PHILADELPHIA, Pa. (October 27, 2022) – Comcast is honored to announce the finalists for the 2022 Comcast Community Champion of the Year Award, an annual award created to recognize the philanthropic efforts of individuals within the NASCAR industry. Whether through spreading cheer at children’s hospitals, inspiring those battling cancer, or impacting lives through the world of adoption, the 2022 class of honorees has gone above and beyond in creating positive change throughout the year. For the first time, Comcast opened the eligibility for anyone in the NASCAR community with a 2022 annual credential or NASCAR full season license, with this expansion, Comcast is now able to share these exceptional stories.

The 2022 finalists are:

  • Josh Williams, NASCAR Xfinity Series driver for DGM Racing (Ryan Seacrest Foundation)
  • Sherry Pollex, Longtime Partner of Martin Truex Jr. (Sherry Strong)
  • Jes Ferreira, Senior Director, Live Shows at CSM Production (Foster Village Charlotte)

“We are honored to be able to recognize these three champions within the sport who do so much good for the world each and every day,” said Matt Lederer, Comcast’s vice president of branded partnerships. “Josh, Sherry and Jes have all made a significant impact on their communities in their own unique ways, and Comcast is proud to be able to celebrate their efforts.”

Comcast’s Xfinity brand entered NASCAR as entitlement partner of the NASCAR Xfinity Series in 2015 and is now also Premier Partner of the NASCAR Cup Series. Since then, the company has donated $840,000 to more than 21 different NASCAR-affiliated organizations to honor their efforts and to help further the impact of their worthy causes. Fans can visit ComcastCommunityChampion.com to learn more about past and present finalists and their acts of selflessness.

The 2022 Comcast Community Champion of the Year will be selected by a panel of Comcast and NASCAR executives, as well as Curtis Francois, owner of World Wide Technology Raceway, who received the award in 2021 for his work with The Raceway Gives Foundation, which focuses on STEM education and diversity. The organization seeks to create a larger STEM footprint by bringing an expanded and unique curriculum to area youth. Of note is the foundation’s relationship with the Jackie Joyner-Kersee Center via the “Racing in the Classroom” program that introduces motorsports education and career opportunities to an underserved community for local youth ages 8-18.

“There are so many incredible stories and people within the NASCAR community, it is an honor to be able to be included and recognized as a Comcast Community Champion of the Year Award recipient, thanks to Comcast’s commitment, so many people and organizations will have a long-lasting impact,” said Curtis Francois, who owns and operates World Wide Technology Raceway, and was named the 2021 Community Champion of the Year.

Comcast will award $60,000 to the champion’s affiliated charity, and $30,000 to each of the two remaining finalists’ selected charities. The 2022 Comcast Community Champion will be announced at a reception during NASCAR Champions Week.

2022 Comcast Community Champion of the Year finalists:

Josh Williams (Port Charlotte, FL) — Many would argue that despite his NASCAR resume, Josh Williams – driver of the No. 92 DGM Racing car for the Xfinity Series – has even more impressive accomplishments off the track. Throughout his career, Josh has dedicated his time by visiting over 150 hospitals in person and, recently, even more via Zoom during the pandemic. Through these visits, he’s had the opportunity to meet with countless children, as well as their families, to show his support.

As an extension of these visits, Josh enlisted the help of OhmniLabs to use their Telepresence robots, which provide the opportunity for some of these children to virtually experience at-track garage tours right from their hospital beds. Josh’s efforts have also formed a relationship with the Ryan Seacrest Foundation, which builds closed circuit TV and radio studios in children’s hospitals throughout the country to increase experiences for patients who can’t make the trip out to the track.

To show his support for these children to the world, Josh collects a painted handprint of each child that he visits. For his last race of each NASCAR season, his race car is wrapped with a composite image of each of those children’s handprints, honoring them and the work of children’s hospitals around the world.

Sherry Pollex (Brighton, MI) — After being diagnosed with stage 3c ovarian cancer, Sherry Pollex knew she wanted to help others who would one day be blind-sided by this terrible disease. In 2016, Sherry launched SherryStrong.org, a website created to empower women to know their bodies and recognize the symptoms of ovarian cancer with a focus on healthy living through holistic and integrative medicine. However, the launch of Sherry Strong wasn’t the start of Sherry’s community outreach efforts, rather a continuation of them. Sherry Strong serves as an arm of the Martin Truex Jr. Foundation, a 501(c)(3) organization she developed with her longtime partner Martin in 2007. The foundation was originally formed to help children with cancer. When Sherry received her diagnosis, the mission of the foundation was then refocused to raise awareness, boost advocacy, and generate financial support for underfunded cancer initiatives specific to childhood and ovarian cancers, two of the most prevalent and underfunded diseases affecting children and women in America today.

Through SherryStrong.org, social media channels, and appearances across the country, Sherry has spent years educating women about choices they have for their bodies, integrative and holistic medicine, self-care practices such as yoga, acupuncture, exercise, meditation, supplements and more. Sherry inspires women daily to find joy amidst the trials of life and to not let illness steal their gratitude or peace. Sherry educates women about the symptoms of ovarian cancer and how to advocate for themselves continuously until answers are found.

Jes Ferreira (Nashua, NH) — Among all the turmoil of the pandemic, CSM Production’s Senior Director of Live Shows Jes Ferreira looked for an opportunity to give back. Despite her heavy workload, she decided to take on an even heavier challenge, becoming a foster parent to two young girls, ages 5 and 8. Jes originally earned a foster license to become a foster parent for one child, but a few months later, the child’s younger sibling needed a new foster home. Although Jes already had a crazy work schedule which included traveling to the race track most weekends on top of fostering one child as a single parent, she knew without a doubt these two siblings deserved to be together while in foster care. Now two young siblings who are going through the most trying time in their lives have been reunited thanks to Jes’ unselfishness and big heart.

On any given day, there are nearly 424,000 children in foster care in the United States. In 2019, over 672,000 children spent time in U.S. foster care. On average, children remain in state care for over a year and a half, and five percent of children in foster care have languished there for five or more years. Now Jes has given two of those nearly half a million children a safe home as well as new experiences that will help shape their lives for the better.

