Kevin Harvick won the Busch Pole Award for Sunday’s Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500 at Texas Motor Speedway (3:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), host of the second Round of 8 race in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs.
The lineup was determined using NASCAR’s competition-based formula, which is a total number based on the series’ previous event: 15% of a fastest lap time position, 25% of the driver’s final race finish position, 25% of the owner’s final race position and 35% of the owner points position.
Harvick’s No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford will share the front row with the No. 22 Team Penske Ford of Joey Logano, who rated second in the performance metric calculations. Logano earned the victory in last Sunday’s Hollywood Casino 400 at Kansas Speedway to lock in a spot for the Championship 4, while Harvick finished second.
In the majority of national series events since NASCAR’s May return, starting lineups have been set by random draws. This structure, first introduced in early August, draws on performance from both individual races and season-long results, rather than leaving a range of starting spots up to chance.
See the full starting lineup for Sunday’s race below (P = playoff eligible):
As a fellow Indiana native, Chase Briscoe grew up a Tony Stewart fan. Briscoe was 7 years old when Stewart won his first NASCAR Cup Series championship in 2002 and 16 years old when he captured his third and final title in 2011. Briscoe watched Stewart make a name for himself as a driver with Joe Gibbs Racing and then continue that success with Stewart-Haas Racing as a driver and co-owner.
Stewart retired from full-time racing after the 2016 season. Three years later, he signed Briscoe to a full-time gig in the Xfinity Series. This week, Stewart announced Briscoe is being promoted to the Cup Series. Better yet, Briscoe will take over Stewart’s old ride: the No. 14 entry.
“It is unbelievable,” Briscoe said. “It still doesn’t really feel real.”
Well, it is. Stewart-Haas Racing officially announced the 2021 deal Tuesday morning.
“I wish I could go tell 7-year-old Chase who was wearing his Tony Stewart stuff and playing sprint car video games and NASCAR video games that he was eventually going to get to drive his car,” Briscoe said. “It definitely is crazy to look back on and think about all those things.”
It’s even crazier when the Stewart-Briscoe similarities are laid out.
For starters, there’s the obvious Indiana tie. Stewart is from Columbus, Indiana, while Briscoe is from Mitchell, Indiana. The towns are about 60 miles apart.
But then there’s also the shared racing resume. Both started out as dirt racers, gaining most of their experience on that track type before taking on NASCAR’s paved ovals. Stewart thinks Briscoe’s dirt background will help him significantly as he transitions into the Cup Series.
“Obviously drivers that drive on dirt are used to the back of the car being free and swinging around and wheel spin and everything else,” Stewart said. “But as NASCAR keeps taking horsepower away from these cars, having the cars freed up is a very big piece of the equation to make sure that you’re keeping speeds. And drivers that can handle a loose race car and are comfortable with that feel I think ultimately are going to have an advantage.”
Sounding just like Stewart, Briscoe took the comparison one step further.
“I think just growing up and running on dirt makes you be versatile,” Briscoe said. “You have to constantly react and move around and search around the race track. These Cup races, with those being longer races, the track will constantly change and you have to be on top of that, so I think it will definitely help.”
Until then, Briscoe is laser-focused on the 2020 Xfinity Series championship. He’s currently the only playoff driver locked into the Championship 4, as the Round of 8 continues Saturday at Texas Motor Speedway with the O’Reilly Auto Parts 300 (4:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). His win last week at Kansas Speedway guaranteed him a shot at the title come Nov. 7 at Phoenix Raceway.
Briscoe has a career-best nine victories this season. That’s a large jump from just one in both 2018 and 2019.
“When he makes a mistake, he will spend more time reflecting on that mistake, unfortunately, than he does the rest of the good things that he does all day, but that’s kind of the way I was in my career, too,” Stewart said. “I felt minimizing mistakes was the key to winning races and championships, and that’s also the same mindset that Chase has as well. He’s very, very diligent about making sure he learns from everything that happens on the race track, and he’s got a pretty good memory bank to hold all of that knowledge in.”
It’s almost like quality over quantity, making the most of an experience rather than going for the most experienced.
Stewart only had 37 national series starts before he earned a Cup Series opportunity. In his first season (1999), Stewart won three races.
By the time the 2020 Xfinity Series season ends, Briscoe will have had 108 starts prior to his Cup Series debut – the 2021 Daytona 500.
