In the last superspeedway race before Sunday’s, Brad Keselowski was seen slamming his helmet into the side of his smoldering No. 2 Ford, which skidded to rest about a mile short of the Daytona 500 finish. Sunday at Talladega Superspeedway, he gained some measure of consolation from that ache with a triumph that placed him in the stock-car racing ether.
Instead of repeating the Team Penske tangle that upended both his and teammate Joey Logano’s victory hopes at Daytona, Keselowski stayed steady in a busy overtime scrap to continue his climb up Talladega’s all-time win list. His first NASCAR Cup Series victory of the year also helped take some of the edge off his season-opening defeat, one that still resonates.
“I mean, Daytona, that’s a big one. Man, it stings still,” Keselowski said. “This is a good one. We’ll take it. Beggars can’t be choosers. Certainly, I learned some lessons from that race, tried to apply them. It came together at the end. Michael McDowell gave me a great push, kind of like he did at Daytona. I was a little bit smarter how I handled it, so it all came together.”
Capably handling the two-lap rumble has re-established Keselowski as an all-timer on the 2.66-mile Alabama high banks, which is now the site of his first and most recent Cup Series victories — both races where he led only the final lap. That total of six Talladega wins pulls him even with Hall of Famers Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Jeff Gordon on the track’s list, four behind the great Dale Earnhardt’s peerless 10 wins there.
Sean Gardner | Getty Images
His breakthrough Talladega win in 2009 came after a dramatic last-lap tangle with rival Carl Edwards. Keselowski had already distinguished himself in the Xfinity Series as a driver for Dale Jr.’s JR Motorsports organization, but his big-league arrival also elevated his name as a must-have prospect among team owners. Roger Penske snapped him up for full-time Cup duty the following year, completing his rise from humble beginnings to NASCAR’s majors.
“I never thought I’d even have that chance,” Keselowski said. “It’s tremendous to me. I grew up loving the sport, still love the sport. We fight sometimes, like husband and wife, but I still love the sport. I love the challenge every day of getting up, trying to find excellence, reinventing yourself as the rules change, people change around you.
“It’s hard. It’s a hard sport. Any success you have means the world. So I think to have my name on any list that has Dale Earnhardt, Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr. at Talladega, that’s a pretty big deal. I’m super happy and super proud to be there with them.”
Sunday’s outcome prompted more defining numbers from Keselowski’s perspective. He now has 35 Cup Series wins, two ahead of Fireball Roberts and two behind Bobby Isaac — both NASCAR Hall of Famers. His success also has longevity; Keselowski’s first victory of the season marks 11 consecutive years with at least one win.
Though he’s yet to win on a road course in his Cup Series career, there’s balance to be found in Keselowski’s overall record on ovals, where he’s won on short tracks, mile-long circuits, intermediates and the sport’s biggest speedways. Still, that Talladega tally of six stands out in front — both for its sheer magnitude and for its association with the high bars set by Gordon and Earnhardt Jr.
“Again, the word ‘surreal’ comes to mind,” Keselowski says. noting the full-circle nature of tying Earnhardt Jr., his former boss, on Talladega’s all-time list. “I never thought that would have been the case.”
“Our day will come.” The refrain from Matt DiBenedetto on Sunday was a familiar one, this time coming after a split-second scramble at the front of a Talladega Superspeedway pack that left his No. 21 Wood Brothers Ford just on the fringe of a Victory Lane visit.
DiBenedetto led the next-to-last lap and the 13 circuits that came before it as Sunday’s GEICO 500 pushed into overtime. His move to block the advances of an ally in Team Penske driver Ryan Blaney as the white flag unfurled, however, opened the low lane for Penske’s Brad Keselowski to methodically surge ahead for his sixth Talladega win.
DiBenedetto settled for fifth place in the frenzied final-lap shuffle, gathering a season-best finish to help soothe a rough start to the 2021 Cup Series campaign. But he still wound up just shy of his first big-league victory after the 222nd start of his journeyman career.
“I think as I get older my perspective on a lot of things gets better,” said DiBenedetto, who remained upbeat after the defeat, “so the way I look at it is, yeah, it’s disappointing to come close so many times, not just today because this is Talladega and a lot of things happen that’s crazy, but to come close — a lot of my career has consisted of a lot of that and some heartbreaks and it’s tough. The way that I look at it is I focus on what’s in my control and focus on the positives. I’m driving fast cars. We’re in position to win and I know that if we keep doing that, like I said, our day will definitely come.”
