Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Michigan International Speedway is a home game in a lot of ways for the No. 48 Ally Chevrolet team at Hendrick Motorsports.
The state of Michigan is the home base for manufacturer Chevrolet and the team’s primary sponsor, Ally. If that weren’t enough, crew chief Greg Ives is from Bark River, Michigan, 436 miles from the location of Sunday’s FireKeepers Casino 400 (3 p.m. ET, USA Network, MRN).
“Growing up about 7 hours north of Michigan International Speedway, I’ve been to the race track a few times as a fan,” said Ives, who is in his fifth full season working with driver Alex Bowman. “As a fan there was pressure for my driver, Jeff Gordon, who was my favorite at the time, to get the win.
“I feel the same way now as the crew chief for Alex, our great sponsor Ally and obviously our manufacturer Chevrolet and of course the fans that show up and want to see us do well.”
A strong run couldn’t come at a better for the No. 48 team, Ives and Bowman. The No. 48 team hasn’t finished inside the top 10 since the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway in May, a stretch of eight races.
During that time, Bowman has finished 32nd or worse four times. That includes a 32nd-place finish last weekend on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course.
Ives acknowledged his team’s recent struggles but said despite what the statistics show, the team isn’t lacking for speed. A little luck, on the other hand, would go a long way in helping the team turn things around before the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs begin at Darlington Raceway on Sept. 4.
“Ultimately it comes down to a fast car and I feel like never giving up,” Ives said. “Also making the right changes from practice to the race. I feel like we were able to do that at Indy and put ourselves in position to I think continue to march forward to the front and improve our track position every lap and every time we pitted.
“Unfortunately a flat left-front tire with contact with the 4 car (Kevin Harvick) and then ultimately the 4 car later on, contact kind of took us out of the race. Until then I thought we were executing the race as best we could and overcoming obstacles when they were presented.”
Rather than get down or get frustrated by the lack of performance by the team of late, Ives said it’s more important to look at this situation as a chance to grow and learn how they could be better as a team.
“I feel like this is an opportunity to not only work on relationships between Alex and myself, but put some accountability and responsibility on the guys on the team to continue to improve, step up and know that the Playoffs start in a few weeks, but the trend back upwards starts this week,” Ives said.
A strong run, or perhaps even a victory Sunday at Michigan, would go a long way towards righting the ship for Ives, Bowman and company.
Obviously that kind of performance would serve as a confidence booster for all parties, but it would mean even more given the proximity to the home bases for Ally and Chevrolet.
“There is never any doubt that we can go into each weekend and win a race,” said Ives, who has a NASCAR Xfinity Series victory at Michigan as a crew chief for Regan Smith in 2013. “We may not be a favorite right now and may not be in consideration for the Power Rankings or what you want to talk about, but you can probably ask anybody, ‘Who can be a sleeper this weekend or has potential that hasn’t lived up to their potential in the last few weeks’ and we’ll probably be part of it.
“Ultimately just go out there and execute a race. If we do that we can easily be inside the top 10 and if we qualify well, easily in the top five. All in all, to come out of there with a win, especially for the manufacturer battle, for Ally, who is a big contributor and supporter of our race team and also always there for fans, it would definitely be a big deal.”
After a topsy-turvy blast through another road course, the NASCAR Cup Series heads to Michigan International Speedway for a more traditional oval race this weekend.
The FireKeepers Casino 400 on Sunday (3 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports App, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) marks one of the final four opportunities for drivers to lock their way into the playoffs, and the unknowns of the 2-mile oval might present higher chances for a new winner.
Catch up on everything you need to know ahead of this weekend’s action.
UP TO SPEED
NASCAR Cup Series teams practice on Saturday afternoon (12:35 p.m. ET, NBC Sports App, MRN Radio), with the 37-car field split into Group A and Group B based on NASCAR’s metric formula. Each group will get 15 minutes of practice ahead of qualifying (1:20 p.m. ET, NBC Sports App, MRN Radio).
Qualifying features single-car, single-lap runs for each group. The fastest five in each group will advance to the second round, where those 10 drivers will fight for the Busch Light Pole Award.
— Kevin Harvick is on a 65-race winless streak, the second longest of his career. Twenty-one drivers won since Harvick’s last win.
— The good news for Harvick is that he has won three of the past four races at Michigan and four of the last six. With five total wins at Michigan, Harvick is the active leader in wins at Michigan and has finished inside the top two in an astounding 29% of his 41 Michigan starts.
— The longest top-10 finish streak by a driver this year is six races by Ross Chastain and Chase Elliott.
— The longest active top-10 streak is three races by Bubba Wallace, marking his longest top-10 streak and 23XI Racing’s longest top-10 streak.
— Chase Elliott’s 7.7 average finish at Michigan is the best of all drivers and is nearly 3.5 positions better than any other active driver, despite being winless there.
— Kyle Busch finished outside the top 10 in the last seven races, the longest streak of his full-time Cup career.
— Tyler Reddick won two of the last five races. Richard Childress Racing failed to win in the previous 71 races.
— Both Front Row Motorsports cars finished top 10 at the Indy Road Course. That was the third time the organization had two cars finish top 10 in a race; the other two came in the two Talladega races in 2013.
Source: Racing Insights
GOODYEAR TIRES
After a mid-spring tire test around the 2-mile oval, Goodyear will bring new left- and right-side tires to Michigan for this weekend’s activities.
Team Penske’s Joey Logano, 23XI Racing’s Bubba Wallace and Richard Childress Racing’s Austin Dillon circled the track May 31 and June 1, allowing the tire manufacturer to determine the best compounds for the 400-mile event. Heat will be a factor with temperatures forecast in the mid-80s, providing yet another challenge for Goodyear.
