SAN FRANCISCO, California and LAUSANNE, Switzerland  Logitech G, a brand of Logitech and leading innovator of gaming technologies and gear, is proud to announce that it has become an official partner of eNASCAR, and the  Logitech G 923 will be the official wheel and pedal of the eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series™.

“We’re excited to team up with eNASCAR to upgrade the driving experience for the remainder of the 2021 season.” said Jim Hoey, global head of G Challenge at Logitech G. “Our TRUEFORCE technology taps into the physics of iracing providing a super realistic racing experience, and we know the drivers are going to love it.”

RELATED: eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series schedule

“Logitech has for many years been an ardent supporter of sim racing, and they have played a major role in elevating the profile of the eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series,” said Nick Rend, managing director of gaming and esports, NASCAR. “We’re excited to help them take a deeper dive into the world of eNASCAR as they continue to innovate around how partners activate in the sim racing space.”

As part of the collaboration with eNASCAR, Logitech G will also serve as the entitlement sponsor for the eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series event, now called the Logitech G Challenge 100, at the virtual Michigan International Speedway on August 17. Logitech G will use this platform to promote its annual G Challenge event, with 2021 marking the fourth annual Logitech McLaren G Challenge. As a result of this agreement, this joint venture is now the largest global eRacing event.

RELATED: More about eNASCAR

In addition to the partnership with eNASCAR, Logitech G has established additional relationships in motorsports as virtual racing and simulation continues to be a key training technique for younger racers. Some of those relationships include William Byron and Bubba Wallace in the NASCAR Cup Series. Logitech G is the title sponsor of Bryon’s eRacing team – William Bryon eSports – which fields two cars in the Coca-Cola iRacing Series for Nick Ottinger and Logan Clampitt. The Brand also supports Formula 1 racing through relationships with McLaren and Lando Norris, and is shepherding the next generation of racers with a relationship through TRD (Toyota Racing Development) and its TD2 driver development program.

Ross Chastain will pilot Trackhouse Racing Team’s second car — the No. 1 Chevrolet — in the 2022 NASCAR Cup Series, the organization announced Tuesday. The deal is a multi-year agreement with Chastain also slated to drive the car in ’23.

RELATED: Tracking the rides for 2022 | All the Silly Season news

The 28-year-old currently drives the No. 42 Chevrolet for Chip Ganassi Racing. Trackhouse revealed it had purchased Ganassi’s NASCAR operations back on June 30, a transaction that included its two Cup Series charters. That left Chastain’s future in question, but not anymore.

“Excitement is always the name of the game with an announcement like this, but it’s more than excitement for just another team,” Chastain told reporters after the Tuesday announcement. “I’ve been now, crazy enough, in this sport for 10 years. … It’s more than just another team. I’ve been fired and I’ve left teams and done a lot of things and could do a lot of things better but to bring it all full circle with somebody I’ve known my entire life in the sport and do it with a group that just truly feels like more than a team, that’s what made this process of getting in this car so much easier.”

Upon learning of the CGR sale, Chastain texted longtime acquaintance and Trackhouse co-owner Justin Marks and simply said, “I want this.”

There were some formalities to iron out of the past month, but the two sides were eager to work out a deal together as Trackhouse continues its march toward the future with exciting, young talent. 

“I know for myself and I think I can speak for Justin that we wanted it. And whether or not it all worked out — we had to work through the other stuff — but fundamentally down to the core of it, I knew this was where I wanted to be,” Chastain said.

Through 22 races this 2021 season, Chastain has tallied two top-five runs – a career-best mark in 101 starts overall. He was the runner-up at Nashville Superspeedway on June 20, another career high. He also has six top 10s and is averaging a 17.8 finish. Chastain sits four spots below the NASCAR Playoffs cutline, out by 144 points with four races remaining until the postseason begins.

After a pair of near full-time Cup seasons in 2018-19 behind the wheel of the No. 15 Premium Motorsports Chevrolet, the 2020 season saw him take on a brief stint as a fill-in for Ryan Newman while the veteran recovered from injuries sustained in a last-lap crash in the season-opening Daytona 500. He also drove the No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevy part-time last year, with a best finish of 16th in the summer race at Daytona International Speedway.

Chastain previously raced in the NASCAR Xfinity Series and Camping World Truck Series. He has two wins in the Xfinity Series and three in the Camping World Truck Series. He was the ’19 Camping World Truck Series runner-up before placing seventh in Xfinity points last year driving for Kaulig Racing.

With the move, Chastain gains Daniel Suarez as a teammate in place of Kurt Busch, whose 2022 plans are still up in the air. Suarez handles Trackhouse’s sole Cup Series car right now – the No. 99 Chevy. He’ll return to the team next season, that has already been made clear.

“Trackhouse, we’re trying to build something real special for the future and that means recognizing talent that sort of is at a point in their career where they’ve got experience but they’re young and still building their career. That’s what we feel we have with Daniel and now for sure we have with Ross,” said Marks. “He’s got a number of Cup starts under his belt. Just like Daniel, when he’s been sitting in race-winning equipment, he’s gotten the job done. That is a talent and a skill that is independent of just how fast you can go. … We’ve got two closers on this team now.”

Trackhouse, co-owned by Marks and Grammy winner Pitbull, is currently in its first Cup Series season.

RELATED: New ownership movement embraces future

Marks talked at length about the kind of driver and person Chastain is, and how much he appreciates the hurdles that the old-school racer has had to overcome in his career to this point. It’s a notion that Marks and Pitbull have embraced thoroughly, and that general underdog, us-against-the-world vibe has been evident from Day 1 at Trackhouse. 

It’s what makes this union the perfect fit.