DiBenedetto led his first 28 laps of the season Sunday, gathering his first stage win and establishing himself as a contender along with his affiliated Team Penske compatriots. After a final-stage pit cycle, he shook out as a leader again in the late going and by the time the field assembled for the final restart, DiBenedetto had reinforcements lined up behind him — two Penske stablemates in Blaney and Keselowski as Ford drivers owned the top six spots.
He abandoned the bottom lane heading to the white flag, pulling in front of Blaney on the top side. But changing horses and stemming that charge left Keselowski free to fill the gap on the low side. When the top lane became disorganized, the late rooting and gouging for finishing positions intensified and DiBenedetto’s help in the aerodynamic draft evaporated.
“I’ll drive myself crazy if I just look back at it, replay exactly what happened and will never let myself live it down,” DiBenedetto said of the late jumble. “We did the best job we can. Circumstances are crazy, especially with how big the runs are and all that, so it’s nothing to beat ourselves up over. We had a stage win and a good day, and I know that although my career has consisted of a lot of heartbreaks our day will come, so I don’t look at it in a negative way.”
At stake Sunday was also a landmark victory for the venerable Wood Brothers team, which remains at 99 Cup Series victories all time. DiBenedetto is in his final season in the Woods’ No. 21 Mustang; he’ll make way for Xfinity Series champ Austin Cindric’s rookie campaign in 2022.
DiBenedetto has come close before, finishing second in both Las Vegas Motor Speedway races last season and clinching an emotional runner-up effort in his last blast for Leavine Family Racing in Bristol Motor Speedway’s night race in 2019. After starting this season with three finishes outside the top 25, he has righted the ship with six straight efforts in the top 15, including two consecutive top-10 results. That first victory, however, remains on the horizon.
“Matt D. is an incredibly talented guy. He’s not going to have to wait as long as I did to win a race, I can promise you that,” said Michael McDowell, who finished a strong third Sunday and broke his own 0-for-357 skid by winning this year’s Daytona 500. “He’s up front so much in these races, not just at the speedways, but he has a great team behind him. He will get to Victory Lane. The biggest thing is not getting down and discouraged, and building. …
“But he’s been doing so well. He will win a race. He is a great guy, has a lot of heart. He fights hard. That’s the thing, you got to fight hard. You got to want it and fight hard. He’s got that.”
Monday, April 26
4:30 a.m., NASCAR Cup Series: GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway (re-air), FS1
8 a.m., eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series: Talladega Superspeedway (re-air), FS2
9:30 a.m., ARCA Menards Series: General Tire 200 at Talladega Superspeedway (re-air), FS2
11:30 a.m., NASCAR Xfinity Series: Ag-Pro 300 at Talladega Superspeedway (re-air), FS2
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway (re-air), FS2
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
7 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway (re-air), FS1
10 p.m., Blink of an Eye (re-air), FS1
Tuesday, April 27
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
On MRN:
7 p.m., NASCAR Live
Wednesday, April 28 6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
Thursday, April 29
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
6:30 p.m., Dale Jr. Download, NBCSN
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub — Best of Radioactive: Kansas Speedway, FS2
Friday, April 30
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub — Best of Radioactive: Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS1
Saturday, May 1 1:30 p.m., ARCA Menards Series: Dutch Boy 150 at Kansas Speedway, FS1
7 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series at Kansas Speedway, FS1
7:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Wise Power 200 at Kansas Speedway, FS1
11 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Wise Power 200 at Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS2
On MRN:
1:30 p.m., ARCA Menards Series: Dutch Boy 150 at Kansas Motor Speedway
7 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Wise Power 200 at Kansas Speedway
Sunday, May 2
1 a.m., ARCA Menards Series: Dutch Boy 150 at Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS2
3 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series: Wise Power 200 at Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS1
5 a.m., ARCA Menards Series: Dutch Boy 150 at Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS1
7 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub — Best of Radioactive: Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS2
1 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub — Best of Radioactive: Kansas Speedway (re-air), FS1
1:30 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: NASCAR Cup Series at Kansas Speedway, FS1
3 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Buschy McBusch Race 400 at Kansas Speedway, FS1 (Canada: TSN5)
6:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Post-Race Show at Kansas, FS1
On MRN:
2 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series: Buschy McBusch Race 400 at Kansas Speedway
Despite sustaining damage in an early wreck, and despite leading only one lap in Sunday’s GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway, Brad Keselowski nailed down an opportunistic overtime victory in the 10th event of the NASCAR Cup Series season.
