistent success he found with crew chief Blake Harris and Co. radiated — two top fives, 12 top 10s, 67 laps led and a 16.7 average finish, all career bests.

So when Harris and other members of his No. 34 team announced plans to move elsewhere for 2023 — namely Harris to become crew chief of Alex Bowman’s No. 48 car at Hendrick Motorsports — McDowell was faced with a decision.

“As it started to fall apart or people started making their announcements, I got to a place where I was like, ‘Man, I don’t want to have to do this again,’ ” McDowell told NASCAR.com. ” ‘I don’t want to have to start over and build from the ground up.’ You know? And I was pretty bummed out. I really was. Just what we had with the group that we had last year, I’m like, ‘Man, we’re just never gonna get that again.’

“It’s just hard to get good people clicking, working together, common goal, hanging out together, going to dinner together, like being around each other, enjoying beating the big teams and doing things that people think we shouldn’t do. Like we just had it going on. And when all the people were gone, I’m like, I just don’t know what we’re going to do or how we’re going to do it.

“So I had a pity party for about three or four days where I just bummed out, over it, ready to be done. Not looking forward to trying to reassemble and redo it. And then I just … got over it. And I’m like, well, we’re not going back to sucking. That’s not happening. So we’re gonna find the right people. And we’re gonna do it just like we did last year, just like we did the year before. It can be done. We’ve done it. And so, get over your pity party, and get after it.”

RELATED: Front Row extends contracts for McDowell, Gilliland

On came Travis Peterson to serve as crew chief, moving over from his role as an engineer on the No. 17 Ford for Chris Buescher at RFK Racing in 2022. In all, McDowell and a lone mechanic are the only returning members from the No. 34 team that excelled in 2022.

The numbers are favoring this particular rebuild for McDowell. He has one top 10 through 10 races as opposed to three last season, but he sits four positions higher in the points standings with a realistic chance of qualifying for the playoffs on points without a victory.

“I’m pretty proud of what we’ve done and the people that we have,” McDowell said. “I think we ended up in a great spot people-wise and running well. And I really do believe that we are just scratching the surface of what we can do. There’s a lot of variables in NASCAR and a lot of things change and we’re still small. I mean, you see it walking around (the shop), we’re still small. And it’s still a daunting challenge to go up against the big teams. But I feel like we can, and I feel like we have the right people to do it. And so I’m proud of where we’re at and I’m excited about where we could potentially go with what we have.”

WALLS COME DOWN

Front Row trudged into 2023 after essentially losing and rebuilding half of its team. Thus far, it’s succeeding.

McDowell and Bergenty had their own heart-to-heart conversation before the season began, McDowell said as Bergenty was discussing the culture shift working through FRM.

McDowell and Gilliland race Noah Gragson
Jonathan Bachman | Getty Images

“Trying to figure out what we’re going to do moving forward to get better, whether that’s the 34, 38 or as a group,” Bergenty explained. “And we did, we sat by the fire for a little bit and, not really hashed anything out, but we just talked about a bunch of things. And obviously, I’m good friends with Blake and he left to go to the 48. And so there was just some opportunities for I think the company, for myself, for all of us and what’s best moving forward and I think we made all the right decisions, because I mean the results are getting closer to where we want.”

To Bergenty’s point, the culture is changing at the small Mooresville shop — but there is not a culture shock. Each of the program’s teams have sniffed success — including Smith’s title run last year in trucks off the same shop floor. They are now in the business of redefining the organization’s success, finding ways to sustain it and augment it.

Part of that transition starts by tearing down walls to communicate more effectively.

“I think the biggest thing is we kind of grouped everybody’s different areas of expertise,” said Peterson, McDowell’s first-year crew chief. “They brought engineering in with me, they took the car chief side with Ryan, and then our ability to work together has never been stronger as far as the two cars. We literally knocked down walls in offices and me and Ryan sit together, the engineers sit together, and we just kind of open communicate, and we’ve probably made a more concerted effort to be as close as possible.”

It should come as little surprise that Bergenty initiated the wall removal himself.

