Tyler Reddick took his turn behind the wheel of the Next Gen car during a two-day Goodyear tire test Tuesday and Wednesday at Darlington Raceway.

Reddick, who drives the No. 8 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet, is in his second season in the NASCAR Cup Series but this marked his first time driving the Next Gen car.

PHOTOS: Scenes from the Next Gen test at Darlington

“I heard how much different this car was, and I wanted to see it for myself,” Reddick said. “Darlington is one of the top 3-4 most challenging tracks we get around. It might be the most difficult. This track in turns 1-2 is different than 3-4. I really wanted to get to drive this car and see what this thing’s like at a track that I’m comfortable at. I have a good understanding of this track, and what it takes to get rubbered in and what direction to go to hopefully find us the best tire.”

The Next Gen car features 18-inch wheels as opposed to the 15-inch wheels that are currently used in the Cup Series. The workhorse P3 prototype was used for the test at Darlington.

Given Reddick’s propensity to run the high line at high-wear tracks, it’s worth asking if he had gotten the first Next Gen Darlington Stripe. Day 1 went without incident, but Reddick’s final run of the day Wednesday ended with slight right-side damage.

“Well, the Lady in Black bit me,” Reddick said on Twitter, recounting details of his 360-degree spin and contact with the retaining wall. “It’s definitely a lot harder to hold onto these cars than what I was used to in the sixth-gen.”

NASCAR Managing Director of Vehicle Systems, R&D, Brandon Thomas, says Tuesday that the goal is to leave the test with Goodyear having enough information to be able to make a decision on the tire for next year’s events with the Next Gen car on track.

“There’s a reverence for the track that is Darlington,” Thomas said. “So when you take a brand-new car, and you bring it to a track with this much history, you want to make sure the car respects the track. Reddick got out one time and was like, ‘This still drives like Darlington.’ And that to me is important.

“We want the car to come here and still slide around, still have to play with the throttle, still have to play the track, and that’s exactly what Reddick said it did.”

This week’s test marks the first appearance at the historic South Carolina track for the Next Gen model, which is scheduled for its official competition debut in the 2022 NASCAR Cup Series. Manufacturer-specific Next Gen cars also tested last week at Martinsville Speedway, gathering data with wheel-force transducers.

Also on Wednesday, NASCAR officials announced that the three automakers’ Next Gen entries for 2022 will get their full unveiling in Charlotte on May 5.

As the Next Gen car inches toward its 2022 competition debut in the NASCAR Cup Series, a full look at the models from each of the sport’s three manufacturers is also closing in.

The three Next Gen entries will be unveiled May 5 in Charlotte, North Carolina. The automakers’ three models took their first turns on the track last week at Martinsville Speedway, but in a closed test and with busy, camouflaged paint schemes to disguise their appearance. In addition to the new race car bodies, specs and elements of the new car also will be announced.

RELATED: Next Gen scenes at Darlington

It’s the next phase in the car’s timeline, moving past the development phase and into tire testing and eventually organizational tests. Wednesday’s announcement dovetailed with Tyler Reddick’s track time in the P3 prototype this week at Darlington Raceway, working with Goodyear officials to determine tire combinations.

Nearly two weeks after their post-race fisticuffs at Atlanta Motor Speedway, Noah Gragson would still like to discuss the incident with Daniel Hemric.

To refresh your memory, the two drivers tangled during a late-race pit stop in the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at the 1.54-mile Georgia track. Hemric overshot his pit stall, which slowed up Gragson’s entry into his respective stall just ahead. Gragson showed Hemric a middle-finger gesture, then entered his stall at an awkward angle, which forced him to back up to get in a better position. Gragson then backed up the No. 9 JR Motorsports Chevrolet into Hemric’s No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota while Hemric’s car was being serviced.

Hemric confronted Gragson on pit road after the race, which led to punches thrown by both parties.

RELATED: Noah Gragson, Daniel Hemric mix it up in Atlanta fight

Hemric felt Gragson’s move was intentional, but NASCAR officials determined no penalty would be handed down to Gragson as a result of the incident.

