Category: NASCAR Cup Series

NASCAR Cup Series

  • Legacy Motor Club executive Joey Cohen on changing manufacturers and the future of NASCAR’s most interesting team

    Legacy Motor Club executive Joey Cohen on changing manufacturers and the future of NASCAR’s most interesting team

    If you haven’t been paying attention to Legacy Motor Club, you need to be. When I spoke with Joey Cohen, Vice President of Racing Operations for the team on January 11th, there was an aura of confidence that surrounded every answer he gave, and rightfully so, as the team has made more noise in the offseason than many pundits thought they would. 

    One of the biggest moves the team made was switching manufacturers from Chevrolet, whom the team had been with since 2018 when they were still Richard Petty Motorsports, to Toyota. Cohen said a lot goes into a Cup Series team changing manufacturers, especially when they have to maintain appearances until the final laps of the season. 

    “The fortunate thing was, we got to go out to the Phoenix test in December when they were testing the short track aero package. That track time is irreplaceable. It’s stuff that you just can’t replicate. To have that track time in the offseason during the transition, to go from running a Chevrolet at Phoenix when the checkered flag falls in November to 30 days later running a Toyota at the same track is a massive effort by our group to build the car, but also by our engineering group. It’s a massive effort on their part to unload another vehicle and go make laps at a competitive pace. So it takes a group effort. It takes a whole team effort and is supported by, obviously, a great OEM partner in Toyota, great people at Legacy Motor Club, great mechanics, great engineers. That’s what gets it done in the offseason.”

    Cohen said the engineering group at LMC is bearing the brunt of the manufacturer change. 

    “You see the (physical) vehicle change, and with the Next Gen platform, that’s pretty easy to accomplish. Our chassis are still the same. Most of the components in the car are the same. It’s really just the body, driveline, and engine package changing. We have really great partners in Toyota going over to this TRD engine platform. Those guys are doing a great job of handling that aspect of it. We hang all of our own bodies ourselves, so we have the capability to take that on ourselves. But it’s really a massive effort by the engineering group on the other side of things. Everything they have from tools to preparation, to how they do their job changes completely. Different simulation tools, different simulator, different programs for the engineering department to set up vehicles, work on pre-event stuff with vehicle optimizations and setups. All our information is based off Chevrolet, so it’s really just transferring that information to a Toyota environment. That’s going to the Toyota wind tunnel in Salisbury (North Carolina). So I’d say the busiest group this offseason has been our engineers, who have been trying to correlate where we’ve been with the Next Gen car the last 2 years, and translating that into the Toyota Platform. 

    Whether it be on track performance or garnering more sponsorship for the team, Cohen agreed wholeheartedly when I told him it seemed to be an exciting time in the race shop. 

    “You can tell there’s energy in the shop right now. Most of the group has been here since Day 1, and to see where it was two years ago, you almost have to pinch yourself, right? It’s one thing to be in the presence of Richard Petty and Jimmie Johnson. But it’s a fast-paced environment and a lot of good things are happening, things you can get excited about. Today, we announced a partnership with Family Dollar and Dollar Tree on a 38-race schedule. It just seems like every time we turn around, there’s been an announcement. There’s some energy coming out of Legacy Motor Club. That’s really fun to be a part of. There’s no replacement for continuing to grow and continuing to move forward. Along the way, there’s been success and there’s been growing pains, but overall, when you look at the span of 2 years and now going into the third one, I think it’s really exciting when you look at what’s on our plate this season, and a lot to be excited about when you think about Toyota support coming in in our third year as an organization. I think if you look around at our peers, they kind of hit their stride going into their third year.  And that’s just a product of getting your feet under you, getting your systems in place and getting your staff and team built out. That’s a process. It takes time. A lot of these things are coming together at the right time with Toyota coming on board and our team coming into its own going into year three. So we have a certain level of energy in the shop right now going into 2024.” 

    “Expectations are really high. That’s a really good place to be in for a young team like ours.”

    As I asked Cohen about the team’s driver lineup in 2024, his face lit up, especially when I mentioned 7-time champion Jimmie Johnson. 

    “We’re really excited about our driver lineup for 2024. To be where we are as an organization and have two established veterans of the sport, even though they’re both floating around 26, 27 years old, I’m like you, I feel like Erik Jones has been in the Cup Series for 10 years now. We’re really excited for Erik and John Hunter to have the resources behind them. A driver needs a good team and good OEM support behind them. I feel like we have 2 of the best drivers in the garage from an organizational standpoint. It’s exciting when you can give those guys what they need in the garage, the tools they need to grow quickly. And then, having Jimmie back this season for a good handful of races, including some racetracks he had a lot of success at, is huge. The Daytona 500 is always going to be fun, but we’re really excited for some of the other races on his schedule this year. He’s going to Charlotte, Kansas, Dover, places where he’s been historically dominant. It’s going to be a really fun season overall with our three drivers.

    “We feel like we’re in a really good spot for the future.”

    Legacy Motor Club will start their season off with the rest of the field in Los Angeles on February 4th with Erik Jones and John Hunter Nemechek, and Jimmie Johnson will join them in the Daytona 500 on February 18th. Both races will air on FOX.

  • Kaulig Racing reveals 2024 Cup Series crew chief lineup

    Kaulig Racing reveals 2024 Cup Series crew chief lineup

    Kaulig Racing took to social media to reveal its crew chief lineup for the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series season which features a new addition alongside a returning notable.

    The person who is new to the team for this upcoming season is Travis Mack, who will assume two roles, the first as crew chief for Kaulig’s No. 16 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 entry in the Cup Series and the other as technical director for Kaulig’s Cup program.

