Due to poor weather, NASCAR’s Cup Series and Xfinity Series practice and qualifying sessions were canceled Saturday morning at Richmond Raceway. The NASCAR starting lineups were then set based upon the rule book.
Current NASCAR Cup Series championship leader Alex Bowman will start Sunday’s Toyota Owners 400 (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) from pole position in the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, with Kyle Busch completing the front row in the No. 8 Richard Childress Chevy. Defending race winner – and four-time Richmond winner — Denny Hamlin will start his No.11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota from 11th on the grid.
There have been five different winners in the last five NASCAR Cup Series races at the 0.75-mile Richmond track.
Justin Allgaier – a two-time Richmond winner – will start Saturday afternoon’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race, the ToyotaCare 250 (1 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) from pole position in the No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet, alongside Joe Gibbs Racing’s rookie Sammy Smith in the No. 18 JGR Toyota.
JR Motorsport’s Sam Mayer and Kaulig Racing’s Daniel Hemric – who will start their Chevys third and fifth, respectively – join Allgaier and Smith in being eligible for the first $100,000 prize from the Dash 4 Cash incentive program this week at Richmond. The top finishing driver among these four (they qualified for the bonus last week at Circuit of The Americas) takes the big check. The top four finishing full-time NASCAR Xfinity Series drivers at Richmond will then be eligible for the next $100,000 at Martinsville Speedway in two weeks.
Ty Gibbs is the defending Richmond race winner, but he is not competing Saturday.
RICHMOND, Va. — Persistent rain showers Friday evening in the Richmond area forced the postponement of the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Virginia is for Racing Lovers 150 at Richmond Raceway.
The race, the second of the 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season, has been rescheduled for Saturday, April 1 after the NASCAR Xfinity Series ToyotaCare 250 at approximately 4:30 p.m. ET.
The Whelen Modified Tour race will be available live on FloRacing and MRN.
Prior to the postponement, Austin Beers set the fastest time in qualifying to secure the Mayhew Tools Dominator Pole Award. Defending race winner Justin Bonsignore qualified second. Click here for complete qualifying results.
Short-track stretch. Since the new package was introduced, Sunday’s race in Richmond will only be the second time it’s been raced on an oval (Phoenix Raceway). So this race will be a big step for teams looking to build their notebooks through the rest of the season, and early success here means leaving all the other teams behind and playing catch up. Each of the three tracks should have different styles of racing, though, with Richmond followed by the Bristol Dirt Race and Martinsville — lining up a trio of races that might swing the playoff standings for many drivers still searching for a victory. With the usual long, green-flag stretches seen at Richmond, pit strategy will be at the forefront of discussion throughout the day and we could see a big gamble pay off toward the end of the race.
History tells us…
Joe Gibbs Racing loves Richmond. The organization has been better here than anywhere, leading all teams with 18 victories and wins in nine of the last 14 races at the Virginia short track. Additionally, an active JGR driver has led the most laps in eight of the last 12 races at Richmond, spearheaded by Denny Hamlin’s 2,135 laps led, placing him fifth on the all-time list. Not to mention Hamlin won the spring race last year and Martin Truex Jr. has three wins in his last seven starts here. With Toyota still searching for their first win this season, Sunday should be the perfect opportunity to get on the board based on their incredible track record.
He may not be the betting favorite to win, but watch out for…
Brad Keselowski. Keselowski’s numbers have been better this season, but the No. 6 driver still has some shaky results sandwiched around an incredible performance at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Still, it’s clear RFK Racing has been on the rise lately and Sunday’s race is a massive chance to show off their progression. While not the same style track, Chris Buescher proved the organization can be dominant at short tracks with his big win in the Bristol Night Race — and Keselowski has had success at Richmond. He has two victories, most recently in 2020, and 14 consecutive top-15 finishes here, which means he will likely be in the mix this weekend.
Practice and qualifying
Both of Saturday’s sessions were canceled, meaning the starting lineup was set by the NASCAR Rule Book with Alex Bowman starting on the pole. Without track time, it will be critical for teams to nail their race setups off the truck or be able to make adjustments during the first stage of the race. Read the full article and see Sunday’s lineup.
MRN’s Todd Gordon and NBC Sports’ Steve Letarte analyze pit stop strategies and the effects of a low downforce package.