“Excessive and sustained heat is the enemy of a race tire,” said Greg Stucker, Goodyear’s director of racing. “When you have a smooth track surface, like the one at Michigan, tires just don’t wear naturally. Heat gets generated the more a tire is run, but on most tracks that heat gets dissipated as the tread wears. At Michigan, as on other low-wear tracks, we design the tire with an appropriately formulated tread compound and minimal tread gage to help control the heat generation, and enable the tire to run at a more optimal performance level.”
MICHIGAN HISTORY
— Michigan was built in the late 1960s by Michigan land developer Larry LoPatin and his short-lived racing empire American Raceways Inc. (ARI) that grew to include tracks in Michigan, Atlanta, and Texas.
— Michigan, located on more than 1,400 acres, was designed by Charles Moneypenny, who also designed Daytona International Speedway.
— After ARI went bankrupt in 1973 the track was placed in receivership. Roger Penske purchased the facility. Under Penske’s 25-year ownership, seating capacity grew from 25,000 to over 125,000 and many buildings and facilities were added, making MIS one of the premier tracks on the Cup circuit.
— International Speedway Corporation acquired Michigan in 1999.
— The 2012 repave consisted of removing the top two inches of the existing pavement and placing two lifts of asphalt – each 1½ inches thick – as a leveling course and a final wearing course. About 646,000-square feet of asphalt was removed and another 22,000 tons of new asphalt went in its place. Pit road was repaved in 2011. A laser survey of the existing track surface collected approximately 100 million data points, allowing engineers to replicate the original pavement yet smooth out the dips and bumps. Those data points have shown the race track has variable banking in its 18-degree turns.
— In June 2012 after the repave, 19 drivers time-trialed at more than 200 mph. Forty drivers were faster than the previous record.
Source: Racing Insights
BETTING THE HOUSE?
Despite having a combined one win at Michigan International Speedway, Chase Elliott and Kyle Busch enter Sunday’s race as co-favorites at 6-1 odds, according to BetMGM.
Busch scored the duo’s lone victory 11 years ago, leading 60 laps on the way to the 2011 win. But don’t be fooled by the win column — Busch has finished seventh or better in eight of the last nine Michigan races, including each of the last seven. Elliott, on the other hand, remains winless but holds the best average finish of anybody at Michigan at 7.7.
The potential steal of the week is Kevin Harvick, who enters at 22-1 odds. The No. 4 Ford has dominated Michigan in recent years with four wins in the last six Michigan races and 327 laps led in that span.
Want to manage a team and race your way to the top of the leaderboards? Check out NASCAR Fantasy Live, which is open now. The free-to-play game lets you choose your drivers each week and show off your crew-chief instincts by garaging a driver by the end of Stage 3, and there is a $25,000 prize for the winner.
The 2022 Fantasy Live points leaders are Chase Elliott (815), Ryan Blaney (688) and Ross Chastain (681).
Get additional camera views by logging on to NASCAR Drive, where each week a select number of in-car cameras will be available — as well as a battle cam and an overhead look.
NASCAR has partnered with LiveLike to add fan engagement in the NASCAR Mobile App. Log in to the mobile app during the race for polls, quizzes, the cheer meter and more — and see instant results from NASCAR fans like you.
Kevin Harvick arrived at Michigan International Speedway in early June 2020 as a 44-year-old NASCAR betting favorite with nearly 700 career NASCAR Cup Series starts and a loaded resume – highlighted by three wins, including two in his last two starts, and six more second-place finishes since 2013 – at the 2-mile track.
Tyler Reddick arrived at Michigan International Speedway in early June 2020 as a little-known 24-year-old rookie who did win the Xfinity Series’ race (LTi Printing 250) in Michigan 14 months earlier but had a non-existent Cup Series resume at the 2-mile track.
All eyes were on Harvick as he sought one-track dominance, an increasing rarity in the Cup Series. And he exceeded the hype with back-to-back wins in the FireKeepers Casino 400 and Consumers Energy 400. Reddick, meanwhile, was largely irrelevant, finishing 18th and 24th.
Two years later, all eyes are on Reddick in the 2022 Firekeepers Casino 400, while oddsmakers expect Harvick to be largely irrelevant.
One week after his win in the Verizon 200 at the Brickyard at the Indy Road Course – his second win in five races to become the first Richard Childress Racing driver with a multi-win season since 2013 – Reddick is within earshot of the favorites for the FireKeepers Casino 400.
As of Thursday in NASCAR odds at BetMGM, Reddick has the sixth-best race-winner odds (+1000) and, with Kyle Busch atop the board at (+650), his smallest gap behind the favorite all season.
“We just know what we’re capable of, and we did that at Road America,” Reddick said after winning at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. “And if we change nothing, we keep working really, really hard, we find a way back to Victory Lane.”
Despite a vote of confidence from oddsmakers, the public isn’t pounding Reddick at the sportsbook. He has just 3.7% of race-winner tickets, tied with Austin Dillon for the 11th-most, and a modest 5.1% of tickets, narrowly behind Joey Logano for the sixth-highest share.
If Reddick finds a way back to Victory Lane on Sunday, he’ll do so in his fourth career Cup Series start at the track and become the ninth different active driver to win the event, all of whom trail Harvick and his five career wins.
Harvick is buried in an unfamiliar spot for a Michigan race; although he owns Cup Series-highs in career wins (five), top-five finishes (15), top-10 finishes (21), and laps led at the track (699), he’s at +1800. Only Chase Elliott and Chase Briscoe have a better average finish, though they have just 12 combined starts to Harvick’s 41.
