Clint Bowyer is driving around his property on a Tuesday afternoon in his tractor, just like any other day. But this time, he’s doing it while on Zoom.

Last fall, Bowyer had a decision to make that would potentially change his role in the NASCAR industry: Continue driving for Stewart-Haas Racing or join the FOX Sports coverage team for the NASCAR Cup Series races.

On his own terms, Bowyer elected to step out of the No. 14 Ford Mustang, allowing Xfinity Series hotshot Chase Briscoe to fill the seat. That ended his 15-year full-time Cup career, in which he accumulated 10 victories, 82 top fives and 226 top-10 finishes in 541 starts. His best finish in the points standings came in 2012, finishing runner-up to champion Brad Keselowski.

Admittedly so from early on in his career, Bowyer never envisioned being a television analyst. However, in 2015, he did his first telecast with FOX Sports, broadcasting an Xfinity Series race at Auto Club Speedway, the same year FOX went to its current format of rotating Cup Series drivers in the booth.

Last year, during the sport’s shutdown caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, FOX brought Bowyer into its Charlotte studios to help Jeff Gordon and Mike Joy broadcast the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series. Then all parties hit the ground running.

“There was a moment during iRacing last year – an ‘a-ha’ moment – and it was when Clint was in the simulator in the studio and he was iRacing while Jeff and I were describing it,” Joy, the network’s longtime play-by-play announcer, recalls. “He had some big problem, and I go, ‘Clint, what happened?’ And he says, ‘I don’t know, my give a damn broke.’ That was the a-ha moment when I think everybody at FOX – Jeff and me included – took a step back and said, ‘Wow, we could really have some fun with this.'”

RELATED: Bowyer-Gordon banter spices up iRacing

From there, Joy explained, Fox executives — including Executive Producer, Vice President/Head of Production and Operations Brad Zager — led the charge in getting Bowyer on their broadcast team.

But still, he wasn’t sure that his openness would translate well to the TV world.

“It just kind of happened,” Bowyer told NASCAR.com on joining the FOX team. “I never really thought about it. I knew I probably had a little more personality than some of the other drivers. That was my selling point not necessarily to TV, but to a fan or anything else. Everybody knows who they are and how they fit in, and I knew that was my gig. But when it came to TV, I didn’t know.”

Back in February, Gordon asked Joy if the trio should broadcast a practice race before Speedweeks, given Bowyer’s newness to the booth. Joy objected, believing spontaneity would take over and the best dialogue would come out on air.

Bowyer bought into that idea.

“What I want from Clint is emotion, reaction and with it all being so new, he explains things really well,” Joy assured. “He explains them with a passion he has for the sport, and because he’s new to this side of it, I think it helps bring the viewer along.

“Most of the analysts that I’ve worked with don’t care for rehearsal and some very famous ones I’ve worked with would never say the same thing on the air that they would say in rehearsal. So why leave the best part of your broadcast so only the producer and director hear it?”

Now, 16 races into his new role, Bowyer is relishing the opportunity FOX has granted him in the booth. It is also allowing both Gordon and Joy to bring out their personalities more, transitioning from a two-man booth last season after having a three-man team for its first 19 years as a NASCAR broadcast partner, primarily with Larry McReynolds and Darrell Waltrip.

Though knowing there are challenges in both a two- and three-man booth, Joy knew the broadcast was missing a little something in 2020.

“Jeff and I are really good explainers, but we’re better explainers than we are entertainers,” he said. “I think that’s where FOX missed some of what Darrell Waltrip brought to the table and they found that in Clint.”

Building chemistry

Bowyer’s colleagues say they have enjoyed working with him, believing that having a driver who recently competed full-time is a breath of fresh air. It was the same transition that Gordon made five years ago.

“It’s actually a joy because he brings a lot of energy to the telecasts,” said Pam Miller, FOX Sports’ lead producer. “He doesn’t miss anything that’s happening on the track. I learned that really quickly working with him in Xfinity.

“[You] can’t trade that knowledge. [He’s] fresh off the track and understands what the trends are in the garage. They understand what the tracks have done the last time they drove them, which is usually the next time they’re in the booth. I think it makes the rest of the group better because they bring a different perspective once they come right from the driver’s seat to the booth.”

