MOORESVILLE, N.C. — Team Penske announced today that the organization is extending its driver development program by signing Austin Cindric to a contract extension that will see the 22-year-old remain with the team through the foreseeable future, driving in both the NASCAR Xfinity Series (NXS) and NASCAR Cup Series (NCS).

Currently competing in the NXS Playoffs, Cindric will return to race full-time in the 2021 Xfinity Series while also earning the opportunity to drive in select Cup Series next season. In 2022, Cindric will race the full season in the Cup Series as he will transition to Wood Brothers Racing to drive the iconic No. 21 Ford Mustang. Team Penske and Wood Brothers Racing formed a technical alliance in 2015 and the teams have worked together on driver development opportunities in the past, most recently with current Team Penske driver Ryan Blaney.

“As we continue to position our team for future success, it is important to make sure Austin continues his development in the Xfinity Series with Team Penske,” said Roger Penske. “Austin has made great strides in recent years and he has become a consistent winner and a true championship contender this season. He will continue his natural progression and get some Cup Series experience in 2021. That will help him prepare for a full season in 2022 with the new NextGen car, racing the No. 21 Ford Mustang for Wood Brothers Racing.”

RELATED: Learn more about the Wood Brothers | Top moments in Wood Brothers history

Racing the No. 22 Ford Mustang in the Xfinity Series, Cindric became just the second driver in series history to win five races in the span of six events earlier this season. Along with his series-best 17 top-five finishes and over 800 laps led, he captured the 2020 NXS Regular Season Championship and entered the playoffs tied for the top seed. He is currently positioned second in points following the second race of the NXS Playoffs last weekend at Talladega Superspeedway.

“This is a big step forward in my career long-term, and I am humbled and motivated by the opportunity and the confidence that Team Penske, Ford Performance, the Wood Brothers, and all of our partners have expressed in my abilities and my development as a driver,” said Cindric. “Every race car driver wants to advance in his career, and I can’t think of a better way to do that than on a clear path with Team Penske that will eventually lead to a full-time opportunity in the NASCAR Cup Series. I’m really excited for this next chapter in my development to continue working towards competing and trying to win at the highest level. Another season of experience in the Xfinity Series will be beneficial and I’m looking forward to competing in some Cup Series races in 2021 to prepare for a full season in 2022.”

RELATED: Matt DiBenedetto back with Wood Brothers for 2021 season

Over the course of his short stock car racing career, Cindric has earned seven NXS victories, along with wins in the NASCAR Truck Series, ARCA and the former NASCAR K&N Series. Cindric is one of the most diverse young racers in America, having also raced in a wide variety of series including the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship, the Pirelli World Challenge Series, the Cooper Tires USF2000 Series and Red Bull Global Rallycross.

“Our Ford Performance family is one of the strongest in the sport, and to know now that we will have a driver like Austin in our camp in both Xfinity and Cup is a very exciting prospect,” said Ford Performance Global Director Mark Rushbrook. “He’s represented our brand so well this year by winning five races and being at the top of the standings, so we know he can get the job done. He’s also a great representative off the track and has helped us connect with an even younger fan base through some of our marketing initiatives. We are happy to see him remain with Team Penske and we are excited about his future with Ford Performance and the Wood Brothers.”

Matt DiBenedetto has inked a contract extension with Wood Brothers Racing, the organization announced Thursday in a release. And Team Penske announced that rising prospect Austin Cindric has signed a multiyear contract, keeping him in the NASCAR Xfinity Series next year before taking over the Wood Brothers No. 21 Ford full-time in 2022.

Those moves appear to iron out all variables in the driver lineup for Team Penske and its affiliated NASCAR teams for next season. Both drivers had indicated that their plans were in limbo in recent weeks, but now Cindric’s path to the Cup Series has come to light. He’ll race in what the team called “select” Cup Series events next season as he prepares for a Sunoco Rookie of the Year campaign in 2022, which dovetails with the projected debut of NASCAR’s Next Gen stock car.

