DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Jimmie Johnson returned to a familiar position on Friday—the front of the NASCAR Cup Series field. With a lap at 194.225 mph, Johnson led a group of four Chevrolet drivers who posted the fastest speeds in opening practice for the Daytona 500.
Chase Elliott, the seven-time champion’s former teammate at Hendrick Motorsports, was second fastest at 194.195 mph, followed by JTG-Daugherty’s Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and pole winner Alex Bowman.
Johnson, who has no competitive experience in NASCAR’s Next Gen car, proved he’s a quick study. He returns to Cup racing as an owner/driver in the No. 84 Chevrolet at Legacy Motor Club after a two-year absence during which he raced in IndyCar.
“It’s my first weekend in this car,” said Johnson, a two-time Daytona 500 winner. “It’s (crew chief) Todd (Gordon’s) first weekend working on the Next Gen car and the first time we’ve all worked together. So we’re going through quality reps right now.
“It’s just so fun to get out there and mix it up. I was in a great draft with Chase and understanding the bump-drafting aspect of where this car is and got some quality reps there, too.”
Led by Aric Almirola, Ford drivers claimed the next eight fastest positions in practice. The quickest Toyota driver was Martin Truex Jr. in 17th.
Kyle Larson, the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series champion jumped to the top of the speed chart on his second lap, touring the 2.5-mile superspeedway in 46.664 seconds at 192.868 mph. That lap in the draft was more than 11 mph faster than Bowman’s pole-winning speed of 181.686 mph during single-car qualifying runs on Wednesday night.
With 34 minutes left in the 50-minute session, Ford drivers Chase Briscoe, Ryan Blaney and Joey Logano surpassed Larson’s speed, soon to be joined by Almirola, who posted the fastest speed of the session at that point at 194.107 mph (46.366 seconds).
In a backup car, thanks to a wreck while leading Thursday’s second Duel, Kyle Busch started his practice session in an interesting group that included teammate Austin Dillon and Trackhouse Racing drivers Ross Chastain and Daniel Suárez, the latter of whom had sent Busch spinning out of control in the qualifying race.
Busch turned 15 laps in practice, with a high speed of 190.234 mph, before taking his No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet to the garage.
“It’s good,” Busch said of the backup. “It’s really hard to tell the speed, obviously, just being out there with three other cars. You want to be in a bigger pack… I’m really proud of the guys, proud that it feels good, and we’ll get ‘em on Sunday.”
With 11 minutes left, a large pack of Chevrolets led by Johnson drafted back to the top of the chart. With Chase Elliott, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Bowman close behind, Camaros claimed the top four spots and remained there through the end of the session.
A respected bettor in Las Vegas liked what he saw when the Westgate SuperBook offered Denny Hamlin at 14-to-1 odds (+1400) to win Sunday’s Daytona 500. By Friday, Hamlin’s price had been shortened to 10-to-1.
“One of my sharp guys bet him,” Ed Salmons, VP of risk management at the SuperBook, said in a text message to NASCAR.com, explaining the steep adjustment.
Hamlin has been just average during Speedweeks – he’s starting from the 18th position Sunday after posting the 26th fastest qualifying time Wednesday and finishing ninth in the Bluegreen Vacations Duel 2 on Thursday. He’s also been mediocre in the results department over his last three runs on the Daytona oval, finishing 25th, 37th, and 13th.
Hamlin, though, has “back class” on superspeedways. Over 34 career races at Daytona, he has three wins and 11 top fives, leading 648 laps along the way. In the 12 superspeedway races since 2020 (also including Talladega), Hamlin has led 15.1% of laps — by the far tops in the NASCAR Cup Series.
“Hamlin is an elite plate racer,” Salmons added.
How much weight should bettors give to Speedweeks performance anyway?
“I don’t think the Duels are very predictive at all (look at past D500 results and the corresponding Duels and you’ll probably agree),” Blake Phillips, a sharp NASCAR bettor, said in a text.
Plus, maybe Hamlin was holding a little something back.
For bettors tempted to tail the sharp play on Hamlin, be wary: The Westgate bettor liked Hamlin at +1400 odds (which implies a 6.67% chance at winning); he probably does not like Hamlin at +1000 (9.09% probability).
How To Bet the Daytona 500
It’s hard to pick a winner in any race. The randomness that occurs at Daytona makes the task even more challenging for the “Great American Race.”
That’s why no driver is priced below 10-to-1 odds at these three sportsbooks.
Luckily for NASCAR bettors, sportsbooks offer wagering options beyond the outright (to win) market.
One prop that caught Phillips’ eye was ‘starting position of race winner’ at FanDuel. Here are the odds:
1-10 (-170)
11-20 (+210)
21-30 (+650)
31+ (+1300)
Based on recent history, the favorite – that the winner will be one of the first 10 drivers on the starting grid – is overpriced. Odds of -170 imply a nearly 63% chance of occurrence, but over the 21 most recent Daytona 500s, 11 winners came from outside the top 10.