During the week, FOX typically has its production meetings on Tuesday to review the most recent race weekend, but more importantly, they are looking ahead at what is to come. Everyone from analysts to pit reporters are on the weekly Zoom call to debrief — even checking in from a tractor, as Bowyer has been known to do.

Those types of meetings can be fun when you have a high-strung personality as Bowyer does.

“It’s a lot like a broadcast for Clint,” Joy said of the production meetings. “Sometimes, when he wants to make a point, he’s very detailed and matter of fact and sometimes it’s, ‘Hey, hey, whoa, whoa, hold on a minute.'”

Christian Petersen | Getty Images
Christian Petersen | Getty Images

Adam Alexander, analyst for the Xfinity Series and NASCAR Race Hub, helped prepare Bowyer for his opportunity. Dating back to the first race Bowyer broadcasted, the two formed a chemistry. It helped Alexander during other broadcasts when a number of drivers rotated through the booth during FOX’s portion of the Xfinity schedule.

But similar to Joy, Alexander sat back and let Bowyer be himself. Ultimately, FOX Sports loved that.

“The role I played, if any, was just letting Clint be Clint,” Alexander said, “and trying to infuse energy his way to make him feel more comfortable to be himself. I think personalities like Clint rarely come along in any sport as a broadcaster and he’s been a real asset to NASCAR and certainly to us at FOX.”

Bowyer stated he knew coming into the 2021 season with FOX that the chemistry among Gordon, Joy and himself would grow. He was more worried about adapting to the TV side now that he was becoming a weekly fixture.

He also knew that having Gordon — someone he battled fiercely on the race track, highlighted by an infamous scuffle at Phoenix Raceway in 2012 – alongside would be calming.

“I knew going into it that Jeff and I would have good camaraderie and good conversation, good banter and obviously strong opinions on any given subject,” Bowyer said. “I knew that would be good. I really did. The bosses didn’t know that. They were like, ‘Man, I know you guys have had some differences in the past,’ and I’m like, ‘I’m telling you, that’s going to be the smallest part of the equation that we have.’ Catching me up, learning the ins and outs of the TV side of this sport was where I needed help the most.”

Since Daytona in February, Bowyer has learned more about TV than he could have imagined. Along the way, he and FOX come up with different and unique ideas for pre-race skits, whether it be going to a dirt track with Gordon to promote the inaugural Bristol Motor Speedway dirt race or going Days of Thunder style and tearing up two rental cars on the Daytona road course.

Quite simply, Bowyer wanted those ideas – and other nuances – to stand out from previous years.

“I just thought with me coming on, I’ve watched this time and time again and I wanted it to be different,” he said. “I think people expected me to bring different things. It’s all about what people like and bringing attention to our sport that people love, that’s why we all do it.”

Joy says Bowyer has done a wonderful job of adapting as a broadcaster, and also believes he stands out from other analyst partners he’s worked with in the past.

“He brings a different view of racing, a different approach to racing and when he breaks down how he looked at a situation or how he looked at a problem and solved it, it’s very different from what Jeff might have done or what [Darrell Waltrip] might have done back in the day,” Joy said. “That gives us interesting places to go in the telecast and interesting things to talk about.”

Like any new job, broadcasting came with its fair share of challenges. Before the season began, Bowyer tapped into Gordon’s experience about what to expect, making sure his head was right.

When Gordon told Bowyer, “To not empty your bucket” was among his biggest challenges, Bowyer was confused.

“What the hell does that mean?” Bowyer recalled saying. “He goes, ‘Let me explain it to you and I think you’ll experience it and understand more.’ What he meant by that is, you start at the Daytona 500. We all have our sayings and opinions on things about what we see and visualize different things. It’s hard not to drain and completely empty the bucket on all of those things right off the bat and not have anything for the next lap or the next stage, next race. Keeping it fresh, keeping it fun but also taking care of business is a tricky balance. Having good camaraderie up there, good teammates by your side helps a lot.”

Bowyer admits the broadcast team has thick skin. The trio gets along well together, and treats the booth as if they’re watching a race at a bar or talking about it together at a coffee shop.

