9-28-22 roundup: Pro basketball, football and soccer, High school football, Middle school football and softball, College football and baseball, Auto racing
By Richard Walker
When Crest visits South Point on Friday, it’ll again be a game with huge Big South 3A Conference title implications.

It also reminds us of one of the first huge football meetings between the two schools that came on a day when another sport shined just as brightly.
When Crest played and hosted its first state playoff game on Nov. 16, 1973, it had to share billing with a N.C. State Red-White intrasquad scrimmage featuring the homecoming of Crest’s most acclaimed alumnus, David Thompson.
The intrasquad scrimmage was slated months earlier, was moved up be played before the 8 p.m. football game.
With a capacity crowd of 2,000 – almost all of whom left the Crest gym and headed straight to the football playoff game – a Red team led by Tommy Burleson outscored Thompson’s White team 107-89 as both scored 29 points each.
Four months later, Thompson and Burleson and their N.C. State teammates ended UCLA’s seven-year reign as NCAA champion by knocking off the Bruins in the Final Four semifinals then beating Marquette in the title game.
As the returning hero on that Friday night in November, Thompson was showered with honors before the game as he received certificates and recognition from the Shelby Rotary Club, the Shelby Board of Aldermen, the Cleveland County Board of Commissioners and Shelby mayor Hubert Plaster.
“Since I’ve been receiving all those awards, I’d like to give something to this area,” Thompson told the crowd of presenting the $750 check he received from the Lifesaver Candy Corporation for being named MVP in the World University Games in Moscow in the summer of 1973.
Due to NCAA rules of the time, Thompson couldn’t accept the check so he donated it to the Cleveland County Boys Club in Shelby.
“This is a small token of my appreciation to for the people at Crest and in Cleveland County who have helped me so much,” Thompson said.
Later that night, unbeaten South Point beat Crest 20-7 in the Chargers’ first state playoff game as Don James scored two touchdowns to lead the Red Raiders to a 20-7 victory. Future N.C. State football player Jim Stowe scored South Point’s other touchdown on a pass from Doug Davis.
Crest, which finished 8-2-1, had advanced to Southwestern Conference title game of the old Western N.C. Activities Association by virtue of an overtime over Shelby after the teams had tied 14-all in regulation time earlier in the season. Per rules of the era, the game was and is still considered a tie.
South Point would tie Watauga the following week 8-all in regulation but lost 8-6 in overtime in a contest that also remains listed as a tie; It marks the second and last time, the Red Raiders have finished a season with an unbeaten mark (11-0-1) as South Point won the 1971 WNCHSAA co-championship with a 12-0-1 record.
Here’s a look at Friday’s other games for Cleveland, Gaston and Lincoln counties:
Ashbrook at North Gaston: Ashbrook leads the series 24-3 including a 47-20 win last year.
Bessemer City at Burns: Burns leads the series 5-0 including a 42-0 win last year.
Bunker Hill at West Lincoln: Bunker Hill leads the series 35-15 including a 15-7 win last year.
Cramer at Huss: Huss leads the series 6-2, but Cramer won 33-8 last year.
East Gaston at Thomas Jefferson: East Gaston won 42-37 last year in the first meeting between the teams.
Highland Tech at Shelby: Shelby won 72-0 last year in the first meeting between the teams.
Kings Mountain at Forestview: Kings Mountain leads the series 13-11 including 28-14 last year.
Lincolnton at Bandys: Lincolnton leads the series 9-6-1 including 27-7 last year.
North Iredell at North Lincoln: North Lincoln leads the series 9-0 including 50-0 last year.
West Iredell at East Lincoln: East Lincoln leads the series 4-1 including 45-0 last year.
Off – Cherryville
(This week’s other area games:)
-Thursday
Statesville at Foard
St. Stephens at Hickory
East Burke at Newton-Conover
Maiden at West Caldwell
Hopewell at West Charlotte
West Meck at Hough
Mallard Creek at North Meck
Kell at Myers Park
Harding at Berry Academy
Olympic at Palisades
East Meck at Butler
Rocky River at Catholic
Independence at Garinger
Mooresville at Providence
Hendersonville at Chase
Patton at East Rutherford
Polk County at R-S Central
-Friday
Nation Ford, S.C. at Clover, S.C.
