Trackhouse Racing Team unveiled Daniel Suarez’s No. 99 iFLY Chevrolet paint scheme Wednesday for the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series season.
iFLY is an indoor sky-diving company. It has flown more than 10,000,000 people in a dozen countries and at sea since launching the modern vertical wind tunnel industry in 1998. iFLY has 85 facilities operating worldwide, including a location in Concord, North Carolina.
The 2021 season will mark Suarez’s fifth full-time run in the Cup Series. It’ll be his first with Trackhouse, as the team makes its official NASCAR debut Feb. 14 in the season-opening Daytona 500. Founder and owner Justin Marks announced the organization’s formation back in October, and a partnership with Pitbull was recently revealed this month.
Scroll to see different angles of the No. 99 iFLY Chevrolet.
The 2021 Rolex 24 field is picture-perfect once again.
Spectators soaked in a peek at the array of prototypes and sports cars during last weekend’s Roar Before the 24 preliminary at Daytona International Speedway. But that was just a prelude to the twice-around-the-clock classic that opens the IMSA season, the 59th Rolex 24 at Daytona, which starts at 3:40 p.m. ET Saturday and ends at the same time Sunday (NBC, NBC Sports App, NBCSN, TrackPass, IMSA.com).
The field assembled Wednesday at the 3.56-mile circuit for the traditional group photo before the 24-hour endurance event, capturing the lineup from multiple angles. The 49 entries are divided among five classes of cars competing for divisional wins and overall laurels.
The No. 31 Whelen Engineering Racing Cadillac DPi will start from the pole position Saturday after a victory in last weekend’s Roar, and the prototype sits in the No. 1 post in the group photo. Defending NASCAR Cup Series champion Chase Elliott will be part of the roster for the No. 31 team, sharing driving duties with Felipe Nasr, Mike Conway and Pipo Derani this weekend.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — FOX Sports kicks off its 21st season of NASCAR coverage with a packed slate of live racing from Daytona International Speedway on six consecutive days, beginning Feb. 9 and culminating with the Daytona 500 on FOX and FOX Deportes on Feb. 14 (2:30 p.m. ET). Live Daytona 500 pre-race coverage begins on FS1 with NASCAR RACEDAY at 11 a.m. ET, before the show’s move to FOX at 1 p.m. ET.
FOX NASCAR’s presentation of Daytona Speedweeks, anchored by its 18th Daytona 500, also includes FS1’s live telecast of the season openers for both the NASCAR Xfinity Series and ARCA Menards Series on Feb. 13 and the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series on Feb. 12. This year marks the 19th consecutive season of exclusive Truck Series coverage for FOX Sports.
The Daytona 500 is streamed live in English and Spanish on the FOX Sports app. FOX Deportes, the No. 1 Spanish-language sports network in the U.S., also offers live coverage of the Daytona 500.
NASCAR RACE HUB returns for the 2021 season just one day before cars hit the track at Daytona, on Feb. 8, live at 6 p.m. ET on FS1. Below is the complete FOX Sports and FOX Deportes’ Daytona Speedweeks programming schedule:
FOX NASCAR DAYTONA SPEEDWEEKS SCHEDULE (all times live and ET unless otherwise noted and subject to change)
Monday, Feb. 8
NASCAR RACE HUB (6-7 p.m.) (FS1)
Tuesday, Feb. 9
NASCAR RACEDAY (BUSCH CLASH AT DAYTONA) (6-7 p.m.) (FS1)
BUSCH CLASH AT DAYTONA (7-9 p.m.) (FS1)
Wednesday, Feb. 10
NASCAR CUP SERIES PRACTICE (12-1 p.m.) (FS1)
NASCAR RACE HUB (6-7 p.m.) (FS1)
NASCAR CUP SERIES QUALIFYING (7-9 p.m.) (FS1)
Thursday, Feb. 11
NASCAR CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES PRACTICE (5:30-6:30 p.m.) (FS1)
NASCAR RACEDAY (DUEL AT DAYTONA) (6:30-7 p.m.) (FS1)
DUEL AT DAYTONA (7-10 p.m.) (FS1)
Friday, Feb. 12
NASCAR CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES QUALIFYING (3-4:30 p.m.) (FS1)
NASCAR XFINITY SERIES PRACTICE (4:30-5:30 p.m.) (FS1)
Today’s Roush Fenway Racing preview continues NASCAR.com’s countdown of team previews for the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series season, ranked in reverse order of best finish in last year’s owner standings.