RELATED: Learn more about the Wood Brothers | Top moments in Wood Brothers history

In his first season driving the iconic No. 21 Ford Mustang in the NASCAR Cup Series, DiBenedetto’s best finish was second place — achieved twice, both times at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Those results tie his career-best finish, which was set in 2019 in the Bristol Motor Speedway night race.

The 2021 season will serve as his seventh full-time year competing at NASCAR’s highest level. DiBenedetto completed one season driving for Leavine Family Racing in 2019, preceded by two seasons at Go Fas Racing and another two seasons for now-defunct BK Racing.

With Cindric’s planned arrival to the Cup Series ranks, DiBenedetto will be job-hunting for 2022. But the arrangement means he’ll have another full season to firm up his plans and further prove his worth for prospective employers.

RELATED: Key players in the 2020-21 Silly Season

“It’s such an honor to be able to continue to drive for Wood Brothers Racing and have another year to grow with this organization,” DiBenedetto said in a release provided by the team. “I am excited to learn from our 2020 notebook and I’m confident that with a full season under our belt and working together as a team, we will produce even better results. I also want to thank Ford Performance and Team Penske for their efforts in making this happen. These types of decisions take a lot of time, as we all know there are a lot of factors in play. All three groups want to make the best decisions for everyone involved and I’m appreciative to have the opportunity to continue to compete for such a legendary race team.”

DiBenedetto qualified for the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs on the basis of points, earning two top fives and seven top 10s in the regular season. He was eliminated from title contention after the opening Round of 16.

The Wood Brothers have earned 99 Cup Series race victories. The 29-year-old is trying to become the 19th driver to win for the organization.

The 2020 season has been a breakout year for Cindric in the Xfinity Series, earning five victories — two races at Kentucky Speedway, Texas Motor Speedway, Road America and the Daytona International Speedway Road Course.

RELATED: Austin Cindric to make move up to Cup in 2022

The 22-year-old driver has competed in two full-time seasons driving the No. 22 Team Penske Ford Mustang, while also spending the full 2018 season alternating between Penske and Roush Fenway Racing.

“This is a big step forward in my career long-term, and I am humbled and motivated by the opportunity and the confidence that Team Penske, Ford Performance, the Wood Brothers, and all of our partners have expressed in my abilities and my development as a driver,” Cindric said in a team release. “Every race car driver wants to advance in his career, and I can’t think of a better way to do that than on a clear path with Team Penske that will eventually lead to a full-time opportunity in the NASCAR Cup Series. I’m really excited for this next chapter in my development to continue working towards competing and trying to win at the highest level. Another season of experience in the Xfinity Series will be beneficial and I’m looking forward to competing in some Cup Series races in 2021 to prepare for a full season in 2022.”

Although Cindric does not yet have a Cup Series start under his belt, he did serve as a substitute driver for Michael McDowell in the No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford during the opening practice session at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval last season.

It may be a risk, but it is a calculated risk.

NASCAR veteran Daniel Suarez will drive for a new Cup Series team in 2021, marking his fourth organization in the same number of years. Suarez was paired with Joe Gibbs Racing from 2017-18 before moving to Stewart-Haas Racing in 2019. This season, he’s Gaunt Brother Racing’s sole wheelman with five races remaining. And, on Wednesday, Trackhouse Racing Team revealed it’ll start a whole new crew next year with Suarez as its pilot.

“Maybe for people that already know me and maybe for people that see all this just from the very, very back, maybe they’re thinking, ‘What the heck is Daniel doing starting again with a brand new team?'” Suarez said on a Zoom teleconference. “But it’s a very good opportunity. I have done a lot in the last few years. I know what it takes to be successful, not just on the race track but as well as outside the race track. And one of the advantages Justin (Marks) has is that he’s still a race-car driver and now he’s a team owner, so he understands all sides of the coin extremely well.”