“It is super humbling to think that the 14 car is going to be driven by me next year,” Briscoe said. “To me, there are only a few numbers in NASCAR that have a lot of significance and the 14 is certainly up there.”
NASCAR issued fines Tuesday to three Cup Series teams and one Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series team for lug-nut infractions found after last weekend’s events at Kansas Speedway.
Each team was cited for violations of Section 10.9.10.4 in the NASCAR Rule Book for each having one lug nut improperly secured in a post-race check. On the Cup Series side, that meant $10,000 fines for the crew chiefs of the following three teams after Sunday’s Hollywood Casino 400:
No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford (crew chief Rodney Childers)
No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota (crew chief Adam Stevens)
No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota (crew chief James Small)
In Gander Trucks, a $2,500 fine was handed down to crew chief Drew Blickensderfer after the No. 17 DGR-Crosley Ford was found with one unsecured lug nut. Hailie Deegan drove the entry to 16th place in her series debut in the Clean Harbors 200.
Noah Sweet’s journey to here started like most do — a love of Matchbox cars, visions of becoming a race car driver, connecting with your favorite driver on the track. Very few journeys reach this stage, though, with one dream fully realized at just 19 years old.
Sweet still has his first-grade notebook, which is filled with cherished early drawings of the car he was attached to the most — the metallic finishes, the yellow on blue that reminded him of the University of Michigan in his home state. His primitive but colorful images were predominantly of the No. 48 car of his favorite driver, Jimmie Johnson, who at the time, was in the midst of his streak of five consecutive championships.
Sweet, now a sophomore design student, has kept at making those images — from sketches to video game paint to ultra-realistic sims. Now one of his designs will make its real-world debut on the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Ally Chevrolet for Sunday’s Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500 (3:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, PRN, SiriusXM) at Texas Motor Speedway. His first on-track paint scheme will coincide with the third-to-last race in Johnson’s final full Cup Series season.
“Seven-time Cup champion, no pressure,” says Sweet, who said he went through at least 10 concepts before settling on his final design. “This has been my dream. It was just a stressful process, but a fun one. I can confidently say it was fun.”
As with most story arcs, Sweet’s journey wasn’t a direct path to a design on the Cup Series grid. It meant finding his voice and dealing with the darker side of social media and mental health, finding support within NASCAR’s community of young designers and eventually from one of the sport’s most decorated champions.
“I kind of took the art aspect and I merged it into my passion for NASCAR and how much I enjoyed it,” Sweet said, “and it kind of came together to make this great huge atom bomb of two of my most passionate hobbies, and it turned into what is now. It’s really evolved since then, but like I’ve said time and time again, I never would’ve thought it would have gotten to this point.”
Painting a picture
Stock-car racing and art have always been outlets for Sweet, who has used the handle “Lefty” on his designs — even though he’s right-handed. He co-opted the nickname from an artist who goes by Left Boy, offering a nod to NASCAR’s tendency toward left turns.
Being a racing fan was an outlet for entertainment. Art was, too, but it also helped him communicate.
“It’s how I emotionally coped with things,” Sweet says. “Like as a kid, I was a very emotional kid and it came from a lot of my mental health issues. But I would generally draw and paint stuff to cope. Like if I was upset, I couldn’t really use my words.”
Growing up, when Sweet could not verbalize that he was upset, he would visualize it, sliding pictures of himself and his mood under his mother’s door in the night to convey his emotions.
So when a wave of social change swept the country during the spring and summer, Sweet expressed himself in the way that he knew — by drawing. The national reckoning coincided with a personal one, as one of Sweet’s relatives grappled with making their sexual orientation public. It also coincided with a NASCAR statement that emphasized the sport’s inclusivity. When all those factors came together, he educated himself, then he drew.
What emerged in June was the concept of a No. 48 Chevrolet adorned with rainbow colors to raise awareness for the LBGTQ community, a paint scheme created for iRacing that began to make the social media rounds. Sweet says he knew there would be backlash once the Pride scheme became more widely circulated, but wasn’t prepared for the full extent of bullying or harassment that he’d face.
