Five cars will start at the rear of the field for Sunday’s Foxwoods Resort Casino 301 (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

The No. 23XI Racing Toyota driven by Bubba Wallace will move to the rear for unapproved adjustments. Wallace was set to line up 18th in Sunday’s race.

RELATED: See this weekend’s paint schemes | Full lineup for the race  

Four cars will also be moving to the rear for multiple pre-race inspection failures. They are:
–No. 00 StarCom Racing Chevrolet of Quin Houff (was going to start 36th)
–No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet of Corey LaJoie (was going to start 26th)
–No. 37 JTG Daugherty Racing Chevrolet of Ryan Preece (was going to start 25th)
–No. 78 Live Fast Motorsports Ford of BJ McLeod (was going to start 32nd)

Preece, a Connecticut native, won the Whelen Modified Tour race on Saturday with a third-to-first move on the final corner at New Hampshire.

Kyle Busch had used up his eligibility for this year in the NASCAR Xfinity Series.

Ty Gibbs had the week off.

But the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota they have driven to a combined seven victories this season was still around — much to the chagrin of the series regulars.

Competing in the Xfinity Series for the first time since he finished third in the final standings in 2019, Christopher Bell led 151 of 200 laps, swept the first two stages and won Saturday’s Ambetter Get Vaccinated 200 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

RELATED: Official results | Weekend schedule

The victory was Bell’s third straight at the 1.058-mile track and the 17th of his career. It was the sixth straight win for Joe Gibbs Racing at New Hampshire, which did not host an Xfinity Series race last year because of schedule changes necessitated by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Bell was the only former New Hampshire winner in the field for Saturday’s race. He finished a comfortable 6.241 seconds ahead of runner-up Justin Allgaier, who held off third-place Daniel Hemric during the final 45-lap green-flag run.

From Bell’s standpoint, the secret to success was easy to define.

James Gilbert | Getty Images
James Gilbert | Getty Images

“What I’ve got figured out is I’ve got really, really fast race cars to drive,” said Bell, who started 14th and took the lead for the first time on Lap 44 — one circuit before the end of the first stage. “I just love being here with Joe Gibbs Racing. All these Supras I’ve had for the last three times I’ve been here have been amazing.

“Hopefully, the Camry is just as good tomorrow (in the NASCAR Cup Series race), but it just feels good to win.”

A flat right-front tire shot Patrick Emerling’s Chevrolet into the outside wall in Turn 4 to cause the fifth and last caution of the race on Lap 149. After an adjustment to his No. 7 Chevrolet designed to create short-run speed, Allgaier battled Bell side-by-side after the final restart on Lap 156.

But the strength and turning ability of Bell’s car, set up by crew chief Chris Gayle, soon prevailed, and Bell pulled away as Allgaier and Hemric fought for the second position.

“Obviously, it was a good short-track battle there,” Allgaier said. “This place is difficult, but it’s fun. You’re out there and you’re sliding around a lot. We didn’t start off the race like we wanted to, and (crew chief) Jason (Burdett) and the boys did a great job of making adjustments and getting us where we needed to be at.

“I wish I knew what we needed there. The Gibbs cars definitely had something we didn’t have today. We’ll go back home, we’ll keep working on it and hopefully get our Brandt Camaro into Victory Lane sooner than later.”

Series leader Austin Cindric ran fourth, followed by Harrison Burton. Justin Haley, Myatt Snider, Josh Berry, Brett Moffitt and Riley Herbst completed the top 10.

Herbst made a remarkable recovery from an early accident on a Lap 26 restart and now trails Michael Annett by 32 points for the final playoff position. Annett missed Saturday’s race — with Berry as his substitute — after undergoing surgery for a stress fracture in his right femur.

MORE: What to Watch: New Hampshire

NASCAR opted not to apply traction compound to the third lane of the racing surface, though the PJ1 had been used for recent races at New Hampshire.

Accordingly, Bell believes racing Saturday without the compound will give him an advantage in Sunday’s Cup race.

“Especially coming here, the Xfinity rules package is really similar to the Cup rules package,” Bell said. “I hope we have a really fast Camry tomorrow.”

The NASCAR Xfinity Series is idle the next two weeks, returning Aug. 7 (4 p.m. ET, CNBC/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Watkins Glen International.

Note: NASCAR’s post-race inspection in the Xfinity Series garage was clear with no issues, thus confirming Bell’s victory.

LOUDON, N.H. — Ryan Preece finally got the win he’d been hoping for.

On a last-lap overtime dive to the outside in Turns 3 and 4, Preece sprinted around Ron Silk and Justin Bonsignore to go from third to first to win the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour’s Whelen 100 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on Saturday afternoon.

Preece was showered in cheers by the crowd after the native New Englander put on an incredible show.

“I’m from Berlin, Connecticut, born and raised, and I have my local tracks in Connecticut,” Preece said. ‘But when it comes to the big three (national touring series) and the Cup Series, this is the only track that’s two and a half hours away. … But this is New England. and all of us New Englanders, we’re kind of our own breed. It’s just really cool to win in front of them all.”

