GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway
(⏰ 3 p.m. ET | 📺 FOX | 📻 MRN, SiriusXM)

Everything you need to know for Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Talladega Superspeedway, the 10th regular-season event of the 2022 campaign.

Race-day info 📝

Where: Talladega, Alabama
Approximate start time: 3 p.m. ET  | Weekend schedule
TV/Radio: FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio | Full TV schedule
Forecast: Mostly sunny, with a high near 85, according to NOAA.gov | Weather tracker
Race distance: 188 laps | 500.08 miles
Stages: 60 | 120 | 188
Pit-road speed: 55 mph
Caution car speed: 70 mph
The purse: $7,420,008
Talladega 101: Get the full lowdown
Starting lineup: Christopher Bell on the pole

Key things to watch 🔑

Big story line

The Next Gen car makes its maiden voyage on the high banks of Talladega, NASCAR’s largest and arguably wildest track at a whopping 2.66 miles in length, merely a week after Cup Series cars spent Easter Sunday night kicking up dirt in eastern Tennessee on a half-mile inside a colosseum. Those are quite the ends of the spectrum that racing fans will get to enjoy in back-to-back weeks, as the sport puts on another highlight-worthy event of an entirely different beast. History was made the last time NASCAR raced at Talladega, seeing Bubba Wallace earn his first Cup win — and the first win for then-first-year 23XI Racing — and with how this season has already gone, it would not be a surprise to see more happen Sunday. Tyler Reddick was, once again, extremely close to nabbing his first win at Bristol Motor Speedway, and Talladega might mark just as good a spot for the Richard Childress Racing driver to break through. Expect a lot of eyes to be on Brad Keselowski, as well, as this weekend likely offers his best remaining shot at winning his way into the playoffs, as a six-time track winner. | Keselowski confident in RFK Racing’s superspeedway program

Who’s hot? Who’s not? 

Team Penske’s Joey Logano and Ryan Blaney look like the two drivers who fit the bill of both hot in 2022 and have the accompanying strong track record at ‘Dega. They, along with 2020 champion Chase Elliott — another strong contender for the win Sunday — stand as the only drivers to top 300 points so far this season. They’ve also had a significant say in Penske winning eight of the last 13 races at the Alabama track (the other five were won by five different organizations). The Trackhouse Racing duo of Ross Chastain and Daniel Suárez also seem to keep showing up every weekend hunting for wins, so you’d think that’ll be the case at Talladega as well. Martin Truex Jr. looked close to being a top contender early on but is starting to dip a bit and now heads to a track type that he’s never won on in 68 starts. Fellow former member of the “Big Three” Kevin Harvick is also in need of a jumpstart, and thankfully for him has put together some decent runs at Talladega of late (three top 10s in the last four).

Driving under the radar

One might argue that Alex Bowman and Christopher Bell might sometimes get overshadowed by their respective teammates, who have five championships collectively, but they’ve also each been putting together quality races over the past month. Bell made plenty of noise at Bristol before finishing seventh, his third-such result or better in the past four races after a dreadful hole to start the season in. He’s also now led laps in three of the last seven and will start on the pole Sunday. Bowman actually already has a win, coming in a stretch of five top 10s in the last seven races. Neither driver has a stellar Talladega history, but it’s Talladega. Anything can happen.

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Getty Images

Race-day staples ✅

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Our biggest pieces of the week — get covered for race day from all angles.

• Paint Scheme Preview: See the looks for Talladega races | See the schemes
• Power Rankings: Chase Elliott having career year despite no wins | Updated driver rankings
• Fantasy Fastlane:
Brad Keselowski needs a big weekend | Top plays, sleepers
• NASCAR betting:
See who’s favored to win Sunday | BetMGM odds

Catch the pack 💨

Read up on the top headlines from the week leading up to Sunday’s race.

• Kyle Busch contract: Busch says to ask Joe Gibbs about his contract | Read more
• Still no bad blood: Reddick stands by Bristol post-race reaction to Briscoe | Read more
Front and off-center: How Talladega’s start-finish line placement came to be | Read more
• Triumph at Talladega:
Reflecting on Bubba Wallace’s breakthrough win | Full story
• Let’s vote!:
2022 Cup Series All-Star Fan Vote is now open | Make your choice
• Next Gen analysis:
Bristol Dirt Race came down to car control, driver skill | Read more
• Dynamic duo:
Australian mother-daughter driver duo trying to make NASCAR, ARCA history | Read more
• Survey says …:
Drivers explain “The Big One” in a GIF | See the GIFs
• Coast-to-coast:
Daniel Suárez visits U.S. Coast Guard station to support Mission 600 | Read more
• Pit-stall analysis:
Holding the draft will be key to having a complete race at ‘Dega | Read more
• No. 9 throwback:
See Chase Elliott’s ride for Darlington | First look
• Major bag alert:
Wendy’s to sponsor Gragson at Talladega | Read more
• Junior in the booth:
NBC Sports’ Dale Earnhardt Jr. hops in the FOX booth on Sunday | Read more
• Clint behind the wheel: Clint Bowyer to pilot Davey Allison’s iconic black No. 28 with ceremonial lap at Talladega | Read more

Get in on the action 💰

Think you know NASCAR? Put your mettle to the test with gaming, fantasy.