Surging to the front on the final lap, after fellow Ford driver Matt DiBenedetto abandoned the bottom lane and gave Keselowski a clear run to the front, Keselowski claimed his first victory of the season, the 35th of his career and his sixth at Talladega, tying Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr. for second-most all-time at the 2.66-mile track.
As the ninth different winner this season, Keselowski joined Team Penske teammates Joey Logano and Ryan Blaney on the 2021 victory list.
Keselowski said he thought “Merry Christmas!” to himself when the bottom lane opened up on the final lap.
“The whole race, I had a couple of opportunities to take the lead, but I just kept thinking, ‘Man, just keep your car in one piece till the end.’ We’ve been so close here, and it just didn’t seem to want to come together here the last few years, and I’ve been on kind of a four-year drought here, but it’s nice to get number six.
“I would have never dreamed I’d tie Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr. here. That’s something. Those guys are really legends. I’m just really proud of my team. We had an accident there early, and they recovered and got it fixed up to where I could keep running. My crew chief, Jeremy Bullins, had a lot of confidence.
“I told him (before pitting on Lap 173 of a scheduled 188), ‘I want to come in and put four tires on this thing,’ and he said, ‘Yep, go ahead.’ And that really helped a bunch at the end.”
William Byron ran second, extending his streak of top-10 finishes to eight races. Daytona 500 winner Michael McDowell was third, followed by Kevin Harvick and DiBenedetto. Kaz Grala, Tyler Reddick, Austin Dillon, Ryan Blaney and Cole Custer completed the top 10.
DiBenedetto held the lead at the white flag in overtime, which took the race three laps beyond its posted distance. But the driver of the No. 21 Wood Brothers Ford moved up the track — uncovering Keselowski behind him — to block a run by Blaney. Keselowski used a strong push from McDowell to charge to the lead.
“Our day will come,” DiBenedetto said ruefully of the lost opportunity. “We’ll get there … It’s just so circumstantial — our day will come.”
Joey Logano had a much shorter day on track than his winning Team Penske teammate. As the lead pack of cars approached the green/checkered flag to end the first 60-lap stage of the race, an aggressive push from Ricky Stenhouse Jr. forced Denny Hamlin out of line. In the process, Hamlin hooked the left rear of Logano’s car, which got airborne off the bumper of Stenhouse’s Chevrolet, turned upside-down, landing on its roof and barrel-rolled before righting itself. Keselowski’s car also sustained minor damage in the incident.
When Logano’s car bounced on its roof, his head hit the roll bar.
“It’s nobody’s fault,” Logano said after a mandatory visit to the infield care center. “Denny is trying to go and the 47 (Stenhouse) is trying to go. It’s a product of this racing. We have to fix it, though. … At the same time, I’m appreciative of driving a car that is this safe and what Team Penske has done for the safety of these cars so that I can live to talk about it and go again.
“I got lucky that I didn’t get hit while I was in the air.”
The end of the second stage also produced fireworks, and once again, Hamlin was at the center of the maelstrom. As the top lane bunched up behind Keselowski, who was running second at the time, Martin Truex Jr. tapped Hamlin from behind, turning the No. 11 Toyota into the wall.
Truex then spun sideways, sustaining damage. Behind him, Byron steered down the track to the avoid the wreck and collected Hendrick Motorsports teammates Alex Bowman and Chase Elliott in a chain-reaction collision. Bowman couldn’t get his car repaired in the requisite six minutes and fell out of the race in 38th place.
Series points leader Hamlin, who led a race-high 43 laps, finished 32nd, three laps down.
Elliott, the reigning series champion, was able to continue and finished 24th. Harrison Burton came home 20th in his NASCAR Cup Series debut.
The NASCAR Cup Series’ next event is the Buschy McBusch Race 400, scheduled for 3 p.m. ET next Sunday (FS1, MRN, SiriusXM) at Kansas Speedway.
Notes: Five Toyota teams were docked for unapproved adjustments just before the green flag, sending a quintet of drivers to the rear of the field for the start. The drivers penalized for their teams’ A-post violations: Hamlin, Truex, Wallace, Christopher Bell and Harrison Burton. … The 20-year-old Burton finished 20th in his Cup Series debut for Gaunt Brothers Racing.