It reached a head when his personal information was compromised and the rumors became more antagonizing. Instead of drawing, he left to distance himself from it, setting off alarms with a social media post that had his friends, followers and family fearing the worst. “I just felt like I had to remove myself because I felt like I got to a point that was affecting people around me,” Sweet says, noting he silenced his social-media accounts while in a seven-day program of inpatient care. “I definitely went AWOL, as they say, and it scared a lot of people. I never would have thought that I’d be that person that people were trying to find.”
His mother later tweeted a note to indicate her son was OK, but after the initial concern, another social-media hashtag was beginning to trend in support of Sweet. Use of the hashtag #WeLoveLefty grew. As Sweet slowly began to return to the public eye, Johnson chimed in with his own post of encouragement.
“At the end of the day, I wish social media was a nicer place to be and exist, and it’s a place where people should be able to express themselves through all ways and be treated right and respectfully,” Johnson said. “You don’t need everybody singing your praises and lying to you, but there’s just some moral lines that have been crossed in how people behave and act on social media because they can hide behind their phone or a keyboard. As a father of kids that are going to enter that space to somebody that’s existing in the space and trying to provide content for fans that generally care of all ages, there’s just a way to behave — morally and ethically, in general.
“I don’t know why the world of social media, all of a sudden, it changes. You can say all the awful things that people say and affect somebody’s life. So to hear about the effect it had on Noah, a very creative young man that’s had some wonderful renderings that could go on our race car — or any race car, for that matter — to have him be attacked like he was, and then to have it affect him like it did, it just hit me. I mentioned all those other things before, you’re just trying to balance all that stuff and then you hear a story where it deeply hurts someone to the level that they consider not being here any longer, you’re like wow, that’s in my world. That’s about my race car, our paint scheme, our sponsorship. It hits close to home.”
Weeks later, the connection led to what Ally Racing representatives have called their best Zoom call of the year — a face-to-face meeting with Sweet and his driving hero.
“Hoo-boy,” Sweet says, recalling the emotions of counting down to the teleconference. “I was shaking the entire time, just so nervous.”
If pictures could talk…for this to be Jimmie's last ride and for Noah to be able to talk to him before it ends…..thank you again @AndreaBrimmer and @JimmieJohnson if Jimmie gets anything out of his last season…it's this. ❤️ pic.twitter.com/YhZg2lDF56
The initial jitters wore off, and Sweet came to realize that he shared a similar childhood memory with Johnson. Sweet attended several races at Charlotte Motor Speedway growing up, during a time where Lowe’s was a primary sponsor of both Johnson and the track. Between those tie-ins, the speedway’s banners that featured Johnson and a No. 48 show car parked out front, “I just thought we were going to Jimmie’s house,” Sweet recalled.
Similarly, Johnson shared that when his family stopped to eat at Hardee’s during his childhood, he figured that Cale Yarborough’s race shops were based there, a nod to the former Cup Series champ whose distinctive orange-and-white cars of the 1980s carried the restaurant’s sponsorship.
Besides that connection, Johnson’s message of strength resonated, but the meeting also came with the promise of a collaboration that would place a Sweet-designed No. 48 on the track for one of Johnson’s final Cup Series races. The encouragement, it turns out, was mutual.
“There was some positivity to come out of it, and I think that that opportunity does exist in social,” Johnson says. “It seems like it’s a little harder to get the positive things out there to have them gain traction. But in this instance, there was some positive traction and I feel like with where his head is and how he seemed on that Zoom call and meeting his parents and his family and understanding his support group, I think he’s moving in a great direction. Then the support that I believe Ally plans to show him here in the future will hopefully squash any negativity that was out there and that he experienced in the past.”
Says Sweet, simply: “I’m going to remember it for the rest of my life. I am.”
Ally Racing
Hitting the track
Pursuing a career in motorsports design? Sweet said it came with a warning. But instead of finding a dog-eat-dog business, Sweet said NASCAR’s talented community of young designers has been a welcoming place.
“I know a lot of people say that this industry is so cutthroat, you know, that you’ve gotta stay on your toes,” he said. “But in all true reality, that all goes away when you make these friendly connections.”
Sweet cites the influence of the late Sam Bass, NASCAR’s first official artist, in his work, noting that one of his first big breaks came with a design for another stock-car racing legend — Hall of Famer Bobby Allison. But he’s also learned from the guiding advice of other designers, who have both shared their experiences and rallied behind his cause.