So is there value in the other entries in this market?
“I think the 21-30 category has gone up in value post-Duel. Not necessarily enough to bet, but I’m going to look at it more closely,” Phillips said in Friday’s text exchange.
“The randomness of the finishing position definitely gives you something to look at with that market,” Phillips said when we spoke Wednesday.
But while he saw value in +210 for 11-20 earlier in the week, he’s downgraded since the Duels.
There’s another lesson in there for recreational bettors: It’s okay to back off your early convictions as new information comes to light.
Longshot in iconic number, rock n’ roll paint scheme
While it’s difficult to find value on the betting board, this is the Daytona 500, and if you’re reading this article, you probably want to get some action down.
At the SuperBook’s 40-to-1 (+4000) price, or even at BetMGM’s +3300, Erik Jones might be worth a sprinkle.
“I don’t like any of the outright bets, really, but I think that’s the best one on the board right now,” Phillips said. “(Jones is) a really good superspeedway driver. Last year, he was definitely in contention for the win in the 500, and he did pretty well at Daytona and Talladega throughout the season. That’s a driver that I think we might see a little bit of value on. If I’m looking at any of ’em, it’s him.”
The last time the No. 43 car was in the Daytona 500 winner’s circle was 1981 when Richard Petty finished first in an STP-branded Buick for his seventh and final 500 victory. Jones, piloting the Guns N’ Roses paint-schemed Chevy, looks to bring the iconic number back to glory Sunday.
2023 futures bet on Kyle Busch
Zack White, a professional sports bettor whose portfolio always includes substantial investments in futures markets, is holding multiple tickets on Kyle Busch at 16-to-1 odds to win the 2023 Cup championship.
A scan of several sportsbooks reveals that price is no longer available (the best we’re seeing is +1400 at the Westgate).
“I’ve taken that number (+1600) out about everywhere,” White said in a text message.
Baked into that favorable number is Busch’s move from Joe Gibbs Racing to Richard Childress Racing, on the surface a step down in quality of equipment based on the teams’ respective successes over the past decade.
RCR, though, is coming off a fine first year of the Next Gen car. In the No. 8 Chevy that Busch is driving this season, Tyler Reddick won three races, led 503 laps, and compiled five top fives, 15 top 10s, and three poles.
Marcus DiNitto is Senior News Editor at Gaming Today. He’s been covering sports business for 25 years and sports betting for 12. NASCAR is among the many sports Marcus enjoys betting but often loses on. Follow him on Twitter; do not bet his picks.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Today, Xfinity announced its plans for the 2023 NASCAR season, its fourth as a Premier Partner and ninth as an entitlement partner of the NASCAR Xfinity Series, including the launch of the next-generation Xfinity 10G Network, which provides customers with a powerful Internet connection today, while building toward a faster, more reliable tomorrow. Additionally, Xfinity announced new partnerships with 23XI Racing, Tyler Reddick and Bubba Wallace.
“NASCAR’s 75th Anniversary season and the Daytona 500 provide a great platform to introduce the next generation Xfinity 10G Network to fans and to our customers,” said Matt Lederer, Vice President of Brand Partnerships, Comcast. “We are also looking forward to partnering with 23XI Racing and their incredible roster of drivers to continue connecting our customers to the sport they love in new and imaginative ways.”
The new partnership between Xfinity and 23XI Racing showcases the limitless potential as they work together on opportunities both on and off the track, including Xfinity 10G network integration, the primary sponsor of Reddick’s No. 45 Toyota Camry TRD for the Atlanta NASCAR Cup Series race and Xfinity Rewards customer fan experiences such as Pit Box VIP access, driver meet-and-greet appearances with Bubba Wallace, Tyler Reddick and more.
“The chance to work with Xfinity is great for the 23XI family,” said NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace. “We look forward to opportunities where we can collaborate on initiatives that drive progress and innovation to the sport.”
“I’m excited to work with Xfinity in this new capacity as they partner with the No. 45 team and 23XI Racing,” said NASCAR driver Tyler Reddick. “The Xfinity Series has been such an integral and memorable part of my career, and I look forward to continuing to make memories throughout the Cup series and having Xfinity support my journey in NASCAR.”
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Feb. 17, 2023) – NASCAR and NBC Sports announced today broadcast coverage for the 2023 slate of grassroots races on CNBC, including events in the ARCA Menards Series East and West, and NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour.
CNBC will air tape-delayed coverage of every race from the ARCA Menards Series East and West – except those that are combined events.
CNBC will also broadcast tape-delayed coverage of 15-of-19 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour races. The four races not on CNBC can be seen live, exclusively on FloRacing.