RELATED: Trackhouse announces formation of Cup Series team

Marks is the founder and owner of Trackhouse Entertainment Group and therefore the brain behind its Trackhouse Racing Team. He picked Suarez to steer his No. 99 Chevrolet, starting with the Daytona 500 in February. Trackhouse leased a charter from Spire Motorsports to immediately get tires on the track in 2021 with full intentions of buying its own ASAP.

In addition to that deal, Trackhouse worked out an embedded operational alliance with Richard Childress Racing, meaning Trackhouse will work out of RCR’s property in Welcome, North Carolina, as an independent organization.

“As you know, it’s now a two-car operation,” Marks said. “But that’s been built out to be bigger than that. So they’ve got all these resources up there that are being underutilized. We’re coming in and basically just sharing some costs on that. Being plugged in to all their technology and their intellectual properties and their processes.

“It’s our team. It’s our people. It’s our effort.”

There are already sponsors on board, too. Marks doesn’t want to reveal anything yet since conversations are still ongoing. But he indicated there will be at least five “significant partners” in 2021.

The point is: Marks doesn’t seem worried about Trackhouse’s financial footing.

“I have a significant competition budget for 2021 that puts us in contention to be a playoff team,” Marks said. “That is a fact. If we get 80% of the way there with our sponsorship, the other 20% is there and it’s going to be utilized to put us in the most competitive position possible.”

RELATED: Daniel Suarez’s career timeline

Suarez isn’t in the current NASCAR Playoffs, which has its Round of 12 elimination race Sunday at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval (2:30 p.m. ET on NBC/NBC Sports App, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR radio). He actually sits 31st in the points standings. The No. 96 Toyota has led 20 laps this season but lacks any top-five or top-10 finishes.

For his career, though, Suarez has eight top-five and 32 top-10 showings. He has won the pole twice — once in 2018 and another in 2019. He placed a personal-best 17th in last year’s final rankings.

“You look to my career in the last few years, I haven’t had consistency, and I feel like consistency in racing is something super important,” Suarez said. “If you can’t have consistency, you cannot be successful. It was very important for me to know I’m going to have everything I need to be competitive and successful — not just next year but as well for what is after that.”

The National Motorsports Final Appeals Officer upheld NASCAR’s behavior penalty issued to Mike Wallace on Sept. 10. Roger Werner heard and considered Wallace’s final appeal on Wednesday, but ultimately decided the Xfinity Series driver violated the following sections in the NASCAR Rule Book: Sections 12.1.a General Procedures; 12.8.e NASCAR Member Conduct; and 12.8.1.e Member Conduct Guidelines.

RELATED: NASCAR suspends Mike Wallace indefinitely

Wallace’s original penalty included an indefinite suspension from NASCAR and sensitivity training at the direction of NASCAR. The decision of the National Motorsports Final Appeals Officer is final and binding on all parties.

Wallace’s first appeal to the National Motorsports Appeal Panel was rejected on Sept. 23. Wallace then had the option to make the final appeal in accordance with Section 15 of the NASCAR Rule Book.

Wallace has driven the No. 0 Chevrolet for owner Johnny Davis in three NASCAR Xfinity Series events this season and has four wins in 497 Xfinity starts as part of his national series career.

The NASCAR Cup Series returns to Charlotte Motor Speedway for the Round of 12 elimination race on the road-course layout. With only two drivers already punching their ticket to the next round, eight drivers will compete for the remaining six spots Sunday at the Bank of America ROVAL 400 (2:30 p.m. ET on NBC/NBC Sports App, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Before this weekend’s showdown, check out some important details.

RELATED: Full Roval schedule | Playoff standings

TRACK DETAILS

Charlotte Motor Speedway’s road course, known as the Roval, was adopted by NASCAR in 2018. The 2.28-mile course features 17 turns with anywhere from two- to 24-degree banking in the corners and zero- to five-degree banking on the straights.

Ryan Blaney and Chase Elliott are the winners of the two Cup Series races at the track.

STAGE LENGTHS

Stage 1 will end at Lap 25, Stage 2 at Lap 50 and the Final Stage at Lap 109.

