Stewart-Haas Racing announced on Wednesday that Ryan Preece will join the organization in a full-time capacity to drive the No. 41 Ford Mustang in the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season.
The 32-year-old Preece has most recently been a reserve driver for the team but will be brought into the full-time fold to compete for next year’s championship. The Berlin, Connecticut, native will join 2014 Cup champion Kevin Harvick and returning drivers Aric Almirola and Chase Briscoe to round out the team’s quartet.
Preece replaces incumbent Cole Custer, who piloted the No. 41 for the past three seasons and is moving to the Xfinity Series to team with Riley Herbst.
“This is the opportunity I’ve been working for,” Preece said in a team release. “Nothing was guaranteed at the start of this year, but I felt like if I put in the time, whether it was in a race car or in a simulator, that SHR was the place for me. It’s a company built by racers, for racers, and it’s exactly where I want to be.
“I know this season just finished and most people are looking to take a break, but I can’t wait to get going.”
Preece appeared in a pair of Cup Series races in 2022, driving the No. 15 Rick Ware Racing Ford to a best finish of 25th at Dover Motor Speedway. He also made a combined 13 starts across Xfinity Series and Camping World Truck Series action, winning in the No. 17 David Gilliland Racing Ford F-150 in June at Nashville Superspeedway.
Custer landed three top 10s and a pole in 2022, and won at Kentucky Speedway during his rookie season in 2020.
“Cole Custer has been a part of SHR since 2017 and we’re glad to have him stay with us,” team co-owner and three-time Cup Series champion Tony Stewart said. “Cole’s experience will be invaluable to Riley Herbst as he continues his development in the Xfinity Series.”
Joe Gibbs Racing announced Tuesday that Xfinity Series champion Ty Gibbs will move to the NASCAR Cup Series full-time next season, taking the roster spot left open by Kyle Busch and marking the next step in his speedy ascent to stock-car racing’s major leagues.
Gibbs is set to drive the No. 54 Toyota for the team owned by his grandfather, Coach Joe Gibbs. The 20-year-old driver will bring the car number he campaigned in the NASCAR Xfinity Series with him, marking a departure from the No. 18 that’s been with the JGR organization since its Cup Series debut in 1992. Although Gibbs will be in the No. 54 car, Joe Gibbs Racing intends to use the No. 18 in the Cup Series in future years.
Chris Gayle, who served as crew chief during Gibbs’ championship season, will move with him to serve as crew chief in the Cup Series.
Gibbs has excelled at each stage of his rapid climb up the NASCAR ladder. He concluded the season as a seven-time winner this year in the Xfinity Series, capping his first full season of Xfinity competition with a title-clinching victory at Phoenix Raceway. That triumph was marked by tragedy with the death of his father, Coy Gibbs, in the overnight hours just after his Phoenix win.
In parts of two Xfinity seasons, he’s already won 11 times, including prevailing in his series debut in 2021 at Daytona International Speedway’s road course. But Gibbs also made an unplanned jump to the Cup Series this year, filling in with 23XI Racing — a JGR affiliate — when former series champion Kurt Busch was sidelined by a concussion after a crash during qualifying on July 23 at Pocono Raceway.
Gibbs was pressed into duty for his Cup Series debut the next day, and he filled in for Busch in 15 races the rest of the year. He withdrew from the Cup season finale after his father’s death.
Joe Gibbs Racing’s high-profile vacancy on its four-car team officially opened Sept. 13, when Kyle Busch and Richard Childress Racing announced they would join forces, starting next season. The move ended a partnership that dated back to 2008, a long-running union that produced two Cup Series championships and 56 of Busch’s 60 career wins.
The younger Gibbs’ rise to NASCAR’s top level has been marked by success and a dab of controversy. Even as he nearly immediately rounded into a consistent challenger for Xfinity Series wins on a part-time schedule last season, Gibbs cruised to a championship in the ARCA Menards Series, prevailing in 10 of the 20 races in 2021. He’s an 18-time winner on that circuit, and he also has multiple victories in each of the two ARCA regional tours.
Gibbs’ aggressive nature has helped him land in Victory Lane, but it’s also ruffled some of his competitors. He was assessed a behavioral penalty and fined $15,000 in April for making contact with Sam Mayer’s car on pit road after an Xfinity race at Martinsville Speedway. That disagreement led to fisticuffs between the two. On the Cup Series side, Gibbs also angrily bumped alongside Ty Dillon’s car on pit road during a Sept. 25 race at Texas Motor Speedway, drawing scrutiny and a $75,000 fine for unsafe driving near race officials and pit-crew personnel.
The controversy came to a head in the Xfinity Series’ penultimate race, when Gibbs bumped teammate Brandon Jones into a last-lap crash at Martinsville Speedway. The maneuver denied another JGR driver from making the Championship 4 field, and a repentant Gibbs apologized for the move.
Gibbs drove the No. 18 during his ARCA successes, flying the car number that his grandfather used when he created Joe Gibbs Racing as a single-car outfit with Dale Jarrett as his driver 31 years ago. As an Xfinity regular, though, he established his own identity with the No. 54.
The last time the No. 18 was not in regular rotation in the NASCAR Cup Series was 1991. JGR drivers account for all but one of the car number’s 80 wins — Marvin Burke was the first, winning in his only Cup appearance in 1951. Three of JGR’s five Cup Series championships have come with the No. 18 — Bobby Labonte’s 2000 title and the two crowns claimed by Kyle Busch (2015, 2019).
The No. 54 has not been used full-time in the Cup Series since 2003, when driver Todd Bodine paired with team owner Travis Carter. The No. 54 has won just three times in NASCAR’s top division, most recently in 1978 when Lennie Pond posted his only Cup Series win at Talladega Superspeedway.
ALTON, Va. – The testing phase of the Garage 56 test-car prototype penned its latest chapter Monday, sending a loud V-8 rumble through the frigid air in the southern Virginia hills.
