Kevin Harvick never panicked during his recent 65-race winless streak.

Since breaking his second-longest dry spell with consecutive NASCAR Cup Series victories at Michigan and Richmond, respectively, Harvick has emphasized a steady, unwavering focus that helped neutralize the lows and highs over the past 23 months. Before Aug. 14, Harvick last visited Victory Lane in September 2020 at Bristol Motor Speedway.

MORE: Watkins Glen schedule | Points standings

The unfaltering mindset wasn’t something naturally engrained in Harvick. Instead, it grew from lessons learned the last time he went through a long skid — a career-worst span of 115 races between February 2007 and April 2010 when he went winless at Richard Childress Racing.

The key takeaway?

“Handle absolutely everything completely different than you handled that one,” Harvick told NASCAR.com on Tuesday.

Harvick doesn’t have fond memories of that stretch, highlighted by the fact he never won a race during the Car of Tomorrow era, when a wing was featured on the rear decklid. Twelve years removed from that dreadful drought, Harvick takes accountability for the lengthy vacation from Victory Lane.

“At that particular time, I was more part of the problem than I was part of the solution,” he said. “So … as you look at this particular (65-race) winless streak and you look at the way that things were handled and how we communicated with each other, you handled it like … I tell people you handle it like an adult. And it was much more productive. And I think as you go through the streak this time and get out of it, you know, it’s like, OK, it’s all the same people. It’s people that you work through a problem to create a solution with, and people that I’ve had a relationship for a long time.

“I would look at the previous (winless) streak at RCR (as) a lot longer than it probably needed to be because of the fact that you weren’t the leader and you weren’t the responsible adult in the room, trying to try to help progress it forward and do the things that you needed to do to fix the cars.”

That experience seemingly changed his entire perspective. Now in his ninth season at Stewart-Haas Racing, the 2014 Cup champion finds connecting with his team is the most imperative facet of his job today.

“I think I worry less about what I want to accomplish and just trying to accomplish what I know I need to accomplish,” Harvick said, “and that is being engaged with my team on a week-to-week basis to get the most out of our cars and vehicles and the responsibility that comes with being prepared and being a part of that process on a week-to-week basis.

“You want to do everything that you can to try to take as much as you can every single week that you’re at the race track, because at some point there won’t be a next week. It’ll be what you used to do, and you want to give it your all while you can.”

Twenty-four races through the 2022 schedule, Harvick is still accomplishing plenty. He holds the hot hand entering the penultimate race of the regular season at Watkins Glen International on Sunday (3 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) and sits tied for ninth all-time in career victories, claiming his 60th checkered flag at Richmond. The man with whom he’s tied is Kyle Busch, the series’ only active multi-title winner.

Harvick became the first driver to score back-to-back wins in the Next Gen era over the past two weeks. To net the hat trick with a third straight victory — which would be the first three-peat since Kyle Larson accomplished the feat in October 2021 (Roval, Texas, Kansas) — Harvick will need to win at the 2.45-mile road course on Sunday, something he hasn’t done since 2006.

“We’ve done a fair amount better on the road courses this year than we did previously,” said Harvick, who rallied to finish fourth at Sonoma Raceway in June but is showing even better speed now. “So Watkins Glen is a place that I’ve been fortunate to win at and have some success at, so it’s a traditional course that we always run so I feel like I know it like the back of my hand. And you know, we just have to have to get in a good rhythm and try to be prepared from the simulator to the race track for that short practice that we have and go straight into qualifying and see where it all goes from there.”

Only three weeks separate the series from the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs, set to begin at Darlington Raceway on Sept. 4. Harvick is determined to earn his second career championship — but he admits he’s not worried about adding stats to his legacy. His goal is simply to execute his tasks at the highest level possible.

“That’s definitely what we’re trying to accomplish, is trying to put ourselves in position to race for another championship,” said Harvick, 46. “And whether it works out or not, I’m not sure that it changes the long-term outlook or not. But I’m sure when I get older, you probably tell yourself that I wish I would have done this a little better or this a little differently, and what year that is I don’t know. But I know right now the goal is to try to accomplish that (championship) as we get towards the end of this year.”