“The funny thing was upstairs last year, the two offices were separate,” Bergenty said. “So the first thing I decided (since) I’m staying here, I took a Sawzall and cut the wall down — literally cut the wall down between the two offices so now it’s one big office. So the engineers mingle. Travis and I’s desks are right across from each other and so he’ll be like, ‘Hey, I’m thinking of this from a car production standpoint,’ and I’m able to apply my experience and skill sets there and then he does vice versa when it comes to engineering and stuff. So we just we understand and complement each other the best we can.”

McDowell has seen multiple iterations of Front Row over his tenure. The shift this year, he believes, is the work that has gone into making the No. 38 program as competitive as McDowell’s No. 34 team.

“I think that that rotation and restructure of people has helped the overall program, and then bringing the 38 and elevating the 38 to where it’s at now, I think has overall helped all the teams,” he said. “And so that was a big focus in the offseason was the 34 is in a good spot. How do we get the 38 to that level? And that wasn’t on Todd.

Todd Gilliland at driver intros
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

“I mean, we knew that we had areas that we had to improve and get better from a process and a procedure standpoint. It wasn’t so much that my car was getting extra attention or different setups as it was each individual team processes were a little different. And so just more organizationally coming up with those, ‘This is how we’re going to build cars. The cars are gonna be built at this spec. This is the process, the schedule, the timing of how you do it.’ Implementing a few more checks and balances and quality control areas to make sure that when the 34 and the 38 left for the race track, they’re as close as they can be within reason of what the crew chiefs and engineers want to do setup-wise.”

McDowell emphasized that his belief in Gilliland as a driver hasn’t shifted just because the results are now showing up.

“(Gilliland’s) effort’s always been there,” McDowell said. “He’s always been committed to being here at the shop and the meetings and digging in and the simulation and all the things that we’re doing, so none of that has really changed from my perspective. I think it’s more of just getting the cars and the group around him to get the results, and then once you start getting the results, that’s what builds the confidence. You can’t just fake it. You can’t fake confidence.

“But once he went out there and had a good run and saw the potential, then he put together another one and then he’s put together another one. Now he’s on a roll.”

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – NASCAR today announced that the NASCAR Cup Series race at Dover Motor Speedway on Sunday, April 30, will now start at 1 p.m. ET – advancing one hour from the original 2 p.m. ET start time – due to the forecasted inclement weather. The broadcast networks for the Würth 400 remain unchanged – FS1, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

With the shift, FS1 will adjust its broadcast windows, with NASCAR RaceDay now beginning at noon ET. The race broadcast will remain on FS1, beginning at 1 p.m. ET. Green flag is scheduled for 1:11 p.m. ET.

MORE: Full Dover schedule | Full Cup race preview

For tickets to Sunday’s Würth 400 – as well as all of this weekend’s on-track activity – visit dovermotorspeedway.com.

The NASCAR Cup Series garage will open at 10 a.m. ET.

In addition to Sunday’s Cup Series race, the NASCAR Xfinity Series and the ARCA Menards Series East are in action at Dover. The ARCA East’s General Tire 125 is scheduled for Friday at 5:30 p.m. ET, broadcast on FloRacing. The NASCAR Xfinity Series’ A-GAME 200 is set for Saturday at 1:30 p.m. ET (FS1, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Practice and qualifying for the Xfinity Series were washed away by Friday rainfall, and the starting lineup was set according to the NASCAR Rule Book. The 200-miler is the final event in the four-race Dash 4 Cash series, and Talladega winner Jeb Burton will be vying for a $100,000 bonus alongside Sheldon Creed, Cole Custer and Parker Kligerman, who is set to start from the No. 1 spot Saturday.

The 2023 NASCAR Home Track roster is set. And for a handful of those venues, the entire 2023 race season will be shown live and exclusively on FloRacing, NASCAR’s official streaming home for grassroots racing.

A total of 53 tracks in the United States and Canada will host NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series racing this year. They include some new additions to the Home Track roster.