Manufacturer: Ford Engine: Roush-Yates Driver-crew chief pairings: Ryan Newman-Scott Graves (No. 6), Chris Buescher-Luke Lambert (No. 17)
What’s new: Apart from the newly signed sponsor in Kohler Generators for Ryan Newman, there’s really nothing else new going on at Roush Fenway Racing. The team returns both of its drivers and their crew chiefs from 2020, as Chris Buescher continues with the No. 17 team and Newman sticks with his No. 6 crew. Other partners, such as Castrol and Guaranteed Rate, therefore extended their relationships with the organization.
Team outlook: Neither of the two Roush Fenway Racing drivers won a race or qualified for the NASCAR Playoffs in 2020. That should be the goal for 2021. A win would secure a berth, but pointing their way in would still be considered a step in the right direction.
Racing Insights’ stats break: Five of Roush Fenway Racing’s 10 top-10 finishes came in the final 14 races of the 2020 season. … Chris Buescher matched his career most top-fives in 2020 and had a career high eight top-10 finishes in his first year in the No. 17.
Ryan Newman, No. 6 Ford
Experience: 20th full season in NASCAR Cup Series 2020 stats: 25th in final standings; 0 wins, 0 top fives, 2 top 10s 2020 final Fantasy Live ranking: 25th 2021 championship odds: 250/1
Outlook: Newman missed three of the 36 races last season after a crash in the season-opening Daytona 500 sidelined him. The Indiana native hit a career low in top 10s with just two in 2020. His previous low was seven in 2006. He’ll need to work his way back toward the front of the pack in 2021, especially if he wants to return to Victory Lane for the first time since 2017.
Chris Buescher, No. 17 Ford
Experience: Sixth full season in NASCAR Cup Series 2020 stats: 21st in final standings; 0 wins, 2 top fives, 8 top 10s 2020 final Fantasy Live ranking: 21st 2021 championship odds: 300/1
Outlook: This will mark Buescher’s second full-time season with Roush Fenway Racing, so he should be more comfortable in the No. 17 Ford. Buescher’s first and only career win at NASCAR’s top level so far came in 2016 at Pocono Raceway, where the Cup Series will host a doubleheader in 2021. Hitting a new top-five high would be a good, realistic goal for the Texas native. He had a career-best eight top-10 finishes last year but only matched his two top-five peak.
The next generation of NASCAR drivers is developing throughout the three national series, and there’s a good crop of them heading into their respective 2021 seasons.
NASCAR.com’s Power Rankings guru, Pat DeCola, recently ranked the top 10 NASCAR prospects 23 years of age and younger. His No. 1 pick — spoiler — was Austin Cindric, the 2020 Xfinity Series champion who will try to defend his title with Team Penske in 2021 but already has a Cup Series ride lined up for 2022 thanks to Wood Brothers Racing.
Fellow NASCAR.com writers Terrin Waack and Chase Wilhelm, however, thought there were two other drivers deserving of the top spot. See below for their arguments.
Note: Drivers who fit the age requirement but have completed a full NASCAR Cup Series season or are slated to in 2021 were ineligible for consideration.
WAACK: Sam Mayer. This kid — and I do mean kid because he’s still just 17 years old — already has a win in a NASCAR national series event. Last year, Mayer won the Camping World Truck Series race at Bristol Motor Speedway, making him the second-youngest driver to record a victory in the division. (Cole Custer, who now races full time in the Cup Series, was 16 when he won in 2014 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.) Mayer did it with flare, too, beating GMS Racing teammate and 2018 Truck Series champion Brett Moffitt to the finish line by a hefty 4.413 seconds. Mayer led the final 30 laps in what also happened to be the playoff opener, essentially taking away a guaranteed postseason berth from the championship-contending field.
On top of that career accomplishment, Mayer ran a full (albeit short) 2020 ARCA Menards East Series schedule and wound up as the overwhelming series champion. He won five out of the six races, and his sole non-win was a runner-up finish. Mayer also raced part time in the ARCA Menards Series last season, winning five of the 13 events in which he competed.
JR Motorsports recognized Mayer’s potential and jumped at the opportunity to sign him to its roster for the 2021 Xfinity Series season. Mayer will pilot Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s No. 8 Chevrolet for the second half of the schedule. Then, in 2022, Mayer will take over the ride full time.
Mayer sure seems like a quick learner — and a quick winner.