He says that’s led to designing T-shirts for Xfinity Series driver Tommy Joe Martins and creating the pit-board sign for part-time driver Ryan Vargas among other projects.
“You get all these connections and then you get a reputation, and I’ve already been told, you’ve pretty much got two feet in the door already, ” Sweet says. “You just have to get that piece of paper that says, ‘hey, I was in college for four years. Here’s my portfolio,’ and then you slap everything on the desk. This is what matters right here.”
As Sweet progresses toward receiving his degree, Ally Racing has stepped in to contribute to his education to assist with making that next step. As for his portfolio, he’s adding to it this weekend with a real-life No. 48 Chevrolet that Johnson will pilot in one of his final races.
It’s a long trip from his original portfolio — that dog-eared notebook from his grade-school years — and a journey that Sweet hasn’t quite wrapped his head around yet.
“We’ll cross that bridge when we get there,” Sweet says, laughing but also flirting with the idea of his No. 48 ending up in Victory Lane. “I’m not sure how I’ll react. We’ll see. Of course, I’ve sat there and imagined what it’ll be like, but I don’t know yet. I’m going to be baffled the moment I see the car.”
Stewart-Haas Racing has called up Chase Briscoe to the NASCAR Cup Series for 2021, the team announced Tuesday.
Briscoe, who currently drives SHR’s No. 98 Ford in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, will take over the organization’s No. 14 Ford in the Cup Series next season. The 25-year-old driver is set to replace Clint Bowyer, who is finishing his final season before transitioning to broadcasting with FOX Sports next year.
HighPoint — an IT company based in Sparta, New Jersey — will also make the transition to the No. 14 team with Briscoe, extending its primary sponsorship into the 2021 Cup Series.
Stewart-Haas Racing
This 2020 slate is Briscoe’s second full-time campaign with Stewart-Haas Racing and easily his most successful. Before the season, Briscoe set an ambitious goal of eight wins. He eclipsed that last weekend at Kansas Speedway, giving him a series-leading nine victories in 2020 and 11 for his Xfinity career.
“In the final three races last season, we saw a confidence in Chase that we hadn’t seen before,” team co-owner Tony Stewart said in a release from the team, noting an affinity for having dirt-track racers behind the wheel of the No. 14. “There was a transformation, and I think those three races last year were a preview of what we were going to see this year. He’s delivered time and time again this season and he’s definitely ready for the NASCAR Cup Series.”
All of Briscoe’s Xfinity Series wins have come with Stewart-Haas Racing. He’s also a two-time winner in Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series competition and the 2016 champion of the ARCA Menards Series.
Bowyer, 41, announced Oct. 8 that he would move to FOX Sports’ NASCAR coverage team in 2021, working alongside Mike Joy and Jeff Gordon in the broadcasting booth. Bowyer is a 10-time Cup Series winner who joined the Cup Series full-time in 2006. He has been with SHR since 2017, when he took over the No. 14 Ford after Stewart’s retirement from driving.
Briscoe’s Kansas win clinched his spot in the Championship 4 field for the Xfinity season finale Nov. 7 at Phoenix Raceway. He finished fifth in the Xfinity Series standings last season, winning Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — In a year nearly unprecedented in its upheaval and changes, directly impacting short track racers across NASCAR, Josh Berry put together a season as remarkable in its consistency and perseverance as it was in its excellence.
Consider, in 37 Late Model Stock Car races starting on June 27, the 29-year-old from Hendersonville, Tennessee, recorded one finish outside of the top 10.
It wasn’t just about rolling up good finishes.
Twenty-four times at four different race tracks, Berry drove the No. 88 All Things Automotive/iRacing Chevrolet for Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s JR Motorsports to Victory Lane. He capped the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series season this past weekend with a win at North Carolina’s Hickory Motor Speedway on Saturday and a doubleheader sweep at Southern National Raceway Park in Kenly, North Carolina, on Sunday.
Josh Berry capped 2020 with a sweep at @SNM_Park Sunday
Now all that’s left is the official word in a call from #NASCAR ud83dudcde this week letting him know he’s the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series Division I national champion.@AdvanceAuto | @joshberrypic.twitter.com/w3lkEnEtKx
On Tuesday, Berry got the call from Steve O’Donnell, executive senior vice president and chief racing development officer at NASCAR, officially congratulating him on winning the 2020 Division I national championship.
