Whether it’s in Illinois, Tennessee or Ohio, the Triple Truck Challenge in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series returned for drivers to win bonus money as they make their final cross through the checkered flag.

The challenge started June 4 at World Wide Technology Raceway in St. Louis, continued at Nashville Superspeedway on June 24 and ended on July 9 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course.

RELATED: Truck standings | Full schedule

The prize fund is built to give race winners a $50,000 bonus per win. If a driver won two out of three races, he or she would have been awarded a total of $150,000. If a driver brought home the ultimate goal and won all three races, he or she would have been awarded a total of $500,000.

“The Trip” was created in 2019 and presents an opportunity for series regulars to gain attention and have extra incentive for race wins. John Hunter Nemechek, Todd Gilliland and Sheldon Creed were winners of the Triple Truck Challenge races last season.

RELATED: History of Triple Truck Challenge winners

2022 Triple Truck Challenge results 

At Mid-Ohio: Part-time driver Parker Kligerman put on a dominant performance on the winding road course for his first series victory since 2017, fending off a late charge from Zane Smith. A late caution period led to a three-lap dash to the checkers, but Kligerman prevailed, leading 56 of 67 laps en route to his $50,000 bonus. Kligerman, who also serves as a pit reporter for NBC Sports’ television coverage, claimed the final prize of the 2022 Triple Truck Challenge.

Recap: Parker Kligerman holds off Zane Smith for Camping World Trucks win at Mid-Ohio

At Nashville: Wiley NASCAR veteran Ryan Preece emerged as the victor at Nashville Superspeedway, holding off a strong charge from rising stars Zane Smith and Carson Hocevar in the closing laps. Running a part-time schedule, Preece earned his second Truck Series win of his career and first of 2022 to cash in on the coveted bonus. Preece’s $50,000 payday is the penultimate of this season’s program and his second consecutive win at the Tennessee track.

Recap: Preece delivers late at Nashville, aces late restart

At Gateway: The first TTC bonus of the season went to 19-year-old Corey Heim, driver of the No. 51 Kyle Busch Motorsports Toyota (part-time). Heim started on the pole, battled through issues early and worked his way back through the field to capitalize on the final restart in OT. Heim chose the inside lane, gifting him a starting spot on the front row, and teammate Chandler Smith lined up behind him to push Heim away to his second victory in just six starts this season (Atlanta Motor Speedway).

Recap: Heim powers to electric win at Gateway; wins first $50,000 bonus

Last year, his first full season racing, Jaylen Hardbarger performed well. He finished with two wins, six top fives, and eight top 10s in 13 races, and he ended up 43rd in the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division IV national points standings.

It was a good season, but this year, he has been much, much better.

Racing at Salina Highbanks Speedway, a NASCAR-sanctioned dirt oval in Pryor, Oklahoma, Hardbarger has five wins and 10 top fives in 12 starts in the track’s S&J Plumbing Pure Stocks division. He is also currently ranked No. 1 in the national Division IV points standings.

Hardbarger didn’t know about his place in the national points until Friday, but he knew he was having a good season.

RELATED: Salina Highbanks’ complete 2022 schedule

“We’ve had a lot of good luck this year,” Hardbarger said. “We’ve found a lot of good speed with the car. Just been really grateful and thankful for what we’ve got. We’ve been doing really well this year and just hope to continue that.”

The 18-year-old driver raced a couple times in 2020 before competing for a full season last year. Even though he is new to being behind the wheel himself, Hardbarger has been around the track his whole life.

“My family has always done it,” he said. “My grandpa, my uncle and everybody has always raced, and I was always in the shop as a kid. It’s always something I wanted to do.”

Jaylen Hardbarger

Hardbarger’s family still helps him with the car. He also works closely with fellow Salina driver Logan Brown, who is from the same hometown of Hulbert, Oklahoma, and competes in the track’s Dawson Roofing Super Stocks division.

“He doesn’t live too far from us, so we’re constantly helping each other with each other’s stuff. Whatever the other needs done, he’ll help me and I’ll help him,” Hardbarger said of Brown. “And of course my dad. My dad is always there whenever we need him.”

Having family he can turn to in racing “helps out tremendously,” Hardbarger said.

“They help me out a lot. I can call them with anything and they’ll help me out the best they can,” he added. “Just having that background and them having the knowledge that they do is amazing. If I’m not for sure about something, I can call them or ask them, and they’ll try to point me in the right direction, tell me if it’s going to work or not going to work.”