The public likes Harvick’s chances in start No. 42. His handle share of 12.7% trails only Kyle Larson (15.2%) for the highest this weekend. If that holds, it’d be one of the highest handle shares for any driver with odds of +1500 or greater this season. Only Austin Cindric (+6600) and Brad Keselowski (+10000) are bigger liabilities for BetMGM.
Oddly, Harvick isn’t a popular pick in featured matchup betting, nor is Reddick. Here’s a look at the four featured matchups for the FireKeepers Casino 400:
Joey Logano (-120) vs. Kevin Harvick (-110)
Joey Logano has been just as good as Kevin Harvick at Michigan. He’s done so in fewer races – 25 to Harvick’s 41 – but has similar rates for wins, top-five finishes, top-10 finishes, and laps led.
Last year’s 33rd-place finish in the FireKeepers Casino 400 was unusual for Logano. In 16 starts from 2013-20, he won three times and had an average finish of 6.6. He had finished worse than 17th only one other time since 2012.
Logano has 80% of the tickets and 95% of the handle to finish ahead of Harvick.
Denny Hamlin (-130) vs. Tyler Reddick (+100)
Hamlin’s “delightfully bizarre” season – as dubbed by Pat DeCola in dropping the two-time Michigan winner (Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400 in both 2010 and 2011) to ninth in this week’s NASCAR Power Rankings – continued with a 14th-place finish at the Brickyard.
Hamlin has just 38% of the tickets in his head-to-head with Reddick, but those tickets account for 95% of the handle.
Ryan Blaney (-115) vs. William Byron (-115)
Ryan Blaney is the defending champion after holding off William Byron last August for his first win in 13 starts at the track, where he had three previous top-five finishes. He’s routinely been in contention but has struggled to capitalize on good starting positions.
He leads active drivers in average starting position (9.4) but also leads active drivers with 10+ starts in worst average start-to-finish drop-off (-5.8) at the 2-mile oval.
It appears the public cares more about last year’s race than the start-to-finish drop-off; Blaney has 94% of the handle (on 67% of the tickets) against Byron.
Daniel Suárez (-125) vs. Bubba Wallace (-105)
Bubba Wallaceis having the best stretch of his Cup Series career – three straight top-10s for the first time – and returns to a track where he won in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. He has, however, struggled for relevancy in Michigan in recent years, posting just one top-10 in eight starts.
While Wallace has a respectable 2.9% race-winner handle share (with +2500 odds), he’s not a popular pick against Daniel Suárez, who owns 74% of the handle (on 60% of the tickets) in featured matchup betting.
You can view updated FireKeepers Casino 400 and more NASCAR betting odds at the BetMGM online sportsbook.
Buddy Arrington, a longtime independent driver with a 25-year career in NASCAR’s top division, has died. He was 84.
Arrington, a native of Martinsville, Virginia, made 560 starts in what is now the NASCAR Cup Series, posting 15 top-five finishes in his career. His best result was third place, achieved twice — in 1965 at Nashville and 1979 at Talladega.
“Buddy Arrington was the epitome of a successful car owner and driver during his era in NASCAR,” Martinsville track president Clay Campbell said in a statement. “As an owner, he knew how to use his resources to compete with the top teams. As a driver, Buddy had all the talent to get the job done, so it was never a surprise to see his red and blue No. 67 Dodge trading paint with some of the best in the sport.
“From a personal perspective, I will always remember him as the first person to give me a ride around Martinsville Speedway when I was a teenager. To this day, it remains one of the most thrilling things I’ve ever done. I will never forget his kindness sharing that experience with me. I think he may have enjoyed it as much as I did and I’m pretty sure he was wearing his signature sunglasses when he did it! That was Buddy.
“He made an impact on the sport that will never be forgotten. My condolences go out to his family during this time.”
RacingOne
Arrington’s third-place Talladega finish represented his closest brush with victory. He qualified fourth and led two laps until a late-race miscue on pit road dropped him from contention. Arrington’s crew left the gas can attached, forcing their driver to pit again and finish two laps down to race winner Bobby Allison.
“We almost won that race at Talladega,” Arrington, who drove a car acquired from Richard Petty that offseason, told the Windsor (Ontario) Star in 1983. “We outran ’em all, every last one of ’em.”
Arrington remained loyal to Chrysler products for the bulk of his racing career, even during times when the automaker was less involved in the sport. Arrington stockpiled Dodge and Chrysler parts, frequently running outdated equipment as a means to save money.
“When I began racing in 1964, I was a mechanic at a Chrysler dealership,” Arrington told Al Pearce in 1985. “It was almost natural that I would begin by racing Plymouths and Dodges since that’s what I knew best. Before I realized it, I had accumulated so much Chrysler equipment and cars that I had to stick with them even though the cars were big and bulky and didn’t run very good.”
Arrington’s career ended in 1988 with a mix of starts with Ford and Chevrolet after his obsolete Chrysler Imperial became ineligible for NASCAR competition in 1985.
Arrington’s ties to NASCAR’s past were not limited to his roots as an independent driver on the circuit. He also had connections to the transport of illegal liquor and was caught by law enforcement in December 1971 with a loaded-down Ford Torino Cobra Jet 429 near his hometown. Arrington posted bond and served no time as a first-time offender.
“To tell the truth, that is probably where racing got its start,” Arrington told the Anniston (Ala.) Star in 1981. “I got caught, paid the price and hung it up. I haven’t touched it since.”
Arrington seemed to take his winless record in stride, saying candidly that he had no doubts he could contend in top-flight equipment.
