The two races on the NASCAR Cup schedule following the Drydene 400 feature a return to the sport’s traditional rhythm of running practice and qualifying ahead of the main event. That means Sunday’s race at Dover is the last chance of the month for a certain segment of bettors and DFS players to capitalize on the some of the oddness brought on by the COVID pandemic.

Only eight races this season are preceded by practice and qualifying, and according to some sharp bettors and DFS players, the rest of the schedule provides an even greater edge than they typically find in the markets.

All bettors and bookmakers are privy to practice and qualifying data, evening the playing field to a certain degree. Plus, oddsmakers are quick to move their lines after watching how teams perform on that week’s track, eroding value from the numbers posted earlier in the week.

RELATED: Starting lineup for Sunday | Early Dover betting odds

“I absolutely loved last year with no practice and qualifying, and so far this year, with the races I bet that don’t have it, I still feel like I’m going in with a really good edge,” said Zack White, a professional NASCAR bettor. “There’s just not as much competition in the marketplace either, because a lot of these at least somewhat sharp guys were reliant on having that practice data. …. There were a lot more sharps in the space in the practice and qualifying races prior to 2020 pandemic era. It’s taken quite a few of the sharps out of the equation.”

Micah Roberts, a former Las Vegas sportsbook director who now bets NASCAR and covers the sport from a betting perspective, says without practice and qualifying, a team’s performance with that week’s race package and its history at the track become more important handicapping tools. When analyzing Dover this week, for example, bettors should emphasize how well drivers do using the 750 horsepower, low downforce package.

“There’s value to be found for guys that are sharp and understand that from the get-go,” Roberts said. “I don’t know if every book does the full work like they would with practice, because most of the bettors would wait until after practice to bet matchups. Now you have to come fully prepared based on what teams do with a certain package.”

Sharps are also exploiting these advantages in DFS, a bettor who goes by the name “AbnormallyDist” (pro gamblers are often notoriously protective of their identity) said on a recent episode of the “Circles Off” sports betting podcast hosted by fellow pro Rob Pizzola.

With practice and qualifying, “there’d be an obvious pick and you’d just play the guy whose car was the best in qualifying, and it was easy for NASCAR touts (pick sellers) because there were obvious plays every week,” AD told Pizzola and his co-host. “Now that there’s no practice, it’s a little harder because you need to use some more advanced statistics. So the edge, I feel like in the last year, has gone through the roof, and it’s been really profitable.”

Blake Phillips, another sharp NASCAR bettor, says the lack of practice and qualifying has reinforced his long-held belief that starting position isn’t as correlated to finishing position as many recreational bettors may think.

“I’ve always thought that starting position wasn’t extremely valuable,” Phillips told NASCAR.com. “The guys that are gonna come out on top usually find a way through the field with these Cup races being as long as they are. You can see the correlation between starting and finishing position drop starting last year and going into this year. So, if anything, you can kind of identify some spots where some things may not be factored in the market, but I don’t think the effect is powerful enough to generate any easy money, per se.”

While Phillips believes the edge from no practice/no quals is more exploitable in DFS than in the betting market, he said there are advantages to be gleaned from a qualitative over a quantitative approach, a notion that should encourage NASCAR bettors who follow the sport closely but may not have the time, patience or mathematical or computer skills to build statistical models.

“There’s value to both (approaches), but being able to follow along and understand why certain drivers do better in certain situations can really help influence your bets and generate an edge that won’t necessarily appear just by looking at the stats,” he said.

Kyle Busch, for example, hasn’t hid the fact that the lack of practice has made it difficult for his team to find the right setup.

“The drivers who are able to adjust on the fly during a race and improve over the course of the race with their crew chiefs are the ones who tend to see more success that you may not have expected, and the drivers who kind of need a lot of that data from practice aren’t getting it,” Phillips said.

RELATED: Power Rankings heading into Dover

The better teams benefit from this dynamic, Roberts agreed.