    Mack, a native of Louisville, Kentucky, joins Kaulig Racing after spending the previous three seasons at Trackhouse Racing, where he worked as Daniel Suarez’s Cup crew chief. He achieved his first career victory at Sonoma Raceway in June 2022, the same day where Suarez notched his first Cup career victory that enabled them to make the 2022 Cup Playoffs. Mack was also a crew chief for Dale Earnhardt Jr. in two Cup events in 2017 and for Kasey Kahne in 15 events in 2018.

    Through 124 appearances as a Cup Series crew chief, Mack achieved one victory, one pole, 10 top-five and 27 top-10 results while working with three competitors. He also worked as a crew chief for 79 Xfinity Series events, where he achieved his lone victory at Daytona International Speedway in February 2019 with Michael Annett while working for JR Motorsports.

    Kaulig Racing’s No. 16 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 entry is set to be piloted by multiple competitors for the 2024 Cup Series season, starting with AJ Allmendinger competing in this year’s 66th running of the Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway in February. The remainder of the entry’s driver lineup and schedule for the 2024 season remains to be determined.

    Returning to Kaulig Racing is Trent Owens, who will continue to work atop the pit box of the No. 31 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 as a crew chief and for Daniel Hemric, the 2021 Xfinity Series champion who returns to the Cup Series after spending the previous three seasons in the Xfinity Series, including the last two with Kaulig Racing as he made the Xfinity Playoffs and settled in the top 10 in the final driver’s standings during both seasons.

    Owens, a native of Davidson, North Carolina, is coming off his second full-time season as a Cup Series crew chief for Kaulig’s No. 31 entry that was piloted by Justin Haley. During the two-year stint, the duo achieved four top-five results and nine top-10 results, with their best points result being a 22nd-place result during the 2022 season. Owens’ first and only Cup victory to date as a crew chief spans back to July 2014 at Daytona International Speedway, where he led Aric Almirola and the No. 43 Richard Petty Motorsports Ford team to a rain-shortened victory that enabled them to make the 2014 Cup Series Playoffs.

    Through 348 previous appearances as a Cup Series crew chief, Owens has achieved one victory, 12 top-five and 40 top-10 results while working with 10 competitors. He has also accumulated five Xfinity Series victories and one Craftsman Truck Series victory as a crew chief.

    Kaulig Racing’s 2024 NASCAR Cup Series season commences with the Busch Light Clash at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on February 4 at 8 p.m. ET on FOX. This event will then be followed by the 66th running of the Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway which will occur on February 18 and air at 2:30 p.m. ET on FOX.

  • Matt Swiderski named crew chief for Daniel Suarez for the 2024 Cup Series season

    Matt Swiderski named crew chief for Daniel Suarez for the 2024 Cup Series season

    Matt Swiderski will be replacing Travis Mack as the crew chief for Daniel Suarez and the No. 99 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 team for the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series season.

    The news comes as the Chicago native is coming off his third season as a Cup Series crew chief for Kaulig Racing’s No. 16 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 entry. During the three-year stint, Swiderski achieved victories with veteran AJ Allmendinger at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course in August 2021 and at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Road Course last October. During the previous season, he also led Allmendinger and the No. 16 team to a total of four top-five results and seven top-10 results before settling in 21st place in the final driver’s standings.

    “Everyone sees what Trackhouse Racing is building and I am thankful for the opportunity to come to a winning organization and lead the No. 99 team,” Swiderski said. “I am looking forward to working with Daniel. We are both striving to achieve the same thing, winning. Every day we are going to work on perfecting the next steps that it takes to get more wins and compete for a championship.”

    Swiderski, who received a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering from Kettering University before attaining a Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering from Purdue University, spent the bulk of his early racing career at Richard Childress Racing, where he first worked as a data acquisition engineer before ascending towards becoming a race engineer both on the Xfinity and Cup Series divisions. After briefly departing NASCAR to join Space Exploration Technologies as a loads engineer in 2012, he returned to both NASCAR and Richard Childress Racing eight months later by assuming the title of chief race engineer, where he would eventually be named head of vehicle performance in 2014.

    In 2017, Swiderski made his inaugural presence as a crew chief in the Xfinity Series, where he worked atop the pit box of RCR’s No. 3 Chevrolet Camaro entry that was piloted between Ty Dillon, Scott Lagasse Jr. and Brian Scott. Throughout the season, the No. 3 entry obtained four top-five results and 18 top-10 results before ending up in 11th place in the final owner’s standings. The following season, Swiderski joined Team Penske and worked as a crew chief for the team’s No. 12 Ford Mustang entry that was competing on a limited basis with rookie Austin Cindric and Cup Series champion Brad Keselowski, with the trio achieving a single top-five result and a combined five top-10 results in eight starts. Swiderski would lead the No. 12 team to a combined five top-five results and three poles in eight races, with the entry split between Ryan Blaney, Keselowski, Joey Logano and Paul Menard, before serving as Keselowski’s Xfinity crew chief for a single event in 2020 and two for Ty Dillon in 2021.

    During the 2021 season, Swiderski joined Kaulig Racing as a crew chief for the team’s No. 16 entry in the Cup Series that was split between AJ Allmendinger, Kaz Grala and Justin Haley. He would remain as the crew chief for the No. 16 entry for the 2022 Cup season that was split between Allmendinger, Noah Gragson and Daniel Hemric before Allmendinger assumed the ride on a full-time basis in 2023.

    Through 78 appearances as a Cup Series crew chief, Swiderski has achieved two victories, nine top-five results and 20 top-10 results while working with five different competitors.