The Hendrick Motorsports-built Garage 56 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 tester debuted Monday at Virginia International Raceway, marking only the program’s second on-track session ahead of a proposed special appearance in the 24 Hours of Le Mans next June.
The troubleshooting process sent the assembled crowds of crew and support personnel scrambling at times, but there were encouraging signs found among the challenges. The track time inched the project another step closer to a potential exhibition entry in the 2023 endurance classic, but also offered a reminder of how early in the process the car’s launch still is.
“No, it’s definitely an infant,” said Chad Knaus, Hendrick Motorsports VP of Competition. “So we’re still trying to get it to go and honestly, the way it ran today, I’m actually pleased with the performance of the car. We’ve just got to start to work out some of the bugs.”
Sports-car veteran Mike Rockenfeller, a former Le Mans overall winner, was again behind the wheel of the test car. The German road-racing ace also drove in a previous Garage 56 test, wheeling a Camaro prepared by IMSA team Action Express Racing at Road Atlanta on Aug. 29-30.
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This entry, Knaus said, is a closer representation of what the actual Le Mans racer might be when it hits the French countryside, with significant updates to the chassis, engine and suspension components, plus the addition of side-view mirrors. Among the most visible changes were the aerodynamic pieces, with the addition of stabilizing dive planes and a more robust splitter and diffuser – an indication of the loose leash that the Garage 56 team will have with the specifications as it builds off the Next Gen template.
“It’s definitely a big step. I mean, we have … where do I start?” Rockenfeller said after wrapping up his day’s work of hustling the car around the 3.27-mile VIR full-course layout. “We have less weight, we have a bit more downforce. Tires are the same, because we did (initial) tire testing in Atlanta, so similar-ish. Power is a bit different, so we increased a little bit there as well in that area, Now we have paddle-shift, we have traction control in, we have a new dash. I mean, everything is different, basically. So we are pretty close to what we think will be the race car in Le Mans. But of course, it’s still a very long way to go.
“We will improve in pace and reliability, definitely. So I would say that’s the difference. Between the current Cup car, and this test car, again, it’s pretty similar, I would say, its weight, its power, its tire grip – it’s just a lot faster. I mean, to give you a figure, around here, I think we are around 10 seconds faster than what I did in a Cup car, so it’s quite a lot faster.”
Reaching that speed Monday took effort all around. An “electrical gremlin” that Knaus chalked up to a faulty power distribution module prevented the test car from making a sustained run during the morning hours. Afternoon testing was stopped early, just before sundown, by a fuel-pump issue that the crew worked on into the evening hours.
That drew the attention of the attending representatives – from Hendrick, Goodyear, NASCAR and Bosch among others – to jump in and lend a hand with remedies.
“I think it’s a huge milestone for us. It doesn’t go without its challenges, of course, but that’s why you come to the race track to test,” Knaus said. “But I think with all the people here and all the resources that have been here at VIR today, it shows the importance of this program, and what a big commitment it has been for everybody.”
More testing was planned for Tuesday at the scenic Virginia road course, as Rockenfeller put the car through its paces in the morning with significant rain in the forecast for later. But a course has already been charted for what’s next in the project’s development – both in performance and endurance.
“Well, this is a first step and over the course of the next six months or so there’s going to be a huge amount of iterations,” Knaus said. “Obviously, always trying to get yourself more margin from a pace standpoint, so we want to continue to try to push and make the car faster from a weight and performance standpoint. Downforce, get some more aero efficiencies put into the car, Goodyear has done a really good job of starting to get some construction and compound combinations put together, and we’ll start to get that really rolled up into what the tire is going to be. So an awful lot of work from this point forward.”
For 24 years, Mark Jenison raced in hopes of one day winning just one championship.
This year, he won two.
Jenison won track titles in the Pro Stock and Late Model divisions at Seekonk Speedway, a NASCAR-sanctioned oval track in Seekonk, Massachusetts. He finished the season with one win and nine top fives in 14 Late Model races, and two Pro Stock victories.
Jenison spent much of his career racing around the Northeast and finished several seasons in the top three in points at more than one track.
This year, Seekonk announced it would be changing its championships away from points races in favor of a playoff system similar to the one used in the NASCAR Cup Series. The change prompted Jenison to focus his racing efforts solely on the Massachusetts track.
On one hand, it was a tough change because Jeinson loves to race. However, the shift in concentration was instrumental in his success.
“I was like, ‘If I could just get over that hump,’” Jenison said. “My team, we’re in a small garage in my backyard building with small funds. Usually you have to have big sponsors, big funds, that way you can get to that championship. This year it just seemed to work out perfect for us.”
Throughout his career, Jenison has dealt with struggles on the track, but he’s always gotten better and stronger as the season goes on. This season was no different. He was in a couple accidents early in the year in his Pro Stock, but he still managed to rank third in points as the playoffs began. He was fourth in the Late Model points at the start of the playoffs.
Mark Jenison (22) leads a pack of cars at Seekonk Speedway. (Photo: Ed St Germain/Seekonk Speedway)
Jenison had conserved tires throughout the season to have six in the final races, which also helped.
“We went out on that last race, and we just dominated,” he said. “The last two races we dominated them pretty good.
“It was very, very refreshing to have something actually pan out and go the way you want it. You don’t usually get that.”
The final Late Model race wasn’t without its own dramatics. Jenison was the fastest car in practice earlier in the day, a fact that wasn’t lost on his competitors.
“Me and Chase Belcher, before we even went out for the race, I was walking through the pits… we started talking, and he says to me, ‘Are you going to take it easy on me today? You’re putting down the fast laps,’” Jenison said. “I said, ‘Chase, it ain’t about the fast laps, it’s the last laps. We’re going to have a hell of a fight when we get there.’ And he just laughed. We both laughed and walked away.
“Me being Nostradamus, I had to go and say that because that’s exactly what happened.”
On the final lap, Jenison was riding the outside when Belcher pushed him up the track even further going into Turns 1-2. Jenison rode the wall as hard as he could going out of the final turns and down the last straightway when Belcher again pushed into him.