STARTING LINEUP

Denny Hamlin earned the Busch Pole Award for the second consecutive race, following his win at Talladega Superspeedway. Chase Elliott, Brad Keselowski, Kevin Harvick and Alex Bowman complete the top five.

The lineup was determined using NASCAR’s competition-based formula, which is a total number based on the 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.

RELATED: Full starting lineup | Most to gain? Most to lose?

RULES PACKAGE

The Cup Series will use the adjusted 2020 package for short tracks and road courses, featuring a reduced rear spoiler and front splitter with engines remaining optimized to produce a targeted 750 horsepower. 

GOODYEAR TIRES

Teams will be provided with eight sets of Goodyear Eagle Road Course Radials for the race.

Despite running a section of the main Charlotte Motor Speedway oval, this week’s focus is set to zone in on maneuverability and tire pressure for right-hand turns.

“We treat the Roval as a road course from a tire construction perspective,” said Greg Stucker, Goodyear’s director of racing. “But the Roval is distinct from other, more traditional road courses that these teams run. Running the majority of the oval, inserting the two chicanes and then having the infield portion of the road course really provides its share of challenges. As on other road courses, the front tires will have higher pressure recommendations to handle the hard braking into the corners and acceleration off the corners. In deference to the oval, the right-front tire position will have the highest pressure recommendation to handle the loads on those sections.”

PLAYOFF STATS TO KNOW

— Kyle Busch, Martin Truex Jr. and Chase Elliott are tied for the most road wins among active drivers with four apiece. Elliott has won each of the last three Cup Series road-course races dating back to 2019.

— Heading into the Round of 12 elimination race, no driver has locked into the next round on points only. Denny Hamlin and Kurt Busch secured advancement with wins.

— Alex Bowman has the best average finish of all Cup Series drivers at the Charlotte Roval: 3.0. He and Clint Bowyer are the only drivers to finish inside the top five in both races.

— Martin Truex Jr. has led laps in the last 10 road-course races, tied for the second longest streak in series history. Despite not always coming out on top, he has arguably been in a good position to win the last nine.

Source: Racing Insights

INTERACTIVE COVERAGE

For a more interactive experience, head over to NASCAR.com or the NASCAR app to check out an enhanced Race Center, live Lap-by-Lap coverage, the customizable live leaderboard with Scanner and the return of Drive (featuring in-car cameras).

Be sure to set your lineup in Fantasy Live and make your picks in the NASCAR Finish Line app.

2019 RACE WINNER

After starting 19th, Chase Elliott worked his way through the field by showcasing his dominant speed and continued road-course prowess. Leading the pack on a Lap 65 restart, Elliott missed Turn 1 and dove nose first into the barrier, sending him to the back of the field in the final stage with just 44 laps to go. The No. 9 team regrouped and ran down the field as Elliott powered his Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet to Victory Lane — perhaps the most iconic win of his career.

RELATED: Elliott to take command?

ACTIVE ROVAL WINNERS

Ryan Blaney and Chase Elliott (one win each).

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Trackhouse Entertainment Group announced Wednesday the formation of a new NASCAR Cup Series team that will make its on-track debut at the 2021 Daytona 500.

Piloting the No. 99 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE will be 2016 NASCAR Xfinity Series champion and NASCAR Cup Series veteran Daniel Suárez. The Trackhouse Racing Team has entered into an embedded operational alliance with Richard Childress Racing that enables Trackhouse to utilize the technology, intellectual property, human capital and engineering developed over decades of championship-caliber competition. Trackhouse will be powered by ECR Engines, which recently announced a merged research and development partnership with Chevrolet powerhouse Hendrick Motorsports.