Jes’s affiliated charity is Foster Village Charlotte, an organization that allows foster parents to connect with and support each other. FVC collaborates with 16 private foster parent licensing agencies, local government, child welfare organizations and the community to serve families holistically and represent the foster family voice to Mecklenburg County Department of Social Services (DSS).

Comcast has a long track record of community service, aiding in the advancement of local organizations, developing programs and partnerships, mobilizing resources to connect people and inspiring positive and substantive change. To learn more about these efforts, visit the Comcast Community Impact site.

Editor’s note: Tune in live or set your DVRs for Episode 9 tonight at 10 ET on USA Network. The previous eight episodes are currently available for streaming on Peacock.

The ninth episode of USA Network’s unscripted series “Race for the Championship” airs tonight at 10 ET, and it provides an exclusive behind-the-scenes look at the field throughout the three-race Round of 12 — including the ongoing discussions around driver safety as playoff driver Alex Bowman misses races due to concussion-like symptoms following a wreck at Texas Motor Speedway.

The driver of the Hendrick Motorsports No. 48 saw his postseason end when he missed races at both Talladega and Charlotte following a wreck at Texas with a hard rear-end impact — the impact of which saw several drivers speak candidly before an all-drivers meeting with NASCAR executive leadership at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

NASCAR has been experimenting with new rear clip designs in order to reduce the impacts drivers take in crashes, and simulations of how those clips could improve impacts will be shown for the first time in tonight’s episode.

Meanwhile, defending champion Kyle Larson and his dirt-track racing efforts are also spotlighted. Larson, seeking to defend his 2021 championship, is one of the most prolific drivers on the NASCAR circuit and fans get a look at him and his family during a weekday race.

His plight at the Charlotte Roval also gets time on the big screen as he, along with Chase Elliott and Joey Logano, are profiled extensively in Episode 9.

NBC Universal previously announced that the entire season so far of Race for the Championship will be available on Peacock starting Oct. 7. Episodes 7-10 of Race for the Championship will still debut on USA Network before being available on Peacock the next day.

So after watching tonight’s Episode 9, be sure to stream previous episodes or any you may have missed on Peacock.

How to find USA Network | USA Network streaming on the go

David Gilliland Racing has scheduled a news conference Thursday morning at 11 ET, and NASCAR.com will live-stream the event.

TUNE IN: Live stream of the announcement

This morning’s announcement will include special organizational news for the 2023 season, featuring an updated driver lineup and more. You can view the stream on NASCAR.com using the above link or tune in to the NASCAR YouTube channel.

MORE: Silly Season moves, so far

DGR fields three full-time trucks in the Camping World Truck Series (Craftsman for 2023) and routine entries in the ARCA Menards Series.

When it comes to four drivers, Thursday’s Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 at Martinsville Speedway will make or break their 2022 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season.

Jon McKennedy, Ron Silk, Justin Bonsignore and Eric Goodale enter the season finale with a chance to win the championship. Awaiting them are 200 laps around the paperclip-shaped, 0.526-mile oval.

Below, starting with the points leader in McKennedy, we explain how each driver reached this point.

RELATED: Martinsville entry list | Race preview

Jon McKennedy
Jon McKennedy (Photo: Nick Grace/NASCAR)
  • Jon McKennedy: 564 points

A consistent season has McKennedy in position to claim his first Modified Tour championship in just his second full season.

McKennedy has one victory this year, which came at New Hampshire’s Claremont Motorsports Park. He has finished outside the top 10 just twice this season. He has seven top-five and 13 top-10 finishes, with his top-10 total being the best among drivers on the Tour.

McKennedy enters the finale with a six-point advantage over Silk. Should McKennedy win at Martinsville, he’ll secure his first Tour championship regardless of where his rivals finish.

McKennedy has just one previous start in Tour competition at Martinsville, which came last season. He started eighth and finished 11th.

Ron Silk
Ron Silk (Photo: Nick Grace/NASCAR)
  • Ron Silk: 558 points

The most experienced driver in the battle for the championship is Silk, who enters the finale six points out of the points lead.

Despite being winless thus far in 2022, Silk has used his incredible consistency to keep himself in the thick of the title hunt. His eight top-five finishes are more than any other driver this year, and he’s finished outside the top-10 in just three events.

Silk’s best finishes this season have come at Claremont and Virginia’s Langley Speedway; he scored runner-up finishes in both of those races. Silk has also led 232 laps this year, the fourth highest total on the Tour.

Silk has six previous starts at Martinsville dating back to 2006. His best finish at the track came in 2009, when he started second and finished fourth. He finished 21st in the Tour’s return to the track last season.

Justin Bonsignore
Justin Bonsignore (Photo: Nick Grace/NASCAR)
  • Justin Bonsignore: 553 points

An up-and-down season for Bonsignore has left him in the unenviable position of sitting 11 points behind McKennedy entering the Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200.

Bonsignore’s season started as poor as it could have with a last-place finish in the season opener at Florida’s New Smyrna Speedway. He rebounded to win the next race at Richmond Raceway, but he followed that with bad finish in the next race, at New York’s Riverhead Raceway.

Bonsignore made up ground in the points through the summer months thanks largely to victories at Monadnock Speedway, Oswego Speedway and Riverhead. He’s led more laps than any of his title rivals this year with 377, and his four victories are the most for a driver on the Tour in 2022. He’ll need more of that summer magic if he hopes to win his fourth championship in five years.

Bonsignore has made just two previous starts at Martinsville, both of which resulted in top-five finishes. He ran second in 2010 and finished third in the Tour’s return to the track last season.

Eric Goodale
Eric Goodale (Photo: Bryan Bennett/NASCAR)
  • Eric Goodale: 551 points

The driver who needs to make up the most points in the title race Thursday night happens to be the most recent Tour winner at Martinsville.