“It doesn’t affect me in any way,” Arrington told the Anniston paper. “This is just what I do. It’s like a guy working in a factory. He knows he’s never going to be president of the company. It’s just the way things are. And it’s a good living …
“I’ve probably accumulated as nice a shop and equipment as anybody (independent), in the business,” he added. “I’ve done all right for myself, but we’ve worked for it, day and night. And when I say night, I mean all night long. But I would do it all over again. I sure would.”
For the third consecutive week, Kurt Busch was not medically cleared to race, meaning he will miss Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan International Speedway.
Busch released the following statement via social media: “While I am continuing to make improvements every day and can’t wait to get back in the No. 45 Monster Energy Toyota Camry TRD, I have yet to be cleared to return to competition and will not be participating in the NASCAR Cup Series race this weekend at Michigan International Speedway. I know Ty (Gibbs) will continue to do a great job representing 23XI and the No. 45 Monster Energy team this weekend in Michigan. I am working hard to get back to 100% and it’s my hope to be back in the car at Richmond Raceway. Thanks to everyone for the continued support and I look forward to being back on track soon.”
Busch suffered concussion-like symptoms after a qualifying crash on July 23 at Pocono Raceway, resulting in Ty Gibbs filling his role for the 23XI Racing team’s No. 45 entry at Pocono and the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course.
Beginning with Saturday’s practice and qualifying sessions, Gibbs is on tap to drive the No. 45 Toyota again this weekend, looking to build off a pair of top-17 finishes in his first career premier series starts. Sunday’s test at Michigan (3 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports APP, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) will be his first on a traditional oval.
Though Busch will now miss his third race of 2022, he has been granted a waiver to compete for the championship if he qualifies for the 16-driver playoff field. In current playoff standing, he is locked in by virtue of his win in May at Kansas Speedway.
Busch will be evaluated further to determine if he is fit to race in next Sunday’s action at Richmond Raceway.
In just a few years, the Motor Mountain Masters has become one of the most cherished and anticipated events at Jennerstown Speedway.
With a storied history that dates all the way back to the 1920s, Jennerstown track operator Bill Hribar and his staff sought to create an event that honored all the traditions and individuals that have made the facility one of the most prestigious in the Northeast, which led to the inception of the Motor Mountain Masters in 2018.
Not only does the winner of the Motor Mountain Masters receive a $10,000 paycheck, but they also have the privilege of adorning a crimson jacket that is a tribute to the green jacket worn by the champions of The Masters at the Augusta National Golf Club.
The drivers determined to take home a crimson jacket in this year’s Motor Mountain Masters consist of the local track heroes along with a healthy group of outsiders, all of whom are looking to add to the growing history of the event.
Below is everything you need to know about the Motor Mountain Masters at Jennerstown Speedway.
Having existed since the 1920s, Jennerstown Speedway possesses a rich racing culture that now includes the Motor Mountain Masters. (Photo: Nate Smallwood/NASCAR)
What TV Channel is the Motor Mountain Masters at Jennerstown Speedway on?
All the on-track action for the Motor Mountain Masters 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 Motor Mountain Masters.
This year’s Motor Mountain Masters will take place on Saturday, Aug. 6.
Three different divisions encompass the on-track action for the Motor Mountain Masters, which includes features for Jennerstown’s Pro Stock and Modified divisions. Wrapping up the night will be the 150-lap Super Late Model feature.
Below is the complete race-day schedule at Jennerstown Speedway.
Time
Event
9 a.m. ET
Pit gates open
9:30 a.m. ET
Tires and fuel sales begin/Tech lines open/Pill draw for qualifying
11 a.m. ET
First practice session
2:30 p.m. ET
Pill draw closes
3:30 p.m. ET
Driver’s meeting
3:45 p.m. ET
Late Model tires released from impound
5 p.m. ET
Qualifying
5:45 p.m. ET
Opening ceremonies
6 p.m. ET
Racing begins (Heat races followed by A Mains)
Official format for the Motor Mountain Masters
Saturday’s Motor Mountain Masters will be divided into three segments.
At the end of each segment, there will be a competition caution that lasts five minutes and teams will be allowed to make any adjustments to their cars or change tires. Only six tires will be allotted to Super Late Model teams for the Motor Mountain Masters.
Caution laps are not counted during the 150-lap Super Late Model feature. The first driver who is one lap down will receive a free pass during each caution flag except for the competition cautions.
Below is a breakdown of the segments for the Motor Mountain Masters.
Stage No.
Laps
Stage 1
40 laps (five minute competition caution)
Stage 2
50 laps (five minute competition caution)
Stage 3
60 laps
Motor Mountain Masters entry list
The current entry list for the Motor Mountain Masters features 26 cars.
Headlining this group is Super Late Model standout and part-time NASCAR Xfinity Series competitor Derek Griffith. Nobody could touch Griffith in last year’s Motor Mountain Masters, as he led 139 of the 150 laps to claim the crimson jacket for himself.
Griffith will have plenty of strong competition to deal with to defend his win on Saturday evening. One of the heavy-hitters standing in Griffith’s way is current Jennerstown points leader Barry Awtey, a six-time track champion who won the inaugural Motor Mountain Masters in 2018.
Other notable names on the entry list include 2014 ACT Late Model Tour champion Joey Polewarczyk Jr., former NASCAR Camping World Truck Series driver Cale Gale and Eddie MacDonald, who has tallied seven victories in what is now the ARCA Menards Series East.
Below is the complete entry list for Saturday’s Motor Mountain Masters
Car No.
Driver
0
Eldon King
00
Jimmy Renfrew Jr.
08
Nicholas Naugle
2
Dave Whittaker
4
Joey Polewarczyk Jr.