“Oh yeah, crammed it into reverse and backed up,” Hemric said at the time. “Punched a hole in the nose of our car. Punched a hole in our car and I got one punched in his eye. We’re even.”

Although Hemric thinks they’re square, it’s Gragson who still wants to have a conversation before the series heads to Martinsville Speedway for Friday night’s Cook Out 250 (8 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Gragson also explained why he wanted to wait until this week to pick up the phone.

“I’m going to call him in the next day or two,” Gragson said on Wednesday. “For me right now, I took a little bit of a break for Easter. I kind of wanted to reset my mind. I didn’t want to jump into anything too premature. I wanted emotions in check. I wanted to kind of give it a few days or a week to cool off. Emotions are high, tempers are high right after the fact.”

RELATED: Exclusive angle of Noah Gragson, Daniel Hemric fight

Gragson and Hemric are fairly familiar with each other after being teammates at JR Motorsports in 2020 before Hemric moved to a full-time ride at Joe Gibbs Racing. Although a relationship between the two drivers may never be the same, Gragson has no hard feelings toward Hemric after exchanging jabs.

“With that being said, I think Daniel is a good guy. “… We’ve been to lunch together. I’ve seen him around at dinner and whatnot. I have no hard feelings toward Daniel or anyone else in the Xfinity garage. But at the same time, I need to keep a job and I need to race as hard as I can.”

See where your favorite driver will pit in the Blue-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway (resumes Sunday at 4 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

“Lost Speedways” with Dale Earnhardt Jr. will return for a second season this summer on Peacock, the soon-to-be NASCAR Hall of Famer revealed on his “The Dale Jr. Download” podcast on Tuesday.

The second season, which will be available on Peacock — an OTT-streaming service owned by NBCUniversal, will consist of eight episodes. Season 1 debuted last summer with eight episodes.

RELATED: Dale Jr. through the years

In a release announcing the second season, Earnhardt said, “We’re excited to bring you a second season of that show. We were so happy with the response from season one. We’ve got a whole new batch of really unique race tracks. Going to these places produced some incredible experiences. I just can’t wait for you to see them.”

The show documents Dale Jr.’s passion, exploration and historical look at race tracks around the country that are now desolate and unused. Matthew Dillner serves as the co-host of the show.

Joey Logano has won the Busch Pole Award for Saturday night’s Blue-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 500 (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Martinsville Speedway.

Logano, the series’ most recent winner at Bristol Motor Speedway’s dirt-track event, will start his No. 22 Team Penske Ford from the pole position. The starting lineup was made official Wednesday morning.

Harrison Burton won the pole for Friday’s Cook Out 250 (8 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) in the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota. The 20-year-old driver is the most recent Xfinity winner at the .526-mile Martinsville track.

RELATED: Martinsville weekend schedule | 2021 Cup Series standings

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

Practice and qualifying are tentatively scheduled for eight Cup Series races this year. Busch Pole Qualifying was held for the season-opening Daytona 500 but 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.

After an unpredictable 2020 season, 2021 promises to bring the same excitement Modified fans have come to love.

It all starts in Virginia at Martinsville Speedway Thursday night for the Virginia Is For Racing Lovers 200 (buy tickets | watch on TrackPass). And it will wrap up Saturday, Sept. 25, at Connecticut’s Stafford Motor Speedway with the 48th Annual NAPA Auto Parts Fall Final.

In between, plenty of action and emerging stars vying for race wins and the 37th championship in tour history.


A revamped schedule

The 2021 schedule is made up of 14 races, from Maine to Virginia, highlighted by three shared Cup weekends and three new tracks.

In just two days, the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour returns to Martinsville for 200 laps in the series’ first visit to the track since 2010.

After a year away due to the pandemic, both New York’s Riverhead Raceway and Oswego Speedway are back on the schedule, each with a pair of race dates. Jennerstown Speedway in Pennsylvania, which stepped in last year as the tour season-opener, has a date this year on Memorial Day weekend.

RELATED: Whelen Modified Tour Announces 2021 Schedule

The tour heads to New Hampshire Motor Speedway in July for 100 laps as part of the Cup Series weekend.

Stafford hosts three Tour races in 2021, including the 49th Annual NAPA Auto Parts Spring Sizzler in April.