The new tracks include: Birch Run Speedway and Event Center in Birch Run, Michigan; Blue Valor Motorplex in Eagle, Idaho; Delaware International Speedway in Delmar, Delaware; Fonda Speedway in Fonda, New York; Hawkeye Down Speedway in Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Georgetown Speedway in Georgetown, Delaware; Lake View Motor Speedway in Nichols, South Carolina, Lonesome Pine Motorsports Park in Coeburn, Virginia; New River All-American Speedway in Jacksonville, North Carolina; Southern National Motorsports Park in Lucama, North Carolina; Sunset Speedway in Innisfil, Ontario; and Utica-Rome Speedway in Vernon, New York.

In addition, 17 NASCAR Home Tracks in 2023 will have their entire seasons of racing available to watch live on FloRacing.

The tracks available to watch all season live on FloRacing are as follows: Alaska Raceway Park, All American Speedway, Autodrome Granby, Berlin Raceway, Bowman Gray Stadium, Delaware International Speedway, Evergreen Speedway, Fonda Speedway, Florence Motor Speedway, Georgetown Speedway, Hickory Motor Speedway, Jennerstown Speedway Complex, LaCrosse Fairgrounds Speedway, Langley Speedway, Meridian Speedway, Riverhead Raceway, South Boston Speedway and Utica-Rome Speedway.

Below is the complete NASCAR Home Tracks roster for 2023.

The tracks that can be viewed all season on FloRacing are designated with an asterisk.

2023 NASCAR Home Tracks

Adams County Speedway
Alaska Raceway Park*
All American Speedway*
Autodrome Chaudière Vallée-Jonction
Autodrome Granby*
Berlin Raceway*
Bethel Motor Speedway
Birch Run Speedway & Event Center
Blue Valor Motorplex
Bowman Gray Stadium*
Claremont Motorsports Park
Colorado National Speedway
Coos Bay Speedway
Delaware International Speedway
Dominion Raceway
Eastbound International Speedway
Edmonton International Raceway
Elko Speedway
Evergreen Speedway*
Florence Motor Speedway*
Fonda Speedway*
Georgetown Speedway
Grandview Speedway
Hawkeye Downs Speedway
Hickory Motor Speedway*
Hudson Speedway
Irwindale Speedway
Jennerstown Speedway Complex*
Kingsport Speedway
LaCrosse Fairgrounds Speedway*
Lake View Motor Speedway
Langley Speedway*
Lee USA Speedway
Limaland Motorsports Park
Lonesome Pine Motorsports Park
Magic Valley Speedway
Meridian Speedway*
Monadnock Speedway
Motor Mile Speedway
New River All American Speedway
New Smyrna Speedway
Riverhead Raceway*
Rockford Speedway
RPM Speedway
Salina Highbanks Speedway
Seekonk Speedway
South Boston Speedway*
Southern National Motorsports Park
Sunset Speedway
The Bullring at Las Vegas Motor Speedway
Tucson Speedway
Utica-Rome Speedway*
Wake County Speedway

Long after multiple heaps of metal had been hauled to Talladega’s temporary scrap yard and much of Saturday’s paying public had filed out, the Victory Lane celebration rolled on for Jeb Burton and Jordan Anderson under a slivered moon. For Burton, the day marked his third NASCAR national-series victory and his first in two years. For Anderson, it was an all-time first after nearly 10 seasons as a driver and team owner.

For that alone, the festivities might be especially raucous. But Talladega Superspeedway’s Victory Lane was lined with fans eager to join in with the underdog team and its journeyman driver. Many had seemingly filled the two red-flag delays in Saturday’s Xfinity Series race with steady intake of fermented beverages. Several begged for freebie hats from the stock used for photo opportunities like they were gold doubloons.

RELATED: Talladega highs and lows | Burton: ‘You have no idea how big this is’

The photo combos – Burton with family, Anderson with family, both with their Jordan Anderson Racing team – progressed until it was just driver and owner. Both Anderson and Burton flanked their newly won hardware and signaled No. 1 as a chant rose up from the masses: “Pick it up! Pick it up!” Fueled by that prodding and the still-rushing adrenaline, the two partners suspended the Hammer & Anvil trophy – all 50-plus pounds of solid iron of it – above the Xfinity Series pedestal.

