Greenwich Time (Sunday)

DiBenedett­o could be out of options after losing ride

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LOUDON, N.H. — Always a popular driver, Matt DiBenedett­o won a fan vote this season that earned him the final spot in NASCAR’s All-Star race. As for the rest of his racing career? Well, wins haven’t come at all.

DiBenedett­o became a fan favorite over his sevenyear career as the underdog of underfunde­d teams — he qualified for his first Daytona 500 in 2016 in an open car — who just needed toptier equipment to prove that he could compete with the stars of the sport and even win a race or two. When he got that shot last year with Wood Brothers Racing, steady success instead never came, and DiBenedett­o is now without a ride for next season.

DiBenedett­o has no idea what’s next. He could not hide the crushing hurt in a nine-minute video he posted on social media where he vented his frustratio­n at losing yet another ride.

“I’m here to win in the Cup Series,” he said. “I am going to.”

Time could be running short.

DiBenedett­o had known since October he was losing his ride in the No. 21 Ford at the end of the season, but perhaps false hope of a reprieve grew when Brad Keselowski decided to leave Team Penske for Roush Fenway Racing. Austin Cindric was slotted for the ride at Wood Brothers, which essentiall­y operates as a fourth Penske car, but got the nod instead to replace Keselowski. DiBenedett­o’s seat will now go to Xfinity Series driver Harrison Burton.

Wood Brothers co-owner

Eddie Wood said he wanted a rookie to team with Cindric as NASCAR ushers in a new car in 2022.

“Those two guys could work together and develop themselves into great race car drivers,” Wood said. “Being rookies, they’re both on the same level and this new car is such a white sheet of paper that even if you’re a veteran, if you’re a 20-year veteran, you’re really not going to have a lot on a rookie.”

DiBenedett­o had held out hope that Keselowski’s departure gave him a chance to keep his ride, but in the end the statistics didn’t support his cause. Although he did qualify for the playoffs last year for the first time, he’s winless and has just 27 top-10 finishes in 233 career starts.

At the track where the winner gets a lobster, DiBenedett­o has an outside chance to claw his way into the playoff picture beginning Sunday at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

“In our eyes, we’re not done,” Wood said. “There are five races left before the playoffs. We’re gonna try to win a race and get in the playoffs.”

DiBenedett­o will hit the free-agent market without a sponsor, and minus the funding necessary to entice a team owner to take him, he could be sitting out the Cup Series in 2022. DiBenedett­o said this week he didn’t want to drop down to the second-tier Xfinity Series or drive in the Truck Series.

The No. 21 team made a

crew chief change in June with Jonathan Hassler taking over for Greg Erwin, which resulted in modest improvemen­t. DiBenedett­o finished 10th and ninth in his last two races.

“Our team is clicking,” DiBenedett­o said. “Finally. But guess what? It’s too late. I know it’s going to work out like it’s supposed to, but I’m just expressing my frustratio­n with the way it is.“

So where he could go? There are few options with most seats for 2022 already secured. 23XI Racing has discussed adding a second car and 2004 champion Kurt Busch, last week’s winner at Atlanta, could be in the mix for that spot. Richard Petty Motorsport­s has yet to pick up the option on Erik Jones’ contract.

GMS Racing is making the move from the Truck Series to Cup in 2022, and Kaulig Racing might have a spot open, leaving a door cracked for DiBenedett­o.

KEZ ON THE MOVE

Keselowski, the defending New Hampshire race winner, is trying to win one more lobster for team owner Roger Penske. Keselowski and Penske officially confirmed this week they were splitting up at the end of the season. Cindric was named driver of the flagship No. 2 for 2022. Keselowski left because he wanted an ownership stake in his race team. Roush Fenway Racing announced it had scheduled “a major announceme­nt next week regarding the team’s plans for the future,” at the NASCAR Hall of

Fame and Keselowski should be named driver and part owner on Tuesday.

Keselowski is set to become the latest active or recently retired driver with an ownership stake, joining Denny Hamlin and Justin Marks, among others.

“I think these drivers don’t want to drive forever,” Penske said. “They want to have equity. They have knowledge and I think the team owners and other people do, so I think it’s a changing of the guard maybe in the industry.”

PITBULL’S ACTIVISM

Pitbull, co-owner of Trackhouse Racing, will place decals of the Cuban flag and the words “Support Freedom” in both English and Spanish on the No. 99 Chevrolet driven by Daniel

Suarez. Pitbull, the CubanAmeri­can entertaine­r, asked people to “stand up, step up” their support in the wake of protests that erupted last weekend in Cuba. Many expressed anger over long lines and shortages of food and medicines, as well as repeated electricit­y outages. Some demanded a faster pace of vaccinatio­n against COVID-19.

ODDS AND ENDS

Denny Hamlin and Kyle Larson are 5-1 favorites to win Sunday, according to FanDuel Sportsbook. Kyle Busch, at 7-1, starts on the pole. … New Hampshire, which used to have two NASCAR weekends, is running its 50th Cup race. … Joe Gibbs Racing has finished first or second in 14 of the last 15 races

 ?? Sean Gardner / Getty Images ?? Matt DiBenedett­o drives during the NASCAR Cup Series Quaker State 400 presented by Walmart at Atlanta Motor Speedway on July 11 in Hampton, Ga.
Sean Gardner / Getty Images Matt DiBenedett­o drives during the NASCAR Cup Series Quaker State 400 presented by Walmart at Atlanta Motor Speedway on July 11 in Hampton, Ga.

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