Familiar favorites ⭐️
Our biggest pieces of the week — get covered for race day from all angles.
• Paint Scheme Preview: Rolling into spring with fresh paint schemes | Pick a favorite • Power Rankings: Will Rowdy still reign at Richmond with RCR? | Latest driver rankings • Fantasy Fastlane: Go heavy on JGR cars | Best plays, lineup advice • Betting odds: Is Sunday when Christopher Bell breaks through? | Top bets, underdog picks
• Stacking Pennies: Driver etiquette, post-race antics and Jordan Taylor joins the show | Listen to the podcast
💎 NASCAR 75: Check out exclusive NASCAR content throughout the anniversary season | Learn more, explore
Hot off the press 📰
Key stories and breaking news from the week leading up to the race.
• Richmond feature: Virginia short track’s history cherished by all | Read more
• Hendrick Motorsports: Appeals panel amends penalties | Read more
• Daniel Suárez: Fined $50,000 for post-race incident at COTA | Read more | Suárez reacts to penalty
• Justin Marks: Team owner comments on Suárez’s actions | Read more
• Bubba Wallace: Determined to shake COTA heartbreak, build back confidence | Read more
• Kyle Busch: Shines light on parity Next Gen brings to NASCAR | Read more
• Garage 56: Jessica Hook, ‘chief of staff,’ following her passion, dream | Read more
• Ryan Blaney: Team Penske driver talks about teammate chemistry | Read more
• Bubba’s Block Party: Event set to take place this weekend in Richmond | Read more
• Untold Stories: Brad Keselowski’s championship run | Watch the video
• All-Star Race: Richard Petty, Darrell Waltrip named co-grand marshals | Read more
• Cup Series: See every winner from the 2023 season, so far | View the gallery
• eNASCAR: Bobby Zalenski shines in Coca-Cola iRacing Series | Read more
• Modified Tour: Ryan Newman, Bobby Labonte bring star power | 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
Ready for Richmond? 🧳
Catch up on the latest track history, all-time leaders and more at the Virginia short track.
• Winner, winner: All-time winners at the 0.75-mile track | See who has the most
• Pace out front: Top 10 lap leaders in Richmond Raceway history | Harvick joins the list • Do you remember?: Memorable moments at Richmond Raceway | Relive them here • GIFs are great: Best moments and highlights from the 2022 spring race | See them here
• Race Rewind: Denny Hamlin pulls off the home-state win | Highlights from 2022
🏦 From the Vault: Dale Earnhardt, Darrell Waltrip collide at Richmond in 1986 |Watch the video
Take some notes 📝
Five hard-hitting, race-relevant statistics, brought to you by the experts at Racing Insights.
• This is the first of five paved short-track races this season.
• Each of the last eight paved short-track races was won by a different driver. • Five of the last seven Richmond races had a final green-flag stretch of 137 or more laps, including both in 2022. • Hendrick Motorsports’ next top-five finish will make them the first team to reach 1,200. • William Byron’s four stage wins are tied for the most all-time through six races.
Sleep would come soon enough for Jessica Hook, but not before pizza. The time she had spent tracking the Garage 56 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 test car on its first major endurance test at Sebring International Raceway had drawn to a close. The Hendrick Motorsports team had already checked a significant box on its two-day to-do list, reaching the goal of running for 24 hours straight with a day-night-day trial. With the session clipping along without a crease and the track still open for track time, the team opted to run the car for four more hours.
Hook had been up for all those waking moments, monitoring the car’s fuel consumption, recording lap times, and charting the duration of drivers’ seat time for 30-plus hours by the end of it. The car and crew had been pushed to their limits. “Pretty delirious” was one feeling, she said, but the others were a sense of achievement chased by a measure of relief.
The hours had pushed late into Tuesday afternoon when it came time to head home. Chad Knaus — Hendrick’s Vice President of Competition and one of the Garage 56 project leads — had ordered the pizza, which was waiting on the team’s private plane once the crew arrived. There hadn’t been high-fives all around after the success of the Sebring test, but well-timed comfort food in a cardboard box was reward enough.