NASCAR officials penalized the No. 18 Kyle Busch Motorsports team Tuesday for an unsecured lug nut after last weekend’s events at Richmond Raceway.

Chandler Smith drove the No. 18 KBM Toyota to his third victory of the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series season in Saturday night’s Worldwide Express 250. His truck was found with a single unsecured lug nut in a post-race check by officials, a violation detailed in Section 8.8.10.4a in the NASCAR Rule Book.

RELATED: Chandler Smith wins Richmond | Truck Series standings

As a result, crew chief Danny Stockman was fined $2,500.

NASCAR also announced the reinstatement of two crew members — Tony Waters, last listed on team rosters as a hauler driver for Kyle Busch Motorsports’ No. 4 team; and Sean Kerlin, a mechanic with JR Motorsports’ No. 9 team in the Xfinity Series. Both had been suspended under the NASCAR Substance Abuse Policy — Waters on June 28, Kerlin on July 6.

In the hours leading up to Sunday’s Federated Auto Parts 400 at Richmond Raceway, a local teenager named Jayden pumped up a large crowd gathered at the Toyota Racing Experience, eagerly awaiting a pre-race appearance by 23XI Racing driver Bubba Wallace. Jayden, a member of the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Richmond, urged cheers before tossing Toyota Racing hats, one by one, into the outstretched hands of race fans.

When Wallace, one of NASCAR’s brightest star drivers, appeared from the backstage area to cheers and applause, Jayden and nearly 30 other Boys & Girls Club teens took their places in the front row to listen to the fan zone Q&A session. The opportunity to hear from and exchange high-fives with Wallace was just one part of a four-hour, pre-race experience hosted by NASCAR and Toyota Racing, and designed to educate high school-aged youth about career opportunities in the sport.

The day began with a special welcome from Lori Collier Waran, who was introduced this past June as Richmond Raceway president and the first woman to hold the position in race track history. Waran, who grew up in the Richmond area and once helped park cars in the track parking lots, invited club member Cheniyah to join her on stage when she addressed race attendees just before the race’s green-flag start.

Boys and Girls Clubs members get a talk from a NASCAR industry member at RichmondThe club youth also met with a variety of industry professionals to learn about their roles in the NASCAR industry as well as their unique journeys into the sport. Kreig Robinson attended Boys & Girls Clubs as a child and now, after a longtime business relationship with Michael Jordan, oversees partnerships for 23XI Racing, the race team co-owned by the iconic basketball legend. Robinson spoke to the group from Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro Richmond about the drive and commitment required to be successful in the pro sports industry.

Caryn Grant, who last week helped organize NASCAR’s first-ever Bubba’s Block Party event at Richmond Raceway, talked to the youth about her role within the sanctioning body’s Diversity & Inclusion department. Greg Carty, manager of licensing and consumer products for NASCAR, provided insight into NASCAR’s licensed merchandise and apparel business.

While touring the NASCAR Cup Series garage, the group learned about the competition-related roles and specifically the role of the engine manufacturer from Brandon Rouze, track support engineer for Toyota Racing Development. At the 23XI Racing hauler, the teens interacted with Jusan Hamilton, race director for Sunday’s Federated Auto Parts 400 and the first Black race director to preside over the Daytona 500, as well as well-known industry pit crew coach Rocko Williams.

The behind-the-scenes experience concluded with a surprise meet-and-greet with Washington Commanders defensive end Chase Young, who was in Richmond to lead the Cup Series field to green in the Toyota Camry pace car as the race’s honorary pace car driver.

NASCAR’s national partnership with Boys & Girls Clubs of America launched in 2021 and focuses on STEM learning and career development and exploration across both digital and at-track experiences. Sunday’s career-focused experience at Richmond Raceway was one of 15 at-track experiences hosted by NASCAR for local Boys & Girls Clubs across the country this season.