• BetMGM: Should Brad Keselowski be the favorite? | Betting analysis
• Play it LIVE:
Full guide to 2022 NASCAR Fantasy Live game | Get the FAQ
• Backseat Bets:
Will Briscoe beat Reddick? | Listen to the debate
• The Action Network:
Three drivers to pick on race day | See who the experts chose
• Weekly props:
Will superspeedway titans rule? | Make your picks
• Going all the way:
NASCAR betting: 2022 Cup Series championship odds | See them here

A trip down Memory Blvd. 🛣

Time to turn to Talladega, the track full of high speeds and high tension. But first, take a look back at some important track history.

Ricky

• The only one that matters: Drivers to lead one lap in win | See the list
• Spring into action:
Every spring winner in Talladega history | See the list
• Surprise, surprise:
Through the years: Talladega’s shocking winners | See the list
• This race last year:
Brad Keselowski seals Talladega victory with last-lap pass in overtime | Read more
• And of course, last fall:
Bubba Wallace makes history with first Cup victory at Talladega | Read more

Fast facts ⏩

Hard-hitting, race-relevant statistics, brought to you by the experts at Racing Insights.

Twelve drivers got their first Cup win at Talladega — for seven of them, it was their only career win.
For seven of the last eight Talladega winners, it was their first win of the season.
Twenty-nine Talladega races were won with a last-lap pass, including three of the last four.
The driver who led the most laps has failed to win the last three Talladega races.
The last seven superspeedway races were won by seven different drivers.

Say what? 🎙

Notable quotes from the stars of the sport heading into Sunday’s race.

Austin Cindric
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

“Anything can happen at Talladega Superspeedway. It’s a little bit of a coin flip, but my No. 3 team will be doing everything we can to try and win. In order to succeed at Talladega, you have to have a little bit of luck, and use momentum at the very end to take advantage of positions. It’s speedway racing. It’s drafting. And it’s chaos, but we’re up for the challenge.” — Austin Dillon, driver of the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet

“The biggest takeaway from Daytona was that these cars drove really good, they handled really well, I didn’t have any handling complaints. Daytona is typically the slicker of the two race tracks and going to Talladega I would expect handling to be a non-factor again. Whenever handling isn’t a factor then typically we are able to be much more aggressive and that’s when we see really good racing.” — Christopher Bell, driver of the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

“Sometimes when the pressure is high people make more mistakes, but at the same time expecting big blocks, expecting people to take runs when they have them. Those types of things are probably what you can do at least to prepare ahead of time as a driver, to maybe anticipate other peoples’ moves, but, otherwise, I’m not promising more wrecks, but it’s usually the late blocks, I mean, similar to what you saw at the end of the second Duel (at Daytona). These cars are very, very challenging to block runs and they’re very challenging to take pushes, but I think there’s gonna be a lot of pushing. I think it’s a lot of the normal stuff you see, especially you’re kind of Daytona end of the year race, but, like I said before, there’s a lot of people noticing that there’s a lot of wins and you have to win to make it into the playoffs with the way things are trending at the moment.” — Austin Cindric, driver of the No. 2 Team Penske Ford

The recent spike up the sportsbook charts is no fluke. Bubba Wallace’s rise to 11-1 odds for Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Talladega Superspeedway is just one acknowledgment of how his skill set at the sport’s largest ovals has developed. His team and fellow competitors recognize it, too.

“That’s a good question because it’s kind of happened recently,” says Joey Logano, a three-time Talladega winner. “I’d say he’s a fairly patient speedway racer, where he makes moves every now and again, but most of the time, he’s pretty patient on kind of letting the race come to him. He used to be a lot more aggressive, make moves, and a lot of times they didn’t work. They weren’t fully calculated and made him honestly fairly easy to beat.

“Now, it’s not quite like that anymore where he’s upped his game and kind of found his own niche of speedway racing that works for him, and he does a good job of surviving them. And that’s the other piece I see. He does a good job of getting to the end, which plays to that patient piece.”

Wallace found his way to an abbreviated end of the most recent Talladega event, securing his first NASCAR Cup Series win. He enters Sunday’s GEICO 500 (3 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM) with a recent bounty of strong showings on his side at Talladega, Daytona International Speedway and the new hybrid-superspeedway at Atlanta Motor Speedway – all of which use the same rules configuration and where the aerodynamic draft is king.

RELATED: Talladega weekend schedule | Latest odds

Wallace had shown glimmers of superspeedway talent earlier in his career, most notably as an emotional runner-up in his first Daytona 500 while racing for team owner Richard Petty. Since joining 23XI Racing at the start of last season, he’s led laps in each of the races at Daytona and Talladega, and his most recent finishes at those two tracks are second (2021 Daytona-2), first (2021 Talladega-2) and second (2022 Daytona-1).

“We’ve had fast cars but didn’t really get the finishes, but then these last three speedway races, man, things have just clicked,” Wallace told NASCAR.com. “So, a little bit of luck involved in all that, too, but I’ve just got to go out and continue to do what we do.”

Luck, perhaps, but making the right maneuvers in the pack also takes a deft touch.

The stout No. 23 Toyotas that the Denny Hamlin and Michael Jordan-owned team fields have helped Wallace become a more regular contender, but his growth as a driver at those high-speed tracks has made him a key player in the draft.

MORE: Wallace makes historic return

“To say we’re watching Bubba mature in front of us, you know, is an understatement,” says Mike Wheeler, 23XI Racing’s competition director. “I think he came in with a lot of insight on how to speedway race. I like to think we gave him a better car to do it in. I really can’t say that, because he definitely excelled pretty early on. I think we’ve had good Toyota cars for years and good packages, but he definitely took it in, and early on, you realized he was making a lot of good moves, but still making typical driver mistakes that get you shuffled out. But at the same point, you realized he had confidence that he could get back up there. He would take himself out if there was, you know, some people that were scary around him. I know Denny has been that way, and a lot of guys will actually bail out of the pack if they see people around them they’re not comfortable with. And that just tells you that that driver has confidence that he’ll know he’ll get back to the front toward the end of the race.