Goodale enters the finale fourth in the standings, 13 points behind McKennedy, but he has plenty in his favor. He enters this event having won the most recent Tour race thanks to amazing drive at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park on Oct. 8. Last year at Martinsville, Goodale started third and led the final 30 laps on his way to victory, one of his now five Tour wins.

Goodale has four previous Tour starts at Martinsville. Including his victory, making him the only driver of the championship four who has a Martinsville clock, he has three top-10 finishes at the track. He enters the finale with five top-five and 10 top-10 finishes in 2022.

Bobby Labonte set for Modified Tour debut

Bobby Labonte
Bobby Labonte (Photo: Streeter Lecka/Getty Images)

For the first time in his lengthy racing career, Bobby Labonte will run with the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour on Thursday at Martinsville.

Labonte, the 2000 NASCAR Cup Series champion who made his last Cup Series start in 2016, will compete in the Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200 in a Modified fielded by Phil Stefanelli, the owner of PSR Products.

The 58-year-old Texan enjoyed a successful NASCAR career, capturing the NASCAR Xfinity Series championship in 1991 before claiming the Cup Series crown in 2000. He scored 32 NASCAR national series victories during that time, including 21 in the Cup Series with Joe Gibbs Racing.

While effectively retired from competition at the Cup Series level, Labonte has been keeping busy racing Modifieds on the side. He scored a Modified victory at South Carolina’s Dillon Motor Speedway last year.

During his NASCAR career, Labonte competed at Martinsville 42 times at the Cup Series level, earning one victory in 2002. He also has a victory at Martinsville in Xfinity Series competition, which came during the 1992 season, and in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, which came in 2005.

Ryan Newman back for another Modified start at Martinsville

Ryan Newman
Ryan Newman (Photo: Sanjay Suchak/NASCAR)

For the first time since he competed at Richmond Raceway in April, former NASCAR Cup Series competitor Ryan Newman will race with the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour this Thursday.

Newman is no stranger to the Tour; he’s competed in 31 events dating back to 2008. He has four Tour victories to go along with 18 in the NASCAR Cup Series, seven in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, one in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and four in the ARCA Menards Series.

The driver from South Bend, Indiana, will again compete for team owners Hermie Sadler and William Stanley at Martinsville after driving for them at Richmond. He started fourth in that event, led two laps and finished 13th.

While Newman hasn’t won a Modified Tour event since his victory at Bristol Motor Speedway in 2011, that doesn’t mean he’s been winless in a Modified.

Earlier this year, Newman won the first race at the revived North Wilkesboro Speedway, capturing a 50-lap Modified event that also featured drivers like Ryan Preece, Matt Hirschman, the aforementioned Labonte and Jimmy Blewett, among others.

While Newman has never won a Tour race at Martinsville, he does have a Cup Series win at the track in 2012 driving for Stewart-Haas Racing.

Notes:

  • Tommy Baldwin Racing will clinch the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour owner’s championship when the green flag waves Thursday night. The team has won five races with three drivers (Doug Coby, Jimmy Blewett and Mike Christopher Jr.) this season. Blewett will pilot the No. 7 entry for the team at Martinsville.
  • NASCAR Cup Series driver Corey LaJoie will make his second start of the season with the Tour, this time aboard the No. 53 for team owner Mike Curb. Ryan Flores, who works as a tire changer for Team Penske as well as an analyst and podcast host for NASCAR.com, will change tires for LaJoie during the event.
  • Ryan Preece, the 2013 Tour champion, will make his fifth start of the season Thursday at Martinsville. He’ll return to the seat of the Ole Blue No. 3 for the Boehler family, with whom he won his first Tour race at Martinsville in 2008.
  • A total of 36 cars are entered for Thursday’s race, a season-high for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour.
  • Chuck Hossfeld returns to Tour competition after last racing with the series at New York’s Oswego Speedway, where he finished second. In two starts this year, Hossfeld has finished third at Richmond Raceway and second at Oswego.
  • Only four drivers entered in Thursday’s race have victories in Tour competition at Martinsville. They include Jimmy Blewett, Ryan Preece, Bobby Santos III and championship contender Eric Goodale.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Sim racing performed on its grandest stage Tuesday night and delivered an event to remember.

The eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series held its championship finale at the NASCAR Hall of Fame in Charlotte, North Carolina, in front of a crowd that gathered to watch virtual racing on its real-life counterpart’s hallowed ground — with winner Casey Kirwan taking home an astounding $100,000 championship prize.

RELATED: More eNASCAR coverage

There to present the trophy was none other than NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr., iRacing’s executive director and a key sim racing leader who helped design the championship trophy that bears his name to resemble Cup Series trophies of decades past. The moment was a far cry from the 1990s when Earnhardt was racking up high Internet bills while racing online himself before his NASCAR career skyrocketed.

On Tuesday, hors d’oeuvres circulated the main hall as drinks flowed among the spectators while four drivers competed on a stage in front of the championed cars of Richard Petty, Dale Earnhardt, Jeff Gordon and Jimmie Johnson.

A general view of the NASCAR Hall of Fame as championship competitors race for the eNASCAR iRacing championship.
James Thomas | NASCAR Studios

“This is just confirmation and the result of years of trying to be an advocate or an asset to sim racing, and a lot of people working really hard to create something really special,” Earnhardt Jr. told NASCAR.com. “And also, I think we’ve got to be thankful for all the development team, and everybody that creates the software to be able to get it to a point to where [the] NASCAR industry starts to look at it as an asset, starts to look at it as a way to connect to a certain demographic. That’s really what we’re seeing here is the NASCAR industry really embrace it.”

After being welcomed by the Carolina Panthers’ drumline outside the Hall of Fame, fans and spectators encompassed the main corridor of the hall, all in awe of how far iRacing has come. Fans, along with families of the drivers, cheered as Kirwan made the title-winning pass on Bobby Zalenski, bringing an immediate smile to Kirwan’s face though more than 25 laps remained.

TJ Majors, spotter of the No. 6 RFK Racing Ford, entered sim racing on the ground floor along with Earnhardt Jr., the driver he previously spotted for. The enthusiasm for virtual competition felt Tuesday night once seemed unfathomable. Suddenly, it’s tangible.