(Cleveland/Gaston/Lincoln individual statistical leaders)
All with 200 or more yards
Passing
Daylin Lee, Shelby 1701
Ny’Tavious Huskey, Crest 1388
Justin Rocquemore, Cramer 1256
Ben Mauney, Burns 1163
Jameer Holmes, Bessemer City 942
Tyler Mizzell, East Lincoln 892
Trent Sherrill, East Gaston 764
Lamont Littlejohn, Kings Mtn 759
Jaxson Hill, Forestview 614
Andre Bost, Lincolnton 567
Chase Miller, Cherryville 476
Tiger Coffin, Mtn Isl Charter 345
Conner Carson, North Lincoln 248
T.J. Belton, North Gaston 216
Rushing
Mason Avery, West Lincoln 984
Cam Medlock, South Point 644
Nehemiah Stovall, East Gaston 522
Jaylin Winnex, West Lincoln 515
Christopher Daley, East Lincoln 506
Jeremiah Norris, Burns 463
Cody Morse, North Lincoln 454
Patrick Blee, South Point 450
Aiden Carson, Crest 369
Justin Rocquemore, Cramer 360
Ny’Tavious Huskey, Crest 341
Terrance Smith, Bessemer City 319
Bricen Kee, Shelby 314
Christian Holland, Forestview 314
Nate Eaton, Mtn Isl Charter 284
Khamoni Heath, Lincolnton 263
J.J. Gordon, North Gaston 261
Mark O’Dell, Cramer 240
Caleb Holland, Kings Mountain 233
Teddy Jeffries, Kings Mountain 221
Chase Miller, Cherryville 215
Ben Summey, East Gaston 212
Dawson Tobin, South Point 200
Receiving
Javarius Green, Crest 751
Izay Bridges, Shelby 659
Ja’Keith Hamilton, Shelby 540
Isaiah Johnson, Cramer 413
Jvontre Duff, Bessemer City 399
Randall Pettus, Bessemer City 377
Tyler Ward, Cramer 374
Ryan Thompson, Burns 297
Markel Clark, East Lincoln 297
Andrew Phelps, Lincolnton 286
Eli Falls, Shelby 284
Keandre Walker, East Lincoln 284
Kahari Surratt, Burns 259
Sirr Stovall, East Gaston 248
Malachi Addison, Crest 238
Hunter Dye, Cramer 224
Nathan Aguilar, Forestview 203
JaQualyn Sanders, Kings Mountain 201
Here are the standings through Sept. 23 with conference records followed by overall records:
(Big South 3A)
Kings Mountain 2-0, 5-0
South Point 2-0, 5-0
Crest 2-0, 4-1
Forestview 2-0, 3-2
Cramer 0-2, 2-3
Ashbrook 0-2, 1-4
Huss 0-2, 1-4
North Gaston 0-2, 0-5
(Southern Piedmont 1A/2A)
Shelby 2-0, 3-3
Bessemer City 2-0, 2-4
Burns 1-0, 4-1
East Gaston 1-0, 3-2
Cherryville 0-2, 2-4
Thomas Jefferson 0-2, 0-5
Highland Tech 0-2, 0-6
(Western Foothills 3A)
East Lincoln 2-0, 5-0
St. Stephens 2-0, 3-2
Hickory 1-1, 3-2
Statesville 1-1, 2-3
North Iredell 1-1, 1-4
West Iredell 1-1, 1-4
Foard 0-2, 0-5
North Lincoln 0-2, 0-5
(Catawba Valley 2A)
Bunker Hill 2-0, 5-0
Maiden 2-0, 4-1
West Lincoln 1-1, 4-1
Bandys 1-1, 2-3
Lincolnton 1-1, 2-3
Newton-Conover 1-1, 2-3
East Burke 0-2, 1-4
West Caldwell 0-2, 0-5
(Queen City 3A/4A)
Hough 2-0, 4-1
Mallard Creek 2-0, 4-2
Chambers 1-1, 4-2
West Charlotte 1-1, 3-3
North Meck 0-1, 3-2
Hopewell 0-1, 2-3
West Meck 0-2, 4-2
(Southern Meck 4A)
South Meck 2-0, 4-2
Myers Park 2-0, 2-4
Olympic 1-0, 5-0
Kell 1-0, 4-1
Palisades 0-2, 1-4
Berry Academy 0-2, 1-5
Harding 0-2, 1-5
(Southwestern 4A)
Butler 2-0, 5-1
Catholic 2-0, 4-1
Rocky River 1-0, 2-3
East Meck 1-1, 2-4
Independence 0-1, 4-1
Providence 0-2, 2-3
Garinger 0-2, 0-6
(Others)
Mtn Isl Charter 0-2, 2-2
Chase 1-0, 5-0
East Rutherford 0-2, 1-5
R-S Central 0-2, 2-4
Lk Nor Charter …, 3-3
College baseball
Gastonia’s CaroMont Health Park will host the 2023, 2024 and 2025 Conference Carolinas postseason tournaments for a league that includes Belmont Abbey College.