“I’ve seen that, I’ve seen Bubba work on not just worrying about the car in front of him or the car behind him, but cars multiple rows behind or in front of him. I think that takes a special set of skills that is hard to quantify. But the moment you know you’re working with two guys behind you or three guys behind you to make a run. It shows the maturity and confidence you have in your ability and your equipment, but that you can have to look that far beyond your windshield and the rearview mirror to make stuff happen.”

Joe Gibbs Racing driver Christopher Bell earned his second career NASCAR Cup Series pole position with a lap of 180.928 mph around the 2.66-mile Talladega Superspeedway on Saturday morning — just edging teammate Martin Truex Jr. by .081 seconds.

The all-JGR Toyota front row marks the first time the team has swept top qualifying honors at Talladega. The teammates will lead the field to green in Sunday’s GEICO 500 (3 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: Starting lineup | Weekend schedule

“There is not much to say about the lap, just a lot to say about Toyota, TRD (Toyota Racing Development), the engine package they brought here, and the cars assembled at JGR,’’ said Bell, whose best Talladega finish in four starts is fifth in last fall’s race. “This No. 20 group did a really good job. They gave me the best car in the field today, so hopefully we can keep it going and keep it up front tomorrow.”

Asked if he thought the wind gusts at the track ultimately made a difference in his pole-winning speed, the 27-year-old smiled and said, “it didn’t hurt.’’

“Even from the first round to the second round, I could tell my RPMs picked up really big going down the back straightaway, then they were pretty flat going down the front straightaway, so I don’t know if it was an advantage to me, but definitely didn’t hurt,’’ said Bell, whose previous pole position came in March at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

The 2021 NASCAR Xfinity Series champion Daniel Hemric — held the top qualifying position until the final two cars in the second round (Truex and Bell) and will start third in the No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet. Daniel Suárez was fourth fastest in the No. 99 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet and reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Larson was fifth fastest in the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports. None of these top-five qualifiers has ever won a NASCAR Cup Series race at the track.

Toyota drivers Kurt Busch and Denny Hamlin, Chevrolet’s William Byron, Toyota’s Bubba Wallace and Chevrolet’s Tyler Reddick rounded out the top 10 for Sunday’s grid.

MORE: At-track photos: Talladega | Latest odds

Of note, the top qualifying Ford driver was Joey Logano, who will roll off 13th in the No. 22 Team Penske Mustang on Sunday. Defending race winner Brad Keselowski will start his No. 6 RFK Racing Ford from 15th position on the grid. Keselowski is the winningest driver in the field with six Talladega victories.

Landon Cassill’s No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet did not participate in Saturday’s qualifying sessions after failing Friday’s opening-day technical inspection three times. Cassill will start last in the 39-car field and will have to serve a penalty with a pass through pit road at his first opportunity after the start.

Sunday’s 500-miler is the 10th race of the Cup Series season and the first for the Next Gen car at Talladega. Both the Cup Series and Xfinity Series races this weekend will be held without practice beforehand.

Contributing: Staff reports


The Spire Motorsports No. 77 Chevrolet failed pre-qualifying inspection three times Friday at Talladega Superspeedway, resulting in penalties ahead of Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race.

RELATED: Talladega weekend schedule | At-track photos

Driver Landon Cassill will have to make a pass-through on pit road at the soonest opportunity after the start of Sunday’s GEICO 500 (3 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM) at the 2.66-mile track. The No. 77 team will not be permitted to participate in Saturday’s Busch Light Pole Qualifying (11 a.m. ET, FS1) and will lose pit-stall selection. Additionally, JR Norris — car chief for the No. 77 team — was ejected.

Two other teams in the 39-car field failed inspection two times, resulting in the loss of pit selection and a crew member for the weekend. Those teams:

No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota (driver Martin Truex Jr.; ejected: engineer Nick Burton)
No. 47 JTG Daugherty Chevrolet (driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr.; ejected: car chief Travis Young)

Sunday’s race is the 10th this season in the NASCAR Cup Series and marks the first visit this year to Talladega.

TALLADEGA, Ala. — This may sound familiar: An Earnhardt-powered black No. 3 captured the pole at Talladega Superspeedway.

Driving the Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, Jeffrey Earnhardt topped the qualifying leaderboard Friday. Jeffrey is the grandson of seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Dale Earnhardt, who made the No. 3 iconic.

“I’m taking the moment in, man,” Jeffrey said. “I’d be lying if I said there was no pressure, honestly. What the black No. 3 means to me is, you know, the champion, the man himself, my grandpa. He was my superhero.

“So, there’s definitely pressure. But I’m just honored to even have this opportunity to be out here in this car.”

RELATED: Xfinity starting lineup | Weekend schedule

The P1 starting position for Saturday’s Ag-Pro 300 (4 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN and SiriusXM) marks Jeffrey’s first pole in 135 career starts. Jeffrey has competed in four races so far in 2022, posting a best finish of 13th at Atlanta Motor Speedway, which used the same rules configuration that will be in place for Talladega.