But there’s nothing Bowyer enjoys more than taking small jabs at Gordon, knowing it won’t bother him.

“I know if I shoot fire at Jeff, I want it back,” Bowyer said. “I think that banter is good. If he has an opinion on something, thinks a guy didn’t wreck somebody, I’m going to say, ‘You’re out of your damn mind. Do you need glasses? Did you miss that one? How do you have that opinion?’ I think that bench racing, coffee shop conversation is so important.

“That’s the way I wanted it and I hope it’s received well because I do feel like it’s a conversation up there. It’s bench racing.”

A season of transition

Bowyer has had fun over the course of the last four months, but he’s also been able to pick up on what his strengths and weaknesses are as a broadcaster.

“I know myself and I know a little bit of Clint is fun, a little too much of Clint can be too much,” he said.”I get it. So I try to keep that in check. Ultimately they just let me be me and hopefully that’s what people are looking for and expect out of me.”

There’s only one downside to being so close to the action. Bowyer says he believes, in some cases, he would still be able to get the job done on the race track. Known to be a respectable road course racer, he pointed to the rain race at Circuit of The Americas as a place where he could make a difference. The last time he raced in wet conditions, he fared well, finishing 10th last year on the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval, despite having no power steering.

But in the long run, Bowyer says no matter the position he’s in, being part of the sport is what counts.

“I don’t care where I’m at right now,” Bowyer noted. “I love NASCAR. I love the sport. I love the fans and I want to make a difference. If that was in the car, that’s what I wanted to do. If that’s in the broadcast booth, that’s what I wanted to do. I wanted to leave a race track knowing I possibly made a difference in the outcome of something. When you do that, you’re already happy.”

Seeing the performance of Stewart-Haas Racing this year, with three of its cars mired below 25th in points, has made it easier and more fulfilling to be a broadcaster as well.

“Looking over my shoulder and seeing how bad those Stewart-Haas cars are running this year, that’s certainly helped. I don’t mean that negatively, I’m just telling the truth,” Bowyer says. “I would have been miserable if I was in that car this year. I was already not running the way I wanted to, and we made the playoffs and had a little bit of fun. But running for 25th every week, I would have been completely miserable.

“The only thing that scares me now is, we’re done here [next week] and you’ve got a second half of the season and I honestly don’t know what to do with myself. I’ve got to figure it out because I’ve never had time off. I think that sounds fun but it’s going to be short-lived and I’m going to be looking for something to do and something I can make a difference in again.”

This story first appeared on April 28:

NASCAR joined Texas Motor Speedway officials Wednesday in announcing the format for the 2021 NASCAR All-Star Race, unveiling a six-round, 100-lap bout for the Fort Worth track’s first hosting of the annual invitational event.

The procedures for the June 13 non-points exhibition (8 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) were first revealed on FOX Sports’ Race Hub. The race winner will collect $1 million, and an additional $100,000 will be presented to the fastest pit crew in a mandatory stop near the end of the race.

RELATED: 2021 Cup Series schedule | Buy All-Star tickets

The race format and procedures:

  • Starting lineup set by random draw.
  • Round 1: 15 laps. After this round, the field will be inverted starting anywhere from the eighth through 12th positions, to be selected by a random draw.
  • Round 2: 15 laps, with entire field inverted after this segment.
  • Round 3: 15 laps, again the field will be inverted starting anywhere from the eighth through 12th positions, to be selected by a random draw after this round.
  • Round 4: 15 laps.
  • Round 5: 30 laps. The lineup for this round will be determined by cumulative finish from the first four rounds, with the best cumulative finisher starting from the pole. Any ties in the aggregate score will be broken by (in order): Most career All-Star wins, most career Cup Series points race wins or 2021 Cup Series driver standings. All cars must enter pit road for a mandatory four-tire pit stop during this round. The crew with the fastest stop will pocket $100,000.
  • Round 6: 10 laps. Cars will line up according to their finishing position from the previous round for the final segment.

“Drivers and pit crews better pack their lunch pails because they are going to have to work extremely hard to earn the honor of celebrating in Victory Lane,” said Texas Motor Speedway president and GM Eddie Gossage, who also plans an old-timey, wild West motif for pre-race ceremonies. “This is a full metal rodeo for a big ol’ bag of dough.”