“Man, where was this 20, 25 years ago?” Majors laughed. “I mean, this is awesome, man. It’s $100 grand to win this championship, so I can’t even — that’s life-changing for one of these kids, man. But it’s great to see it. We’ve got a huge trophy over here now that’s … gonna mean something. It’s pretty awesome looking. It’s like an old Cup trophy. I mean, you got a Hall of Famer here giving the command. And this is a big production. So it’s pretty cool to see it grow to this and to see this many real-world drivers involved and real race teams.”

Anthony Alfredo, driver of the No. 23 Our Motorsports Chevrolet in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, helps run the XSET iRacing team that Kirwan competes for and was in attendance to celebrate as the champion co-owner. Alfredo credits the simulation service for his rapid ascension through the stock-car ranks and was struck by the significance of this championship event.

“It’s definitely huge for not just the sim racing industry as a whole but motorsports because I’m one of actually a few drivers now that made the transition from sim to reality, started their career on a computer,” Alfredo said. “So this is just really cool to see guys racing for a world championship tonight, and to be a part of it on the team side with XSET gaming and Casey Kirwan is huge.”

Rajah Caruth is one of the most recent examples of the sim’s success, jumping on iRacing after seeing William Byron’s rise from iRacer to NASCAR Xfinity Series champion — the same Byron who can clinch a spot in the NASCAR Cup Series Championship 4 on Sunday at Martinsville Speedway (2 p.m. ET, NBC, NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

“I didn’t grow up going to the race track. I was born in Atlanta, raised in DC, away from racing,” Caruth said. “The only reason why I have any sort of driving ability is really due to the sim. So that shows the legitimacy of the platform.”

Also on hand was Aric Almirola, driver of the No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford in the NASCAR Cup Series. Stewart-Haas eSports competitor Steven Wilson was among the Championship 4 contenders in the iRacing Series, and Smithfield, primary sponsor of both Wilson and Almirola, has taken notice of the value iRacing’s platform can provide.

“They understand the value, and they know that they can reach a younger demographic of the NASCAR fan by being involved in iRacing,” Almirola said. “And it’s a great opportunity to stay engaged with our fans and the consumers of their products and reach that younger demographic.”

eNASCAR iRacing championship contenders flank the trophy
James Thomas | NASCAR Studios

Steve Myers, the executive vice president of iRacing, stood gobsmacked at the success of the event as the festivities slowly came to a close, admitting an event like this was something he’d dreamed of exhibiting.

“These guys start getting emotional, their families get emotional and everyone’s crying. Like, I find myself emotional because I know how much work went into it,” Myers said. “Not just them, but everyone put into this. And to see that end result of the champion having that champion moment, there’s no words that I can use to describe that feeling.

“I am immensely proud of what we accomplished tonight, and I think we just got it started. I think this was a huge success. I think absolutely next year, I feel like we have the momentum to make it bigger.”

The sanctioning body and iRacing have worked more closely in recent years on numerous projects, a list that includes mapping the track laid inside the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum as well as the Chicago street course that will debut in reality in 2023.

That partnership continues to grow, and its roots spread to the Hall of Fame on Tuesday night.

“It’s something that, shoot man, 10 years ago, trying to talk to NASCAR people about iRacing, they just couldn’t see the vision,” Earnhardt Jr. said. “So it’s pretty awesome actually to see everybody can’t deny, I guess, the cool factor here and the sheer connection this creates to a younger demographic.”

Ross Chastain turned in another ho-hum finish at Homestead-Miami Speedway on Sunday, landing a second straight runner-up result after a P2 at Las Vegas the week before.

Why ho-hum? Because we’re now living in a world in which the weekly expectation for the No. 1 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet driver, who entered 2022 with three total top fives through his first 115 NASCAR Cup Series starts, is a battle for the win and a finish among the leaders.

The 29-year-old Floridian’s out-in-the-open transformation over the course of a rollercoaster 2022 has been one of the most prominent among a handful of remarkable story lines on display this season. Chastain wasn’t in a whole lot of preseason playoff picks, yet here we are about to set the Championship 4 this Sunday at Martinsville Speedway (2 p.m. ET, NBC, NBC Sports App, MRN, Sirius XM NASCAR Radio) and he’s in the best position to do so of the seven drivers not currently locked in.

It’s the culmination of a lot of deep, ongoing self-analysis and the drive to be better — and then going out and doing it. The Ross Chastain we’re seeing now is not the Ross Chastain that showed up to the LA Coliseum in February, or the one who drew the ire of seemingly half the field over the summer.

He’s leveled up.

“So I mean, (his decision-making improvement is) what I’ve seen in these playoffs. He’s learning when to push and when to chill, and you see it,” Trackhouse co-owner Justin Marks said on pit road after the Dixie Vodka 400, the Round of 8’s middle race. “I mean, he makes his way to the front. And then he’s a threat these last two weeks; he’s been a threat to win both races, obviously. So yeah, that’s just maturity. That’s part of going through the process. He’ll be doing it for a long time. But there’s an absolutely lethal race car driver in there somewhere. It’s just, you know, the experience will bring it out.”

MORE: Chastain’s evolution into Champ 4 contender

Chastain emerged from his home track looking every bit the championship part, battling with rival and fellow title contender Denny Hamlin cleanly toward the end, and for the second week in a row receiving props after the race from a driver he was racing with. After they stopped their cars on pit road, Chastain and P3-finisher AJ Allmendinger shared a hearty handshake just a week after Vegas winner Joey Logano made sure to mention how much fun he had racing the two-time 2022 winner in the closing laps.

Now contrast that with the constant chatter leading up to and during the playoffs about when drivers might potentially issue payback for past run-ins with Chastain. If they still plan to, we haven’t seen any recent evidence of it.