“He’s got a lot of fight and a lot of want in him. And I tell people this: there’s a real nuance when you’re looking at drivers and you’re trying to determine what skill set they’ve got and what kind of potential they have and to me, I’m a huge fan of people that have had to work hard against adversity and against odds to try to get where they’ve gotten in their careers. I think it’s that fight and those years of working hard towards something when it’s been difficult along the way that pays dividends at the Cup level.”

Chastain will make his Trackhouse debut in the 2022 Daytona 500 on February 20.

Contributing: Staff reports

After a thrilling inaugural race at Lancaster Speedway, the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour blazes back to Stafford Motor Speedway for the 30th annual GAF Roofing 150 presented by Riverhead Building Supply on Friday night (9:15 p.m. ET, TrackPass).

Patrick Emerling took home the checkered flag last week at his home racetrack and enters Friday as the defending winner at Stafford, winning the April 30 event earlier this year.

Stafford’s history is well documented. Built as a horse track in 1870, the dirt half-mile oval began hosting auto racing following World War II and welcomed modifieds as early as 1952. The track was finally paved in 1967 and hosted weekly NASCAR-sanctioned races through 2020, including tour races since 1985.

The late, great Ted Christopher is listed as the all-time record holder for feature wins at the northeastern Connecticut racetrack with an astounding 131 victories. Woody Pitkat, who enters this week’s contest eighth in points, sits second at Stafford with 78 feature wins, two of which were wins on the tour.

Along with the tour’s usual suspects, Ryan Preece will join the series for the sixth time this season. Preece led 13 laps in April’s Spring Sizzler but came away 17th after contact between him and Ronnie Silk sent them and others spinning while battling for the lead.

Tickets are still available with live streaming coverage available on NBC Sports Gold via TrackPass.

RACE INFO: Entry list | Race Center


GAF Roofing 150 Presented By Riverhead Building Supply

WHAT TO WATCH FOR:

Patrick Emerling led 30 of the final 31 laps en route to the win last weekend at Lancaster Speedway and is locked in a tight battle for the points with Justin Bonsignore, who finished second in a photo finish one week ago.

Six races remain before the 2021 modified champion is crowned, and the season finale will come at Stafford on Sept. 25, adding even more emphasis on Friday night’s action.

2021 Gaf 150

In April, Matt Swanson led 84 of the 130 laps of the rain-shortened 49th annual Spring Sizzler but was caught in a Lap 111 crash that ended his night early. Emerling spun at lap 96 but found himself celebrating in victory lane with only seven laps led after dicing through the wreck that eliminated Preece, Silk, Anthony Nocella and Justin Bonsignore. Under that yellow, Mother Nature canceled the final 20 laps.

Preece returns to the circuit with eight wins at Stafford under his belt, his most recent coming in September 2018. In fact, Preece has won three of his last five entries at Stafford, a track which sits just 45 minutes northeast of his hometown of Berlin, Connecticut.

Silk has had three straight strong runs on the tour but only two top fives to show for it. Last week at Lancaster, Silk had another top-five performance going but was caught up in the Lap 141 crash that took out eight cars, relegating Silk to a 12th-place finish. Silk took home a Stafford win in September 2020 and has three career wins at the half-mile.

Doug Coby returns to Stafford with a fantastic resume and strong momentum, bringing the experience of 12 modified tour victories in 59 starts along with him. Coby started from behind one week ago at Lancaster and needed his shifter replaced before even taking the green flag, which set him back two laps. He rebounded to finish ninth, but two straight races with mechanical troubles – a failed engine at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on July 17 – coupled with a missed race in May have almost certainly dashed Coby’s chances of a seventh modified tour championship this season.

Bonsignore, meanwhile, finds himself on a hot streak. The Holtsville, New York, native has finished inside the top three in six of this year’s eight races, including two consecutive second-place finishes. Locked in a tight battle with Emerling for the championship, it’s clear this fight may continue into September. But Bonsignore has yet to win at Stafford Motor Speedway, only coming as close as second four times in 39 starts and most recently in 2019. The only other track on the tour where Bonsignore has that many starts is Thompson Speedway, a track where he’s won 12 times and which isn’t on the 2021 calendar.

Other drivers on this week’s entry list include Chuck Hossfeld, who won at Stafford in 2008; 2017 winner Eric Goodale; 2018 winner Kyle Bonsignore; and 2019 winner Craig Lutz.

RACING REFERENCE:

RACE FACTS

Race GAF Roofing 150 presented by Riverhead Building Supply
Date Friday, Aug. 6, 2021
Track Stafford Motor Speedway
Layout Half-mile oval
Location Stafford, Connecticut
Start time 9:15 p.m. ET
Laps 150
Miles 75
Tickets Click here
TV channel NBCSN (Delayed: Sunday, Aug. 15, 9 p.m. ET)
Live stream TrackPass on NBC Sports Gold (Live)

RACEDAY SCHEDULE: Friday, Aug. 6 — Garage opens: 1:15 p.m. ET; Practice: 3:45-4:45 p.m.; Qualifying: 6:20 p.m.; Race: 9:15 p.m.

CREW CHIEF HANDOUT:
The starting field for the GAF Roofing 150 Presented By Riverhead Supply Building is limited to 28 starters including provisionals. The field will be set by qualifying (1-22) and provisional process per the entry blank (23-28) for the GAF Roofing 150 Presented By Riverhead Supply Building. In the event that qualifying as stated on the entry blank does not take place for any unforeseen circumstance, the field will be set in accordance with the 2021 NASCAR Touring Series Rule Book.