“Because there’s no practice, they can’t (screw) around on the setup coming out of the garage like they used to,” Robert said. “(They can’t say) ‘we’ll figure it out in the first practice, and we’ll change a few things’ – they’ve got to do it during the race.”

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.

The National Motorsports Final Appeals Officer overturned penalties Wednesday issued to the JR Motorsports No. 9 Chevrolet team after Saturday’s NASCAR Xfinity Series race at Darlington Raceway.

Roger Werner, the final appeals officer, heard and considered the organization’s appeal, overruling the disqualification that stemmed from the No. 9 car’s failure to pass post-race technical inspection. The decision restores Noah Gragson’s fourth-place result and the $100,000 Dash 4 Cash bonus as the top finisher among a group of four drivers eligible for the prize.

RELATED: Dash 4 Cash results

“Everyone at JR Motorsports strives to bring four fast and competitive race cars to the track each and every week and we are happy to see that the ruling was overturned,” JR Motorsports general manager Kelley Earnhardt Miller said in a statement.

On Saturday, NASCAR officials had relegated Gragson and the No. 9 entry to last place in the 40-car field for the Steakhouse Elite 200. That decision had briefly handed the Dash 4 Cash bonus to the next-highest eligible finisher — AJ Allmendinger.

NASCAR officials said post-race the JRM No. 9 had violated Rule 20.14.c in the NASCAR Rule Book, which states: “All suspension mounts and mounting hardware must not allow movement or realignment of any suspension and/or drivetrain component beyond normal rotation or suspension and/or drivetrain travel.”

With his Darlington finish restored after Wednesday’s hearing, Gragson rejoins the four-driver Dash 4 Cash field for Saturday’s Drydene 200 (1:30 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM) at Dover International Speedway. That bonus will be contested among Gragson, Darlington race winner Justin Allgaier, Josh Berry and Brandon Jones.

Gragson has swept all three Dash 4 Cash prizes this season, topping the field of eligible drivers at Martinsville Speedway (April 11), Talladega Superspeedway (April 24) and Darlington (May 8). Saturday’s 200-miler at Dover is the final event in the four-race D4C program for 2021.

RALEIGH, N.C. (May 12, 2021) – The race fans have spoken. Berlin Raceway in Marne, Michigan, will receive $50,000 as winner of the “Advance My Track Challenge,” a community-based program led by Advance Auto Parts (NYSE: AAP), a leading automotive aftermarket parts retailer and entitlement sponsor of the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series (NAAPWS).

Berlin Raceway accrued the most race fan votes out of six NASCAR-sanctioned short tracks that were part of the final round of voting, held on May 9-10. The .4375-mile paved oval track outside of Grand Rapids, Michigan, hosts NAAPWS racing and other racing series from April through September each year.

“We are thrilled to award the grand prize to the DeWitt family and their fantastic team at Berlin Raceway,” said Jason McDonell, Advance’s executive vice president of merchandising, marketing and E-commerce. “It’s been incredible seeing the passion from the track team and their fans as they rallied to support their local track throughout the program. The ‘Advance My Track Challenge’ had a great first year, and our message to race fans is, we’re just getting started. This program plans to return next year, as our team at Advance continues to support grassroots racing across NASCAR’s home tracks.”

Along with the $50,000 grand prize, Berlin Raceway will host an Advance Auto Parts-themed night for fans during an upcoming weekend of racing. Advance also awarded $15,000 to the track finishing with the second-most votes, New Hampshire’s Hudson Speedway. The third-place track, Alaska Raceway Park in Palmer, Alaska, received a $10,000 prize.

The “Advance My Track Challenge” began on March 24, with 22 NASCAR home tracks across the United States and Canada represented in the program’s first round of voting. Fans voted up to three times daily in the first round, which concluded April 27. The six tracks receiving the most fan votes were part of the final round of voting, which took place May 9-10.

