Twenty-two races down. Fourteen to go.

NASCAR’s 2021 Cup Series season has been an eventful one, to say the least, and now that the schedule is in the midst of a two-week break, there has been ample time to reflect on all that has happened so far. From numerous victors to new tracks and record marks to winless streaks, this year has seen a bit of everything. Below is a recap of five themes through 22 events.

RELATED: Playoff picture | Championship standings | Title odds

… NEW TRACKS, WHO DIS?

This year’s Cup Series schedule features three new tracks in addition to two new track layouts. NASCAR hasn’t had this much of a shake-up since 1969.

The road course at Circuit of The Americas made its stock-car debut on May 23. NASCAR’s top competitors returned to Road America for the first time since 1956 on July 4. And then Nashville Superspeedway hosted its inaugural Cup Series race on June 20.

RELATED: Road America crushed its NASCAR Cup Series return

Those were the three new venues.

One of the two new layouts already happened at Bristol Motor Speedway on March 28. The short track turned into the dirt track. There hadn’t been a Cup Series race on dirt since 1970.

Still to come is Indianapolis Motor Speedway’s road course, a configuration the Cup Series has never raced. That event will take place Aug. 15, the third-to-last regular-season race.

… KICK THE DUST UP

Ovals and road courses are nothing new to the Cup Series. Dirt, however, was a large question mark.

Sure, many drivers have competed in dirt races before. But not in a stock car. None of the active drivers were competing back in 1970, aka the last time NASCAR took on dirt.

RELATED: Bristol dirt weekend to return in 2022

The Bristol Dirt Race was scheduled to be one of the eight race weekends that featured practice and qualifying, as the sanctioning body continues to limit at-track time due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Cup Series completed its two practices Friday, but its four qualifying races were canceled due to wet-weather conditions. Sunday’s main event was then postponed to Monday.

Joey Logano, driver of the No. 22 Team Penske Ford, ultimately won, leading 61 of the 253 laps. Martin Truex Jr.’s No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota led a race-high 126 circuits but finished 19th. Kyle Larson, who’s known as a dirt-racing maniac, actually placed his No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet 29th, four laps short of the total distance.

… EVERYBODY GETS A TROPHY

The first domino fell in the season-opening Daytona 500 with Michael McDowell, and another six went down in order.

NASCAR saw seven different winners in the first seven Cup Series races. Truex was the first repeat offender, claiming the fifth (Phoenix Raceway) and eighth (Martinsville Speedway) trophies. After Truex, though, there were another three different winners, making it 10 of out the first 11.

RELATED: 2021 NASCAR Cup Series winners

A quick look at that order: McDowell, Christopher Bell, William Byron, Larson, Truex, Ryan Blaney, Logano, Truex (second win), Alex Bowman, Brad Keselowski and Kyle Busch. Only for Truex to end the trend again.

Overall, there have been 13 different winners this season, the most recent being Aric Almirola at New Hampshire Motor Speedway right before the sport’s off weeks.

… A NEW TOP DOG

Hendrick Motorsports became the all-time winningest team this season, taking the top spot from Petty Enterprises, which had been No. 1 since 1999. Hendrick Motorsports tied Petty Enterprises at 268 wins on May 23 at Circuit of The Americas and then pushed ahead a week later at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

RELATED: Top 10 car owners in NASCAR Cup Series

Larson won the 2021 Coca-Cola 600 to put Hendrick Motorsports in the lead. Since then, Hendrick Motorsports has added an additional four victories. The team now stands at 273 wins all time.

Speaking of Larson and accomplishments, the pilot of the No. 5 Chevrolet has won a series-best four points-paying races this year, including three in a row between May and June. During that stretch, Larson also won the exhibition All-Star Race at Texas Motor Speedway.

Larson sits second in the points standings with four races left before a regular-season champion is crowned.

… Y’ALL GOOD?

Neither Kevin Harvick nor Denny Hamlin have won a race this season. Harvick had a series-high nine wins in 2020, while Hamlin had a second-best seven.

At this point last year, Harvick already had six wins and Hamlin had five.