Only green-flag laps will count in the All-Star Race.

The rules configuration for the All-Star Race will use the high-downforce aerodynamics package at the 1.5-mile track, but engines will use a tapered spacer reduced from 59/64th of an inch to 57/64th. That setup is currently used on superspeedways, where horsepower targets are in the 500-510 range.

A total of 17 drivers have already clinched All-Star berths: Christopher Bell, Ryan Blaney, Alex Bowman, Kurt Busch, Kyle Busch, William Byron, Cole Custer, Austin Dillon, Chase Elliott, Denny Hamlin, Kevin Harvick, Brad Keselowski, Kyle Larson, Joey Logano, Michael McDowell, Ryan Newman and Martin Truex Jr. The criteria for eligibility includes NASCAR Cup Series race winners in 2020-21 and full-time drivers who are either past All-Star winners or past Cup Series champions.

RELATED: See every All-Star Race winner

The rest of the field will be completed in the NASCAR Open qualifying race (June 13, 6 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) and the All-Star Fan Vote. The Open will be run in three segments — 20 laps, 20 laps and a 10-lap shootout — with segment winners and the overall winner advancing to the All-Star main event. Fan balloting will determine the final driver in the field who is otherwise ineligible.

“Texas has always felt like an All-Star market; it is a big-event market and Texas Motor Speedway thrives under a bright spotlight,” said NASCAR executive VP and chief racing development officer Steve O’Donnell. “The entire Speedway Motorsports and TMS team has done an incredible job embracing and elevating this event, creating a must-see show for fans at the track and watching from home on FS1.”

Coverage of the NASCAR All-Star Race will be sponsored by NASCAR Premier Partners Busch Beer, Coca-Cola, GEICO and Xfinity.

Elliott won last year’s All-Star Race, held for the first time at Bristol Motor Speedway. Of the 36 previous editions, 34 were held at Charlotte Motor Speedway, with only last season’s Bristol invitational and the 1986 running at Atlanta Motor Speedway held away from the North Carolina track.

Not-so slowly but oh-so surely, the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs picture is coming into focus.

Ten events remain in the regular season, and most of the 16-driver postseason field is already set. There have been 11 different race winners who are all currently guaranteed berths. That leaves five spots up for grabs by the way of victory or points.

Then, of course, there are the three playoff rounds before the championship race itself.

“I mean, it’s still a lot of racing left,” Kyle Larson said. “I think if you were to point right now at a favorite, I think for sure you’d have to look at us.”

RELATED: Official Sonoma results | Updated points standings

Not wrong. Larson has been on fire lately, rattling off five top-two finishes in a row. The two most recent were wins at Charlotte Motor Speedway and Sonoma Raceway. He now has three wins this season, with the other coming at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in March.

Larson is one of three drivers with more than one win this year. He is tied with Martin Truex Jr. from Joe Gibbs Racing for the series’ lead, while Hendrick Motorsports teammate Alex Bowman has two of his own. The other eight unaccounted-for races were each won by a different driver.

Also with victories: the rest of the Hendrick Motorsports garage (Chase Elliott and William Byron), all of Team Penske (Brad Keselowski, Joey Logano and Ryan Blaney), two more Joe Gibbs Racing members (Kyle Busch and Christopher Bell) and then one Front Row Motorsports surprise (Michael McDowell).

It has been four weeks since someone outside of Hendrick Motorsports has won, though. Two weeks since the victor was someone other than Larson.

“It’s hard to say it’s good when you’re not winning, at least that’s for me,” Logano said. “You get paid to win. Top fives are great and running towards the front is good, but we need more speed to beat them. The 5 is the class of the field right now.”

Even still, Larson does not top the point standings. Denny Hamlin does by 47 points, which matters for the event Regular Season Champion title. That puts him 12th on the playoffs leaderboard (above the cutoff line by 333 points).

Hamlin is tied with Larson for most top-five results (nine) and with Byron for top 10s (12). Hamlin just hasn’t won yet. This drought comes after a series and career second-best seven-win season in 2020.