As part of its NASCAR Cup Series sponsorship with Team Penske, Advance partnered with the organization and driver Ryan Blaney to promote the “Advance My Track Challenge.” Blaney, who began his career racing on short tracks across the Southeastern United States, raced his No. 12 Advance Auto Parts Ford Mustang with “Advance My Track Challenge” branding at the March 29 dirt race at Bristol Motor Speedway and the May 9 race at Darlington Raceway.

“It’s been awesome partnering with the Advance team in their support of NASCAR’s home tracks,” said Blaney, a five-time NASCAR Cup Series race winner. “Local race tracks are incredibly important to the communities they’re in and provide a positive economic impact. They’re entertaining fans and giving race car drivers the chance to live their dream. I’ve enjoyed being part of this program and putting the spotlight on all of these home tracks. Congratulations to Berlin Raceway and their team on the grand prize. I look forward to following the great things happening at their track for years to come.”

Learn more about the local drivers, teams and NASCAR home tracks that make up the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series by visiting the series page on NASCAR.com.

See where your favorite driver will pit for Sunday’s Drydene 400 at Dover International Speedway (2 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Martin Truex Jr. has claimed the Busch Pole Award for Sunday’s Drydene 400 (2 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Dover International Speedway.

Truex, who won last weekend’s event at Darlington Raceway, will start his No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota from the pole position. Through 12 races, Truex is still the NASCAR Cup Series’ only multi-race winner in 2021. He’s at three victories.

RELATED: Dover weekend schedule | 2021 Cup Series standings

Daniel Hemric’s No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota is on the pole for Saturday’s Drydene 200 (1:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM) in the NASCAR Xfinity Series.

As NASCAR adapted to COVID-19 protocols last season, practice and qualifying were eliminated at a majority of national-series events to limit at-track time, exposure and to cut race weekend costs. To determine starting lineups, competition officials used grouped draws, added inversions for weekend doubleheaders, and eventually adopted a performance-metrics formula. That metrics format remains in place this season, drawing on performance from both individual races and season-long results.

NASCAR’s metrics formula for 2021 weighs:

    • 25 percent: Driver’s finishing position from the previous race
    • 25 percent: Car owner’s finishing position from the previous race
    • 35 percent: Team owner points ranking
    • 15 percent: Fastest lap from the previous race

See the full lineup for Sunday’s Cup Series race below.

Start pos.
Driver Car # Team
1 Martin Truex Jr. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing
2 Denny Hamlin 11 Joe Gibbs Racing
3 William Byron 24 Hendrick Motorsports
4 Kyle Larson 5 Hendrick Motorsports
5 Kevin Harvick 4 Stewart-Haas Racing
6 Kyle Busch 18 Joe Gibbs Racing
7 Ryan Blaney 12 Team Penske
8 Chase Elliott 9 Hendrick Motorsports
9 Joey Logano 22 Team Penske
10 Chris Buescher 17 Roush Fenway Racing
11 Christopher Bell 20 Joe Gibbs Racing
12 Tyler Reddick 8 Richard Childress Racing
13 Ryan Newman 6 Roush Fenway Racing
14 Austin Dillon 3 Richard Childress Racing
15 Brad Keselowski 2 Team Penske
16 Alex Bowman 48 Hendrick Motorsports
17 Chase Briscoe 14 Stewart-Haas Racing
18 Matt DiBenedetto 21 Wood Brothers Racing
19 Ross Chastain 42 Chip Ganassi Racing
20 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 47 JTG Daugherty Racing
21 Michael McDowell 34 Front Row Motorsports
22 Bubba Wallace 23 23XI Racing
23 Erik Jones 43 Richard Petty Motorsports
24 Daniel Suarez 99 Trackhouse Racing Team
25 Ryan Preece 37 JTG Daugherty Racing
26 Corey LaJoie 7 Spire Motorsports
27 Anthony Alfredo 38 Front Row Motorsports
28 Kurt Busch 1 Chip Ganassi Racing
29 Josh Berry* 77 Spire Motorsports
30 Cole Custer 41 Stewart-Haas Racing
31 BJ McLeod 78 Live Fast Motorsports
32 Aric Almirola 10 Stewart-Haas Racing
33 James Davison 15 Rick Ware Racing
34 Cody Ware 51 Petty Ware Racing
35 Quin Houff 00 StarCom Racing
36 Garrett Smithley 53 Rick Ware Racing
37 Josh Bilicki 52 Rick Ware Racing