RELATED: Learn the latest from world of grassroots racing at NASCAR Roots

The race was pushed to overtime when J.B. Fortin and Eric Goodale collided on the front straightaway with two laps to go, setting Silk and Preece on the front row for the final restart.

In a backup car following a crash in Saturday morning’s practice, Silk got the jump on the restart with a massive push from Bonsignore into Turn 1. The No. 85 of Silk shot to the lead but had the field strong in tow, thanks to the effect of the draft.

Silk led to the white flag, but Bonsignore had an outstanding run off Turn 2. He darted to the inside, but Silk hung a left to defend. Preece, meanwhile, held his line against the outside wall while the two leaders lost momentum.

Bonsignore jumped out to lead for a brief moment, but Preece rocketed around both drivers to launch to his first win at the “Magic Mile.”

“I can play it back in my head probably a billion times and probably do 10 different things off of Turn 2, but that’s the move you think you got to make,’ Bonsignore said. “And Ronnie did exactly what I would have done as the leader and probably stalled us both out too much and then Ryan got a good run.”

RELATED: New Hampshire Race Center recaps the weekend

Bonsignore also elected not to take fuel when the caution fell at Lap 74, choosing to take tires and track position instead. Off Turn 4 on the final lap, Bonsignore said the engine stumbled, hindering any momentum coming back to the checkered flag.

In third place, Silk completed an impressive effort in a backup car that had zero practice laps on it and just two qualifying circuits before Saturday’s contest.

“All you can do at this place is put yourself in a position to win at the end and then it kind of just falls where it falls,” Silk said. “But yeah, to have zero laps of practice on this car and have a good run like that, it’s really good.”

The race kicked off with a caution on Lap 1 when Matt Swanson drifted wide off Turn 4 and contacted the outside wall. As the field scattered around him, Max McLaughlin was turned into the outside wall, and both drivers’ days ended early.

After a lengthy cleanup period, the race got back underway at Lap 12, kicking off a long 62-lap green-flag run.

The front end of that run featured incredible fights for the lead between Bonsignore and Preece, who traded the lead seemingly every other lap as the draft came into play.

“It’s always fun,” Bonsignore said. “We understand what each other is trying to do. You can’t be tucked up behind the guy for too many laps. Otherwise, you start to run hot. So it’s more of a game of just ‘Hey, I need to lead to cool the motor back off and lead three, four laps and get the lead back.’ But at the same time you want to be the leader because if the caution comes out, you want to make sure you’re lined up as the leader, so it’s a game of cat and mouse.”

Bonsignore held the lead at the Lap-74 caution, which flew for Bryan Dauzat’s failed engine, and elected to take tires only while the majority of the leaders pitted for both fuel and tires.

PHOTOS: See the 2021 Whelen Modified Tour championship trophy

At Lap 93, Tyler Rypkema suffered a right-rear tire puncture heading into Turn 1 and spun driver-side into the outside wall before climbing out under his own power.

That set up a restart with four to go, leading to the eventual contact between Fortin and Goodale.

Patrick Emerling entered Saturday’s race with a three-point lead over Bonsignore in the championship standings but instead left with a disappointing 13th-place finish, at one point losing a lap to Bonsignore.

Doug Coby came into Saturday’s race fourth in points 41 points out despite missing the event at Oswego Speedway, but a blown motor ended the six-time champion’s day after just 44 laps.

Completing the top five behind Preece, Bonsignore and Silk were Ronnie Williams and Jon McKennedy. Andy Seuss, Dave Sapienza, Bobby Santos III, Kyle Bonsignore and Timmy Solomito rounded out the top 10.

Foxwoods Resort Casino 301 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway
(⏰ 3 p.m. ET | 📺 NBCSN | 📻 PRN, SiriusXM)

Everything you need to know for Sunday’s race, the 22nd points-paying NASCAR Cup Series event of the 2021 season. 

Where: New Hampshire Motor Speedway, a 1.058-mile layout located in Loudon, New Hampshire
Green flag: 3:18 p.m. ET
TV/Radio: NBCSN/NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
Forecast: Showers. High near 73. Calm wind becoming northeast around 5 mph in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 80%, according to NOAA.gov
Race Distance: 301 laps, 318.46 miles
Stages: Stage 1 – 75 laps | Stage 2 – 110 laps (ends at Lap 185) | Final Stage – 116 laps (scheduled to end at Lap 301)
Pit-road speed: 45 mph
Caution car speed: 50 mph
New Hampshire 101: Get the full lowdown
Starting lineup: See the full lineup

Pit-stall assignments: See who is pitting where  | Expert breaks down pit selections

Nhms 2

Five to watch

Here are five big story lines we’ll be following at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

1. It certainly was a NASCAR week to remember, and we now know officially Brad Keselowski and Matt DiBenedetto will no longer be with Team Penske and Wood Brothers Racing, respectively, after the season. Now what? Well, there are still 15 races left for each of them with their respective teams, and they’re each capable of winning — particularly at New Hampshire. The 2012 champ Keselowski is the defending winner of the race, showing last season his proclivity with this rules package, extending his top-10 run at the “Magic Mile” to five in the last six there. DiBenedetto, while up and down this season, is currently on the rise and has finished sixth or better in the last two NHMS jaunts. With plenty to prove, look for these two Ford drivers to come out swinging this weekend.