Instead, in 2021, Harvick has driven his No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford to six top-five and 15 top-10 finishes. Hamlin’s No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota has tallied 11 top fives and 15 top 10s. Each has one runner-up showing.

RELATED: How Kyle Larson caught up to Denny Hamlin in points

Harvick and Hamlin have 14 opportunities left to score a win, starting Aug. 8 at Watkins Glen International (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). But they only have four chances left to qualify for the NASCAR Playoffs.

Hamlin currently sits atop the point standings, and if he holds on to that lead, he’ll earn the regular-season title and with that comes a postseason berth. Otherwise, he has a 283-point buffer on the cutoff line.

Harvick’s advantage is only 82 points. He’s only two spots away from elimination.

Both of them made the 16-driver field last season. This year is TBD.

Tyler Paige, an engineer at JR Motorsports, is competing in Tokyo at the 2021 Olympics representing the American Samoa sailing team.

At the beginning of 2020, Paige received an opportunity to join JR Motorsports as an engineer. He accepted but delayed his start date so he could continue training for qualifying races in hopes of making the Olympic team.

When sailing came to a standstill due to COVID-19 and sailing dates were rescheduled, he began working for the JR Motorsports’ NASCAR Xfinity Series teams from September to February. He is currently on a leave of absence in order to compete in the Olympics.

At 25, Paige competes for America Samoa, which is a U.S. territory of seven South Pacific islands. The sailing program has been rebuilding for the past few years, and Paige volunteered to help get the program Olympics-ready. He will compete in 10 Olympic heats alongside his teammate, Adrian Hoesch, beginning Wednesday.

Paige began sailing in his childhood and ranked as high as 20th in the world in 2015 in the men’s 470 category. In 2018, he represented the United States at the Junior 470 world championship.

Paige will return to JR Motorsports after his Olympic journey is over.

One of the biggest surprises of the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series season so far is that neither Kevin Harvick nor Denny Hamlin has won any of the 22 races. These two combined for 16 wins in 2021, with Harvick tallying a series-high nine and Hamlin contributing the other seven for the second-best mark. Eleven of those total victories were accomplished by this point last year, too.

RELATED: Playoff picture | Cup standings | 2021 schedule

OK then, what has been the problem with the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford and No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota drivers? There have been 13 different winners this season, so it’s not for a lack of variety.

NASCAR.com’s Pat DeCola and Terrin Waack debate whether Harvick or Hamlin will take home a trophy first. Four races are left in the regular season, and then there are another 10 in the playoffs. Plenty of opportunities remain.

DeCOLA: It’s truly remarkable that both of these drivers remain winless after what we witnessed last year, especially considering neither of them is having a bad season and one of them has been leading the point standings since February. Alas, here we are — Gooseegg City. That said, I do think both of them will win before the season is up. The regular season, that is.

Since we just mentioned February, let’s go back there. Do you recall what the big, on-track story line was? Oh yeah — Hamlin was vying for his third straight Daytona 500 crown. While it didn’t come, he notched his fourth top five — he finished fifth — in the last five races at the notoriously mercurial Daytona. Few out there will argue against Hamlin being the undisputed superspeedway ace at the moment, and the notion of him going to Daytona winless with an unsecured playoff spot makes it feel like a sure thing he’ll be the one walking out of there holding the trophy.

And now for the bait-and-switch …

Harvick is going to win first.

One week before Daytona? Michigan. Winner of four of the last five Michigan races? Harvick.

It’s a bit concerning that No. 4 crew chief Rodney Childers said two weeks ago the team was struggling to find more horsepower and downforce, admitting the performance of the car “kind of is what it is at this point,” but there are some encouraging signs.

SHR is the most recent Cup team to win, with Aric Almirola’s New Hampshire victory highlighting five Fords in the top six after a season of domination from Chevrolet and Toyota. It gives the Blue Ovals the upper hand as the sport entered a multi-week break amidst a recent uptick in performance overall. Given that Harvick has perhaps been Ford’s most consistent — albeit, you know, winless — driver this year, logic stands to reason that if the manufacturer has found something and closed the gap on the others, the 2014 champ would be the primary benefactor.