Toyota has a long-standing partnership with Boys & Girls Clubs of America aimed at providing life-changing experiences for club members. Since 2007, the partnership has awarded more than $2.4 million in academic scholarships and supported signature initiatives including Workforce Readiness and Youth of the Year. As a founding sponsor of BGCA’s Workforce Readiness Strategy, Toyota’s investment supports essential skill development, career exploration and work-based learning opportunities for club youth.

In addition to hosting the Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro Richmond at the Toyota Racing Experience, Toyota also provided 100 tickets to Sunday’s race for club youth and staff.

Boys and Girls Club members on Toyota stage at Richmond
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

Editor’s note: This year’s playoff field will be spotlighted in USA Network’s new unscripted series “Race for the Championship” airing this fall. The first episode is Thursday, Sept. 1, at 10 p.m. ET/PT. Watch the trailer here. 

Twenty-four down. Two to go.

In what is likely the most unpredictable regular season in the history of NASCAR’s playoff era, two races remain before the 16-driver playoff field is set.

With 15 Cup Series winners so far this season, there are still various scenarios in play for this year’s postseason — especially with the next two races taking place at road course Watkins Glen International and unpredictable Daytona International Speedway.

Here’s everything you need to know for the next two weeks.

RELATED: Current Playoff outlook

Scenario: No new winners over the next two races

If there are no new winners over the next two races, then the 15 drivers who have won a race this year will advance to the postseason. The final spot will be decided between Ryan Blaney and Martin Truex Jr. There are no other drivers who can advance to the postseason by points.

With two races remaining, Blaney sits 26 points ahead of Truex.

Scenario: The winless Regular Season Champion

A win automatically qualifies a driver for the postseason. So, too, does winning the Regular Season Championship. For a spell, it appeared that winless Blaney — currently second in the regular-season standings — could really turn the playoff picture upside down if he were to surpass points leader Chase Elliott.

Consider this scenario kaput, however.

Blaney is 116 points behind Elliott. If Blaney gets the maximum number of points without winning over the next two races, that would net him 55 points per race (35 points for finishing runner-up, plus 20 points for two stage wins in this hypothetical scenario). That’s 110 points total, which isn’t enough to catch Elliott, even if the Hendrick Motorsports driver finishes last place the next two weeks.

There’s still a remote chance Blaney catches Elliott for the Regular Season Championship, but he would have to win — which would then clinch Blaney’s spot in the postseason anyway.

RELATED: Current standings

Scenario: Exactly 16 winners

Simple. The 16 drivers who win a race in the 26-race regular season would advance to the playoffs, provided they are ranked 30th or better in the regular-season standings.

Scenario: 17 winners

Call this one The Chaos Theory.

If there are 17 winners, clearly a driver who has won a race will not advance to the 16-driver playoffs.

Here’s how it would be determined: Every driver with multiple wins would advance. So, Chase Elliott (4 wins), Ross Chastain (2), Joey Logano (2), Kevin Harvick (2), William Byron (2), Denny Hamlin (2) and Tyler Reddick (2) are safe. One-win drivers Kyle Larson, Christopher Bell and Kyle Busch also mathematically cannot be eliminated from the postseason picture if there are 17 winners, so count them in the field, too.

Of all the remaining drivers with one victory, whoever is lowest in the points standings would be eliminated and not advance to the postseason.

Of the current crop of winners, Kurt Busch is the likely odd man out in this scenario, given that he has missed four consecutive races due to recovering from concussion-like symptoms following a qualifying wreck at Pocono Raceway. However, if one of the new winners sits behind Busch in the standings, it’s possible they could win one of the remaining two races and still not advance in this scenario.

Here’s a look at the points between the remaining one-time winners this year:

Driver Points Behind
Alex Bowman 592
Daniel Suárez 574 -18
Austin Cindric 556 -36
Chase Briscoe 549 -43
Kurt Busch 485 -107

When it comes to historic race tracks on the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour, there are none more notable than Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park.

The venue located in Thompson, Connecticut, has hosted more races than any other track in the history of the Tour. In fact, Thompson played host to the first official Tour race on March 31, 1985, a race that was won by the late Richie Evans.

Evans won the first four NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour events held at Thompson, all during the 1985 season. George Kent Jr. snapped that streak, topping the fifth visit by the Tour to Thompson that served as the penultimate race of the 1985 season.