The biggest difference from Year 1 to Year 2 for Hardbarger has been simple: more time in the car.

Practice and seat time has helped him learn more about track conditions and how the dirt changes, something that can only be learned with time.

“That’s the main thing right there is experience,” Hardbarger said. “It’s a lot of mental work… Just to know you can do it and also putting in a lot of time in the shop and just kind of feel out the car and know what it’s going to do, know track conditions, know where you need to be when you need to be there.”

Hardbarger came into the season with a goal of winning a track championship at Salina, and he currently has the points lead by a wide, 125-point margin.

He thought he might try to shoot for the national points, but now that he sees a national championship is in reach, his goals have grown. He plans to continue going for that title.

“Now that we’re leading the national points, obviously, we’re going to try to win that, and shoot for the championship and maybe get a few more wins at a couple other tracks this year,” he said.

The team will try to venture off to some other tracks in the south and Midwest on weekends when Salina isn’t racing — not just to try to get more points, but also to perfect their setup at new places.

Finding success away from Salina is what Hardbarger believes will be the key for him the rest of the season.

“Getting the car to work at different places is the main thing,” he said. “We kind of struggled with that here lately. Last year anyways, we’d go to different places and we just wouldn’t get the setup just right, and that would put us behind the eight ball all night.

“Then of course God, just him helping me and keeping me safe and helping our season.”

NASCAR racing will return to Salina Speedway on Saturday with six of the track’s divisions competing. Racing will begin at 7 p.m. CT.

Typically, “Game 7” is used in reference to a do-or-die contest in a sports league’s postseason already in progress.

But for a handful of drivers heading to Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Atlanta Motor Speedway (3 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), the phrase should be in the minds of those needing a win to clinch a playoff berth.

RELATED: 2022 Cup runners-up | 2022 Cup postseason picture

No driver is arguably more in need to turn his season around than Bubba Wallace.

To say the least, it’s not the year the 28-year-old or 23XI Racing expected from the second-year No. 23 Toyota team.

Halfway through the 2022 season, Wallace has only compiled two top-10 finishes with his lone top-five result coming at the season-opening Daytona 500. In 10 of the 18 races this year, he’s finished outside the top 20.

Wallace’s average finish of 22.0 ranks 27th among full-timers, below that of Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (21.4), Ty Dillon (21.2) and Justin Haley (18.9). Dillon returned to the Cup Series full-time with the newly-merged Petty GMS Racing while Haley is running his first full Cup season with Kaulig Racing.

The results trend is still going in the wrong direction for Wallace, as he’s DNF’d in four of the last seven races.

Combined with the poor finishes, there have been some hiccups with his pit crew.

Slow stops, tire issues and penalties have thwarted great runs for the No. 23 team at times and while Wallace recovered with a top 10 at Kansas Speedway and a 12th-place run at Nashville Superspeedway, it didn’t stop him from lashing out at the team over his radio after in-race mistakes.

RELATED: Wallace’s emotions | Kurt Busch on Wallace

The recent pit-crew criticisms have led to a swap of crew members between Wallace and Joe Gibbs Racing driver Christopher Bell.

This is Wallace’s fifth full year in the Cup Series and he’s yet to break through into the postseason. However, with his track record at superspeedways, Sunday provides Wallace with a golden opportunity to turn a so-far frustrating season into a fresh slate for the second half and playoff push.

It’s no secret that Wallace has a knack for running well on superspeedways.

Below is a breakdown of his superspeedway history.

TRACK         STARTS      TOP FIVES         TOP 10s      LAPS LED          WINS
Daytona 10 4 4 21 0
Talladega 9 1 1 53 1
Atlanta (reconfigured) 1 0 0 3 0

Wallace owns two runner-up finishes in the Daytona 500 and was second to Ryan Blaney in last year’s regular-season finale at Daytona. Atlanta’s re-profiled 1.54-mile layout will use the same superspeedway rules configuration as the larger ovals at Daytona and Talladega.

While there’s not a large sample size on the reconfigured Atlanta oval, Wallace should be aggressive in working his way to the front of the pack as he spent more than two-thirds of the spring race inside the top 15, according to NASCAR’s loop data.

The reason why Wallace should view Sunday as a “do-or-die” for his playoff hopes is that the stretch of tracks coming up before the regular-season finale at Daytona don’t favor him, to put it kindly.

Two road courses are among the next six races after Atlanta — a style of track where Wallace has yet to find comfort.

Here is a breakdown of Wallace’s history at the six races following Atlanta.