And even if it hasn’t, Harvick and Childers clearly have Michigan figured out and it’s their race to lose.

WAACKTruth be told, I really just want to say “I told you so!” at the end of the season.

In NASCAR.com’s bold 2021 preseason predictions, I said: “You know how Kyle Busch struggled after his 2019 championship run? A similar story line is going to unfold for Kevin Harvick after his nine-win 2020 season.”

And that is exactly what is happening.

Through 22 races, the Stewart-Haas Racing driver has yet to park his No. 4 Ford in Victory Lane. Harvick’s best finish yet — second — came at Kansas Speedway back in May, and he has had just two top-five runs since then (11 races).

Harvick is in danger of not making the NASCAR Playoffs, sitting in 15th and 82 points above the cutline, with four races left in the regular season. Hamlin is 14th with a 283-point buffer, for comparison. The two drivers are tied for most top-10 showings (15) in the series, but the difference is 11 of those double as top fives for Hamlin, while only six do for Harvick.

Neither has won, but Hamlin is performing better than Harvick, leading me to believe he will punch his winning ticket first.

Joey Logano and wife Brittany revealed that they are expecting their third child on social media via a YouTube video Tuesday. You can watch the video here for a unique gender reveal, courtesy of a replica No. 22 Shell Pennzoil Ford driven by son Hudson and with son Jameson riding shotgun.

The couple’s first child, Hudson, was born in January 2018. He made his debut in Victory Lane just three months later and got to see his dad win the 2018 NASCAR Cup Series championship. Their second child, Jameson, was born in 2020.

Congrats to the Loganos on their expanding family.

RELATED: Joey Logano through the years

Phil Horton likens the driver-pit crew relationship to the difference between NFL quarterbacks and special teams.

Drivers may have the celebrity status of a quarterback, but special teams are expected to do their job behind the scenes to perfection on football teams. When they don’t, they are the first ones criticized. But every part of the team is important.

Pit crews are the sometimes-overlooked part of professional racing. They not only take care of the car, but they also take care of the driver, ensure their safety and help to put them in a position to win the race.

A successful pit crew can change the pace of a race. Drivers and pit crews depend on each other. If a driver can take a team up to third place, maybe a fast pit stop can get the driver into second or first, Horton explains. That can be the difference between winning and losing.

The NASCAR Drive for Diversity Program was launched in 2004, establishing a driver and pit crew development and recruitment program. Those initiatives are part of the NASCAR Diversity, Equity & Inclusion platform. Max Siegel, the owner of Rev Racing and a former executive with Dale Earnhardt Inc. and USA Track and Field, has been instrumental in making significant Drive for Diversity advancements through the years.

RELATED: Learn more about NASCAR Drive for Diversity 

Horton, who is the director of athletic performance at Rev Racing, serves as the pit crew coach for the Drive for Diversity Crew Member Development Program. His background in athletics is wide ranging. He was a former strength coach for the Milwaukee Bucks and former head trainer at the University of Memphis and Florida A&M University. After a long career in that area, Horton started a private athletic training practice in North Carolina and began his work in NASCAR. He was first a personal trainer for former driver Ernie Irvan but soon began working with other drivers, pit crew athletes and race teams.

“I have 15 Cup wins as a pit coach, 12 Xfinity wins, 12 Truck wins, and a Truck championship from 2010,” Horton said. “That’s what makes it fun. Those are the rewards of being a part of a racing organization and winning.”

Now, he focuses on training new pit crews and looking for new ways to make pit stops more effective as the sport progresses.

The pit crew development program has become a staple for teams in finding high-quality pit crew members. The program boasts more than 90 alumni on teams all around the NASCAR garage. A large number of pit crew members come from professional and college sports backgrounds, specifically former players in football, basketball and softball.

Pit crew members must be strong, fast, and focused to be able to do what needs to be done. It’s also the ability to perform on the big stage that is something Horton is keenly keeping an eye out for.

