MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Heavy rain dumped plenty of water onto Martinsville Speedway Friday night, resulting in a weather-shortened win for Corey Heim. But a clearing offered the unique opportunity to debut Goodyear’s wet-weather tires to begin the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race.

The event began without a hitch, running 27 laps before NASCAR officials displayed the competition caution, necessitating all competitors to change back to slicks. All three of NASCAR’s national series — trucks, Xfinity and Cup — have utilized rain tires on road courses but never on an oval until Friday night.

MORE: Recap the race | At-track photos: Martinsville

Feedback following the rain-shortened Long John Silver’s 200 after heavier rain washed over the 0.526-mile facility was generally positive — notably from two Cup Series veterans.

Trucks racing in the rain at Martinsville Speedway
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

“I thought it was great,” Ross Chastain told NASCAR.com. “I thought they did a good job to get the track dry of like standing water and then let us go. Tire had plenty of grip. This generation of rain tire, really everything I’ve seen out of it, is OK and right for the situation.”

Though the asphalt straightaways were still wet, the concrete corners dried significantly as the run went on. That blistered Chastain’s tires — “blew apart basically the tread” — and eventually landed his No. 41 Chevrolet a lap down. That didn’t dissuade last year’s Martinsville star from advocating for more wet-weather tires in future situations.

“I saw other guys being fine. They were a half second, maybe a second faster than me at the end,” Chastain said. “That’s something that we’ll learn, right? Niece and (crew chief) Mike Hillman will learn about the rain tires now. And then we went back to slicks, and everything was fine. The track still had wet spots, but everybody raced good.”

Two-time Cup Series champion Kyle Busch found early success on the wets, moving past polesitter Zane Smith for the early lead.

“For us, it was good,” said Busch, the winningest driver in Truck Series history. “I thought we were fast. We were able to hold on to it really well. A couple of the other guys seem to be struggling with it. But yeah, it was fine by me.”

Ultimately, the race was red-flagged for the second and final time at Lap 125 as rain moved back over the speedway. NASCAR officials deemed the event over, but some competitors wanted another shot to learn on the treaded tires.

“It rains again, and I’m like, ‘Hey, we’ve got another set of wets, let’s put them on and let’s keep learning. Let’s keep doing this,'” Chastain said. “I think this is the perfect scenario for racing in the rain, where the track won’t dry out. The tires will last longer. We won’t need those (competition) cautions to change them. I think right now we could with this (rain), we will not dry the track out and we can keep running, and I’ll take that to NASCAR as my opinion.”

Busch was a little more hesitant but agreed it would have been worth a shot.

“Right now, I mean honestly, this is a little bit heavy of a rain, maybe depending on the spray, but we didn’t even give it a chance,” he said.

Heim managed to pass Busch for the lead on slicks on a Lap 43 restart and was never passed again. But the driver of the No. 11 Toyota credited crew chief Scott Zipadelli for the opening stint on wets, nailing the tire setup to allow Heim to work from fourth to second and have a shot at the lead.

“It seemed like a lot of people had a lot of different reactions with their trucks. I think it was all about air pressures,” Heim said. “Scott and my crew hit it on the dot right there and really gave us a good opportunity right there from the start.”

Another takeaway from the opening stint was just how much the tires wore. As rubber laid down and the track dried, lap times slowed significantly.

“Yeah, there was falloff. We need more tires like those,” Busch said.

A view of the Goodyear Eagle Wet-Weather Radials used in Friday night's Truck Series race.
Goodyear Eagle Wet-Weather Radials used Friday night. Photo by Sean Gardner of Getty Images.

NASCAR and Goodyear worked at Martinsville and Richmond Raceway to develop a tire capable of handling damp conditions on short ovals. That led to the introduction of a wet-weather package for most tracks 1 mile in length or shorter — the exceptions being Bristol Motor Speedway and Dover Motor Speedway.

“The testing they did, I didn’t put any stock into it. It was a water truck on a sunny day,” Chastain said. “Tonight, as a sport and industry, I think we will study this, and they (officials) will ask drivers up and down pit lane. And I will encourage drivers and NASCAR to talk and let’s get these Truck Series drivers — this field has the most knowledge now. And let’s learn from this for all of us because I’m telling you, man, I know it stinked to sit up there and the stands and watch this, but we could’ve finished this race in these conditions.”

MARTINSVILLE, Va. – Corey Heim prevailed at Martinsville Speedway late Friday night to earn his first NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series victory of the season after persevering through both rain and dry conditions, two red flag periods for weather and multiple charges by the highly-motivated veteran Kyle Busch.

The 20-year-old Georgia native, Heim, led his first laps of the 2023 season at exactly the right time – holding the point for an impressive 82 of the 124 laps of the Long John Silver’s 200. Including the most important lap.

RELATED: Race results | At-track photos

An accident with 85 laps remaining brought out the yellow flag and after several circuits under caution, NASCAR brought the trucks to pit road where the red flag flew for rain and the race was declared official on lap 124 of the scheduled 200 laps.

“Rain, rain, come on,’’ Heim told his TRICON Garage crew on the radio, just before climbing out of his No. 11 Toyota truck during that final red flag period.

“This race was cut short and that’s definitely unfortunate, but this truck was fast all night,’’ Heim said. “I couldn’t ask for a better group of guys.’’