QUALIFYING: Two consecutive qualifying laps. Faster lap determines qualifying position. Adjustments or repairs may not be made on the vehicle after the vehicle has taken the green flag at the start-finish line. NASCAR reserves the right to have more than one vehicle engage in qualifying runs at the same time.

The maximum tire allotment available for this event is as follows: The maximum tire allotment available for this event is eleven (11) tires per team. All tires used for qualifying and the race must be purchased at the track and scanned by Hoosier, unless otherwise approved in advance by the Series Director. Four (4) tires must be used for qualifying and to begin the race. All qualifying tires must remain in impound until released by NASCAR Officials. The remaining tire allotment may be used for practice and/or change tires during the event.

The tire change rule is four (4) tires, any position. To utilize the fourth (4th) change tire, the team will have to take a practice tire purchased at Stafford Motor Speedway and turn in by the conclusion of practice.

QUALIFYING AND SPECIAL AWARDS

$400 Phil Kurze Halfway Leader Award presented by Josten’s per event award to the race leader at the halfway point of the event, regardless if the race is running under green or yellow.

$600 Hoosier Tire “Lap Leader” per event award to the eligible car owner whose driver leads the most laps in each event. In the event of a tie, the award will go to the highest finishing car in the event.

$500 Hoosier Tire “Hard Charger” per event award to the highest finishing eligible driver who advances the most positions during the course of the race. In the case of a tie, the highest finishing driver will receive the award.

$500 Hoosier Tire “Most Improved” per event award to the eligible new team/organization whose driver improves the most positions during the course of the race. In the event of a tie, the award will go to the highest finishing car in the event. If money is not awarded during this event, funds will roll over to the next event and will continue to roll over until an eligible new team/organization claims the money.

$1,000 Mayhew Tools Dominator Pole per event award to the driver with the fastest qualifying time eligible to participate under the Manufacturers’ Prize Money Conditions.

$550 Sunoco Spec Fuel award divided: 1st-$300 5th-$150 10th-$100.

$3,500 Whelen Engineering “Winner of the Race” award to the winning driver.

Whelen Non-Starter award will be paid to the first 15 competitors throughout the season who pass inspection, practice, attempt to qualify but fail to make the feature event.

Name: Deke
Current City: Annapolis, Maryland
Member Since: 2020

Getting to KNOW Deke:

Q.  How did you first become interested in NASCAR?
“Back in 2015, I asked about ten of my friends if they would be interested in a NASCAR fantasy league. Most of us knew nothing about the sport, but after watching the Daytona 500 we were HOOKED! We have since become huge fans, all with our own favorite drivers and have been to races in Michigan, Dover, Daytona and Richmond.”

Q. What is your favorite part about NASCAR?
“I love the driver personalities and merchandise (and I collect all of it!). I love how teams and drivers adapt from race to race. Most of all I love the smell of burning rubber and exhaust on Sunday afternoons at the racetrack.”

Q: What is your favorite NASCAR memory?
“My first race, Dover 2015 in the fall. It was a playoff race and I’ll never forget the people, the sights and the smells of that weekend. A close second was the first time I arrived at Daytona International Speedway — just seeing the grandstands in person was epic.”

Q: Do you have a favorite in any of the following categories?
Current Driver: Alex Bowman.”
Past Driver: Dale Earnhardt Jr.”
Up and Coming Driver: Sam Mayer.”
Team: “Hendrick Motorsports.”
Track: Road America.”

Q. What do you like to do in your free time?
“Corner flagging at Road America and Blackhawk Farms, iRacing leagues, and working in the garage.”

FROM ALL OF US AT NASCAR, WE THANK DEKE FOR HIS CONTINUED SUPPORT AND LOOK FORWARD TO HEARING FROM HIM IN 2021!

Look for Deke on the Official NASCAR Fan Council page on NASCAR.COM.

PLANO, Texas – Toyota Racing is proud to announce the establishment of the Dream Experiential Endowment in partnership with Bubba Wallace’s Live to be Different Foundation.

As a continuation to the Toyota Racing ‘Dream’ commercial that took to the air waves around the 2021 Daytona 500, Toyota will team with the Live to Be Different Foundation, led by Toyota driver Bubba Wallace, to allow students who dream of working within the world of motorsports, a chance to experience that dream.

“The opportunity to establish this experiential endowment is something our team has worked towards since the release of ‘The Dream’ earlier this season,” said Paul Doleshal, group manager of motorsports and assets for Toyota Motor North America. “This film was something we were all extremely proud of and served as a small reminder for everyone to find their dream and pursue it regardless of the challenges that might be in their path. The establishment of the Toyota Racing Dream Experiential Endowment is a way for us to bring the message of the film to life and in partnership with Bubba’s Live to be Different Foundation, we can ensure that those who want to pursue a career outside the cockpit in motorsports can have a chance to experience that dream.”

The message within the film is that anyone from any background should have the chance to pursue their dream no matter the obstacles they might be facing. Wallace serves as the primary motivator within the film where a young African American girl is pursuing her dream of becoming a race car driver and seeks motivation following a setback on the race track, this message aligns with the mission of Wallace’s Foundation — to breathe new life into individuals striving to achieve their goals, no matter their age, skin color, disabilities or ambitions.

“To have the chance to partner with Toyota on this experiential endowment and give people with a dream to work in motorsports the chance to live that experience in really something special,” said Bubba Wallace, driver of the No. 23 Camry for 23XI Racing. “It’s really cool to be a part of things like ‘The Dream’ and now this initiative that aligns with my own beliefs and how I want to influence the next generation.  ‘The Dream’ showed others, no matter the circumstances or who you are, to keep fighting and follow your dreams. It may not always be easy, but it will be worth it. To now have my foundation partnering with Toyota to bring ‘The Dream’ to life is pretty incredible.”