“(Drama) hasn’t really … you know, there’s been no reason to have that conversation for months now,” said Marks, whose Trackhouse organization has won three total races in its second year of existence. “I mean, it was just a moment in time. And, you know, he learned from it and grew from it. And he’s not going to be that type of guy forever. You know what I mean? It’s just part of the learning experience. So, I suspect that the Ross Chastain we’ve seen for the last couple of months is the Ross Chastain we’re gonna see for many years to come.”

Let’s not put the (watermelon) cart before the horse, of course, but if this is the driver we’re going to see for the next decade-plus, in cars that are already this fast coming from an organization with one of the strongest trajectories in the Cup Series … just do the math there. That’s a strong recipe for a shot at double-digit career wins and the potential for multiple championships, the first of which could come in less than two weeks.

There’s always the chance, as we’ve seen with the comers and goers on the leaderboard in the Next Gen’s first year, that other cars in the garage catch up to Chastain and crew chief Phil Surgen and their weekly ways of finding the front. At the same time, however, it feels like this group still has a ways to go before hitting its ceiling, and that momentum could certainly be carried into 2023 and beyond.

daniel suarez and ross chastain look on
Getty Images

“We’re learning more about what he needs in a race car and giving him a race car for his style. And that just comes with everything we’re learning around this new car, but then his relationship with Phil continuing to develop and making sure during the week that they’re really listening to each other,” said Marks. ” … I mean, look, he’s been here for a long time. He’s got a lot of Cup starts. He’s driven a lot of stuff. And he’s just now in a position where he’s sitting in race cars that can win almost every week. So I just think it goes back to him recognizing the opportunity that he’s got, and just trying to maximize that opportunity to the most of his ability.”

For an ambitious organization that’s intent on doing things differently, it begs the question if expansion — beyond Trackhouse’s Project 91 program — could be in the works.

If so, is the “next Ross Chastain” out there?

“I think as the team grows, obviously, as a company, we have to start looking for talent out there,” said the driver-turned-owner. “But I want both these guys (including No. 99 driver Daniel Suárez) in these cars for a long time. So that’s definitely where we’re at right now. And that’ll just be something for way further down the line as we continue to build this company. I think it probably just goes to … is Trackhouse gonna be in a position over the next couple of years to expand to a third team? And, you know, charter acquisition is a tough thing right now, if not impossible at this moment in time. So we’re just committed to our two guys and our two cars.

” … But yeah, I mean, it’s part of the process. I’m excited watching (Ross) go through it. Excited about our opportunity.”

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — NASCAR and FloRacing will continue their unprecedented investment and commitment to grassroots racing, adding $30,000 to the race purse for the Charlie Powell Memorial South Carolina 400 at Florence Motor Speedway on Nov. 18-19. The additional funding from FloRacing – along with added prize money from track and race sponsors – more than doubles the race purse from 2021.

The incremental purse will provide additional prize money to the winner, but the majority of the extra investment will go to the middle and back of the field. The last 20 finishers will receive more than double the purse from last year.

RELATED: Everything to know about the South Carolina 400

The South Carolina 400 was formerly known as the Myrtle Beach 400, a race that took place at Myrtle Beach Speedway. This year is the 30th anniversary of the event. Florence Motor Speedway owner Steve Zacharias formerly served as general manager at Myrtle Beach Speedway. Zacharias purchased Florence after Myrtle Beach closed in 2020 with the goal of making it a premier destination for racers across the country.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. will compete in the event, which also features many of the top drivers in grassroots racing. The South Carolina 400 will air live and exclusive on FloRacing.

“We are extremely grateful for the commitment from NASCAR and FloRacing to make the South Carolina 400 even bigger and better than ever,” Zacharias said. “Florence Motor Speedway is a premier destination for short track racing, and we can’t wait to showcase it to the world on FloRacing and to the fans in attendance on Nov. 18-19.”

Fifty-two cars entered the South Carolina 400 in 2021, and more are expected this year. Past winners at Florence Motor Speedway include Earnhardt Jr., Joe Nemechek, John Hunter Nemechek and Josh Berry.

“Grassroots racing is a huge passion of mine and I’m honored to support the South Carolina 400,” said Earnhardt Jr. “I grew up competing at Florence and have been looking forward to taking the wheel there again against some of the best short-track racers in the world.”

About five years ago, teenager Mady Stichal decided she wanted to try racing.

No one in her family had ever raced before; it was just something she saw that looked like fun, and she wanted to try it.

“My dad, when I first told him I wanted to race, he was like, ‘I don’t know,’” Stichal said. “But he saw how committed I was, and he’s every step of the way looked into it, done so much research for me, found so many set-ups and sat me down, read me books after books, articles after articles. Like, ‘Here, look at this, look at this.’ So he’s definitely someone who helped me throughout the way.”

Not only did Stichal want to try racing, she wanted to try everything in racing. After spending the first few years of her career competing on dirt tracks, this season she added an asphalt track to her resume, competing at Alaska Raceway Park.

Stichal ran in the track’s Late Model class full-time, and she competed in the Bandolero, Asphalt Sprint and Legends classes while also competing at three different dirt tracks on her off weekends.

“It was pretty crazy,” Stichal said of her busy season.

Behind the scenes: Alaska Raceway Park in photos

Mady Stichal
(Photo courtesy of Mady Stichal)

The recent high school graduate finished fifth in the GCI Late Model class at Alaska Raceway Park, a NASCAR-sanctioned 0.333-mile track in Palmer, Alaska. She was the highest finishing rookie in the field.

More than anything, 2022 was a learning season for Stichal.

“It was definitely a challenge. I learned a lot,” she said. “In the very beginning I was kind of skeptical of what to do, because I’ve always been on dirt, and I’ve mainly done sprints, so getting into a bigger car, I was like, ‘What could happen?’

“We figured out a lot with me, because my team was like, ‘We usually like setting up for a tighter car,’ and I was like, ‘OK, let’s try it.’ And it ended up not working for me, and we ended up battling setups until we figured out I’m more into loose cars. So it was pretty interesting to learn that each driver is different when it comes to setups.”

Prior to this season, Stichal, who dreams of one day racing in the World of Outlaws, said she had never considered racing on asphalt. That was until her car owner, Stu, reached out.