“We just want to congratulate you on behalf of everyone at NASCAR and the France family on an incredible 2020 championship,” O’Donnell told him. “To you, Dale Jr., Kelley, and everyone at JR Motorsports, it has been an incredibly challenging year. You persevered, 24 wins – heck of a year, heck of a job – and we‘re really proud to have you as our champion.”
For Berry, the call was expected after he built a nearly insurmountable lead over the last half of the season. But it was one that was almost inconceivable before this year.
“It was pretty amazing,” said Berry of getting the call. “A national champ is no something we really thought we’d be ever able to compete for.
“To be able to get the championship, with the amazing season we’ve had, it really means a lot.”
Berry finished with 24 wins, 33 top fives and 36 top 10s in 37 starts. A driver’s top 14 finishes this season counted toward their championship points, giving Berry 480.
He out-distanced 2007 national champion Peyton Sellers, who had 10 wins, 26 top fives and 28 top 10s in 30 starts and finished with 452 points. Sellers won the track championship at Virginia’s Dominion Raceway. Ryan Millington, who captured the track title at Hickory, finished third in the national standings. Millington had six wins, 20 top fives and 22 top 10s in 26 starts for 440 points.
Defending national champion Jacob Goede finished fourth with 422 points, racing at Elko Speedway in Minnesota as well as Wisconsin’s LaCrosse Fairgrounds Speedway and Madison International Speedway.
Brian Robie finished fifth, winning a tiebreaker with Nick Murgic. Robie had 10 wins at New Hampshire’s Hudson Speedway, Claremont Motorsports Park and Monadnock Speedway; Murgic won twice while racing at Madison, Elko and LaCrosse.
Sam Butler wrapped up the Josten’s Rookie of the Year and finished seventh in the final national standings.
Benjamin Byrne (Monadnock, Hudson, Claremont), Keith Rocco and Mason Diaz rounded out the top 10. Rocco, the 2010 national champion, won his NASCAR-record 18th track title with his championship at Connecticut’s Stafford Motor Speedway, while Diaz took home the title at Southern National.
Berry credited his team, led by crew chief Ryan Vasconcellos, who has been with him for a decade. Together they won the 2012 Late Model title at Virginia’s Motor Mile Speedway and the 2014 championship at Hickory.
For Berry, his 2020 race season started with five wins in eight starts at Hickory.
His “dream” season, however, dates back to last October when he won the annual postseason Late Model race at Virginia’s Martinsville Speedway. He started on the pole and led every lap to win the race for the first time after seven previous failures.
“That was a huge boost,” said Berry. “I can’t even put into words what kind of night that was for us. That we a big weight off my shoulders, as a race car driver, that was a win that had eluded me.
In the offseason, he and his wife welcomed a baby girl. Racing close to home — he made 19 starts at Hickory — allowed him to have them at the race track with him.
“It’s been amazing,” said Berry. “That was really special to share all those moments with them.”
Berry finished sixth and 18th at South Carolina’s Myrtle Beach Speedway on Aug. 1, the lone blip on an otherwise flawless season.
He bounced back with four more wins at Hickory, including a doubleheader sweep on Aug. 29 that he followed with a doubleheader sweep the next day at Southern National. The wins vaulted him to the top of the standings, a position he would not relinquish.
“That’s when we really looked at the points and knew we needed tighten down the rest of the season and hold those guys off and win it,” said Berry, who closed out the season with 13 wins in his last 15 starts. “We were really fast, and we had some luck, too, and that’s just hard to beat.
“This whole season, it was tough on everybody. We were just able to come together as a team, find a goal, and achieve it.”
NASCAR officials reinstated Kyle Larson on Monday, more than six months after his suspension for his use of a racial slur during an iRacing event.
Chip Ganassi Racing fired Larson on April 14, one day after NASCAR barred him indefinitely as part of a behavioral penalty. Larson was mandated to complete sensitivity training at NASCAR’s direction as a condition for reinstatement, but will also have continued requirements to fulfill in order to keep his NASCAR membership current.
“NASCAR continues to prioritize diversity and inclusion across our sport,” the sanctioning body said in an official statement. “Kyle Larson has fulfilled the requirements set by NASCAR, and has taken several voluntary measures, to better educate himself so that he can use his platform to help bridge the divide in our country. Larson’s indefinite suspension has been lifted. Under the terms of his reinstatement, he will be cleared to return to all NASCAR racing activities effective January 1, 2021.”