“I said, ‘Here it comes,’” Jennison said.
“I tried to get down more to get away from the wall a little bit, because I knew I was going have to scrape the wall coming out. I got it down a little a bit, and as I got it down the car started pushing… I couldn’t turn the wheel. All I could hear was his engine roaring, and as I soon as I heard it, I went up over the wall.”
Jenison crossed the finish line with his car’s wheels on the outside wall. He finished second, just a few hundredths of a second behind Belcher.
“When I finally stopped in Turn 1 the engine was still running. I had to shut the engine off. I knew what happened, but in your mind in the car you’re like, ‘What’s going on now?’” he said. “I see all the smoke coming off and I’m like, ‘Oh geez. I don’t even know if I’m on fire or not.’
“I’m trying to get out of the harnesses and stuff, and my belt is stuck on the seat. Then I heard the first responders up there yelling my name saying, ‘You all right?’ So I was like, ‘At least I’m not on fire, because if he’s up there yelling to me… He’s not going to jump on the flames.’ … So I calmed down and started getting my belts off easier and climbed out.
“Chase was there and he was like, ‘Oh man, I’m so sorry.’ He was trying to be compassionate, trying to make sure I was alright.”
Belcher was disqualified for the move, giving Jenison the win, and the eventual Late Model title.
“I’ve had some pretty good dooseys before. Not exactly like that one at the start finish line. That one was for the books,” he said.
“We both had the opportunity to win that championship, and that was what was the coolest about the whole thing. It obviously wasn’t cool to lose your car, but it was cool that there’s so much love out there for the sport that you’re putting your life on the line for it. Just knowing that people still have the love for the sport like that was the coolest.”
Mark Jenison poses with the remains of his destroyed race car following a crash at Seekonk Speedway. (Photo: Courtesy of Seekonk Speedway)
It’s the thrill of races like that one at Seekonk that has kept Jenison in the sport for so long. He began his career drag racing before his brother convinced him to give circle tracks a try.
“I liked drag racing, but to me it was too short and not enough thrills to it,” he said. “I like the longevity and the thrill of controlling something that’s out of control.
“Drag racing, I felt like if you could just hold the wheel straight and put it to the floor you could do it. I used to run 12.2 seconds in a quarter mile, and it’s 12 seconds then you pull up and you park it and it would take you almost an hour to get back out again. It wasn’t as much of an adrenaline rush with racing and circle tracks. You could spend that 20 minutes, half hour, hour sometimes racing and actually being in that tight pack of cars and racing hard with people and trying to prove yourself. It’s a lot different, but more exciting to me.”
Jenison said he still hasn’t figured out how he was able to pull off two championships after racing for decades and never winning one. He’s looking forward to more racing in 2023 and trying to race for even more.
“I’m 53 years old. My best racing has been coming in my later years,” he said. “It’s funny, because they push these young kids to run these cars at young ages, and they do well, but it just goes to show you can still be an older person and still run these cars and win races.
“Twenty-four years it took me to get these two championships, and I was trying to get one. Like, before I retire I’d like to get one. And then that night everything just came down.”
The 30th running of the South Carolina 400 will take the green flag Saturday night at Florence Motor Speedway, and the entry list features more than 50 drivers who will be vying for a starting position in the event that continues the legendary history of the Myrtle Beach 400 at Myrtle Beach Speedway.
The entry list that will battle for a coveted starting position in Saturday’s event includes track and regional champions from up and down the East Coast, as well as a two-time Daytona 500 and NASCAR Xfinity Series champion.
Multiple rounds of qualifying will determine the 40-car starting field, with more than a dozen drivers expected to be sent home before the green flag even waves for the 200-lap late model stock car main event.
Below is a closer look at some of the racing champions on the entry list for Saturday’s South Carolina 400 and their accomplishments.
We’d be remiss if we didn’t start with the most well-known name on the entry list: Dale Earnhardt Jr. The two-time Daytona 500 winner and two-time NASCAR Xfinity Series champion is making a rare late model stock car start. Earnhardt won at Florence during his formative years racing late model stock cars, so there’s no reason why he can’t win at the track again.
When identifying contenders for events like the South Carolina 400, one must consider the reigning track champion. That honor belongs to 16-year-old Kade Brown, who claimed his first Florence track championship this year in his first full season racing late model stock cars for AK Performance. He also won the 2022 NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series South Carolina state championship.
Typically a contender in a super late model, Matt Craig is set for a rare late model stock start in the South Carolina 400. Craig is a multi-time super late model champion with both the CARS Tour and Pro All Stars Series. In 2021, he won the legendary All American 400 at Tennessee’s Nashville Fairgrounds Speedway.
Brenden Queen has been turning heads for several seasons with his impressive performances at Langley Speedway in Hampton, Virginia, where he is the three-time and defending track champion in the late model stock division. A victory in the South Carolina 400 would be his first marquee victory in a major late model stock event.
The driver of the second JR Motorsports entry in the South Carolina 400 is Carson Kvapil, the son of 2003 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series champion Travis Kvapil. The 19-year-old racer recently completed his first full season racing late model stock cars, claiming the CARS Late Model Stock Tour championship in the process.
You’ll be hard pressed to find a driver with more experience at tracks with worn out asphalt than Sam Yarbrough. A six-time track champion at Myrtle Beach Speedway, Yarbrough won the last race held at the historic South Carolina venue in 2020. He won the Myrtle Beach 400 in 2007 and will attempt to add the South Carolina 400 to his resume.
The 2022 season was a statement year for Landon Huffman, who ran the full schedule at Hickory Motor Speedway in pursuit of his first track championship. He accomplished his mission thanks to three victories, joining his father Robert Huffman as track champions at one of the Southeast’s most historic venues.
He doesn’t get behind the wheel of a race car as often as he used to, but Dexter Canipe Jr. can still be a contender if the cards fall his way. The son of 1997 NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series national champion Dexter Canipe, the younger Canipe made his mark at Hickory Motor Speedway when he captured the 2016 track championship.