    The 2024 Cup Series season will mark Swiderski’s first at Trackhouse Racing and first being paired with Suarez. The 32-year-old Suarez from Monterrey, Mexico, is coming off his seventh full-time campaign in the Cup circuit and third with Trackhouse, where he recorded a pole position at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Road Course, three top-five results, 10 top-10 results, 48 laps led and an average-finishing result of 19.0 before settling in 19th place in the 2023 driver’s standings. His first and latest victory to date occurred at Sonoma Raceway in June 2022, a victory that enabled him to make the 2022 Playoffs before settling in 10th place in the final driver’s standings.

    “Matt is a proven winner with a dynamic engineering background, and we are confident he will pair well with Daniel,” Justin Marks, Trackhouse founder and owner, added.

    Matt Swiderski’s first Cup Series campaign as a crew chief for Daniel Suarez and Trackhouse Racing commences with the Busch Light Clash at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on February 4, with the event’s coverage to occur at 8 p.m. ET on FOX, followed by the 66th running of the Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway that will occur on February 18, with the event’s coverage to occur at 2:30 p.m. ET on FOX.

  • Previewing Shane van Gisbergen’s 2024 season-Can SVG prove he’s the next big thing?

    Previewing Shane van Gisbergen’s 2024 season-Can SVG prove he’s the next big thing?

    Shane van Gisbergen’s 2024 season could easily be one of the most influential in NASCAR history. His results will likely alter the future of NASCAR in a big way, and I’m here to give an unsolicited prediction on how he will fare. SVG will run a limited schedule in the Cup Series, so let’s start there, go through it race by race, and predict how he will do. 

    Circuit of The Americas, March 24: Finish Prediction – 10th-15th

    While his most memorable moment of last year was winning Chicago, van Gisbegergen followed up his win in the Windy City with a solid 10th-place run at the Indianapolis road course. I think he’ll run about the same in Austin, and if there’s late-race chaos for the third straight year, he could have an outside shot at pulling off another upset win. 

    Talladega, April 21: Finish Prediction: 15th-20th

    I think Trackhouse will bring SVG a good race car, and if he can learn quickly, he’ll be in the lead draft late in the going. That’s really all you can ask for in a modern superspeedway race, and I think if SVG stays out of trouble, he can count his first Talladega race as a success. 

    Coca-Cola 600 (Charlotte) May 26: Finish Prediction – 25th-30th

    Van Gisbergen may run well for a portion of this race, but asking him to run 600 mistake-free miles in his first (normal) oval race in the Cup Series is a tall task. SVG’s main goal for the World 600 should just be to finish the event. Anything more will be a cherry on top for a driver with little experience on intermediate racetracks. 

    Chicago Street Race, July 7: Finish Prediction – 5th-10th

    SVG will be fast in Chicago, but everyone else in the field now has experience at the course, and in the rain, if Mother Nature presents another monsoon to the masses. He’ll still be a contender for the race win, but I’m not sure I would put money on him to pull into victory circle. 

    Watkins Glen, September 15: Finish Prediction: 10th-15th. 

    The Project 91 car was solid at WGI in 2022 when Kimi Raikkonnen’s good run was ruined by a late-race incident. SVG will have already run two road courses in the Next-Gen car in 2024, and with notes from the previous day’s Xfinity Series race on hand, I see SVG having another solid run in his road course finale. 

    Talladega, October 6: Finish Prediction: 20th-25th

    Talladega is simply too much of a wildcard for me to predict these races, but with notes from the spring and a little more trust in the draft from his competitors, I think he can have a top-15 run. However, The Big One will likely claim him in one of these races, so I’ll put him finishing around 20th in the fall. 

    Las Vegas, October 20th: Finish Prediction – 20th-25th

    In his final Cup Series race of the season, I think SVG finishes on the lead lap in a respectable 20th position. More notes, experience, and a more confident driver will lead to their best run on an intermediate track in 2024. 

    Now for the Xfinity Series, where van Gisbergen will run his first full-time campaign in NASCAR. It’s a little hard to predict his season, but I’ll do my best. We won’t break it down race by race with this one, rather writing a comprehensive report on my prediction for his year. 

    Points finish: 12th
    Top Fives: 6-8
    Top 10s: 13-15
    Avg Finish: 16
    Wins: ????

    I’ll start by explaining the question marks in the win column. I truly don’t know how many wins he’ll get this season. He could win three or four road course races and be a championship contender or he could go winless and miss the Playoffs. I wouldn’t be surprised either way, simply because SVG is a huge unknown. I have him as my “last one in” driver to make the postseason, but I said the same thing in my playoff prediction article as I am now; we don’t know how many wins he could get, but he has the talent to win as many as he wants to. 

    I feel like the top five, top 10, and average finish numbers are self-explanatory when you look at my predicted points standing. With only one road course in the Playoffs for the Xfinity Series, I think he’s a first-round exit, and I predict that the final seven-race stretch as a whole will be a struggle. Road courses will obviously be a strong suit, and once you throw in a couple of top 10s each at intermediates, short tracks, and superspeedways, you can chalk up double-digit top 10s. I think most of his top fives come on road courses as well, and if he wins a race, that’s where it will be. The average finish may be a bit low for my predicted number of top 10s, but I could see van Gisbergen ending up in a couple of wrecks that he didn’t start by running mid-pack. 

    Overall, I think SVG will put together a very respectable season. For him to be seriously considered for a full-time Cup Series ride in 2025, he’ll have to have a few solid runs, and I think he’ll do much more than that. He may be NASCAR’s biggest unknown, but his talent is the most obvious thing in NASCAR in quite a while.