By working with various organizations around the country, Toyota Racing will identify a minimum of four participants per year and arrange for them to spend a finite amount of time with a Toyota race team or TRD-related organization to experience the dream they have to pursue a career in the world of motorsports.

The initial group of recipients will be chosen in the coming weeks and begin their experience during late summer of the 2021 racing season.

Applicants looking to be considered can submit a resume along with a 500-word maximum essay explaining their dream to work in motorsports to [email protected].

It’s the season of change in NASCAR. We’re talking Silly Season, of course! With all sorts of driver, owner and team changes happening for 2022, it’s tricky to keep track of it all—especially when Internet rumors abound. Now it’s your turn to add to the noise with our latest generator: the Silly Season Simulator. Just press the button and you’ll be presented with a totally fabricated rumor that you can share with all your friends online. And if it comes true, guess what? You’ll look like a total genius!

2021 NASCAR Cup Series regular-season stretch run
Watkins Glen | Indianapolis | Michigan | Daytona

Everything you need to know for the four NASCAR Cup Series races in August — the final four chances to punch a postseason ticket before the 2021 NASCAR Playoffs begin Sept. 5. 

Go Bowling at The Glen

Where: Watkins Glen International, a 2.45-mile road course located in Watkins Glen, New YorkWgi
Date: Sunday, Aug. 8, 3 p.m. ET
TV/Radio: NBCSN/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
Race Distance: 90 laps, 220.5 miles
Stages: Stage 1 – 20 laps | Stage 2 – 20 laps (ends at Lap 40) | Final Stage – 50 laps (scheduled to end at Lap 90)
Defending winner: Chase Elliott
Most wins among active drivers:
Elliott (2), Kyle Busch (2) 
Best average finish: 
Erik Jones (6.3)


Verizon 200 at the Brickyard

Where: Indianapolis Motor Speedway, a 2.439-mile infield road course located in Speedway, IndianaIndy
Date: Sunday, Aug. 15, 1 p.m. ET
TV/Radio: NBC/NBC Sports App, PRN/IMS Radio Network, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
Race Distance: 82 laps, 200 miles
Stages: Stage 1 -15 laps | Stage 2 – 20 laps (ends at Lap 35) | Final Stage – 47 laps (scheduled to end at Lap 82)
Defending winner: Kevin Harvick (oval layout)
Most wins among active drivers:
New layout
Best average finish:
First race on new layout
*There will be practice Saturday and qualifying Sunday morning.


FireKeepers Casino 400

Where: Michigan International Speedway, a 2-mile oval located in Brooklyn, MichiganMichigan
Date:
Sunday, Aug. 22, 3 p.m. ET
TV/Radio: NBCSN/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
Race Distance: 200 laps, 400 miles
Stages: Stage 1 – 60 laps | Stage 2 – 60 laps (ends at Lap 120) | Final Stage – 80 laps (scheduled to end at Lap 200)
Defending winner: Kevin Harvick 
Most wins:
Harvick (5)
Best average finish:
Chase Elliott (7.7)


Coke Zero Sugar 400

Where: Daytona International Speedway, a 2.5-mile superspeedway located in Daytona Beach, FloridaDaytona
Date: Saturday, Aug. 28, 7 p.m. ET
TV/Radio: NBC/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
Race Distance: 160 laps, 400 miles
Stages: Stage 1 – 50 laps | Stage 2 – 50 laps (ends at Lap 100) | Final Stage – 60 laps (scheduled to end at Lap 160)
Defending winner: William Byron
Most wins:
Denny Hamlin (3)
Best average finish:
Austin Dillon (14.8)

Five to watch

Here are five big story lines we’ll be following: one for each race and one overarching story line.

1. Watkins Glen: After a year away from the facility, NASCAR makes its long-awaited return to The Glen — and no driver will be happier to see it than Chase Elliott. The reigning Cup champion is the only winner at the New York track since Martin Truex Jr. won in 2017 and has a pair of road-course wins to his credit already this season. After a slower than usual start to the year, it’s not impossible that he positions himself as the title favorite once again coming out of this four-race stretch. If anyone is able to topple Elliott, these races offer strong chances for a wild-card winner to really shake things before the postseason field locks in. Several winless drivers around or below the cutline have looked sporty at times at the several road courses we’ve been to. If we’ve learned anything from this season, it’s to expect the unexpected, and it would be a surprise if we don’t see at least one new winner in this stretch.

2. Indianapolis: You want to talk about wild cards? How about tossing in a new layout right before the playoffs start at one of the most historic race tracks in the world that almost none of the drivers have raced at before? While it will feel different to not see a Brickyard race run on the traditional layout, it’s inarguable that the intensity and excitement levels for this race will be ramped up to a 10. Kevin Harvick has been the man to beat here lately, but will that translate to the road course? The Cup Series so rarely has two road-course races in back-to-back weeks, so we could see a lot of the same faces running well in each — and potentially who could look to clinch a Round of 8 spot in a couple of months at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval. One driver to watch could be Chase Briscoe, despite an underwhelming rookie season so far. Stewart-Haas Racing found its footing to close out the last race before the break and Briscoe, a strong road racer, won the Xfinity Series race on this layout last summer.

3. Michigan: Speaking of SHR, everything on paper points to this being Harvick’s race to lose. Everything our eyes have shown us this year, however, is that if he doesn’t win this race it’s hard to see the nine-time 2020 winner visiting Victory Lane this season. The team has, self-admittedly, struggled this year, but if there’s any driver who can put together a late postseason push, it’s Harvick. If one of Hendrick Motorsports’ drivers didn’t win one of the first two races back, look for the group to potentially reassert its dominance here. Kyle Larson once won three straight Michigan races in his Ganassi days and Chase Elliott rattled off a trio of runner-ups to start his career there. Worth noting: The last time a current Joe Gibbs Racing driver won at Michigan was Kyle Busch in 2011. Team Penske‘s Joey Logano himself has three wins there since leaving Gibbs before the 2013 season.