Heim had to work for this, holding off Busch – who was racing for Kyle Busch Motorsports’ 100th win – and reigning series champion Zane Smith on four different re-starts to claim the famed one-of-a-kind grandfather clock Martinsville trophy only minutes before that clock would strike midnight.

“We just didn’t have a good enough short-run truck,’’ said Busch, who finished second. “Being a little bit loose and free that we were, we were hoping that would pay off in the long run but never had a long run. The longest run of the race was on rain tires.

“It did not go our way today, unfortunately.’’

Heim swept both stage wins – his first of the season as well.

“I bring a 100% effort to every race every week so to be able to sit here and have it pay off is phenomenal,’’ Heim said.

Smith finished third in the No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford with ThorSport Racing’s Ty Majeski and Heim’s Tricon teammate Tanner Gray rounding out the top five.

Ben Rhodes, Matt DiBenedetto, Taylor Gray, William Sawalich and Chase Purdy completed the top 10. It was the 16-year-old Sawalich’s NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series debut – helping the Tricon team to four top-10 finishes.

Majeski maintains the points lead after Martinsville by 26 points over Smith and 49 over Rhodes.

The trucks take a couple of weeks off and will return to competition on Saturday, May 6 at Kansas Speedway in the Heart of America 200 (8 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Note: Inspection is complete in the Truck Series garage with no issues, confirming Heim as the winner.

Nick Sanchez will honor racing legend Mario Andretti in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Darlington Raceway on May 12, Rev Racing announced Friday.

With primary sponsorship from Gainbridge, Sanchez’s No. 2 Chevrolet will bear the powder blue, gold and red that Andretti wheeled to Victory Lane in the 1967 Daytona 500, the only NASCAR triumph of his glorious and monumental career.

MORE: Full Truck Series schedule | Buy Darlington tickets

A rendered view of the No. 2 truck Nick Sanchez will drive at Darlington
Rev Racing

An integral part of racing history, Andretti will be on site in Darlington to see his cherished Holman-Moody paint scheme don Sanchez’s Silverado while helping celebrate NASCAR’s 75th anniversary.

“You don’t really get pressure as a race car driver a lot,” Sanchez told NASCAR.com. “But driving his paint scheme that he won the ’67 Daytona 500 in at a place like Darlington on throwback weekend? That’s pressure — a good kind of pressure, though.”

Keen on racing as ever at age 83, Andretti showed sincere gratitude that Rev Racing and Gainbridge wanted to honor a livery so important to his illustrious past.

“That’s definitely special,” Andretti told NASCAR.com via teleconference, eager to show a rendering of the truck he’d printed out. “I mean, it brings back such special, very treasured memories of a great time in my career. I’m just totally flattered that the team is doing this for me, and I’m going to really enjoy watching Nick put this baby up there – maybe on the top step at the end of this race.”

Andretti has been keeping a watchful eye on Sanchez’s inaugural Truck Series campaign, a rookie year that coincides with Rev Racing’s first endeavor at NASCAR’s national levels, thanks in part to an alliance with Kyle Busch Motorsports.

Sanchez, the 2022 ARCA Menards Series champion, has shown impressive speed, with two poles and an Atlanta runner-up finish in six starts. A dominant performance at Texas Motor Speedway saw Sanchez lead 168 of 171 laps before a last-lap crash eliminated him from competition.

“I’ve been watching the young lad the last few races, and he’s definitely a comer for sure,” Andretti said. “He’s no stranger to the winner’s circle coming through the ranks, and now obviously, with NASCAR with the trucks, it looks like he’s definitely with the right team and a competitive truck and a driver that knows what to do with it.”

Mario Andretti's 1967 Daytona 500 winning car sits on an open trailer
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images

The victor over a half-century ago, Andretti celebrated his Daytona triumph in only the ninth running of the Great American Race. His No. 11 Holman-Moody Racing Ford led 112 of 200 laps on Feb. 26, 1967, en route to the checkered flag.

“I think the significance grows, quite honestly,” Andretti said of the win. “The stature of the event grows as well, then you have the strong tradition. And to be part of that tradition, let’s face it, the Daytona 500 for NASCAR is like for IndyCar the Indianapolis 500. I mean, there’s a marquee event, and then there’s a (season-long) championship.

“But sometimes, there’s as much value to winning that one particular race on either side as there is winning the championship. It’s unfair, but that’s a fact. And to see my name there in that roster of Daytona 500 winners is something I’m very proud of.”

Gainbridge serves as the primary sponsor for both Sanchez and the Andretti Autosport team in IndyCar. Having an opportunity to bridge the gap between series while honoring a legend in Andretti was something Gainbridge and Rev Racing seemed too perfect to pass up.

A conversation with Rev Racing led Mike Nichols, Gainbridge’s chief of sponsorship strategy and activation, to start brainstorming throwback ideas. In reality, that meant bouncing the question to his 17-year-old son, Michael, who himself is an avid NASCAR fan.

Mario Andretti celebrates his 1967 Daytona 500 win in Victory Lane
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images

“Without hesitation, he said ‘1967 Daytona 500’ – and within 5 minutes, I had a half-dozen photos and drawings of that car texted to me by him,” Nichols said in an email.  “Now I also have the good fortune of having an in-house graphic designer who spent 30 years designing paint schemes before he joined Gainbridge. … I texted the images to him and said, ‘I want to do a throwback to this car. Can you pull something together for me to approach Mario?’

“Within 48 hours, I had the amazing drawings with incredible attention to detail that you’ve now seen – and I fired off an email to Mario asking his permission to honor him and if he would be interested in being a part of it. As you saw today, he enthusiastically accepted and wanted to be as involved as he could be.”