The race-winning No. 2 Team Penske Ford of Keselowski passed NASCAR’s post-race inspection. The No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota of Kyle Busch was found with one lug nut not safe and secure.
Matt DiBenedetto was leading in his No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford, with Ryan Blaney pushing behind him in the No. 12 Team Penske Ford. Logano, another Team Penske driver, was running third. Issues arose when Denny Hamlin, the No. 11 Toyota wheelman for Joe Gibbs Racing, tried to make a move toward the bottom and pass Logano’s No. 22 Ford. Hamlin was getting a heavy push by Ricky Stenhouse Jr.’s No. 47 JTG Daugherty Racing Chevrolet, though, and clipped the left rear of Logano’s car. Logano then spun into the pack behind him, went airborne after being hit and skidded on its roof before settling back on all four wheels.
Once the No. 22 came to a halt, Logano reported he was OK over the team radio. He was later evaluated and released from the infield care center. He went down in the results sheet as 39th out of 40, with only Kyle Larson below him after early motor issues.
DiBenedetto won the stage and finished fifth overall. Blaney came in ninth. Hamlin placed 32nd, and Stenhouse was 33rd.
Also involved in the crash: the No. 2 Team Penske Ford of Brad Keselowski, No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford of Chase Briscoe and No. 23 23XI Racing Toyota of Bubba Wallace.
Keselowski ultimately went on to win the race, leading just the final lap in overtime. Briscoe was 11th. Wallace turned in a 19th-place result.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — NASCAR and Boys & Girls Clubs of America announced a multiyear partnership Sunday that will support the nonprofit’s mission of enabling and enriching the lives of young people. As the Official Youth Community Partner of NASCAR, Boys & Girls Clubs of America will work with NASCAR and industry stakeholders to engage more than 4.6 million youth and teens across the country with NASCAR content and experiences.
The nationwide partnership will focus on three core areas — STEM education, career development and diversity, equity and inclusion (DE&I) initiatives — and extend across all NASCAR platforms and race tracks. Programming will include both virtual and at-track experiences with an emphasis on local Boys & Girls Club locations within NASCAR race markets.
Partnership efforts will build on the continuing work of The NASCAR Foundation to advance children’s well-being, including ongoing relationships with several Boys & Girls Clubs across the country.
“As a community leader, Boys & Girls Clubs of America continues to have immeasurable impact on the lives of our country’s youth, and NASCAR looks forward to engaging those efforts in meaningful ways,” said Steve Phelps, president of NASCAR. “Through this partnership and together with the NASCAR industry, we have boundless opportunities to advance the mission and objectives of Boys & Girls Clubs of America while at the same time introducing young future fans to our great sport.”
Said Boys & Girls Clubs of America president and CEO Jim Clark: “Kids and teens need safe places and caring mentors now more than ever, and local Boys & Girls Clubs around the country are doing whatever it takes to empower youth and build new opportunities so they can achieve every success in life. We are very excited to partner with NASCAR to elevate this support in communities even further, enabling more high-quality programing and experiences that will have a positive impact on kids and teens.”
As young people continue to emerge from the pandemic and navigate virtual learning, the first year of the partnership will focus on developing high-quality education programming that will live on MyFuture, Boys & Girls Clubs of America’s digital learning platform.
Additionally, NASCAR’s work with Boys & Girls Clubs of America will focus on career development and mentoring across a breadth of industry disciplines and will include engagement with industry executives and other employees.
Throughout the partnership, NASCAR will collaborate with drivers, teams and tracks to amplify the sport’s commitment to Boys & Girls Clubs of America and deepen the engagement with Club youth and teens. NASCAR partners will also have the opportunity to integrate with the new partnership, and several partners will look to build on their own longstanding relationships with Boys & Girls Clubs of America.
Eric Shanks, CEO and executive producer of FOX Sports, and Mark Lazarus, chairman of NBCUniversal Television and Streaming, are both members of the non-profit’s Board of Governors. Shanks attended Boys & Girls Clubs as a youth and is now a member of the Boys & Girls Clubs Alumni Hall of Fame. Next month, Lazarus will serve as chair of Boys & Girls Clubs of America’s Annual Conference.