2. It’s kind of hard to believe given the blistering start to the season he had, but Denny Hamlin may be looking to prove himself this weekend, as well. Despite still narrowly holding onto the points lead, last year’s seven-time winner is still mysteriously winless in 2021, but that could change Sunday. He has been in contention there lately — he was passed for the win in each of the last two Loudon races — and it has been a productive track for him in general. With three wins and six runner-up finishes at New Hampshire, he has finished top two in a third of his NHMS starts. Beyond Hamlin, this could be a boon of a weekend for Joe Gibbs Racing as a whole — all four of its drivers are excellent there.

3. In a vein similar to that of Hamlin, his fellow 2020 dominator in Kevin Harvick will be looking to rock out big time Sunday in the Granite State. Arguably the best driver at Loudon the past decade, Harvick has arguably also had the most head-scratching, winless season after he put up nine victories last year. The Stewart-Haas Racing driver has won three of the last six NHMS events, has finished top five in six of the last seven and crew chief Rodney Childers has four wins there — most among all crew chiefs and at least one for all three manufacturers. You’d think this is where he puts it all together, but we’re well past the halfway point and Childers has implied there isn’t much left speed to be found in the No. 4’s last 15 races with the Gen 6 car. Still, Harvick is an all-world talent behind the wheel and could out-maneuver faster cars Sunday for what would be a strong statement victory.

4. OK, so if so many other drivers and teams have a shot to win — consider all Penske/Gibbs drivers as legitimate contenders —where does that leave the season’s best team in Hendrick Motorsports? Well, it’s tough to say. On one hand, it has been so dominant in this middle portion of the season it’s unrealistic to expect the powerhouse team to just bow down to Loudon’s typical magicians. On the other, it was unrealistic to expect the other teams to not catch up at some point, and this weekend might be when we really start to see shades of that. Hendrick drivers have just three total top 10s among them the past two weeks (of course, one of them was Chase Elliott‘s Road America win) and New Hampshire hasn’t been a strong track for Rick Hendricks’ group in quite some time. Kyle Larson still has the second-best odds out there at 21-4, but it seems oddsmakers are favoring the Fords and Toyotas overall. And they’re probably right.

5. How about a different Chevrolet driver landing in Victory Lane, though? How about the one who did last week? Kurt Busch shocked the world last Sunday — well, not if you read Power Rankings every week — when the 42-year-old out-dueled his younger brother for the win at Atlanta, but the question remains if Busch will find the fountain of youth again this weekend. He’ll certainly need it, as his three NHMS wins all came in 2008 or earlier, having finished 17th or worse in three of the last four races there. He has also only won back-to-back races once in his career, at Martinsville/Atlanta in 2002. Perhaps we’ll see another new winner this weekend (relatively likely considering what we said about Hamlin/Harvick), and apart from the drivers already mentioned it wouldn’t be too surprising to see a Tyler Reddick, Austin Dillon or Ross Chastain victory Sunday, though those feel much less certain than Busch looked entering Atlanta. Either way, with five races remaining before the playoffs, there’s plenty to watch and Sunday should be a thrill ride.

Race-day staples

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

Power Rankings: Ryan Blaney heating up before strong Penske track | Scope the ranks
Paint Scheme Preview: Magical paint schemes for Loudon | See the schemes
Fantasy Fastlane: See which drivers to use, avoid | Full Fantasy advice | Set your roster
Preview Show: Jonathan Merryman and Alex Weaver preview the race | Watch the show
Bubble Watch: Where drivers closest to the cutline stand before New Hampshire | See the bubble

Get in on the action

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

Betting odds for New Hampshire race | See the odds
New Hampshire race provides teaching moments for NASCAR bettors | Find out why
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

Wicked good racing up north

2007nhtbt

NASCAR is back in New England with a race at the “Magic Mile.” Take a look at some track history and what happened last time out.

Remember this?: Memorable moments from New Hampshire | See the moments
• Boy, oh boy: Relive Clint Bowyer’s first career Cup Series win | Watch the 2007 Sylvania 300
 A lot of lobster: All-time wins at New Hampshire Motor Speedway | See the winners
Locked in at Loudon: How JGR has put together history NHMS run | Analysis
• Throwback ‘2’ last year:
Keselowski victorious at the Magic Mile in ’20 | See how Kes won

Fast facts

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

Chevrolet has only won one of the last 14 NHMS races (Harvick, 2016). The last time by a current Chevy driver? Kurt Busch, 2008.
The Stage 1 winner has never gone on to win the race at NHMS. The Stage 2 winner has won twice.
The race winner led 54 laps or fewer in six of the last eight races at NHMS. In the other two they led more than 180 in each.
The average green flag stretch at NHMS in 2020 was 21 laps, the shortest in the last nine races there.
The final lead change came with 30 or more laps to go in nine of the last 12 races at the “Magic Mile.”