The home of the Gastonia Honey Hunters of the Atlantic League of Professional Baseball, the ballpark opened in 2021 and has already hosted Honey Hunters games, local high school games and Gaston College baseball games in its brief history.
The 2023 event will be held from May 3-8.
“It is always of top priority for all in Conference Carolinas to work collaboratively to find first-class facilities that can host our championships,” Conference Carolinas Commissioner Chris Colvin said in a news release. “We fully believe that we have accomplished our goal and much more with our upcoming Baseball Championship being held at CaroMont Health Park. We have arguably the best Division II baseball conference in the country and our collaboration with FUSE, the City of Gastonia and Gaston County Tourism Development will allow us to properly showcase our top-notch baseball student-athletes in May of 2023.”
Eight teams advance to the tournament, with two single-elimination games eliminating two teams to create a six-team double-elimination format for a league whose 2022 champion, North Greenville, went on to win the NCAA Division II national championship.
“We’re excited to host the Conference Carolinas Baseball Championship for the next three years at CaroMont Health Park in downtown Gastonia,” Business Development Manager for Gaston County Tourism Development Brandon Black said in a news release. “We are very thankful to the City of Gastonia and the Gastonia Honey Hunters for the partnership to support and execute a first-class championship for the student-athletes. We look forward to welcoming the teams and their fans to Gastonia for a week of championship baseball.”
Pro basketball
Here is the 2022-23 Charlotte Hornets schedule:
(Preseason)
October
2 at Boston, 1 p.m.
5 Indiana, 7 p.m.
7 Boston (at Greensboro), 7:30 p.m.
10 Washington, 7 p.m.
12 at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
(Regular season)
October
19 at San Antonio, 8 p.m.
21 New Orleans, 7 p.m.
23 at Atlanta, 5:00 p.m.
26 at New York, 7:30 p.m.
28 at Orlando, 7 p.m.
29 Golden State 7 p.m.
31 Sacramento, 7 p.m.
November
2 at Chicago, 7:30 p.m.
4 at Memphis, 8 p.m.
5 Brooklyn, 7 p.m.
7 Washington, 7 p.m.
9 Portland, 7 p.m.
10 at Miami, 7:30 p.m.
12 at Miami, 8 p.m.
14 at Orlando, 7 p.m.
16 Indiana, 7 p.m.
18 at Cleveland, 7:30 p.m.
20 at Washington, 6 p.m.
23 Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
25 Minnesota, 5 p.m.
28 at Boston, 7:30 p.m.
December
2 Washington, 7 p.m.
3 Milwaukee, 6 p.m.
5 L.A. Clippers, 7 p.m.
7 at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m.
9 New York, 7 p.m.
11 at Philadelphia, 6 p.m.
14 Detroit, 7 p.m.
16 Atlanta, 7 p.m.
18 at Denver, 8 p.m.
19 at Sacramento, 10 p.m.
21 at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.
23 at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.
26 at Portland, 10 p.m.
27 at Golden State, 10 p.m.
29 Oklahoma City, 7 p.m.
31 Brooklyn, 7 p.m.
January
2 L.A. Lakers, 7 p.m.
4 Memphis, 7 p.m.
6 at Milwaukee, 8 p.m.
8 at Indiana, 5 p.m.
10 at Toronto, 7:30 p.m.
12 at Toronto, 7:30 p.m.
14 Boston, 7 p.m.
16 Boston, 1 p.m.
18 at Houston, 8 p.m.