WILHELM: If you had Zane Smith in your Camping World Truck Series Championship 4 last year, then you were probably in the minority. This year, though, it will be expected from the 21-year-old driver.
Not only did Smith finish runner-up in the points standings with two victories, but his inaugural Xfinity Series part-time campaign in 2019 also was an impressive one. Smith piloted the No. 8 JR Motorsports in 10 races, earning a pair of top fives and seven top 10s.
Smith is poised to give Camping World Truck Series champion and teammate Sheldon Creed, along with the rest of the field, a run for their money in his second full-time season with GMS Racing. I think he’ll pick up right where he left off with three top-three finishes to wrap up the 2020 season.
Yeah, Cindric and Mayer are quality picks, but Smith is a name we’ll be talking about for years to come.
HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. — Joe Gibbs Racing driver Ty Gibbs will compete for the ARCA Menards Series Championship in 2021 and make his NASCAR Xfinity Series debut in the No. 54 Toyota Supra.
Gibbs, who captured an ARCA Menards Series-high six wins in 2020 despite running a partial schedule, will return to the No. 18 Toyota Camry to run the full schedule and compete for the championship. In addition to his six wins, Gibbs scored 12 top-five and 14 top-10 finishes in his 16 starts last season to help claim the organization’s first ARCA Menards Series Owner’s Championship. In addition, Gibbs also earned a win in six starts in the ARCA Menards East Series.
“We want to build on the success that our team had last season,” said JGR ARCA Menards Series crew chief Mark McFarland. “Ty works extremely hard to prepare each week and it’s exciting to have him behind the wheel for every race and the opportunity to go after our goal of winning that championship.”
In addition to competing in the ARCA Menards Series, Gibbs is slated to make his Xfinity Series debut driving the No. 54 Toyota Supra starting with the road course race in Daytona on February 20. Although his exact schedule in the Series is still being finalized, current plans qualify Gibbs to contend for the Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors. He will be joined behind the wheel of the No. 54 Toyota Supra this season by veteran teammates Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, and Martin Truex Jr., all of whom are scheduled to run at least one race.
“I’m pumped to run the full season in the ARCA Menards Series,” said Ty Gibbs. “(Crew Chief) Mark (McFarland) has put together an amazing team that gives me a chance to be successful every week.
“I’m also really excited to have the opportunity to work with (crew chief) Chris Gayle to make my debut in the Xfinity Series,” added Gibbs. “I can’t imagine a better situation for me to learn and be able to compare notes, not only with my Series’ teammates like Brandon (Jones), Harrison (Burton) and Daniel (Hemric), but also veterans like Kyle, Denny and Martin who I will share the car with.”
A full schedule to include driver assignments for JGR’s No. 54 Xfinity Series entry will be announced at a later date.
“I’m looking forward to the upcoming season,” said Chris Gayle, who will serve as crew chief for the JGR No. 54 Xfinity Series entry in 2021. “Ty has already shown a great deal of talent with each step he has taken in his career and I think the opportunity to also learn from his veteran teammates will be a huge benefit to his development.”
Stu Laidlaw moved from dirt to pavement racing three years ago.
The first year he raced at Alaska Raceway Park he said it was “embarrassing.” He would get lapped sometimes two or three times in a 60-lap feature.
The second year, with more knowledge of set-up, he met his goal of just staying on the lead lap every race.
This year, in an attempt to continue building on what he and his team had learned, Laidlaw wanted to get to the podium for at least a couple races. It was a modest goal, but one he thought they could easily meet.
But even he was surprised by how many podium finishes he had, and how many points he accumulated.
Stu Laidlaw won the GCI Late Model championship in 2020.
Laidlaw won the late model championship at Alaska Raceway, a NASCAR-sanctioned third-mile oval asphalt track in Palmer, Alaska, and was the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Alaska Division I state champion. Even though he didn’t have any wins, Laidlaw finished in the top 5 in all eight ARP races, and won the state title by two points.
Being a low budget team, Laidlaw said his expectations were more moderate going into 2020, even with the improvements he had seen his team make. But where he said they lacked in speed, they made up for in consistency.
“My crew chief and the team were all about winning the championship,” he said. “And I never really bought into that. I didn’t want that kind of pressure. Then once it was about midway through the season when we were up there basically in the top two in points and not that far behind I was thinking, ‘We have a chance.’”… By midseason I thought, ‘Boy, we’re really doing something. We‘re moving in the right direction. We have a chance.’