Rev Racing has been a key part of NASCAR’s Drive for Diversity program, a driver development initiative created in 2004 to develop and train ethnically diverse and female drivers both on and off the track. NASCAR Cup Series drivers Bubba Wallace, Daniel Suárez and Kyle Larson are alumni of this program, which is operated by Rev Racing in Concord, N.C.

MORE: See the 2023 Drive for Diversity class

That aspect connects Rev Racing further with Andretti, a native of Italy whose Daytona 500 victory made him NASCAR’s first internationally-born driver to win. He has seen the benefits of diversity across motorsports – including at Andretti Autosport, where one of the top race engineers that he once worked with in IndyCar testing was a woman.

“I was very impressed with the way that she was analyzing situations and so forth and that I was giving her my practical side,” Andretti said. “So her and I bonded immediately. And again, that’s something that we all encourage. I mean, it’s definitely an open door. Anyone with those wishes and talents obviously will be looked at very seriously.”

NASCAR’s throwback weekend at Darlington offers a look in the rear-view mirror of the sport’s 75-year history. Andretti has been honored before – defending Cup Series champion Joey Logano ran his 1971 Formula One livery in 2021 commemorating Andretti’s inaugural South Africa triumph.

With Sanchez set to pay tribute to Andretti’s lone stock-car triumph, the memories keep flowing back.

“These throwback situations are something that, they’re much more valuable than a lot of people think,” Andretti said. “You know that some of these moments are not totally forgotten in time.”

NOCO 400 at Martinsville Speedway
(⏰ 3 p.m. ET | 📺 FS1, FOX Sports App | 📻 MRN, SiriusXM)

Everything you need to know for Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race in Virginia, the ninth regular-season race of the 2023 Cup Series campaign.

Weekend schedule | TV schedule | Weather tracker | Martinsville 101

📍 Location: Martinsville, Virginia
📐 Track length: 0.526 miles
🎟️ Buy tickets: Find seats for Sunday
💰 Cup Series race purse: $7,324,203
📏 Race distance: 400 laps | 210.4 miles
🔢 Stages: 80 | 180 | 400

🚪 Entry list: Chase Elliott returns, Zane Smith piloting No. 51
📋 Starting lineup: See where your favorite driver rolls off Sunday
🚗 Pit stall assignments:
See where drivers will pit Sunday
📦 Rules package: Refresher on rules for short tracks, road courses
🏆 Most recent winner: Christopher Bell


Key things to watch 🔑

Top story line

Chase Elliott is back in the No. 9. The 2020 Cup Series champion will pilot his Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet for the first time since scoring a runner-up finish at Auto Club Speedway in February. Elliott missed six weeks with a leg injury suffered in a snowboarding accident, and Xfinity Series regular Josh Berry and IMSA driver Jordan Taylor piloted the No. 9 in his absence. Martinsville is a fitting return for the 27-year-old, who has scored five top-10 finishes in the last six races on “The Paperclip,” including a win in the fall of 2020. Racing Insights projects a rousing return for Elliott, predicting him in Victory Lane after 400 laps Sunday.

🏆 ANALYSIS: How Elliott can qualify for the playoffs 

History tells us…

An established veteran scores the win. Martinsville is an ultimate test of patience and requires tactical discipline if a driver wants to grab the checkered flag. Dating back to the turn of the century, the least-experienced driver to win on NASCAR’s shortest points-paying short track was Tony Stewart in his sophomore Cup Series campaign in 2000. Sunday would be the perfect turnaround for Virginia native Denny Hamlin, who has yet to score a top-five finish in 2023. Hamlin’s Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Martin Truex Jr. has won three of the last seven Martinsville races. Expect either JGR or Hendrick to continue their grasp of the track as the teams have split the last seven wins on the short track.

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

Brad Keselowski. Opening at 22-1 odds, Keselowski squeaks into the top half of favorites for Sunday’s race. RFK Racing has shown massive strides in consistency and speed compared to this same time last season. The driver of the No. 6 Ford scored a top 10 with the updated short-track package at Richmond and crossed the finish line inside the top five at Martinsville last fall before a disqualification sent Keselowski down to the bottom of the results. Currently sitting inside the top 10 in points, if he shows the speed in practice and qualifying Saturday afternoon, don’t be surprised if RFK picks up its second short-track victory in the Next Gen era.

Practice and qualifying

A surprise came out of Saturday’s sessions as Ryan Preece earned his first career Cup Series pole ahead of his 124th start on Sunday. The quick pace showed throughout Stewart-Haas Racing as all four Fords will start inside the top 10 with Aric Almirola and Chase Briscoe locking out the second row and Kevin Harvick starting seventh.

In his first start back from a leg injury, Chase Elliott will start 24th.

Tyler Reddick showed the fastest single-lap speed in practice but it was defending Martinsville spring winner William Byron topping the board in 15, 20 and 25 consecutive lap averages.

Inside the Race 🔍

It’s back to the asphalt at Martinsville Sunday with the return of Chase Elliott, and Steve Letarte and Todd Gordon are here to bring you up to speed.

Familiar favorites ⭐️

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

• Paint Scheme Preview: Fresh looks and short-track style | Pick a favorite
• Power Rankings: Tyler Reddick rounding into form as threat to win on all track types | Latest driver rankings
• Fantasy Fastlane: TBD
• Betting odds: See where Chase Elliott sits on the oddsboard in his return to the Cup Series | Top bets, underdog picks
• Stacking Pennies:
Corey LaJoie’s father, Randy, joins the show | 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.