4. Daytona: And it all comes down to Daytona. The track is the great equalizer and its placement as the regular-season finale is just perfect. There will likely be 15-plus winless drivers in the top 30 in points looking to punch their ticket to the postseason with a last-ditch win under the lights at Daytona, and it’s going to be a must-see night of stock-car racing. We already saw one miracle happen at the World Center of Racing in this year’s 500 and it sure feels like something similar could happen again in this one. Don’t forget, Denny Hamlin — who has been the unquestioned best driver at the track in recent years — could still be looking for his first win of 2021 by then. William Byron clinched his berth with a Daytona win last summer, teeing up the drama for the playoffs — who might be this year’s spoiler?

5. As you can tell by now, these four races are crucial. The playoff field could look considerably different a month from now, and it should set the bar high for the excitement we’re bound to see in this year’s playoffs. Could we also see a driver with a statement to make — i.e. Matt DiBenedetto or Brad Keselowski — pick up a win and jolt his season in the final races in his current ride? Could we see another team emerge as the top dog after Hendrick ruled the bulk of the regular season? Could we see a shift in power with the break allowing for extra R&D time and different teams finding speed? Will more Silly Season news drop in the coming weeks? There’s just so much going on, and it’s a good thing we had this break to give the garage a chance to catch its collective breath, because we’re in for a thrill of a ride down the stretch.

Staples from the break

Our biggest pieces during the off weeks. Get caught up quickly right here. Busch Almirola

Power Rankings: Potential free agents for 2022 Cup rides | Scope the ranks
Off-week reflections: Highlights from 2021 season — so far | Read more
• Fantasy:
Who you should use and where for the final four races | Read more
• Debate:
Who will win first, Denny Hamlin or Kevin Harvick? | Read more
• Handing out the hardware:
Cup superlatives at the break | Read more
• Playoff Watch:
How the postseason picture looks | Read more
• Bubble Watch:
Which remaining tracks stand out for cutline drivers | Read more

Get in on the action

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

Betting odds for 2021 Cup Series championship | See the odds
Case for betting Martin Truex Jr. to win the title | Read more
NASCAR, Penn National Gaming expand strategic alliance | Read more
One-stop shop for NASCAR betting information | Check it out
Take a shot at winning cash prizes with the free-to-play Jackpot Races app | Hit the jackpot
Full guide to 2021 NASCAR Fantasy Live game | Get the FAQ

Silly Season in full swing

2021 July20 Keselowski Main
Dontre Graves | NASCAR Digital Media

The 2022 Cup garage is starting to take shape. Keep up with the latest happenings here.

 Key players: See the movers and shakers of free agency | See more
Return to The King?:
Erik Jones hopeful on RPM return | Read more
Winners get hired:
Steve Letarte on Matt DiBenedetto’s situation | Watch the video
New owner in town:
Brad Keselowski headed to Roush Fenway in driver-owner role | Read more
Taking their time:
Roush, Keselowski set for full transition but not soon | Read more
• In limbo:
What’s next for Ryan Newman in ’22? Read more
• Track that:
Keep tabs on the 2022 Silly Season driver chart | Read more

Catch the pack

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

• No. 3 for No. 22: Loganos reveal third child on the way | Read more
• Penalty:
Nos. 9, 48 in Cup get L1-level penalties after New Hampshire | Read more
• The race is on:
How Kyle Larson caught Denny Hamlin in points battle | Read more
• Position to win: Pit-crew development leaves lasting mark with athletes | Read more
• New vets:
Joey Logano, Ryan Blaney must increase leadership roles a Penske | Read more
• Xfinity Series Playoff Watch:
Analyzing the projected field | Read more
• Camping World Truck Series Playoff Watch:
How it looks before regular-season finale | Read more

@nascarcasm’s corner

2021 June Gymnasts Intro

Pros & Cons: A two-week break in the season | Read more
Cup Series Silly Season Trivia Quiz | Take the quiz
Are NASCAR drivers gymnasts? | Read more
Olympic pictograms interpreted for NASCAR | See them
GIF Council: How drivers are spending their vacation | See the GIFs
• All-NASCAR Olympic team | See the team
Old tweets: How drivers are (probably) spending time offSee the tweets

Which channels have NASCAR programming this week? We answer that and give the weekly NASCAR television listings here in the NASCAR TV schedule.

Note: All times are ET.

MORE: How to find NBCSN | Get the NBC Sports App | How to find FS1 | Get FOX Sports App

Monday, August 2
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Features — Part 1, FS1

Tuesday, August 3
4 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Race Hub Game Night — Part 2, FS2 (re-air)
5 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Features — Part 1, FS2 (re-air)
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Features — Part 2, FS1

Wednesday, August 4
6 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Features — Part 1, FS2 (re-air)
7 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Features — Part 2, FS2 (re-air)
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Women in Wheels, FS1

Thursday, August 5
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
7 p.m., Renegades: The Bad Boys of NASCAR, FS1 (re-air)

Friday, August 6
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
6 p.m., ARCA Menards Series: Clean Harbors 100 at The Glen, FS1