Catch the pack

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

• You’re up, kids: Cindric, Burton making move to Cup in 2022 | See the details
• Like family: Harrison Burton teams with Wood Brothers | Read more
• DiBenedetto opens up:
Matt DiBenedetto on losing Wood Brothers Racing ride: ‘It does suck’ | See what he said
• From 21 to 2:
Why Roger Penske switched Austin Cindric’s 2022 Cup plans | Read more
• Silly Season tracker:
Keep tabs on who’s headed where for next season | See the details
• Blueprint followed?: Did Team Penske, Wood Brothers follow Hendrick in driver shuffle | Full analysis
• Extending the pact:
Kyle Larson to stay at Hendrick through 2023Read more
• Evolving stance:
Rick Hendrick explains how he’s changed his mind on letting drivers run other disciplinesRead more
• Long-term view:
Rick Hendrick aims “to keep the band together” in current lineup | See what he said

Say what?

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

“New Hampshire has been a really hit-or-miss place for us. It’s just a different track. It takes a differing driving style, I feel like, than some of the other places. I look at Loudon as being more of its own animal. We’ve had a couple solid runs here, but never a dominating performance. I don’t feel like personally it has been my best place.” — Chase Elliott, driver of the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

Sean Gardner | Getty Images

“I’m not crazy about touching the lobster. My wife (Morgan) is excited about it. I will probably let her hold it (if I win).” — Christopher Bell, driver of the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

“New Hampshire is fairly difficult. I feel like it’s a track that, historically, the veteran drivers do really well at with their experience there. It’s just a tough racetrack. You have to have a lot of grip in your car to run well. And honestly, this is one of the tracks that Rudy (Fugle) and I have done the best at in our careers. We have some testing notes there and know what works well and what the car needs to do. I’m honestly pretty excited about going to New Hampshire this weekend. It’s a track that Rudy and I have been looking forward to going to all season long.” — William Byron, driver of the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

“New Hampshire Motor Speedway is a track that I’ve had to work really hard at to understand how to run better and get around there properly. I put a lot of work in over the off-season to be better at places like short tracks and road courses where you use a lot of brake, and New Hampshire is a track where you definitely need to manage your brakes well. We’ve done a really good job this year improving at tracks I found challenging before, so I’m excited to see what that means for New Hampshire this Sunday.” — Tyler Reddick, driver of the No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet

This article is brought to you by BetMGM.

The NASCAR Cup Series is back in New Hampshire, and the 1.058-mile oval could be the opportunity that hungry veterans like Denny Hamlin and Kevin Harvick need to get that elusive first win of the season. With a win, they qualify for the postseason.

“The Magic Mile” — as the Loudon, New Hampshire track is also known — hosts a critical race this weekend, as the NASCAR Cup Series is now down to five races remaining in the regular season. After this weekend, the season will have a two-week break while the Olympics are going on. After the Olympics, four races remain in August before the postseason begins in September.

Could a veteran snag this critical win, or will Kyle Larson continue his 2021 dominance after signing a contract extension this week with Hendrick Motorsports?

RELATED: NASCAR BetCenter | Odds for Sunday’s race at New Hampshire

Take a look at the NASCAR racing odds for the Foxwoods Resort Casino 301 at Loudon:

THE ODDS-ON FAVORITE

Martin Truex, Jr. (+500)

Truex, Jr. tops the odds at Loudon, but there are many historically strong drivers in this field — even with many top veterans of the past two decades recently retired. Truex comes from a New Jersey family that has had success at the New Hampshire oval track. His father — Martin Truex Sr. — won the only NASCAR touring series race of his career at Loudon, capturing the K&N Pro Series East race (now known as ARCA Menards Series East) there in 1994. Little brother Ryan Truex also won two East races here in 2010, and Truex, Jr. won twice in the same series and won once in the Xfinity Series (2005).

While Truex, Jr. hasn’t won at Loudon in the NASCAR Cup Series, he has one of the top average finish numbers there — 12.0. He has 13 career top-10 finishes and seven career top-fives. Keep in mind, Truex, Jr. hasn’t always been in top-flight equipment during his career, either. His last six runs here have been top 10s, and he took third last year in Joe Gibbs’ equipment — the strongest team he’s raced for in his career.

Couple the historical context above with the fact that he’s won three times this season and will start second this weekend, and you can see that he’s a solid favorite.

RELATED: Starting lineup for New Hampshire

OTHERS: Truex, Jr. is not miles ahead of everybody else in the NASCAR racing odds. Now that he’s racing with Hendrick Motorsports, Kyle Larson (+525) has proven he can win just about anywhere at any time. With five races remaining before NASCAR begins its postseason on Sept. 5 in Darlington, Larson would be on top of the playoff standings if the regular season ended today. He’s been stellar.