Another winless surprise: Kevin Harvick, who sits ninth in points and 13th in playoffs (safe by 152). He has had four top fives and 11 top 10s. Harvick won a series-high and career-high nine races last season.

At this point last season, Hamlin and Harvick accounted for half of the race wins with four apiece.

By no means should Hamlin or Harvick – or really anyone – be counted out. Again, there are 10 points-paying races left, starting at Nashville Superspeedway on June 20. There are three new venues on deck (Nashville, Road America and Indianapolis Road Course), along with five familiar tracks (Pocono Raceway (twice), Atlanta Motor Speedway, New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Watkins Glen International and Michigan International Speedway) before the wild-card finale at Daytona International Speedway.

Only then will the 2021 NASCAR Playoffs picture be in full focus.

“We’ve got to stay sharp,” said Larson’s crew chief, Cliff Daniels. “Then, come playoff time, that’s when we’ve really got to be on top of our game.”

Chip Ganassi Racing pulled off quite the turnaround within a week.

After filling the bottom two spots last weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Kurt Busch and Ross Chastain both rallied back with top-10 finishes Sunday at Sonoma Raceway. Both times, the two Chevrolets were listed back-to-back on the results sheet.

“A good day for both the No. 1 and 42 teams,” Chastain said. “I got to race with the No. 1 car a lot there at the end and only touch a little bit, which is hard to do here. A good teammate and good building day for CGR.”

RELATED: Official results

Chastain placed seventh in Sonoma’s Toyota/Save Mart 350. Busch was just ahead in sixth. Chastain’s result tied for his second best in 2021, and Busch’s also marked his second best.

The experience levels couldn’t really be more different. While Chastain is in his first full-time Cup Series ride, Busch is a former champion (2004) in his 21st full season. Chastain made his second career start at Sonoma. Busch notched his 20th.

“We had a smooth day,” Busch said. “We figured out how to have a nice, easy execution. I worked with Ross, our teammate, to get two top 10s. It was almost a top-five type car, just needed better drive off the corners. To be in the mix and have the right strategy and have a smooth day, we’ll take it, and we’re going to build on it.”

RELATED: Kyle Larson scores Sonoma win

The 37th and 38th finishes at Charlotte were flukes. Hendrick Motorsports executive vice president and general manager Jeff Andrews even publicly apologized and took responsibility for the performance of Chip Ganassi Racing’s engines on Friday. The organizations have a collaborative partnership as Chevrolet-backed teams.

Neither Chastain nor Busch is currently in the playoff picture. Busch is ranked 18th in the points standings, two spots outside the 16-driver field. Chastain is a bit further back in 20th. Ten races remain in the regular season, with the next points-paying opportunity not until June 20 at Nashville Superspeedway since the exhibition All-Star Race at Texas Motor Speedway is this upcoming Sunday (8 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Sonoma was a step back in the right direction for Chip Ganassi Racing, though. Busch and Chastain did both move up a standing tick after the pair of strong runs.

“Whoa, seventh on a dry road course,” Chastain said. “This No. 42 team is so good. They gave me a Clover Chevy that I can go out and race with the best Cup Series guys. It just seems wild.”

SONOMA, Calif. — Score another sweep for Kyle Larson, who dominated an action-filled Toyota/Save Mart 350 NASCAR Cup Series race on Sunday at Sonoma Raceway.

Through a spate of late accidents and restarts, Larson held off Hendrick Motorsports teammate Chase Elliott and three-time Sonoma winner Martin Truex Jr. to claim a second-straight race in which he also swept both the first and second stages.

RELATED: Official results | Updated driver standings

The victory was Larson’s first at the 2.52-mile road course, his third of the season and the ninth of his career. It was the fourth straight 1-2 finish for Hendrick Motorsports and the first time since 2014 that HMS has posted four-straight wins.

The victory was the 270th for Hendrick, extending the record the organization broke last Sunday.

Coming off last week’s win in the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte, Larson made the overtime win look easy. But looks can be deceiving, said the driver of the No. 5 Chevrolet.

“It was not easy,” said Larson, who grew up in nearby Elk Grove, Calif. “Just keeping it on the track is tough, especially when you’ve got two of the best behind you on the last restart.”