  • Respect is earned: Broadcaster Ralph Sheheen’s tales of ‘The Intimidator’

    Respect is earned: Broadcaster Ralph Sheheen’s tales of ‘The Intimidator’

    Dale Earnhardt always intimidated his competitors out on the racetrack, as well as the press who came asking questions. Broadcaster Ralph Sheheen, however, refused to break, despite the Intimidator’s best efforts.

    Detailing an interview he had with Earnhardt at the Winston one year, Sheheen says Earnhardt “dug into his kidneys like there was no tomorrow trying to get me to break.” Sheheen not only went about his business but went on with the interview longer than he initially planned, just to prove to ‘Big E’ that he was no pushover like some of his colleagues. Sheheen says that the interview made Earnhardt gain respect for the California native, which proved a very valuable asset. 

    Growing up in California, Sheheen watched whatever form of racing he could, and always made time for the superspeedway events that NASCAR had to offer. After a stint calling events in a given week, including Motocross and fashion shows at a local bar, Sheheen got his big break. 

    “When I graduated from college, there was an IMSA season finale in Del Mar, California,” Sheheen explained. “I called up about being the PA announcer, and they said they had all their PA guys, but we need a TV announcer for pit road on the ESPN broadcast. They said, ‘Have you ever done TV?’ Oh yeah, sure, I’ve done a ton of TV. Well, I’ve never been on TV a day in my life,” Sheheen said, recounting the experience. “But I figured, hey, the door’s cracked open, you got to come on through, you know?”

    Like so many in the motorsports broadcasting field, Sheheen’s longevity is nearly as impressive as his accolades themselves, such as his induction into the National Sprint Car Hall of Fame in 2023. Sheheen says there’s not necessarily a secret to a long career, and also says that you can’t make everyone happy. 

    “It’s very subjective, so you’re not going to like everybody,” he said. There’s people that are going to love me and despise ‘The Postman’. There’s going to be people that love Steve (Post) and despise me. That’s fine. That’s the way it goes. It’s just human nature. I think everybody is pretty good at what we do. And then it becomes subjective as to who you like. After that, I think you just have to find your groove, whatever that is. Some guys like Mike Joy are really good at history. Dick Berggren was outstanding at the technical side of things. He could tell you all about the nuts and bolts of the race car. I tend to go more of an enthusiastic level when I’m doing play-by-play. So you have to find your lane and try to stay there. You need to know what your real strengths are and play to that. And after that, you have to be a good person, got to be easy to work with. Don’t be a diva. Don’t come in thinking you’re better than everyone else on the crew, because you’re not. And you can easily be replaced.”

    Sheheen was also firm on facts and journalistic integrity, telling a fantastic story involving Dale Earnhardt in the process. 

    “You’ve got to do what you tell the athletes you’re going to do. Perfect example, there was this one time in Atlanta, Earnhardt Sr. had the flu. He really wasn’t feeling good. My producer really wanted to hear from Dale on this. So I went over, knocked on his door, and I said ‘Hey man, I got to ask you one question. One, Dale, Just one.’ And he stepped out to do the interview, and I asked him one question, the one question I knew my producer needed. Even if I thought of a second one, there was no way I was asking him that question. I told him I had to do one. If I did two, he never answers that second question, and I never get another (interview) with him. So whatever it is, you’ve got to be true to what you tell them you’re going to do.” 

    After I made a quick mention of Dale Earnhardt liking to mess with the press, Sheheen came out with his best anecdote of the day about an encounter he had with Earnhardt at the Winston. 

    “We were on the air, and I’m supposed to interview him pre-race. They used to run a limited sportsman category prior to the (Cup) race, and Kerry Earnhardt was running in it. And Dale knew we were supposed to do this interview live, but he got stuck up watching Kerry’s race and missed the interview. And he comes running out and he goes, ‘Oh man, I’m so sorry.’ I go, ‘don’t worry about it.’

    It’s Dale Earnhardt. They’ll take that interview whenever they can get it. So I told my producer, hey, Dale’s ready now. And they said, sure enough, let’s come on down. So I come walking over, he (Dale) goes ‘Hey, girls, come over here.’ And there’s these two young ladies standing over there. He gets them in the middle between us, you know, whatever Dale wants to do, you just do it.

    Dale’s in a great mood, and we start doing our interview. He says, ‘all right girls, get out of here, Sheheen and I need to talk business.’ So they get out, and then he scoots in next to me and he reaches around behind me, and he is digging into my kidneys like there’s no tomorrow. He’s doing everything he can to get me to break. And I purposely went longer with the interview just because there was no way I was going to break. I couldn’t let him get away with that because I knew what that would mean. If he got one up on you, then it’s game over. He always tried to test you. If you could pass his test, it was good. And as he was walking away, he turns around and pow, just let me have it on the shoulder.”

    Earnhardt was also the subject of Sheheen’s favorite memory from his over 3-and-a-half decade career covering racing, though it was far from a victorious moment for the Intimidator. 

    “Remember the year (1997) he flipped down the backstretch and got out of the car, and then he goes into the ambulance and sees the tires are still full of air, and he gets back into the car and drives it around? Well, at the end of the race, our producer needed someone to go interview Dale. Everybody else is tied up and I didn’t realize nobody had gone to Dale yet. So I said, ‘I’ll go get him.’ So I go running to get to Dale, and I come around the corner and he’s sitting there in this smoking heap of metal, and he’s standing next to this torn-up race car and there’s all these media guys around. Well, we’re live TV, so I just dive into the pile, and he sees me coming through with the microphone, and he reaches in and pulls me through, and he goes, ‘What do you need?’ I said, “Well I’ve got to interview you, but my battery died on our cameraman back here, so they’re bringing us a new battery. I’m down for a minute.”