*Justin Haley was initially slated to compete in the No. 77 entry but will miss the race due to COVID-19 protocols.

Practice and qualifying are tentatively scheduled for eight Cup Series races this year. Busch Pole Qualifying was held for the season-opening Daytona 500, and rain canceled the qualifying races for Bristol Motor Speedway’s dirt-track race. The next Cup Series event with qualifying scheduled is the May 23 debut at the Circuit of The Americas road course in Austin, Texas.

Mason Mitchell may have quit full-time racing a decade ago, but the itch never left. He’s just, instead, found new ways to share his love of racing in Texas.

Mitchell is the race director at Houston Motorsports Park, a NASCAR-sanctioned 0.375-mile banked asphalt oval track in Houston, Texas. It’s the same track where he used to race in the early 2010s.

He stopped racing himself in 2011, when work, family, and life got too busy. But even though Mitchell wasn’t behind the wheel, he remained involved with uncles and cousins who were still racing. His family was also working to re-open HMP and Mobile International Speedway in Alabama.

Mitchell’s mom started the Gulf Coast Racing Series in Houston and Mobile, and he helped for a couple years before being asked to take on the role of race director at both tracks.

Now he has his hands on every little thing at the track on race days – from cleaning the track, concessions, and bathrooms, to calling the races, talking to drivers in the driver’s meeting to explain the rules, timing, and setting up wireless radios and cameras for livestreams of races.

“I know pretty much everything that goes into it and I just have my hand in every jar, I guess you could say,” Mitchell said. “It’s really just a jack of all trades.”

Mitchell was a fourth generation driver. His great-grandfather started as a factory driver for Indian Motorcycles in Daytona, Florida in the ’40s. Both of his grandfathers also raced, at one time even against each other.

It was watching his uncles race when he was younger that got Mitchell interested in trying it himself. He would go to the track and help on their cars, and he finally got the opportunity to try racing on dirt in a limited modified.

“I took to it. I wasn’t really good on dirt, and then I had a chance to race on asphalt and I just went from there,” he said. “It just seemed like it came natural to me. As many races as I watched growing up, watching the line and watching everybody’s runs. It’s one of those things where I just grew up around it and knew I wanted to do it.”

At the time he quit racing, Mitchell said he was travelling a lot for work, often out of the country, and he didn’t want to commit to the sport if he couldn’t give it his full attention.

“It’s just really hard to be competitive in racing if you’re not giving 100 percent to it,” he said. “And I’m not the kind of guy who’s just, I like doing it but at the same time I know I can be competitive. And if I’m going to race I’m going to be competitive and try to win. It’s just one of those things.”

The itch to get back into the car never left Mitchell, even after he quit racing full-time. He’s run a couple pro truck events for his father-in-law over the last couple years, and he never turns down a chance to get behind the wheel.

“Any day of the week if somebody asks me to come out and hot lap their car I’m 100 percent willing,” he said. “Any chance I can get back in the car I’m back in the car. Even making some hot laps or helping the drivers out at the track and giving my knowledge of what I’ve known in the past to young drivers or drivers in general… I always have the itch.”

Mitchell’s hope is that drivers at HMP and in Mobile can tell he sees racing from the perspective of a driver.

“At the end of the night I try to make it a point to go talk to a lot of the drivers and get their perspectives and see what we can do better and what we can build on,” he said. “That’s something I’m always looking at. Same with the fans. In order to keep fans in the stands you’ve got to have drivers that want to come out and race and you’ve got to have a field.