In total, CNBC will air tape-delayed coverage of 30 NASCAR grassroots races.
All televised coverage on CNBC will stream on NBCSports.com and the NBC Sports app.
All races from the ARCA Menards Series East and West (when not combined with ARCA Menards Series events), and the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour will air live on FloRacing.
NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour
The season kicked off with the New Smyrna Visitors Bureau 200 at New Smyrna Speedway on Feb. 11. CNBC begins its grassroots coverage with a tape-delayed broadcast of the event on Sunday, Feb. 19 at 10 a.m. ET.
ARCA Menards Series East
The 2022 campaign starts at Five Flags Speedway on Saturday, March 25 (8 p.m. ET on FloRacing). CNBC will provide tape-delayed coverage of the event on Sunday, April 2 at 9 a.m. ET.
ARCA Menards Series West
A 150-lap race at Irwindale Speedway marks the first CNBC event of the season for the ARCA Menards Series West. It will air live on FloRacing on Saturday, April 1 at 10 p.m. ET before CNBC provides tape-delayed coverage on Sunday, April 23 at 12 p.m. ET.
Complete event/air dates and times for all three series on CNBC are below. All times eastern and schedule subject to change.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Garage 56 officials unveiled the look of the Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 that’s planned for a special entry into the 100th-anniversary edition of the 24 Hours of Le Mans.
The design was revealed Friday in Victory Lane at Daytona International Speedway, with dignitaries from all of the project’s collaborators – NASCAR, Chevrolet, Goodyear and Hendrick Motorsports – in attendance.
The livery – or “paint scheme” for the state-siders – features a dominant bright blue with contrasting gold accents and a pearlescent hood. Logos of the Garage 56 contributors are featured prominently, including branding for the NASCAR 75th anniversary and an American flag design up front.
“That’s a beautiful work of art,” said Jim France, NASCAR Chairman and CEO. “The fans will love it. I got to watch it when they were testing here a couple of weeks ago, watching it run through the chicane with the lights on and everything at night. It’s spectacular.”
The names of the three co-drivers – Jenson Button, Jimmie Johnson and Mike Rockenfeller – arc across the top of the driver-door window. The trio was officially added to the Garage 56 personnel roster on Jan. 28 during IMSA’s Rolex 24 weekend at Daytona.
The project has undergone extensive development and testing since its launch last March at Sebring International Raceway. The car intends to compete at Le Mans as a designated class of one in the June 10-11 endurance event, showcasing those innovations as an invitation-only entrant.
“Everybody in our company has touched this car,” said team owner Rick Hendrick. “So it’s been a major undertaking, but I’m really proud of it, and it’s gonna be fun to watch it over there. I’m gonna be nervous; we’ve got to run 24 hours, but I’m super excited.”
Some of the car’s specifications, based on the Next Gen vehicle that races in the NASCAR Cup Series, were revealed Friday as part of the design unveil. The total weight of the Garage 56 car tips the scales at 2,960 pounds, significantly less than the 3,485 pounds of the current Cup Series racer. Chad Knaus, Hendrick VP of competition, said the target horsepower figure for the car is rated in the “high seven hundreds.”
The G56 entry also carries project-specific Goodyear Eagle racing tires and special aerodynamic devices – dive planes, plus a more robust front splitter and rear diffuser – which have been featured on the test car. That includes a taller rear spoiler – 6 inches vs. the 4-inch spoiler on the current Cup Series configuration. The fuel cell is also larger – 32 gallons for Garage 56, compared to 20 gallons for the Cup Series.
Knaus said trimming weight from the car was a cumulative effect of measures taken from top to bottom. He added that with a full fuel load, the car weighs in near the 3,250-pound range.
“Everywhere, honestly,” Knaus said. “We’ve worked with all of our partners, all of the single-source parts providers from NASCAR, whether it be BBS, AP with the brakes, you go all the way to the shocks, it’s all the way across the board. Everybody pitched in, and we got to work on this program. Everything on the car has been lightened up to the best of our ability – Dallara and us and the folks at NASCAR worked really hard on just about everything. It’s got composite disc brakes. The wheels are lighter than what the NASCAR Cup wheel is. So really front to back. Five Star stepped up, they got us lighter body panels. It’s everywhere. It’s not just one thing, it’s the whole thing.”
The next step in the testing comes a day after Sunday’s Daytona 500 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), with the Garage 56 team loading in for two days at Sebring. The test car made extended on-track stints during the Jan. 31-Feb. 1 sessions at Daytona, but next week’s plan is a first go at a 24-hour run.
“Monday, we’re going to run through first thing in the morning, all the drivers, just to get them in the car, get them comfortable really quick. And then our intention is to start what we’re going to consider a 24-hour test at about 10 o’clock in the morning or maybe 11. We’re going to have one break for lunch right straight away, and then from there on out, we’re going to go until 11 o’clock the next day, so all through the evening and all the next morning.”