• Post-Bristol Dirt: NASCAR ‘will take deeper dive’ into Preece, Larson incident | Listen here
• Cody Ware:
NASCAR suspends Ware indefinitely | Read more
• Untold Stories:
Martinsville’s 6-year-old pace-car driver | Watch here
• NASCAR Legends:
Story behind Martinsville’s grandfather clock | Read more
• Photo Memories:
Ernie Irvan wins in memory of Davey Allison | Watch here
• NASCAR Legends:
Story behind Martinsville’s grandfather clock | Read more
• Roots:
Josh Berry carrying flag for grassroots racers throughout NASCAR journey | Read more
• NASCAR Foundation: Two new members added to Board of Directors | Read more
• ‘The Paperclip’:
Martinsville Speedway has been making memories with NASCAR from the start | 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 half mile of mayhem’ 📎

Revisit the history of some of the most iconic moments from Martinsville.

• Winner, winner: All-time winners of Martinsville’s spring race | See who has the most
• Do you remember?:
Historic moments at Martinsville | Relive them here
• Added to the lore:
Ross Chastain helps remove wall at Martinsville to commemorate ‘Hail Melon’ | Read more
• Lap leaders:
See who has led the most laps around Martinsville |Scroll through
• Good eats:
Why the Martinsville hot dog stand stands the test of time | Read more

Take some notes 📝

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

The last 11 Martinsville races have been won by nine different drivers, Martin Truex Jr. is the only driver with multiple wins in that time period.
Ford is winless in the last seven Martinsville races; the manufacturer had won the three previous races.
The race winner started outside the top 10 in five of the last seven short-track races.
A driver has led 100 or more laps in five of eight races in 2023.

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

Chase Elliott insists he wasn’t doing anything extravagantly “wild or crazy” last month, when he sustained the snowboarding injury that’s kept him out of the last six NASCAR Cup Series races. That would seem to rule out schussing off a Colorado cliff’s razor edge or dropping in from a helicopter into some perilous powder.

“I don’t have a cool story to tell,” Elliott said in a video conference Thursday, three days before his planned return to Cup Series competition. “It was just that perfect storm that could happen at any point in time, honestly.”

At the same time, Elliott said he knew that the damage that was done “was not good, and I knew that pretty quickly.” X-rays and tests would later reveal a fractured tibia in his left leg, but before that diagnosis was made, Elliott was already on the phone from the emergency room with his team owner, Rick Hendrick, and Alan Gustafson, the crew chief of his No. 9 Chevrolet. The team would need to make contingency plans for that weekend’s race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway and potentially beyond, with Elliott being careful not to over-dramatize the situation but also being transparent about it.

“Obviously I didn’t know at that point in time and was just hoping for the best,” Elliott said, “but whatever it was gonna be, it was gonna be. It was done at that point, right? So I was more just thinking about tackling what it was and doing what the doctors told me to do to get back to 100% as soon as I could.”

Getting back to his day job happens this weekend, with Elliott returning to the No. 9 Chevy in time for this Sunday’s NOCO 400 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM) at Martinsville Speedway. The event marks the 27-year-old driver’s third start of the season, and he’ll be pursuing the historic track’s grandfather-clock hardware carrying some extra hardware of his own — surgically placed screws that have helped his fracture heal.

RELATED: Martinsville weekend schedule | Chase Elliott set to return

Elliott was medically cleared earlier this week and consecutive days in the racing simulator convinced him he was ready to return. He said that the next two tracks on the schedule — Martinsville and the 2.66-mile Talladega Superspeedway — would not have been his first choices to make his comeback, but he felt confident in his strength and what his doctors have told him about the integrity of his healing bone. But, he added, “I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t going to be tough. I mean, it’s going to be tough.”

“Had a really good week in the gym, ran a lot of laps and got to a point where I felt like I was comfortable,” Elliott told NASCAR.com, noting that getting around the tight 0.526-mile track requires heavy braking for each corner entry. “Ultimately, that was why we made the decision that we did. If I didn’t feel like I could do it, I wouldn’t put us in the situation or I wouldn’t go, but I just think that you’ve got to get back in the swing at some point, and no better way than to just go do it.”

Elliott said Josh Berry, who filled in for five of the six races in the No. 9 Chevrolet, would be on standby this weekend at Martinsville should he need a relief driver. The longtime short-track standout performed capably in Elliott’s absence, netting a career-best showing of second place on April 2 at Richmond Raceway. IMSA champion Jordan Taylor subbed at the lone road course in that six-race stretch, making his Cup Series debut at Circuit of The Americas.

Elliott lauded the contributions of both fill-in drivers, noting especially Berry’s quick turnaround for Las Vegas on relatively short notice and Taylor’s show of speed on a challenging road circuit with his first experience in a Cup Series car.

“I thought they both did a really good job. Obviously, Josh’s background was very natural, and he’s done a done a really nice job and everybody on the team has enjoyed working with him,” Elliott said. “And Jordan jumping in there, I thought he had a lot of pace. I’d love to see him get another opportunity to run again, now that he has a little more time to think about things and digest what went on at COTA. But nonetheless, both did a really good job, and I appreciate them jumping in and the job that they did and the effort that they put in to help us.”