TRACK STARTS TOP 10s LAPS LED AVG. FINISH
New Hampshire 4 0 0 23.8
Pocono 9 1 7 22.3
Indy Road Course
1 0 0 13.0
Michigan 8 1 0 20.6
Richmond 8 0 0 25.1
Watkins Glen 3 0 0 25.3

Of the eight races Wallace has participated in at Richmond, he’s only finished on the lead lap once and that came in the fall of 2019 where he scored his best finish at the 0.75-mile oval of 12th.

A winless Sunday wouldn’t be a complete loss of hope for the No. 23 team with several races still before Daytona closes out the regular season, but time is running out for Wallace if he and his team have a goal of reaching the playoffs. Now might be his best time to strike.

According to BetMGM, Wallace is a popular pick to win Atlanta with 6.8% of the handle, which is fourth-highest among all drivers.

Wallace enters Sunday 25th in the points standings — 177 points below the playoff cutline.

Brittney Zamora is one of NASCAR’s most dynamic rising stars. As a second-generation driver and one of the inaugural participants in the Busch Light Accelerate Her program, Zamora is just starting to rev her engine on her speedy path to success.

From early on, Zamora was encouraged by her family to pursue motorsports and follow her dream to become one of the all-time top drivers in NASCAR. Throughout her career, she has won various championships, broken track records and received a multitude of awards ranging from Rookie of the Year to the prestigious NASCAR Wendall Scott Trailblazer Award. Zamora currently races the No. 25 Pro Late Model for Rackley W.A.R., and is competing full-time in the Show Me The Money series at the Montgomery Motor Speedway.

By joining forces with Busch Light through the Accelerate Her program, Zamora aims to break the stereotypes that many women face in a male-dominated sport. She recalls having trouble securing meaningful brand support at the beginning of her career and facing more obstacles than her competitors. Ultimately, this pushed her to become an even stronger competitor, making a name for herself on and off the track.

“Throughout my career, I’ve struggled with exposure due to a lack of brand support, so having a brand like Busch Light that is so prominent in NASCAR backing me is huge,” Zamora said. “This support from Busch Light is helping to set me up for success in a way that I haven’t before. I’m excited to continue growing with this support and establish a long-lasting relationship with one of the biggest supporters of NASCAR — Busch Light.”

ABOUT THE BUSCH LIGHT ACCELERATE HER PROGRAM

The Busch Light Accelerate Her Program is a three-year commitment that takes aim at the inequity of resources available to women drivers by investing directly in every 21+ woman driver in NASCAR, providing brand-building opportunities to increase fan visibility of drivers and the sport. The Busch Light Accelerate Her program is the next step in a proud, 40-year partnership between Busch Light and NASCAR that has propelled the sport forward, bringing fans closer to the action and expanding NASCAR throughout the U.S. Busch Light asks that fans show their support by heading to Busch.com/accelerateher where they can learn more about the inaugural drivers, including Natalie, that are receiving this opportunity.

Dave Alpern, president of Joe Gibbs Racing, left no words minced: The team intends to have Kyle Busch back in the No. 18 Toyota for the 2023 Cup Series season along with Ty Gibbs back in the Xfinity Series.

What muddies those plans is the lack of signed contracts midway through the 2022 season.

RELATED: Atlanta weekend schedule | Cup points standings

Busch, the only active multi-time Cup champion on the circuit, is losing longtime sponsor Mars, Inc. at the end of the season. In a Thursday teleconference, Alpern noted the search for the two-time titlist’s replacement sponsor remains ongoing.

“We’ve been pretty consistent since the end of last season, which is we want Kyle to be in the (No.) 18 car and that’s our plan,” Alpern said. “We’re still working on sponsorship, and as much interest as there is in our sport, these take a long time. And admittedly, this one’s taking a little longer than we thought. It’s not for lack of interest. It’s just trying to get everything put together. So those will probably happen in parallel. And, again, we’re hoping to get something decided here in the very near future.”

Those discussions persist while Gibbs, the grandson of team owner Joe Gibbs, continues to impress in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, where he has amassed four wins this year, equalling last year’s total in two less series starts. Perhaps his most impressive triumph came July 2 at Road America, where he executed a clean, late pass on defending Cup champion Kyle Larson to claim the victory.