As Hook settled into her seat, she took note of who else was on board. Across from her was Jimmie Johnson, the NASCAR legend recruited to add another layer of stock-car authenticity to the 24 Hours of Le Mans driver lineup. Knaus, Johnson’s crew chief all those years in a past career phase, was in the next row up. One of the later passengers to arrive for a seat nearer to the front was Jeff Gordon, now a team executive as Hendrick’s vice chairman. In earlier years, Gordon was the favorite driver of Hook’s older sister, Aimee. Jessica had gone the other direction growing up, pulling for Dale Earnhardt’s black No. 3 Chevrolet, the antithesis to Gordon’s rainbow-colored No. 24.
In both their past lives and current roles, Johnson, Knaus and Gordon remain three pillars of the Hendrick organization’s racing heritage. Though Hook now works alongside them on a regular basis, it was hard for her not to appreciate where she was. Sure, her gear said “Hendrick Motorsports” just the same as the rest of them, but here was a trio with 18 Cup Series championships collected among them.
“I could hear them all talking to each other, and I just kind of had this moment,” Hook says. “… Like, these are all guys I grew up watching. I mean, they’re the reason why I wanted to do this, I wanted to be there with them. And so I just remember, like, I kind of had forgotten that, when you’re in the day-to-day and you just are trying to get things done. I remember sitting there and it was kind of a zoomed-out moment of like, ‘Oh, I’m here. I’m doing it. Like I’m doing what I’ve always wanted to do, and here I am on a plane sitting next to the three guys that I grew up watching them made me want to be here,’ and it was kind of just a surreal moment.”
CoForce
By the next day after she’d caught up on rest, she also caught up on texts she’d missed. Hook responded to a question that her dad, Kraig Rowe, had about potential Coca-Cola 600 plans in May, but she also shared the experience she’d just had in the last 24 hours, including her zoomed-out moment. “He of all people totally understands that I feel like he’s been on this ride with me the whole time,” she said.
Back home in his northern Mississippi home in the town of Hernando, Rowe passed that on to anyone within sighting distance. “I’m like so proud of her and I get such a kick out of it,” he said. “I mean, it’s just amazing to know somebody that is doing what she’s doing, never mind the fact that she’s my daughter doing what she does.”
Rowe had his own zoom-out perspective. He’d watched Jessica follow the path he’d taken into engineering, betting on her future by treating out-of-state tuition in UNC Charlotte’s motorsports engineering program as an investment in herself. By his estimation, her work ethic and her ability in science, math and technology had earned her that spot.
“And I said, you know why you’re on that plane? Because you’re one of them. You’re one of those people. You belong with those people,” Rowe says. “And she told me, she said that’s probably the nicest thing anyone’s ever told her. And I believe it.”
Jessica Hook has found her place, now in her sixth year at Hendrick Motorsports and a critical part of the collaborative thrust to field a NASCAR-based entry in the 24 Hours of Le Mans. The 34-year-old mechanical engineer possesses a well-versed sports-car pedigree, which has already been a valuable resource and a fitting blend with the stock-car side of the project.
More sleepless nights surely are ahead, including the big one on June 10-11. That creeping familiar feeling of exhaustion from her Sebring flight will likely return, but so will the fulfilling thought she had after that February milestone: OK, this is why I’m doing it.
Carving her path
NASCAR was almost always in the background of Hook’s childhood. She and her siblings would return home from church, and the lap-by-lap banter from the airwaves would be the soundtrack to a typical Sunday afternoon.
Hook became fast friends with a neighbor across the street whose father raced at a local dirt track, and she tagged along from time to time. But as Kansas Speedway sprouted and opened its doors when Hook was just 12 years old, it brought NASCAR’s major leagues to her home state.
Hook family photo
“I think I went because neither of my other siblings wanted to go kind of thing,” Hook recalls. “And I remember being in the stands and hearing the cars turned on for the first time. And it was like, it lit something in me and hasn’t gone away since. So that’s when I saw them, I heard them and I remember telling my dad on the drive home, I wanted to be on the other side of the fence and working in and contributing to a team that could win a race. So that’s what started it. I was probably eighth-grade-ish in school. It just never went away.”