“I’m not the kind of director that’s all about business, making money here, making money there. I’m for the racer. Having a racing background and a family in racing, it’s easier, I think, for me to talk to the drivers and the drivers knowing I did that in the past and the respect we have for each other. I think that makes it work out as well as it does is just having all that knowledge about racing in general from the get-go.”

Every now and then Mitchell will go race again, but for now he said he’s really focusing on his directing job and “getting fans in the stands and just keeping racing alive in Houston and in Texas.”

For him, racing is about more than just being behind the wheel. It’s sharing the love of the sport with friends made at the track, and “just seeing an old school track and the history from way back when and just trying to bring it back to life,” he said.

“Racing has kind of died off in Texas for the most part as far as short tracks on asphalt,” he said. “We have a lot of dirt tracks but asphalt racing has really died off and it got the point there where we really didn’t have anything and it was up to us to either do it and make a series and keep racing going or it was just going to be one of those things where it was dead. So I definitely didn’t want to see that happen.

“It’s just the friendships and the rivalries. Everything that goes along with it. It’s in my blood. I like doing it. I feel comfortable doing it. Even when I’m stressed out and have 50 things going on at the racetrack in the same day, I’m in my inner circle, I guess you could say.”

NASCAR competition officials handed out a one-race suspension Tuesday to Paul Wolfe, crew chief of the No. 22 Team Penske Ford in the Cup Series, for a lug-nut violation during last weekend’s event at Darlington Raceway.

The No. 22 group was one of five teams — two in the Cup Series and three in Xfinity Series — that were docked for unsecured lug nuts in a post-race check, in accordance with Section 10.9.10.4 of the NASCAR Rule Book. Wolfe was also fined $20,000 after two lug nuts were found not safely secured on Joey Logano’s entry after Sunday’s Goodyear 400.

STANDINGS: Cup Series | Xfinity Series

NASCAR officials also issued a $10,000 fine to crew chief Luke Lambert for one unsecured lug nut on the No. 17 Roush Fenway Racing Ford driven by Chris Buescher at Darlington.

In the Xfinity Series, three crew chiefs were each fined $5,000 after their cars with hit with single-lug penalties after Saturday’s Steakhouse Elite 200. Those teams were:

No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet and crew chief Bruce Schlicker (driver Jeb Burton)
No. 16 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet and crew chief Jason Trinchere (driver AJ Allmendinger)
No. 44 Martins Motorsports Chevrolet and crew chief Buddy Sisco (driver Tommy Joe Martins)

The 2021 NASCAR Salutes Together with Coca-Cola campaign is more than just a military appreciation platform — it’s a campaign that salutes heroes next door. Each week, NASCAR.com will highlight multiple individuals in the week’s race markets who have made a difference with their service both in the military and to their communities.

In the latest profile of a next-door hero, NASCAR.com is highlighting U.S. Air Force Master Sergeant Daniel “Dan” White.

RELATED: Learn more about NASCAR Salutes 

MSG White has served in the U.S. Air Force for 18 years. He has spent his service maintaining cable and antenna systems, providing key information technology to the U.S. Department of Defense. Born in the Philippines, White comes from a Navy family. 

Currently, White is stationed at Dover Air Force Base with wife Sara and sons Douglas and Benjamin. Since moving to the area two years ago, he has dedicated more than 372 hours as a local Cub Scout leader. He has provided leadership training and moral value development to local youth through lessons involving conservation, basic navigation and team-building exercises. One such activity involved an immersion with the city of Magnolia’s Fire House, where scouts learned about fire safety and what it entails to become a firefighter. His pack is making every effort to meet in person, while following safety protocols to hold meetings in a safe manner.

“This past year has been a challenge with COVID-19 restrictions, but we’re resilient and found a way to move forward,” White said. 