NBCUniversal, parent company of NASCAR Premier Partner Xfinity, has partnered with Boys & Girls Clubs for nearly 20 years to drive digital equity. The company has opened WiFi-Connected Lift Zones at Boys & Girls Clubs across the country, including an upcoming Martinsville, Virginia, location to celebrate the NASCAR Xfinity Series Dash 4 Cash, to provide a safe space for students to access Internet for free to participate in distance learning and conduct schoolwork.
Coca-Cola is currently celebrating 75 years of partnership with Boys & Girls Clubs of America and is also represented on the non-profit’s Board of Governors. The NASCAR Premier Partner is also a founding sponsor of the non-profit’s Workforce Readiness Strategy, supporting essential skill development, career exploration, employability skills and credentialing, and work-based learning opportunities for young people at Clubs. Coca-Cola, NASCAR and Boys & Girls Clubs of America look forward to partnering.
Toyota’s partnership with Boys & Girls Clubs of America is focused on closing the opportunity gap for the nation’s youth and inspiring future innovators, problem solvers and leaders who will make a positive impact on the community.
Boys & Girls Clubs of America provides high-quality programming that helps level the playing field and provide opportunities to young people that will help them build the skills they need to become the leaders, innovators and problem-solvers who shape the world.
To learn more about Boys & Girls Clubs of America and support its mission with donations, visit BGCA.org.
Noah Gragson is 2-for-2 in collecting $100,000 Dash 4 Cash bonuses in this year’s edition of the NASCAR Xfinity Series initiative. He’s also a perfect 2-for-2 in somehow losing the giant display checks with his name on them.
Gragson finished sixth in Saturday’s Ag-Pro 300 at Talladega Superspeedway, outdistancing three other eligible drivers — Josh Berry, Daniel Hemric and Brandon Jones — for the six-figure payout. He is halfway to a clean sweep of the four-race promotion but has none of the fancy Dash 4 Cash check placards to show for it.
“I have the one from Atlanta last year, but I don’t know where the one from Martinsville went,” Gragson said, noting his April 11 reward at the Virginia short track. “I got back to the shop and there’s a Big Check Bandit at the shop somewhere from the Martinsville check and then there’s a Big Check Bandit here at Talladega. So we’ve got to find this person because they’re stealing all the checks.”
The 22-year-old Vegas native led four times for eight laps in a quest for his first victory of the Xfinity Series season. That stretch of time up front included a convincing Stage 2 win with JR Motorsports teammate Justin Allgaier pushing him to the green-checkered flag.
Gragson remained in the hunt until two caution periods slowed the final stage, all before a drenching rain shower forced the event to be stopped with 90 of a scheduled 113 laps complete. While the victory instead went to first-time winner Jeb Burton, Gragson was able to take measure of consolation in the Dash 4 Cash prize.
“I think it’s huge. We really want to win races, but I think that extra bonus through Xfinity and Comcast is really appreciated and beneficial for our team at JR Motorsports,” Gragson said, adding the incentive money will be split amongst him and his crew. “… It’s a team sport and I’m just very thankful to be a part of this 9 team and very fortunate. It’s not me winning the $100,000 two weeks in a row, it’s the 9 team and those guys. It takes a whole group.”
As for the other eligible Dash 4 Cash drivers at Talladega, Hemric was the best of the rest, leading 18 laps early in the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 Toyota and settling for 12th at the end. Martinsville winner Berry wound up 31st — last on the lead lap — after a solo spin with a flat tire hampered his efforts in the JRM No. 8 Chevy. Jones fared the worst, his Gibbs No. 19 Supra sustaining heavy damage in a multi-car stack-up on Lap 75 and relegating him to 37th overall.
Gragson’s result means he’ll face off with Saturday’s top-finishing Xfinity regulars — Burton, Austin Cindric and AJ Allmendinger — in the next Dash 4 Cash round, scheduled May 8 at Darlington Raceway (1 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM). With the extra money on the line again, Gragson said he doesn’t expect to temper his aggressive approach and prioritize the Dash 4 Cash finish over a race win. He just might have to be more protective of the display check if he goes 3-for-3.
“I don’t really see a reason to change,” Gragson said. “I sleep like a baby at night, and our race team sleeps like a baby at night, just because we’re content with who we are. I don’t know, we’re just confident and when we get to the race track, we know we have an opportunity to win, and outside noise doesn’t really bother us.”
Jeb Burton won his first career NASCAR Xfinity Series race Saturday at Talladega Superspeedway, and the NASCAR community turned to social media to congratulate the driver of the No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet.