Friday afternoon’s unveiling wasn’t as big of a surprise to those who have been working on the project for nearly a year now and had already seen the car wrapped. But for Knaus & Co., it provided a chance for a sneak preview of what’s planning to be a unique entry added to the Le Mans field.
“It’s not as awe-inspiring for me because I’ve had my hands on it the whole time,” Knaus said. “So you guys are seeing it for the first time, but when they flicked the lights on there and pulled the cover off of it, I was like, ‘Man, that’s a proper race car right there.’ With the way Greg (Ives, crew chief) and Ben (Wright, G56 program manager) and the whole group are working together on this project, I think the folks in Europe are really going to be impressed what the NASCAR community’s capable of putting on the race track. It’s a really clean race car.”
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – Growing up, Elton Sawyer had an interest in multiple sports during his high school years, including the three majors of baseball, basketball and football. His appetite for those athletic pursuits fed grand aspirations. But a chance visit to a historic short track near his home led to his life’s calling.
“I think the deciding factor was I had this dream to go to Notre Dame and play defensive back for Coach Lou Holtz,” Sawyer says from a meeting room in the NASCAR Cup Series hauler parked at Daytona International Speedway, “but he wasn’t recruiting like 5-7, 155-pound defensive backs.”
Loosely reenacting the plot of the movie “Rudy” took a back seat to stock-car racing and eventually a long career in what’s now the NASCAR Xfinity Series. Sawyer, now 63, starts the next phase of that career this season, taking on a prime leadership role as NASCAR’s Senior Vice President of Competition.
Experience from his driving days and his later work with racing teams have prepared Sawyer for this moment as he enters his ninth season with NASCAR’s competition department. But the lessons learned from his childhood stick-and-ball background still provide Sawyer with a reference point.
“Take football, it’s what you do at the race shop, that’s kind of your defense, right?” Sawyer explains. “And then you get to the race track, and you’re on offense. You practice, and then you qualify and then you race; you’re always trying to get to the next position or lead the most laps. And then you’ve got your pit crew, which is kind of your special teams. So you know, I like team sports. I’ve always enjoyed, whether it’s high school basketball, high school football, or baseball, I enjoy being on the team. Now, as I’ve gotten older, I enjoy being part of the management of the team. …
“The best way I can describe it is I enjoy the process. I enjoy, again, our team, just watching everybody really work hard to prepare and then go out and execute.”
Setting the foundation
Elton Sawyer recalls being a high school junior when his father, Everett, first took him to Langley Speedway, a .395-mile bullring not far from the family’s hometown of Chesapeake in the Tidewater area of Virginia.
Interest grew quickly, and soon the family was occupying Langley’s garage and pit area instead of the bleachers. Everett Sawyer began racing there in 1976, and Elton followed suit two years later as he wrapped up his time at Great Bridge High School. Elton’s younger brother, Roger, and a cousin named Earl also raced there.
“We all kind of came along, and it was a family event,” Sawyer says, noting their start in the entry-level Street Division. “We’d go work on cars behind the house in the garage, and then it just continued.”
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images
Elton Sawyer quickly laddered up to become one of Langley’s hotshots. His season tally of wins regularly tripped double digits, and he was the speedway’s track champion for three consecutive years from 1983-85. In two of those years, Sawyer’s accomplishments earned him the Mid-Atlantic regional championship in what’s now called the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series.
By then, Sawyer had started to explore the Late Model Sportsman ranks – a circuit that later was called the Busch Series and has evolved into today’s Xfinity Series. Sawyer made that tour his home as a series regular starting in 1986, and his career spanned a who’s who of legends from that golden era who made their mark there.
Sawyer rattles off the stellar names from his earlier days in that national tour – Jack Ingram, Sam Ard, Tommy Ellis, Tommy Houston, L.D. Ottinger – and then adds some of the regular visitors from the Cup Series in that era – Dale Earnhardt, Darrell Waltrip, Terry Labonte, Harry Gant, Morgan Shepherd. “You put that group there, and then you go to an event and you have success,” Sawyer said, “you can walk out of there with your head pretty high.”
The names changed for Sawyer’s later years in the series, but the quality of competition remained high, and he listed Jason Keller, brothers David and Jeff Green, Bobby Labonte and Chad Little as just a handful among the many standouts. During that time, he often raced alongside his wife, Patty Moise, a veteran of 133 Xfinity starts, and he collected two victories – his 1994 breakthrough at the old Myrtle Beach Speedway and later in 1999 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.