Speaking of Hickory Motor Speedway, two-time track champion Ryan Millington is heading to Florence for the South Carolina 400. The 2017 and 2020 Hickory champion has been riding a wave of momentum recently after winning the Bobby Isaac Memorial, one of Hickory’s marquee late season events that honors the legacy of 1970 NASCAR Cup Series champion Bobby Isaac.
A familiar face at tracks across Virginia, Mark Wertz has been involved in the short-track racing scene for more than two decades. In that time he’s scored five track championships, with his most recent coming in 2020 at Langley Speedway in the modified division.
Race fans may recognize Jason Kitzmiller as an occasional competitor in the ARCA Menards Series, but when he’s not competing on a national stage, he’s racing with the Super Cup Stock Car Series. This year he won six times en route to his first championship with the Super Cup Stock Car Series, momentum he hopes to carry into the South Carolina 400.
Better known by his nickname “Boo Boo,” Ross Dalton is one of the more accomplished drivers on the entry list. He’s scored track championships at a variety of venues around the Southeast, including Ace Speedway, Orange County Speedway and Caraway Speedway. This year alone he’s scored nine victories at eight different race tracks.
Blaise Brinkley makes the trek to Florence after competing regularly at Caraway Speedway in Sophia, North Carolina, the last few seasons. He captured the 2021 Caraway track championship and will look to add a South Carolina 400 trophy to his case.
A familiar name at nearby Anderson Motor Speedway, David Roberts joins the field for the South Carolina 400. Roberts is a multi-time late model stock car track champion at Anderson, something he hopes will give him an edge when the green flag waves at Florence.
Live coverage of the South Carolina 400 at Florence starts at 7:30 p.m. ET Saturday on FloRacing.
Below is the complete 2022 South Carolina 400 entry list.
HICKORY, N.C. — For years, Ray Alfalla dreamed of the day he would make his debut behind the wheel of a race car.
That day arrived Saturday at Hickory Motor Speedway, where the four-time eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series champion competed in the 100-lap Limited Late Model race held during the 25th annual Fall Brawl.
It was a moment years in the making for Alfalla, who traveled from Florida to North Carolina to take part in Saturday’s event.
“It was hard enough just getting up here,” said Alfalla, who was born in Cuba but moved to the United States when he was 6. “We had to go through a tropical storm, flew in, and then had to drive through a tropical storm to the hotel. The whole travel day was hectic enough.
“It’s been a lot to get here, just to get to this race. It still feels surreal.”
The chance for Alfalla to live his dream started a few months ago when he tested a limited late model at Hickory under the guidance of 2022 track champion Landon Huffman and the Jason Smith Racing team.
Ray Alfalla (51) battles Bub Haney (28) during the Limited Late Model feature as part of the Fall Brawl at Hickory Motor Speedway on Nov. 12, 2022. (Photo: Adam Fenwick/NASCAR)
Alfalla said he quickly realized there were some things he needed to improve, including his physical fitness.
“I did a test and figured out I needed to get in better shape,” Alfalla said. “I lost 20 pounds over the summer. I worked a lot on my neck, and it showed [Saturday]. I’m very comfortable physically in the car. Made a few adjustments to the steering wheel and the seating position from the last time.
“After the test, it was just about getting funding together and finding a race to do.”
The funding came from iRacing, the Virtual Racing School and Interstate Batteries. After a few false starts, Alfalla settled on the Fall Brawl and Hickory as the time and place to make his racing debut.
In order to prepare for Saturday’s race, Alfalla did what came natural by turning laps at Hickory on iRacing. The 0.363-mile asphalt oval was added to the iRacing service last year.
“Obviously I know the track perfectly; I have no issues with that,” Alfalla said. “I got out there in a practice session with a bunch of cars, and I felt comfortable. It was my first time ever with a bunch of other cars, and it didn’t feel any different than I would expect. I feel as comfortable as I think you can feel getting into a car for the first time.
“I’m really just focused on finding speed and not making any mistakes. iRacing has really helped flatten that learning curve a lot.”
Ray Alfalla during practice for the Fall Brawl at Hickory Motor Speedway on Nov. 12, 2022. (Adam Fenwick/NASCAR)
Entering race day, the 33-year-old said his biggest concern had nothing to do with his on-track ability. Instead, he was more concerned about how to navigate pit road or how to get in the race car.
These are all factors with which the iRacer had never dealt.
“I was almost more concerned with the logistics of where to go and what to do,” Alfalla said. “Where to maneuver on pit road and getting in and out of the car, all that stuff. Obviously on iRacing you just sit on the sim and you just drive. You don’t have to deal with everything else.”
Alfalla qualified 17th for the 100-lap race, roughly half a second off the pole speed of eventual race winner Michael Bumgarner. During the race, Aflalla battled mechanical gremlins and ultimately retired from the event early, registering an 18th-place finish following a fuel pump failure.
P18 in the Fall Brawl. Fuel pump failure ended our race, but overall an amazing experience! Learned a ton and showed some good pace. Thank you iRacing, VRS, and Interstate Batteries for making this happen, as well as my friends and family for their support. We’ll be back 🤙 pic.twitter.com/9dJbZnNRYR
While it wasn’t the type of debut for which Alfalla hoped, he was still grateful for the opportunity and is working toward adding more races to his schedule in 2023 in his home state of Florida.
“I’ve always been a big believer in sim racers,” Alfalla said. “There are a lot of drivers who are really good on iRacing but don’t have the funds to go race in real life. Now we’re seeing more and more of it. I’m happy to be another one of those.
“Thanks to NASCAR and iRacing for putting sim racers on the map and putting eNASCAR on the map and helping us really showcase that we can do this. The simulation is close enough to real life that guys get into a real car and they can get up to speed fairly quickly.”
More than 50 late model stock teams have filed entries for the 200-lap feature set to take place Nov. 19, with NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr. headlining a talented group of competitors that includes Florence track regulars, young prospects and veterans with decades of experience.