Elliott has just two starts in the books for 2023 at both ends of the pendulum — a 38th-place crash-out in the Daytona 500 followed by a runner-up result at Auto Club Speedway the next week. But his time away has relegated him to 34th in the Cup Series standings.

MORE: Elliott: ‘Kind of like a reset for me’ | Inside his path to the playoffs

NASCAR officials granted Elliott a medical waiver that would keep his eligibility for the Cup Series Playoffs intact. A rule change made before the season no longer requires drivers to finish among the top 30 in Cup Series points to be playoff-eligible. Theoretically, a mathematical path to the postseason might exist, but Elliott says he has been zeroed in on winning to punch his ticket.

“I have no idea how far back we are, but I just assume that that wasn’t even possible,” Elliott said regarding the points route to the playoff field of 16. “I mean, I think for us, we’re in a position where we’re going to have to win. That’s at least how I’m looking at it, how I’ve been thinking about it ever since this happened. I figured you miss a few weeks, and you’re pretty much gonna have to win. That’s how I’m looking at it.

“I don’t think I really change my approach. Does that change how we call races from a strategic standpoint? Yeah, you know, it probably does. But does it change how I drive or how I want the car to be set up for the weekend? No. I mean, I think we’re always out there trying to win events, but I certainly think it can change your play as far as a particular race day.”

Elliott said he texted back and forth during his rehabilitation process with Kyle Busch, who made his own recovery from severe leg injuries several years back. Busch missed 11 races at the start of the 2015 season after a crash in the Xfinity Series opener, but returned to claim his first Cup Series championship.

Elliott acknowledged the nature of Busch’s injuries was different, and in his estimation, more severe. But he says he found some common ground in their conversations as he worked his way back toward Cup Series competition.

“We worked with different doctors, right, so just kind of quizzing him on what his guys were telling him and comparing that with what I’m being told,” Elliott said. “Just gathering information for myself personally and just to understand kind of what he went through in that rehab process, how he felt when he was getting back in the car, what things he was looking for, what was comfortable, what wasn’t, if anything. Just kind of talk through as much of that as I can, just to gather info. Like I said, very different injuries, but always good to get a second opinion on a somewhat similar situation.”

NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Larson is one of the 25 new additions to NASCAR’s Greatest Drivers list in celebration of the sport’s 75th anniversary, the sanctioning body announced on Thursday.

Larson, the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series title winner, was given the news in a telephone call with NASCAR Chairman and CEO Jim France and Vice Chairman Mike Helton.

RELATED: How the 75 Greatest Drivers works | More NASCAR 75 coverage

Naming the 75 Greatest Drivers is a continuation of the popular program established in 1998 recognizing the 50 Greatest Drivers for NASCAR’s golden anniversary. The 50 Greatest Drivers form the foundation of the 75 Greatest Drivers — there will be 25 new names added to the list first established 25 years ago.

Currently the driver of the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, Larson, 30, has amassed 20 Cup Series victories to date, all but six of which have come for team owner Rick Hendrick since 2021. Larson previously drove for Chip Ganassi’s now-defunct Cup operation, winning his first premier series race in 2016 at Michigan International Speedway behind the wheel of the No. 42 Chevy.

After an absence from the sport for the majority of the 2020 season, Larson signed with Hendrick and immediately established his dominance by winning 10 of 36 races in 2021 en route to his first Cup championship. One of his more prominent wins came during the Coca-Cola 600, where he led 327 laps.

Widely known as an all-time legend — if not the greatest ever — across the dirt-racing scene, Larson’s NASCAR career began with a full-time Xfinity Series campaign in 2013 after four Craftsman Truck Series starts in 2012. In sum, he’s collected 13 Xfinity wins while netting two Truck Series trophies.

MORE: Kyle Larson through the years | Ten wins in three minutes, Larson’s 2021 reel

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.

You could say, it is the ultimate in time-honored traditions.

Beginning with Fred Lorenzen’s victory from pole position in 1964, NASCAR race winners at this week’s historic venue, Martinsville Speedway have received a grandfather clock for their effort. It’s arguably the most unique trophy in the sport and certainly one that keeps on giving — its chime every 15 minutes reminding all within earshot of a celebrated win or cherished victory.

RELATED: NASCAR 75 hub page | Martinsville schedule

The elite Martinsville clock ownership group largely reads like a NASCAR Hall of Fame roll call.

Although NASCAR legend Richard Petty is the track’s all-time winningest driver with 15 victories, he’d already claimed three wins before the tradition of awarding the timepieces to Martinsville winners began. His 12 clocks, however, are still the most ever won.

“And it’s always been kind of a standing joke through all of the clocks he has in all the various rooms of his house, that it must be pretty noisy over there every 15 minutes,” Martinsville Speedway President Clay Campbell says with a laugh.

Darrell Waltrip claimed 11 Martinsville clocks and still keeps three in his house. As with other multi-time winners he’s gifted some of the cherished timepieces to family and friends. Jimmie Johnson has all but one of the nine clocks he’s won at home. Another nine-time Martinsville winner, Jeff Gordon, has kept some and shared some.

“It’s certainly the most unique trophy and it has so much meaning behind it because it’s a tough one to capture,” said Gordon, now an executive with the same Hendrick Motorsports team he drove for when he won the clocks.

“It’s a very difficult race track. You have to have a lot of things go your way to conquer that place. And then the trophy itself stands out. It has a lot of meaning.”

