DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — NASCAR and Cometic Gasket, Inc. announced today an expansion of their multi-year official partnership, designating the company the sponsor of the NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series™ pole award. The Cometic Gasket Pole Award will be awarded to the NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series driver with the fastest qualifying time each week, starting on Friday, Feb. 14 at Daytona International Speedway.

“For years, Cometic Gasket has been a committed partner and has supported all levels of NASCAR racing,” said Scott Miller, senior vice president, competition, NASCAR. “Their expanded relationship to sponsor the Cometic Gasket Pole Award will enhance the value of the program and elevate their brand in our sport.”

RELATED: Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series 2020 schedule

Cometic Gasket’s relationship with NASCAR dates back nearly a decade when it became the “Official Gasket of NASCAR®.” In addition, the global leader and innovator in the engine marketplace began sponsoring a contingency program in the ARCA Menards Series™, then known as the NASCAR K&N Pro Series, as well as sponsoring billboards in the NASCAR Weekly Racing Series™. Today, Cometic Gasket is the preferred engine gasket supplier for a significant majority of teams in NASCAR’s three national series.

“Assuming the role as pole award sponsor in the NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series is a natural progression of our partnership,” said Bob Gorman, CEO & founder, Cometic Gasket. “As a longtime partner, we’ve seen the value of NASCAR, its competitors and brand-loyal fanbase. We’re excited to further integrate ourselves into the sport and amplify our presence at the national series level.”

Competitors will be eligible for the Cometic Gasket Pole Award by displaying a decal on the front fenders of their trucks. At the culmination of the season, the driver who has accumulated the most Cometic Gasket Pole Awards in the NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series will be awarded the season-ending Cometic Gasket Pole Award.

As a part of the expanded partnership, Cometic Gasket will continue to support grassroots racing, maintaining its designation as the “Official Gasket of the ARCA Menards Series®” as well as its billboard program in the NASCAR Weekly Racing Series.

The 2020 NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series season kicks off with the NextEra Energy 250 at Daytona International Speedway on Friday, February 14 at 7:30 p.m. ET on FS1, MRN and SiriusXM Radio.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Premium Motorsports unveiled its Daytona 500 car and new sponsorship deal on Monday at the NASCAR Hall of Fame with Brennan Poole, driver of the No. 15 Chevrolet Camaro in the NASCAR Cup Series. Spartan Mosquito will serve as the primary sponsor for 17 races, including “The Great American Race.”

The Spartan Mosquito No. 15 will also display the R.E.D. (RememberEveryoneDeployed.org) organization. The R.E.D organization helps raise awareness of the hardships faced by troops that are currently deployed. R.E.D will use this sponsorship opportunity to expand its content and collaborate with Premium Motorsports and Poole throughout the season.

“The willingness to give back is the most important thing,” Poole said. “As a small team, every little bit of funding helps. But the special things throughout the season and bringing awareness to a great cause is what I’m most excited about.”

Premium and Poole will kick off the season by making their first attempt at the Daytona 500 on Feb. 16 at Daytona International Speedway. Poole’s custom R.E.D. Daytona 500 gloves will then be donated in a contest to benefit R.E.D.

Poole, 28, is excited to finally have his chance at a Daytona 500 run and knows the opportunity is one he will never forget.

“Being in the Daytona 500 is hard to put into words,” said Poole, a candidate for Sunoco Rookie of the Year in 2020. “It didn’t feel real until I saw the car for the first time. Now I have great partners to do it with. It’s my dream.”