Fast-forward to 2022 and, after a brief hiatus, the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour is returning to Thompson for the 149th time this Thursday for the running of the Phoenix Communications 150. The event was originally scheduled for Wednesday, but expected weather led to the event being rescheduled for Thursday.

RELATED: Thompson entry list | Race preview

In the 148 previous NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour races held at Thompson, 36 drivers have made trips to Victory Lane. Many current Tour stars have enjoyed success at Thompson through the years, but none more than Justin Bonsignore.

In 39 Tour starts at Thompson, Bonsignore has scored a whopping 12 victories at the 0.625-mile track. His first Thompson victory came in his 10th Tour start at the track in 2012, and he quickly added to his total, at one point winning six straight Tour events at Thompson from 2018-19.

Several other active Tour competitors have enjoyed Victory Lane at Thompson, including six-time Tour champion Doug Coby. The driver from Milford, Connecticut, has six Thompson victories in 64 starts, with his most recent coming in 2019. Coby is also a good qualifier at Thompson, with the veteran having earned 11 Tour poles at the track during his career.

Current NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour championship leader Ron Silk is a five-time Thompson winner, as is part-time competitor Bobby Santos III. Both are entered for Wednesday’s event.

Other previous Thompson winners who are entered for Wednesday’s race are Donny Lia, Timmy Solomito and Craig Lutz, who won the most recent Tour event at Thompson during the 2020 season.

Kyle Soper back in search of another Tour win

The last time Kyle Soper raced with the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour, his night ended in Victory Lane.

Soper, a weekly competitor at New York’s Riverhead Raceway, bested the Tour regulars when they invaded his home track on June 25. Soper led 39 laps during the race, including the final 11, to notch his first NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour victory.

In doing so, Soper became the first Riverhead regular to best the Tour stars since 1995, when Ed Brunnhoelzl Jr. was able to earn a trip to Victory Lane.

Soper hasn’t slowed down much since notching his first Tour victory. Since then he’s continued to compete weekly at Riverhead, earning a marquee victory during the Baldwin, Evans & Jarzombek 77 on July 30. He also currently leads the weekly Modified standings at Riverhead.

Now Soper is turning his attention to Wednesday’s mid-week NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour event at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park,

The 26-year-old driver from Manorville, New York, has competed in four previous Tour events at Thompson. However, luck has not been on his side.

His best finish in those four starts is 13th, and he has an average finish of 21.5, a number he’ll look to drastically improve upon Wednesday during the Phoenix Communications 150.

Jimmy Blewett, driver of the #7 John Blewett Inc car races during the Jersey Shore 150 for the Whelen Modified Tour at Wall Stadium Speedway on July 9, 2022 in Wall Township, New Jersey. (Kostas Lymperopoulos/NASCAR)
Jimmy Blewett, driver of the No. 7 John Blewett Inc Modified, races during the Jersey Shore 150 for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at Wall Stadium Speedway on July 9, 2022. (Photo: Kostas Lymperopoulos/NASCAR)

Tommy Baldwin Jr. leads owner standings

There has been no team better this year on the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour than Tommy Baldwin Racing.

The team owned by Daytona 500 winning crew chief Tommy Baldwin Jr. has visited Victory Lane four times this season with three different drivers, allowing Baldwin’s team to open a large lead in the Tour owner standings.

Entering the Phoenix Communications 150, Baldwin holds a 37-point advantage on No. 16 team owner Tyler Haydt, whose driver Ron Silk currently leads the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour driver standings.

Doug Coby, who has won twice in Baldwin’s equipment this year, will field his own car for Wednesday’s race at Thompson. Mike Christopher Jr., a winner in Baldwin’s equipment at Jennerstown Speedway, won’t be in action Wednesday.

That leaves Jimmy Blewett, who won at Wall Stadium Speedway for Baldwin, to pilot the No. 7NY in Wednesday’s race. Blewett has made a whopping 40 starts in Tour competition at Thompson, earning a best finish of second on two occasions.