Dale Earnhardt Jr., Bubba Wallace, Brad Keselowski and Michael McDowell are just a few past and present NASCAR drivers to celebrate Burton on Twitter.
Burton is the son of former NASCAR Cup Series driver, Ward Burton, and the cousin of current NASCAR Xfinity Series driver, Harrison Burton.
In 2020, Burton competed on a part-time basis with Earnhardt’s JR Motorsports in the No. 8 Chevrolet and earned three top-five and six top-10 finishes in 11 starts. Burton also has one NASCAR Camping World Truck Series win at Texas Motor Speedway and 33 NASCAR Cup Series starts.
Felt good to control the race early. I wasn’t decisive enough and lost control of the race near the end of stage 1, and really struggled the rest of the day to get the right momentum going after that. Happy to see @JebBurtonRacing get his 🏁👍
Editor’s note: This story originally appeared on NASCAR.com on Feb. 8, 2021:
How to measure the value of hard work: Clearing roads, sawing downed trees plus overseeing controlled burns equals sweat, aches and the rewarding feeling of managing nearly 10,000 acres through your outdoors foundation.
Then even recreation turns into something of a project. Hunting and other outdoor activities in the Virginia countryside become a prime facet of a streaming TV series, putting another aspect of your life on a to-do list.
“We’re always doing something,” Jeb Burton says, boiling his multi-pronged family life down to a simple declarative phrase.
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images
How, then, to measure hard work in stock-car racing? When a driver loses the power steering and has to muscle a heavy vehicle through high-load, high-banked turns, that’s an easy litmus test. Less quantifiable is the work of a NASCAR grinder, one who has scrapped for part-time rides and tried to maximize all of them, one who has picked himself up when sponsors reneged and hustled to attract new ones, and one who has fought to stay relevant in a business where cast-offs are quickly forgotten.
“It all goes back to breaks,” says Chris Rice, “getting something where you get a chance to show your talents.”
Rice should know. As president of Kaulig Racing, a rising Xfinity Series organization with eyes on Cup Series expansion, Rice presented the 28-year-old Burton with his biggest break to date: his first full ride in six years as the newly tapped driver of the team’s No. 10 Chevrolet for the 2021 season — one south-central Virginian to another.
“All this racing and success is about timing, anywhere you go on a team,” Burton said. “I feel like I’m going to Kaulig and hitting my stride when I’m hitting their stride at the same time.”
The timing of that stride is the culmination of a life immersed in the outdoors and stock-car racing, with both pursuits forged by the value of a solid day’s work.
A family’s foundation
Jeb Burton was 9 years old when his father, Ward, won the Daytona 500. That was 2002, and the victory represented the largest of his father’s five Cup Series triumphs. Jeb’s memories include watching the frantic final laps in their motorcoach, his mother Tabitha’s jubilance after the checkered flag and the golf cart ride to Victory Lane.
Ward says he remembers taking an extra lap to compose himself before pulling his No. 22 car to a halt. His family was there to greet him, and many newspapers printed the Associated Press’ group photo showing young Jeb signaling No. 1 beside the Harley J. Earl Trophy.
Capturing the Great American Race meant making the talk show rounds in the days that followed, and The New York Times caught up with him in the green room of “Live with Regis and Kelly.” The Burtons’ daughter, Sarah, said “absolutely not” when asked if racing was in her plans. Instead, she offered: “But my brother Jeb — he’s 9 — he likes to live on the edge, like daddy. He’s not afraid of anything.”
By then, Ward had already been teaching Sarah to drive a tractor on the family’s farm. Grade-school Jeb was driving a truck — his dad working the pedals while the youngster sat on his lap and grasped the wheel. “We’ve had a few close calls, just missed falling into a few ditches,” Burton told The Times, “but he’s got what it takes.”
So while the racing life wasn’t for all of Ward and Tabitha Burton’s children, Jeb took to it, eventually finding his way to the same South Boston Speedway that launched careers for both his father and his uncle, Jeff. While he was drawn to the thrill-seeking aspects of racing, he maintained a strong connection to quieter adventure, exploring the still of the Virginia woods like his father did growing up.
“When I was being brought up, there was nothing else but the outdoors, you know,” Ward Burton said. “Our parents gave us a lot of freedom. By the time I was 8 or 9 years old, my mom wasn’t even concerned about me if I didn’t come home, just so I got home an hour after dark. My generation was a little bit more protective of children, but I didn’t move to Charlotte and all that because I wanted to bring my kids up in the rural culture that I was brought up in.”