21 at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.
23 at Utah, 9 p.m.
24 at Phoenix, 9 p.m.
26 Chicago, 7:30 p.m.
29 Miami, 1 p.m.
31 at Milwaukee, 8 p.m.
February
2 at Chicago, 8 p.m.
3 at Detroit, 7 p.m.
5 Orlando, 1 p.m.
8 at Washington, 7 p.m.
10 at Boston, 7:30 p.m.
11 Denver, 7 p.m.
13 Atlanta, 7 p.m.
15 San Antonio, 7 p.m.
24 at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
25 Miami, 7 p.m.
27 Detroit, 7 p.m.
March
1 Phoenix, 7 p.m.
3 Orlando, 7 p.m.
5 at Brooklyn, 6 p.m.
7 at New York, 7:30 p.m.
9 at Detroit, 7 p.m.
11 Utah, 7 p.m.
12 Cleveland, 5 p.m.
14 Cleveland, 7 p.m.
17 Philadelphia, 7 p.m.
20 Indiana, 7 p.m.
23 at New Orleans, 8 p.m.
24 at Dallas, 7:30 p.m.
26 Dallas, 1 p.m.
28 at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m.
31 Chicago, 7 p.m.
April
2 Toronto, 1 p.m.
4 Toronto, 7 p.m.
7 Houston, 7 p.m.
9 at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Pro football
Here’s the full Carolina Panthers schedule for the 2022 season:
Week 1, Sept. 11, Cleveland (L 24-26)
Week 2, Sept. 18, at N.Y. Giants (L 16-19)
Week 3, Sept. 25, New Orleans (W 22-14)
Week 4, Oct. 2, Arizona, 4:05 p.m.
Week 5, Oct. 9, San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.
Week 6, Oct. 16, at L.A. Rams, 4:05 p.m.
Week 7, Oct. 23, Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Week 8, Oct. 30, at Atlanta, 1 p.m.
Week 9, Nov. 6, at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
Week 10, Nov. 9, Atlanta, 1 p.m.
Week 11, Nov. 20, at Baltimore, 1 p.m.
Week 12, Nov. 27, Denver, 1 p.m.
Week 13, Dec. 4, BYE
Week 14, Dec. 11, at Seattle, 4:25 p.m.
Week 15, Dec. 18, Pittsburgh, 1 p.m.
Week 16, Dec. 24, Detroit, 1 p.m.
Week 17, Jan. 1, at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
Week 18, Jan. 7 or 8, at New Orleans, TBD
Middle school football
GASTON COUNTY CONFERENCE
Standings through Sept. 21 with division records followed by overall records:
(Division I)
Southwest 3-0, 4-1
Holbrook 2-1, 4-1
Cramerton 2-2, 4-2
Grier 1-2, 2-3
Mount Holly 0-3, 2-3
(Division II)
Belmont 4-0, 6-0
York Chester 3-1, 3-3
Stanley 2-2, 2-3
W.C. Friday 2-2, 2-4
Bessemer City 1-3, 1-5
Chavis 0-4, 0-5
(Wednesday’s games)
Bessemer City 20, Chavis 14
Belmont 33, W.C. Friday 0
Holbrook 18, Grier 8
Cramerton 22, Mount Holly 15
York Chester 30, Stanley 0
(Oct. 5 games)
Chavis at Belmont
Mount Holly at Grier
Southwest at Holbrook
Stanley at Bessemer City
York Chester at W.C. Friday
TRI-COUNTY CONFERENCE
Standings through Sept. 22 with division records followed by overall records:
(West)
East Lincoln 2-1, 3-1
Lincolnton 2-1, 3-1
North Lincoln 2-1, 3-1
Kings Mountain 2-1, 2-2
Burns 1-2, 1-3
West Lincoln 0-3, 1-3
(East)
Crest 3-0, 4-0
Shelby 2-1, 3-1
R-S Central 1-1, 1-2
Thomas Jefferson 1-1, 1-2
East Rutherford 1-2, 1-3
Chase 0-3, 0-4
(Tuesday’s game)
Kings Mountain 28, East Lincoln 22 (2 OT)
(Wednesday’s games)
Lincolnton 28, Burns 14
Crest 57, Chase 8: Brock Melton (5 TD passes), Kalih Clark (1 TD reception), Travion Gaston (2 TD receptions), Jahmere Canaday (1 TD reception), Solomon Willis (1 TD reception), Malachi Gamble (1 TD run), Kenyon Rhône (1 TD run), Westin Baker (1 TD kickoff return), Dushaut Long (1 XP pass reception), Carson Grier (7-7 XP kicks) led the Crest offense and Duchant Long, Charlie Kennedy, Daily Williams, Paxton Dobbins and Jandre Beam led the defense.