“It took Jeb and I both to pick it up,” Anderson said.

Both drivers had been carrying their own weight of hardships through the offseason, and the elation for two self-described grinders was shared after their first win together in last weekend’s Ag-Pro 300. Anderson had only launched his racing operation in 2018, starting in Craftsman Trucks and venturing into the Xfinity Series ranks just two years ago. The team expanded this season, with young prospect Parker Retzlaff joining the fold. The addition of Burton provided a stabilizing, veteran force.

“I think that’s why we get along so good. We both haven’t had nothing given to us,” Burton said in the winner’s press conference. “We’ve worked our ass off, and today is what it’s about.”

Jordan Anderson Racing teammates Jeb Burton (27) and Parker Retzlaff (31) lead the field at Talladega Superspeedway
James Gilbert | Getty Images

Burton’s agreement with Anderson was formally announced Jan. 4, ending another offseason of uncertainty. The well-traveled driver’s tenure with Our Motorsports drew to a close last fall, and his new link with Jordan Anderson Racing became his fourth team in as many years.

Concurrently, Burton’s personal life was also thrown into disarray with a split from his wife, Brandi. He opened up about the topic for the first time last weekend and said he had grown stronger through the adversity. Getting back behind the wheel for an offseason test session became therapeutic.

“I probably lost 10 pounds over the offseason. It was tough. I was not in a good way,” Burton said. “But when I got to the race track at Charlotte and put that helmet on, it rejuvenized me and showed me that this is what’s important right here. The guys, they had my back.”

It’s part of why Burton was in an especially thankful mood after Saturday’s triumph – to the family that’s grown closer, to the longtime sponsors who had stuck with him through the team changes, and the new car owner who bet on him with the team’s expansion in the offseason. “Y’all have made racing fun again for me,” Burton told his team after crossing under the checkered flag.

“To give that to all those people that have helped me the last 15 years is just very special,” Burton said. “And like with Jordan, I mean he’s busted his tail, and to be the guy to win the first oval stage, and then to win a race today for him, that was awesome. I’d rather win for him and do that with this little team and build this team than anybody else.”

MORE: Xfinity Series standings

Anderson’s weight came in returning to the scene of a terrifying crash last October at the 2.66-mile track. The 32-year-old was making one of five spot starts in the Craftsman Truck Series last year when his No. 3 Chevrolet combusted, the result of an oil-line failure under the hood. Anderson tried to escape his still-moving truck as it skidded to a halt, and the flames that shrouded the vehicle left him with significant burns.

Back in Talladega this spring, he recalled arriving through the infield tunnel but leaving by helicopter to an area hospital.

“Just had a little moment, just taking it all in and it’s like, wow, all that we’ve been through with that,” Anderson said. “I’m usually pretty tough. Growing up, I broke bones, knocked teeth out with BMX and did a lot of crazy stuff. And that was a lot of pain, emotional and physical, to go through all that stuff, and it was tough on my family and all that stuff. But at my heart and core, that was an opportunity race for me. I mean, I hadn’t raced a lot last year, and we were running fourth when it happened, and it’s like, man, just took a lot, took kind of the wind out of my sails and knocked me out, kind of on a little different scale than Jeb.”

Since the accident, Anderson says he’s put more focus on the ownership side, hoping to foster the team’s growth with Burton and the 19-year-old Retzlaff, who rallied to finish seventh last weekend at Talladega. His upstart group has tried to make inroads against more established Xfinity Series teams, including some with a Cup Series lineage. Now the team has a playoff spot in hand as the 2023 campaign rolls forward.

Through it all, Anderson has carried an independent, short-track ethos and an “embrace the journey” mantra that honor his humble start – with a high-mileage heavy-duty truck and a primitive trailer that carried his racing equipment. Saturday, a weight lifted for both owner and driver.