Chris Graythen | Getty Images
Growing up Burton also meant go-karts and motocross and eventually a Limited Late Model debut at South Boston shortly after his 16th birthday. After more seasoning in the Late Model ranks, his national-tour debut came in 2012. His first full season the next year with Turner Scott Motorsports produced seven pole positions, an emotional first win at Texas Motor Speedway and a fifth-place finish in the overall Camping World Truck Series standings.
Then Burton’s career turned nomadic. After a prime sponsor defaulted on payment to Turner Scott late in the 2013-14 offseason, the next-generation driver hopped rides and series, briefly bumping up to the Cup Series for the 2015 campaign with underfunded BK Racing. The years that followed were made up of part-time duty with rides in the Xfinity Series and trucks, never competing in more than half the races in a given season.
With the family still trying to attract business partners for their efforts, the scrutiny sharpened on Jeb Burton each time out. With limited seat time to impress prospective sponsors and team owners, both father and son felt the strain.
“Look, man, when you’ve only got five, six, seven races and you’ve brought all the partners to the team like Jeb has been doing over the last couple years, it’s a ton of damn pressure,” Ward Burton says. “It’s a ton of pressure to perform for your companies that are supporting you, your family, yourself, and it’s tough no matter what you’re doing when somebody’s doing it every single week and you’re not. And racing just adds a steroid to that.”
The most productive of those part-time seats proved to be a springboard. Jeb Burton landed seven races with JR Motorsports in 2019, finishing among the top 10 in all but one start. That led to last year’s 11-race slate, which yielded three top fives and a runner-up finish to JRM teammate Justin Allgaier in September.
“Didn’t put any pressure on anybody but me,” Jeb Burton says. “I just had a lot that I needed to prove, and last year I feel like we did that. Should’ve won a couple races, looking back on it. … I think we showed we can lead laps and contend for wins, and me racing every week this year will make me better so I can win those races when I have the opportunity to do it. So there was a lot of pressure last year, but I feel like a lot of that got off my shoulders once I went and ran inside the top three and continued to do it and showing that I can do it given the opportunity.”
Opportunity arises
On Oct. 14, the Burtons met at Kaulig Racing for a conference with Kaulig’s Chris Rice and representatives for sponsor Nutrien Ag Solutions, a Colorado-based agricultural company. Rice admits now to ramping up some of the drama by initially casting doubt on whether an agreement could be achieved, but the actual reveal — captured on camera — prompted both father and son to well up.
Not another part-time ride, but a full one. Rice saying “33 races” almost didn’t register right away.
“It’s just, those things don’t happen. And they haven’t happened,” Jeb Burton said. “Every time something did happen for me, it kind of blew up in my face. Either somebody defaulted on a payment or didn’t do what they said they were going to do on a contract, so it’s been a struggle. … It’s just been a tough road and that’s where all of that emotion came from.”
The news was announced nearly a month later on Nov. 16. The No. 10 Chevrolet that Ross Chastain drove to a series-best 27 top 10s in 2020 would now have Jeb Burton’s name above the driver’s door.
Burton’s connection to Rice extends beyond the Kaulig relationship, rooted in their shared upbringing in Halifax County, Virginia, Rice’s father and uncle built racing chassis under the banner of A&E Race Cars and fielded Late Models for Jeff Burton in a collaborative effort between their families. And Cathy Rice, Chris’ mother, still serves as general manager of South Boston Speedway, her involvement with the operations of the grassroots track spanning 33 years.
So that fit seems natural for Burton, and so does his blending in with his two full-time teammates in veteran AJ Allmendinger and returning 21-year-old ace Justin Haley. The connection with Nutrien Ag Solutions is an even greater bit of synergy. The company was an existing partner of Kaulig’s, but its background in sustainability, conservation and farming aligned with the Burtons’ off-track pursuits. “It really is everything that we stand for,” Jeb Burton says.
Harold Hinson/HHP | Kaulig Racing
On track, Burton’s fit may require a slight adjustment period, Rice says, as he prepares for his first full-time campaign in six years.
“He’s going to fall right in here,” Rice said, “and I think he’ll have some learning curve early on because no driving full-time in an Xfinity car and then having to drive it every week’s a little different. I think he’ll have a little learning curve, but I think he’ll be ready to go by race five or six, and you won’t see him miss a beat.”