“We’re looking for someone who doesn’t mind getting dirty … and someone who can deal with the pressure of performing in front of big crowds while changing tires,” Horton said. “We look for individuals who not only understand the team concept but have the personality to make that happen.”

On average, a four-tire pit stop in NASCAR is about 14 to 15 seconds. The top pit crews in the Cup Series get four-tire stops down in under 14 seconds, per Racing Insights. Two-tire stops are done in half the time. In this time, the over-the-wall crew jacks up the car, changes the tires, fuels the car, makes any adjustments, and sometimes rips a tear-off from the front windshield. If a car has a minor crash, the crew is needed to repair damage before the car can get back on the track.

It takes years to build the necessary skills to work on NASCAR Cup Series teams, Horton said. Crew members start at the grassroots level or in the ARCA Menards Series, then climb the ladder into the NASCAR national series. The pit crew development program trains its participants for about six months before they try out for specific teams.

RELATED: NASCAR, Rev Racing announce 2021 Drive for Diversity class

Horton travels to different schools and universities to recruit people and inform students about the ins and outs of NASCAR. If the resume fits, prospects will be invited to a NASCAR combine, much like the NFL Scouting Combine, but car-related and on a smaller scale. Candidates learn the workouts and routine of what pit crew members go through each week leading up to the race weekend. The combine serves as a test of their speed and their ability to quickly learn the concepts.

At every regional or national combine, about 10-15 people try out, but many are surprised at the number of physical capabilities it takes to be successful. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, Rev Racing held a pit crew combine on the weekend of the Coca-Cola 600 for prospective pit crew candidates. The number of available spots depend on the season, but teams sometimes need backups in case of injury or illness.

“You only try out if you know about it, and you only know about it through your school or affiliated staff,” said Ricky Rozier, a fueler in Chip Ganassi Racing’s development system who gets his over-the-wall reps in all three national series for other teams on race weekends. “They really try to get those student-athletes out there to perform.”

Rozier is a former football player for Winston-Salem State University and already had an interest in NASCAR before trying out and looking into the Drive for Diversity pit crew program.

In the case of Jonathan Willard, a jackman for the No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet team in the Cup Series as well as the Jeremy Clements Racing team in the Xfinity Series and the Hattori Racing Enterprises team in Camping World Trucks, he played football at Clemson University. He then moved on to play for the NFL’s Tennessee Titans and in the CFL. Being a pit crew member has been a “great experience” for him, and this is his eighth season on board.

“I wanted to do something that was different from what everybody else was doing so by chance, I sent out a resume to the NASCAR Racing Experience and Andretti Racing School not thinking that they’d call me back,” he said. “Two or three days later, they called me in for an interview.”

This interview came at just the right time. He had just finished a brief stint in law enforcement and wanted to break away from his family’s drag racing business near Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. He trained twice a day with Horton one-on-one for about two months and got his first full-time gig a year later.

RELATED: The Brotherhood of NASCAR — Building a Culture

Traveling to races around the country is a part of the job, and the schedule can be intense. The pit crews travel nearly every weekend from February to November. For those with a family and roots at home, this takes some getting used to.

Marshall McFadden, a jackman in Chip Ganassi Racing’s development system who gets his over-the-wall reps in all three national series for other teams on race weekends and another alumnus of the program, compares pitting to being in the NFL. Though he played for the Pittsburgh Steelers, Oakland Raiders and the St. Louis Rams, his experience still couldn’t prepare him for NASCAR. The job requires you to stay in shape and constantly improve to keep your spot.

“By looking at it, you’re like ‘It ain’t too bad,’ ” McFadden said. “My first race of the season at Daytona in 2017 was very humbling. … I thought I could do it all, but it’s harder than you think. It takes a lot of practice, repetitions, and camaraderie with the team. I wasn’t as good as I thought I was.”

What was the biggest mistake he made at the beginning of his career? Not jacking up the car correctly during pit stops, which can cause the car to fall when the crews are changing tires and filling up the gas tank. It’s a common mistake among less-experienced pit crew members but a costly one, as all the actions of a pit stop are timing-based and well-choreographed. It took months of watching film for him to become comfortable moving at race-day speed with accuracy. With only five over-the-wall spots on each pit crew, each team member has to stay sharp.