Notes:

  • Spencer Davis is slated to make his fourth NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour start of the year at Thompson. The driver from Dawsonville, Georgia, has made five previous Tour starts at Thompson, earning a best finish of seventh.
  • Another driver making his fourth start of the season is Ronnie Williams. The driver from Ellington, Connecticut, has two career NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour poles, and both of them came at Thompson in 2018.
  • Dylan Slepian will attempt to earn his third straight top-five finish in NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour competition following back-to-back top five results at Riverhead Raceway in his last two Tour starts.

Trackhouse Racing’s PROJECT91 unveiled the sharp paint scheme that Kimi Räikkönen will pilot around Watkins Glen International in his NASCAR Cup Series debut this weekend.

MORE: Watkins Glen schedule | Points standings

Kimi Räikkönen's Watkins Glen paint scheme.
Photo provided by Trackhouse Racing

Räikkönen, the 2007 Formula One World Champion and 21-race winner, returns to NASCAR behind the wheel of the No. 91 Recogni/iLOQ Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, introducing two new technology companies to the sport. Recogni, headquartered in San Jose, California, focuses on vision-based artificial intelligence, according to the team’s press release, aiming to allow vehicles to “make driving decisions more accurately than humans while consuming minimal amounts of energy.”

iLOQ is a Finnish-based company that has partnered with Räikkönen, a native of Espoo, Finland, since 2019 that centers around digital locking technology.

Räikkönen, who made respective Xfinity and Truck series starts in 2011, returns to stock-car racing in the Go Bowling at The Glen on Sunday (3 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Kolby Garrison is an avid NASCAR fan. The only thing that separates her from most other fans is that she’s blind.

Kolby has been blind since birth, but became a NASCAR fan as a child when her relatives had the races on the TV and radio.

Kolby Garrison smiling during an interview

Now living in Greensboro, North Carolina, she consumes the races each week and has attended several races at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Martinsville Speedway and Richmond Raceway.

“Yes, I experience NASCAR and the world in a different way, but it’s no less rich, no less vivid, no less detailed. Just different,” Garrison says.

NASCAR Studios will explore how Kolby experiences the sounds, smells and textures of NASCAR racing in a four-part, two-week video series coming to YouTube, starting Wednesday.

Bookmark this page to watch weekly updates; Episodes 1 and 2 are now live below.

Episode 1

Episode 2

Episode 3

Episode 4

 

After 40 years of racing, A.J. Sanders has achieved everything he ever wanted on the race track.

He’s won championships at several different tracks in North and South Carolina. He won a NASCAR national championship in 2014, the first year NASCAR offered national titles for lower divisions. He has 56 race wins in the Q104.1 Stadium Stock Series at Bowman Gray Stadium, a record for the NASCAR-sanctioned quarter-mile track in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and has won multiple most popular driver awards.

“I’ve done everything I possibly can do in local racing like this that a person could dream of doing,” Sanders said.

All those achievements, though, aren’t stopping the 54-year-old this season. Sanders has seven wins and 15 top-five finishes in 16 races between Bowman Gray, Florence Motor Speedway and Wake County Speedway, and he’s currently fourth in the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division IV national points standings.

There’s no question: Sanders would like to add another national title to his resume.

“This year, we’re trying for it,” he said. “I don’t know if we’re going to get enough races to be able to do it. Hopefully we can maybe get into the top three. I’d love to win it, but hopefully we get into the top three in the national and win the regional and be able to go to the banquet.”

RELATED: 2022 Division IV national points standings

AJ Sanders

Sanders started racing when he was 13. His dad was also a long-time racer, competing until he was 71.

“I’ve had a NASCAR license for a long time, ever since I was able to get them,” Sanders said. “I wanted to do it at 13, and my dad built me a car and said, ‘Here we go.’ We raced against each other.”

Just like how he started racing with his dad, Sanders now goes racing with his own sons. His two oldest both race. His middle son, Stephen also competes in Stadium Stocks at Bowman Gray.

Sanders’ youngest son, Blaze, is his spotter. Blaze is believed to be the youngest regular spotter at Bowman Gray, calling races for his dad despite the fact he’s just 12.