There are other tracks making a long-awaited return to the schedule, too, and another making its first foray onto the Whelen Modified Tour scene.

Richmond also brings the tour south for their September Cup weekend, and Maine’s Beech Ridge Motor Speedway will see ground-pounder action for the first time since 2005.

New York International Raceway in Lancaster will host its first race on July 31. Western New York is a traditional modified hotbed, and the track joins Oswego on the schedule.

Defending Tour champion Justin Bonsignore dealt with plenty of schedule curveballs in his 2020 title run. And 2021 isn’t a concern for him.

“I welcome the new tracks,” Bonsignore said. “Any time a new facility is willing to host the Modified Tour, that’s a huge thing and we really appreciate the racetracks that are on the schedule this year with all the uncertainties of COVID. For them to take on the task of hosting a Tour race, that’s really, really cool.”

Chasing down the champs

The biggest question mark coming into 2021 in terms of competition: Who is going to stop the juggernaut that is Bonsignore and the No. 51 Phoenix Communications Chevrolet team?

It’s one of the greatest runs of success in Modified history. They’ve finished in the top 10 in 20 straight races and inside the top five 15 consecutive times, streaks that date back to June and August of 2019. Last year, Bonsignore’s average finish of 2.7 set the all-time record for best average finish by any Whelen Modified Tour champion.

Ron Silk was one of the hottest drivers in the series in the back half of the 2020 season. After the No. 85 team withdrew from the August race at Jennerstown, the 2011 tour champion tore off five top-three finishes including two wins to wrap up the year.

While he didn’t win a race in 2020, Jon McKennedy rallied late in the season to finish second in the standings in his first full-time season. Working with Tommy Baldwin, McKennedy was the only driver besides Bonsignore to finish all nine races inside the top 10. McKennedy’s average finish of 5.6 was far and away the best of his tour career.

Of course, it would be silly to count out six-time Tour champion Doug Coby. In his first year as an owner-driver, Coby won a race at New Hampshire’s White Mountain Motorsports Park, making 2020 the 10th straight season he won a race; That tops all other active drivers. Coby also scored two poles en route to a third-place points finish.

A 22nd in the season-finale at Thompson was the only time Coby failed to score a top-10 all year.

Coby was the only driver to keep within striking distance of Bonsignore in points. With championship No. 7 at stake, Coby will almost certainly be in the title discussion down the stretch.

And don’t forget about Craig Lutz. Lutz won a pair of races in 2020. In doing so, Lutz became one of three drivers, along with Bonsignore and Silk, to win multiple races last season. More consistency from Lutz would vault him into serious championship contention. Considering the steps that the No. 46 team took in 2019 and 2020, Lutz appears ready to do just that.

For their part, the No. 51 Ken Massa-owned team finished building a new car this offseason that will make its debut at Martinsville. They plan to use it alongside their other chassis that have led the Tour in wins the last three seasons.

“We have a program in our team where we rotate cars based on the schedule,” Bonsignore said. “I’m sure we’ll continue to do that this year as well, but we’re just looking to see how this new car debuts. If it’s really successful, we’ll probably use it more than we expect to.”

Craig Lutz, driver of the #46 Riverhead Bld Chevrolet,  before the White Mountain Showdown 200 for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at White Mountain Motorsports Park in North Woodstock, New Hampshire on Saturday, August 1, 2020. (Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)
Craig Lutz, driver of the #46 Riverhead Building Supplies Chevrolet, won a pair of races last year and is expected to be a championship contender in 2021. (Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)

Fans back in the stands

When the Modifieds take the green flag at Martinsville, the grandstands will be open at 30 percent capacity. That will give the tour its largest crowd since the 2019 season.

Connecticut currently allows racetracks to operate at 50 percent capacity, meaning another robust crowd when the series heads north to Stafford for the Spring Sizzler.

The 2021 Whelen Modified Tour season will be decidedly more normal than a year ago. It’s something that Bonsignore looks forward to as things begin to open up over the course of the spring and summer.

“The fact that we can go to a big facility like Martinsville and have a 30 percent capacity, that’s great for our series,” Bonsignore said. That would be an awesome crowd.”