7
Cory Casagrande
10
Kate Re
11
Mike Sweeney
12
Cale Gale
12
Derek Griffith
13
Brandon Marhefka
14
Chris Davidson
15
Mike Hopkins
17
Eddie MacDonald
19
Ethan Myers
22
Evan Shotko
31
Luke Hinkley
32
Brandon Barker
33
Albert Francis
47
Gabe Brown
51
Owen Houpt
75
Barry Awtey
76
Tyler Johnson
92
Jarred Barclay
95
Garry Wiltrout
98
Jimmy Tucker
Derek Griffith is the defending winner of the Motor Mountain Masters at Jennerstown Speedway. (Photo: Jennerstown Speedway)
Motor Mountain Masters history, winners
Each edition of the Motor Mountain Masters has been won by a different driver.
Along with Awtey and Griffith, Todd Stone and Mike Hopkins have both had the privilege of celebrating in Victory Lane at the end of the Motor Mountain Masters, with all four competitors hailing from the Northeast.
Stone is the only past winner not entered in this year’s event, which puts Awtey, Hopkins and Griffith in an ideal but challenging position to become the first repeat champion of the Motor Mountain Masters in the event’s fifth year.
The crimson jacket has a strong chance of staying in the Northeast with 70 percent of the entry list hailing from the region, but the battle for the prestigious trophy is expected to be intense through all 150 laps on Saturday evening.
Below is the complete list of winners in the Motor Mountain Masters.
With four races to go before the NASCAR Cup Series postseason begins at Darlington Raceway (Sept. 4), only two spots remain up for grabs in the playoff standings. Ryan Blaney (+121) and Martin Truex Jr. (+96) occupy those last two spots, but can they find a way to secure their position — or will drivers outside the playoffs currently find Victory Lane to take the spots?
Let’s take a look at the remaining tracks on the Cup regular-season schedule and evaluate which winless drivers have the best chance to win on each.
Analysis: Sure, the Next Gen car has shaken up the hierarchy of the Cup Series but a constant in NASCAR’s premier series has been Harvick’s success at Michigan International Speedway. Entering Sunday’s race (3 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM), he’s won four of the last six races on the 2-mile oval and had a stretch of four-consecutive runner-up finishes in 2013 and 2014. If any winless driver is grabbing the checkered flag at Michigan, it will be Harvick.
Sean Gardner | Getty Images
Richmond: Martin Truex Jr.
Analysis: There was a time when you wouldn’t consider Truex as a race-winning contender on a short track, but since a runner-up finish at Martinsville Speedway in the fall race of 2017, the Joe Gibbs Racing driver has mastered the art of short-track racing in the state of Virginia. At Richmond, Truex is currently on a streak of seven consecutive top fives with three wins in the last six races at the 0.75-mile oval. With the playoff picture as tight as ever, this is going to be the race Truex needs to circle as a must-win.
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images
Watkins Glen: Ryan Blaney
Analysis: While the numbers at Watkins Glen don’t point to Blaney being a favorite, his stretch on road courses this year has surely been an eye-opener. You can dump the 26th-place result at the Indianapolis Road Course last Sunday as Blaney was one of many casualties in Turn 1 and was spun on the overtime restart while running in the top five. He was also able to manage his tires and stayed out front for a big chunk of the race, leading 17 laps. Outside of Indy, Blaney won the pole and finished sixth at Circuit of The Americas, scored a sixth-place finish at Sonoma Raceway and tallied an 11th-place result at Road America, picking up a stage win in the process. Blaney has been one of the most consistent drivers on road courses this season, and Watkins Glen is the place for the Team Penske driver to make sure that all three Penske teams compete for a title.
Chris Graythen | Getty Images
Daytona: Justin Haley
Analysis: Hear me out. As crazy as it would be, are we really going to be surprised if the one-time Cup winner is able to score another stunning victory at Daytona International Speedway? Superspeedways are about surviving until the final lap and that’s what Haley does at the Cup level on these types of tracks. Haley showed his competence and ability to get to the front at superspeedways with all four of his Xfinity Series wins coming at either Daytona or Talladega. With 11 career Cup starts on superspeedways (Atlanta’s reconfiguration included), Haley has only DNF’d once and it came at his first Cup superspeedway race at Talladega in the spring of 2019. He’s also flown under the radar this season with an average finish of 18.5 — better than Chris Buescher (18.8), Brad Keselowski (19.2), Bubba Wallace (19.4) and Denny Hamlin (20.0). With most of the field going “checkers or wreckers” to get into the playoffs, Haley’s likely to be one of the drivers left standing when the checkered flag flies.
It’s 10:30 a.m. and Kyle Busch has already been up for five-plus hours, a few empty cans of Rowdy Energy no doubt already having hit the recycling bin at the Busch household.
Two-month-old Lennix is finally sleeping eight hours through the night, but those 5 a.m. newborn wake-up calls can still sting — especially with the frenzy of last-minute prep and packing before setting off on a midwest swing of 14 days of racing over the next 17 for 7-year-old Brexton’s burgeoning career.
Not to mention squeezing in media responsibilities before hitting the road to talk about his day job of being one of the top NASCAR Cup Series drivers the sport’s ever seen.
It’s a small window into the daily, ever-growing chaos of the Busch family, and they wouldn’t have it any other way.
“So, pre-being a dad was pre-2015. Fortunately for me when I had 2015 happen, that was the injury and then it was also Brexton, right? So I had kind of two things twofold there where I was like, ‘man, OK, I need to really have a different perspective on what all I do,’ ” Busch told NASCAR.com on Tuesday. “Because then it was literally just me and (wife) Samantha and we were literally tackling all of our work. It was literally work, work, work, work all the time, work all the time, and you would feel drained. Like you would literally feel like you would get to September, October and you’re like jeez, when is this season over? Like, can we be done already? And that’s when you’re getting into the prime of the season with the playoffs and stuff like that, you know, so I feel like now as you get older too, right? Like days fly by faster. Now, like I look at the calendar just yesterday, it’s August 1, and it’s like, when did that happen? So you know, it’s good that you can be having fun and living through your days and things like that. And not dreading you know, coming up to the end of the season or whatever you’re actually really like, wow, it’s almost here like, holy cow, it already happened that fast.”