North Lincoln 42, West Lincoln 0
R-S Central at Thomas Jefferson, no report
Shelby 38, East Rutherford 0
(Oct. 4 games)
Burns at North Lincoln
Chase at Shelby
East Lincoln at West Lincoln
East Rutherford at R-S Central
Lincolnton at Kings Mountain
Thomas Jefferson at Crest
Middle school softball
Standings through Sept. 26:
Belmont 8-0
Chavis 6-2
Stanley 6-2
W.C. Friday 5-3
Mount Holly 5-3
Bessemer City 4-4
Holbrook 4-5
Cramerton 2-6
Grier 1-7
Southwest 0-9
(Thursday’s games)
Cramerton at Chavis
W.C. Friday at Bessemer City
Grier at Belmont
Mount Holly at Stanley
High school boys soccer
East Burke 3, West Lincoln 1 (Tuesday): Joel Sellers (30 steals), Mark Aguilar (32 steals), Ethan Rameriez Cordero (1 goal) led West Lincoln.
Ashbrook 2, East Gaston 1 (Tuesday): Sanders Zendejas and Andrew Peña scored goals for Ashbrook.
Forestview 3, Shelby 2 (Tuesday): Christian Tyler had 3 goals for Forestview.
Cramer 3, Ashbrook 2 (Monday): Jeremiah George and Jackson Thomas scored goals for Ashbrook.
High school volleyball
Kings Mountain def. Huss 3-0 (25-6, 25-3, 25-6): Camden Pasour (15 service points, 2 kills, 16 assists, 5 digs), Caroline Barber (13 service points, 3 serve receptions, 5 assists, 5 serve receptions, 4 digs), Paige Bagwell (3 service points, 8 kills, 10 assists, 5 digs), Meile Songaila (11 service points, 3 serve receptions, 13 kills, 3 serve receptions, 4 digs) and Myracle Davis (7 kills, 1 block) led Kings Mountain.
Kings Mountain def. Ashbrook 3-0 (25-2, 25-4, 25-3 on Tuesday): Camden Pasour (14 service points, 1 block, 2 digs, 19 assists), Jessie Ozmore (16 service points, 11 serve receptions, 2 digs), Meile Songaila (12 serve receptions, 5 service points, 1 block, 18 kills, 4 digs), Paige Bagwell (14 service points, 2 kills, 5 assists) and Myracle Davis (8 kills) led Kings Mountain.
Kings Mountain also won the JV match by a 2-0 score (25-5, 25-5) behind Abigail Hedgepath (14 assists, 2 digs, 15 service points), Kenzlie Morris (5 kills, 1 block, 9 service points) and Brooke Hamrick (4 kills, 9 service points).
College football
This week’s NCAA Division I Carolinas schedule:
(Thursday’s game)
S.C. State at South Carolina, noon
(Saturday’s games)
N.C. Central at Campbell, noon
Butler at Davidson, 1 p.m.
Presbyterian at Morehead State, 1 p.m.
Mercer at Wofford, 1:30 p.m.
Samford at Furman, 2 p.m.
Richmond at Elon, 2 p.m.
Wake Forest at Florida State, 3:30 p.m.
Virginia Tech at North Carolina, 3:30 p.m.
The Citadel at Appalachian State, 3:30 p.m.
Gardner-Webb at Marshall, 3:30 p.m.
VMI at Western Carolina, 3:30 p.m.
UTEP at Charlotte, 6 p.m.
Bryant at North Carolina A&T, 7 p.m.
East Carolina at South Florida, 7 p.m.
N.C. State at Clemson, 7:30 p.m.
Virginia at Duke, 7:30 p.m.