“He kind of mirrored what my brothers and I kind of went through growing up. We worked on our cars, we kept them up and we also got to drive,” said David Green, the 1994 Xfinity Series champion who now works alongside Sawyer as a chief safety official. “But I can remember Elton the most being the Mr. Nice Guy. Of course, Bobby Labonte, who I drove for, he for years accused me of being a nice guy and said nice guys didn’t win all the time. But Elton won, and I was able to win some, so I think nice cars do win.
“But that’s the biggest thing with Elton is he was always very professional on the race track. You kind of knew who you were racing against, whether it’s Daytona or Hickory or whatever fell in between. So that’s what I remember the most.”
New era at R&D
David Green hadn’t been working at NASCAR for long when Sawyer joined the team at the Research & Development Center in 2015, but he remembers fondly his feelings at hearing the news. Sawyer had spent time working with race teams, serving as competition director at the former Red Bull Racing organization as one of his stops along the way.
Sawyer’s first appointment with NASCAR was as director of the Craftsman Truck Series, but it also meant that Green was getting a colleague who was cut from the same racing fabric.
“I went from feeling very comfortable with the company prior to this announcement to feeling extra comfortable, meaning that was just another guy that was joining our forces that we all grew up doing the same and have seen every side of it,” Green says, noting the tenures of former drivers Chad Little and Brett Bodine with the R&D Center. “The list goes on, right? Now all of a sudden, we’re getting some racers in there, and we kind of talked the same language. Not that the rest of us weren’t talking the same language, but there’s just a really good feel for me in also knowing Elton’s background. …
Doug Benc | Getty Images
“But when he joined us, it was such a good feeling for me internally to know that I had somebody that was going to be a true supporter and understood everything we deal with within the garage on a day-to-day basis.”
As for the even-keel demeanor that Green referenced during their racing days, Sawyer says he’ll carry that same straightforward style into this role rather than adopting an iron-fist approach.
“I would look at it more as we hold all the cards, we as NASCAR, so we know what all the teams are doing,” Sawyer says. “It’s a fact-finding exercise a lot of times — here’s the topic of discussion, gather the facts and then we make a decision. So the teams are our customers, and we want to treat them with respect. There’s going to be some tough decisions, and we’re going to tell them, here’s what we’re doing, and we’ll make those decisions as the sanctioning body, and that’s what we’re going to do.
“In our meetings, the things we talk about are we want the level playing field to be equitable across the board for all competitors. We want it to be a safe environment to the best of our abilities; we’re inherently a dangerous sport. And we don’t want to over-officiate. So when we can check the boxes on those three things when we leave an event, then we kind of feel like we’ve done our job and we’re not the story on Monday.”
Sawyer officially took the post Jan. 18, replacing Scott Miller, who was tapped for a new role as competition strategist. Sawyer previously served as vice president of officiating and technical inspection, a position where he helped shape the rules and penalty procedures and other elements of the week-to-week scrutineering of race vehicles.
It’s experience that’s bolstered by his involvement in multiple facets of the sport – as a longtime driver, a team principal and now as a top NASCAR official.
“Elton’s got a cool head on his shoulders. I respect the hell out of him,” says veteran driver Brad Keselowski, now starting his second season as a Cup Series team co-owner. “I think he’s seen this sport through a lot of different lenses – a driver being one of them, and at one time, I think he was a team president or something to that effect. He understands the competitive element from the drivers and team side, and he’s been at NASCAR for at least a half-dozen years. I think he’s a really well-rounded person who has the ability to see a bigger picture than most anyone else in his shoes.
“I think he’s earned his opportunity. It’s a big hire for NASCAR – a big gain. If you would’ve challenged me to sit down and find five or 10 names to put in a hat for that position, he would have certainly been one of the men I’d put in that hat. I thought it was a really good move.”
The time will inevitably come this season when a competitor will have to heed a summons to the Cup Series hauler. When that happens, the expectation, Green says, is a firm-but-fair consultation instead of a stern, boisterous talking-to.
Proof positive, he says, that nice guys do win, even if it’s not necessarily as a defender in the Notre Dame secondary.
“To me, the nice guy on the race track generates an X-amount of respect,” Green says. “So yes, the guy that really beats it up to people, right, sometimes gets a little bit of respect because this guy’s gonna call it like it is and be tough to deal with. But in my career and what I’ve seen, and I owe a lot to Bobby Labonte and guys like Elton Sawyer, the good guys get an equal amount of respect. It’s a little bit different kind of respect, but the end result is respect. So to me, the fact that he’s got his mannerisms how he handles the garage is so reassuring and really gives us a lot of confidence to come out in the garage and do what we do. So that nice guy approach to me got Elton Sawyer nothing but leaps and bounds in respect, not only from us competitors, but then now the road that we’re in now. I know he is cut out for that job, and he’s shown that throughout the years he’s been with us.