Denny Hamlin (+550) is extremely hungry to get that first win of the season. He tops the regular-season standings as of today, but that will change once the NASCAR Cup Series standings reset for the postseason. Hamlin’s past two races have produced second-place finishes at this venue, and he has won three races here in his career. He also holds the best average finish (9.6) among any active driver with more than one start.

Lastly, there’s Kyle Busch (+650). He’ll start on the pole and has 12 career NASCAR wins at Loudon in the top three series: Three in the Cup Series, six in the Xfinity Series, and three in the Camping World Truck Series.

THE DARK HORSE THREAT

Kevin Harvick (+1200)

Of all of this weekend’s entrants, nobody has more career Cup Series wins than Kevin Harvick at New Hampshire. He has won four times at the track — three coming in the past six Cup races — and also has more top fives (13) and top 10s (21) than anybody in this weekend’s field.

Harvick has been at his best in his career at intermediate-length tracks that range in size from 1.00-to-1.54 miles long. Consider this: Of Harvick’s 58 career Cup Series wins, 36 of them have come at tracks in this range of length. There’s something just right about this track size. Harvick hasn’t won a race this year, but this might be a big opportunity.

THE INTRIGUING LONG SHOT

Christopher Bell (+2000)

Bell has only run a single race at New Hampshire when it comes to the Cup Series, but he’s won the past two races here (2018 & 2019) in the Xfinity Series and won the 2017 Camping World Truck Series also. In all three lower-series victories, he started No. 2 and was racing with either Joe Gibbs (Xfinity) or Kyle Busch (Trucks) — both traditionally strong in those levels. He’ll be in a Gibbs’ Cup Series car this weekend.

Ever dream of designing a paint scheme for a NASCAR Cup Series champion?

Now’s your chance to make those dreams come true in Busch’s latest sweepstakes. Turn on your @BuschBeer notifications for #Foxwoods 301 this Sunday when Kevin Harvick is driving the No. 4 Busch Light Apple Ford in the NASCAR Cup Series race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway (3 p.m. ET, NBCSN, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Then, whenever the No. 4 car is in the last three laps of a stage, tweet #BuschLightApple #Sweepstakes for your chance to enter.

RELATED: New Hampshire weekend schedule

Every stage is a chance for you to get one step closer to having the opportunity to devise a sweet new paint scheme for the 2014 Cup champion. There are three stages scheduled for Sunday’s race, so be sure to pay attention and get the maximum number of entries.

Heading into Sunday’s race, Harvick was in ninth place in the standings with 159 points of breathing room between himself and the playoff cutline. Harvick has made the playoffs in 12 straight seasons, including in 2014 when he won the championship.

Harvick is a four-time winner at New Hampshire, with his most recent victories coming in 2018 and 2019 in Busch Beer-sponsored cars. Harvick has 21 top-10 finishes and 13 top fives in 37 starts at the 1.058-mile track known as the “Magic Mile.”

Busch Light Apple is a crisp, refreshing, apple-flavored lager with a touch of sweet on the front end and a clear, beer finish on the back end. It is available for a limited time only in 12-, 24- and 30-packs at a store near you.

Betting around Sunday’s Foxwoods Resorts Casino 301 (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) offers a couple of valuable lessons for gamblers: the importance of line shopping and the importance of getting down early.

In terms of the latter, one prominent national sportsbooks was pretty far off-market with its opening number on Denny Hamlin in the odds-to-win market.

FanDuel’s opener of +900 (bet $100 to win $900) on Hamlin was double the price hung at SuperBook USA in Las Vegas. As of Friday morning, Hamlin has been shortened to +450 at FanDuel, in line with the Vegas shop.

RELATED: NASCAR BetCenter | BetMGM’s odds for New Hampshire

With those 9/1 odds on the No. 11 Toyota long gone, bettors who placed their wagers early at FanDuel got clear value.

Jim Sannes, a quantitative NASCAR betting and DFS analyst at numberFire, rates Hamlin as the favorite at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, giving him a 17.1 percent chance to win, which translates to odds of about +485. The best price we’re seeing on Hamlin as of this writing is +600 at Barstool SportsBook, and for Sannes, the Joe Gibbs Racing driver is still a play at that number.

“I feel like I’ll be higher than consensus on him, but based on his strengths, and based on what he did at Richmond and Phoenix specifically, I’m kind of okay going out on a limb with Hamlin this week,” Sannes told NASCAR.com on Tuesday.

There are plenty of other discrepancies among sportsbooks ahead of Sunday’s race. Kyle Larson, for example, is the +700 fourth betting choice at the SuperBook, while he’s the +450 co-favorite at FanDuel. NASCAR partners BetMGM and Barstool offer Larson at +525 and +550, respectively.

So once you’ve handicapped the race and settled on the driver or drivers you like, be sure to shop around – there are plenty of books around the country happy to take your action.

Larson knocked from favorite perch

This week’s race in Loudon marks the first on an oval since the Coca-Cola 600 in May that Larson isn’t the betting favorite at SuperBook USA, where he’s priced longer than Hamlin, Martin Truex Jr. (+450) and Brad Keselowski (+600).