“Obviously, Ty’s done really, really, really good,” Alpern said. “This last weekend, I gotta be honest, was exciting to see him race against a Cup champion. Look, there’s a lot of interest in Ty for a number of reasons. He’s a great driver. He’s a great kid. It’s been fun. So I think the timetable for us is to continue. We don’t want to push him too fast. There are no specific plans beyond this year in reference to a Cup race or whatever. We’re just kind of trying to play out the year and see if he can go win or can compete for an Xfinity championship this year. And he’s got four wins and he’s doing really well.”

Asked more directly if the program’s intent is to keep Gibbs in the second-tiered Xfinity Series for 2023, Alpern said: “Yes, that would be the plan. That is Plan A.”

The only apparent opening for a Plan B — moving Gibbs to Cup — would be the No. 18 Toyota, which Busch has operated since 2008 and where he’s earned 56 of his 60 career Cup wins.

Alpern indicated no concern in getting Busch re-signed with the proper partners in place.

“What we do is get sponsors. I mean, we’ve been doing that for 30 years. We’re in the business,” Alpern said. “I think it’s not a matter of just slapping something on the car. It’s finding a partnership that makes sense. And so we’re just trying to find the right fit.”

But for now, the dotted line sits blank.

“We have every intention (of re-signing Busch),” Alpern said. “Pro sports — look, things happen. Carl Edwards retired on the week of Christmas one year, so trying to speculate what’s going to happen? Things happen. But the plan is we feel confident there’ll be a good partner on that car for next year.

“And, again, the hope is that Kyle Busch will be in it.”

MORE: Ty Gibbs on Stacking Pennies

NASCAR’s Camping World Truck Series makes its Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course debut in Saturday’s O’Reilly Auto Parts 150 at Mid-Ohio (1:30 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) — the third and final road-course event of the season.

Current championship leader Zane Smith won the first road-course race of the year at Austin’s Circuit of The Americas (COTA), and NASCAR Cup Series regular Kyle Busch took the trophy more recently at Sonoma Raceway, with Smith finishing runner-up.

RELATED: Truck Series standings | NASCAR TV schedule

NASCAR held eight Xfinity Series races at Mid-Ohio, as recently as last season. This weekend, one of those winners, Trackhouse Racing team owner Justin Marks, will compete again at the 2.258-mile, 13-turn circuit in Lexington, Ohio.

Saturday’s race marks the final leg of the Triple Truck Challenge incentive program. Corey Heim, who is making selected 2022 starts for Kyle Busch Motorsports, can pocket an extra $150,000 should he match his win at World Wide Technology Raceway at Gateway back in June with a victory at Mid-Ohio. Any other driver to win would take an extra $50,000 as part of the popular program.

With only two races remaining to set the 10-driver Camping World Truck Series Playoff field, Smith leads all championship-eligible drivers with three race wins and 12 top 10s in 14 races — and holds a 21-point advantage on John Hunter Nemechek in the standings. The Regular Season Championship concludes July 23 at Pocono Raceway with the top-10 drivers earning playoff eligibility.

Only 53 points separate the top six drivers in the standings. Ben Rhodes, the 2021 series champion, is currently in third place, 30 points behind Smith.

Zane Smith, Nemechek and Rhodes all have previous road-course wins. Smith has the win (COTA) and runner-up (Sonoma) this year. Nemechek was runner-up at COTA this year and won at Canadian Tire Motorsports Park in 2016. And Rhodes won on the Daytona Road Course last season.

There is an hour-long practice session Friday morning followed by two rounds of Cometic Gasket Pole Qualifying at 3:35 p.m. ET (FS1).

Chase Briscoe predicted an intense and wild ride at the reconfigured Atlanta Motor Speedway’s first NASCAR Cup Series event, the Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500, earlier this year.

It would be crazy, predicted Kyle Busch. Denny Hamlin didn’t know what to expect at the 62-year-old track, nor did Kurt Busch, Austin Dillon and dozens of other drivers who grew accustomed to three and four-wide racing atop the worn asphalt.

It was an intense, wild, crazy, and unpredictable ride with 46 lead changes — from 20 different drivers — as William Byron won his third career Cup Series race. And four months later, the online betting markets appear braced for more chaos.

In NASCAR odds at BetMGM, four drivers opened as co-favorites for the Quaker State 400; Chase Elliott, Denny Hamlin, Ryan Blaney and Byron all sat at +1000. Byron and Hamlin have since dropped to +1100, but if it holds until Sunday, it will be the first race this season without a driver inside +1000 for race-winner odds.