“I just hope that for our sport, I know there’s thousands of kids, people out there like myself that are racing Legend Cars, Late Models at a short track across the country,” said Anderson, who began his driver career in Legends and Bandoleros. “They’re going out there with their mom and dad and brother and sister, and they’ve got the brother putting tires in the car and the dad spotting and they’re working all they can do to get that car to the race track every week. Hopefully, our story is for those people that watch and said hey, the grassroots dream is alive and well in our sport that if you set your mind to it and you work hard enough, you surround yourself with good people, you can get here and you can win one. And it’s just, this is really cool. This is one for all of them, for sure.”

Two years ago, Josh Whitfield set a goal of winning a Street Stock championship at All American Speedway in Roseville, California.

Whitfield had raced in the division for more than a decade, but had never competed in a full season at his home track during that timeframe.

Not only did Whitfield win the 2021 championship, he went the entire season only losing one race.

The success of that season made Whitfield dream bigger for 2022. His next goal was to defend his title from the previous year while also going undefeated along the way.

Whitfield went a perfect 8-0 to claim his second All American Street Stock championship by 46 points.

“Last year we set the expectations pretty high,” Whitfield said. “It’s all a team effort. We didn’t always have the fastest car at the track, but we tried hard as a team and we always made the right adjustments and we kept our head straight.”

As All American opens the 2023 season, Whitfield’s goals for this summer aren’t quite as lofty, but he is challenging himself once again. He will be going for his third consecutive title in Street Stocks, while also joining All American’s Late Model division.

Saturday’s season-opener will be the first time Whitfield has raced a Late Model during his career.

“This year is going to be a learning curve for our whole team, myself and my sponsors [as we step] up into this Late Model class,” Whitfield said. “We do have some people helping us, but I think this year is all about getting notes, seeing what the car does, and seeing how it handles adjustments. Next year we’ll set our goals to either a championship or winning a bunch of races.

“I feel pretty good. I think we have a good little setup to start off with, and we’ll just adjust from there. I think my team and myself has enough experience to start off with. We’ll take notes and go from there.”

Although Whitfield has been racing at All American since 2005, he’s been in and around the sport much longer. His grandfather and dad both raced, and racing has always been a part of their family.

“My sister was actually born at the Stockton 99 Speedway in 1992,” Whitfield said. “My dad was on the track qualifying and my mom went into labor.

“My grandpas started racing, my dad started racing, and when I was 8 years old I started racing mini Cup cars at Altamont Raceway, and ever since then we never stopped.”

A busy 2023 season for Josh Whitfield will see him run in a Late Model at All American Speedway for the first time in his career (Photo: Josh Whitfield)

Whitfield’s grandfathers, who both recently passed away, were always a big part of his racing career, and he keeps their memory alive on the track.

“I basically do this for my family,” he said. “[Racing] brings my family together. It’s a good Saturday night gathering, and we go from there.”

In addition to his dad, Whitfield’s team consist of his crew chief, Ed, his tire guy, Dave, and friends Casey and Tim, who help out in the pits and garage.

After racing so many years at All American, Whitfield has gained quite a few fans in the stands. One family in particular became such big fans they would come down to the pits and cheer him on.

Now, those fans have become one of Whitfield’s most loyal sponsors.

“They became fans of me watching how I race, and afterwards in the pits always coming down, and they brought their kids, and I was always interacting with them, and he became my primary sponsor,” Whitfield said. “We kind of started it small and kept with the street stocks to keep it fun, and this year he wanted to step it up and get a late model, so we decided to go and try late model racing.”

Whitfield will stay in street stocks for fun, but he’s also hopeful his success in that class will give him confidence in Late Models.

Confidence is high with Whitfield’s team in both cars this season, and he’s proven in the past he can reach whatever goals he puts his mind to.

“We feel pretty good,” he said. “Our team is excited to start with the late model program. Obviously, we do all of this for fun, but it’s a local track, it’s close to home, so we’ll just haul two cars out there and race two divisions to support a local track.”

All American Speedway will open its 69th season on Saturday with a schedule that features the Wild West Super Series Late Models, Modified twin features, Super Stocks, and F4s.