As dominant as Larson has been for stretches this season, he has not exactly shined on the short flat tracks comparable to New Hampshire. While he finished seventh at Phoenix, fifth at Martinsville and 18th at Richmond, he led just one lap combined in those three races.

“Hendrick’s never really had a ton of success here,” said Ed Salmons, vice president of risk management at the SuperBook.

Salmons also factored in the fact that Larson’s playoff position is secure.

“We’re in the stage of the year where some of these teams have so many bonus points built up that I’m not sure they’re not trying different things, like winning isn’t their ultimate goal,” he said. “I’m not sure if Hendrick is doing that right now or not. But I think all that is baked into the numbers.”

Sannes gives Larson the second-best chance to win this week, at 13.1 percent, behind Hamlin. That translates to about +660, meaning prices ranging from FanDuel’s +450 to Barstool’s +550 offer no value on the No. 5.

“I get it,” Sannes said of the continued short pricing on Larson, “but I can’t get there.”

Others in the mix

Joey Logano is offered at +1400 at FanDuel, again off-market from the +1000 consensus price. Those 14/1 odds are enticing to Sannes, who puts Logano’s chances of winning 10.8%.

“He’s really good on the short flat tracks,” Sannes said.

Added Salmons, “The Penske guys have always been strong (on these layouts), it’s been their thing.”

Sannes emphasized that since favorites tend to rule the day in New Hampshire, it’s more logical to target longer shots in markets other than outrights. He has Aric Almirola circled for group matchups and to finish in the top 10.

At FanDuel, Almirola is +320 to finish first in a group that also includes Tyler Reddick (+210), Ross Chastain (+320) and Austin Dillon (+320). BetMGM prices the No. 10 Ford at +225 for a top-10 finish.

Sannes also likes Kevin Harvick, Almirola’s teammate, to win at FanDuel’s price of +1700.

“I can’t touch Stewart-Haas Racing at a 550 (horsepower) track, but at a 750 I can,” he said.

Marcus DiNitto is a writer and editor living in Charlotte, North Carolina. He has been covering sports for nearly two-and-a-half decades and sports betting for more than 10 years. His first NASCAR betting experience was in 1995 at North Wilkesboro Speedway, where he went 0-for-3 on his matchup picks. Read his articles and follow him on Twitter; do not bet his picks.

Bethel Motor Speedway may just be a quarter-mile asphalt track, but running hundreds of laps there on a given weekend is anything but easy.

Joel Murns is running in three different divisions at Bethel – a NASCAR-sanctioned track in Swan Lake, New York – this season. He’s currently third in points in the track’s street stocks division, third in the track’s enduro series with a win and second in points in the renegade division, having won the only race so far.

Between the three, Murns estimates there are nights he runs 300-400 laps.

“There are nights I don’t ever get out of the car, and I really, really enjoy it,” Murns said.

RELATED: Learn more about Bethel Motor Speedway

Physically, racing that much on a given night is much more demanding, but Murns has also put in a new focus on his fitness, which has helped him become more prepared for the rigors of racing.

2021 Weeklyseries1
Photo Credit | Melissa Brush Photography

Murns quit smoking cigarettes in 2019 and started running. He’s now lost about 50 pounds and runs about five miles a day. He and his kids all run together, and he’s doing half marathons, 5Ks and 10Ks, which has given him another outlet for his competitive juices.

“You always want to place in your age group and do well,” he said. “I’m a pretty competitive guy. It’s just another aspect of racing, it’s just I’m doing it with sneakers instead of tires.”

Being in better shape physically has made driving a bit easier for Murns. He went from struggling to get a win to finding Victory Lane twice so far this season, his third running full-time at Bethel.

“Before, I didn’t really think I was that out of shape until I started running more than one division in a night and realized I needed to do something else,” he said. “I’m going to say it’s extremely key. It’s a tight little bullring so you’re constantly on the wheel. Most of your top-level NASCAR guys lose about eight pounds in just one race. There are nights I don’t get out of the car for three or four hours and it’s about the same. I’m losing about eight pounds a night. A lot of it is water weight and stuff like that.”

In addition to his own focus on physical health, Murns credits friends and colleagues Jimmy Smith, Tony Garaguso, Larry O’Donnell and Kyle Welsch, along with his family, with helping him find more success at the track.

Fans at Bethel have enjoyed Murns getting to Victory Lane as much as he does. Although he’s relatively new to the track, he has built a friendship with a lot of the fans and brought new ones to the track through his work at the VA Hospital.

“I’ve got a couple of vets that see me at the clinic and they come to the races now, too,” Murns said. “So it’s kind of turned into another outlet for some of my veterans, too, to get out of the house and get back into society a little bit.”

2021 Weeklyseries
Photo Credit | Melissa Brush Photography

Winning also gives Murns a chance to show off his “rooftop shuffle,” a dance he does on the top of his car after all of his wins.

“Even at 44 years old, I can still get my old butt up on the roof,” Murns said. “The kids get into it… I love when a driver gets out of the car and shows emotion. I’ve been an announcer for over 20 years at a local track and there’s nothing better than when a guy wins and shows emotion. I absolutely love it.”