“He hit me up and was like, ‘Hey, I’ve been watching you race for some time. I really want to step back, and I really want to get a younger driver into the car. Would you be interested?’

“I thought about it and said, ‘This is going to grow my racing career, so why not?’ So I took it.”

In addition to learning how to drive a late model, it took some time for Stichal to adjust week-to-week when going from dirt to asphalt.

She reached her goals in each discipline, getting into the top five among sprint car racers in Alaska while also getting faster every week in a late model.

“It was pretty great for me to be able to jump to all those cars and learn and explore how each car is on this track,” she said. “I was blown away with myself, and I was really proud of my team for getting me back up there. It was awesome.”

Stichal said she’s learned a lot thanks to the help of her family. Even though none of the Stichals have a racing background, while she has learned how to drive, her family has learned with her to help her get better.

“With my whole family, they’re all super supportive,” she said. “They’re all there with me like, ‘Hey check this out, let’s try this set up,’ and I’m like, ‘Yea, let’s try it.’

“It helps me a lot to know that my family is right here by my side. If something goes wrong, if an accident happens or I end up failing or not doing my best, I know that they’re right there still supporting me saying, ‘Hey you have the next race.’”

And there will definitely be a next race. Stichal has talked with her car owner about possibly traveling outside of Alaska to race late models and sprints next season.

She plans to race as many different cars as possible for as long as she can.

“I feel it grounds me to say I can do different things,” she said. “It definitely made me more humble about which car I’m driving.

“I think it’s just the adrenaline rush, for sure, and the speed. Just wanting to be better and be faster every single lap I take for myself.”

Petty GMS Motorsports announced Tuesday that veteran crew chief Luke Lambert will lead the No. 42 Chevrolet team next season, continuing his partnership with driver Noah Gragson into 2023.

Lambert will return to the NASCAR Cup Series after a successful Xfinity Series campaign with Gragson this season on the No. 9 JR Motorsports team. Their pairing has yielded a series-best eight victories this season, including a four-in-a-row win streak that tied a record set by the legendary Sam Ard.

Gragson’s most recent win – last weekend at Homestead-Miami Speedway – clinched a Championship 4 appearance for the Nov. 5 finale.

RELATED: Xfinity Series standings | Martinsville weekend schedule

“I’m looking forward to continuing this journey with Noah,” Lambert said in a Petty GMS team release. “This year has been fun and rewarding, and I’ve enjoyed every minute of it. When I joined JRM, it was because I believed in the organization and knew I’d have the opportunity to compete for race wins and a chance at the championship, and that’s exactly where we are right now. I see the same opportunity with Petty GMS. They’ve shown great growth this season and were able to get the team’s first win. With Dave and Erik, along with what Noah and I bring to the table, I think we’ll continue to see that success and contend for race wins next season.”

The announcement finalizes the Petty GMS driver-crew chief lineup for next year. Gragson and Lambert will race alongside the No. 43 Chevy team, which will return driver Erik Jones and crew chief Dave Elenz in 2023.

“Hiring Luke was the right choice for us when it came to finding a crew chief for Noah,” said Joey Cohen, director of competition and engineering for Petty GMS. “The chemistry and success they have had this year in the Xfinity Series is one that can’t be replicated, and we know with the right resources and tools, that success can carry over to the Cup Series next year. Luke brings a great deal of knowledge from his previous years in the Cup Series and knowledge of Noah. With both Luke and Dave next year, Noah and Erik and the relationships they’ve already built, I know we’re giving them the best chance for success next season and the ability to continue to elevate Petty GMS.”

Tuesday’s move marks the latest in a series of changes for the No. 42 team, which was created when team owners Richard Petty and Maury Gallagher merged operations to launch Petty GMS last offseason. Gragson was tapped Aug. 10 as Ty Dillon’s replacement for 2023, and Chad Norris was named interim crew chief for the No. 42 group on Sept. 13, replacing first-year wrench Jerame Donley for the remainder of the season.

Lambert enters with a wealth of experience, dating back to his start as a race engineer for Richard Childress Racing to his ascent to the crew chief role in 2011. Since then, he’s made 332 Cup Series appearances atop the pit box – a stretch that includes one victory (2017) and a Championship 4 appearance (2014), both with Ryan Newman.

Lambert has been a crew chief for just two full seasons in the Xfinity Series, but those stints have been marked by rampant success. He more than doubled his victory total this year, adding Gragson’s eight triumphs to the four wins he shared with driver Elliott Sadler at RCR in 2012.

The hiring of Lambert means that Petty GMS will have two former crew chiefs for the JRM No. 9 team atop their pit boxes next year. Elenz worked with Gragson from 2019-21, collecting five Xfinity Series victories together and making the Championship 4 field in their final year with the No. 9 group.

Jones and Elenz have clicked this year, winning the Cook Out Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway last month and totaling 13 top-10 finishes so far in 2022.

A season of hard work for drivers at 45 NASCAR-sanctioned shorts tracks across the United States and Canada has culminated in celebrations for numerous track champions.

From Alaska Raceway Park in Palmer, Alaska, to New Smyrna Speedway in New Smyrna Beach, Florida, drivers from all across the continent worked tirelessly toward the goal of becoming NASCAR track champions this season. For a select few, that dream was realized.

They include 2022 NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series national champion Layne Riggs, who captured his first track title at Virginia’s South Boston Speedway this year. Also among the track champions are drivers like Tim Brown, who captured his record-breaking 12th championship at Bowman Gray Stadium in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Dylan Zampa won 11 races in 13 starts at All American Speedway in Roseville, California, and Craig Von Dohren captured his 13th track championship at Grandview Speedway in Bechtelsville, Pennsylvania.

Below is a list of NASCAR-sanctioned division champions from all of the tracks that are part of the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series.