“What I learned is being the most consistent wins championships, and that’s what we did.”
The team stayed on the lead lap in every race except one when they had brake issues. Laidlaw credited that consistency with his overall success in 2020.
“Really what we did right this year was not only through our hard work but through our learning process. It’s a science,” he said. “The littlest corrections, the little adjustments, make big differences. And we’re still learning that, but we got a lot better at it. Now it’s just being consistent and that consistency allowed us to win the championship.”
Laidlaw began racing on dirt in 2010, and stayed with it until a good friend of his was told by his doctor to stop dirt racing for health reason. When that friend told Laidlaw he was going to move to competing on pavement tracks, Laidlaw decided to follow him in support.
He initially bought a race truck, but there wasn’t a class for that at ARP unless he wanted to run it in the street stocks division. At the same time, the late model of the track’s championship team at the time came up for sale.
“I thought, ‘I can buy this car, it’s cheaper,’” Laidlaw said. “I didn’t realize how expensive a late model is compared to the street stock.”
Laidlaw was looking for something different when he moved from dirt racing, and he found that competing on pavement was quite a bit different. While his prior experience helped him with the driving part, there was a significant learning curve when it came to setting the car up for asphalt.
“All the science and documenting, tracking everything, making sure you write down what you did, where are things at, tire temps and pressures, you don’t have to do that with dirt,” he said. “You get your pressures and if the car’s not handling right the driver can pedal it. But on a paved surface if the car is not set up, I don’t care how good of a driver you are, you’re going backwards. And that was the main difference is just getting the car set up so you can actually drive it. You have that in dirt but it’s not as critical.”
Stu Laidlaw and his team.
The 2020 title was Laidlaw’s first championship in any level of racing. But, while he’s thankful for the opportunity to represent his track, he said it’s not just one person who wins a title. It takes “people to help you go around the track,” he said.
It was the help of his team that allowed Laidlaw’s car to continue to get better and move up the ARP standings. His crew has made sure to keep racing fun even with all the work that goes into it.
The sport is also a family event for Laidlaw. His teenage son works on his pit crew with him, and his wife supports him every step of the way.
His other son, who is 9, has also gotten into racing, and Laidlaw hopes they can get a bandolero for his youngest to begin racing this season.
While he has his real family on board with him, his team has become his family as well.
“I think maybe that drives me the most is just the team aspect, which includes my family,” he said.
“My team, from my audio visual camera people, to our social media and marketing people, to my crew chief and his assistant, I think what really will bring me back next year is what can we do together not only to repeat the championship but what can we do together to make the product better overall. What can we produce? I think that’s what drives me is more, better, faster, proficiency, and keep building and see what else we can do.”
As Laidlaw looks ahead to the next season, he looks forward to getting the opportunity to share the sport of racing with more young car enthusiasts in his hometown. He’s hoping to work with Big Brothers, Big Sisters and have kids come out to races, do some crew work, and be exposed to a new experience.
“You never know, it could be the next Kyle Busch or his tire changer,” he said. “Or could be the next CEO of a company that maybe you never know that’s what it was that lit the fire.”
As far as racing goes, Laidlaw hopes that after three straight years of progression, he hasn’t hit his peak just yet.
“Next year, I don’t know what will happen,” he said. “We’ve kind of hit the top here, but it’d be great to repeat it. That’d be a dream come true for us, but we’ll see what happens.
“Alaska, it’s small time up here. It’s a small market, but to have the competition we have and to be able to have the connections with the NASCAR family makes a difference because we are so far removed. So we’re thankful we even first of all got to race this year. Second of all to be able to win this championship, it’s truly an honor. I don’t know how to say anything less than that.”
DAYTONA BEACH, FL — After a historic debut season that set the high watermark in viewership for televised esports programming, the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series is set to return in 2021.
NASCAR and iRacing jointly announced today a new-look Pro Invitational will see NASCAR Cup Series stars compete virtually in a 10-race schedule that will complement NASCAR’s real-life racing schedule, offering fans a new mid-week competition featuring NASCAR’s top drivers. FOX Sports, which helped NASCAR and iRacing set viewership records with the inaugural Pro Invitational last season, will broadcast the first five races of the series live in primetime on FS1. NBC Sports will air the final five races of the series, with its schedule and details to be announced at a later date.