Even though McFadden and Willard dreamed of playing professional football for most of their careers, they’ve both become accustomed to the NASCAR lifestyle and emphasize that everyone on a professional racing pit crew is an athlete.

The biggest difference? On a pit crew, you’re a special-teams athlete supporting the team’s quarterback, the driver.

The 2021 eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series All-Star Race will be held Tuesday, July 27 at virtual Nashville Superspeedway at 8 p.m. ET (eNASCAR.com), pitting the series’ top drivers against each other in a race for the $3,500 grand prize.

RELATED: eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series schedule

The event will be split into two segments: a 23-driver All-Star Open qualifier, followed by the main event. Past series champions and drivers who have won a race or started from the pole in either 2021 or 2020 are automatically locked into the main event. Others not meeting the criteria will compete in the Open for two transfer spots.

In the All-Star Open, drivers will compete in a 40-lap shootout on a single set of tires. There will be a scheduled competition caution on Lap 25, setting up the 15-lap dash to the finish. The top two finishers in the Open advance to the feature event.

The All-Star Race will be 60 laps and have competition cautions on Lap 20 and 45. For the length of the race, drivers are allowed two sets of tires (including the starting set).

Second place in the main event will win $1,000 and third place earns $500.

WATCH: All-Star Race on YouTube

All-Star Roster (locked in): Keegan Leahy, Logan Clampitt, Chris Shearburn, Michael Conti, Ryan Michael Luza, Bob Bryant, Vicente Salas, Mitchell deJong, Jimmy Mullis, Ray Alfalla, Bobby Zalenski, Nick Ottinger, Corey Vincent, Graham A. Bowlin, Casey Kirwan, Ashton Crowder, Kollin Keister, Brandon Heyse Kettelle, Zach Novak, Kenny Humpe and Richard Towler

Experienced IndyCar and IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship driver Sage Karam will compete for Jordan Anderson Racing in the NASCAR Xfinity Series at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course.

Karam will drive the No. 31 Chevrolet at the 2.534-mile road course on Aug. 14 (4 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App), which will serve as his debut in the Xfinity Series.

“It has always been a dream of mine to be able to compete at this level with some of the world’s best stock car drivers,” said Karam in a team press release. “My goal is to learn as much as possible and soak in this experience. It’s a welcomed challenge for me, and I’m looking forward to building strong relationships with the talented people of Jordan Anderson Racing.”

RELATED: 2021 Xfinity Series schedule

Karam has two top-10 finishes in eight career starts in the Indianapolis 500. The 26-year-old driver started 31st in this year’s running of the Indy 500 and finished seventh. Karam also had three career starts on the Indianapolis road course with the IndyCar Series, all of which occurred during the 2020 season.

The Nazareth, Pennsylvania native also spent two seasons racing for factory Lexus during the 2017 IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship seasons.

“Our entire team is incredibly proud to add Sage Karam to our list of talented drivers that have driven the 31 Chevrolet this year,” stated JAR President Jordan Anderson. “With Sage’s extensive experience in road racing and open-wheel racing, along with finishing 7th in this year’s Indianapolis 500, we knew that the road course at the famed Indianapolis Motor Speedway would be a special place for him to make his NASCAR debut with support from Montage Mountain Resorts and so many other great partners.

“To bridge the gap between two different fields of racing is a challenge that I’m confident Sage will be able to master. We’re blessed to have some amazing drivers and people that continue to help our organization grow, and this opportunity is another pivotal part of our long-term goal.”

Karam is one of five drivers who will have competed with Jordan Anderson Racing in 2021, which also include Cup Series regular  Tyler Reddick, Kaz Grala, Josh Berry and owner-driver Anderson. The team has earned four top-10 finishes on the year.

The NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour is set to tackle a new venue on July 31 with its inaugural trip to New York International Raceway Park in Lancaster, New York.