Interest in the race has never been an issue for Florence general manager Steve Zacharias, who grew accustomed to dealing with massive late model stock fields in November back when the event took place at the now-defunct Myrtle Beach Speedway.
Although he considers the closure of Myrtle Beach a huge loss for short track racing, Zacharias could not be happier with how the South Carolina 400 has prospered at Florence over the last two years.
“This is the third time we’ve run this race at Florence, but I consider it the 30th overall,” Zacharias said. “With Myrtle Beach falling, we were fortunate to continue the tradition of the 400 at Florence. Otherwise it would have just gone away.
“I’m excited to still be a part of it, and we’re very excited about everything taking place this year.”
For more than 30 years, many of the best short track drivers have flocked to South Carolina in November to participate in what was then known as the Myrtle Beach 400, which formally began in 1993 as the NASCAR All Pro Series season finale.
The half-mile facility tested competitors on both strategy and patience for 400 laps before changes to race-day procedures cut the distance down to 250 laps. As the surface gradually aged over the years, tire conservation became a more pressing issue and forced drivers to race at a reduced pace during the opening laps, which often resulted in pack racing.
No one mastered the grueling nature of the Myrtle Beach 400 like Frank Deiny Jr., who won the prestigious event four times, including a three-year win streak from 2003-05. Other notable names that visited Victory Lane in the Myrtle Beach 400 include Josh Berry, Chad McCumbee, Timothy Peters, Scott Riggs, Christian Eckes and Lee Pulliam.
The South Carolina 400 took place at Myrtle Beach Speedway for 26 years. Frank Deiny Jr. holds the most wins in the race with four. (Photo: Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)
When Will Burns took the checkered flag in a curfew-shortened Myrtle Beach 400 in 2019, Zacharias had every reason to believe the year-end tradition would continue despite ongoing challenges that included dealing with a neighborhood that had sprung up behind the track.
That mindset changed in January of 2020, when track owner Bob Lutz informed Zacharias he would be selling Myrtle Beach to make room for more land development, citing financial issues as the reason behind his decision.
For Sam Yarbrough, a six-time Myrtle Beach champion who won the 400 in 2007, he knew the track was on borrowed time despite the efforts of Lutz and Zacharias. But the foresight did not minimize the impact of the facility’s demise.
“Living in the area, seeing all the development and the car counts go down over the years, it was only a matter of time,” Yarbrough said. “I wasn’t shocked, but I was disappointed that we lost a really good race track where you could race and come up with great strategies. We all saw the writing on the wall, so none of us were shocked when it happened.”
With Myrtle Beach’s final race scheduled for Aug. 15, 2020, Zacharias knew he had to act quick to ensure the track’s employees and its competitors had a place to race before the last checkered flag was displayed.
Salvation came just a month before the finale when Zacharias and long-time Florence owner Charlie Powell came to terms on an agreement that would see Myrtle Beach’s staff take over day-to-day operations at Florence. They would also continue Myrtle Beach’s crown jewel event as the rebranded South Carolina 400.
The timing of the agreement could not have been more perfect for Zacharias.
“Things work out in mysterious ways,” Zacharias said. “Myrtle Beach falls in 2020, and Charlie [Powell] and I sign our deal on July 6. Charlie then unfortunately passes away on Aug. 1, so if I didn’t work something out with him prior to Myrtle Beach closing, two tracks in this area could have gone away at the exact same time.”
Steve Zacharias took over as the general manager at Florence Motor Speedway shortly before long-time owner Charlie Powell passed away. (Photo:NASCAR)
As Zacharias prepares to wrap up his second full year at Florence, he believes everyone from Myrtle Beach has seamlessly transitioned into their new environment.
Along with being easier to manage from a logistical standpoint, Zacharias added that Florence produces high-quality racing. The track shares many similarities with Myrtle Beach, particularly the abrasive surface, but Zacharias said the progressive banking at Florence enables drivers to consistently run multiple lanes.
Yarbrough, who never turned a lap at Florence prior to Myrtle Beach’s closure, was one of the first to get acclimated to competing at Florence on a regular basis. After winning the last race at Myrtle Beach, Yarbrough won the first late model stock event at Florence under Zacharias’ management on Sept. 4, 2020.
Like Myrtle Beach, Yarbrough compares races at Florence to a chess match when it comes to tire conservation. He expects that trend to continue as Florence’s surface keeps aging, especially with a race as long as the South Carolina 400.
“The track surface is pretty similar,” Yarbrough said. “It’s not quite as abrasive as Myrtle Beach, but it’s getting pretty close. You have to take the same approach at both tracks by being conscious of tire wear and always thinking about the next three steps. As different as [Florence] is with no back wall and a smaller infield, this track races very similar to Myrtle Beach.”
As the only past winner currently entered in the South Carolina 400, Yarbrough is confident he can hold his own against the stacked field and come away as the first driver to win the prestigious race at both Myrtle Beach and Florence.
Yarbrough wants to see Florence flourish as a focal point for asphalt short-track competitors in South Carolina, adding that bringing in Earnhardt for the state’s most prestigious grassroots event is an ideal way to bring more positive attention to the track.
While many challenges face Florence in both the short and long term, Yarbrough believes Zacharias’ ability to appeal to both fans and competitors will be crucial in making the track thrive in the 2020s and beyond.
“Steve has a good rapport with a lot of racers,” Yarbrough said. “As long as he keeps treating people the way he’s been treating them by doing everything he can to provide an affordable place to race, I really think he’ll have a chance to make something good [at Florence] in the long run.”
A stacked field of competitors will descend onto Florence Motor Speedway as it hosts the South Carolina 400 for the third time. (Photo:NASCAR)
Zacharias envisions Yarbrough being one of the favorites to win the South Carolina 400 alongside other regulars like Matt Cox and 2022 Florence champion Kade Brown, though he believes JR Motorsports will set the benchmark with Earnhardt and Carson Kvapil.
Despite this, Zacharias does not see a single driver on the massive entry list that is not capable of contending for the South Carolina 400. He’s confident fans who either attend or tune into the event on FloRacing will be in for one of the best short-track races of the year.