    He goes, ‘Well let’s go back to the hauler.’ So he goes walking through the crowd to go to the hauler, and he reaches back and grabs me and pulls me through, and I’m screaming, ‘I’ve got Dale, I’ve got Dale!’ We get over to the hauler and he stands on this ice chest, and he tells the rest of the crowd, ‘I’m not going to do anyone else’s interviews until I’m done talking to Ralph.’ I’m sitting there thinking, ‘Oh my gosh, this is amazing, right?’ So we finally got the battery on that camera ready to go, and we knocked out that interview. And that was a really big moment because the respect he had for me to do that was unbelievable. I’m still thinking about that today, I can’t believe I got that from him. But I earned that. That goes back to what we were talking about. Had I not done just that one question (at Atlanta) that one time, he wouldn’t have done that for me then.”

    Sheheen’s relationship with Dale Earnhardt is considered even more special by the television vet because many of his peers had no semblance of one themselves. 

    “I knew reporters who were afraid to talk to him. I mean, just would not do it. I remember being in production meetings and a producer saying, ‘Hey, we need an interview with Earnhardt today. Who wants to do it?’ And I remember peers of mine going ‘No, not me.’ And once they had that in their head, it was over.”

    So many journalists, reporters, and media personalities in the NASCAR garage are revered, and for good reason. But few men or women were able to break through the thick ice that seemed to stand between them and the greatest driver of the day. 

    It didn’t seem to deter Ralph Sheheen. 

  • My Official Way Too Early 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoff Predictions

    My Official Way Too Early 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoff Predictions

    As the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series season slowly approaches, it’s time for me and every other NASCAR fan with any type of platform to make our Playoff predictions for the 2024 season, going from drivers who seem to be locks to those who will squeak in. Let’s get started, shall we?

    Virtual Locks (These Guys Are Shoe Ins)

    Ryan Blaney, No. 12 Ford Mustang Dark Horse, Team Penske

    Yes, I’m legally obligated to place the defending Cup Series champion in this category, but I do think the newly engaged driver will pretty easily make the Playoffs. I’d be shocked if he doesn’t win multiple races in the regular season. We’ll see Blaney make a solid case for title defense in 2024. 

    Kyle Larson, No. 5 Chevrolet Camaro, Hendrick Motorsports 

    Perhaps the most obvious choice, Larson has been dynamite ever since joining HMS in 2021. Larson has 17 wins in his 3 years with the team, and he’s my pick to lead the league in wins next year. Yung Money won’t just make the Playoffs, he’ll be the #1 seed after Darlington. 

    William Byron, No. 24 Chevrolet Camaro, Hendrick Motorsports 

    Following a breakout year in which he won 6 times, Byron is looking to finish the job with his first Cup Series championship in 2024. All the pieces are there for Byron, and I think he’ll win at least 3 times in the regular season. He and teammate Kyle Larson will once more pace the field out of the gates. 

    Christopher Bell, No. 20 Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Bell’s championship hopes were dashed early at Phoenix due to a mechanical failure, but the Norman, Oklahoma native has made 2 consecutive Final 4 appearances. All signs point to him being able to do so again in 2024. Bell wins his way into the playoffs by the halfway mark of the regular season. 

    Denny Hamlin, No. 11 Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing 

    Following shoulder surgery in the offseason, Hamlin’s status for the Busch Light Clash is in question. Hopefully, he won’t have to miss any points races, but even if he does, I have the driver of the #11 in Victory Lane before Atlanta kicks off the postseason. Hamlin will get another chance to chase down that elusive Cup Series title. 

    Kyle Busch, No. 8 Chevrolet Camaro, Richard Childress Racing 

    2023 was a campaign filled with inconsistency for the younger Busch brother, whose 3 wins all came in the first 15 races of the season. The 2nd half of the year was plagued with wrecks and slow race cars. Busch will easily make the Playoffs, but how far will he go? That’s impossible to predict. 

    I Feel Good, But…

    Chase Elliott, No. 9 Chevrolet Camaro, Hendrick Motorsports 

    Elliott’s 2023 season was marred by injury, poor decisions by both driver and crew chief in the heat of the moment (see Charlotte and Watkins Glen), and a lack of race-winning speed down the stretch. While the year was an anomaly and not at all normal, it was slightly jarring to see a driver who had made three consecutive Championship 4s miss the Playoffs entirely, no matter the circumstances. Elliott will get to Victory Lane before Atlanta, but the race-winning speed needs to be much more prevalent for me to consider them championship contenders again. 

    Martin Truex Jr, No. 19 Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing

    Truex and company fell apart in the Playoffs last season, somehow making it to the Round of 8 and not putting up much of a fight in said round. Truex will win a race or two, but the team’s performance in the Playoffs will determine if Truex wants to retire or not at the end of the year. Regular-season Truex will be fine, but can the #19 crew find the same spark in the Playoffs?

    Joey Logano, No. 22 Ford Mustang Dark Horse, Team Penske

    2023 was a lackluster title defense from Logano, as he only turned in one victory and was eliminated in the Round of 16. However, 2024 should be a great year if the trends continue – Logano has never missed the Championship 4 in an even-numbered season since the knockout style format was introduced in 2014. I’m not one for superstition, but it seems Logano is reading the stars right in even-numbered years. Logano will win a couple in the regular season, but don’t be surprised if he comes out of Phoenix with his 3rd championship. 

    Tyler Reddick, No. 45 Toyota Camry XSE, 23XI Racing 

    In a year plagued with inconsistency, late race mistakes, and the #45 team giving away stage points like candy on Halloween, they unexpectedly turned up the wick in the Playoffs, even winning at Kansas. Reddick has lofty expectations on his shoulders entering 2024, and a Championship 4 appearance doesn’t at all seem out of the question. Reddick will win in the 2024 regular season, but the team needs to capitalize on all available opportunities for points to make a deep run. 