One of NASCAR’s most mercurial, polarizing figures, Busch has often found himself surrounded by a maelstrom of turmoil — this season no different — but it’s evident that he’s found a way to bring calm to the swirling winds around him, and the Las Vegas native is exactly right that things changed in 2015.
From that year on, the two-time Cup champion has picked up both titles and taken 31 of his 60 total premier series trips to Victory Lane. A championship favorite again this year — he’s got the fourth-best odds at 8-1, per BetMGM — Busch also averaged a points finish of 4.0 (i.e. essentially averaging an annual Championship 4 appearance) from 2015-2021.
His first 10 full-time seasons before that saw plenty of success — even seeing an eight-win campaign in his first year with Joe Gibbs Racing in 2008 — but the standings results left some to be desired, averaging a finish outside the top 10 (10.5) in his first decade in Cup.
Part of that, of course, was the experience that came with age and added time behind the wheel and getting enough laps under his belt. The bigger factors seem to have come off the track, however, and adjusting effectively to the growing demands of both the “dad” and “driver” life.
“Yeah, I mean, obviously just diet, nutrition. That’s a big part of it,” Busch said. “Of course, working out, being able to do those sorts of things staying hydrated, all that sort of stuff. That’s just all your preparation for getting into the weekend. So how do you keep going through, week to week to week through the grind? You know, I think some of it relies on being able to open up your mind to other things. All I do is live, breathe, drink, eat sleep racing, right, like even now with my son, it’s all about racing with him. So you have to be able to give your mind a break, though, and have a chance of having an outlet of being able to think about something else. And so when you’re able to do that, you know, that doesn’t tire you out as easy or as quickly as it might be if you are just ingrained in the trenches all the time, every day.
“I think to me, it’s taking your mind off things with your wife, going to dinners or hanging out with friends. Being able to just relax on the couch, watch TV programs that have nothing to do with the stuff that we do, you know, just living a normal life, if you will. I feel like giving yourself more of a balance, more of a perspective to then being able to come back and when you come back, you have a fresh mind, you’re able to go back to your work and attack your work. And, really, take it all in better.”
From the sounds of it, he’ll have plenty of work to attack over the coming weeks between Brexton’s midwest foray, four extremely different tracks to close out the regular season between now and Labor Day and, oh yeah, that whole other thing about negotiating his current expiring contract with JGR and his potential status as the hottest free agent to hit the NASCAR market in perhaps decades.
The first of those tracks comes Sunday at Michigan International Speedway (3 p.m. ET, USA Network, MRN, Sirius XM NASCAR Radio) — a track Busch surprisingly has just one win at that came more than a decade ago. He’s been no slouch there in recent years, though, with nine straight top 10s and laps led in seven of those races.
There are no guarantees, of course, but sharing 6-1 odds to win with co-race favorite Chase Elliott would indicate it marks a good weekend for his first win in the Irish Hills since 2011 and first this year since April’s triumph on dirt nearly four months ago.
“I would like to think so. I mean, we’ve been good there over the last little bit, you know,” said the 37-year-old. “I won there in ’11 and then the track went through the repave. I was terrible on the repave like, I’m just not very good with repaves. But it’s been getting more age on it and it’s been getting a little bit better; widening out is definitely good. And with these cars, they’re gonna like to venture out from being behind somebody else in front of you and getting out of their wake.
” … I feel like for us, Joe Gibbs Racing, our mile-and-a-half-programs have been really strong, the Vegas, the Kansas, the Atlantas, the Charlottes, and I feel like that kind of goes right with Michigan. And so I think we can be good there.”
As with just about every team this year, Busch has seen some ups and downs throughout 2022 as teams scramble to find a firmer grip than their competitors on the handle of the Next Gen car, which debuted in February.
He’s had remarkable stints — averaging a 7.44 finish across the nine-race Richmond to Gateway run — and some … less-than-remarkable ones, with no top 10s and an average finish of 22.7 across the last seven. Given he’s adjusting to the broken sleep inextricably tied to having a newborn in the house while also being deep into the assuredly intense negotiation of his future, his recent results could theoretically be excused for said reasons.
But he’s Kyle Busch, and Kyle Busch doesn’t make excuses.
“Well, so, I feel like if nothing goes wrong in a race, and we can just run a normal race, we’re top seven every single week, you know, besides the road courses, the Sonomas, the Road Americas, they are not on our radar as being very good,” he said. “The Indy Road Course, though, this past weekend, honestly, like I passed Austin Cindric, before that second-to-last yellow and got myself into 10th place. And then he made it through the last two green-white-checkers and got a second-place finish, and I got spun out through the grass, so it’s just, do you have the luck on your side? Yes or no?
“But, you know, we’ve messed up a little bit with some strategy calls, and I’ve messed up spinning out in a couple of races and things like that, just trying hard to get positions. And so, you know, we should have better results than what we do. The optics don’t quite look as good because the results don’t say it. But the performance has been there on our side. So we just need to have some more good results.”
At this point, Busch’s playoff standing is relatively safe despite his recent downturn on the results sheet. We’re at 14 winners with four races remaining — two of which are at another road course and Daytona, which could both produce wild-card winners — but he’s still racking up enough points to sleep well at night (when Lennix allows it, of course).