William Byron points to the sky standing next to the Martinsville grandfather clock
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

Martinsville’s most recent multi-time winner, Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron has both of the grand clocks he won last spring — in the NASCAR Cup Series and Craftsman Truck Series races — strategically positioned in his Charlotte apartment.

“When we won that race last year, and won the Truck race, it was the first thing I thought about, that the clock was going somewhere,” Byron said. “I think it is the coolest trophy in NASCAR. It definitely holds a lot of meaning. I was excited to get that delivered and I’ve got both of them set up in my apartment.

“They’re nice to look at and remember those moments.”

That was exactly the intention when Martinsville’s original owner, Campbell’s grandfather, H. Clay Earles decided six decades ago to award winners with a full-sensory trophy for their performance at his half-mile Martinsville track.

“For whatever reason, granddaddy just wanted to do something different,” Campbell explained. “He wanted to have a trophy that wouldn’t sit around on a shelf or be put off to the side and collect dust like your typical old trophies. At the time that was pretty much the regular deal.

“So, he figured if he did a grandfather clock, the driver’s wife would like it, too, and it would be put in a prominent place in their home. That holds true today. But that was the origin of it. It was just a family-owned company with the speedway and a family-owned company with the clocks”

“My grandfather started that tradition and who knew at that time, it was going to be a tradition. That was just something he wanted to do.”

That tradition became so popular — the clock so cherished and desired — that Campbell recalls the family eventually decided to award it to all the Martinsville race winners not just the NASCAR Cup Series race winners.

RELATED: Untold Stories: Martinsville’s 6-year-old pace-car driver

“We got to thinking, it’s so important and so difficult to win here, we ought to give it to every race winner whether it be modified, late model, trucks, Xfinity Series, so now everybody gets it,” Campbell said. “And you’d be surprised how many drivers have not forgotten that they won the last year before we started giving the clock to all the winners. Mike Skinner is one that comes to mind. He’s always reminding me, ‘where’s my clock?’ because he won the [Craftsman Truck Series race] the year before we started giving it to all winners.”

And, Campbell notes, just the presentation alone is a well-choreographed event with all sorts of behind-the-scenes contingency plans to safeguard this one-of-a-kind trophy that isn’t formally released to the driver until after the winning race car passes inspection.

“We have the clock on stage and our Victory Lane is on the frontstretch, but our Victory Lane is actually a trailer,” Campbell said. “A trailer moves a little bit, and you also get some jubilant crew members jumping up and down so it can be a little risky for the clock.

“So, we have a guy that stands behind the clock and that’s his primary role, ‘hold that clock and make sure it doesn’t topple over.’ He’s not in view of any camera shots, but he’s back there holding the clock.”

The extra care is appreciated. It is a timeless treasure and certainly a prize to be displayed, not gathering dust on a trophy shelf. For drivers fortunate to have several of these iconic Martinsville winner’s trophies, that has created a wonderful conundrum: where to put them all.

Jeff Gordon congratulates Jimmie Johnson for his win in the 2006 fall race at Martinsville.
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

“They are all on display in my man cave, all but one,” shared the seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Johnson, owner-driver of the NASCAR Cup Series’ Legacy Motor Club team.

“One I gifted to Bruton Smith. Being friends with him and neighbors essentially, he would always talk about that Martinsville clock and one conversation, he said, ‘If you win another one of those things, I need that in the foyer of my home.’

“And sure enough, that next weekend we went to the track and won that race and I remembered I mentioned I would give that to him. So, when the clock was ready for delivery, I had the truck take it over to his home, met him there and put it in the foyer of his house.”

Waltrip says he’s also shared his prize and given clocks to family members and close associates.

“I have three in the house, they are such beautiful clocks,” Waltrip said. “I couldn’t believe it the first time I ever won one, but you can only have so many grandfather clocks in your house.”

As Gordon acknowledges, “It’s a very good problem to have.”

Over the course of decades NASCAR competitors have really come to appreciate the opportunity for their own full-sensory Martinsville trophy experience. And the track is happy to oblige with this all-time favorite.

“It’s pretty cool, especially for a new winner to receive that clock because he knows the history and all the greats that are in possession of that clock,” Campbell said. “For him to be receiving that I think is very special. I’ve never seen anyone that isn’t really jubilant over getting it.

“Most people don’t talk about Martinsville Speedway for too long before the word ‘grandfather clock’ comes up. It’s just synonymous with us and one of our slogans this year is “only at Martinsville.” That could go for a lot of things, but it certainly goes for the clock.”

Tune in to Sunday’s NOCO 400 from Martinsville Speedway to see who will take home the clock this time (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

MORE: NASCAR’s greatest drivers

 

Ron Bouchard and Ray Hendrick pose with the Martinsville clock in 1974 after winning in the NASCAR Modified and NASCAR Late Model sportsman races.
Ron Bouchard and Ray Hendrick pose with clock in 1974 after wins in NASCAR Modified and Late Model Sportsman races. NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images

 

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — The NASCAR Foundation has announced the addition of Andrea Brimmer, chief marketing and public relations officer at Ally Financial Inc., and Kaulig Racing President Chris Rice to its Board of Directors, bringing wide-ranging marketing and motorsports experience to help grow the impact of Foundation activities into race communities across the country.

“Andrea and Chris are valuable additions to our Board of Directors. Their vast knowledge, experience and leadership within the NASCAR industry will provide welcome insight to our efforts,” said Mike Helton, Chairman, The NASCAR Foundation. “We are confident their guidance will help great things happen for the Foundation and kids it serves.”