2022 NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series track champions

Adams County Speedway

  • Modified champion: Jesse Dennis
  • Stock Car champion: Brad Derry
  • B Modified champion: Austin Paul
  • Hobby Stock champion: Luke Ramsey
  • Compact champion: Bryan Vannausdle
  • Late Model champion: Zach Zeitner

Alaska Raceway Park

  • Late Model champion: John Klayum
  • Baby Grand champion: Travis Holmes
  • Thunder Stock champion: Keith Jones
  • Bomber Stock champion: Jeremy Copley

All American Speedway

  • Late Model champion: Dylan Zampa
  • Modified champion: Brandon White
  • Super Stock champion: Josh Whitfield
  • F4 champion: Ray Molina

Autodrome Chaudière Vallée-Jonction

  • Late Model champion: Jeff Cote
  • Truck champion: Steve Lavigne
  • Vintage champion: Marco Gilbert
  • Sport Compact Amateur champion: Eric Desponts
  • Legend champion: Hugo Paquet

Autodrome Granby

  • Modified champion: David Hebert
  • Sportsman champion: Samuel Charland
  • Pro Stock champion: Pascal Payeur
  • Sport Compact champion: Jeremie Goyette

Berlin Raceway

  • Super Late Model champion: Evan Shotko
  • Limited Late Model champion: Tim DeVos
  • Sportsman champion: Brian Thome
  • 4 Cylinder champion: Corey Holtzlander

Bethel Motor Speedway

  • Modified champion: Ed Dachenhausen
  • Street Stock champion: Bill Deak Sr.
  • Pro Stock champion: Brandon Decker

Bowman Gray Stadium

  • Modified champion: Tim Brown
  • Sportsman champion: Tommy Neal
  • Street Stock champion: Billy Gregg
  • Stadium Stock champion: A.J. Sanders

Claremont Motorsports Park

  • Modified champion: Trevor Bleau
  • Street Stock champion: Dave Greenslit
  • Late Model Sportsman champion: Ricky Bly
  • Mini Stock champion: Bradon Morrie

Colorado National Speedway

  • Super Late Model champion: Cody Dempster
  • Pro Truck champion: Curtis Heldenbrand
  • Late Model champion: Dan Alamaa
  • Grand American Modified champion: Kyle Clegg
  • Figure 8 champion: Travis Sanders
  • Super Stock champion: Chris Cox
  • Pure Stock champion: Kyle Carrasco

Complexe ICAR

  • Sportsman champion: Stephane Descoste
  • Legend Modified champion: Stephane Caron
  • Sport Compact: Jean-Phillipe Laberge

Coos Bay Speedway

  • Super Late Model champion: Wayne Butler
  • Street Stock champion: Toby McIntyre
  • Sportsman Late Model champion: Ryan Emry
  • Mini Outlaw champion: Bid Van Ioon
  • Hornet champion: Alex Butler
Peyton Sellers celebrates a victory at Dominion Raceway in Woodford, Virginia, on September 17, 2022. (Dinah Mullins/NASCAR)
Peyton Sellers celebrates a victory at Dominion Raceway in Woodford, Virginia, on September 17, 2022. (Dinah Mullins/NASCAR)

Dominion Raceway

  • Late Model Stock champion: Peyton Sellers
  • Modified champion: Mike Rudy
  • Virginia Racer champion: Alex Brock
  • Dominion Stock champion: Richard Powers
  • UCAR champion: Michael Chapman

Eastbound International Speedway

  • Sportsman champion: Jason Groves
  • Hobby Stock champion: Kevin Lane

Edmonton International Raceway

  • Pure Stocks champion: Garry Bushnell
  • Super Stocks champion: Mike Ramm
  • Thunder Cars champion: Andrew Crandall
  • Future Stocks champion: Lucas Belbeck

Elko Speedway

  • Late Model champion: Jacob Goede
  • Thunder Car champion: Conrad Jorgenson
  • Power Stock champion: Nick Oxborough

Evergreen Speedway

  • Pro Late Model champion: Naima Lang
  • Street Stock champion: Mark Hubbard
  • Mini Stock champion: Lane Sundholm
  • Hornet champion: Ryan Hausenfluck
  • Outlaw Figure 8 champion: Ricky Deitz

Florence Motor Speedway

  • Late Model Stock champion: Kade Brown
  • Charger champion: Wayne Locklair
  • Super Truck champion: Cody Kelley
  • Mini Stock champion: Matt Briggs

Grandview Speedway

  • Modified champion: Craig Von Dohren
  • Sportsman champion: Brian Hirthler

Greenville Pickens Speedway

  • Late Model Stock champion: Magnum Tate
  • Super Stock champion: David Rocklein
  • Renegade champion: Michael Mote
  • 4 Cylinder Front Wheel Drive champion: Joshua Thomason
  • Pure Stock champion: Robert Hall
  • Street Stock champion: Drexx Brezeale
Landon Huffman during the Jack Ingram Memorial at North Carolina's Hickory Motor Speedway on June 11, 2022. (Adam Fenwick/NASCAR)
Landon Huffman during the Jack Ingram Memorial at North Carolina’s Hickory Motor Speedway on June 11, 2022. (Photo: Adam Fenwick/NASCAR)

Hickory Motor Speedway

  • Late Model Stock champion: Landon Huffman
  • Street Stock champion: Jon Austin
  • Super Truck champion: Rickie Dennie
  • Renegade champion: Charlie Neill
  • 4 Cylinder champion: Tim Canipe/Brian Mundy (tie)

Hudson Speedway

  • Modified champion: Geoff Rollins
  • Street Stock champion: Chuck Dehney
  • Late Model champion: Cole Littlewood
  • Mini Stock champion: Ricky Fisette
  • Six Shooter champion: Ryan Nelson

I-80 Speedway

  • Super Late Model champion: Kyle Berck
  • Stock Car champion: Brad Derry
  • Sport Mod champion: Matthew Andrews
  • Hobby Stock champion: Ryan Gilland
  • Modified champion: Jacob Hobscheidt
  • Late Model champion: Jacob Brown
  • Sport Compact champion: Adam Smith