    Chris Buescher, No. 17 Ford Mustang Dark Horse, RFK Racing 

    Hailing from a town of just 30,000(if you know, you know), Chris Buescher had his breakout year in 2023, winning 3 races and advancing to the Round of 8 in the Playoffs. RFK has the potential to take the next step in 2024, and many consider Buescher to be a dark horse to make a run at the championship if he gathers enough Playoff points. 

    Brad Keselowski, No. 6 Ford Mustang Dark Horse, RFK Racing

    While he went winless, Keselowski looked the best he had since 2020 when he made the Championship 4. While he got bounced in the Round of 12, the speed in the #6 car was a very uplifting sight. The next item on Keselowski’s agenda? Breaking a nearly 3-year long winless streak dating back to the spring Talladega race in 2021. 

    By The Skin Of Their Teeth…

    Bubba Wallace, No. 23 Toyota Camry XSE, 23XI Racing 

    I think Bubba will be the best of the “Skin of Their Teeth” group, and he may even win a race to lock himself in. However, he (and the whole of 23XI) need to prove that they can start a season as quickly as they can finish it. If they can start fast (or even mitigate the slow start) this could be a special season for Bubba and the #23 group. 

    Ross Chastain, No. 1 Chevrolet Camaro, Trackhouse Racing 

    This may be a bit of an overreaction, but was Chastain’s Championship 4 run in 2022 a fluke? Not to take anything away from the very impressive 2-year resume they’ve put together, but 2023 seemed to detract from all the glitz and glamor that 2022 brought. 2023 only reaped 2 wins and an early Playoff exit. Chastain will either point or win his way into the postseason next year, but I don’t think he’s the easy lock as many declare him to be. 

    Alex Bowman, No. 48 Chevrolet Camaro, Hendrick Motorsports 

    Bowman recently announced that he will cut back on non-NASCAR sanctioned races (Big Bill France would be proud) in order to focus on his full-time Cup Series obligations. After an incredible start to 2023, a couple of penalties knocked Bowman and new crew chief Blake Harris down a couple of rungs on the proverbial ladder. After Bowman missed time with a back injury sustained in a sprint car accident, he never found his groove again. Slow cars, late race incidents, and uncharacteristic mistakes (see the Southern 500) plagued a horrific 2nd half of the season. While I don’t think he will win next year, Bowman is good enough to still point himself into the postseason. Here’s to hoping he can have his first fully healthy season since 2021 when he won 4 races. 

    And Finally…

    Ty Gibbs, No. 54 Toyota Camry XSE, Joe Gibbs Racing 

    While not the most popular pick, Gibbs caught fire in the summer during last season, producing several runs that show he’s more than just hype. Gibbs might just narrowly point his way into the 2024 Playoffs, but he’s determined to show he belongs, and I think he beats out several veterans for the final Playoff spot. 

    Just A Bit Outside…

    Michael McDowell, No. 34 Ford Mustang Dark Horse, Front Row Motorsports

    This one pains me to type, but McDowell isn’t quite consistent enough at intermediates and short tracks to lead me to believe he can point his way in. With the Indy Road Course and Watkins Glen removed from the regular season schedule, I don’t see enough legitimate winning opportunities for McDowell to place him in my early Playoff bracket. I hope he proves me wrong, but Father Time has to start catching up at some point. 

    Chase Briscoe, No. 14 Ford Mustang Dark Horse, Stewart Haas Racing 

    Call me crazy, but I don’t see any SHR cars in the postseason next year. I would place Berry, Preece & Gragson in my next category of “Next Four Out” (in NCAA Tournament terms). That being said, a young talent in Briscoe is their best chance. That win at Phoenix in 2022, nor his Cinderella run to the Round of 8, has escaped my brain. That being said, SHR’s cars aren’t quite good enough, and Briscoe still has a lot to learn. If he could go more than 3 or 4 races without being a lap down in Stage 1, I’ll amend my prediction. Until he consistently runs with the big dogs, I can’t place him in the postseason. 

    Ricky Stenhouse Jr, No. 47 Chevrolet Camaro, JTG Daugherty Racing 

    Coming off the best year for JTG since 2014, Stenhouse & Co. looked extremely competitive in the first half of the year before cooling off and being escorted from the Playoffs in the first round. A Daytona 500 win is huge for the team, but without a win, I don’t think the team is fast enough to make up a points gap. 

    Erik Jones, No. 43 Toyota Camry XSE, Legacy Motor Club

    I think That Jones Boy outperforms his teammate, but will still come up short of a Playoff spot. Jones will rebound from a terrible 2023 campaign, but without a victory, I don’t see LMC having fast enough cars to go point for point with the likes of Chastain, Gibbs, and Bowman.

    Next Four Out: 

    Berry, Suarez, Preece, Gragson

    25th-28th: 

    Cindric, Nemechek, Dillon, Lajoie

    Per usual, please don’t come back to this article after the Southern 500 to see how badly these takes have aged. They’ll all be incinerated by Memorial Day.

  • Rest in peace Cale Yarborough, the toughest racecar driver the world has ever seen

    Rest in peace Cale Yarborough, the toughest racecar driver the world has ever seen

    Cale Yarborough, a three-time NASCAR Cup Series champion, passed away today at the age of 84. The Timmonsville, South Carolina native’s career spanned 31 years and 560 starts. Yarborough won 83 of those starts, an impressive 14.8% winning percentage. He also set a then-record with 3 consecutive NASCAR Cup Series championships, a record only matched and then broken by 7-time champion Jimmie Johnson. 