Zacharias is taking all the buildup to the South Carolina 400 as a sign that Florence has a bright future in a constantly evolving industry.
“I’m fighting the good fight right now trying to keep this place going,” Zacharias said. “The support of my drivers and the fans all year long is what keeps us going. My wife loves it, my kids love it and my parents love it, so it’s going to take a lot to get [Florence] out of my hands.
“I’ll keep fighting to make this place work.”
The past few years have tested the resolve of Zacharias and his staff in multiple ways, yet their commitment has remained sturdy as they put the finishing touches on a highly anticipated South Carolina 400 race weekend.
It was months ago when the dual personnel shake-ups that altered Richard Childress Racing’s direction for 2023 came to light. Tyler Reddick’s momentous decision to join 23XI Racing was revealed in July. Kyle Busch’s blockbuster shift from Joe Gibbs Racing to RCR came almost exactly two months later in September.
Now, with the curtain closed on the NASCAR Cup Series season, those transitions are starting to take hold at Childress’ shop in Welcome, N.C. It’s a new sense of rejuvenation for the organization, which gained momentum with four Cup Series wins this year – three for Reddick and one with Austin Dillon – and has a renewed energy with the arrival of Busch, one of the sport’s biggest stars and a 60-time winner at NASCAR’s top level.
“He is already wearing everybody out about, ‘hey, we’ve got to be ready to go,’ ” Dillon said during the season-ending race weekend at Phoenix Raceway. “So that fire is definitely there, and that’s what you want to see.”
Dillon enters his 10th season as a Cup Series regular with a transition in teammates. Reddick had been Dillon’s partner in the No. 8 Chevrolet the last three seasons. In 2021, Reddick edged out Dillon for the final spot in the Cup Series Playoffs; this year, Reddick provided a definitive aerodynamic push that helped Dillon to victory in the regular-season finale at Daytona International Speedway, ensuring both RCR cars would make the postseason cut.
Though Reddick’s move caused some initial acrimony with Childress, the 26-year-old driver’s commitment to winning even as his term was drawing to a close helped to soothe some of the bitterness. On the eve of their last race together, Dillon spoke with appreciation for Reddick’s efforts, both personally and professionally.
“For me, it’s one of the best things that could’ve happened,” Dillon said. “I mean, he was a great teammate throughout, brought speed instantly, a new mentality to the track for RCR. I feel like it was big. He’s just got a lot of good things that came with having him as a teammate. We worked well together. Obviously, this year, I think any time on the track, we had each other’s back and we pushed each other to be better. So yeah, he was a great part of our organization for the time he’s been here, and we’ve got a good friendship and hopefully he has a good career ahead of him where he’s going, and I’m happy for him.”
RCR now charts a new course with Dillon alongside Busch, who jumps on board after a successful 15-year tenure with Joe Gibbs Racing and Toyota. He’ll be driving a Chevrolet for the first time since 2004-07, his stint with Hendrick Motorsports.
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images
Busch has already been involved on a preliminary level, visiting the shop and encouraging Dillon to log more simulator time to validate his on-track performance.
“We’ve already started a little bit,” Busch said post-race at Phoenix. “My duties say JGR and Toyota — one of them continues through the (awards) banquet, the other one continues through December 31. So we’ll see what happens in the month of December.”
The more casual initiation may come sooner than later. Dillon says he received a text from Busch expressing an interest in a hunting trip – a pastime long associated with the Childress family, but perhaps not with Busch, who said he’d likely need to renew his license.
“I had one once upon a time. I’ve been before. Don’t let things completely shock you,” Busch said with a grin. “Actually, (crew chief) Jason Ratcliff and I, when we were really close and racing for a championship in ’09, him and I went together. So it was fun. I’ve done it before, I’d enjoy doing it again. I’ve just never really I guess had any invites to go.”
Those opportunities might be more frequent as the two new teammates get to know each other better in the offseason. The team in general will be getting more acquainted, with new driver-crew chief pairings introduced for both cars.
Randall Burnett, atop the pit box for Reddick’s three wins this year, will remain with the No. 8 Chevrolet team to partner with Busch next season. Dillon will work hand-in-hand with veteran Keith Rodden, who replaces the outgoing Justin Alexander and returns to a regular crew chief role for the first time since 2017.
Rodden remained with Hendrick Motorsports as a project manager after stepping off the pit box. This year, he’s served as executive general manager for General Motors’ motorsports competition NASCAR strategy group, where he worked on developing Chevrolet’s approach to maximizing track time with the Next Gen racer that debuted this past season. Rodden also served as crew chief and project lead for Chevy’s wheel-force testing program, where he first clicked with Dillon at a two-day test at Richmond Raceway last offseason.
“He’s a racer, and you want that, and he’s fired up. He’s wanting to be here every Sunday and give it his all,” Dillon said. “So I think we’re building. We’ve got a good team already, nothing’s really changed on that front. Just some small minor tweaks. So he just kind of gets to come in there and take what he’s learned from the war room at Chevy this year, and doing the wheel-force testing and kind of the bird’s-eye view from all the Chevy teams and their approach and try and put — in his mind — what the best setup for me is each and every week.”
Dillon will also likely benefit from insight from Busch, whose diligence and devotion to studying and improving his craft has long ranked among the sport’s elite. It also doesn’t hurt matters that when Busch is fitted for his new RCR fire suit, his uniform will say “Champion 2X” beneath the Cup Series logo below his right shoulder.
“I think, as a sports fan, there’s no champion out there that doesn’t give maximum effort to all parts of the game,” Dillon says. “You know, there’s some very talented people that do pretty well, but they’re not always a champion. Kyle created himself to be a two-time Cup champion, I feel like, so the commitment he has to this sport is unmatched. When you’re a champion, it’s unmatched. So I feel like knowing that going in, you just can’t put an amount on that that it brings to our organization. It’s going to step everybody’s game up.”
Editor’s note: Tune in live or set your DVRs for the final episode tonight at 11 ET on USA Network. The previous 10 episodes are currently available for streaming on Peacock.