With the NASCAR Cup Series set to visit new tracks and new markets in 2021, this year’s Pro Invitational will feature a mix of tracks designed primarily to preview the upcoming weekend’s “real life” race — a feature that will be particularly beneficial in giving fans an idea of what to expect as the real-life drivers take on challenging new circuits throughout the season.
“The success of our eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series was underscored by an industry-wide effort to entertain fans during the early months of the global pandemic,” said Tim Clark, NASCAR’s senior vice president and chief digital officer. “This year the Pro Invitational will return with a schedule of midweek races that will bridge the gap between our real-world races each weekend.”
“After last year’s Pro Invitational success, we’re proud that our partners at NASCAR, FOX, and the race teams view the series as an integral part of their marketing and fan engagement strategies for 2021,” said Steve Myers, iRacing executive producer. “It’s even more fulfilling that the industry has rallied around our platform not only as the most authentic re-creation of the sport, but also a terrific tool to help grow NASCAR’s audience and generate revenue to strengthen the entire ecosystem.”
The first five mid-week events will air on FS1 on select Wednesday nights beginning March 24, featuring an exciting mix of races that includes Bristol Motor Speedway’s new dirt configuration, fan-favorites such as Talladega Superspeedway and Darlington Raceway, and Austin, Texas’ famed Circuit of the Americas’ facility. NBC Sports will pick up the second half of the 10-race season once the network’s broadcast window begins in June.
“FOX Sports embraced the eNASCAR iRacing Invitational Series in the spring as a way to keep race fans entertained, but we quickly realized it was a product and collaboration that we would continue to explore,” said FOX Sports Executive Producer, EVP/Head of Operations and Production Brad Zager. “The product is best-in-class, it delivers NASCAR to an even broader audience and, let’s face it, it’s a heckuva lot of fun.”
Details around the fifth race in the FS1 window, plus further plans for the second half of the ’21 Pro Invitational schedule, will be announced at a later date.
For more information on the eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series, along with other esports initiatives, visit www.eNASCAR.com.
2021 eNASCAR iRacing Pro Invitational Series (First Five-Races)
Today’s Richard Petty Motorsports preview continues NASCAR.com’s countdown of team previews for the 2021 NASCAR Cup Series season, starting with new chartered teams then ranked in reverse order of best finish in last year’s owner standings.
Manufacturer: Chevrolet Engine: ECR Engines Driver-crew chief pairings: Erik Jones-Jerry Baxter (No. 43)
What’s new: The driver. Erik Jones makes the move to Richard Petty Motorsports after spending the last three seasons driving the No. 20 Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing. For Jones, it will mark his first time driving a Chevrolet in the NASCAR Cup Series. Jones will also have a new crew chief in Jerry Baxter, who returns to RPM for his second season. Baxter was a crew chief at Kyle Busch Motorsports when Jones won the 2015 Camping World Truck Series title with Rudy Fugle, who is now at Hendrick Motorsports.
Team outlook: Richard Petty Motorsports is coming off its best finish in the standings, 22nd, since making the move in 2018 to Chevrolet and forming an alliance with Richard Childress Racing. The team will look to continue that momentum and grow the relationship with RCR with Jones behind the wheel. A top-20 finish in the standings would be the benchmark with the ultimate goal of returning the famed No. 43 to Victory Lane and to a playoff berth.
Racing Insights’ stats break: Erik Jones brings the No. 43 car something it hasn’t had in more than six years: a proven winner. Jones is a two-time winner in Cup and has more wins than any of the other six drivers Richard Petty Motorsports had employed since the start of the 2015 season. (Aric Almirola had one Cup win before moving to the No. 10 Stewart Haas Racing Ford and Regan Smith, who made only two starts for the team, also had one.) Jones made the playoffs two of the last three seasons. Richard Petty Motorsports’ last playoff driver was Aric Almirola in 2014.
Erik Jones, No. 43 Chevrolet
Experience: Fifth full season in NASCAR Cup Series 2020 stats: 17th in final standings; 0 wins, 9 top fives, 13 top 10s. 2020 final Fantasy Live ranking: 15th 2021 championship odds: 200-1
Outlook: There’s no doubt Jones has the capability to put RPM back in Victory Lane. The team has been close on occasion over the past few seasons, most notably at superspeedways where Jones has one career win. After being with a multi-car organization since his rookie year, Jones will get a fresh perspective with the move to a single-car team as something he’s looking forward to in his next chapter. He will become the 13th different driver to pilot the No. 43 since team owner Richard Petty retired from driving at the end of the 1992 season.