2022 April22 Jeffrey Earnhardt 1 Main Image
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

Of his 22 career poles in the NASCAR Cup Series, Dale put his No. 3 out front 17 times total from 1985-96, three of which came at Talladega. Sixty-seven of his 76 wins came in the No. 3, including nine of his 10 total at Talladega. Dale died in 2001.

“It’s been pretty amazing,” team owner Richard Childress said. “Just to see the black 3 car back on the track with an Earnhardt in it, it’s just kind of touching to me anyway because I was always a big Earnhardt fan. And this is Earnhardt country.”

Dale’s crew chief is back, too. Larry McReynolds, now a FOX Sports broadcaster, will be atop the pit box this weekend for Jeffrey, making his return after nearly 22 years away. McReynolds has 23 NASCAR Cup Series wins to his name, including a Daytona 500 victory with Dale in 1998.

“It’s cool to be back down here,” McReynolds said, “trust me.”

Jeffrey’s best-career result in the NASCAR Xfinity Series dates back to 2019 – third at Charlotte Motor Speedway. The Mooresville, North Carolina, native has made nine starts at Talladega, with a 12th-place high in 2015. He averages a 21.3 finish around the 2.66-mile Alabama track.

This is his first-ever run with Richard Childress Racing.

“It’s incredible,” Jeffrey said. “It just really has me speechless. I didn’t… This is what we hoped to happen, but I didn’t know for sure that I would be capable of it. Obviously Richard brings fast cars and I feel like I’m a good driver, but you never know until you’re given the opportunity. I think we were able to put it all together today and hopefully we can do the same tomorrow.”

There was a feeling that came over Bubba Wallace last October as he prepared to race again in his home state. He’d had that same sensation once before in his racing career several years earlier, but now it was back. He told Amanda Carter, his fiancée, matter-of-factly what it was – a momentous hunch that he relayed during the most mundane of tasks.

“Amanda and I were brushing our teeth to go to bed or something, and it was like, ‘Yep, it’s gonna happen this weekend. We’re gonna win,’ ” Wallace said this week, recalling the events of last fall. “And we kept saying it throughout the weekend.”

That grand premonition had to wait. A washout of Sunday’s scheduled start at Talladega Superspeedway pushed the Yellawood 500 to a Monday show. Work obligations forced Carter to return home, leaving Wallace and their dog, Asher, at the track. “So it was just me and ol’ Asher Dasher the dog, chillin’ Monday morning,” Wallace said, “and I still had that feeling.”

That intuition is now 2-for-2. Last Oct. 4, Wallace put 23XI Racing into Victory Lane for the first time and etched his name into the history books with his first NASCAR Cup Series win.

RELATED: Wallace savors first Cup Series win | Watch: A drive to history

That only other time such a strong expectation washed over Wallace? That occasion marked off another historic first, in another October eight years earlier. At the time, he was a 20-year-old prospect just getting started in the Camping World Truck Series, still going by his given name of Darrell Wallace Jr. instead of his more commonly used nickname. But when he entered Martinsville Speedway on that chilly race weekend, he felt he couldn’t lose.

“We raced on Saturday, so it was probably Friday night, Thursday night,” Wallace says. “And this was when I was still living by myself in my apartment, and it was like, ‘Yep, this is when it happens.’ ”

NASCAR is back this weekend in Talladega, the star-crossed track where some of stock-car racing’s most enduring memories have been created and where Wallace will forever be linked. Wallace, now 28, is a self-proclaimed “live in the moment” type – not prone to the uncertain hysteria of looking too far ahead, yet able to appreciate the past without dwelling in it. But it’s difficult not to reflect when the racing calendar makes a return trip to the site of such emotion, the place where the list of Black winners in the Cup Series – stuck at one for nearly 60 years – grew to two.

What it meant for a trail blazer’s legacy, for an upstart race team, and for Wallace’s triumphant return, some six-plus months later … much like Talladega itself, it’s worth revisiting.

Brian Lawdermilk | Getty Images
Brian Lawdermilk | Getty Images

‘It was his moment’

Wendell Scott’s lasting legacy may be twofold, one a nod to his life spent as a pioneer in the racing community as NASCAR’s first Black winner in its top division but the other as a father with a close-knit sense of family. Those relatives have carried on his memory since his death in 1990, but they have also brought in Wallace as one of their own.

The family’s support has come from all corners, but Wallace may have had his tightest connection with Wendell Scott Jr., who died in February. “My uncle, Wendell Jr., absolutely adored that man,” says Warrick Scott, grandson of the NASCAR Hall of Famer. “I mean, they were the closest of all our family.”

Says Wallace: “He was the one texting me just about after every weekend. We’d go a few weeks without talking, but man, he was always watching. And even if it was a bad race, he was like, ‘Man, I see what you were doing in Turns 3 and 4. That was sexy. That was cool.’ And it was like, I appreciate that, that’ll definitely be missed.”

Robert Laberge
Robert Laberge | Getty Images

The Scott family had been there in force to celebrate Wallace’s repeat Truck Series win at Martinsville in 2014. The group made the short drive west from the family’s hometown in Danville, Virginia, to watch Wallace dominate in a one-race switch to the No. 34 and the powder-blue paint once favored by their patriarch.

Plans had been sketched out for the family to be at Talladega last August, Warrick Scott says, but that so much travel in the weeks and months leading into the race made them press pause. Even watching from home, the Scotts felt no less connected, watching Wallace put his No. 23 Toyota in position to win once the rain – which had already forced a one-day delay – halted the race and made the outcome official.