“He’s good,” Sanders said of his youngest son. “That’s all he knows. Since he was a baby, he’s been at the race tracks.

“It’s great because it keeps your family together; it’s kept my whole family together. We know where each other’s at every week, and we’re together, we’re having a good time, and we enjoy it. We get to spend quality time at the track.”

Sanders has seen a lot of changes in racing over the last four decades. He tries to maintain the old school, blue collar way of driving, working on the car and funding everything himself. He’s passed that mentality down to his sons, too.

“I see the young kids nowadays come into the sport, and they don’t work on their cars and they don’t really appreciate what they have like the older racers do,” he said. “They don’t know what it is to struggle. I think a kid should struggle just a little bit to appreciate the wins and championships he gets later.

“You’ve got to be able to work on your car. You need to know what the car is doing when it does something to be able to fix it. You can’t just come in and say, ‘I don’t know, it made a noise,’ or, ‘I don’t know, it’s doing this.’ You need to know how to adjust the car or what to do to it, and the only way you’re going to know that is to have your hand in working on the car. And I think that makes a better racer is the ones who know how to work on their own stuff and come in and make those adjustments.”

It could be that old school mentality that has made Sanders a fan favorite at Bowman Gray. He’s also known for giving away his winners caps and even trophies to young fans after races, and he’ll typically leave his car out after races so others can look at it.

“They’re standing there looking at the car. I say, ‘What are you looking at it for? Get in it!” he said. “And they look at you and their eyes get bigger than their head.”

His biggest joy is passing his love of racing to the next generation.

“When you have kids come to you after the race and say, ‘I really love watching you race,’ or parents come down and say it, I get more out of watching the fans enjoy you. I try to represent myself well for the fans and kids, because that’s the future is the kids.”

AJ Sanders

With a full-time job as a truck driver, Sanders typically only gets about one day a week to work on his car. He relies on a lot of help from friends and family to be race-ready.

That’s why he works so hard to give back to those who have helped him for so many years, whether that’s those who support him in the pits, at home, or from the stands.

“I’ve always said the driver gets all the glory at the end of the night when he pulls into Victory Lane, but that’s not where it’s at,” he said. “It’s all the people that help you around you… It’s at team effort all the way around.”

Sanders said he may have to step away from his own racing if Blaze gets to the point where he’d like to get behind the wheel. Until then, he’ll be at the track as often as possible, chasing wins and adding more and more achievements to his resume.

“I’ve also put in a lot for this sport in 40 years,” he said. “If you take a man who’s done something 30 or 40 years, he’s sacrificed a lot to be able to do that. That’s where it gets overlooked sometimes… It’s a lot of dedication, a lot of all-nighters to make this work.

“I’ve been very fortunate. I tell people I’m a very lucky man to do what I do and how I do it.”

July 23, 2004 was a memorable day for the Christopher family.

On that summer afternoon at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour teams and drivers competed in the Siemens 100. The day belonged to Ted and Mike Christopher, with the twin brothers combining to lead 80 of the 108 contested laps en route to a one-two finish. Ted won the race, with Mike crossing the finish line second.

Just 5 at the time, Mike Christopher Jr. doesn’t remember much about being at the track that day. He does remember rewatching the race multiple times on VHS, making it one of his earliest memories of Modified racing.

“That was just an incredible day, not only for them but for my mom and the whole crew,” Mike Jr. recalled. “Ted had the Mystique No. 13 car and was obviously doing great and the car owner, Mr. Jimmy Galante, asked my dad if he would want to race. So they built a car exactly like Ted’s, same paint scheme, just with the No. 82 on the side of it. And they finished one-two at New Hampshire.

“My dad, my uncle, they all went to Victory Lane together because it was pretty much like a we-both-won kind of deal. You can’t get much better than that.”

RELATED: How racing a Modified became a way of life for Matt Hirschman and family

Moments like that leave a lasting impression on a 5-year-old kid from Connecticut, but Mike Jr. was lucky enough to witness many.

Another that stands out to the newest member of the Christopher racing clan happened a few years later, in 2008. His uncle Ted, at the age of 50, won his first and only NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour championship.