Pro soccer
Here’s the full Charlotte FC MLS schedule for the 2022 season (with results):
(12-17-2 record)
Feb. 26 at D.C. (L 0-3)
March 5, L.A. (L 0-1)
March 13, at Atlanta (L 1-2)
March 19, New England (W 3-1)
March 26, Cincinnati (W 2-0)
April 2, at Philadelphia (L 0-2)
April 10, Atlanta (W 1-0)
April 16, at New England (L 1-2)
April 23, at Colorado (T 0-0)
April 30, at Orlando (L 1-2)
May 7, Miami (W 1-0)
May 14, Montreal (L 0-2)
May 22, Vancouver (W 2-1)
May 29, at Seattle (L 1-2)
June 11, New York (W 2-0)
June 18, at Columbus (T 1-1)
June 25, at Montreal (L 1-2)
June 30, Austin (L 0-1)
July 3, at Houston (W 2-1)
July 9, Nashville (W 4-1)
July 16, at Miami (L 2-3)
July 23, at Toronto (L 0-4)
July 30, Columbus (suspended at 0-0 in 16th minute to Oct. 5)
August 3, D.C. (W 3-0)
August 6, Chicago (L 2-3)
August 13, at LAFC (L 0-5)
August 17, at New York City (W 3-1)
August 21, Orlando (L 1-2)
August 27, Toronto (L 0-2)
September 3, at Cincinnati (L 0-2)
September 10, New York City (W 1-0)
September 17, at Chicago (W 3-2)
October 1, Philadelphia, 5:30 p.m.
October 5, Columbus, 7 p.m.
October 9, at New York, 1 p.m.
Auto racing
The 2022 NASCAR cup schedule (with winners):
Feb. 6 Busch Light Clash (Joey Logano)
Feb. 17 Bluegreen Vacations Duel 1 (Brad Keselowski)
Feb. 17 Bluegreen Vacations Duel 2 (Chris Buescher)
Feb. 20 Daytona 500 (Austin Cindric)
Feb. 27 Wise Power 400 (Kyle Larson)
Mar. 6 Pennzoil 400 (Alex Bowman)
Mar. 13 Ruoff Mortgage (Chase Briscoe)
Mar. 20 Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 (William Byron)
Mar. 27 EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix (Ross Chastain)
Apr. 3 Toyota Owners (Denny Hamlin)
Apr. 9 Blue-Emu Maximum Pain Relief 400 (William Byron-2)
Apr. 17 Food City Dirt Race (Kyle Busch)
Apr. 24 Geico 500 (Ross Chastain-2)
May 2 DuraMAX Drydene 400 (Chase Elliott)
May 8 Goodyear 400 (Joey Logano)
May 15 AdventHealth 400 (Kurt Busch)
May 22 NASCAR All-Star Open (Daniel Suarez)
May 22 NASCAR All-Star (Ryan Blaney)
May 29 Coca-Cola 600 (Denny Hamlin-2)
June 5 Enjoy Illinois 300 (Joey Logano-2)
June 12 Toyota/Save Mart 350 (Daniel Suarez)
June 26 Ally 400 (Chase Elliott-2)
July 3 Kwik Trip 250 (Tyler Reddick)
July 10 Quaker State 400 (Chase Elliott-3)
July 17 Ambetter 301 (Christopher Bell)
July 24 NASCAR Cup Series at Pocono (Chase Elliott-4)
July 31 Verizon 200 at the Brickyard (Tyler Reddick-2)
Aug. 7 FireKeepers Casino 400 (Kevin Harvick)
Aug. 14 Federated Auto Parts 400 (Kevin Harvick-2)
Aug. 21 Go Bowling at The Glen (Kyle Larson-2)
Aug. 27-28 Coke Zero Sugar 400 (Austin Dillon)
Sept. 4 Cook Out Southern 500 (Erik Jones)
Sept. 11 Hollywood Casino 400 (Bubba Wallace)
Sept. 17 Bass Pro Shops Night Race (Chris Buescher)
Sept. 25 AutoTraderEchoPark Automotive 500 (Tyler Reddick-3)
Oct. 2 YellaWood 500
Oct. 9 Bank of America ROVAL 400
Oct. 16 South Point 400
Oct. 23 Dixie Vodka 400
Oct. 30 Xfinity 500
Nov. 6 NASCAR Cup Series Championship