The Whelen Modified Tour is the oldest division in NASCAR racing.
It began in 1947, and while it has undergone many name changes over the years, from the Winston Modified Tour to the Featherlite Modified Series to the Whelen Modified Tour in 2005, when Whelen Engineering began sponsoring, it is the only open-wheel division that NASCAR sanctions.
It is a style of racing with great tradition and history, and history was made last year.
Northampton native Austin Beers became the Whelen Tour’s youngest champion at 22 years, seven months, and five days. He broke the record set by current NASCAR Cup Series driver Ryan Preece, who was 22 years, 11 months, and 25 days old when he won the title in 2013.
Beers, who grew up in a racing family (his father Eric competed in the series from 1997 to 2012) has earned his share of wins and championships while racing at local tracks.
But this is his biggest accomplishment so far and could be a stepping stone to bigger circuits and championships.
“For sure, this is my biggest,” Beers said. “It’s a 16-race series where you need to be super consistent all year. You can’t have bad races. It’s a long, hard-fought year, and it came down to the last race at Martinsville in Virginia, and I was going against a four-time champion in the series [Justin Bonsignore] and someone who is second on the all-time win list. We were able to do what we needed to do and finished second in that last race at Martinsville. That allowed us to have enough points to win the championship.
“To be the youngest champion ever in the oldest series in NASCAR means a lot. It was not only special for me, but also for my family, who sacrificed all of their weekends throughout the year to support me and for my car owner, Mike Murphy, who got his first championship.”
Murphy is a story in his own right. He is a 68-year-old Irish immigrant who, according to NASCAR.com, bought his first race car in the mid-1990s and underwent a lung transplant last January.
“This is the best year of my life. I got a second chance at life,” Murphy told NASCAR.com. “Hard work, I would say, is all it takes. This is a great country. A country of opportunity. The only thing that is going to stop you is yourself.”
Murphy and his KLM Motorsports team took a chance on Beers in 2021 when he was 18.
So, learning they won the championship was emotional for Beers and Murphy.
“He took a gamble on me, and it has been all good ever since,” Beers said.
It is Murphy who believes in Beers as much as anyone. He said, again to NASCAR.com, “I hope this is a stepping stone. He’s still young. He’s only 22. Hopefully, there is somebody out there watching and will see how good he is, and maybe they’ll offer him a ride somewhere along the way.”
Beers was a model of consistency throughout the year.
In 16 races, he never finished lower than ninth. He scored two wins along with 12 top-5s and 16 top-10s. He was the tour’s only driver to finish every led and led all drivers with a 4.6 average finish.
“Hopefully this helps me move into a bigger series, whether it’s the NASCAR truck series or the Xfinity series, but in NASCAR, like in all of racing, it comes down to funding and money,” Beers said. “This is definitely something that should be eye-catching on a resume, I hope. Obviously, it’s only been a couple of months, but hopefully it does catch some people’s eyes. We’ve sent out our resumes to companies, hoping it will attract some sponsorship, and hopefully they can see it and know what I am capable of.”
Beers said the tour championship didn’t sink in until a month after he won it, and he went to the NASCAR Hall of Fame and pulled the tape off, and got to see his name on the championship trophy.
“That’s when it truly sank in, and I got to go to the awards dinner with the higher-ups in NASCAR, and I got to meet the other champions as well,” Beers said. “I talked with them and got some advice from them. I talked to Brenden Queen, who is running full-time on the truck series for Kaulig Racing, and I asked him what I could do because he does a really good job on social media finding sponsorships. It was great to get his advice.”
Beers is getting another avenue to promote his name and boost sponsorship potential.
UFC CEO Dana White is backing an eight-part series called “Race for the Seat,” a new reality competition series featuring 15 aspiring drivers and giving them a chance to compete for a spot on the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series for Kaulig Racing.
Beers is one of the participants in the series, which is sponsored by Ram Trucks. It was already filmed in November, and while Beers can’t reveal the results, he said it was an awesome experience and race fans should watch when it premieres on Fox on Jan. 25 on the day of the NFC Championship Game in pro football. Subsequent episodes will be on Ram’s YouTube Channel through Feb. 6, and the winner is expected to be on the Kaulig team for the Craftsman Truck Series opener Feb. 13 at Daytona.
“I was competing for a NASCAR truck series ride with 14 other talented drivers,” Beers said. “It was pretty special. It was an absolute blast, especially because of the people you’re dealing with. You are basically hanging out with 14 of your friends, and you get to drive race cars some days. For someone like me, that’s a dream. It was so much fun and an awesome experience. It was like a racecar boot camp. I think it will do something not only for my career, but also for the other 14 drivers. It will be huge for our racing careers. I am excited for it to come out and have everybody see it.”
Beers said he can’t go too in-depth on the series, but said it was about racing different types of cars and at different tracks.
“We were competing against each other to see who’s the best,” Beers said.
Meanwhile, Beers just hopes to keep getting better and looking for better and bigger opportunities.
“It’s just like a basketball player practicing 3-pointers or free throws,” he said. “The more laps you do, the better you’re going to get. Over these past two years, I’ve run over 50 races per year. On the asphalt side of racing, that’s a lot. I’ve just been trying to do as many races as possible, trying to perfect my craft and put myself in a situation where if I am in a certain situation, I know what to do because I’ve been in that scenario before. It becomes muscle memory and you know what to do with pit strategy and adjustments. The more laps you make, the better you’re going to get.”
But as good as he gets, you still need someone to notice.
“Winning a championship at a regional touring level is beyond what my dreams were when I started,” he said. “My dream was just to run the Whelen Modified Tour, and to have this kind of success has been amazing. I saw my dad get emotional, and that’s very rare. It meant a lot to my family and to my racing team. We kept building and building toward it. It’s not easy by any means. It’s a lot of work, a lot of hours, and long days at the race track. I owe so much to my sponsors and my family.
“Racing is such a different type of sport. A kid can go outside and shoot free throws or go out and put the ball on the tee in golf. In this sport, it costs money just to go to these race tracks and get practice laps. It’s not something you can practice. You have to be on your ‘A game’ at all times. You have to have a lot of support behind you, funding-wise, just to be able to try to do it. But I love it and hope we can continue to be successful.”