RELATED: Kyle Larson: This will always be home to me

Elliott was able to stay on Larson’s bumper after the race went to an overtime restart — the result of a four-car accident in Turn 4 on Lap 88 of a scheduled 90. But Larson inched away over the final two laps.

“I felt like I did a good job on the (restart) before and was able to stretch it out a little bit,” Larson said. “I didn’t want to give it another try at it, but (Chase) kept the pressure on. Martin was strong, too.

“What a car! I thought I would be OK today, but I really didn’t know how I would race — I don’t think any of us really knew with no practice, but our car was really good there, and I can’t say enough about it.”

The closeness of his hometown — east of Sacramento — made the victory that much more satisfying.

“It means a lot,” said Larson, who crossed the finish line .614 seconds ahead of Elliott. “Northern California will always be home to me, even if I live way on the East Coast now. … To get back-to-back wins in the Cup Series is something I’ve always dreamed of doing, and to get it done feels great.”

Elliott, the reigning series champion, achieved his best finish at Sonoma, but couldn’t find a way past his teammate.

RELATED: Chase Elliott gives credit to the No. 5 team

“I wish I knew (where Larson was stronger),” said Elliott, who has six road-course wins to his credit. “I would have tried to give him a little better run. But congrats to Kyle and (crew chief) Cliff (Daniels) and everybody on the 5 team. They’ve been doing an amazing job.

“I’m really proud of our NAPA group, though. I felt like we were a lot better there at the end than we were at the beginning. That’s definitely the best I’ve ever been here at Sonoma.”

Truex came home third, followed by Joey Logano and Kyle Busch, who summed up Larson’s dominance in one sentience.

“The 5 was just out of this world,” Busch said.

Chip Ganassi Racing teammates Kurt Busch and Ross Chastain were sixth and seventh, respectively. Denny Hamlin, Alex Bowman and Ryan Blaney completed the top 10.

Hamlin and Kevin Harvick, who combined for 16 victories in 2020, left Sonoma still winless this season. Harvick was the victim of a seven-car chain reaction crash in Turn 11 on Lap 77 during a rash of four cautions within an 18-lap stretch near the end of the race.

Without a hood or right front fender on his car, Harvick salvaged a 22nd-place result.

Up next, the NASCAR Cup Series changes it up a bit. Instead of having its 17th points-paying race, it will head to Texas Motor Speedway for the 2021 NASCAR All-Star Race on Sunday (8 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Note: The race-winning No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet of Kyle Larson passed NASCAR’s post-race inspection. The No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota of third-place Martin Truex Jr. had one lug nut not safe and secure. There were no other issues.

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, June 7
2:30 a.m., Renegades: The Bad Boys of NASCAR (re-air), FS1
3:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub Best of Radioactive: Road Courses (re-air), FS1
4:30 a.m., NASCAR Cup Series Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway (re-air), FS1
9:30 a.m., Renegades: The Bad Boys of NASCAR (re-air), FS2
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
7 p.m., One Hot Night: The NASCAR 1992 All-Star Race (re-air), FS1

Tuesday, June 8
3 a.m., NASCAR Cup Series Toyota/Save Mart 350 (re-air), FS1
6 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub Best of Radioactive: Charlotte (re-air), FS2
6:30 a.m., NASCAR Auto Racing Classics: 1989 Banquet Frozen Foods 300 (re-air) , FS2
9:30 a.m., ARCA Menards Series Mid-Ohio 150 (re-air), FS2
11:30 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series B&L Transport 170 at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course (re-air), FS2
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series Toyota/ Save Mart 350 (re-air), FS2
5:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Wednesday, June 9
6 p.m., ARCA Menards Series West: General Tire 200 (tape delay), NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
7 p.m., Unrivaled: Earnhardt vs. Gordon (re-air), FS1

Thursday, June 10
6 p.m., Dale Jr. Download: Ward Burton, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
7 p.m., One Hot Night: The NASCAR 1992 All-Star Race (re-air), FS1

Friday, June 11
10:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub Best of Radioactive: All-Star (re-air), FS2
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1