“I think what gets lost in the moment, is the dynamic drive that he did leading up to that moment,” says Warrick Scott, the Wendell Scott Foundation‘s CEO. “He had to be in first to be declared the winner, and then his dominance or his proficiency at superspeedways. And so to see it all kind of come together at the same time, it just really felt like you know … the Scotts, we’re spiritual people. And we just really believe that my grandfather’s spirit, just in this totality, Darrell had obtained favor from the Lord above. And it was his moment.”

But it was at least a moment that the family shared as well, given the activity spike on Warrick Scott’s phone. Friends, family and well-wishers had come calling, but so did the interview requests into the foundation — local and national outlets, but also several outside the continental U.S. He rattles off the list of international media asks – Germany, Turkey, Sweden among others.

It was a spotlight Wallace was happy to share.

“The Scott family as a whole has been really good to me,” he says. “And it’s been fun, you know, carrying the torch that their father had ignited. So I’m just carrying it further until someone else comes along to carry it even further than that. So it’s just very humbling and special.”

Candidates are already lining up to be that next torch-bearer that Wallace mentions. Rajah Caruth, 19, is in his first ARCA Menards Series season and made his Xfinity Series debut earlier this month at Richmond Raceway. Fellow teenager Lavar Scott has followed the same short-track route, driving a Rev Racing entry with Wendell’s No. 34 with some early success.

Warrick Scott says he wondered what sort of impact Wallace’s win might have on the talent pool of Black drivers rising through the ranks this season. Now he’s watching that influence unfold.

“Now we’re in the following year talking about it, so you’re seeing an uptick in the opportunities that they’re getting,” Scott says. “I’m not saying that Bubba’s victory is solely the reason, but you’ve got to feel like internally, those guys can look at him and see a form of success that they can touch and connect to. They can only read about and watch my grandfather, watch about what my grandfather did and read about them.

“But to be able to get some real tutelage or guidance from that guy, about many things that probably don’t even have to do with the actual action of racing, the stuff leading up to the race — who you have to be socially, who you have to be culturally — to be able to have a tour guide. It just felt like a powerful moment in sports history that I am glad that my grandfather’s legacy wasn’t a footnote. It was, it felt as though he was a part of that moment, even from the grave.”

Upstart to winner

It had been barely more than a year since the launch of 23XI Racing, announced by friends turned business partners Denny Hamlin and NBA legend Michael Jordan, by the time Talladega’s October race arrived.

In some ways, the operation was still a start-up finding its way through its first season together. By Talladega, 23XI was three races into its first major reorganization – crew chief Mike Wheeler in his new role as competition director, and fellow veteran Bootie Barker taking his spot making the race-day calls. They oversaw a still-new group tasked with making the No. 23 go. When Talladega arrived, there was a collective release mixed with fulfillment.

“I think the reality was for us just watching the team come together and actually get rewarded for all of its efforts from scratch,” Wheeler told NASCAR.com. “You know, we were working hard all year to grow from nothing to being relevant and trying to make the playoffs.”

The postseason goal eluded Wallace, who finished second to longtime friend Ryan Blaney in the regular-season finale at Daytona, where a last-minute victory would have propelled him onto the playoff grid. Talladega, though, meant a chance to steal away a win from the championship contenders, and for Wallace to celebrate with the team that helped get him there.

2022 April22 Bubba Wallace 4 Main Image
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

“Man, that was really sweet, and made that moment just last even longer and something you could think about and cherish for a really long time,” Wallace says. “So, I’ve got a lot of great people on my team, a lot of hard workers, and you appreciate their attitude and their effort that they bring to the track. We’ve had some people move around a little bit, go from off the road to in the shop, but just the people that we continue to surround ourselves with, and bring on at 23XI, it’s been fun. It’s just been a fun atmosphere, and that’s what I wanted it to be.”

When the race was ruled official, Wallace’s emotion overflowed alongside his team’s.

“So, just that day … it just put everything in perspective about how hard you work and how much you put in to put it together,” Wheeler says. “And a lot of guys in that team, it was their first win. I know it was Bubba’s first win, but it was Bootie’s first win, it was engineers’ first win, it was tire guys’ first win. There’s a lot of people on that team that haven’t ever won a national series race or even a Cup race. For me it was, I had another win under my belt, maybe it was my first win as comp director, but I remember calling Denny up and saying how much it felt differently. As much as we were excited, it was more of a ‘wow’ than happiness.”

The Victory Lane hit differently in many ways, from the alternate indoor location made necessary by lightning in the vicinity of the track to the presence of Asher for the post-race festivities. For Hamlin, it was a rare moment to observe a celebration for a race he didn’t win. Instead, he watched like a proud parent as the team he’d helped assemble soaked in the moment.

Wheeler didn’t want the moment to end, but he also wanted a proper finishing touch. So once the storm had let up, he asked.

“I remember afterward, the Victory Lane stuff going a little bit south because of the lightning delay and all the rain,” Wheeler says. “I remember actually calling up NASCAR and being like, ‘hey, we gotta get these guys Victory Lane pictures. This is the first time ever. We can’t just send them home without a Victory Lane party,’ so I was happy that NASCAR followed through with that and got all these guys a moment in Victory Lane like that.”

The return

Wallace has kept several mementos from last October – one of the hats he wore through post-race, Jordan’s voicemail with his personal congratulations. Other keepsakes he’ll be reunited with later, after their rotation through the NASCAR Hall of Fame. Among those is the No. 23 Toyota he drove, a previous-generation Cup car that now has historic provenance.