Bonsignore’s victory at the season-opener at Jennerstown last May underscored to him what fans mean to a raceday atmosphere, when he got out of his car to complete silence in front of an empty grandstand.

“You always realize how important fans are, but when they’re not there at all, it just really is eye-opening,” Bonsignore said.

“We definitely miss the fans being at the racetrack. Whether they’re cheering or booing for you, they’re just diehards about our series. To me, that’s what makes the Modified Tour so special.”

The 2021 Whelen Modified Tour season is just about here. It’s going to be one heck of a ride.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Daytona International Speedway today announced Frank Kelleher, an experienced industry veteran, has been appointed President of Daytona International Speedway. Concurrently, NASCAR announced that Chip Wile has been promoted to a new expansive role overseeing 13 NASCAR-owned tracks as Senior Vice President, Chief Track Properties Officer.

In his previous role as NASCAR Senior Vice President and Chief Sales Officer, Kelleher oversaw a team responsible for business strategy and revenue generation. His team played a critical role in driving both media and partnership sales for NASCAR and its tracks. Kelleher helped secure the founding sponsorships to Daytona International Speedway’s highly visible injectors. As only the ninth track president in DIS history, Kelleher is well-suited to step into this important position.

“For nearly two decades, Frank has demonstrated the ability to foster meaningful relationships and lead critical areas of our business,” said Lesa France Kennedy, Executive Vice Chairperson, NASCAR. “He is a dedicated member of the greater Daytona Beach community, a true team-builder, and most importantly, he has a deep-rooted passion for motorsports and promoting the fan experience. We are incredibly excited to have Frank leading Daytona International Speedway.”

“I am incredibly honored to take on this historic role and represent the most iconic motorsports venue in the world,” said Kelleher. “Our race fans are what makes working in motorsports so special and I’m excited to work with the tremendous team at Daytona International Speedway to continue to deliver a best-in-class racing experience for our fans locally, nationally and around the globe.”

As President of DIS, Wile successfully oversaw promotion and operation of the most famous and iconic venue in motorsports. From his first major event, the Country 500 over Memorial Day weekend in 2016, to leading the industry through a revised Speedweeks in 2021, Wile has pushed innovation and fan engagement at every turn. Prior to Daytona, Wile was the President of Darlington Raceway, spearheading a five-year strategy to reinvent the track experience, including the successful introduction of the now widely celebrated Throwback race weekend.

“Chip has played a tremendous role in guiding the success of two of our flagship racetracks in Daytona International Speedway and Darlington Raceway,” said NASCAR President, Steve Phelps. “Always looking to deliver for our incredible fans, Chip’s constant desire to improve and drive innovation will serve our sport well in this new and important leadership role.”

“Serving the community of race fans, our industry and the France family as President of Daytona International Speedway has been the greatest honor of my career,” said Wile. “I look forward to working with our team of talented track presidents as we continue to elevate the fan experience and deliver lifetime memories every time someone sets foot on our track properties.”

Both Kelleher and Wile will assume their new roles effective immediately.

Daytona International Speedway’s next scheduled major motorsports weekend is a NASCAR doubleheader Aug. 27-28, featuring the Coke Zero Sugar 400 and the Wawa 250 Powered by Coca-Cola. The Coke Zero Sugar 400, Aug. 28, returns as the Regular Season Finale for the NASCAR Cup Series, and will be held under the lights on the famed high banks. With only 16 Playoff spots up for grabs, anything could happen as the stage is set for NASCAR to crown a Champion.

Tickets for the Wawa 250 Powered by Coca-Cola, the Coke Zero Sugar 400 and other speedway events can be purchased online at www.daytonainternationalspeedway.com or by calling 1-800-PITSHOP. Fans can stay connected with Daytona International Speedway and see the latest speedway news on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

Buffalo Bills running back Antonio Williams has always been fascinated with fast cars. But over the past year, he’s become involved in stock-car racing and his investment is growing at a rapid pace.

While honing his skills on the gridiron as a rookie in the NFL, Williams watched the progression NASCAR made in 2020, fighting against social injustices in the United States. He believes that will open the doors for new owners – some of color – to enter the sport, diversifying the product even more.