The ever-important timing that Burton mentioned is something Kaulig has focused on as well. The organization has expanded to three full-season Xfinity Series teams for 2021, and the group is wading into Cup Series waters with a part-time effort expected to grow into a full-fledged ride at NASCAR’s top level.
Burton has a measure of Cup Series experience, but so do Allmendinger and Haley, who have registered premier series wins. The team also has Kaz Grala in its system, and the 22-year-old will attempt the Daytona 500 and other Cup Series starts this season.
“I think every driver we have, we say can go further along with us,” Rice said when asked about Burton’s prospects for a return to Cup. “We don’t look at any of them that this is a one-year deal or this is just for this year. We look at them that we would love for them to grow with us and continue to make Kaulig Racing better and where we want it to be, and I think Jeb’s one of them.”
All the while, Burton has remained true to his identity both as a racer and an avid outdoorsman. Both interests are now documented in a MyOutdoorTV series called “Crossroads with the Burtons,” a show that focuses on Jeb, his wife Brandi and father Ward. And the family’s works with the Ward Burton Wildlife Foundation continue with land management and its programs that connect with military veterans and educational outreach.
Crossroads is an apt title for where Jeb Burton is now on both fronts. In recent years, his father had placed some of his personal pursuits on the back burner to nurture partnerships for his son’s racing efforts. Ward Burton is now able to dial back those engagements as his son’s new opportunity approaches; as Rice says, now he’s ours — the reward for years of grinding and putting in a solid day’s work.
“It’s still emotional. It’s been a long ride, man,” Ward Burton says, making a nod to their tearful reaction to last fall’s career move. “We’ve exhausted just about every resource. I took off almost two years and made this career Jeb wanted a priority in my life, and everything else just came second. I finally just had to step away a little bit because it was going to kill me. Those emotions were real and they still are now.”
A thunderstorm pelted Talladega Superspeedway at just the right time for Jeb Burton.
After a seven-car wreck on the backstretch, Burton held the lead under caution when the rain intensified. After NASCAR brought the Xfinity Series cars to pit road, the clouds opened and made a first-time winner of No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet driver.
Burton’s win in Saturday’s Ag-Pro 300 was the third straight at Talladega for Kaulig Racing, which swept last year’s two events with driver Justin Haley.
“Unbelievable, man,” said Burton, son of 2002 Daytona 500 winner Ward Burton. “It’s been a tough road to get to this point. Just an unbelievable race team. Today we had Mother Nature on our side, but we had a fast car anyway. We ran up front all day …
“We’ve been building and building and building, and I feel like I’ve kind of been the weak link the last couple of races, and I need to clean some things up. Just the momentum — that’s what I needed … I want to win races. I told them (Kaulig Racing) that I wanted to come there and hang banners.”
The wreck on the backstretch on Lap 85 of a scheduled 113 destroyed the cars of Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Brandon Jones and Ty Dillon and ended the last green-flag run of the race. Michael Annett spun off the bumper of Joe Graf Jr.’s car, igniting a seven-car accident that brought out the fourth and final caution of the afternoon.
Dillon’s Toyota was knocked up the track into the Supra of Jones, as both cars sustained severe damage.
The first two 25-lap stages ran without incident. Haley surged into the lead on the final lap of Stage 1 and beat Burton to the stripe to score the NASCAR Playoffs point.
The second stage went to Noah Gragson, who moved past Austin Cindric on Lap 50 to get the green-white-checkered flag.
Series leader Cindric finished second in the race, followed by AJ Allmendinger, Riley Herbst and Ryan Sieg. Sixth-place Gragson pocketed the $100,000 Xfinity Dash 4 Cash bonus for the second straight race as the highest finisher among four eligible drivers.
“A hundred thousand dollars is a big deal for us,” Gragson said. “This is two times in a row. It’s pretty cool to be able to do that, but, man, I wanted to race for the win… A hundred thousand’s nice, but I race for wins. It is what it is. It’s ‘Dega, baby.”
Burton, Cindric, Allmendinger and Gragson all qualify for the next round of the Dash 4 Cash on May 8 at Darlington Raceway (1 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM).
Cindric, the reigning series champion, leaves Talladega with a 59-point lead in the standings over second-place Daniel Hemric, who ran 12th Saturday.
NOTE: The race winning No. 10 Kaulig Racing Chevrolet of Jeb Burton passed NASCAR’s post-race inspection. There were no other issues.