RELATED: Atlanta Motor Speedway opening odds

And with five more drivers stacked closely behind at +1200 — Kyle Larson and Ross Chastain — and +1400 — Bubba Wallace, Kyle Busch and Joey Logano – it could be the tightest odds of the season.

Featured matchup betting reflects oddsmakers’ reluctance to draw lines in the sand, or perhaps more appropriately, lines in the meticulously manicured asphalt, which was replaced immediately following last year’s Quaker State 400. This was designed to produce pack racing similar to Daytona International Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway.

One week after pricing multiple heavy favorites for the Kwik Trip 250, BetMGM doesn’t have a featured matchup favorite above -140 this weekend.

Ryan Blaney (-130) vs. Martin Truex Jr. (+100)

Winner of the 2021 Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500, Ryan Blaney finished 17th in March after three straight top-five finishes at Atlanta, part of a strong run for Ford drivers over the last five years.

Blaney is tied with Denny Hamlin for the most top-five finishes at Atlanta, Daytona, and Talladega (seven) over the last 15 races at those three tracks. Truex isn’t far behind, though, with five top-five finishes in those races, including a third-place finish in last year’s Quaker State 400.

As of Thursday, Truex is dominating public betting in this matchup; he has 95% of the tickets and 93% of the handle.

Tyler Reddick (-125) vs. Austin Dillon (-105)

One week removed from his first career NASCAR Cup Series win, Tyler Reddick is seeking to join only five other drivers with multiple wins this season. The 26-year-old driver of the No. 8 Chevrolet has never posted back-to-back top-five finishes in his Cup Series career, something Austin Dillon has done only once in his nine full seasons.

Reddick isn’t a popular pick in race-winner betting — with only 2.1% of the tickets and 2% of the handle — but he has 65% of the handle in the head-to-head with Austin Dillon.

Kevin Harvick (-120) vs. Brad Keselowski (-110)

There was nothing better than Atlanta’s old asphalt, Kevin Harvick said before the race in March, which ended with his worst finish (21st) at the track since 2010.

Harvick is now 21 years removed from his first win at Atlanta Motor Speedway — in the 2001 Cracker Barrel Old Country Store 500, his third career Cup Series start — and after last week’s 10th-place finish, he will carry a 61-race winless drought into Sunday’s race. It’s the second-longest drought of his 22-year career.

Harvick is currently commanding two of every three tickets and 90% of the handle against Brad Keselowski in featured matchup betting.

Bubba Wallace (-140) vs. Michael McDowell (+110)

This feels like the week Bubba Wallace has been waiting for.

Struggling for consistent contention with the No. 23 Toyota, Wallace raced well at Atlanta in March (13th), Daytona in February (second), and Talladega last October (first). He did swap two crew members with Christopher Bell ahead of this weekend’s race.

Wallace is a popular pick to win the race — with 6.8% of the handle, fourth-highest among all drivers — and finish ahead of Michael McDowell. Wallace has 88% of the handle over the 37-year-old who finished eighth last weekend in Wisconsin.

You can view updated Quaker State 400 odds and more online sports betting opportunities at the BetMGM online sportsbook.

Danny Bohn’s family has a long history at New Jersey’s Wall Stadium Speedway.

His grandfather, Parker Bohn, and father, Eddie Bohn, were both winners at the historic third-mile, high-banked paved oval long before the youngest member of the Bohn racing family turned laps at the track.

This Saturday, the Bohn name returns to Wall Stadium Speedway as the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour rolls into town for the first time since 2019. Bohn, who will pilot the No. 65 Modified owned by Scott Brannick, is among those on the entry list for Saturday’s Jersey Shore 150.

The last time Bohn raced with the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour also happens to be the last time the Tour visited Wall Stadium Speedway. Bohn started ninth and finished 27th at the track in 2019.

That event represents one of Bohn’s three NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour starts, which is surprising given Bohn made a name for himself racing Modifieds. He just didn’t do it in the Northeast.

RELATED: Wall entry list | Race preview

Bohn’s career skyrocketed once he began racing in the Southeast. In 2014, he did something few Northern drivers in history have ever done: win a track championship at Bowman Gray Stadium in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

He hasn’t stopped winning at Bowman Gray. Despite branching out into the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series the last few years, Bohn has made a point to continue racing at Bowman Gray as often as he can.

In fact, he opened the 2022 season at Bowman Gray Stadium in winning fashion by dominating the Hayes Jewelers 200 on April 23. It was his first victory in the track’s biggest race and was his 16th overall at the flat quarter-mile oval.