Irwindale Speedway

  • Pro Late Model champion: Linny White
  • Spec Late Model champion: Tanner Huddleston
  • Enduro champion: Ian Rotundo
  • Street Stock champion: Jim Vermillion

Jennerstown Speedway

  • Late Model champion: Barry Awtey
  • Modified champion: Tom Golik
  • Pro Stock champion: Jeff Giles
  • Street Stock champion: Greg Burbidge
  • Charger champion: Steve Singo
  • Fast N’ Furious 4’s champion: Johnathan Haburcsak

Kingsport Speedway

  • Late Model Stock champion: Kres VanDyke
  • Sportsman champion: Keith Helton
  • Street Stock champion: Rob Austin
  • Pure 4 champion: Kenny Absher
  • Mod 4 champion: Kevin Canter

LaCrosse Fairgrounds Speedway

  • Late Model champion: Mike Carlson
  • Sportsman champion: Sam Niles
  • Hornet champion: Lester Stanfield
2022 Langley Speedway Late Model Stock Car champion Brenden Queen.
2022 Langley Speedway Late Model Stock Car champion Brenden Queen. (Photo: Langley Speedway)

Langley Speedway

  • Late Model Stock champion: Brenden Queen
  • Modified champion: Matt Carter
  • Limited Late Model champion: Ryley Music
  • Super Street champion: Jimmy Adkins
  • Enduro champion: Stephen Flinn
  • Grand Stock champion: Chris Roberts
  • Super Truck champion: Hunter Waltrip
  • UCAR champion: Christian Keller
  • Pro Six champion: Travis Wall

Lee USA Speedway

  • Pro Stock champion: Brandon Barker
  • Late Model Sportsman: Cole Littlewood
  • Street Stock champion: Milton Duran
  • Six Shooter champion: Adam Knowles
  • Pure Stock champion: Justin Faford

Limaland Motorsports Park

  • Modified champion: Todd Sherman
  • Thunderstocks champion: Gabe Mueller

Madison International Speedway

  • Late Model champion: Zack Riddle
  • MISfitz champion: Ray Hellenbrand
  • Bandits champion Nick Schmidt

Magic Valley Speedway

  • Modified champion: Zach Webster
  • Super Late Model champion: Jeff Hillock
  • Mini Stock champion: Roy Boots Jr.
  • Street Stock champion: Steve Edens Sr.
  • Bomber champion: Robin Finch Sr.
  • Hornet champion: Daniel Beam

Meridian Speedway

  • Modified champion: Neal Latham
  • Pro Late Model champion: Dalton Cristiani
  • Street Stock champion: Taylor Occhipinti
  • Mini Stock champion: Travis Pavlacky
  • Pro 4 champion: Jordan Harris
  • Hornet champion: Dale Bolinger
  • Bomber champion: Blaine Waller

Monadnock Speedway

  • Modified champion: Tyler Leary
  • Street Stock champion: Tim Wenzel
  • Late Model Sportsman champion: Justin Littlewood
  • Mini Stock champion: Gordon Farnum

Motor Mile Speedway

  • Late Model Stock champion: Kyle Dudley
  • Limited Sportsman champion: Karl Budzevski
  • Super Street champion: Hank Turman
  • Mod-4 champion: Kevin Canter

New Smyrna Speedway

  • Super Late Model champion: Brad May
  • Pro Late Model champion: Brad May
  • Modified champion: Wayne Parker
  • Sportsman champion: Ron Whaley
  • Super Stock champion: Justin Spears
  • Bomber A champion: C.J. Creech
  • Bomber B champion: Tony Bromley
  • E-Mod champion: Dylan LeBeau
  • Mod Mini champion: Todd Haught
  • Ground Pounder champion: Art Kunzeman
  • Truck champion: Jeffrey White
  • 602 Tour Modified champion: Bud McIntyre

Riverhead Raceway

  • Modified champion: Kyle Soper
  • Crate Modified champion: Owen Grennan
  • Late Model champion: Shawn Patrick
  • Super Pro Truck champion: Sean Glennon
  • Blunderbust champion: Cody Triola
  • Figure 8 champion: Scott Pedersen

Rockford Speedway

  • Late Model champion: Jacob Gille
  • Sportsman champion: Chad Smith
  • American Short Track champion: Matt Berger
  • Bandit champion: Stephen Hillary
  • Roadrunner champion: Austin Fowler

RPM Speedway

  • Modified champion: Steve Bernier
  • Sportsman champion: William Racine
BRENDA DILBECK
Jared Russell captured the Modified championship at Salina Highbanks Speedway in 2022. (Photo: Brenda Dilbeck/Salina Highbanks Speedway)

Salina Highbanks Speedway

  • Modified champion: Jared Russell
  • B-Mod champion: John Potter
  • Super Stock champion: Logan Brown
  • Pure Stock champion: Jaylen Hardbarger
  • Factory Stock champion: Matt French

Seekonk Speedway

  • Pro Stock champion: Mark Jenison
  • Late Model champion: Mark Jenison
  • Sportsman champion: Craig Pianka
  • Sport Truck champion: Rick Martin

South Boston Speedway

  • Late Model Stock champion: Layne Riggs
  • Limited Sportsman champion: Kyle Barnes
  • Pure Stock champion: Scott Phillips
  • Hornet champion: Jason DeCarlo

The Bullring at Las Vegas

  • Pro Late Model champion: Scott Gafforini
  • Modified champion: Justin Johnson
  • Outlaw Factory Stock champion: Michael Miller
  • Super Stock champion: Justin Johnson

Tucson Speedway

  • Super Late Model champion: Dylan Jones
  • Modified champion: Nick O’Neil
  • Pro Stock champion: Don Geary
  • Thunder Truck champion: David Levitt
  • Hobby Stock champion: Colton Tutt
  • Mini Stock champion: Jim Bates

Wake County Speedway

  • Late Model Stock champion: Clay Jones
  • Charger champion: Michael O’Brien
  • Bomber/Any Car champion: Sammy Pacitti
  • Modified 4-Cylinder champion: Kevin Jefferys
  • Mini Stock champion: Brandon Clements