Those terms for reinstatement include several speaking engagements, each spaced out through 2023, where Larson will share his experiences with NASCAR’s weekly series, e-sports and dirt-racing communities. He will also be required to take further training and engagement classes through 2023, plus continue his work with the Urban Youth Racing School (UYRS) and Rev Racing, providing coaching and mentorship for those initiatives.
Larson’s suspension came after an April 12 invitational iRacing event. He said he had keyed his microphone to send a private message, but his use of a racial slur was instead broadcast to all participants in the race and to viewers on public live streams.
Larson was penalized for violating Sections 12.1 (General Procedures) and 12.8 (NASCAR Member Conduct Guidelines) of the NASCAR Rule Book. He later apologized for his actions through his social media channels. Competition officials confirmed Oct. 16 that Larson had applied for reinstatement.
After his dismissal, Larson told the Associated Press in an Aug. 19 article: “I was just ignorant. And immature. I didn’t understand the negativity and hurt that comes with that word.”
He also explained the measures that he had quietly undertaken since the incident to learn more about civil-rights issues, making some of his first in-depth comments about the matter in a personal essay published Oct. 4 on his website.
In his essay, Larson took accountability for his actions and said he had connected with former athletes Tony Sanneh and Jackie Joyner-Kersee to work with their foundations and to see the impact of racial injustice first-hand in Minneapolis. He also said he had hired a diversity coach, Doug Harris of The Kaleidoscope Group, and had conversations with Black racers Bubba Wallace, J.R. Todd and Willy T. Ribbs to learn about their experiences.
“I want them to know that words do matter,” Larson wrote in his essay, referencing that he would have to answer to his family as he takes responsibility for his actions moving forward. “Apologizing for your mistakes matters. Accountability matters. Forgiveness matters. Treating others with respect matters. I will not stop listening and learning, but for me now, it’s about action — doing the right things, being a part of the solution and writing a new chapter that my children will be proud to read.”
Larson’s first televised remarks about the subject came Oct. 16 in an interview with James Brown on CBS This Morning. The feature also focused on Larson’s work with the UYRS in Philadelphia and his efforts to regain the trust of its founders after the incident.
During his suspension from NASCAR, Larson was a regular winner in sprint-car competition, including a series-best 12 victories on the World of Outlaws tour, which required Larson to complete sensitivity training within 30 days of the incident to be cleared for competition. Larson won again Sunday in USAC’s Silver Crown division, taking the Bettenhausen 100 at the Illinois State Fairgrounds.
Larson has six victories in 223 NASCAR Cup Series starts. He joined the circuit full-time in 2014 with Ganassi’s operation. The California native has also tallied 12 Xfinity Series wins and two victories in Gander Trucks competition.
Crew chief Paul Wolfe has been a part of Team Penske since 2010, when he helped guide a young Brad Keselowski to the Xfinity Series championship. Joey Logano has been with Roger Penske’s organization since 2013, when he took over driving duties for the No. 22 Ford that is now his longtime home.
The two have worked on separate teams for most of their Team Penske tenure, but their goals were on common ground, oars that helped to keep rowing the collective operation forward. This season — a most unusual season for driver-crew chief communication — became their first working under the same No. 22 umbrella.
Given their career overlaps, Wolfe was already familiar with the competitive fire that has pushed Logano to elite status in the NASCAR Cup Series garage. Now he’s seeing it first-hand, week upon week.
“It’s a lot,” Wolfe said after Sunday’s latest triumph. “I mean, that’s the one thing I’ve noticed with working with Joey for the short time now, is how big of a team player he is, effort and things he does to make sure we have a strong team all working together, pulling in the same direction.”
Logano and Wolfe took the next step toward each landing their second premier-series championship, winning Sunday’s Hollywood Casino 400 at Kansas Speedway and locking up the automatic Championship 4 berth that came with it. Wolfe and Keselowski won the Cup Series title together in 2012; Logano did it six years later, paired with veteran Todd Gordon atop the pit box.
The Logano-Wolfe partnership stemmed from a three-team crew chief shake-up orchestrated by Penske before the season in an effort to boost overall performance. The overhaul meant Wolfe’s first new driver in 11 years and Logano’s first new crew chief in eight.