“I’m going to be a little bit prejudiced in saying I’m glad he’s in our corner because now, as a NASCAR official inspector and a guy that’s really got to keep your foot down when it counts, for when it matters and when it even doesn’t matter, I’ve got the guy that supports us through thick and thin. So a totally different kind of respect.”
BIRCH RUN, Mich. — A big year is ahead for Birch Run Speedway and Event Center as the track celebrates its 75th year of operation.
The 0.4-mile, progressively banked oval situated in Birch Run, Michigan, is now now part of the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series, continuing a vibrant short-track tradition that has been ongoing since the facility opened during NASCAR’s first year in 1948.
Originally a 0.33-mile dirt track during its first decade, what was then Dixie Speedway was paved in the early 1960s. The facility continued to grow during the next several years with additions that included a Figure 8 course in the infield and the construction of the 4/10-mile oval that is predominantly used today.
Many notable competitors have developed their talents on both ovals at Birch Run since its inception, such as past NASCAR Cup Series champions Brad Keselowski and Benny Parsons, 1963 Indianapolis 500 winner Parnelli Jones and with two-time Southern 500 winner Erik Jones.
Outside of the on-track action, Birch Run has worked diligently to create a welcoming atmosphere for fans and competitors with the installation of a modern tech barn, upgraded bathrooms, new stadium lights and the construction of a luxury VIP box atop the main grandstands. The track was recognized for that work by the Michigan Automobile Racing Fan Club, which awarded the facility its 2022 Promoter of the Year Award.
Under the direction of owner Andy Suski, who purchased the track in 2017 and renamed it Birch Run Speedway and Event Center, the 75th year of on-track competition is primed to be the most exciting in the facility’s long history.
The 2023 season will see Birch Run host the second edition of Down Right Awesome Night, which is designed to raise awareness for those born with Down syndrome. As part of the festivities, 100 percent of 50/50 and t-shirt money raised will be donated to the Hurley Children’s Clinic in Flint, Michigan.
Headlining Down Right Awesome Night will be a $21,000-to-win Modified feature. This will serve as one of several major events for Birch Run on a 2023 schedule that includes hosting the American Speed U.S. Nationals for the first time and welcoming the JEGS/CRA All-Stars Tour.
Fans who attend any race at Birch Run will have plenty of entertainment at their disposal. Along with giveaways, autograph sessions and family theme nights, Birch Run also features the longest bar in Michigan known as Gas Alley and has their own mascot called Marco the Track Dog.
A thrilling year at Birch Run commemorating the history of the track formally kicks off March 11 with a preseason party. Opening night for Birch Run is scheduled for April 28, with a docket consisting of the Midwest Dirt Compact Series, Wheeler Trucking Friday Night Thunder Series, Dwarf Cars and American Trucks.
NEW SMYRNA BEACH, Fla. — Night 7 of the World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing at New Smyrna Speedway proved to be the longest and most eventful in the event so far.
Five divisions ended up sharing the track Thursday evening. Along with Modifieds, Super Late Models, Pro Late Models and Florida Modifieds, a champion ended up being crowned in the 602 Modified division.
There was no shortage of intense on-track action and a few heated battles across each respective feature, but the night ended with plenty of familiar names finding their way to Victory Lane.
Below are the key takeaways from the seventh night of racing in the World Series of Asphalt.
Katie Hettinger halted a week of frustration in the World Series of Asphalt by finally earning her first victory in a Pro Late Model, which she accomplished by making an aggressive move on pole-sitter Carson Brown with fewer than 10 laps remaining. Ryan Luza passed Brown to finish second, with Conner Jones and Brent Crews rounding out the top-five finishers.
In a stroke of luck, the qualifying redraw for the Modified feature moved Matt Hirschman from third to first on the starting grid. Despite this, it would not be an entirely smooth ride for Hirschman, who had to fend off an immense challenge from Patrick Emerling for his fourth consecutive win, with the skirmish leading to contact between the two on the last restart that sent Emerling into the outside wall.
Emerling managed to pilot his wounded car home in the second position. Teddy Hodgdon finished in third, with Jimmy Blewett and Eric Goodale completing the top five.
On a Lap 13 restart, Casey Roderick muscled his way past William Sawalich to take his second consecutive World Series of Asphalt victory in the Super Late Model division. Conner Jones finished in third behind Sawalich, where he was followed by Giovanni Ruggiero and Nicholas Naugle.
The final 602 Modified feature of the week was one dominated by numerous on-track incidents and an incredible battle between Luke Baldwin and Trevor Catalano. Baldwin ended up prevailing to claim the win and the 602 Modified title, with Lee Sharpsteen, Catalano, Evan Rygielski and Bobby Jones following him in the running order.
The longest race of the evening in length was the 75-lap Florida Modified feature. Cody Stickler took home his second checkered flag in the World Series of Asphalt over Jason Lester, Bill Burba, Tim Moore and Alan Bruns.