Murns grew up going to races at Bethel. Now that he has been racing there for a few years, he said, “it’s the same as I always remembered as a kid.”

And it’s a place he’ll continue to go to — and run as many laps as possible.

“I saw a meme the other day… when you’re out on the track and you see a kid waving, you smile and wave back because I was that kid once. And that’s kind of how I feel,” Murns said. “You’ve got your hometown heroes there that I grew up watching. I don’t know if I’m becoming one of those, but sometimes I feel like I am. It’s kind of cool.

“My kids come to the races with me and they help work on the car and it’s absolutely amazing… As long as we’re having a good time I’ll continue to do this. And that’s mainly the goal. I hate points racing. I don’t like it. I never have. I’m just trying to have fun. I’m just trying to be that guy that people talk about Monday morning.”

This weekend, NASCAR marks its 50th visit to New Hampshire Motor Speedway. As always, the winner of the race will win the coveted (assuming you’re not Denny Hamlin) giant lobster in Victory Lane. This got us thinking — which sea creature would be the best behind the wheel of a race car? Thankfully, Steve Luvender and @nascarcasm are here to discuss. Let’s take a deep dive into this hot-button issue!

MORE: Memorable moments at New Hampshire

@NASCARCASM: I have done the Googles on many sea creatures, and so many would make excellent drivers. The shark would be aggressive, but would depend too much on the spotter when its eyes rolled back into its head. The jellyfish would be smooth, but it lacks a brain. I have settled on the octopus. The octopus would make the best driver.

STEVE LUVENDER: The octopus! A solid choice. Hard to think of a downside for so many tentacles. I, too, searched so many times on Google for sea creatures in the past few days that my suggested searches are probably now damaged beyond repair. But, alas, our job is to answer the question at hand, no matter the cost. So, my esteemed colleague, while I’m interested to hear why you’re leaning toward an octopus driver, I’ll have to argue there’s a better creature who calls the ocean its home: the dolphin.

@NASCARCASM: I love dolphins. Everyone loves dolphins. For real. Have you ever met anyone who saw a dolphin and was like “F— you, dolphin”? No, dolphins are beloved. I do, however, challenge your insinuation that it would be better than an octopus. The octopus has (Googles “octo-”) eight arms. The dolphin has none. That alone should end this discussion.

LUVENDER: Ah! Darn! Looks like I’ve been bested. Discussion over.

Or not. I’ve already carefully considered such an argument—that a lack of arms means a lack of ability to drive—and it’s simply fallacious. Dolphins have flippers (think the adventure/family movie by a similar name), and they’re more than sufficient for navigating a car. If a trained dolphin can wave at people with its fins, it can steer and shift gears, too. An octopus, on the other hand … I don’t think so. You need quick movements when you’re making split-second decisions in a race, and those suction cups aren’t doing you any favors.

@NASCARCASM: The octopus can have two tentacles on the wheel, one on the shifter, one on the radio knob, one on the brake, one on the gas, one on the clutch and one out the window giving other drivers the finger ALL AT THE SAME TIME. It’s literally a deep-sea Swiss-Army knife of motorsports domination, Steve. Your flipper statement may have a modicum of truth but comparing a tentacle to a flipper is like comparing Jimmie Johnson to Casey Atwood, bruh.

LUVENDER: How dare you invoke the name of Casey Atwood! He didn’t get a fair shot in the Cup Series and you know it. Of course the octopus guy would make such a comparison. All that aside, let’s put this discussion to rest once and for all. The dolphin, unlike the octopus, is a mammal. That means dolphins breathe air. Care to head back to your precious Google and type in “How long can an octopus survive out of the water?”

@NASCARCASM: Instead of cool air, we simply pump saltwater into the helmet eliminating the need for oxygen. Problem solved. You’re just sitting back and envisioning the octopus signing eight autographs at once and becoming a fan favorite right now, aren’t you?

LUVENDER: Oh, you want to talk fan favorites? Close your eyes and picture this: a theme park, where the theme is ocean creatures. Fun ocean creatures that everyone loves. Open your eyes. It already exists, and it’s called SeaWorld. The dolphins are the stars of the show. Not some octopus with evil in its eyes and vengeance in its heart. Dolphins squeal and shriek with delight, and they have the gift of echolocation to see with sound waves or something. I don’t know the specifics; I only read the first page of Google. Tell me echolocation wouldn’t come in handy on the race track. More than the basis of your argument that seems awfully tentacle-heavy.

@NASCARCASM: HOW DO YOU KNOW THAT AN OCTOPUS CAN’T DO TRICKS? Maybe they can dance. Maybe they can grenade-toss beers out to friends, eight at a time. And that echolocation thing is a lie perpetuated by marine biologists. What’ll they say next – if dolphins swim really fast in a circle they can keep hurricanes away?

LUVENDER: Sure, there’s that video where an octopus trapped in a jar frees itself, but how often are NASCAR drivers faced with opening a jar at 200 mph? And I don’t want to get into the Vortex Theory discussion since we both know that’s scientific fact. Let’s recap how much I’m winning this argument.