When the Cup Series returns to Talladega for Sunday’s GEICO 500 (3 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM), Wallace and 23XI will figure among the favorites. The team finished second in the Daytona 500 earlier this year and contended until the last handful of laps at Atlanta Motor Speedway’s new hybrid superspeedway configuration.

MORE: Talladega weekend schedule | Latest odds

The reminders of the last Talladega race will travel with them, some of them tangible. Wallace has already indicated this week that he’ll sport a mustache look – a good-luck charm from his last appearance there. But there’s also the reminder of the sense of accomplishment and the hint that it could be repeated.

“You definitely go to some of these speedway tracks going, ‘hey, we won the last race, we can do this again.’ Talladega is one of them, obviously,” Wheeler says. “It’s the last event we were there, we won. So I don’t say it’s a swagger, but there’s a confidence saying we can do it again, and I think it’s where it makes you very powerful in what you’re doing, because people around you, too, realize you’re a good speedway racer or a team, and it takes people helping you to win these races or following you to help win races. Having that confidence and people around you having that confidence in the car and the team does make you faster and have a better chance.”

Within the memories was validation. Wallace was in his fourth full Cup Series season, and while he’d won at other levels, it had been 142 races into his career without breaking through. That drought was fodder for naysayers and social-media hecklers, a group that bristles at his willingness to take a stand on social justice issues and that conflates his position in the sport with privilege. No singular act would shut that narrative down, but the Talladega victory at least made the noisemakers take a hard look at the scoreboard.

2022 April22 Bubba Wallace 5 Main Image
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

“You know, what’s happened there in the past with some comments that have been made about him from people out there — I’m not even gonna call them fans — I think it makes it sweeter that he won there,” Blaney says. “So I know he’s looking forward to getting back. I’m looking forward to getting back.

“So I don’t want him to win again, I will say that,” Blaney added with a laugh, knowing that he’ll be seeking his third Talladega win for Team Penske this weekend. “That was a really special one, and it was a fun night to be able to spend that with him. …  I mean, before you get your first Cup win, you’re always questioning, OK, can I make it here? Can I compete for wins? Can I do this, that? And when you get your first Cup win, like, it just boosts your confidence a ton when you’re able to do that and kind of break through. So yeah, I think obviously it’s gonna help anybody out confidence-level-wise.”

Wallace’s profile elevated in the days after his first win, his name ringing out on the evening news – nationally and beyond. He’s since been the subject of a behind-the-scenes documentary on Netflix, and his media rounds have reached beyond the sphere of motorsports.

In terms of his race-day approach, Wallace insists that little has changed – from his reliance on his 23XI team, his trust in longtime spotter Freddie Kraft and his faith in his own superspeedway abilities. The return trip through the Talladega gates this weekend may bring that flood of memories back, but there are still memories yet to make.

“I think going back, obviously, all the eyes are on you, which I don’t want, but it’s just how it works. That’s how any competition, any league works,” Wallace says. “Somebody wins at that place, and then they come back. It’s like, ‘can they do it again?’ So it’s just like, well, can I kind of get through qualifying first, can I get to my motorhome first. But I think in just being there, appreciating where we’re at as a team, where I’m at as a driver, and just going out and racing, racing and having fun. I genuinely have fun at these plate races and that goes a long way, too, when you’re having fun, and you can make some of the moves that may be questionable early on and you’re like, ‘ah, we’ll be OK. Our car’s fast.’

“I keep saying it, but we’re not gonna change a thing of what we do, and Freddie and I know what to do. And that’s it.”

The 2022 NASCAR All-Star Race at Texas Motor Speedway is set for May 22, and the All-Star Fan Vote is now open.

Fans can vote here to send their favorite drivers into the All-Star field if they haven’t yet qualified. You can only vote for one eligible NASCAR driver per submission, and you may only submit one ballot per day per each unique email address. Sharing your vote on Twitter and Facebook adds a bonus entry for each, for a total of four submissions for your favorite driver per day.

RELATED: Bookmark, vote daily

The drivers currently eligible for the Fan Vote are: Austin Dillon, Corey LaJoie, Tyler Reddick, Chris Buescher, Harrison Burton, Justin Haley, Todd Gilliland, Cole Custer, Ty Dillon, Erik Jones, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Cody Ware, Landon Cassill, BJ McLeod and Daniel Suárez.

Drivers are eligible for the Fan Vote by having attempted to qualify for the 2022 Daytona 500. If a Fan Vote candidate wins a NASCAR Cup Series race before the All-Star Race — Talladega Superspeedway, Dover Motor Speedway, Darlington Raceway and Kansas Speedway stand as the four opportunities left — that driver is automatically in the All-Star field.

RELATED: History of All-Star Fan Vote winners

If a driver wins a stage in the NASCAR Open qualifying race before the All-Star Race, that driver will be locked into the field and is not eligible to be the Fan Vote winner. A driver must finish the NASCAR Open with his respective vehicle in a raceable condition at the time called as determined by the NASCAR Cup Series Managing Director in order to win the Fan Vote.

Voting will close at noon ET on May 20.

Disclaimer: On or off track, participation in either “Big One” at Talladega Superspeedway may not be voluntary.

The on-track “Big One” is obviously a large wreck that happens during the race. The off-track “Big One” is essentially an infield party. Both can scoop up the willing and unwilling.

“So, it was a good time. (Ryan) Blaney and I just did like the pillow fight on top of the balance beam or whatever, and that hurt,” Bubba Wallace said. “I think I pulled a muscle trying to keep myself on top of that thing.”