Gone are the late-2010s days of the “Big Three” of he, Kevin Harvick and teammate Martin Truex Jr., hoarding trophies among the trio while the rest of the field struggles to even make it competitive. But there’s still a sense that Busch has continued to evolve since, meticulously crafting his skills as a race car driver while dialing in things in his personal life to become a more complete — and more formidable — person overall.
Even if he admittedly wouldn’t mind a return to such stretches of dominance, he knows the parity brought forth by the Next Gen makes that scenario unlikely … but a situation he can still capitalize in.
“I look back on what was it 2017, 2018, where you had the ‘Big Three’ right? You had Martin Truex Jr. and you had Kevin Harvick. It was us every weekend, it seemed. And then, you know, Denny (Hamlin) would pop in there, (Joey) Logano would pop in there, a couple other guys maybe. But I love that theme. I want to go back to those days. Can we bring that back?
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“You know, but you look at this year, and I think the theme of this year is just the Next Gen,” he said. “It’s just the unknowns of everything around this car. And we’re all trying to wrap our arms around it and figure it out and be competitive of understanding what this car likes and what it takes. And there’s a lot of things on this thing that you would think like, ‘OK, well, this is what worked with the old car.’ Throw that out the window, though. That notebook is gone. So I think that’s kind of the perspective that everybody’s kind of getting with seeing so many different winners in this car and seeing how each … like, look at everybody’s schedule. Man, besides Trackhouse guys maybe, you can see the damn roller coaster ride everybody goes on every single week with finishes. Good finish, bad finish, good finish, bad finish, whatever. Like you can’t get on a roll except, Chase Elliott, I guess, the last six weeks. You can’t get even a top five, top five, top five, top five every week. It’s tough. And we all are trying to get to that point. And you know, there’s only one guy doing that. … Hopefully, they’re peaking too soon.”
So where does that leave Busch and the No. 18 team — did they peak too soon in the middle of the regular season? Probably not, and with how focused he is off the track at the moment, it’s only reasonable to think that Busch’s best days could still be ahead of him, both in the remaining 14 races of 2022 and his, at this moment, very unclear future about where he’ll be racing beyond the season finale at Phoenix Raceway in November.
It’s entirely possible that Busch’s final race for Joe Gibbs could be that one, and it could end with two of NASCAR’s most prominent figures hoisting the Bill France Cup on the world stage before shaking hands and parting ways.
Busch became a father for the first time just months before his first Cup title, and 2022 could be shaping up to be just as decorated of a campaign on both a personal and professional level. In some ways, it just makes sense.
“I don’t think (having a baby mid-season is) the secret weapon. I don’t think that’s the secret sauce, but I like where your head’s at,” he said. “So, I’m hoping that 2022 we can be rewarded with another championship. That would certainly be nice. And with everything kind of happening and going on right now, obviously, being able to win and be successful and have the success on the track.
A strong contingent of drivers with connections to NASCAR’s national series will be competing in this week’s BC39 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The annual USAC Midget event, which honors the late Bryan Clauson, is held on the quarter-mile dirt track located inside Turn 3 of the historic IMS oval.
Once again this year, the BC39 will feature champions from all over the motorsports world with NASCAR, USAC, World of Outlaws, Tezos All Star Circuit of Champions and more represented.
The entry list includes the names of champions and race winners in the NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR Xfinity Series and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. Take a look below at the list of drivers with NASCAR connections that will be competing in the race.
Kyle Larson looks over the track during the 2022 Lucas Oil Chili Bowl Nationals presented by General Tire at Tulsa Expo Raceway in Tulsa, Oklahoma on Jan. 15, 2022. (Nick Oxford/NASCAR)
Kyle Larson
The defending NASCAR Cup Series champion is also the most recent winner of the BC39. One year ago, Larson prevailed in a thrilling battle with open-wheel stars Justin Grant and Thomas Meseruall to score the $15,000 victory. In addition to his 2021 BC39 win, Larson has won the last two runnings of the Stoops Pursuit race held on Wednesday night.
Chase Briscoe
Briscoe, the driver of the No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing car in the NASCAR Cup Series, has yet to miss the BC39 in the three years it’s been held. After failing to qualify in 2018, he finished 24th in 2019 before recording a career-best finish of 11th one year ago. After securing his first NASCAR Cup Series win earlier this year at Phoenix Raceway, Briscoe has been busy on his “Chase’n Dirt Tour” racing MIdgets, Sprint Cars and Dirt Late Models throughout the year.
Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
Stenhouse returns to the BC39 after missing last year’s version of the event. The full-time driver of the No. 47 JTG Daugherty Racing car on the NASCAR Cup Series circuit finished 11th in the inaugural BC39 before recording his best finish of seventh in 2019. This time around, Stenhouse will be driving the No. 08 car for Dave Mac Dalby Motorsports.
Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (Meg Oliphant/Getty Images)
Sheldon Creed
The 2020 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series champion will make his USAC Midget debut at the BC39. Creed, who currently competes full-time in the NASCAR Xfinity Series with Richard Childress Racing, has made a handful of dirt starts in recent years. He’s competed in Dirt Late Models, UMP Modifieds and Micro Sprints, most notably at Millbridge Speedway in North Carolina.
Ryan Newman
While Newman no longer competes full-time in the NASCAR Cup Series, he’s a very familiar name to NASCAR fans. He’s also a familiar face at the BC39 after competing in last year’s event. This year, Newman competed full-time with the Superstar Racing Experience (SRX) and collected a victory at Stafford Motor Speedway. In addition to driving SRX cars, he’s also raced Midgets, Pavement Sprint Cars, Tour-type Modifieds and USAC Silver Crown cars this season. Now, he’ll return to a Dirt Midget for the first time since January’s Chili Bowl Nationals.