Würth 400 at Dover Motor Speedway
(⏰ Monday at noon ET | 📺 FS1, FOX Sports App | 📻 PRN, SiriusXM)

Everything you need to know for Monday’s NASCAR Cup Series race in Delaware, the 11th regular season race of the 2023 Cup Series campaign.

Weekend schedule | TV schedule | Weather tracker | Dover 101

🚨 UPDATE: Sunday’s race postponed to Monday due to inclement weather

📍 Location: Dover, Delaware
📐 Track length: 1 mile
🎟️ Buy tickets: Find weekend passes, seats for the race
💰 Cup Series race purse: $7,629,649
📏 Race distance: 400 miles | 400 laps
🔢 Stages: 120 | 250 | 400

🚪 Entry list: Drivers, teams heading to race
📋 Starting lineup: Where drivers will start on Monday
🚗 Pit stall assignments:
Where drivers will pit on Monday
🏆 Most recent winner: Chase Elliott

Key things to watch 🔑

Top story line

Can Kyle Busch stay hot? Busch is off to a historic start with his new organization, Richard Childress Racing, and is still showing signs of improvement. In his career at Dover, though, he has been pretty hit or miss but does have a seventh-place result in 2022 to build off — in addition to three wins, the last of which was in 2017. Each of the last six races at the “Monster Mile” has been won by a different driver, and Busch is not on that list. But drivers who do, namely Kevin Harvick and Martin Truex Jr., might be among the many standing in his way — after all, they still need to reach Victory Lane for the first time this season.

🏥 Alex Bowman sidelined: Driver to miss 3-4 weeks due to back injury

History tells us…

Hendrick Motorsports rules at Dover. The storied Chevrolet organization has 22 wins at the track, bolstered by Jimmie Johnson’s 11. Kyle Larson and Chase Elliott, the defending race winner, have won and routinely found success at the “Monster Mile.” And while William Byron has yet to reach Victory Lane here, he has finished fourth and is off to a remarkable start this season, winning two of the last eight races. Though Bowman is sidelined this weekend with an injury, Josh Berry fills in and has already proven his talent at the Cup Series level. There will be a handful of other contenders, but don’t be surprised if all four Hendrick cars are in contention for the win.

He may not be the betting favorite to win, but watch out for…

Josh Berry. Berry has very little Cup Series experience — mostly from filling in for Elliott during his snowboarding injury recovery — but has shown that his talent and consistency can propel him in the right direction. By nearly winning a race and finishing runner-up to Kyle Larson at Martinsville Speedway, Berry proved that he’s not just a fill-in driver. He’s here to win.

Saturday’s sessions

Cup cars hit the track for the first time during Saturday’s practice session, battling the washed-down track throughout the morning with many struggling to find grip in their tires. Tire wear and the chilly conditions seemed to be the major theme throughout the morning as drivers and teams scrambled to make adjustments.

Brad Keselowski posted a morning-best 158.660 mph lap time in his session, topping the charts and setting up nicely for Monday’s race. When eyes shifted to qualifying, however, another rain storm rolled in and canceled qualifying. Monday’s starting lineup was set by the rule book with Talladega Superspeedway winner Kyle Busch leading the field to the green flag. | Read full recap

Inside the Race 🔍

MRN’s Todd Gordon and NBC Sports’ Steve Letarte deep dive into the characteristics that set Dover Motor Speedway apart from other race tracks.

Familiar favorites ⭐️

Our biggest pieces of the week — get covered for race day from all angles. 

• Paint Scheme Preview: Daniel Suárez rocking a Pitbull scheme | Pick a favorite
• Power Rankings: Can Elliott break into the win column at Dover? | Latest driver rankings
Fantasy Fastlane: Hendrick drivers expected to dominate | Top Fantasy Live plays, sleepers
• Betting odds: See which driver is the favorite for Monday’s race | Top bets, underdog picks
• Stacking Pennies:
‘The King,” Richard Petty, joins the show this week | Listen to the podcast

💎 NASCAR 75: Honoring NASCAR’s 50 Greatest Drivers … then revealing 25 more | Check out the list

Hot off the press 📰

Key stories and breaking news from the week leading up to the race.