Rowe remembers it much the same way. He recalled being in one of the fan zones at the Kansas City track and lapsing into what he called “tourist mode” as he pointed toward a restricted area where the teams milled about. “She’d be like ‘Dad, you know one of these days, I’m going to be working with those people.’ ” he says. “I’d get all excited about seeing a driver, and she tried to calm me down because she’s like, ‘someday I’m going to be doing this.’ ”
How, then, to make that happen? She’d been a fan of fast cars, and her ownership of a series of Mustangs growing up backed that notion, but racing her way into the stock-car ladder system proved to be cost-prohibitive. Jessica had inherited her father’s fandom, and the family’s tradition of engineering didn’t skip her generation, either.
Her father worked his way into the trade, taking a pair of two-year degrees and an old-school approach into fieldwork with instrumentation for Cessna, and later with calibrating and servicing automotive testing applications for other companies before striking out on his own in 2011. Those connections run deeper for Hook – both her grandfathers worked as engineers with a background in tooling, one running a whole division for a large corporation and the other eventually working for Boeing. “Both of them were very innovative people,” Rowe says. “Problem solvers, hands-on, so she’s got the bloodline.”
By that time, Hook was already an A student who excelled at math. That would be her route.
“He was the one who gave me that idea,” she says. “Being an engineer, he recognized that in racing and motorsports and saw that it was going more in that engineering route versus kind of the grassroots. He kind of put the two ideas together, because I think I always was interested in math and science and engineering. He saw that in me and he also saw I had this passion for NASCAR and racing. He put the two together for me, and said, ‘hey, you know you can do both.’ ”
Her goals led to an internship at a local shop that offered some hands-on experience. But as her freshman year starting off at Kansas State University wound down, Jessica was ready to make a leap to UNC Charlotte and a clearer path to a career in racing. The cost of enrollment as an out-of-state student was a concern, but she was determined to chase the opportunity closer to NASCAR’s hub. “The smartest money you’ll ever spend is on yourself,” Rowe told her. He said the family helped with room and board, and student loans took care of the rest.
Hook says now that some of her friends “never really understood it or got it,” as she pursued her career goals. Her dedication made more of an impression on her friends’ fathers who counted themselves as car guys. Her peer group changed in Charlotte, however, with like-minded students after similar versions of her dream.
“All of a sudden, I felt like I was kind of with my own kind, which was amazing,” Hook says. “There were hundreds of us.”
What she may have lacked in first-hand experience at the grassroots level of racing, she made up for in drive. While still in college, Hook turned down a more lucrative job offer with Duke Energy to join Riley Motorsports’ SRT Viper program part-time. Rowe said with a chuckle that her reasoning was simple: She hadn’t moved halfway across the country to follow her racing aspirations to wind up working for the power company.
The job with Riley was entry-level at first, but became a full-time role as soon as she graduated. The opportunity to travel the sports-car circuit with the team also provided her first taste of Le Mans, and she became a key member of the organization’s design department.
When Riley’s number of design projects dried up in 2018, so did Hook’s position. Just a handful of months passed before Hendrick Motorsports came calling, and her childhood vision of working in NASCAR came full circle.
“I always encouraged the kids that they could achieve anything they set their mind to it, and I was really strong in that, because I didn’t … my parents didn’t do that with me,” Rowe says. “So, you know, I was just kind of floundering through life with no real direction because I didn’t get that encouragement to chase your dream, that if you chase it and put the work in, you’re gonna get there. So I tried to really kind of overcorrect maybe, or correct that with my kids. And so she had that dream, I was very much, you can get there, you know. You’ve just got to put in the work.”
Launch toward Le Mans
On the morning of March 2, 2022, a message popped up in Jessica Hook’s Microsoft Teams app. Chad Knaus asked her to come meet him at his office to talk about something, and he was purposely short on providing much initial detail.
There were still plenty of questions once she arrived, but Knaus held the main one.
“Basically, we’re wanting to take a Next Gen Cup car to Le Mans in 2023,” Hook recalled Knaus saying. “Would this be something you’d be interested in working on?”
“Oh, wow,” Hook said. “Yeah, definitely.”
“He’s like, ‘OK, great, because we’ve got a meeting in five minutes. Go get your laptop.’ And that’s how I got started,” Hook says. “Basically, he asked me at 8:55, and by 9 a.m., I was in my first technical meeting, talking about it.”