J.J. Yeley
Yeley, who experienced success on dirt before beginning his NASCAR career, returns to the BC39 after attempting all three previous versions of the race. He has failed to qualify in his three previous attempts. In 2003, Yeley claimed the USAC Triple Crown championship after winning the USAC National Midget, USAC National Sprint Car and USAC Silver Crown championships in the same year. On the NASCAR circuit, he has made 342 NASCAR Cup Series starts and 369 NASCAR Xfinity Series starts.
Dillon Welch
While Welch isn’t known primarily for driving a race car, he’s a well-known personality within the NASCAR world. He returns to the BC39 after missing last year’s event. Welch, the son of FOX Sports NASCAR broadcaster Vince Welch, has created a path of his own in the broadcast industry as a reporter for NBC Sports and MRN Radio. He’s also the co-host of the Loudpedal Podcast on FloRacing. Behind the wheel, Welch has experienced success while racing a limited schedule. In January, he qualified for the A-Main at the prestigious Chili Bowl Nationals.
Homecoming week for Brad Keselowski comes with some recent signs of encouragement — “a little bit of an upswing,” as he puts it. His first year on the driver-slash-ownership side with RFK Racing has had its share of wild swings with some hits and misses mixed in.
Back in his native state for Sunday’s FireKeepers Casino 400 (3 p.m. ET, USA, NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM) at Michigan International Speedway, Keselowski says he hopes to give the home crowd reason to cheer — both for his No. 6 Ford and the No. 17 Mustang of teammate Chris Buescher. Tuesday, he indicated he’s making progress in re-establishing the organization’s place among the NASCAR Cup Series’ perennial powers, but that he also has personal goals for adding to his own legacy behind the wheel.
“We seem to be getting better every week, and the team’s starting to click and we’re starting to figure out some of the missing pieces,” Keselowski said, noting the speed he and Buescher had last weekend on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course. “Michigan is gonna probably be a tough race for us, but I’m looking at Richmond, Watkins Glen, Daytona, and I think we have reason for a lot of optimism and hope. So, we’re gonna give it all we got, and I’m in this for the long haul. I’m 38 years old, and statistically, I’m still a few years from my prime, and I want to keep pushing as hard as I can to get this company to where RFK — both cars, the 6 and the 17 — can win races and contend for championships.
“So we’re heading the right direction, and I think it’ll bear fruit with a little patience. So I appreciate the fans that are sticking with me as we’re turning a new leaf.”
The newness remains, barely more than a year after the announcement in July 2021 that Keselowski would join forces with Hall of Famer Jack Roush’s group. The organization’s name change came later, and RFK Racing made its first on-track splash with a sweep of this year’s Daytona 500 qualifying races.
The splashes have had fewer ripples since, and both drivers need wins to shoehorn their way into the Cup Series Playoffs. Buescher managed to snag his first career pole position earlier this season, but has just six top-10 finishes so far. Keselowski’s total is half that, and his place in the Cup Series standings received a jolt in March with a 100-point penalty for modifications to a single-source part for the Next Gen car model that debuted this year.
That punishment stood alone until a recent spate of infractions emerged after last month’s race at Pocono Raceway, where the top finishing Joe Gibbs Racing entries of Denny Hamlin and Kyle Busch were disqualified. Days later, Michael McDowell’s Front Row Motorsports No. 34 team was added to the offenders’ list with its own 100-point deduction.
Keselowski said he had “a little bit of sense of relief” that the penalties to those teams were treated with similar severity to his team’s case. While he said he had a general understanding of NASCAR’s position with rules enforcement, he advocated for wider, sweeping sanctions for teams that play outside the rule book’s boundaries.
“The reality is that the garage is going through a reset with respect to kind of cutting out the games, and that’s a good thing for us as a sport,” Keselowski said. “I personally think the sport needs more penalties, and that NASCAR needs to be handing them out like candy right now to get control of the garage. Because, you know, we’ve been playing a lot of games for a lot of years, and the games have to stop. The games cost a lot of money. … And so looking at that, the easiest way for NASCAR to stop those expenses is to stop the games.”
After his team’s own brush with the long arm of NASCAR law, Keselowski said he clamped down. Engineering home-grown parts at great expense was out.
“I know after our issues at Atlanta, we went through our entire company and said no more games,” Keselowski said. “Nothing goes on in these cars, period. And it’s a rapid culture shift and there’s a lot of people inside our own company that didn’t like it, but the reality is NASCAR is setting precedents that needed to be set, that we support being set, that are important to the future of our industry and its viability.”
As for the more immediate outlook, this weekend’s event at Michigan holds extra importance to the sport’s manufacturers, but also to the Rochester Hills-raised Keselowski. The driver-owner is 0-for-24 in Cup Series races held at the 2-mile track, and the prospects for finally scratching the win column there are marked by variables.
Sunday’s 400-miler is the first Michigan race for the Next Gen model, and a Goodyear test there earlier this year prompted a change in approach from the tire supplier. Mix those factors with limited track time in Saturday’s preliminaries and there’s uncertainty aplenty.
“I would say this is about as wild card as a wild card can get this weekend,” Keselowski said. “I don’t know what to tell you to expect with the new car, different tires, very little practice. The one test session there was with a limited amount of cars didn’t go that smoothly so we’ll have to see. I don’t know what to expect. It could be complete and utter chaos. It could be the best race ever. It could be somewhere in between. I don’t know. I think that’s in some ways part of the fun of Next Gen is the complete uncertainty every week, what’s going to happen.”