On MRN
6 p.m., ARCA Menards Series Clean Harbors 100 at The Glen

Saturday, August 7
2 a.m., ARCA Menards Series: Clean Harbors 100 at The Glen, FS1 (re-air)
4 a.m., ARCA Menards Seres: Clean Harbors 100 at The Glen, FS2 (re-air)
6 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive — Road Courses, FS2 (re-air)
6:30 a.m., ARCA Menards Series: Clean Harbors 100 at The Glen, FS1 (re-air)
8:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive — Road Courses, FS1 (re-air)
9 a.m, NASCAR Classics: 1986 Budweiser at the Glen, FS1 (re-air)
11:30 a.m., NASCAR Raceday: Watkins Glen, FS1
12:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: United Rentals 176, FS1
3:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series Countdown to Green, CNBC/NBC Sports App
4 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series Skrewball Peanut Butter Whiskey 200, CNBC/NBC Sports App (Canada: TSN3)
9:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: United Rentals 176, FS2 (re-air)
11:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive — Road Courses, FS2 (re-air)

On MRN
noon, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series United Rentals 176
3:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series Skrewball Peanut Butter Whiskey 200

Sunday, August 8
1:30 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: United Rentals 176, FS1 (re-air)
7 a.m., ARCA Menards Series: Clean Harbors 100 at The Glen, FS2 (re-air)
9 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: United Rentals 176, FS2 (re-air)
11:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive — Road Courses, FS1 (re-air)
12:30 p.m., NASCAR Raceday: Watkins Glen, FS1
2 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series Countdown to Green, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
3 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Go Bowling at The Glen, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Canada: TSN3, 5)
8 p.m., IMSA Auto Racing SportsCar Championship, NBCSN

On MRN
2 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series Go Bowling at The Glen

Patrick Emerling christened Lancaster Speedway with a victory for the ages.

After a late-race restart pitted the western New York native against Justin Bonsignore, his nearest threat for the championship, Emerling fended off a fierce charge on the final corner to win the inaugural Nu-Way Auto Parts 150 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour race on Saturday night.

Emerling grew up in Orchard Park, New York, just 30 minutes south of New York International Raceway Park where the track sits. The hard charger excelled late and led the final 30 laps en route to his second tour victory of 2021 to reclaim the series points lead.

RELATED: Full race results

“I was like a kid in a candy store all day,” Emerling said. “Having a Whelen Modified Tour race at one of my home tracks in western New York is absolutely incredible. We had a great car all day. Great long run speed and the crew here did an excellent job.”

After a significant multi-car crash brought out the red flag within the final 10 laps, Emerling led Bonsignore back to the green flag with five laps to go. Emerling got the jump and knew he had to maintain the bottom line. Bonsignore knew his best shot would be jumping to the outside in Turns 3 and 4.

Bryan Bennett
Bryan Bennett

Bonsignore was right and rocketed alongside Emerling’s No. 07 car. The two made contact, but at the line, it was Emerling eking out the victory by 0.045 seconds.

“I was just going to hold the bottom,” Emerling said. “When you’re on the bottom, you have control. I wasn’t going to let him get underneath and then I opened up the top there. He got a decent run but we were just able to edge him a little bit there.”

Bonsignore, who entered the night with a 10-point lead over Emerling, put his class on full display by congratulating Emerling’s team on its way to Victory Lane before eventually seeking Emerling out himself, showing his respect after a hard-fought race.

“Congrats to Patrick,” Bonsignore said. “I mean, it sucks to lose, especially (to) the guy you’re battling in points, but a hometown guy at his home track with this crowd? Can’t thank Mikey Myers and his whole staff (enough) who put this whole show on.”

Jon McKennedy began the night on the pole and was untouchable for the first 90 laps despite best efforts from Bonsignore and Max McLaughlin. Eventually, though, Bonsignore reeled in McKennedy and made the pass for the lead on Lap 91 in the midst of a long green-flag run that followed an early caution at Lap 28.

Not long after Bonsignore set sail in the lead, Emerling’s car seemingly came to life. The long-run speed of the No. 07 allowed Emerling to erase a 1.14-second deficit in just 10 laps before leapfrogging Bonsignore into the top spot. Bonsignore was attempting to lap another driver when he caught the marbles in Turn 2, allowing Emerling to pass through cleanly on the inside for the lead.

The last 26 laps of the contest, however, became suddenly filled with cautions. On Lap 124, Scott Wylie and Walter Sutcliffe Jr. tangled in Turns 1 and 2 to bring out the second yellow flag of the evening.

Under that caution period, the leaders all came to pit road. Emerling maintained his lead but Bonsignore lost considerable track position and came out mired in the middle of the top 10.

“Picked a bad time to have our worst pit stop probably in five years,” Bonsignore said. “The guys always are balanced out … so we’ll win and lose as a team tonight.”

Then the cautions kept coming.

One lap after the restart, McKennedy and Anthony Nocella made contact entering Turn 1 and sent both cars sideways at the front of the field. Eric Goodale suffered significant damage while Andy Jankowiak and J.B. Fortin also got collected.

The ensuing restart on Lap 141 was no better. Chuck Hossfeld seemed to suffer a right-front suspension issue entering Turn 1 and clipped the back bumper of Silk’s No. 85 machine. Silk attempted to make the corner but was caught on the outside three-wide and triggered a pile-up that gathered up Tommy Catalano, Ken Heagy, Timmy Solomito, Mike Leaty and Nocella.

At the checkered flag, McLaughlin finished third behind Emerling and Bonsignore while McKennedy and Goodale rounded out the top five.

Tyler Rypkema came home sixth ahead of Hossfeld and Fortin, who completed the lead-lap finishers. Doug Coby finished ninth, one lap down, after starting the race two laps down — the six-time champ needed his shifter replaced before the field took the green flag. Rounding out the top 10 was Kyle Bonsignore.