That was in fall 2019, the last time Talladega hosted its biannual infield party.

Well, let the good times roll once again.

RELATED: Complete Talladega weekend schedule

After a two-year hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the “Big One on the Blvd” returns Friday to kick off NASCAR’s race weekend. Festivities will begin at 7 p.m. CT (local) and wrap around 9 p.m. CT. Unique to this spring, in honor of the event’s resurgence, a firework show – estimated about 12 minutes in length – will follow for everyone in the area to see.

“We’re extremely excited about it,” track president Brian Crichton told NASCAR.com. “It is a tradition at Talladega, and it’s so good to have that tradition back.”

The “Big One on the Blvd” begins with a mini parade inside the track. Drivers ride on a 53-foot flatbed trailer that doubles as a makeshift float equipped with lights, microphones and speakers down Talladega Boulevard, starting on the Turn 3 side. They toss swag – T-shirts, koozies, beads or whatever is handy – out to the crowd.

The journey, but not the fun, ends at the intersection of Talladega Boulevard and Eastaboga Boulevard, right by the “Boulevard Bar.” This is where the games take place.

“I’ve always been a part of the ‘Big One,’ ” Blaney said. “Because it’s a great event for fans and it’s a really fun time. I’m happy it’s able to come back, and I’m probably gonna sneak out there and see what I can get into.”

Blaney and Wallace aren’t the only drivers who have made an appearance. William Byron, Daniel Suárez, Ty Dillon, Chase Briscoe, Brad Keselowski, Erik Jones, Kurt Busch, Tyler Reddick, Alex Bowman, Chase Elliott, Corey LaJoie and many, many more are listed as attendees on Talladega documents.

Clint Bowyer was one of the original masterminds behind the “Big One on the Blvd,” which debuted in 2014. He, along with Kevin Harvick, Austin Dillon and Ricky Stenhouse Jr., were present at the inaugural throwdown.

Talladega Boulevard
Courtesy of Talladega Superspeedway

Speaking of the first-ever, one of the games from that year is making a comeback Friday: barbecue-sauce wrestling. Fifty-five gallon drums of barbecue sauce have been brought in from all over the state of Alabama.

“The barbecue-sauce wrestling was just … it was electric,” Crichton said. “People had so much fun with it. I’d have to go back to that one (as most memorable) just because the referee got dragged into it and the contestants were just having a lot of fun with it.”

Talladega put out an online “Pick ‘Em Fan Vote” to determine Friday’s games. Along with “BBQ Sauce Wrestling,” fans chose “Oh Sit” (musical chairs, but with balls), “Rubber Pull” (a tug-of-war tire in a Jell-O pit) and “Slopfest” (three “tasty” delicacies).

There are two ways to gain access to the “Big One on the Blvd.” First off, all infield passes are guaranteed admission. Then, as an incentive, guests who renew their tickets receive a special renewal ticket that grants entrance.

RELATED: Learn more about ‘The Big One on the Blvd’

“All my friends ask me like, ‘Where should we go watch a Cup race?’ ” Bowman said. “And I’m like, ‘You either gotta go to Talladega, rent a camper and camp on the Boulevard, or you gotta go to a road-course race.’ I feel like those are the two things that I would want to do, so definitely excited to get back there. It’s a cool place.”

Rubber Pull
Courtesy of Talladega Superspeedway

Talladega was the first venue to allow NASCAR fans amid COVID-19, selling up to 5,000 tickets for the June 2020 weekend. Ticket sales were limited that October, too. Attendance was better in 2021, but mask and social-distancing regulations were still in place.

The revival of the “Big One on the Blvd” truly checks the final box. Talladega is 100% operational.

“Looking out into the infield and not seeing a RV or camper that June, it wasn’t right,” Crichton said. “It just didn’t seem, you know… It obviously wasn’t Talladega.

“Talladega, it’s like we say: This is more than a race. This is Talladega.”

Season ticket sale numbers at Berlin Raceway this season are higher than ever before, “times four,” said Berlin general manager Jeff Striegle.

When Striegle looks at the names of people who are buying season tickets for the Marne, Michigan, track this season, some are fans who have been going to the paved oval track for years and decades, some are brand new, and some are second and third generations of Berlin families.

“I think what makes it even more special is some of the people I know who have been coming here for three, four, five decades are now bringing their grandchildren to the racetrack and introducing them to what racing is and what we do here at the track,” Striegle said.

Striegle also knows many of those new fans learned about Berlin Raceway thanks to the track’s win in the Advance Auto Parts “Advance My Track Challenge” last year. The NASCAR-sanctioned track accrued the most fan votes among 22 NASCAR tracks across the country in the contest last summer.

RELATED: Advance My Track Challenge returns for 2022

Berlin Raceway
(Photo: Nic Antaya/ARCA Racing)

The win came with a $50,000 prize, which Striegle said the track plans to use in three ways, one of which is a project that has already begun. A new fan deck is currently being built in Turn 2, which will be about 5,000 square feet and hold at least 250 fans.

When the deck is complete, Berlin officials also plan to make enhancements to the track’s main concession stand, and they’re also looking at starting a nonprofit organization to work with disadvantaged youth in western Michigan.

“I’m very proud to say that, when it’s complete, I think we’re going to have the best hospitality deck in all of short track racing,” Striegle said. “Winning it was such a big deal for the Berlin Raceway in so many different facets that we were not only able to better serve our race fans, including our hospitality, but also reach out and give back to the community.”