Saturday, June 12
11 a.m., Renegades: The Bad Boys of NASCAR (re-air), FS1
12 p.m., NASCAR Raceday: NCWTS at Texas, FS1
1 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series SpeedyCash.com 220 at Texas Motor Speedway, FS1
3 p.m., NASCAR Raceday: Xfinity Texas, FS1
4 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series Alsco Uniforms 250 at Texas Motor Speedway, FS1 (Canada: TSN2)
6:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series Post-Race Show, FS1

On MRN:
12:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: SpeedyCash.com 220

On PRN
3:30 p.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Alsco Uniforms 250

Sunday, June 13
1 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series Alsco Uniforms 250 (re-air), FS1
3:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub Best of Radioactive: All-Star (re-air), FS1
5 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: All-Star Open at Texas Motor Speedway, FS1
6 p.m., NASCAR All-Star Open, FS1 (Canada: TSN3, 5)
7:30 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: All-Star Race, FS1
8 p.m., NASCAR All-Star Race, FS1 (Canada: TSN3, 5)

On MRN:
5:30 p.m., NASCAR All-Star Coverage includes the Open and All-Star Race

The No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford driven by Anthony Alfredo will start at the rear of the field for an inspection violation found prior to the start of Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway (4 p.m. ET on FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Crew chief Seth Barbour has been ejected for the violation.

RELATED: Sonoma starting lineup | Everything to know for Sunday’s race

Alfredo, a rookie in the sport’s top series, was slated to start 28th in the 37-car field and is making his first career start at Sonoma. The 21-year-old has made 15 starts this season with a best finish of 12th at Talladega Superspeedway in April.

Scott Heckert and the No. 78 Live Fast Motorsports Ford will also start at the rear of the field for unapproved adjustments. Heckert is making his second Cup start and was set to start 35th in Sunday’s race.

NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour: Race 5/14

Oswegosteelpalace150logofinal

 

Race Steel Palace 150
Date Saturday, June 12, 2021
Track Oswego Speedway
Layout 0.675-mile oval
Location Oswego, New York
Start time 7:30 p.m. ET
Laps 150
Miles 101.25
Tickets OswegoSpeedway.com
TV channel NBCSN (Delayed: Sunday, June 20, 10 a.m. ET)
Live stream TrackPass on NBC Sports Gold

RACEDAY SCHEDULE: Saturday, June 12 — Garage opens: 12:30 p.m. ET; Practice: 3-4 p.m.; Qualifying: 6 p.m.; Race: 7:30 p.m.

Quick links: ENTRY LIST | PRACTICE RESULTS | QUALIFYING | RESULTS | RACE RECAP

LIVE TIMING

Kaulig Racing driver AJ Allmendinger and owner Matt Kaulig were riding high Saturday after the Xfinity Series race at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, and rightly so. Their No. 16 Chevrolet was parked in Victory Lane for the second time this season. The smiles on their faces during post-race media availability were expected and evident.

Neither Kaulig nor Allmendinger faltered when asked if Allmendinger will pilot a Cup Series car for Kaulig Racing in 2022 as the team plans its anticipated full-time foray to the premier series.

“He’s definitely on our short list,” Kaulig said. “We fully plan on running at least one car in the Cup Series next year full time. Whether that’s AJ or someone else, we’re really not sure. I think AJ, regardless, will run road courses or maybe some superspeedways, I don’t know.”

RELATED: AJ Allmendinger wins Xfinity race at Mid-Ohio

Kaulig then clarified, however, that the team will seat only one driver in its full-time car so he or she can be eligible for the playoffs and championship. The Chevrolet-backed organization has not obtained a 2022 charter yet.

Mentioning Allmendinger for road courses and superspeedways, along with saying “at least one car,” does make it seem like there is more in the works than what has already been announced, which was simply a confirmed 2022 full-time effort in the Cup Series.

Allmendinger must have caught the possible slip-up since he covered with a joke immediately afterward.

“I might be the one driving the truck to the road courses and superspeedway races,” Allmendinger said. “They may part time me for that.”

Allmendinger has Cup Series experience — 373 starts to be exact, with two coming this year. He raced there full time from 2009-11 and then again from 2014-18. Allmendinger has one career win from 2014 at Watkins Glen International that came along with a postseason berth.