• Hendrick Motorsports: Jeff Andrews discusses stance on driver risk | Listen here
• Front Row Motorsports:
Culture shift, breaking down barriers | Read more
• Analysis:
Can Truex or Blaney end winless drought Monday at Dover? | Read more
• Bobby Labonte:
Next driver named to 75 Greatest Drivers list | Read more
• Dale Jr.:
Fan favorite named to 75 Greatest Drivers | Read more
• NASCAR Salutes:
Plan to honor the U.S. military kicks off | Read more
• Talladega wreck:
NASCAR investigating Nos. 5 and 41 | Learn more
• Photo Memories:
Richard Childress recounts early racing dreams | Read more
• More than music:
Pitbull details vision, mission for Trackhouse | Read more
• Darlington:
William Byron honors Jeff Gordon with cool throwback | Read more | See all angles
• All-Star Race:
STP, Legacy MC honoring Richard Petty with new scheme | Read more
• NASCAR Foundation:
Organization delivers bikes to children in schools | Read more
• Radio news:
NASCAR, SiriusXM renew broadcasting agreement | Read more

Get in on the action 💰

Think you know NASCAR? Put your mettle to the test with gaming, fantasy and Fan Rewards.

• Fan Rewards: New in 2023, get rewarded for your participation | Learn more
• Fantasy Live: Still time to get on the leaderboard and win big this season | Tips for 2023
• NASCAR BetCenter: Don’t miss your chance to make picks each week | Visit the BetCenter
• Going the distance:
2023 Cup Series championship odds | See them here
• The Action Network: Keep an eye on this Hendrick favorite | Expert analysis

Dive in at Dover 🏊‍♂️

Memorable moments, key race flashbacks and more from the history of the ‘Monster Mile’

• Do you remember?: Memorable moments at Dover | Relive them here
• Dover details:
Track’s historic impact felt throughout the garage | Read the story
• Race Rewind:
Best moments from the 2022 race | Watch Elliott’s win
• An impossible save:
See Johnson’s qualifying save at Dover in 2006 | Check it out

Take some notes 📝

Five hard-hitting, race-relevant statistics, brought to you by the experts at Racing Insights.

The last six Dover races were won by different drivers.
The Stage 1 winner went on to win three times at Dover and the Stage 2 winner four times.
The Dover race winner has finished in the top 10 in Stage 2 in every race with stages
A driver led 100 or more laps in six of 10 races in 2023.
Hendrick Motorsports has 22 wins at Dover, more than double any other organization.

🔮 Predicting the winner: Using data to set a projected finishing order

Editor’s note: This story is part of our monthlong celebration of NASCAR Legends presented by GEICO. For more great legends content, visit our hub page, and don’t forget to enter for a chance to win a legendary VIP experience at the 2024 GEICO 500 at Talladega.

Every kid has an idol, someone they want to be like when they grow up.

Even if they one day get into a highly publicized fight with their one-time idol on pit road.

RELATED: More NASCAR 75 coverage | Joey Logano through the years

Such is the case of Joey Logano and one of his idols, namely NASCAR Hall of Famer Tony Stewart. Growing up in New England, Logano’s life was consumed by two things: racing and Stewart. He wanted to be like Stewart so much, to the point where he dutifully and intently studied Stewart’s moves on the race track and copied them himself.

Invariably, watching Stewart and the lessons he learned helped Logano win a great deal of races growing up.

And then in what some might call the ultimate honor, Logano was the hand-picked choice of team owner, Joe Gibbs,  to replace Stewart in the No. 20 Home Depot Toyota when the latter switched teams after the 2008 season.

Logano was just 18 years old at the time!

“I was nine or 10 years old (when he was a Stewart fan), so 10 years later I’m driving the car that he’s leaving, with pretty much the same team he had then,” Logano said. “I take over his car, people were talking about how I’m going to fill his shoes in his race car and all this stuff.”

Logano grew up with posters of Stewart on his bedroom wall. He voraciously read every story he could about the Indiana native — who patterned himself after another racer, the legendary A.J. Foyt – be it a race story, feature, Q&A or everything in-between.