“The formation of a top-level NASCAR Cup Series team has been a dream of mine for a long time,” said Justin Marks, founder and owner of Trackhouse Entertainment Group. “A lot of hard work has transpired to get us to this point and I don’t think we could’ve ended up with better partners in RCR and Chevrolet and with a more passionate and committed driver than Daniel Suárez. Daniel’s drive and hunger to get to the top of this sport is palpable every time I am in his presence. We are building a team of winners and Daniel has delivered just about every time he’s sat in race winning equipment. It’s my job now to put a car underneath him that will carry him to the highest echelon of the sport.”

RELATED: Daniel Suarez’s career timeline

A native of Monterrey, Mexico, Suárez has proven his talent as a race-car driver after moving to the United States from Mexico to pursue a career in NASCAR. He has had a career highlighted by wins in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East, the NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series and the NASCAR Xfinity Series. After securing rookie of the year in 2015, Suárez brought home the 2016 NASCAR Xfinity Series championship, becoming NASCAR’s first foreign-born national series champion. In 138 NASCAR Cup Series starts to date, Suárez has secured 32 top-10 finishes, eight top fives and two poles.

Suarez Marks Video Image

“I see in Trackhouse a great opportunity for me with a very strong group of people that share the same vision, commitment and goals that I have,” Suárez said. “Justin has been involved in the racing world for over 20 years and understands the ins and outs of the sport both as a driver and from the business side. I have learned a lot in the last few years and have been very fortunate to be a part of very good organizations. I have learned that this sport is about people, and I know we are going to work very hard to put together a talented team. Furthermore, getting the support from a strong manufacturer like Chevrolet will be a key to our success. My goal is simple, I want to win races.”

NASCAR industry veteran Ty Norris will serve as president of racing operations. Norris brings a wealth of knowledge and experience to Trackhouse after serving as executive vice president and general manager of both Dale Earnhardt Inc. and Michael Waltrip Racing. The Trackhouse Racing Team enters the sport during a transitional time in NASCAR’s history.

MORE: Bookmark Trackhouse site

Central to the Trackhouse Racing Team is a commitment to making an impact on youth in America’s minority communities. Through a sizable contribution from the Marks Family Foundation, as well as support from the team’s partners, Trackhouse will design and execute an immersive STEM education initiative aimed at exposing America’s underrepresented youth to career opportunities in Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics. Using the spectacle of NASCAR racing as a curriculum platform, Trackhouse will work with school districts, community organizations and youth groups to build the most impactful roadmap for those who are inspired to pursue STEM careers.

“I believe deeply in the direction NASCAR’s executive group is taking the sport,” Marks said. “There is a disruptive and courageous vision for the future taking place that is displayed by the incredible 2021 racing schedule and new ways of looking at a sustainable economic model culminating in the debut of the 2022 NextGen car that, in my opinion, will lay the groundwork for a dramatic value proposition for future owners, media partners, stakeholders and sponsors for decades to come. Everything Trackhouse will be doing in 2021 from a business development standpoint will be in the context of positioning ourselves to win races and championships as NASCAR embarks on a new chapter in 2022 and beyond.”

As Trackhouse builds a competitive framework for 2021, announcements regarding partners and key personnel will be forthcoming.

Hailie Deegan will make her first career NASCAR national series start Oct. 17 at Kansas Speedway, it was announced Wednesday.

The 19-year-old from California is set to drive the No. 17 Ford for DGR-Crosley in the Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series. Deegan currently drives full time for the organization in the ARCA Menards Series, steering the No. 4 entry, where she’s currently ranked third in the standings with four top-five and 16 top-10 finishes in 19 races.

RELATED: Deegan ‘wouldn’t call (2020) a lost year’

Deegan has yet to win in the ARCA Menards Series, but does hold three victories from 2018-19 in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series West — now known as the ARCA Menards Series West.

DGR-Crosley fields one full-time Gander Trucks team — the No. 15 of Tanner Gray. The No. 17 truck is a part-time option for multiple drivers, such as Deegan.

The Clean Harbors 200 is set for 4 p.m. ET next Saturday (FOX, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). It’ll be a 134-lap event around the 1.5-mile track in Kansas City.