Since 2019, Allmendinger has been in the Xfinity Series with Kaulig Racing. He had five starts in 2019 and 11 in 2020 before signing on full time in 2021. Allmendinger credits his current team for falling back in love with the sport.

“I’ve told Matt and Chris (Rice) that no matter what the role is, I just want to keep being a part of the growth,” Allmendinger said. “Because I truly enjoy it. And that’s something since 2019, I’ve enjoyed more than I thought I would.”

With a remarkable run from the back of the field in the final stage at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, AJ Allmendinger charged to an overtime victory in Saturday’s B&L Transport 170 and tied Marcos Ambrose for the most NASCAR Xfinity Series road course wins all-time.

The triumph at the home track of team owner Matt Kaulig was the fifth in the series on a road course for Allmendinger, the first two-time winner at the technical 2.258-mile, 13-turn circuit. Allmendinger went to Victory Lane in the inaugural event at the Lexington, Ohio, track in 2013.

RELATED: Official results

After suffering a rear-of-the-field penalty for not taking the required 50 seconds on pit road under modified pit road rules, Allmendinger restarted 19th on Lap 56 of a scheduled 75 and quickly began working his way through the field.

When teammate Jeb Burton slid into a gravel trap off Turn 4 on Lap 68 to cause the sixth caution of the race, Allmendinger had climbed to third and took full advantage of a restart on Lap 72, diving to the inside and taking race leader and reigning series champion Austin Cindric and second-place Ty Gibbs three-wide in the first corner.

Allmendinger survived contact with Gibbs’ Toyota and came out of the corner with the lead, but Cindric pin-balled off the cars of Gibbs and Michael Annett and spun through the grass, ending his winning chances.

WATCH: Late-race chaos snares Austin Cindric

After a seventh caution for a wreck involving, Kris Wright, Alex Labbe and Kyle Weatherman, Allmendinger pulled away from Kaulig Racing teammate Justin Haley to win by .809 seconds. Haley nursed a car with right-front damage to the runner-up finish, one spot ahead of Gibbs.

“I’m not going to lie; I was a little upset,” Allmendinger said of the penalty. “But we win and lose as a team, so I was going to fight until the checkered flag flew. I knew we had the best car …

“I was shocked that Cindric took the outside (on the restart) … I know these guys would do it to me, so I was barreling in there when I saw a gap, and I was going to come out on the other side clean.”

Indianapolis 500 winning car owner Michael Shank, who fielded the team with which Allmendinger won the 50th running of the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona in 2012, was watching from the pits and predicted his good friend would recover from the penalty.

PHOTOS: Scenes from Mid-Ohio

“He came here to see me,” said Allmendinger, who won for the second time this season and the seventh time in his career. “How lucky am I? I love Shank. And this is Matt Kaulig’s Super Bowl … It’s just such a big deal. I always want to win for him, but here, I put a lot more pressure on myself to try to win.”

Gibbs, for one, wasn’t happy with Allmendinger’s move to the inside on the decisive restart.

“The 16 (Allmendinger) did us a little dirty there,” said Gibbs, who nevertheless collected his sixth top five (including two wins) in his seventh Xfinity Series start. “I feel like there is a point, you know … we are racing in Xfinity cars at road courses. It’s always going to be rough, but he took it to the next level.

“I guess I was a little torpedoed. I got the 22 (Cindric), knocked him out, but, yeah, I didn’t really have anywhere to go. That’s just part of it — part of the end of these races. Things get rough.”

Cindric, who led a race-high 30 laps to Allmendinger’s 23, finished 14th. Brandon Jones and road course ace Andy Lally ran fourth and fifth, respectively. Brandon Brown, Michael Annett, Josh Berry, Ryan Sieg and Josh Williams completed the to 10.

In addition to finishing 1-2, Allmendinger and Haley won Stages 1 and 2, respectively. Allmendinger increased his Playoff point total to 13, seven behind Cindric’s series-leading 20.

WATCH: Early caution comes out for Noah Gragson | Harrison Burton’s race shortened in Stage 1

Next Saturday, the NASCAR Xfinity Series takes on Texas Motor Speedway (4 p.m. ET on FS1, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Note: No issues were reported in post-race inspection in the Xfinity Series garage.