White’s sense of community extends beyond the Cub Scouts and into his own neighborhood, where he is a founding member of his neighborhood watch. There, he serves as an advocate for law enforcement and first responders, while hoping to inspire others to take an active role in their communities. 

Riverhead Raceway had been a regular stop for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour since the tour’s inception in 1985.

Sixty-four races over 35 seasons, with fabled Modified stars like Mike Stefanik, Richie Evans and Reggie Ruggiero trading wins with home track heroes such as Mike Ewanitsko, Steve Park and Wayne Anderson. The tour-typed Modifieds have long been a mainstay of the track’s NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series program, and the quarter-mile bullring seems to be uniquely suited to bringing out the best of the Modifieds.

The COVID-19 pandemic kept the tour away last year, but it will return in a big way in 2021, starting with Saturday night’s Miller Lite 200 (8 p.m. ET, TrackPass).

It will be one of three trips to Long Island for the tour.

RELATED LINKS:

Fans can attend the race as well as watch the race live on TrackPass on NBC Sports Gold.


Miller Lite 200

WHAT TO WATCH FOR:

Miller Lite 200

It’s been 26 years since a weekly series regular has knocked off a visitor from the touring series. But Victory Lane at Riverhead has been the exclusive domain of a Long Islander since 2013.

In fast, since 2003, only four drivers outside of New York have won at the track in 25 races there.

That bodes well for the driver leading the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour in points after two events: Eric Goodale.

Goodale’s first career tour win came at his home track in 2014. He has four top fives and 12 top 10s in 17 starts there, but has finished outside the top 10 in three of his last four races.

Nobody has been better at Riverhead than Justin Bonsignore.

The two-time tour champion has eight wins in 18 starts, including the last four trips between 2018-19.

They haven’t been easy. In July of 2019, he held off track regular John Beatty Jr. in a green-white-checkered finish that had Bonsignore taking the checkered flag sideways across the finish line. When the tour returned two months later, it was another green-white-checkered with Bonsignore edging Timmy Solomito.

Solomito has three wins and 10 top fives in 13 races at the track he grew up racing at.

The last driver NOT from Long Island to win there? Ryan Preece.

And the NASCAR Cup Series driver, who has four wins at Riverhead including three straight between 2012-13, will be back in the No. 6 for his third tour start of the season. Preece also won the Islip 300 last November, to become the first back-to-back winner of that non-tour event.

Craig Lutz was second to Preece in that race and third in the tour’s last race at Riverhead in 2019, while Stafford winner Patrick Emerling scored his first top five at the track in the last visit. Six-time tour champion Doug Coby has won the Mayhew Tools Pole Award in two of the last three Riverhead races, but has just seven top fives in 19 starts.

Among Riverhead’s weekly series competitors looking to end the tour drought is five-time track champion Tom Rogers Jr. Rogers has 60 wins at Riverhead, second all-time, and has nine top 10s in his last 10 tour starts at Riverhead – including a fourth in 2016. He also led 113 laps before finishing ninth in the September race in 2019.

Two-time Riverhead modified champion Kyle Soper will pilot Anderson’s car.

RACING REFERENCE:

RACE FACTS

RACE Miller Lite 200
PLACE Riverhead Raceway in Riverhead, N.Y.
DATE Saturday, May 15, 2021
TIME 8 p.m. ET
TV/LIVE STREAM TrackPass on NBC Sports Gold (live) / NBCSN – (Friday, May 21, 5 p.m. ET)
TRACK LAYOUT Quarter-mile paved oval
LAPS 200
MILES 50
EVENT SCHEDULE Saturday, May 15 — Garage opens: 12:45 p.m. ET; Practice: 3-4 p.m.; Qualifying: 6 p.m.; Miler Lite 200: 8 p.m.
TWITTER @NASCARRoots, @RiverheadRacewy, @_TrackPass

RELATED:

CREW CHIEF HANDOUT: The starting field for the Miller Lite 200 is limited to 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 Miller Lite 200. 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 eight (8) 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 zero (0) tires, any position.