The final Season 1 episode of USA Network’s unscripted series “Race for the Championship” airs tonight at 11 ET, and it provides an exclusive behind-the-scenes look at the Championship 4 race at Phoenix Raceway with some additional moments from the Round of 8 finale at Martinsville Speedway.
The episode will then be expanded with even more exclusive footage the following day when it hits Peacock for streaming.
The “Race for the Championship” docuseries debuted Sept. 1 with an episode dedicated to the beginning of the NASCAR season. As the series and season have both evolved, it caught up to real-time with the episode right before the season finale at Phoenix.
NBC Universal previously announced that the entire season of “Race for the Championship” is now available on Peacock.
So after watching tonight’s episode, be sure to stream previous episodes or any you may have missed on Peacock.
Nestled in the small town of Timmonsville, South Carolina lies one of NASCAR’s most unique short tracks in Florence Motor Speedway, home of the prestigious South Carolina 400.
Constructed in 1982 as a dirt track before being paved in 1988, Florence has seen plenty of talented drivers visit Victory Lane throughout its proud history. That list includes Joe and John Hunter Nemechek, along with Matt Hirschman, Robert Huffman and Dave Mader III, among others.
Since 2020, Florence’s most prestigious race has been the South Carolina 400 held every November in honor of former track owner Charlie Powell. The event serves as a spiritual successor to the Myrtle Beach 400, which took place at the now-defunct Myrtle Beach Speedway from 1993 through 2019.
The South Carolina 400 has challenged the best late model stock drivers during its brief existence. Along with an abrasive surface that will put a heavy emphasis on tire conservation, Florence has no walls on the backstretch or in the turns. One mistake could send a driver into a massive run-off area that extends into the adjacent forest.
Now in its third year, the South Carolina 400 has quickly become one of the proudest end-of-year traditions in late model stock racing, with more history set to be added when the green flag flies on Nov. 19.
Below is everything you need to know about the South Carolina 400 at Florence Motor Speedway.
Florence Motor Speedway (Photo: William Chilton/NASCAR)
What TV Channel is the 2022 South Carolina 400 on?
All the on-track action for the South Carolina 400 can be viewed live on FloRacing, the official streaming home for all NASCAR Roots properties.
The event will not be shown on a television network.
Below is the complete schedule for FloRacing’s coverage of the South Carolina 400.
A full weekend of racing is in store for the South Carolina 400, with practice starting Thursday, Nov. 17. That will lead into the feature events on Friday, Nov. 18 and Saturday, Nov. 19.
Five different divisions will be in action over the weekend at Florence. Limited Late Models, Street Stocks and Mini Stocks are set to race on Friday, and the 200-lap Late Model Stock event will be preceded on Saturday by Bandolero, Legend and Super Truck features.
With a big field of cars expected for the Late Model Stock race, the top 20 in group qualifying Saturday will be locked into the main event. Two separate rounds come afterwards, in which the top 10 from each session will round out the 40-car grid.
Below is the complete schedule for all of the weekend action at Florence Motor Speedway (all times ET).
Thursday, Nov. 17
Time
Event
11 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Pit Gates Open/Park Trailers
2 – 5 p.m.
Rotating practice between Late Model Stocks and Limited Late Models
Friday, Nov. 18
Time
Event
10 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Late Model Stock Practice
2:05 – 3:50 p.m.
Support Division Practice
4 – 4:25 p.m.
Support Division Driver’s Meeting
4:35 – 5 p.m.
Limited Late Model Group Qualifying
5:30 – 6 p.m.
Mini Stock Feature (50 laps or 30 minutes)
6 – 6:30 p.m.
Street Stock Feature (50 laps or 30 minutes)
6:30 p.m.
Limited Late Model Feature (100 laps or 1 hour)
Saturday, Nov. 19
Time
Event
8:30 a.m.
Driver’s Meeting
9 a.m. – 3:35 p.m.
Rotating Practice between Late Model Stocks, Legends, Super Trucks and Bandoleros
4:10 – 4:45 p.m.
Late Model Stock Group Qualifying (Top 20 advance)
4:55 – 5:05 p.m.
2nd Round of Late Model Stock Qualifying (Top 10 advance)
5:10 – 5:20 p.m.
3rd Round of Late Model Stock Qualifying (Top 10 advance)
5:30 – 5:50 p.m.
Bandolero Feature (30 laps or 20 minutes)
6 – 6:20 p.m.
Legends Feature (40 laps or 20 minutes)
6:30 – 7: 15 p.m.
Super Truck Feature (75 laps or 45 minutes)
7:30 p.m.
Late Model Stock Driver Introductions
7:45 p.m.
South Carolina 400 (200 laps)
Entry list
Entries continue to pile in for the South Carolina 400, and every driver who enters will be looking to join Ty Majeski as a winner of the prestigious event.
Headlining the early entrants is NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr. A two-time Daytona 500 champion, Earnhardt developed his skills at tracks like Florence during the 1990s and is set to return to his roots by running the South Carolina 400 for the first time in his long career.
Earnhardt’s car will be one of two Late Model Stocks fielded by JR Motorsports in the South Carolina 400, with the other being piloted by Carson Kvapil. The son of 2003 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series champion Travis Kvapil will be behind the wheel of a JR Motorsports car as he looks to continue a stellar season in late model stock competition.
Joining Earnhardt, Jr. and Kvapil on the preliminary entry list is three-time Langley Speedway track champion Brenden Queen, who will drive a car fielded by four-time NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series champion Lee Pulliam. Queen and Pulliam recently announced plans to contest the entire 2023 season together.
Denver, North Carolina native Kade Brown is also set to compete in the South Carolina 400. The 16-year-old just wrapped up a stellar season at Florence that saw him win the track championship.
More entries are expected for the South Carolina 400 over the next few weeks. Below is the current entry list for the race.
Car No.