Now the question is whether Bohn can translate the success he’s enjoyed in the Southeast into a winning drive Saturday night at Wall Stadium Speedway.

He’s enjoyed success at Wall Stadium Speedway before. He won the track’s annual Turkey Derby event in 2006 and claimed a pair of Modified track championships at Wall Stadium Speedway early in his career.

Bohn could hardly be considered the favorite to win the Jersey Shore 150, but he shouldn’t be counted out, either.

Jersey Shore 150 marks season halfway point

The Jersey Shore 150 at Wall Stadium Speedway will officially mark the halfway point of the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season.

Through seven events this year, Ron Silk has utilized consistency to secure his spot at the top of the Tour standings.

Despite being winless thus far this year, Silk has not finished outside the top 10. That, combined with four top-five finishes, has given him an 18-point advantage in the standings ahead of his closest pursuer, Eric Goodale, who has one top-five and five top-10 finishes so far.

However, behind the top two, there are several other contenders lurking.

Jon McKennedy and Tommy Catalano are tied for third in the standings, 22 points off the pace set by Silk. McKennedy and Catalano each have a runner-up finish this year, but neither have managed to find Victory Lane.

The biggest threat to Silk’s position may very well be the man who sits fifth in the standings. That man is three-time and defending NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour champion Justin Bonsignore, who is 33 points behind Silk despite having two wins this season.

Bonsignore’s victories, which came at Richmond Raceway and Monadnock Speedway, have helped him make up a deficit created by poor finishes at New Smyrna Speedway and Riverhead Raceway earlier this year.

With half of the season left, anything could happen.

Dave Sapienza driver of the #36 SAP Enterprises during the Duel at the Dog 200 for the Whelen Modified Tour at Monadnock Speedway on June 19, 2022 in Winchester, New Hampshire. (Nick Grace/NASCAR)
Dave Sapienza, driver of the No. 36 SAP Enterprises Modified, during the Duel at the Dog 200 for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at Monadnock Speedway on June 19, 2022 in Winchester, New Hampshire. (Photo: Nick Grace/NASCAR)

Sapienza returns to Wall in search of improvement

Dave Sapienza had a good race the last time the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour visited Wall Stadium Speedway in 2019.

Sapienza, a native of Riverhead, New York, finished fifth that day. It represents one of only nine top-five finishes that Sapienza has earned through 95 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour starts.

With any luck, Sapienza will be able to make it an even 10 by the time Saturday night is over.

Sapienza has struggled for speed this season. Despite sitting ninth in the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour standings, Sapienza has failed to register one top-10 finish in seven starts this year.

He has been, however, consistent in the finishes he has achieved. His best finish of the season is 13th at Lee USA Speedway, and he has finished no worse than 18th all year.

Perhaps he’ll be able to turn that consistency into a strong run in the Jersey Shore 150 on Saturday evening.

Notes:

  • Two drivers, Anthony Sesley and Jack Ely, will be making their NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour debuts Saturday night at Wall Stadium Speedway.
  • In addition to the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Jersey Shore 150, Wall Stadium Speedway will also hold races for three weekly divisions Saturday. The Sportsman, Factory Stock and Legend Car division will also be in action.
  • Andrew Krause, who is the defending Wall Stadium Speedway Modified division champion, is scheduled to compete Saturday. His family has operated Wall Stadium Speedway since 2011.

As the race for the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs heats up, the series heads to Atlanta Motor Speedway for Sunday’s Quaker State 400 at the revamped Georgia circuit.

Before the green flag waves (3 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), make sure you are up to speed on some important details.

SETTING THE LINEUP

Earlier this season, Cup Series teams participated in a 50-minute practice session before the first Atlanta race. This weekend, teams will only participate in two-round, single-lap qualifying. Split into two groups, A and B, the fastest five from each will move on to the Busch Light Pole Award round, setting the starting lineup for Sunday’s race.

RELATED: Qualifying orderAtlanta weekend schedule | How to watch on TV

ATLANTA HISTORY

— Atlanta Motor Speedway has hosted 116 races in the Cup Series, placing it seventh on the all-time list. Fireball Roberts won the first race here in July 1960.

— Atlanta held two races a year from 1960-2010 except for 1961 when three races were held. Atlanta held one race a year from 2011-20, and starting in 2021 Atlanta again hosted two races a year.

— This season’s renovations mark the track’s first repave since 1997 and also tightened the corner width from 55 feet to 40 feet and increased the banking from 24 degrees to 28.