Dolphins: super smart, friendly and communicative, air-breathing. Can balance a ball on its nose and do tricks for its trainers (think crew chief) in exchange for dead fish.

Octopus: Intelligence unknown since it can’t speak. Can open a jar. Might toss beers to friends.

I’ll give you this: for tailgating, the octopus wins, eight-tentacles-down. But for a driver, I don’t think so.

@NASCARCASM: OK to answer your first inquiry, that would be the third race of the 1954 season when Gober Sosebee, in desperate need of a mid-race snack, opened up a jar of delicious pickled eggs while soaring down the beach at Daytona (Source: Internet).

Hey, want me to further win this debate by adding this schematic which demonstrates how the tentacles advantage of the octopus means that a pit stop could be performed by ONE octopus? Four tentacles remove and replace the tires, two operate the pit guns, one adds fuel and the other uses suction to clean the grill more thoroughly than a human hand. GAME. SET. OCTOPUS. OR SOMETHING.

LUVENDER: Typical ‘Casm, moving the goalposts and changing the rules. Since you know the octopus would make for a worse driver, you’re now talking about their performance as a pit-crew member — and, to your point, they’d excel. And, unlike dolphins, people eat octopus, you know. Sort of like the New Hampshire Motor Speedway lobster trophy.

@NASCARCASM: THE OCTOPUS CAN EAT LOBSTER TOO. I just Googled it. Many interesting albeit disturbing videos exist on YouTube of this happening. It’s not quick. It’s a weird confrontation that takes a while. It’s sort of like if John Wes Townley was the octopus and Spencer Gallagher was the lobster. With that, I have won the argument. I step atop the aqua race car and raise my eight arms in the air for I have triumphed.

LUVENDER: Twenty to 30 minutes. That was the answer, by the way, to the question I posed earlier about how long the octopus can survive above land. Meanwhile, the dolphin’s already on its way to Victory Lane to enjoy its lobster dinner. Apparently, both dolphins and octopi eat lobster, so even if we can’t agree to which of the two would make for a better driver, there’s one clear loser — and it’s the lobster.

(EDITOR’S NOTE: 20 TO 30 MINUTES IS ABOUT HOW MUCH OF YOUR LIFE YOU’LL NEVER GET BACK BY READING THIS. WE ARE TERRIBLY SORRY)

A driver from Joe Gibbs Racing has finished first or second in 14 of the last 15 Cup Series races at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. Half of the times that happened, it was a JGR car parked in Victory Lane. And then twice there was a 1-2 finish between teammates in Loudon.

NEW HAMPSHIRE: Betting odds | Starting lineup | Paint schemes Screen Shot 2021 07 15 At 3.09.26 Pm

The winners in that span include Matt Kenseth (three times), Kyle Busch (twice) and Denny Hamlin (twice). Kenseth no longer races in NASCAR after two part-time seasons in 2018 and 2020. Busch still pilots the No. 18 JGR Toyota, and Hamlin remains with the No. 11 entry. Martin Truex Jr. (No. 19) and Christopher Bell (No. 20) complete the four-car garage now, joining the team in 2019 and 2021, respectively, from other organizations.

Still looking at New Hampshire alone, Hamlin and Busch have the most career wins out of their teammates with three apiece. They also each have 11 top-five and 16 top-10 finishes, oddly enough. Hamlin has that stat line in 27 starts. Busch does in 29.

Neither Truex, nor Bell have won at New Hampshire. Truex has seven top fives and 13 top 10s in 27 starts. Bell only has his 28th-place run last year, but he did go two-for-two in the Xfinity Series from 2018-19.

With that said, BetMGM has Truex as not just the JGR favorite to win Sunday’s Foxwoods Resort Casino 301 in Loudon (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App, PRN and SiriusXM) but also the overall favorite. He stands at 5-1 odds – more than likely because he has won three of the seven oval races with the same 750-horsepower package that’ll be used at New Hampshire. Kyle Larson from Hendrick Motorsports has the second-best odds at 21-4, followed by Hamlin at 11-2 and Busch at 13-2, in order. Bell is further down on the board with 20-1 odds.

RELATED: Complete weekend schedule for New Hampshire

Truex (three), Busch (two) and Bell (one) have already won this season, thus locking themselves into the 2021 NASCAR Playoffs. Hamlin has not.

Hamlin’s 369-point cushion on the cutline looks promising, but there are still five regular-season races left and only four spots remaining in the 16-driver postseason field. If he claims the regular-season title – Larson is catching up, now just 10 points behind – Hamlin will be playoff-bound. If he doesn’t win that or a race, and there are four new winners, he will get the boot. It’s best he wins, and New Hampshire offers a solid opportunity.

Speaking of those who have surprisingly not won this season and could at New Hampshire, Stewart-Haas Racing’s Kevin Harvick was victorious in three of the last six races there. He has four wins at New Hampshire for his career, making him the winningest active driver in Loudon despite Joe Gibbs Racing’s recent success.