“I didn’t understand racing that much, back then because I was just so young,” Mike Jr. said. “I knew (Ted) was really determined to chase that Tour championship and finally got this opportunity in the Eddie Whelan car.

“I remember going to Thompson for that World Series weekend. That was a big deal for him and the Christopher family, too.”

The Christopher family has long been associated with the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour. Ted earned 42 Tour victories in addition to his 2008 championship before he was killed in a plane crash in 2017. Mike competed in 75 Tour events through the years, earning five top-five finishes.

These days the Christopher family continues to make memories on the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour, but now it’s Mike Jr. who is the author.

Following in the footsteps of his late uncle and his father, Mike Jr. began racing go karts when he was 10 at Connecticut’s Stafford Motor Speedway. He said the push to go racing came not from his father, but from his mother.

Mike Christopher, Jr., driver of the #7 Ultra Wheel Chevrolet, during qualifying for the Miller Lite 200 for the Whelen Modified Tour at Riverhead Raceway on September 18, 2021 in Riverhead, New York. (Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)
Mike Christopher Jr. during his first NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour event at Riverhead Raceway on Sept. 18, 2021. (Photo: Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)

“It was actually my mom who got me to the track almost every single week,” Mike Jr. said. “My dad’s dad, my Grampy, also brought me to Stafford every single week for the weekly racing that Ted did. It’s just something I grew up with. Going to the tracks every single week and watching Ted race, and whenever my dad raced too, watching that. It’s just something you grow up with.”

Modified racing has a strong tendency to attract generational family involvement, something Mike Jr. attributes to the fact that it’s mostly based in the Northeast.

RELATED: Blewett carries on family tradition of Modified racing

“It’s a very specific subset of racing,” Mike Jr. said. “It’s primarily in the Northeast; that’s where it grew up from, and it’s stayed there the whole time in the New England, New York, Pennsylvania. It doesn’t really venture much outside of that.

“The idea of having generational teams or families that grow up and continue Modified racing I think stems from that. They do have Southern tours and series, but that’s kind of newer. Modified racing in the Northeast has been around since the dawn of NASCAR racing. I mean, it is the oldest division, so it kind of makes sense that this subset, this genre of racing has grown up to be so popular among Northeast families.

“You think about racing in the Northeast, and its Modified country. We do have Supers (Supermodifieds) and Late Models and stuff like that, but it’s nothing compared to Modified racing up here.”

Now 23, Mike Jr. has begun making a name for himself on the Northeastern Modified scene. He’s become a fixture at tracks like Stafford Motor Speedway and Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park, and last year he made his NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour debut at New York’s Riverhead Raceway driving for Tommy Baldwin Jr.

The partnership between Baldwin and Mike Jr. has been fruitful, with the duo earning several victories so far this season.

Mike Christopher Jr., driver of the #7, celebrates after winning The Jennerstown Salutes 150 for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at Jennerstown Speedway in Jennerstown, Pennsylvania on May 28, 2022. (Nate Smallwood/NASCAR)
Mike Christopher Jr., driver of the No. 7 Tommy Baldwin Racing Modified, celebrates after winning the Jennerstown Salutes 150 for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at Jennerstown Speedway on May 28, 2022. (Photo: Nate Smallwood/NASCAR)

“(Baldwin) came to me in like 2019 maybe, something like that, and we ran a couple of one-off races and just kept building on that,” Mike Jr. said. “He puts a lot of work and effort into getting me specifically to the track with sponsorship and stuff like that. We raced last year and won some races, and I guess he saw that there was some kind of potential here to go out and win races.”

One of the aforementioned victories for the pairing this year came at Pennsylvania’s Jennerstown Speedway on May 28 in the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Jennerstown Salutes 150. It was Mike Jr.’s first Tour victory in just his third start.

“I just feel like I have an incredible car and team behind me,” Mike Jr. said. “Everything felt right to where the chances were good even before the race started that we were going to win, because Tommy’s just been on his game.”

RELATED: Baldwin Jr. continues family love affair with Modified Tour

With his first NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour victory out of the way, the question now is what’s next.