“[If] you look at basketball and football, the biggest separation between those sports is that there is not just one demographic that watches it; everyone watches those sports,” Williams recently told NASCAR.com. “What NASCAR is doing is opening the door for that type of demographic and for everyone to be a fan of it now.”

Williams has been a fan of NASCAR since he was an infant, watching races with his grandfather, James Williams, whose favorite driver was Bill Elliott. Though he can’t remember his exact age, the North Carolina native attended his first race at Charlotte Motor Speedway approximately 15 years ago, cheering on Tony Stewart.

But when Williams’ grandfather died last summer, the 23-year-old wanted to honor his legacy. That prompted him to send out a tweet on Sept. 10, 2020, asking if anyone had any “NASCAR connections,” and that “I’d love to get involved with it in the future.”

With 323 replies, one in particular stuck out: Nate Blasdell, the business manager for Joe Graf Jr., who spends a chunk of his time in Rochester, N.Y., a stone’s throw away from Buffalo. Two days later, the two had lunch at a Texas Roadhouse in Rochester, sharing a conversation that sparked Williams’ interest in working with Graf and his current team, SS Green Light Racing.

At the same time, there was common ground between Williams and Graf through sports psychologist Desaree Festa. Before taking a job with the Bills, Festa was based out of Charlotte, working with several race teams and even Graf.

“I still kept in touch and worked with [Festa] through last year,” Graf said. “She spoke extraordinarily high of [Williams] and he was looking to get into NASCAR. She put us together and we’ve hit it off really well.”

Williams believes he and Graf were destined to meet, ultimately working together in NASCAR.

“I definitely believe me going to Buffalo and meeting [Festa], meeting up with Joe and all of this is happening for a reason,” he said. “I think it’s led for early success in NASCAR for sure.”

Shortly after the Bills’ loss in the AFC Championship game to the Kansas City Chiefs in January, Williams and Graf met in person for the first time at the team’s race shop in Mooresville, N.C. It was a fit from the start.

“When we met in person, it was the same,” Williams added. “There was a great connection, and we both have the same mindset of wanting to be great in our respective sport. I definitely want to help him out in his.”

Since then, Graf said he and Williams speak daily, forming a bond away from the business. The two have spent time at Graf’s house, while Williams is trying to attend as many race weekends as he can before training camp begins this summer.

Just before the 2021 Xfinity Series went green at Daytona International Speedway, Williams announced that he had become an investor in Graf’s racing career to help form relationships. That meant he would focus on helping recruit sponsorship to the No. 07 team to help Graf be more competitive on the race track.

On the racing front, Graf has gotten off to a much better start than his rookie season in 2020. Through six races, Graf sits 18th in the championship standings, five positions higher than at this point last year.

RELATED: Xfinity Series standings

Graf, a business, media and sports management major at New York University, is open to having all the help he can to find additional sponsors. Thus far, Z Grills and Hazheart.com have joined the team, along with Bucked Up Energy returning for the bulk of the 2021 season. The duo is in discussion with multiple other partners that could potentially join the No. 07 team.

Christian Petersen | Getty Images
Christian Petersen | Getty Images

“[Williams] has helped so much on the business side of it,” Graf noted. “I don’t think people realize how involved he really is. He’s helped close on a lot of sponsorship deals. He’s helped start a lot of conversations with sponsors we’re talking to now.”

Williams said he believes being part of another sport can also help sell sponsorship.

“The NFL logo, for me, can get us into a lot more doors and that’s beneficial,” Williams said. “It’s whatever I need to do on the sponsorship side. I’m mostly on the business side helping Joe with whatever needs to be done as far as sponsorships, promotional deals and all that type of stuff.”

Unlike Graf, Williams was a psychology major at the University of North Carolina with no previous marketing background. However, he believes his ability to connect with people and motivate them – especially useful in football – is what can help sell sponsors.

Williams said, “I know the way you can sell is by allowing people to see your vision and your dream and understand their vision and their dream and meeting at that halfway point. When you have two sides working for one common goal, it typically works. That’s what has been helping us out and I think that’s what is going to continue progressing us in the future.”