Berlin Raceway, which opened in 1951, has a long history as one of the premiere short tracks in the country. One of the things Striegle said those at the track like to brag about is the fact Berlin has hosted 11 NASCAR Hall of Famers at one point in their career. Names like Mark Martin, Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Sr. and Rusty Wallace.

Other drivers like Bob Sennekar, the winningest driver in the history of the American Speed Association National Tour, NASCAR Busch Series and Truck Series champion Johnny Benson, and Tim Steele, an ARCA Re/Max Series national champion, also got their start at the track.

Carson Hocevar, who currently races in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, is also a former Berlin track champion, and he returns to his home track as often as he can.

Striegle has his own history at Berlin. He has been going to races there since his dad started bringing him when he was 10. He has raced there himself and owned race cars that raced there. While he said he wasn’t necessarily looking for another job – Striegle is also a radio broadcaster for the Motor Racing Network, calling NASCAR races nearly every weekend – he said when the opportunity to manage the facility came up, “I couldn’t turn it down, because I just have so much passion for this place.”

“It’s something that has been special to me and my family for years and years, and when the opportunity came, I had to accept,” he added.

There are so many other fans at Berlin with similar histories of years and years of going to races there, but winning the Advance My Track Challenge also helped bring new attention to the staple in the community.

“Even though we have been here for 71 seasons prior, I sometimes feel like fans may forget that we’re here,” Striegle said. “I think, with the media attention that winning the challenge brought us, it reminded people who may not have been here in a long time that we’re still here.

“And obviously a key factor is, it introduced Berlin to people who might like racing that didn’t even realize we were here. … Hopefully we’re going to see new people and new faces coming through the gates this year all because of the Advance My Track Challenge.”

Track Profile: Everything to know about Berlin Raceway

Berlin Raceway
ARCA Menards Series racing at Berlin Raceway in 2021 (Photo: Nic Antaya/ARCA Racing)

With a busy summer ahead, Striegle said he is most excited about the diversity of racing that will compete at Berlin in 2022. The track runs super late models on a regular basis, and it will also welcome wing and non-wing sprint cars, outlaw late models, and modifieds, among others.

Berlin had to cancel its season-opener last weekend due to weather, but things are looking much better for this weekend’s Berlin Icebreaker, featuring 4-cylinders, sportsman, limited late models and super late models. Racing begins at 4 p.m. ET.

“I’m trying to figure out where to put all the cars and the people, because I know they’re going to be here,” Striegle said.

“I think when we think about the history and we look around the facility, we see names and car numbers that just resonate what it was and what it is today.”

Fans and competitors have a lot to look forward to when Bowman Gray Stadium in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, begins its 73rd season Saturday.

The Hayes Jewelers 200 presented by Q104.1, the track’s marquee race for the headlining Modified division, kicks off the first full season of NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series racing at the quarter-mile paved oval since the COVID-19 pandemic stopped racing in its tracks in early 2020.

The track did host weekly racing last year, but it was an abbreviated season that started late as COVID-19 restrictions were lifted in the region.

“I think the big thing that we’re all looking forward to is getting back to normal,” said Gray Garrison, the promoter of Bowman Gray Stadium and the grandson of Alvin Hawkins, who co-founded the track with NASCAR’s own Bill France. “Like the rest of the world, we were kind of shut down in 2020, and then we had an abbreviated season in 2021. This year we’re ready to get back and hit the ground running wide open.

“I kind of feel like we’re lost just a little bit because we kind of got out of our routine because of the last couple years, but the season is coming together real good.”

RELATED: Reflections from a lifelong Bowman Gray fan

Bowman Gray Stadium
Bowman Gray Stadium (Photo: Sara D. Davis/Getty Images for NASCAR)

On top of a return to normalcy at the legendary facility, Bowman Gray Stadium recently got a facelift thanks to funding from the city of Winston-Salem.

“The main shell of the facility was built in the 1930s under the WPA (Works Progress Administration) program,” Garrison explained. “It was kind of time for a facelift. The city had some bond money they raised, and part of the bond money was (used for) improvements to Bowman Gray Stadium.”

Among the many upgrades to the facility were new concession stands, new restrooms and a fresh coat of paint on many of the walls and other facilities at the Stadium that is also home to the Winston-Salem State Rams.

Perhaps most importantly, the bond money paid for a new racing surface at the quarter-mile flat oval.

“New pavement is always good,” Garrison said. “That’s going to create a little different scenario for everybody, because nobody knows really what it’s going to do in race conditions. It should be exciting to see what happens.”

A new season also brings a new streaming partner, as FloRacing has partnered with NASCAR and Bowman Gray Stadium to stream races from the historic track live every week throughout the season.

It’s the first time in track history that an entire season’s worth of racing will be available to watch via livestream.

RELATED: Watch Dale Jr.’s in-car camera at Bowman Gray Next Gen test

“The world is changing so much, and streaming just seems to be part of the new era that we live in,” Garrison said. “The whole package with NASCAR, FloRacing and Bowman Gray, that’s a pretty good combination right there for everybody.”

It all adds up to one of the biggest season openers in Bowman Gray Stadium history, which Garrison believes will include grandstands packed with the Bowman Gray faithful on Saturday night.

“Even though we are streaming, there is nothing like being at Bowman Gray Stadium,” Garrison said. “It’s an event. It’s an atmosphere you can’t describe. It’s like the first day of school at the fair. There is just so much going on that you can’t see and take it all in.

“There is nothing like being there. The feel, the atmosphere, the rumble of the cars, the crowd screaming. It’s just an amazing place to see a race.”