The combination leapt from the starting blocks quickly, grabbing two victories in the first four races of the season before the COVID-19 outbreak placed the sports world — motorsports calendar included — on hold. The initial footsteps for Logano and Wolfe toward building at-track chemistry went on hold as well.
The return to racing in mid-May was a difficult one from an adjustment standpoint, with practice or qualifying scratched in an effort to streamline weekends to control both costs and the disease’s spread. For a new driver-crew chief pairing, those adjustment hurdles may have been more pronounced.
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images
“It’s been an amazing challenge, if I’m being honest with you,” Logano said. “The beginning of the year with practice, we were able to get to know each other, get to know what I needed with the car, work on it during practice. COVID started. Coming back with no practice, we started getting our butts handed to us pretty hard. We were struggling for the first, I don’t know, 15 races back. Just really struggling, trying to get a handle on the car, what direction we need to go. It’s really hard to fix things when you don’t have practice.
“We’re going to the race track for the first time together, honestly it’s kind of shooting from the hip from a setup standpoint, just trying to find something that we can hit on that’s decent.”
Those opening two wins became a more distant memory after NASCAR’s return, in part because of the lengthy interruption of the racing schedule but also because of the downturn that Logano noted. His playoff fate was already secure, but the No. 22 team posted just one top-five finish in the first 13 races back, as rivals Kevin Harvick and Denny Hamlin quickly took control of the series’ win column.
That’s when Logano, Wolfe says, became more vocal, all in an effort to instill the same competitive drive in the rest of the team.
“It was kind of a rocky road there for a while, a lot of ups and downs, some struggles,” Wolfe said. “Towards the end of the summer, before the playoffs, we kind of got together and talked a lot. It was very important for him to make sure everyone was focused and pulling in the same direction. He’s a great leader from that standpoint, keeping the team and the guys around him motivated.
“Everyone knows you’re getting all the effort, all the time. It really makes everyone want to step up and do their part.”
Logano still trails Harvick and Hamlin in the season’s win count, but Sunday’s victory gave the 30-year-old former prodigy a measure of one-upmanship. He’s now the only driver automatically qualified for NASCAR’s final four in the season-ending race Nov. 8 at Phoenix Raceway — a track Logano conquered in March during the series’ last event before the coronavirus outbreak.
Pandemic aside, the parallels between this season and Logano’s previous title march are uncanny. Two years ago, in a campaign that also included a midseason lull, Logano also won the Round of 8 opener (then held at Martinsville), earning the No. 22 team a two-week release of postseason pressure to focus on the championship race.
Logano entered that finale as the Cinderella facing that year’s Big 3 of Harvick, Kyle Busch and Martin Truex Jr. — winners of 20 of the 36 races. This year, it’s Harvick (nine wins so far) and Hamlin (seven) who — barring catastrophe — will likely enter the Phoenix final as co-favorites.
Logano embraced the “Big 3 and Me” mindset ahead of the 2018 championship race, saying, “I might be the underdog on the stats standpoint, but we sure don’t feel like we are.” Sunday, he indicated he’s ready for the next test of his competitive spirit, aiming for a sequel of the movie that debuted two years ago.
“I hope so. I hope so,” Logano said with trademark grin. “I’m A-OK with being the underdog. Kind of been there for most of my career. I’m fine with that, doesn’t bother me a bit.”
LEXINGTON, N.C. — Kaulig Racing is thrilled to announce Justin Haley will return to the No. 11 Chevrolet for the 2021 NASCAR Xfinity Series season.
Haley, who originally signed a two-year deal with Kaulig Racing beginning in 2019, has signed a one-year extension, and will be the first driver to return for a third season with the team.
“I’d first like to thank LeafFilter Gutter Protection, Matt Kaulig, Chris Rice and everyone at Kaulig Racing for an amazing partnership the past two years,” Haley said. “We’ve grown as a team, an organization, and most importantly, as a family. I feel super blessed to have gotten the call from Kaulig Racing after my second win at Talladega that they wanted me back in 2021. They have believed in me since Day 1, and have stuck with me through the highs and lows. I’m extremely humbled to keep this strong partnership going into 2021 and continue trophy hunting!”