But just because the tour has never run an official race at the park’s Lancaster Speedway doesn’t mean there isn’t a long trail of modified history at this western New York track.

Drivers the likes of Richie Evans, Geoff Bodine, Tony Hirschman and others have raced modifieds around the half-mile oval just 30 minutes south of Niagara Falls.

The modern stars of the sport, though, are ready to storm into Lancaster and continue their fight for a championship. Justin Bonsignore leads the points standings for the first time in 2021 and holds a 10-point advantage over Patrick Emerling. New York marks the start of the second half of the 14-race season for the mods, so while drivers aren’t focused on points racing quite yet, they know every spot matters on the track. And with such limited experience around this particular track, the possibilities for something to go right — or wrong — are endless.

RACE INFO: Race Center | Entry List


Nu-Way Auto Parts 150

WHAT TO WATCH FOR:

Bonsignore’s spot atop the standings is neither a mistake nor a surprise. In seven races this year, the two-time and defending tour champion has one win (Jennerstown, May 29) and six top-four finishes, his lone misstep coming at Stafford Motor Speedway where he finished 13th. Most recently, Bonsignore piloted his No. 51 car to a runner-up finish at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

Nuway150 Logo

Emerling’s stats are nearly identical. Emerling, whose hometown of Orchard Park, New York, sits just 30 minutes south of Lancaster, notched his first victory of 2021 at Stafford on April 30 and has five top fives in seven starts this year. The difference between his numbers and Bonsignore’s? Emerling finished eighth in the season opener at Martinsville Speedway before an uncharacteristic 13th-place finish at Loudon.

This season’s lone multi-time winner remains Doug Coby, who took the checkered flags at Riverhead Raceway on May 15 and June 20. But Coby, a six-time modified champion, is in a massive points hole after not participating on June 12 at Oswego Speedway and suffering an early engine failure on July 17 at New Hampshire. The Connecticut native sits ninth in points 65 points behind Bonsignore.

Kyle Bonsignore, cousin of points leader Justin, has had quite the up-and-down season, posting two top fives but three finishes of 10th or worse. He enters off a ninth-place showing at New Hampshire and hopes to find some of the success he had earlier this season, when he finished fifth at Martinsville and fourth at the first of two Riverhead races.

RACING REFERENCE: 2021 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Points

RACE FACTS

Race Nu-Way Auto Parts at New York International Raceway Park
Date Saturday, July 31, 2021
Track New York International Raceway Park
Layout Half-mile oval
Location Lancaster, New York
Start time 8 p.m. ET
Laps 150
Miles 75
Tickets Click here
TV channel NBCSN (Delayed: Wednesday, Aug. 11, 2 p.m. ET)
Live stream TrackPass on NBC Sports Gold (Live)

RACEDAY SCHEDULE: Saturday, July 31 — Garage opens: 11:30 a.m. ET; Practice: 2-3:15 p.m.; Qualifying: 5 p.m.; Race: 8 p.m.

CREW CHIEF HANDOUT: The starting field for the Nu-Way Auto Parts 150 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 Nu-Way Auto Parts 150. 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 New York International Raceway at Lancaster 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.

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, July 26
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of 2021 Radioactive — Part 2, FS1 (re-air)
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Tuesday, July 27
4 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Legends Show, FS2 (re-air)
5 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Hometown Show, FS2 (re-air)
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Legends Show, FS1 (re-air)
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Wednesday, July 28
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Hometown Show, FS1 (re-air)
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
9:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of 2021 Radioactive — Part 1, FS2 (re-air)
10:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of 2021 Radioactive — Part 2, FS2 (re-air)
11:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Legends Show, FS2 (re-air)

Thursday, July 29
12:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Hometown Show, FS2 (re-air)
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Game Night — Part 1, FS1

Friday, July 30
8 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub Game Night — Part 1, FS2 (re-air)
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Game Night — Part 2, FS1
7 p.m., Renegades: The Bad Boys of NASCAR, FS1 (re-air)

LOUDON, N.H. — Justin Bonsignore and Patrick Emerling are halfway through a title fight in the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour.