Driver
Hometown
Owner
00
Bobbie Tumbleston III
Cameron, SC
N/A
02
Justin Milliken
Shallote, NC
Milliken Racing
03
Brenden ‘Butterbean’ Queen
Chesapeake, VA
Lee Pulliam Performance
07
Averitt Lucas
Manning, SC
Lucas Racing
09
Riley Gentry
Easley, SC
Riley Gentry Racing
0
Landon Pembelton
Amelia, VA
Landon Pembelton Racing
1
Trent Barnes
Forest Hill, MD
Barnes Racing
1
Andrew Grady
Youngsville, NC
Mike Darne Racing
1
Jamie York
Reidsville, NC
N/A
2
Brandon Pierce
Oak Ridge, NC
Lee Pulliam Performance
3
Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Mooresville, NC
JR Motorsports
4
Adam Resnick
Surf City, NC
Yeoman Racing
5
Bryant Barnhill
Conway, SC
Barnhill Motorsports
5
Dexter Canipe Jr.
Conover, NC
3D Motorsports
5
Casey Kelley
Hartsville, SC
Kelley Racing
7
Jason Kitzmiller
Claremont, NC
3D Motorsports
7
Tristan McKee
Williamsburg, VA
International Trading Racing
8
Carson Kvapil
Mooresville, NC
JR Motorsports
9
Ashton Higgins
Weaverville, NC
ALH Motorsports
10
Kaden Honeycutt
Troutman, NC
R&S Race Cars
11
Blaise Brinkley
Sanford, NC
Brad Brinkley Racing
13
Bobby June
Darlington, SC
June Motorsports
15
Ryan Millington
Statesville, NC
Leisure Tyme Racing Team
16
Kade Brown
Denver, NC
AK Performance
18
Anthony Adams
Simpsonville, SC
Adams Racing
18
David Roberts
Simpsonsville, SC
N/A
19
Kyle Wood
Moseley, VA
Ramco Motorsports
21
Tim Allensworth
Bladenboro, NC
Allensworth Racing
21
Matt Linker
Mt. Pleasant, NC
AK Performance
21
Jimmy Wallace
Lexington, NC
Tutterow Racing
28
Ryan Glenski
Mooresville, NC
RG Racing
32
Zack Miracle
Indian Trail, NC
Miracle Motorsports
41
Whitney Meggs
Riegelwood, NC
Hawk McCall Motorsports
44
Conner Jones
Fredericksburg, VA
R&S Race Cars
44
Justin Whitaker
Burlington, NC
Be Aggressive Racing
47
Ryley Music
Norfolk, VA
Ryley Music Racing
50
‘Boo Boo’ Dalton
Greensboro, NC
Ross Dalton Racing
51
Matt Cox
Longs, SC
McCumbee Elliott Racing
52
Jordan Stillwell
Kannapolis, NC
Stillwell Racing
54
Matt Craig
Concord, NC
R&S Race Cars
55
Isabella Robusto
Mooresville, NC
Lee Faulk Racing
55
Mark Wertz
Chesapeake, VA
Mark Wertz Racing
59
Heath Causey
Snow Camp, NC
N/A
60
R.A. Brown
Chapin, SC
Brown Racing
61
Justin Hicks
Thomasville, NC
Hicks Motorsports, MDR
63
Chris Throckmorton
Myrtle Beach, SC
Throckstar Motorsports
70
Jeremy McDowell
Conway, SC
Ricks-McDowell Racing
71
Katie Hettinger
Conniver, NC
Matt Piercy Racing
75
Landon Huffman
Claremont, NC
Jason Smith Racing
77
Mason Diaz
Vale, NC
Chad Bryant Racing
88
Doug Barnes Jr.
Forest Hill, MD
Barnes Racing
94
Jamie Weatherford
Darlington, SC
JWR
95
Jacob Heafner
Dallas, NC
Carroll Speedshop
95
Sam Yarbrough
Myrtle Beach, SC
McCumbee Elliott Racing
98
Cody Kelley
Hartsville, SC
AK Performance
99
Austin Somero
Landrum, SC
Somero Motorsports
170
Dylan ‘Mamba’ Smith
Huntersville, NC
Lee Faulk Racing
T2
Travis Truett
Conway, SC
Truett Racing
Late model racing at Florence Motor Speedway (Photo: William CHilton/NASCAR)
South Carolina 400 race format
The 200-lap South Carolina 400 will be divided into three stages.
Each of the first two stages will run 75 laps, and a 50-lap shootout will determine the winner of the event. The final stage is named in honor of former Myrtle Beach competitor Terry Evans, who tragically passed away from injuries sustained in a car accident in 2017.
Additional information surrounding the total purse and payouts for each stage in the South Carolina 400 will be announced in the coming weeks.
Cars in action during the South Carolina 400 at Florence Motor Speedway on Nov. 21, 2021. (Photo: William Chilton/NASCAR)
South Carolina 400/Myrtle Beach 400 list of winners
For 26 years, late model stock competitors across the southeast had the Myrtle Beach 400 circled on their calendar.
The driver who found the most success during that timeframe was Frank Deiny Jr. He tallied three consecutive Myrtle Beach 400 victories from 2003-05 before adding one more checkered flag in the prestigious race back in 2010, which he accomplished by passing Steve Grissom’s son Kyle Grissom with 20 laps remaining.
Other notable drivers who have scored a Myrtle Beach 400 victory include current NASCAR Xfinity Series championship contender Josh Berry, Christian Eckes, Myatt Snider, Timothy Peters and Scott Riggs. Will Burns claimed the final Myrtle Beach 400 in 2019.
Since becoming the South Carolina 400 at Florence, no driver has been able to match the pace of Ty Majeski. His win in 2020 came in his first late model stock appearance, and the 2021 race saw Majeski grind his way to a victory after starting 32nd.
Although the Myrtle Beach 400 no longer exists, the tradition that started back in 1993 remains alive and well, as an even mix of veterans and newcomers are set to descend upon the track in November for its crown jewel event.
Below is the complete list of winners between the Myrtle Beach 400 and the South Carolina 400.