The victory for Emerling inches him closer to the points lead one race after losing the top position to Bonsignore. That battle, with Bonsignore currently six points ahead, will heat up as the tour heads to Stafford Motor Speedway on Friday, Aug. 6, for its next contest.

Perhaps it is only fitting. The Next Gen car rolls into NASCAR Cup Series competition in 2022 with an expanding group of Next Gen team owners; from a successful 40-year-old entrepreneur to former drivers and current competitors to an NBA legend and a Grammy winner, they’re all creating a new-look ownership landscape in the sport’s premier series.

Yes, the NASCAR “titans” remain still very much in play, with NASCAR Hall of Fame owners such as Rick Hendrick, Richard Childress, Jack Roush, Roger Penske and Joe Gibbs. But a group of next-generation ownership including businessman Matt Kaulig, former competitor Justin Marks and current racers Denny Hamlin and Brad Keselowski will field cars on the grid next season, too.

Add to that NBA legend Michael Jordan and Grammy winner Pitbull, who are lending a decidedly marquee feel to the grid as well as part of the new NASCAR ownership groups.

MORE: Key players in 2022 Silly Season

It’s one of the largest “new class” of NASCAR Cup Series ownership and a sure sign the sport will retain its competitive foundation for the foreseeable future. It is Opportunity with a capital O but also a well-regarded safety net for the sport’s natural transitions in team ownership.

“The sport has a lot of momentum,” said Hendrick, who in June named four-time NASCAR Cup Series champion, Hall of Famer Jeff Gordon, 49, as Hendrick Motorsports’ vice chairman, essentially his heir apparent. “We have a whole crop of young drivers who are winning races and developing into stars. We have a huge fan base and they’re coming back in a major way after the pandemic. When you see 100,000 people at Road America, that’s very exciting.

“NASCAR has done an excellent job with the schedule and introducing new venues. The business model is also changing and making things more attractive for potential new owners. It’s a great time for the sport.”

Kaulig, a team owner, certainly agrees. As a former college football player, whose father was an executive at Raybestos Brakes, Kaulig grew up around motorsports. In five years fielding a team full time in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, his Kaulig Racing organization has scored 10 wins and amassed an impressive 142 top-10 finishes in 283 total starts.

Kaulig has also made a few highly competitive forays into the NASCAR Cup Series as well. In April, he announced his team will field a car for his current 22-year-old Xfinity Series driver, Justin Haley, full time in the NASCAR Cup Series.

With a solid track record, his background as a successful businessman and his genuine aspirations of expanding his place in the sport, Kaulig said he had originally hoped to make the jump into the NASCAR Cup Series ranks full time for the 2021 season. But COVID-19 and the extenuating circumstances the pandemic created pushed his plans back a year.

Still, it is the ultimate outcome for someone who initially became involved in the sport as a sponsor, putting his LeafFilter Gutter Protection company on the hood of cars and eventually becoming so involved he bought his own team.

He, too, welcomes the increased level of competition all around and is adamant the ever-burgeoning group of new teams coming into the sport right now are a valuable and visible asset.

Certainly rolling out the Next Gen car for 2022 presents a kind of fresh start or even reset for everyone on the grid. The timing just makes sense.

“I think it’s really healthy and I think NASCAR is embracing it,” Kaulig said of the new, younger ownership groups. “There’s definitely a transition going on and I’m super excited about it. I want to be one of the guys that’s looked at as kind of taking over care for the sport. I know Justin (Marks) has been pretty vocal about their goals to do that, too.

“These longtime owners, like Richard Childress, Jack Roush, they’ve been great and I aspire to be like them.”

To that point, one of the most successful all-around racing organizations, Chip Ganassi Racing, has sold its entire NASCAR operation to Marks, who along with international music superstar Pitbull, debuted Trackhouse Racing Team this year. Currently Trackhouse fields the No. 99 Chevrolet for Daniel Suarez. Next year, thanks to the Ganassi purchase, there will be two cars on track for the team, although the second driver has yet to be named.

With essentially a jump on the pivotal 2022 season, Marks, 40, a former NASCAR Xfinity Series race winner who has had a successful and versatile driving career himself, is optimistic about having a year under the team’s belt. He’s especially enthusiastic about what acquiring Ganassi’s assets and some of the team’s manpower could mean going forward.

Marks also sees the present rise in new ownership as a sort of competitive evolution. Seeing so many younger team owners is a natural and positive sign of progression. And it bodes well not just for a couple of upcoming seasons but potentially for decades to come.

“I think where my mind goes is proof of concept for NASCAR’s vision for the future,” Marks said. “It’s proof of concept for the new car. This is exactly what they were trying to do with the new car. The business model of the sport made the barrier of entry for new ownership higher and higher and higher every single year and it was going to take something like this to ignite a movement like this.

“I think we’re proving that there’s a lot of desire to get into this sport, just the mechanism to do that had just been too high of a mountain for a lot of people to climb. But I think the promise of the new car and the model of the new car is that opportunity for a lot of owners.

“Denny (Hamlin) and I talk about this and it’s a common theme among a number of the new owners that this is the opportunity to come in when the sport is in a big period of transition and I think the days ahead of the sport and for the new ownership and these new teams are really, really bright and I’m very fortunate to be a part of it.”

Hamlin, who partnered with the NBA great Jordan to form 23XI Racing — a nod to Jordan’s famed No. 23 jersey and Hamlin’s famed Joe Gibbs Racing No 11 Toyota — also sees a true transition of sorts in NASCAR.

A three-time Daytona 500 winner and consummate NASCAR Cup Series championship contender, the 40-year-old Hamlin has managed to both compete in the sport’s highest level – he currently leads the championship standings – and operate his own team employing driver Bubba Wallace.