Editor’s note: Today’s Hendrick Motorsports preview continues NASCAR.com’s countdown of team previews for the NASCAR Cup Series season, ranked in order of best finish in last year’s owner standings.  MORE: Changes to know for the 2020 season HENDRICK MOTORSPORTS Manufacturer: Chevrolet Engine: Hendrick Engines Drivers: Chase Elliott (No. 9), William Byron (No. 24), Jimmie Johnson (No. 48), Alex Bowman (No. 88) Crew chiefs: Alan Gustafson (No. 9), Chad Knaus (No. 24), Cliff Daniels (No. 48), Greg Ives (No. 88) What’s new: Nothing really, apart from the not-so minor detail the 2020 season will be Jimmie Johnson’s last as a full-time driver. That’ll surely motivate the No. 48 team at least. Also, there’s probably a fire lit within the organization as a whole considering not a single driver advanced into the Championship 4 last season. Can’t win a title if not in contention. Team strength: All but one Hendrick Motorsports driver (Jimmie Johnson) made the NASCAR Playoffs last season. HMS overall improved every major statistical category from 2018 to 2019, and its four wins extended the organization’s streak of at least three wins per season to 25 years straight. Ten poles also led all teams. The Action Network’s Best Bet: Most of the focus in 2020 will be Jimmie Johnson and his final full-time Cup Series season, but William Byron is the driver bettors should target. I expect to bet him early and often to start the year, especially if he’s priced similarly to last season. – PJ Walsh Racing Insights’ Number to Know: One. This is the one and only multi-car organization to have every driver/crew chief/spotter pairing return unchanged from 2019.

AVONDALE, ARIZONA - NOVEMBER 09: Chase Elliott, driver of the #9 NAPA Autocare Center Chevrolet, stands on the grid during qualifying for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Bluegreen Vacations 500 at ISM Raceway on November 09, 2019 in Avondale, Arizona. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

CHASE ELLIOTT: No. 9 Chevrolet 2019 stats: 10th in final standings; three wins (Talladega-1, Watkins Glen, Roval), four poles, 11 top fives, 15 top 10s 2020 championship odds: 12-1 Fantasy Live picks: Watkins Glen, Michigan, Dover, Kansas, Martinsville Outlook: The Round of 8 really botched Chase Elliott’s championship hopes in 2019. He finished 36th at Martinsville Speedway, 32nd at Texas Motor Speedway and 39th at Phoenix Raceway to ultimately get booted from title competition. Elliott was one round – one win – away from making the Championship 4. If he can get back to the NASCAR Playoffs again in 2020, wouldn’t be crazy to see him make that last jump into the finale with a shot at the ultimate trophy. WILLIAM BYRON: No. 24 Chevrolet

AVONDALE, ARIZONA - NOVEMBER 09: William Byron, driver of the #24 Hertz Chevrolet, stands on the grid during qualifying for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Bluegreen Vacations 500 at ISM Raceway on November 09, 2019 in Avondale, Arizona. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

2019 stats: 11th in final standings; five poles, five top fives, 13 top 10s 2020 championship odds: 20-1 Fantasy Live picks: Pocono, Texas, Dover, Watkins Glen, Chicagoland Outlook: William Byron’s first career win is bound to happen in 2020. The third-year driver had two runner-up finishes in 2019 (Daytona International Speedway in the summer and Martinsville Speedway in the postseason), on top of three other top-five runs and 233 laps led overall. He knows how to steer his way to the front of the pack; it’s just a matter of staying there come checkered flag. If not, Byron pointed his way into last season’s NASCAR Playoffs and made it to the Round of 12 anyway.

LOUDON, NEW HAMPSHIRE - JULY 19: Jimmie Johnson, driver of the #48 Ally Chevrolet, stands by his car during qualifying for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Foxwoods Resort Casino 301 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on July 19, 2019 in Loudon, New Hampshire. (Photo by Chris Trotman/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Chris Trotman | Getty Images

JIMMIE JOHNSON: No. 48 Chevrolet 2019 stats: 18th in final standings; one pole, three top fives, 12 top 10s 2020 championship odds: 40-1 Fantasy Live picks: Richmond, Charlotte, Dover, Chicagoland, Sonoma Outlook: Jimmie Johnson is ready for #OneFinalTime, as the seven-time champion will retire from full-time racing at the end of the 2020 season. As already noted, that’ll surely be a huge motivator to go out with a bang. Last year, though, ended in Johnson’s worst overall finish ever and marked the first time Johnson failed to make the NASCAR Playoffs in his career. He has to do at least better than that this year. Maybe a full season with Cliff Daniels, who replaced Kevin Meendering midway through last season, atop his pit box will help produce better results. ALEX BOWMAN: No. 88 Chevrolet