Denny Hamlin won the Busch Pole Award for Sunday’s Bank of America ROVAL 400 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs race at Charlotte Motor Speedway (2:30 p.m. ET on NBC/NBC Sports App, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

The lineup was determined using NASCAR’s competition-based formula, which is a total number based on the 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.

RELATED: Learn more about the new lineup formula | ADVANCING through the playoffs

The No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota driver will be joined by Chase Elliott on the front row in the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.

In the majority of national series events since NASCAR’s May return, starting lineups have been set by random draws. The new structure 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.

Starting spot Driver Car # Team
1 Denny Hamlin (P) 11 Joe Gibbs Racing
2 Chase Elliott (P) 9 Hendrick Motorsports
3 Brad Keselowski (P) 2 Team Penske
4 Kevin Harvick (P) 4 Stewart-Haas Racing
5 Alex Bowman (P) 88 Hendrick Motorsports
6 Austin Dillon (P) 3 Richard Childress Racing
7 Martin Truex Jr. (P) 19 Joe Gibbs Racing
8 Joey Logano (P) 22 Team Penske
9 Kyle Busch (P) 18 Joe Gibbs Racing
10 Kurt Busch (P) 1 Chip Ganassi Racing
11 Clint Bowyer (P) 14 Stewart-Haas Racing
12 Aric Almirola (P) 10 Stewart-Haas Racing
13 William Byron 24 Hendrick Motorsports
14 Erik Jones 20 Joe Gibbs Racing
15 Ryan Newman 6 Roush Fenway Racing
16 Tyler Reddick 8 Richard Childress Racing
17 Ty Dillon 13 Germain Racing
18 Ryan Preece 37 JTG Daugherty Racing
19 John Hunter Nemechek 38 Front Row Racing
20 Matt DiBenedetto 21 Wood Brothers Racing
21 Chris Buescher 17 Roush Fenway Racing
22 Brennan Poole 15 Premium Motorsports
23 Matt Kenseth 42 Chip Ganassi Racing
24 Ryan Blaney 12 Team Penske
25 Quinn Houff 00 StarCom Racing
26 Bubba Wallace 43 Richard Petty Motorsports
27 Timmy Hill 66 MBM Motorsports
28 Cole Custer 41 Stewart-Haas Racing
29 Josh Bilicki 51 Petty Ware Racing
30 Jimmie Johnson 48 Hendrick Motorsports
31 Michael McDowell 34 Front Row Racing
32 Corey LaJoie 32 GoFas Racing
33 JJ Yeley 77 Spire Motorsports
34 Daniel Suarez 96 Gaunt Brothers Racing
35 Christopher Bell 95 Leavine Family Racing
36 Gray Gaulding 27 Rick Ware Racing
37 James Davison 53 Rick Ware Racing
38 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 47 JTG Daugherty Racing

Alex Bowman’s favorite Batman villain — crew chief Greg Ives — has earned his distinctive nickname, one that offers a nod toward his sometimes cryptic messages over in-car communications. That handle will stick for a fourth consecutive year, as Ives will make the shift with Bowman from Hendrick Motorsports’ No. 88 Chevrolet to its No. 48 ride in 2021.

“They just keep hitting me with riddles,” Bowman said with a grin, “so the Riddler is back.”

The continued pairing ensures Bowman will start another season with Ives, who has helped his driver assemble one of his strongest playoff bids to date. Bowman acknowledged some ebbs that have gone with the flows during their three years together, most notably a sluggish start to last season and a midsummer swoon this year. But Bowman has also noted their growth, which has cemented their driver-crew chief chemistry in sometimes unconventional ways.

RELATED: Bowman to shift to No. 48 in 2021 | Special bond for Johnson, Bowman

“Regardless of if things were going well or not, I feel like our team has stayed strong together, and Greg and I have done a really good job of communicating,” Bowman said. “To continue to work with Greg, it’s awesome. He’s a great person; a little bit awkward and goofy. He’s like a 9 on the awkward scale, and I’m like a 7, so you know we balance each other out really well.”