As the chief marketing and public relations officer at Ally, Brimmer is responsible for leading all aspects of integrated marketing and brand transformation at the digital financial services company, driving unprecedented growth and disruptive consumer engagement. Among her many honors, Brimmer was named a winner of the 2020 Adweek Brand Genius award, is a three-time honoree on the Forbes’ list of World’s Most Influential CMOs, is the only three-time winner of the Financial Communications Society Marketer of the Year award and was named to the 2022 Adweek Most Powerful Women in Sports list.

Before joining Ally in 2006, Brimmer spent 20 years on the agency side in Detroit, where she led the Chevrolet account and launched the iconic American Revolution campaign. She holds several board positions at organizations including eHealth, the Ad Council and the Professional Advisory Board of the College of Communication Arts and Sciences at Michigan State University.

“It is such an honor to be named to the NASCAR Foundation’s Board of Directors. I have long admired the work of the Foundation and its initiatives designed to support children, their families, and the communities around them,” Brimmer said. “I’m looking forward to bringing Ally’s Do It Right mentality into the boardroom with me and working alongside the other talented and dedicated people who put children’s health and well-being front and center.”

Chris Rice, president of Kaulig Racing, has been in the sport for more than 30 years, beginning in 1989 as a gasman for the NASCAR Busch Grand National Series, now known as the NASCAR Xfinity Series. He worked closely with Hermie Sadler, who was named Rookie of the Year in 1993, and quickly moved on to win a championship in 1995 with Hermie’s brother, Elliott. Because of his accomplishments with the Sadler brothers, Rice became a well-known name in the industry. He’s worked in every elite series in NASCAR with over 18 drivers.

In 2000, Rice worked at Richard Petty Motorsports then moved to Bill Davis Racing in 2002. From 2011 to 2015, Rice worked as a crew chief for RAB Racing with a stable of four different drivers. In 2015, he moved to NTS as the competition director and crew chief. In addition to holding the title of general manager, Rice served as crew chief for Kaulig Racing from 2016-2018 and led the team to one pole, one top-five and 21 top-10 finishes and three consecutive NASCAR Xfinity Series Playoff berths.

In 2018, Rice assumed the president role at Kaulig Racing and has continued to build a championship-contending organization.

“Being on The NASCAR Foundation Board of Directors is very special because you get to be a part of things that are bigger than racing,” Rice said. “We love the competition side of what we do, but it is truly an honor to be on a decision-making team when it comes to improving the lives of children through the NASCAR community.”

To learn more about The NASCAR Foundation or to make a donation, please visit NASCARfoundation.org.

The 2022 season at Berlin Raceway was something Evan Shotko had dreamed about repeatedly while growing up at the facility.

A total of seven wins, including a triumph in the prestigious Battle at Berlin, not only allowed Shotko to join his father Billy Shotko as a champion at the family’s home track. They also resulted in his claiming the Michigan state championship in the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series.

Besting seasoned veterans like Brian Campbell, Joe Bush and others for a Berlin title was something in which the 19-year-old Shotko took immense pride. But he knows expectations must be kept in check if he wants to put together another strong campaign in 2023.

“We’ve got another hot rod for this year,” Shotko said. “However, I’m a realist, so I realize it’s going to be tough to top what we did last year. If we can do half as good this season, then I’ll be a happy guy.”

RELATED: Watch Saturday’s Berlin Icebreaker live on FloRacing

Racing has been a pivotal part of Shotko’s family history from the moment his grandfather Bill turned his first laps several decades ago.

Bill’s love for motorsports ended up being passed down to Billy, who became one of Berlin’s best drivers in the Modified division with three titles. As Billy kept accumulating victories, Shotko paid close attention to his dad’s intuition on how to find success. He became determined to win at Berlin himself as soon as he was old enough to race.

The opportunity for Shotko to compete against many of the same drivers he idolized during his childhood materialized in the late 2010s, as he started making frequent appearances in Berlin’s Super Late Model division while also traveling to different tracks in Michigan.

Due to inexperience and his family team initially lacking resources, Shotko admitted his first years in a full-bodied stock car were far from a smooth experience.

“To be honest, I wasn’t very good when I first started,” Shotko said. “There was a lot of stuff we needed to learn, and we did everything ourselves. We never hired anybody to help us and never paid for a setup. It took me a while to get to where we were good enough to win races.

“We had to do everything the hard way.”

Among the accomplishments Evan Shotko accumulated during his title run at Berlin Raceway in 2022 included a victory in the Battle at Berlin 150 (Photo: Ally Ross/Berlin Raceway)

A part of that journey for Shotko saw him start up his own business in Shotko Motorsports, where he specializes in assisting drivers with their own needs such as shock services, setups and custom fabrication.

By spending so much time preparing cars and bouncing ideas off competitors with different backgrounds, Shotko only grew wiser about what his Super Late Model program needed to be efficient. He used that knowledge to emerge as a Berlin track champion in 2022.

Jeff Striegle, who is the general manager at Berlin, envisioned that Shotko would one day win a championship at the facility but said the acumen Shotko possesses with his cars at such a young age is a quality that will guarantee him success in motorsports for many years to come.

“What makes Evan unique is his knowledge,” Striegle said. “We all recognized Evan was going to be a talented race car driver, but we didn’t know how soon it would be. The amount of effort, time, knowledge and testing Evan puts into his program sets him aside from others. He has elevated himself to being one of the best in the country.”