Bonsignore, the tour’s defending champion in addition to his 2018 title, jumped into the points lead for the first time this season following a second-place finish at New Hampshire Motor Speedway last Saturday.

RELATED: Thrilling finish at New Hampshire | Whelen Modified Tour standings

Emerling had led the standings since race No. 3 on May 15 with a runner-up finish at Riverhead Raceway on the heels of a win at Stafford Motor Speedway two weeks prior. But an uncharacteristically poor performance at Loudon saw Emerling finish 13th, the last car on the lead lap after being lapped by Bonsignore earlier in the contest.

So as New Hampshire marked the separation of the first half and the second half of 2021’s tour schedule, it also separated Bonsignore and Emerling from the rest of the field, as third-place driver Kyle Bonsignore now sits 48 points back of his cousin for the points lead and 38 back of Emerling.

Justin Bonsignore said prior to Saturday’s race he wasn’t thinking about points — that the only thing that mattered in New Hampshire was winning the tour’s version of the Daytona 500.

But with how solidly he ran, leading 63 of 105 laps en route to a runner-up finish, Bonsignore knew how productive New Hampshire was for him and his team as he hunts a third championship, which would be halfway to Doug Coby’s six pack.

“Any year you can have a shot at it is special,” Bonsignore said. “This series is really hard. Doug made it look easy for a long time and it’s not. It is a really tough series to be a part of and to win in and we’ve got a great team. We could have won maybe four or five races this year and we’ve got one. That’s just how this series is.

Coby began 2021 eyeing a run for a seventh modified title, but that plan took a step back on Saturday. Despite missing the race at Oswego, Coby came into New Hampshire tied for fourth in points just 41 points behind. But an engine issue ended Coby’s race at lap 44, relegating him to a 27th-place finish and now sitting ninth in the standings 68 points behind the leaders.

“It probably kills it,” Coby said of his championship hopes. “We’re really solid. The 51 (Bonsignore) and their mistakes turn into eighth-place finishes when they screw up, if that. Sometimes, their mistakes turn into fifth-place finishes. We didn’t need a day like this where certainly we almost gave them another race.

“We’ve finished 27th and they go out and finish second, lead the most laps and get all sorts of bonus points and stuff. The reality is in a 14-race season, you can’t give somebody two.”

Emerling said New Hampshire tends to be his best track, and with six top fives — the most he’s accumulated at any track — the numbers back that up. But a tight car and issues refueling on Saturday gave Emerling enough trouble to cost him the points lead.

“He (Bonsignore) always brings his A-game everywhere he goes,” Emerling said. “He had an amazing car today. We just have to just put our heads down and get a little bit more speed out of our cars.”

Now begins the second half of the season, kicking off at New York International Raceway Park in Lancaster, New York, on July 31, a new venue on the tour schedule.

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Bonsignore, who works as the general manager of a fiber optics company to pay his bills when he’s not behind the wheel, knows there’s a long way between now and Sept. 25 when the champion will be crowned at Stafford. But Loudon was a good measuring stick for where he and his team are functioning, he said.

“Before this weekend, I needed to see some speed,” said Bonsignore. “This car is a new car this year, and for the first time this year, this car really had a lot of speed all day long. It was really, really well balanced. Every track we’re gonna go to is a little different, but there’s a lot of flat tracks [with the] same similar setup we’re gonna run a lot of places. So hopefully this was a big step. Hopefully we learned some stuff, [have] some momentum on our side and just gonna keep our head down.

“Long way to go before we have to worry about the points, but you’re always conscious of it, I’ve learned throughout these battles.”

Emerling, meanwhile, is vying for his first championship on the tour. Just 10 points out, he knows he’s got a fighting chance but needs to keep giving Bonsignore strong fights if he wants to come out on top.

“We’re just gonna put our heads down and bring our A-game,” Emerling said. “We’re coming off of a win there (at Stafford), so now we think we’ll be pretty good there.”

The tour takes its next green flag on July 31 at New York International Raceway Park at 8 p.m. ET and can be streamed live via TrackPass on NBC Sports Gold.