— The last 15 Atlanta races were won by five organizations: Hendrick Motorsports (5), Team Penske (4), Stewart-Haas Racing (3), Joe Gibbs Racing (2) and Chip Ganassi Racing.

— Kyle Larson has led 419 laps at Atlanta, securing his spot as the all-time lap leader at the track who has not won a race. Geoff Bodine is second with 391 laps led.

Source: Racing Insights

GOODYEAR TIRES

With the series returning to Atlanta Motor Speedway for the second time this year, the race package remains the same and the teams should be more familiar with it this time around. The offseason repave placed the middle-Georgia track in the superspeedway classification with Daytona International Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway, meaning Cup teams will field cars with 510 horsepower and a seven-inch-tall spoiler, as opposed to 670 horsepower and a four-inch blade at other intermediate tracks.

“The one advantage we have in the Cup Series at Atlanta this week is that these teams already have a race under their belts at this track with this package,” said Greg Stucker, Goodyear’s director of racing. “Having said that, that also means that teams have had four months to learn this car, study this package and improve their cars.  The challenges that Atlanta now presents have not changed since the last race in March, and along with the repave and increase in banking, the smooth track surface will not naturally wear tires much at all.

“Tire wear and the dissipation of heat is important in racing because as the tire wears, it sheds rubber and that helps keep the tire cooler and performing at a more optimal level.  We’ve specifically designed our tires for Atlanta to operate in these low-wear conditions, both with the formulation of the tread compounds as well as the tread depth.”

ATLANTA STORY LINES

— With the regular-season championship up for grabs and 15 playoff points on the line, the top three drivers are separated by just 35 points in the standings.

— Kyle Larson is on a 16-race winless streak; the longest of his tenure with Hendrick Motorsports.

— The pass for the win came in the final 10 laps in 12 of the 18 races in 2022, including the spring race at Atlanta.

— Twenty different drivers led a lap in the March 2022 race, the most ever at Atlanta.

— If Kurt Busch wins at Atlanta with Toyota, he will tie Cale Yarborough and Bobby Allison for the most different makes with a win at the track.

Source: Racing Insights

GIDDY UP, DARK HORSES

Normally, a superspeedway-style race would struggle to find a dominant driver in the field. But in March, William Byron led an incredible 111 laps en route to an impressive victory. Unsurprisingly, Byron opens tied for first on this Sunday’s BetMGM betting oddsboard at 10-1. So, will the co-favorite dominate again? Or will another driver rise to the occasion?

Two very consistent drivers slotted in behind Byron with the second- and third-most laps led in March: Ross Chastain (42) and Chase Elliott (29). Both drivers are in a fight for the regular-season title and cannot afford a bad day at Atlanta. As close as they are in the title fight, they are even closer on the oddsboard. Elliott opens at 10-1, co-favorite, with Chastain on his heels at 12-1.

But there is also incredible value to be found down the line.

Corey LaJoie showed strong will and determination in this year’s first race, finishing fifth overall in by far his strongest race of the season. At 125-1 odds, LaJoie is arguably the best longshot on the board. Recent superspeedway winners Bubba Wallace (14-1) and Michael McDowell (33-1) present good value, but will not surprise too many people if they find Victory Lane this time around.

RELATED: Complete list of Sunday’s odds

FANTASY LIVE

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 (618), Ryan Blaney (583) and Ross Chastain (578).

How to play: Fantasy Live | Set up a team today!

ALSO ON NASCAR.COM

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.

Editor’s note: This story first published on June 22, 2021:

One of the best complementing experiences of attending a NASCAR race is camping near a race track. Both before and after a race, the interaction between fans — creating new friendships and renewing old friendships, as well — is a celebration of NASCAR, camaraderie and limitless fun.

There’s a definite joy of sitting around a campsite talking with fellow fans about memorable past races, favorite (and sometimes not-so-favorite) drivers, and swapping tales — all the while enjoying a drink or meal, maybe even toasting some marshmallows over a campfire.

RELATED: Buy tickets for Atlanta Motor Speedway

While camping can run the gamut from pitching a pup tent to “roughing it” in a six-figure motor home, like with the old American Express commercials, there are certain things you just shouldn’t leave home without.