He doesn’t currently have an answer.

Christopher is not scheduled for any more Tour events this season, but he hopes to secure an opportunity to contest the full schedule in the coming years.

How that’s going to happen is the greatest unknown.

“Obviously I want to race Tour races, but I feel accomplished with winning the one race and I want more,” he said. “It’s a question I’ve been wrestling for the past couple months, year, or so. Just growing up and realizing you’re not a kid anymore. You think you’re going to be a race car driver, but reality is setting in.

“You’ve got to figure out what you’ve got to do personally to make money and also what you have to do to follow your dreams. It’s definitely a deep, philosophical question that you’re trying to wrestle with and answer.”

RICHMOND, Va. — Kevin Harvick’s latest milestone victory in a storied NASCAR Cup Series career was also the perfect counter, a challenge to the sayers of nay who had dismissed the competitive verve of the veteran driver and his Stewart-Haas Racing team.

“It’s kind of like when they put those small boxes in the newspaper where they have to correct their story and you can’t hardly read them,” Harvick said with a smile. “I feel like a lot of you should put those at the bottom of your story. I get great gratification out of that.”

MORE: Richmond recap | Points standings

The ink reserved for small-print retractions flowed after Harvick’s defiant late surge to win Sunday’s Federated Auto Parts 400 at Richmond Raceway. The 46-year-old driver, written off to the playoff fringe not that long ago, now has the head of steam from two consecutive victories – an awakening of the sleeping giant just in time to make hay in the 10-race postseason.

The triumph also provided some historical perspective. Reaching his 60th win made him the co-leader among active Cup Series drivers, tied with Kyle Busch. But the big, round number also gave him a closer view of the names ahead of him on the all-time list – Earnhardt, Yarborough, Johnson, Allison, Waltrip, Gordon, Pearson, all the way up to Petty.

In terms of his late-career streak, Harvick also ranks a firm third on the list of all-time wins after age 40. His 29 wins past that age milestone sit behind Lee Petty’s 42 and Bobby Allison’s 38. It also allowed him to invoke the name of Harry Gant, who captivated the NASCAR world in 1991 with his electric four-race win streak – a run of success at age 51 that gave him the nickname “Mr. September.”

Harvick needed his memory jogged as a reminder of what month it is, and ultimately joked that he might be willing to try “Mr. August” on for size. That said, Harvick indicated that the time to reflect on the scope of his career will come later. Until then, it’s focus forward.

“I’ve always prided myself in trying to be competitive and do what it takes to be competitive and make the sacrifices that it takes to be competitive. But I do enjoy it,” Harvick said. “There’s nothing better than winning. That’s what we do. I don’t know how to really put it all into perspective because it’s just not something that I just stop and really ever look at. I never really stop and say, where are all those 60 wins? The first one is easy. Today is easy to remember. Last week is easy to remember. But if you guys wouldn’t have told me that the last race that we won was at Bristol, I would have argued with you. I would have told you it was Darlington.

“I don’t really look at the numbers. It’s always about — maybe this is a fault of mine, but I think it’s also one of the reasons that we progress forward. But it’s never about what you have done, what the numbers look like. It’s what do we got to do next week, what could we have done better last week, how do we keep this all in perspective.”

RELATED: Where Harvick ranks all-time

The victory celebration also allowed for a brief moment of reflection for Rodney Childers, Harvick’s longtime collaborator as crew chief of Stewart-Haas’ No. 4 Ford team. For Childers, Richmond marked a milestone with his 40th Cup Series win, 37 of which have come since the driver and crew chief first paired up in 2014.

Childers said he thought back to Victory Lane at Phoenix Raceway early in the 2018 season, just as Harvick had gone on another three-race tear to achieve his 40th win. “I remember that day, and wondering if I would ever get there,” Childers said.

The only wonder now is how many more the two can rack up, now that the 65-race drought is even further in the past.

“It started two months ago, and you could just see everybody — the communication and the confidence and the cars we were building and all that stuff just got better,” Childers said. “It doesn’t take a lot of confidence with our group to make a huge difference.”