    It seems ironic that the most memorable moment of his career was a heartbreaking loss in what was one of the most iconic finishes in the 1979 Daytona 500, and the fight with the Allison brothers that ensued. 

    But Daytona also gave him great moments, such as the 1983 Daytona 500, where Yarborough infamously won while making engine noises while driving the No. 28 Hardees car, entertaining the millions of fans who heard him. 

    Yarborough was hailed as the toughest driver on the blacktop, fighting tooth and nail for every single spot. If a driver upset him, Yarborough let him know. If a competitor respected him, the respect was mutual. Yarborough never made himself out to be a flashy driver, which made sense, considering his humble beginnings. There’s a story that Yarborough and his wife were once on the way to a race in 1962 when a toll booth slowed their journey. Having no money after paying a $10 speeding ticket earlier in their journey and eating hastily made sandwiches along the way, the couple scrambled to find all the money they could in every possible crevice of the car. When they couldn’t come up with the required fare, Yarborough somehow convinced the toll agent to let him pay on the journey back with his race winnings. After an engine failure doomed Yarborough’s night at the track and his financial situation, he borrowed money from the track promoter, paid the toll agent and went on to become one of the greatest drivers in NASCAR history. 

    Yarborough won his first race at the Valdosta (GA) Speedway in 1965, and started a streak of 8-straight consecutive top-9 points finishes in 1973 and winning Winston Cup titles in 1976, 1977, and 1978. He retired from full-time competition after 1980 and proceeded to run at least 10 races a season until 1987, garnering 14 wins over 8 years to further cement himself as one of the greats.  

    Whether it be on or off the racetrack, his tough driving style, never-back-down attitude, and work ethic told you he was a racecar driver without him even having to tell you what he did for a living. 

    Few men have embodied the spirit of a sport brought up by hard-working men and women who were willing to do whatever it took to put food on the table, outrun the law, and most importantly, win. Cale Yarborough, however, was the epitome of the hard-working attitude embraced by so many across the American South who became stock car racing legends. 

    Cale has now joined the ranks of Dale Earnhardt, David Pearson, Lee Petty, and so many others before him up above, but his legacy here below will be remembered through the ages. 

    Rest in Peace, Ol’ Hickory. 

    Cale Yarborough, 1939-2023

  • Four-Time Indy 500 Starter, NASCAR Legend Yarborough Dies at 84

    Four-Time Indy 500 Starter, NASCAR Legend Yarborough Dies at 84

    INDIANAPOLIS (Sunday, Dec. 31, 2023) – Cale Yarborough, who made four Indianapolis 500 starts during his legendary, championship-winning NASCAR career, died Dec. 31 in his native South Carolina. He was 84.

    Yarborough was one of the greatest stock car drivers in history, winning three straight Cup Series championships from 1976-78. His 83 victories are tied for sixth on the all-time NASCAR Cup Series victory list.

    Among his career accolades were four Daytona 500 victories, in 1968, 1977, 1983 and 1984. But the fiercely determined Yarborough gained just as much renown and helped to launch stock car racing into the national consciousness in the 1979 Daytona 500 when he fought with brothers Donnie and Bobby Allison inside Turn 3 after Yarborough and Donnie Allison crashed while dueling for the win on the final lap.

    Before rising to stardom in NASCAR while driving for the legendary Junior Johnson in the mid-1970s, Yarborough showed his versatility by competing in open-wheel racing.

    Yarborough made his first Indianapolis 500 start in 1966, driving for Rolla Vollstedt. Yarborough was caught off guard by the throngs who attended qualifying days in May at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and got stuck in traffic en route to the track for the first qualifying day. He ended up parking his car in the yard of a local resident and walking to the track, qualifying 24th in the No. 66 Jim Robbins Vollstedt/Ford.

    But his four-lap qualification run that year lasted longer than his race. Yarborough’s car was one of 11 collected and eliminated in a first-lap accident that triggered a red-flag delay of nearly 90 minutes, and he was credited with 28th place.

    Yarborough returned with Vollstedt’s team in 1967 and finished 17th, completing 176 laps. He made his final two “500” starts in 1971 and 1972 with Gene White’s team, completing 193 laps and finishing 10th in 1972 – both career bests – in a colorful team that also boasted fellow kindred jovial spirits Lloyd Ruby and Sam Sessions.

    In 1971, Yarborough raced the entire USAC Championship Trail with White’s team. He produced a best finish of fifth, at Trenton and Michigan, and ended up 16th in the standings in his only full open-wheel season.

    Yarborough retired as a driver after the 1988 NASCAR Cup Series season and then focused on team ownership and other businesses. His Cale Yarborough Motorsports raced in the Cup Series through the 1999 season, with John Andretti delivering the team its sole victory in the 1997 Pepsi 400 at Daytona.

    His immense success as a driver helped Yarborough earn enshrinement in the International Motorsports Hall of Fame, the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America, the NASCAR Hall of Fame and the South Carolina Hall of Fame. He was selected as one of NASCAR’s 50 Greatest Drivers in 1998 and one of its 75 Greatest Drivers in 2023.

    Yarborough was an excellent athlete before focusing on racing in his late teens. He was a high school football star and played semi-pro football in his native South Carolina, and he also was a Golden Gloves boxer.

  • Allmendinger tapped to drive Kaulig Racing’s No. 16 entry for 2024 Daytona 500

    Allmendinger tapped to drive Kaulig Racing’s No. 16 entry for 2024 Daytona 500

    Kaulig Racing took to social media to reveal that AJ Allmendinger will be driving the team’s No. 16 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 entry for the 66th running of the Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway in February 2024.