As part of NASCAR’s Summer Family Fun initiative, here are 10 helpful tips for novice campers to make the overall experience all the more enjoyable and rewarding:

1. The biggest must-have of all: bug spray! Whether you’re camping outside places like Bristol Motor Speedway, Pocono Raceway or Talladega Superspeedway, always make sure to pack bug spray to shoo away pests like mosquitos, bees, wasps and especially ants! Don’t forget: pests love camping, too! They consider it an all-you-can-eat buffet, be it your food or, in the case of “skeeters,” your blood. Keep a can of bug spray in your bag, and don’t forget the suntan lotion.

2. Practice makes perfect: If you’re a camping newbie, DO NOT wait until you get to your campsite to figure out how to pitch your tent. Even if the instructions say you can be in business in five minutes or less, don’t believe it if you have zero prior experience. Make several practice runs while still at home on learning a quick, efficient way to erect and take down your new tent. Also, put silicone treatment on both the inside and outside of your tent to make sure it’s as waterproof as possible.

3. It’s all about location, location, location: Make sure you pitch your tent on as level ground as you can find, and bring along two tarps or indoor/outdoor rugs, one that can essentially serve as your “living room” outside the tent, and another tarp for the interior of the tent to rest your sleeping bags upon and stay clean and dry. Lastly, if you can camp in locations that offer amenities including hot showers, clean restrooms, and some that even offer wi-fi connections, you’ll have nearly all the comforts of home.

4. Getting a charge out of life, Part 1: Don’t forget a portable battery-powered radio — preferably one that includes a weather band (and alarm for approaching bad weather alerts) — and plenty of batteries. A radio not only keeps you connected with the news of the world and Motor Racing Network’s or Performance Racing Network’s broadcasts of NASCAR races, but it also keeps you informed of weather in your immediate area. If a storm front is moving in, a radio will help you prepare for what’s to come, as well as allow time to seek shelter, if need be. Also, make sure you have at least a couple of flashlights (again, with plenty of backup battery power) or lanterns to show you the way in the darkness. One clever amenity we’ve seen numerous campers use is to hang glow sticks to give a more comforting ambient light atmosphere around the campsite.

5. Getting a charge out of life, Part 2: Be it talking, texting, checking email and social media, surfing the web or playing games, we love our cell phones. Unfortunately, the more we use our phones, the quicker the battery life dries up. Our best suggestion: invest in not one but two portable phone battery chargers. And like your phone, make sure they’re fully charged before you leave home because it’s easy to forget there isn’t a wall plug or power strip that’s accessible when you’re in your tent.

6. Pack extra food and snacks (and ice!): Your campsite menu plans are only limited by your imagination, from simple staples such as hamburgers and hot dogs, on up to ribs, steaks, chicken and more. Always bring more than enough non-perishables (aka canned food) in case you wind up staying an extra day or two, plus plenty of chips and other snacks to nibble on when you get the munchies (but be careful about leaving candy around, as the ants will descend upon you quicker than a mid-winter blizzard), plus plenty of water and other liquids to remain hydrated. Don’t forget your cooler and lots of ice (or ice substitutes such as freeze packs and the like) to keep drinks, meats and other perishables cool and prevent spoilage. And bring several rolls of paper towels.

7. Pack extra clothes and blankets: Even if you camp for just one night, make sure to have plenty of blankets, pillows and extra dry clothes (including a jacket) in case you get stuck in the middle of a monsoon, your tent leaks or the 90-degree mid-afternoon temperature suddenly drops to 40 degrees at night, particularly in some of the more hilly areas near tracks such as Pocono, Bristol and New Hampshire. And don’t forget one folding chair apiece for everyone in your camping party.

8. Bring extra cash, just in case: Even if you’re the most prepared camper in the world, there’s always the chance of unexpected expenses that can occur at the worst of times. Plus, what’s going camping if you can’t bring home a few racing souvenirs from the track, right? One key tip: if you take extra cash, make sure it’s in your wallet only and that the wallet never leaves your sight or possession.

9. If possible, keep your vehicle close by: Unless you’re in a motor home or trailer, having your vehicle parked close by allows an element of enhanced safety from both stormy weather as well as if a local bear or other wildlife wanders into your campsite (which admittedly is rare). And if your sleeping bag proves too hard to get some decent sleep, there’s always the comfort of your car or truck to get some zzzzz’s.

10. Don’t be a litter bug: Bring plenty of garbage bags to clean up after yourself. Leave your campsite as you found it: clean! One other important thing: make sure that if you built one, that your campfire is completely extinguished before you leave. To paraphrase a line from Smokey The Bear, only YOU can prevent campsite fires!

Oh yes, one more thing — and perhaps the most important thing to pack of all: don’t forget your race tickets!