Before Haley joined the team in 2019, Kaulig Racing recorded 22 top 10s and one top-five finish from 2016-2018. So far, Haley has earned three wins, 39 top 10s and 14 top five-finishes for Kaulig Racing in the No. 11 Chevrolet.
Haley also joined the likes of Dale Earnhardt and Dale Earnhardt Jr. as a driver to win three superspeedway races in a row following his win at Talladega Superspeedway earlier this month. The 21-year-old has since become one of 34 drivers, and the second youngest, to record a win in all three of NASCAR’s top-tier series.
“To have Justin Haley come back for a third year with us is beyond amazing for our team,” Matt Kaulig, owner of Kaulig Racing, said. “Everyone at Kaulig Racing loves Justin, and it is safe to say he has become an integral part of our family. Justin has only helped our program grow, and the proof is in the stats! I’m looking forward to many more wins and trophies with Justin in 2021.”
Haley and the team also made history together when they entered their first Daytona 500, the first-ever NASCAR Cup Series race for Kaulig Racing, in February of 2020.
“Having Justin Haley return to Kaulig Racing for the 2021 season is truly special to me,” said Chris Rice, president of Kaulig Racing. “I had my eye on Justin for a while before he came to Kaulig Racing and knew there was something special about this kid. I was able to be a part of handpicking him for the No. 11 car, and there has not been one day that I have regretted that decision. I know he will do big things in 2021 for Kaulig Racing.”
The NASCAR Cup Series kicked off its Round of 8 in the 2020 NASCAR Playoffs at Kansas Speedway with the Hollywood Casino 400. Sunday marked the first of three races in this postseason round. At the end of it, four drivers will be eliminated from playoff contention and the Championship 4 will be set for the title race Nov. 8 at Phoenix Raceway.
WINNER
Joey Logano. The No. 22 Team Penske Ford won Sunday’s Hollywood Casino 400 at the 1.5-mile track in Kansas City, Kansas, leading 47 of the 267 laps. It marked Logano’s third win in 2020 and 26th in his career. The 2018 champ is locked into the Championship 4.
Kevin Harvick. The No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford finished runner-up after losing the lead to Joey Logano with 45 laps to go. Harvick tried to chase Logano down but fell short by .312 seconds. Harvick led a race-high 85 laps.
Chase Elliott. The No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports team struggled with radio issues throughout the entire first stage. Elliott reported he could not clearly hear his crew chief or spotter, though they could hear the driver fine. That didn’t prevent Elliott from going on to win Stage 1 for a playoff bonus point. The only reason Elliott now lands below the cutline after his sixth-place, 47-points day points is because Joey Logano won from fifth in standings.
WHO’S NOT
Denny Hamlin. The No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota clipped the Turn 4 wall with 86 laps to go in the final stage while battling for fifth. The contact made the right-rear tire go down, prompting an unscheduled pit stop. Hamlin had just won Stage 2. He finished 15th. Watch what happened.
Kurt Busch. The No. 1 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet blew its motor with 69 laps remaining, forcing Busch to exit the race prematurely. Busch was already in the eighth — last — playoff spot, 21 points below the cutline. This keeps him there and adds to his deficit. Learn what happened.
BUBBLE WATCH
Rank
Driver
Points to cutoff
1.
Joey Logano
WIN
2.
Kevin Harvick
+41
3.
Denny Hamlin
+20
4.
Brad Keselowski
+8
——-
CUTOFF LINE
———————
5.
Chase Elliott
-8
6.
Alex Bowman
-27
7.
Martin Truex Jr.
-31
8.
Kurt Busch
-73
NEXT RACE
The NASCAR Cup Series heads to Texas Motor Speedway for its second race in the Round of 8 next Sunday — the Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 500 (3:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
WHO IT FAVORS
Kevin Harvick. The No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford has won three of the last six races in Fort Worth, Texas, and all three of those wins came during the playoffs. The three other spring races still resulted in top-10 finishes, including a fifth-place finish earlier this season. Harvick also boasts the best average finish at the Texas track among playoff contenders with a 10.2 mark.
WHO IT HURTS
Alex Bowman. The No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet carries the worst Texas average finish — 25.6 — among playoff drivers. In Bowman’s 10 starts there, he has one top-five and one top-10 finish, and it was a fifth-place effort in last year’s postseason event. Earlier this season, he wound up 30th after crashing out with 15 laps to go.