CoForce
At that point, the Garage 56 project was 15 days away from its public unveil at Sebring, still hush-hush and a race car on paper only. But Knaus already knew about Hook’s background and skill set, which had grown from her role as a design engineer to a spot with Kevin Meendering’s competition development group. When Knaus dipped into IMSA competition with Johnson and the Action Express Racing team a couple of years back, it was Hook he called to bring him up to speed on the sports-car series’ distinct rules and regulations.
“I didn’t know about wave-arounds, I didn’t know about class splits, I didn’t know about any of that stuff, so she carried me through all of that,” Knaus says. “She’s basically our chief of staff. She’s helping us understand what we need from a personnel standpoint, and she’s helping us understand what we need from a logistical standpoint. She’s got a great understanding of the cadence of the race, and she’s been in it multiple times. So she’s fantastic. She’s going to be a huge asset to us, not only for this program but in future programs.”
NASCAR had initially stoked her passion for racing, and the sports-car world was her career’s entry point. “So to combine the two for me, it’s a dream-come-true project,” Hook says. And while Knaus brought her into the project with an ask and not a directive, “I think he knew from conversations we had before that it was going to be a yes,” Hook said, “that I would want to do it, and a pretty easy yes.”
Balancing it all would be another challenge. Hook’s husband, Tyler, still works on the sports-car side with Riley, and together, the couple has a 1 1/2-year-old son, Nicholas.
Hook family photo
“You have to multitask, you have to work under pressure, trying to make dinner while he’s screaming, crying or trying to do anything,” Hook says. “I think I’m getting better at that because I have to do it at home with my son, and I think that just makes me stronger here working.”
Hook says that’s meant doing things she didn’t think she could – giving birth, caring for Nicholas after learning of his food allergies, and calming him during a severe reaction that required an Epi-Pen shot and a maze of monitors attached to him in the hospital. She took her son into the bathroom, turned off the light and sang to him. “That moment was just an eye-opening moment about, this is what matters, and I need to balance a little bit more.”
Since that scare, the Garage 56 project has grown, but so has the staff dedicated to the initiative – a development that has helped to reduce Hook’s workload. She’s still traveling, but says she and Tyler have a better understanding of their son’s condition. Both sides of the work-life balance have become slightly more manageable, even with the Sebring all-nighter in her recent rearview.
The testing has been a rewarding part of the work, seeing the car grow from an idea to a prototype to a test car and a finished product. And though Hook has been instrumental in bringing Garage 56 to life, she’s been content to work mostly behind the scenes, even though her position as one of the few women with hands on the project might make her stand out.
“I don’t like having any spotlights on me. I just want to be known for my work and not necessarily the fact that I’m a woman,” Hook says. “I hope that maybe I can pass that on, and if this helps a girl reading this to see, ‘OK, yeah, I can fill in the picture a little bit more about what I want to do because I’ve seen another woman do it,’ then that would be at the end of it what this is all about. I’m never gonna get a trophy. … You know, there’s no Hall of Fame for race engineers, right? It’s not why I’m doing it, but at the end of my career, if I know I’ve inspired someone else to do it and go beyond what I did, that’s what is I think most rewarding.”
The question of what’s next for Hook is an interesting one. She says she’s been so laser-focused on prepping for Le Mans that the concept of time after Garage 56 isn’t something she’s fully considered. The thought of expanding into a race engineer role with one of Hendrick’s Cup Series teams intrigues her. So does realizing the dream of driving that she deferred so many years, as she relayed to her husband at a ChampCar (formerly ChumpCar) amateur racing event at Virginia International Raceway last summer.
“I told him I’ve never wanted to get in the car more,” Hook says. “I don’t know if it’s because I’ve been building up a lot of aggression that I need to get out or what, but I have never wanted to get behind the seat more than I do now.”
In the meantime, Hook has at least two more flights in her future. One will take her back to Sebring for what’s scheduled to be the final Garage 56 test in a couple of weeks; the other will be Hook’s load-in with the rest of the team in France for the 100th anniversary of the endurance classic.
She’ll go with the assurance that she’s earned her seat on the plane, gliding easily alongside the household names on the Hendrick roster. As she relayed to her father by text after the marathon Sebring test in February, it occurred to her that I think maybe I’ve made it.
“Yeah, you’ve made it,” Rowe recalls telling her. “You’re just admiring the moon on your way to Mars.”
NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C. (March 30, 2023) – The winningest NASCAR Cup Series drivers in North Wilkesboro Speedway history, Richard Petty and Darrell Waltrip, will serve as co-Grand Marshals for the highly anticipated May 21 NASCAR All-Star Race.
NASCAR will return to the historic short track for the first time since 1996 with the two NASCAR Hall of Famers slated to give the command to start engines.
“Returning to North Wilkesboro Speedway during NASCAR’s 75th anniversary season will be the most nostalgic highlight of a year where we remember the past by paying tribute in the present,” said Speedway Motorsports President and CEO Marcus Smith. “We are honored to recognize and celebrate two true icons of NASCAR’s history, Richard Petty and Darrell Waltrip, during an All-Star Race weekend that will feature the rebirth of one of our sport’s original race tracks.”
Both legends have plenty of history with the track, as Petty’s 15 victories and Waltrip’s 10 can attest. The pairing also collected a combined 284 points-paying NASCAR Cup Series wins (200 for Petty, 84 for Waltrip) and an incredible 10 championships (seven for Petty, three for Waltrip) in their storied careers. Additionally, Waltrip holds the honor of winning the inaugural NASCAR All-Star Race in 1985 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
Today, Petty continues his service to the sport. He owned a NASCAR Cup Series team for decades and, this year, began serving as the team ambassador for Legacy Motor Club. Waltrip retired from full-time driving at the end of the 2000 season and served as an acclaimed NASCAR on FOX color analyst from 2001-19.
The NASCAR All-Star Race format and additional dignitaries will be announced at a later date.
After voyages to superspeedways, the West Coast and the longest circuit on the schedule in Austin, Texas, NASCAR nestles into a series of legacy tracks for the next month beginning with a trip to the “Old Dominion” — Virginia’s Richmond Raceway.
Sunday’s Toyota Owners 400 (3:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) will mark the 133rd Cup race at the 0.75-mile oval short track, the third most of any track behind Martinsville Speedway (148) and Daytona International Speedway (151) to host a premier series event. Richmond will be followed by two unique short tracks in Bristol Motor Speedway (April 9) and Martinville (April 16) to cap a three-race stretch on sub-1-mile ovals.
Before the green flag drops, check out trends to follow during the race, notable moments at the track, tire info and the weekend schedule of action.
Tempers were hot following last weekend’s race at Circuit of the Americas and while short-track action could bring more intensity, there’s got to be something to the state phrase “Virginia is For Lovers.”
Especially for Trackhouse Racing, the teammate pair of Ross Chastain and Daniel Suárez will need to set aside differences after their intramural confrontation on pit road at COTA. On Wednesday, Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney offered his perspective when he’s had on-track disagreements with his teammates Joey Logano and Austin Cindric.
“It’s important to try to set things straight when you and a teammate have a run-in because you can’t be walking around the race shop and crew members, you can’t have them being mad at each other, too,” Blaney said. “It’s a weird situation between those guys. It’s like, ‘Oh, my driver is mad at the teammate driver. Should we be mad at each other, too?’ Then it’s a weird dynamic in the shop, so those things have to be dealt with quickly.”
Sunday sees the return of the rules package that drops the rear spoiler from four inches to two inches. Several updates were made to the underbody of the car, such as the removal of three diffuser strakes, engine panel strakes and trimming of the diffuser’s outer fencing.
Cup cars will run the same tire codes that were used last season at Richmond in the first year of the Next Gen car. With Richmond being a track with high tire wear, teams will be issued nine sets of tires for the 400-lap event.
In the event of a lost wheel that is contained to pit road, the offending team will be subject to a pass-through penalty under green-flag conditions. If the infraction occurs during a caution period, the offending team will restart at the tail end of the field.
If the wheel breaks free outside of pit road, the new rules guidelines mandate a two-lap penalty, plus a two-race suspension for two crew members. Each penalty is series-specific: Violations in one series will not impact those crew members’ eligibility to participate in other series.
After the race at Phoenix, competition officials issued a safety violation for the loss or separation of an improperly installed tire/wheel from the vehicle (Sections 8.8.10.4 A&C) to the No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford driven by Aric Almirola. Crew members Ryan Mulder (front tire changer) and Sean Cotten (jack) were suspended for two races.