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 rollover to the next event and will continue to rollover 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.

DARLINGTON, S.C. — To borrow a phrase overheard in the newly reopened media center during NASCAR’s throwback weekend, the expansion of garage access to selected guests at Darlington Raceway had a “first day of school” feel.

Race teams welcomed back sponsors and corporate guests, and team officials and media roamed the garage in limited numbers during the tripleheader weekend. The historic speedway that served as the epicenter for NASCAR’s schedule resuming in 2020 was host for the next evolutionary step in the sport’s COVID-19 protocol procedures.

“I think it’s a big deal any time we can get more fan and media and sponsor interaction for our sport,” said Cliff Daniels, crew chief for Hendrick Motorsports’ No. 5 team and driver Kyle Larson. “We know the fans are the lifeblood of our sport and everyone with the media and reporters are what presents it to the world and keeps the fans engaged. So to have you guys here and the fans in the stands and have sponsors and media members in the infield, I thought was really cool.

“I think it’s a big positive for us. I know that NASCAR is going about doing it the right way and definitely trust in what they’re doing, so it’s good to see.”

RELATED: Kyle Larson salvages second place to Martin Truex Jr. at Darlington

NASCAR announced April 20 that the garage footprint of essential personnel would grow for fully vaccinated guests, starting with Darlington and including the inaugural race weekend at the Circuit of The Americas in Austin, Texas on May 22-23. That two-race trial will help shape the protocols for access going forward, as vaccine availability helps the sports world and the country loosen the pandemic’s grip.

As infield access has grown in small measures, so has the reopening of the grandstands. On Friday, both Darlington and Daytona International Speedway announced that their races scheduled for later this season would be open to full attendance. Those two tracks joined Atlanta, Pocono and Sonoma among the venues planning to end restrictions on the number of spectators allowed through the doors later this year.

Darlington hosted limited fans in the stands for its throwback weekend, but those numbers — in the seating areas and the infield — should rise when NASCAR returns for the traditional Labor Day date. So will the crowd reaction, and in turn, so will the buzz.

“It’s encouraging,” said Denny Hamlin, the Cup Series points leader. “Seeing more people on pit lane is always a little more encouraging and a lot more fun from our standpoint. It gets the energy going a little bit better for the event, so definitely hoping we continue this direction that we’re in.”

RELATED: Photos from the track as NASCAR.com reporters return to pit road

Besides the positives of increased fan interaction, this weekend’s soft reopening was also a boon to race teams from the business side. Organizations were able to greet sponsors and provide the “behind the ropes” experience that has become the hallmark of business-to-business relationships in the NASCAR industry. It’s one thing to make the financial commitment to sponsorship; it’s quite another full-on rush from seeing your company’s logo whisk by at triple-digit speeds in person. That’s a different sort of zoom meeting.

“It’s so important for us. Some of the key players that our sponsors have such interest in it, and they love being here and being a part of it,” said Coach Joe Gibbs, who regularly emphasizes how sponsorship makes his four-car effort go. “Today we had guys flying in from all over, (Bass Pro Shops owner) Johnny Morris coming in. It’s great for us to have things opening up. I’m hoping we get back to our fans being — evidently in the fall we’re going to have the place packed.

“But it’s very, very important, too, to get those key people from the companies back into our sport, and I’m looking forward to getting to go again and do hospitalities. So all of that is coming, but it is very, very important today.”

In that sense, the weekend was a sort of reunion on multiple levels. NASCAR continued the annual throwback tradition of getting back in touch with its rich history, and many infield guests safely reconnected after months of work-from-home isolation away from the track.

School was back in session, and all indications are that class sizes are prepared to grow.

“It’s nice to start getting back to normal, getting more fans in the stands and packing the house and putting on a good show for everybody,” said Ben Beshore, crew chief for Gibbs’ No. 18 Toyota and driver Kyle Busch. “That’s what NASCAR is all about and looking forward to getting back there.”