    The news comes 13 days after the 42-year-old Allmendinger from Los Gatos, California, was announced to return to the Xfinity Series with the Kaulig organization for the 2024 season after spending this past season piloting Kaulig’s No. 16 entry in the Cup Series.

    Allmendinger’s bid for the 2024 Daytona 500 indicates that Kaulig Racing’s No. 16 entry will return as the team’s “All-Star” entry for the first time since 2022 and field multiple competitors throughout the 2024 season. Despite Allmendinger scaling back to being a part-time Cup competitor, Kaulig’s No. 16 entry is expected to be guaranteed a starting spot for the event as a locked chartered entry due to contesting in all 36 events throughout the 2023 Cup season, though this remains to be determined. For the 500, Allmendinger will be a teammate alongside Daniel Hemric, who will be piloting Kaulig’s No. 31 entry on a full-time basis as he makes his return to Cup Series competition.

    The 2024 Daytona 500 is set to mark Allmendinger’s 11th career apperance in the Great American Race and second in a row for Kaulig Racing. Through 11 previous starts, the Californian has achieved four top-10 results and two career-best third-place finishes in the 500 (2009 & 2017). He claimed a sixth-place finish during last year’s Daytona 500.

    This past season, Allmendinger scored a Cup Series victory at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Road Course in October, which marked his third win in NASCAR’s premier series. He also recorded four top-five results, seven top-10 results, 64 laps led and an average-finishing result of 19.6 throghout the 36-race schedule before settling in 21st place in the final driver’s standings. To go along with his Cup victory at the Charlotte Roval, Allmendinger won two Xfinity Series races (Circuit of the Americas in March and at Nashville Superspeedway in June).

    Additional driver plans regarding Kaulig’s No. 16 entry along with Allmendinger’s part-time schedule for the 2024 Cup Series season remains to be determined.

    Allmendinger’s 11th Daytona 500 career start and second with Kaulig Racing is scheduled to occur on February 18, 2024, with the event’s broadcast time set to air at 2:30 p.m. ET on FOX.

  • Alfredo joins Beard Motorsports for Daytona 500 bid, part-time Cup Series campaign in 2024

    Alfredo joins Beard Motorsports for Daytona 500 bid, part-time Cup Series campaign in 2024

    Anthony Alfredo has been selected to pilot the No. 62 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 for Beard Motorsports throughout Daytona Speedweeks in preparation for the 66th running of the Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway in February 2024, where he will then attempt to compete at Talladega Superspeedway in April.

    The news comes as Beard Motorsports is set to return on a part-time NASCAR Cup Series campaign in 2024, beginning with an eighth consecutive entrance in Daytona Speedweeks and the team’s bid to make the Daytona 500 field, which would mark the team’s sixth qualification for the 500, after missing the event this past season. Due to being a non-chartered team, Beard Motorsports will have to make the 500 either through the Daytona 500 Qualifying session that will occur on February 14 or through one of two Bluegreen Vacations Duels that will occur the following day on February 15.

    For Alfredo, the 24-year-old native from Ridgefield, Connecticut, will attempt to become the sixth competitor to compete in a Cup Series event for Beard Motorsports. He previously competed in the entire 2021 Cup season with Front Row Motorsports, where he ended up in 30th place in the final standings on the strength of a single top-10 result and an average-finishing result of 27.5. He also made two Cup starts with Live Fast Motorsports this past season, which occurred at Richmond Raceway and at Martinsville Speedway in April.

    Aside from his part-time Cup campaign with Beard Motorsports, Alfredo is set to campaign on a full-time basis in the 2024 Xfinity Series season for Our Motorsports.

    “I’m so thankful for this opportunity,” Alfredo said in a released statement. “Every driver that runs stock cars wants to race in the NASCAR Cup Series and the Daytona 500. I’ve been blessed to race at this level against drivers that are childhood heroes of mine. This opportunity with the Beard family is very exciting. They have always fielded great cars in these superspeedway races, so I’m thrilled to get behind the wheel of their No. 62 Chevrolet.”

    Beard Motorsports, which is based in Mooresville, North Carolina, and has only a single full-time employee, that being crew chief Darren Shaw, made its Cup Series debut during the 2017 Daytona 500 with veteran Brendan Gaughan. Since then, the team has made 26 career starts in NASCAR’s premier series, primarily at Daytona and Talladega. Within the 26 starts, the team recorded five top-10 results and a career-best fifth-place run with Noah Gragson at Daytona in August 2022. The team’s best result in the Daytona 500 is a seventh-place finish produced by Brendan Gaughan in 2020.

    This past season, Austin Hill, an Xfinity Series competitor for Richard Childress Racing, made a total of five Cup starts for Beard Motorsports. Hill’s best result with the team was a 14th-place run at Daytona in August.

    “The 2024 season marks our eighth year competing in the NASCAR Cup Series,” Amie Beard, executive vice president of Beard Motorsports, added. “It’s surreal to even be referencing year number eight. This race team is a passion project for all of us. My dad loved the sport and it’s a passion that we now share as a family. It’s what drives this team.”

    Beard Motorsports also plans to compete at Daytona in August and at Talladega in October. The team’s driver plans for both events along with additional events to enter remain to be determined.

    Alfredo’s first Cup Series campaign with Beard Motorsports commences with the Daytona 500 Qualifying session on February 14 followed by the Bluegreen Vacations Duels at Daytona International Speedway that will occur on February 15 as he attempts to qualify for the 66th running of the Daytona 500 that will follow suit on February 18 and air at 2:30 p.m. ET on FOX.