Striegle puts Shotko’s initiative up against many industry veterans in regards to experimentation and applying his own distinctive critical thinking to setting up a car. With Shotko’s 20th birthday coming in July, Striegle expects the driver’s knowledge to expand as he gains more experience.

Whether Shotko is able to parlay his success and knowledge of short-track racing into the top divisions of NASCAR is yet to be determined. Shotko himself admitted he would need to find a significant amount of funding to make that possibility a reality.

Despite this, Striegle has confidence in Shotko’s future and believes the reigning track champion is going to win a plethora of races outside of Berlin this year; a feat he already accomplished in the rain-shortened Motor Mountain Masters at Jennerstown Speedway last August.

Striegle cited Shotko’s victories at Jennerstown and the Battle at Berlin in the same week as a career-defining moment for the young driver. He expects more career-defining moments from Shotko as he continues to build his own brand.

“Evan believes in Shotko Motorsports, and [everyone at Berlin] believes in it, too,” Striegle said. “He can grow that business by showcasing his ability at other tracks around the country. I don’t know if we’ll see him every Saturday night, but I’d like to see him have that chance to keep developing his skills as a driver and as a business owner.”

With plenty of knowledge and a successful business at his disposal, Evan Shotko is ready to put together another stellar short track season. (Photo: Ally Ross/Berlin Raceway)

Although Shotko would love to defend his championship at Berlin from 2022, he said venturing out to other tracks and series is the most pragmatic approach for him to grow his company and take away some of the financial burden from his parents as they continue to support his career.

Shotko knows he is betting on himself this year, but he intends to make his own luck across the country and prove to everyone his efficiency as a driver extends far beyond his championship run from Berlin.

RELATED: Follow Berlin Raceway all year on FloRacing

“In racing, you make 95 percent of your own luck, but the stars need to align for the final five percent,” Shotko said. “You could have the fastest car on the race track, but sometimes you don’t end up winning the race. I expect myself and my team to put ourselves in a position to win each time we race. We’ll just see if the stars align from there.”

A combination of experience, knowledge and a strong racing background allowed everything to line up perfectly for Shotko becoming a Berlin track champion. He hopes those qualities guide him to success once again as he searches for more wins to add to his growing resume.

The 73rd season of competition at Berlin Raceway begins Saturday with one of the track’s most prestigious events: the Icebreaker.

Serving as the opening leg of Berlin’s triple crown that consists of the Money in the Bank 150 and the Battle at Berlin, the Icebreaker features a full docket of on-track action, which includes features in the Super Late Model, Limited Late Model, Sportsman and 4 Cylinder divisions.

The Super Late Model division will be the headliner for the Icebreaker with a $5,000-to-win race contested for 75 laps. Kyle Crump enters Saturday as the most recent Icebreaker winner.

Below is everything you need to know about the season-opening Icebreaker at Berlin Raceway.

RELATED: Watch the Icebreaker at Berlin live on FloRacing

(Photo:Nic Antaya/ARCA Racing)

What TV channel is the Berlin Icebreaker on in 2023?

All on-track action from the Icebreaker at Berlin Raceway can be viewed live on FloRacing, the official streaming home for all NASCAR Roots properties.

The Icebreaker will not be show on a television network.

Below is the complete schedule for Icebreaker coverage on FloRacing.

Date Start time How to watch
Saturday, Apr. 15 4 p.m. ET FloRacing
(Photo: Nic Antaya/ARCA Racing)

Berlin Icebreaker 2023 schedule

A busy day of on-track action for the Icebreaker begins at 2 p.m. ET.

The Super Late Model and Limited Late Model divisions each get one session during a 90-minute practice period, with the Sportsman and 4 Cylinder divisions getting two opportunities to hit the track.

Qualifying for Super Late Models is set to start at 3:30 p.m. ET, with the first race of the day following shortly afterwards at 4 p.m. ET. The Limited Late Model, Sportsman and 4 Cylinder divisions will all participate in double features.

Below is the complete race-day schedule for the Icebreaker at Berlin Raceway.

Time Event
11:30 p.m. Pit Pass Window Opens
12 p.m. Pit Gate Open
12:45 p.m. 4 Cylinder Tech (Turn 1)
1:30 p.m. Sportsman Tech
2-2:30 p.m. Super Late Model Practice (30 min)/LLM Tech (Turn 1)
2:30-2:40 p.m. 4 Cylinder Practice (10 min)
2:40-2:50 p.m. Sportsman Practice (10 min)/SLM Tech
2:50-3 p.m. Limited Late Model Practice (10 min)
3-3:10 p.m. 4 Cylinder Practice (10 min)
3:10-3:20 p.m. Sportsman Practice (10 min)
3:20-3:30 p.m. Limited Late Model Practice (10 min)
3:30 p.m. Super Late Model Qualifying
3:57 p.m. Invocation (Larry Bush)/National Anthem (Orchard Hill Praise Team)
4 p.m. Icebreaker (Sportsman Feature 1: 20 laps/20 min, 4 Cylinder Feature 1: 15 laps/15 min, Limited Late Model Feature 1: 25 laps/25 min, Must See Sprints Exhibition Race: 8 laps, Sportsman Feature 2: 20 laps/20 min, 4 Cylinder Feature 2: 15 laps/15 min, Limited Late Model Feature 2: 25 laps/25 min, Super Late Model Feature: 75 laps/60 min