When he was in his early teens and racing late models throughout the Southeast, Logano and his family were living in a condo atop Atlanta Motor Speedway at the time. It was centrally located to many of the small bull rings he raced upon.

But after years of idolizing Stewart, one day Logano dropped his hero cold.

It took Logano almost 20 minutes to be convinced to tell this story, but truth and transparency have always been his calling card, so here’s that recollection — or as the late legendary broadcaster Paul Harvey used to say: “And now you know the rest of the story.”

“Right in-between the (Atlanta Motor Speedway) garage and the bus lot is a little area where fans can kind of be there, and you see your driver, and a lot of the drivers would stop and sign autographs or whatever,” Logano said with an almost sheepish recollection. “Well, I have a Tony Stewart hat (on), I have all my stuff, I was a Tony Stewart fan. I wanted to get Tony Stewart’s autograph, I wanted to meet Tony Stewart.

“(Stewart) must have had a bad day or something, because now knowing Tony, this isn’t who he is. But Tony’s an emotional person as well. I’ve learned that about him too, and probably something wasn’t going his way that day, but Tony just walked right by us.

“I yelled, ‘Hey Tony, sign my hat.’ And he didn’t even look at me, just bee-lined, right? And I’m like, ‘Screw this guy.’ Right? That was my reaction, like, ‘I don’t like this guy.’ So, I took all my (Stewart) stuff and I threw it in the garbage when I got home.”

In hindsight, years later, Logano would come to understand why Stewart was the way he was on that  particular day — and in a sense now, wished he had kept all his Stewart memorabilia.

There’s a moral to this story that Logano is quick to point out: He’s been in Stewart’s shoes at times — so to speak — when the last thing he wanted to do was sign an autograph or spend time with a fan.

“Every time I see a kid, it is like, ‘Stop in my tracks.’ I try really hard to do it,” Logano said of doling out his autograph to admiring fans, who have waited a long time to get a glimpse of and a couple seconds of time with their racing hero. “I can’t say I’m perfect at it, but I have that memory burned into my mind of what it felt like to be rejected as a kid.

“I feel like adults can somewhat understand (what a race car driver goes through): ‘Hey, there’s a job at hand. I have to go to work. There’s things I got to do. I have to get to a certain place at a certain time.’

“But kids don’t really get that. I didn’t get that. I didn’t understand what a bad practice felt like. I didn’t understand what bad qualifying efforts felt like, where you’re mad at yourself, you’re mad at the situation, you just want to go back and figure out how to be better. But nobody realizes what you’re going through in those moments, so you always have to remove yourself or try to remove yourself from the situation.”

Once he reached the NASCAR Cup Series , Logano learned a lot from Stewart — both good and bad, although they were on different teams at that point. Among the more notable things Logano learned was an up-close-and-personal example of Stewart’s temper, during the March 24, 2013, Cup race at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California.

Late in the race on a restart, Logano blocked Stewart — with a full head of steam — from getting past him. When the race was over, Stewart hunted Logano down. For a guy who grew up idolizing Stewart, Logano quickly learned there was another side to the man they call “Smoke.”

Stewart was hot about the incident — especially since Logano’s block forced Stewart out of line and rather than a top-five or top-10 finish, he wound up 22nd, while Logano finished third.

It’s an incident Stewart has never forgotten. A few years ago in an interview with NASCAR, he still vividly recalled the run-in (the duo now laughs about it these days).

“I’m like I got his ass now. I’m gonna dot his I and cross his T. We’ve got this,” Stewart said of wanting to punch out Logano. “And about that time, a big fuel guy grabs me by the collar and pulls me back like I’m a rag doll. I was just so mad about it.”

Logano recalls the same incident with a laugh, as well, although it wasn’t funny when it happened.

“Fast forward a couple years later (after he first came into Cup), we’re fighting on pit road  together, right?” Logano said. “Life’s weird, man. I’m telling you, just crazy things happen. You never know the paths that you’re going to cross with people sometimes.

“And so to think of, from how our relationship started through the whole thing, now we get along fine, but it’s kind of funny how that all happened, yeah.”