The latter is something the sport hasn’t really seen since the late Dale Earnhardt drove for Richard Childress Racing but also fielded cars under Dale Earnhardt Inc. (DEI).

For Hamlin, the formation of his team this season came a little sooner on the grand calendar than he anticipated.

“But the stars just aligned perfectly with myself and Toyota,” Hamlin said.

With Toyota essentially losing a team with Leavine Family Racing closing shop at the end of 2019, Jordan being open to NASCAR ownership and Hamlin always seeing it as a goal down the road for himself, things just moved more quickly.

“It happened certainly at least two or three years quicker than I thought it would, but I also thought this was really the right time,” said Hamlin, whose 23XI Racing Toyota is part of a Joe Gibbs Racing team alliance.

Hamlin is hopeful to add a second car soon to the 23XI team. Sponsorship and driver choice are essential to the expansion. And, as with Marks, he sees the 2022 debut of the Next Gen car presenting the perfect timing for all the new teams.

“You won’t be starting from behind where if you come in two to three years from now, people have already started to refine stuff,” Hamlin said. “You’re not starting at a deficit now, everyone is kind of starting at the same time, with the same playing field. Everyone is starting fresh. The drivers and teams, we’re all going to be learning together. I think that’s the reason now is kind of a critical time.”

Hamlin carries no illusions to how difficult it has been competing against the longtime legends of the sport in Penske, Hendrick, Childress, Roush and Gibbs. Unlike those long-tenured, championship owners, Hamlin doesn’t bring a fortune with him from success in ventures outside of racing. He – and many of his fellow new, next-generation owners – must rely on sponsorship dollars and the business-sense of racing.

A renewed emphasis on keeping costs down is part of the philosophy behind the Next Gen car and a real attraction for potential owners.

“It’s very difficult for the new owners coming in because ultimately when you look at us, we don’t have billion-dollar businesses that we can leverage our partners in,” Hamlin said. “So what is the landscape for the next owners that come in?”

Like Marks and Hamlin, Gordon’s transition from NASCAR’s FOX broadcast booth has been well received and a positive sign about the health of the sport in general.

Gordon was a part-owner on seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson’s Hendrick Motorsports car. And he has long been heavily involved with major decisions at the team. Beginning Jan. 1, however, he will sit alongside Hendrick on the NASCAR team owner council and oversee the day-to-day overall operation of the organization – whose four driver’s average age, by the way, is only 26.

“I cannot put into words what Hendrick Motorsports means to me,” Gordon said upon the June announcement of his expanded role with the company. “In many ways, it’s my home and the people here are my family. I’ve never lost my passion for the organization, for our sport and for the sheer challenge of racing and winning at the highest level.

“Being part of the competition is where I’m happiest and feel I can make the biggest contribution to the continued, long-term success of the team.”

It’s a similarly optimistic view for yet another former NASCAR Cup Series champion, Brad Keselowski, who formally added his name to the ownership mix just two weeks ago.

MORE: Keselowski set to join Roush ranks

As with Gordon, team ownership has always been important for the 2012 champ Keselowski. He owned a successful NASCAR Camping World Truck Series team from 2008-17 that earned 11 wins and twice finished runner-up in the championship with Ryan Blaney (2011) and Tyler Reddick (2015).

Having spent the last 12 years driving for Team Penske — and earning 34 wins — Keselowski will move to Roush Fenway Racing at the end of this season, assuming an ownership role in that famed NASCAR operation.

Roush Fenway Racing president Steve Newmark said several extensive conversations took place between himself and Keselowski about the next era of NASCAR competition, long before the idea of Keselowski becoming part of the team’s ownership group.

“It was a lot of focus on where we were headed with Next Gen and I was able to tell him unequivocally that from the Fenway and Roush perspective, we think the Next Gen is a pivotal point for the sport and is one that our owners and are committed to investing and continuing to build upon,” Newmark said. “And I think more importantly stepping back, we talked about how our ownership group really believes that NASCAR is going in the right direction and really bullish on the future and a lot of that stems from the leadership provided by Jim France, Steve Phelps and Steve O’Donnell and a lot of the initiatives around the Next Gen, social initiatives, esports and so we talked a lot about the future and why we were coming up with five and 10-year plans.

“But we also explained that there was kind of a hole in our strategy going forward in that one of the things that we were looking for at Roush Fenway is a more solid succession plan.”

Keselowski said he entered into discussions with the team and set certain “deal-breakers” — from his insistence on securing a long-term driving contract to having a leadership role, to having an ownership stake. All those critical conditions were not only met by the Roush Fenway group but embraced.

The timing, with the introduction of the Next Gen car, made the opportunity feel so right Keselowski called it a “no-brainer”.

“The Next Gen car coming into the sport should be a significant reset with the technology, a significant reset for the way the processes flow and some of those things that we would need to overcome,” Keselowski said. “So I think that kind of taking that down the course of NASCAR leadership and some of the things they have going on, I have a lot of confidence in where the sport is heading.

“I think we’re on a big upswing and I kind of feel like I’m buying into a stock as it’s about to go up with looking at the landscape.”

It’s a theme, for sure, and one that is significantly defining the NASCAR model going forward.

“I’m a big believer in the law of attraction,” Pitbull said when announcing his ownership at the start of the season. “I want to be involved. There’s no better time to be involved in NASCAR, with Trackhouse, Daniel (Suarez), Justin (Marks) and (team executive) Ty (Norris) than now.

“It is all about creating awareness. In the same way that music is a universal language, I also see NASCAR as a universal language. Everybody loves a fast car and a great story, you know.”