The phrase “good job of communicating” comes with a caveat, which is where the Riddler nickname — first brought to public light in 2018 — comes in. Bowman hinted he may need to keep a translation dictionary handy to decipher his crew chief’s radio messages, which are sometimes delivered in code due to his ultra-secretive nature.

“I mean, he just likes to be discreet on the radio and not say obvious things, I guess, and try to keep information to ourselves,” Bowman said. “So he will literally talk in riddles, and it gets really confusing. I’m like, ‘Man, I’m trying to drive. Just tell me what’s going on.’ He’s always looking for that little edge and trying to fool people a little bit. He just tends to talk in riddles a little bit, so we just started calling him the Riddler.”

Ives’ credentials go beyond the nickname, and he has history and familiarity with the No. 48’s pedigree. The 41-year-old crew chief was the No. 48 team engineer from 2006-12 during Johnson’s run of five consecutive Cup Series championships. His transition to a crew chief role helped guide JR Motorsports and Chase Elliott to an Xfinity Series title in 2014.

That history set the foundation for him to take over Hendrick’s No. 88 Chevy as its crew chief, where he has scored five Cup Series wins — three with Dale Earnhardt Jr. and two in his time with Bowman. His latest move represents a type of homecoming.

“It’s pretty special to be able to represent a number that gave me a lot of success early on in my career, and actually built my career, allowed me great opportunities to become crew chief and opened doors for me that probably would never have opened,” Ives said. “My goal is to honor the number by continuing on the great heritage that it has — winning races, championships and being a great team in the sport. Jimmie was able to build that with his character on and off the race track.”

Johnson has seen Ives’ impact up close but also seen his recent development in his partnership with Bowman — one that has been based on mutual trust.

“We all have our own unique style on how we communicate, how we work together, and the success that that yields,” Johnson said. “To watch Greg and Alex really connect and be able to say so little but get so much across. I can only say that because I see them behind the scenes and the way they interact at the shop and understand how they talk in the race, the progression or their setups, their cars and where they go. I mean, Alex has so much trust in Greg. It lets Greg be the creative mad scientist he needs to be to build a fast race car, and then Greg trusts Alex just to jump in there and wheel it and make it happen. So to see that bond between them grow and the trust between the two of them on those levels has really produced the success, and I know it will continue to do so in the future.”

Filling one ride at Hendrick Motorsports has created a vacancy for another. Tuesday’s news break indicated plans for the No. 88 Chevrolet and for Cliff Daniels — the No. 48 team’s current crew chief — would be announced at a later date. Daniels joined Johnson for the final 15 races last year and 2020 has marked his first full season atop the pit box.

“Cliff’s done an amazing job, and to be able to win a championship with him as an engineer and races with him as an engineer and to see him grow into this crew chief role, he has a really bright future,” Johnson said. “And I look forward to seeing what happens for him in 2021.”

MORE: Key figures in Silly Season

For the rest of this season, Bowman and Ives have more goals to achieve as they finish out their term in Hendrick’s No. 88 Chevy. Bowman, who landed his second career victory earlier this season at Auto Club Speedway, now sits 22 points on the plus side of the cutoff line in the playoff picture, heading to Sunday’s Round of 12 finale (2:30 p.m. ET on NBC/NBC Sports App, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) on the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval.

Four drivers will be eliminated from title contention after the Charlotte Roval event. Avoiding that cut and making the Round of 8 would mark the furthest the Bowman-Ives combo has advanced in the playoffs during the 27-year-old driver’s Cup Series career. It would also continue the team’s comeback from its midseason blues.

“The summer was really rough on us, but I think it showed how strong we can continue to work together,” Bowman said. “The whole team did such a great job staying positive and continuing to work hard and not letting those hard months kind of beat us down. We weren’t running how we wanted to be, but everybody still stuck together. That was really cool to see, and now to see that paying off here over the last couple weeks and to be running well through the playoffs when it counts is really cool.”