Only two nights remain in the World Series of Asphalt. Friday at New Smyrna will include two major events in the Hart to Heart 100 for Pro Late Models and the Richie Evans Memorial 100 for Modifieds, all while Super Stocks, Trucks, Bomber Bs and Vintage Cars run their own races.
FloRacing has the coverage starting at 7:30 p.m. ET.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – The Money Team Racing made another improbable run into the Daytona 500, landing a last-ditch drive that had IndyCar regular Conor Daly welling up with tears after the checkered flag of Thursday night’s second qualifying race. “Shock the world!” was the rallying cry from the joyous TMT crew as the No. 50 Chevrolet came to rest on pit road.
Daly joined reigning Craftsman Truck Series champion Zane Smith in clinching the final Daytona 500 starting spots after Thursday night’s Bluegreen Vacations Duel qualifying races. Both drivers will be making their second Cup Series starts and their first in Sunday’s prestigious season opener (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM).
Both were also aided by misfortune for each of their primary competitors for Daytona 500 berths. Chandler Smith never recovered from a mid-race pit road speeding penalty in Duel 1, and Austin Hill was caught up in the wake of a multicar stack-up in the second 150-miler. Both failed to qualify.
For Daly, the result was the culmination of a more-than-eventful couple of days in Daytona, with the No. 50 crew failing to post a qualifying lap in Wednesday’s time trials because of a faulty oil line. It was a push to get to the grid, and Daly battled a major vibration and other handling concerns even in the pace laps. He dropped a lap behind by the second Duel’s halfway point.
The tide shifted when Hill’s Beard Oil Motorsports No. 62 Chevrolet became entangled in the evening’s biggest wreck. With Hill sidelined, Daly trudged on and finished 17th — one lap down in the final car running.
“As I was accelerating, it was like literally driving a bucking bronco,” Daly said, recounting the warm-up laps before the green flag. “I didn’t know what was going on. It was shaking so much that it’s like you feel like a wheel’s falling off. But as I told Tony (Eury, crew chief), I said, ‘Well, I just, I have to go.’ And so I didn’t lift those first two laps. But as it was moving around, I was like, this is really not confidence-inspiring. And so I lost the draft but when he made that first adjustment, I could definitely tell where what was happening and thankfully, we were able to fix that and I guess we got a lot better as we went, but it was crazy.
“And we took advantage of a lucky situation. We can’t ever deny a lucky situation because I’ll take it any day.”
Hill’s hopes for his first 500 had risen with Daly’s early woes, but his good fortune ran out two-thirds of the way through Duel 2. When Kyle Busch crashed at the front of the pack, he was unable to escape the tie-up farther back with Travis Pastrana and Riley Herbst. Hill was able to limp away from the crash scene, but the crew’s efforts to repair the No. 62 Camaro were fruitless. After the damaged vehicle policy clock expired, Hill finished 18th, completing just 41 of the 60 laps.
“We didn’t need to be in the draft,” Hill said after a check at the infield care center. “The main reason we were in the draft was because it was single-file and I was just trying to get experience, see how the car drove and what the car was doing when I would get a run on a guy, that type of thing, just trying to learn for the 500. And then right down the backstretch, when I saw the wreck happen, there was a lot of dirt going across the track. So I kind of lost sight of where the other cars were that were wrecking. I kind of got to the dirt as the dirt was coming across and it just made me lose traction.
“Not sure if the 15 (Herbst) tagged me or not, I have no idea. But, we just, we started spinning and the right-front, I think it was the lower [control arm] was broke. So it ended our night. There was really no reason for us to even be up there in the pack. The 50 wasn’t in the draft. He was multiple laps down and, just, just dumb on my part. I mean there’s no way around it. I mean it was just stupid to even be up there, just trying to learn and see what we can do going into the 500 and now we’re not even in it. We could have just run by ourselves and not around anyone to stay in front of the 50 and we would be locked in. So it stings, but I have a race Saturday in the Xfinity Series and I’ll do all I can to win that race.”
Tyler Strong | NASCAR Studios
The first race was the calmer of the two, and Zane Smith used a steady eighth-place finish to outdistance Chandler Smith, no relation, to advance. And he wound up a bit starstruck by a certain returning seven-time champion, who he spent time racing with in the pack at Daytona International Speedway.
“I don’t know what life is. I had Jimmie Johnson parked behind me. I watched him all my life growing up and still is my idol,” Zane Smith said on pit road after the first 150-mile qualifier. “Just unbelievable being in the ‘Great American Race.'”
Ford drivers snared seven of the top eight spots, led by opening-race winner Joey Logano. Smith followed Front Row Motorsports teammate Michael McDowell – a former 500 winner — through into the lead pack, then stayed clear of the last-lap dicing up front that closed the caution-free race.