But over the years, many investors in racing have come and gone. New teams have opened, spent a boatload of money and shut down a handful of years later.

Graf believes it’s different with Williams.

“I feel like Antonio is here for the long haul,” Graf added. “He’s got a lot of ambitions within the sport, and the big thing is, Antonio isn’t putting a massive amount of money in up front like a lot of these investors do. We’re building a sponsorship portfolio that creates value.”

Currently, Williams is enjoying the role of being an investor. But his ultimate goal in NASCAR is to become a team owner.

He believes that would fulfill his destiny of honoring his grandfather’s legacy.

“At first, I didn’t know what I wanted to do with NASCAR,” Williams said. “I’m so competitive, I want to be the best in anything that I do, and potentially owning a team would give me the opportunity to do things the way that I would want to do it, exactly that way and potentially be very competitive.

“I think it would be fun and great to have owners of diversity within the sport, other owners of diversity. I think putting myself in that position would be good for my grandfather’s legacy and the sport in general.”

Being a realist, Graf wants to keep his expectations limited, but believes his SS Green Light Racing team can be the best of the teams running within similar budgets.

“My goal is to be in the top 15 in points,” Graf stated. “It’s kind of an outside shot of us making the playoffs unless maybe a win at a superspeedway race or something like that. I definitely want to be the best of that second tier of cars.”

But what’s next for this duo?

“If we just keep stacking days,” Williams said. “Stacking days and getting better each day. I don’t want to say what the next step is because I don’t know, I just know that we’ll try to get better every day. I think the sky is the limit at this point.”

Seven races, seven faces. The NASCAR Cup Series’ cast of winners this season is so far a list of one-timers, with a unique face gracing Victory Lane each weekend.

Michael McDowell and Christopher Bell started the trend with their first career Cup Series triumphs in back-to-back weeks at Daytona. Since then we’ve had no repeaters, and the list of “win and in” playoff hopefuls has gotten more and more crowded.

RELATED: Martinsville weekend schedule

So, who might be able to keep the streak going this weekend? Martinsville Speedway, one of NASCAR’s original tracks, is next up on the schedule with the  Blue-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 500 (set to resume Sunday at 4 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM), and several former winners at the Virginia paperclip are poised to return to form.

With favorites and underdogs hoping to be in the mix, which driver stands the best chance of making it 8-for-8 for new faces on this season’s win list? NASCAR.com’s Zack Albert and Chase Wilhelm make their picks among the so-far winless.

ALBERT: Still plenty of surprises among the heavy hitters with zeros beside their names in the win column, but here’s going with last year’s hardware hoister at season’s end — Chase Elliott. The defending Cup Series champ is the most recent Martinsville Speedway winner, converting in a November romp as a springboard to his first series title a week later.

Elliott might still hold a claim for the crown when the sport’s road-course ruling class is discussed, but his record on NASCAR’s shortest paved oval is pretty stout, too. The Georgia native has notched top-five finishes in three of his last four starts at Martinsville, where his Hendrick Motorsports organization has won a stunning 25 times.

With honorable-mention nods to points leader Denny Hamlin and top 2020 winner Kevin Harvick — both of whom have Martinsville grandfather clocks in their trophy collection — the pick this week is Elliott to keep the revolving door of winners spinning.

WILHELM: Team Penske drivers have earned victories in the past two races with Ryan Blaney at Atlanta Motor Speedway and Joey Logano at the Bristol Dirt Race. It feels like it’s Brad Keselowski’s turn now.

Keselowski has been hit-or-miss in the first seven races with three top fives, while the other four have been outside the top 11. But he’s still been able to find the front on occasion with 93 laps led and four races of 31 points or better.

Although the season has been a tad too rocky for Keselowski’s liking so far, it’s his recent Martinsville performances that you can’t ignore. Keselowski has finished fifth or better in nine of the last 10 events at the Virginia short track, including two triumphs in 2017 and ’19.

So Zack, I’ll raise you Elliott’s one grandfather clock with Keselowski’s pair. The No. 2 Team Penske driver will be a favorite to add a third coveted clock to his collection to keep this different winners streak going.