Fans can get in on the action all season long with NASCAR Fan Rewards, a free program that rewards fans for participating in the action when they watch races and play NASCAR Fantasy.
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Earn points by checking into a race from home or at the track, setting your Fantasy Live lineup, making purchases on the NASCAR.com shop and more. Points can be redeemed for race tickets, merchandise and VIP experiences at the track, including pace car rides and waving the green flag at qualifying.
Want to manage a team and race your way to the top of the leaderboards? Check out NASCAR Fantasy Live, which is open now. The free-to-play game lets you choose your drivers each week and show off your crew-chief instincts by garaging a driver by the end of Stage 2, and there is a $25,000 prize for the winner.
Get additional camera views by logging on to NASCAR Drive, where each week, in-car cameras will be available — as well as a battle cam and an overhead look.
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Patrick Emerling is going to be a very busy man this weekend at Richmond Raceway.
Emerling, the co-owner of Emerling-Gase Motorsports in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, will be racing in the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour race — the Virginia is for Racing Lovers 150 — on Friday. On Saturday, he’ll shift his attention to the NASCAR Xfinity Series and pilot the No. 53 Chevrolet he co-owns with Joey Gase in the ToyotaCare 250.
“It’s not really that tough of a transition,” Emerling said of switching from a Modified to an Xfinity Series car on consecutive days. “The more I have an opportunity to drive the Xfinity cars, the more I can figure them out a little bit.
“It’s not that one car is harder than the other to drive, they’re slightly different skill sets, I believe.”
This won’t be the first time Emerling has pulled double duty with the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour and NASCAR Xfinity Series. He’s done it multiple times, including in 2021, when he raced in both divisions at Richmond on consecutive days.
When it comes to competing at Richmond, Emerling compared racing on the track’s surface to racing on ice due to the lack of grip provided by the asphalt surface. He believes that’s where his years racing a Modified will benefit him the most.
“It kind of feels like you’re driving on ice shortly into the run,” Emerling said. “I feel like in the Xfinity cars the tires fall off and they stay falling off, whereas the Modified tires will keep on dropping off a cliff until you’re spinning out.
“It takes a lot of finesse. In the Modified that’s one of my stronger suits. It’s one of those tracks where you definitely have to finesse the car around, easy on and off the gas. You’ve got to utilize throttle control.”
Emerling’s luck at Richmond has, thus far, been lackluster with the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour.
In 2021, Emerling qualified second at Richmond, but a broken panhard bar relegated him to a 25th-place finish. Last year he fell out of the race early following a flat tire and subsequent crash.
This time around he believes he’ll be among the contenders at the front of the field Friday evening when he battles drivers like Jon McKennedy, Ron Silk, Doug Coby, Justin Bonsignore, Ryan Newman and Bobby Labonte, among others.
“As far as expectations, with the Modified we’re planning on being in contention to win,” Emerling said. “With the Xfinity car, we just want to have a solid points day and try to beat the cars we’re trying to race in points.”
NASCAR fined Daniel Suárez of Trackhouse Racing $50,000 for a behavioral penalty after a post-race incident March 26 at Circuit of The Americas. The sections cited in the NASCAR Rule Book were 4.4.B&D NASCAR Member Conduct, contact with another vehicle on pit road after the race.
After the cooldown lap of the NASCAR Cup Series race at COTA, Suárez repeatedly contacted the back bumper of Alex Bowman’s No. 48 Chevrolet as the duo entered pit road, moments after nudging teammate Ross Chastain aside to get to Bowman.
The collision between Suárez and Bowman took place feet from a NASCAR official near pit entrance who was directing drivers where to go. Suárez hit Bowman’s car twice before Bowman brake-checked the No. 99 car.
Suárez’s frustration seemed to stem from a double-overtime restart that saw him go from inside the top five down to a 27th-place finish after contact in the braking zone entering Turn 1. Chastain bumped Bowman into Suárez, sending the seventh-year veteran into 2017 Cup champion Martin Truex Jr., spinning Truex and flattening Suárez’s right-front tire. Bowman and Chastain continued on to finish in third and fourth place, respectively.
Suárez confronted Bowman and Chastain upon exiting his vehicle to discuss the incidents.
Trackhouse Racing co-owner Justin Marks said Monday on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio he would “rather have two guys mad about losing” than shrugging off their chances to win.