“Yeah, my emotions are definitely weird, just how big this event is,” Smith said. “You don’t realize it just coming until you’re making an attempt at it. It’s been crazy, all the media, and just all the hype behind it. Those Duels were a little nerve-racking, but I kind of just followed my teammate through there, and he was a huge, huge help. Big shout-out to him, all the Fords really. I felt like we really all worked together well.”
Chandler Smith was hampered by a pit-road speeding penalty on the 22nd of 60 laps, getting tagged with the costly violation as he left the pit lane. The 20-year-old Kaulig Racing driver placed 18th in the 21-car field — one lap off the pace — and failed to qualify for what would have been his Cup Series debut.
“Just got greedy, man,” Chandler Smith said. “At the very end of pit road, I was like, ‘Oh, we’re in a really good spot, this is really promising,’ and squeezed a little too much right before the yellow line. So it’s just, it’s on me. But I believe everything happens for a reason. I just can’t thank (team owner) Matt Kaulig and (team president) Chris Rice enough and Quick Tie Products, everybody that was on this deal that put a full effort in to allow me to come down here.”
Johnson and Pastrana clinched their starting spots on the basis of their speed in Wednesday’s qualifying session, besting the other non-chartered teams during those time trials.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Kyle Busch was the primary victim of a multi-car crash in Thursday night’s second Bluegreen Vacations Duel qualifying race, losing control after a late-race push from Daniel Suárez.
Busch’s No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet veered into the outside retaining wall while leading on the Daytona International Speedway backstretch, ending his race with 40 of 60 laps complete after an errant push from Suárez’s No. 99 Chevrolet. Busch was unhurt but expressed his frustration after being relegated to a backup car for Sunday’s 65th running of the Daytona 500 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM).
“Just a lot of pushing and shoving. I don’t know why,” Busch said at the infield care center. “I mean we were single file. There was no pressure from the outside. There was nothing happening and was just getting pushed for two straight laps and finally, it didn’t want to hang on anymore. It overloaded the left rear and spun out the wrong way on the straightaway.”
Busch’s car nosed into the outside wall as oncoming traffic dodged his vehicles. Noah Gragson, Ryan Preece and Justin Haley dove to the grass to avoid the sliding Chevrolet, but that grassy debris found its way to Austin Hill’s tires, causing the No. 62 Chevrolet to spin.
Hill collided with Travis Pastrana and Riley Herbst, ending Hill’s Daytona 500 chances. Hill was piloting the Beard Motorsports non-chartered entry and failed to qualify for the “Great American Race.”
Busch was left bewildered the aggression reached that point midway through the second of two qualifying races on Thursday night.
“The inside lane with the 99 and the five behind me, they stopped pushing and they weren’t shoving and the outside still disintegrated,” Busch said. “And a couple guys tried to make the outside come forward, never came forward. And then for the last two laps there before I wrecked, they started pushing. I don’t see the sense and it really boggles me.”
The disappointment was bolstered by the fact Busch and his No. 8 team – a fresh pairing for the 2023 season – believed they could win the Daytona 500 with their primary car. Busch is a two-time Cup Series champion but has yet to win the Daytona 500 in 17 tries.
“Car was fine. It was good,” Busch said. “If there was any weak spot we had, it was just exit of the corners where guys could kind of bunch back up to me but that’s to be expected. That’s just the accordion.”
Pastrana, the action sports icon, is driving the No. 67 Toyota for 23XI Racing, another “open” entry, but sealed his spot in the Daytona 500 in Wednesday night’s single-car qualifying session. The 39-year-old noted Wednesday any cost for damages are coming directly out of his pocket this weekend but left the infield care center confident the damage his car suffered is fixable ahead of Sunday’s race without using a backup car.
“I didn’t hit much,” Pastrana said. “The rear was bent pretty good. So we’ll change a few parts out. Shouldn’t be too bad for the pocket and we’ll definitely be back out there but hopefully in the same car.”
Pastrana competed in the Xfinity Series in a full-time effort in 2013 but has never made a Cup Series start. More challenging is that the Next Gen vehicle hardly compares to any prior experience he gleaned in a stock car.
“We were just cruising around back just trying to avoid exactly what happened,” Pastrana said. “Thought we’re far enough back actually, and at 200 miles an hour, it’s hard to get whoa-ed up. So I learned a lot. I kept wanting to go for it and then start getting in the mix. They’re like, ‘just don’t mess up the car.’ I’m like, alright, we’ll just stay in the back. We’ll learn from those guys. See what works, see what doesn’t. …
“Good information going forward and I had a blast. It was super intense.”
Cup teams will have one 50-minute practice session on Friday at 5:35 p.m. ET (FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) and additional 50 minutes Saturday at 10:30 a.m. ET (FS1, MRN, SiriusXM) to perfect their cars ahead of Sunday’s Daytona 500.