MARTINSVILLE, VIRGINIA - OCTOBER 27: Alex Bowman, driver of the #88 Llumar Chevrolet, walks to the stage during pre-race ceremonies for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series First Data 500 at Martinsville Speedway on October 27, 2019 in Martinsville, Virginia. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

2019 stats: 12th in final standings; one win (Chicagoland), seven top fives, 12 top 10s 2020 championship odds: 40-1 Fantasy Live picks: Chicagoland, Dover, Charlotte, Michigan, Kansas Outlook: Last season at Chicagoland Speedway, Alex Bowman scored his first career win and locked himself in the NASCAR Playoffs. Once there, he truly became known as someone who’s willing to fight for his spot in the postseason – take Charlotte Motor Speedway’s Roval elimination race for example, he barely advanced into the Round of 12 after an eventful day. His playoff chances ended that next three-race stretch, like the season before, but he improved his final rank four spots from 2018 to 2019. Could do even better in 2020 if he continues to better his statistical marks.


NASCAR.com 2020 team previews schedule  

Jan. 20: Teams outside the top 30
Jan. 21: Go Fas Racing
Jan. 22: Front Row Motorsports
Jan. 23: Richard Petty Motorsports
Jan. 24: Germain Racing
Jan. 27: Leavine Family Racing
Jan. 28: Richard Childress Racing
Jan. 29: JTG Daugherty Racing
Jan. 30: Wood Brothers Racing
Jan. 31: Roush Fenway Racing
Feb. 3: Hendrick Motorsports
Feb. 4: Chip Ganassi Racing
Feb. 5: Team Penske
Feb. 6: Stewart-Haas Racing
Feb. 7: Joe Gibbs Racing

Cliff Daniels’ first full-time season as crew chief of the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports team doubles as Jimmie Johnson’s last.

Naturally, pressure is there. Daniels admitted that much.

Or at least it should be.

“I haven’t really had time to sit back and think, ‘Oh, man. Is this intimidating or is this scary?’” Daniels said Thursday at the team’s complex in Concord, North Carolina. “I don’t know yet. I really don’t.”

RELATED: Johnson changes season hashtag, mindset

Johnson announced back in late November, just days after the 2019 finale, he will retire at the conclusion of the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series season. Already considered one of the sport’s greats, Johnson holds seven championships, making him the only active driver tied with Hall of Famers Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt for most titles. Johnson boasts 83 career wins in the premier series from 18 full seasons.

That’s who Daniels has to – gets to – command this year.

“One of the biggest things I’ve done this offseason is really drive the point home of the togetherness and the family dynamic of the team across the board,” Daniels said. “I grew up playing baseball, soccer, football, other sports. It’s so rare to see a team that truly every individual is pulling in the same direction. Obviously, we’re all unique with our identity, but together, the team is really, really strong.”

Daniels took over atop the pit box 22 races into last season, replacing Kevin Meendering, who was also new to the position in 2019. Chad Knaus was Johnson’s crew chief from 2002-18. All of Johnson’s championships and victories came during that time span.

Instead of being wary of yet another new leader, especially after a winless season without a NASCAR Playoffs berth, Johnson is confident in Daniels’ potential.

“Relationships are everything, and that driver-crew chief relationship is everything,” Johnson said. “When I reflect back on 17 years with Chad, the closer we were, the better that car ran. In some indirect way, there was a correlation. … That’s what makes things so easy with Cliff. We have so much in common.”

RELATED: Most notable highlights from Johnson’s career

Knaus remained within the Hendrick Motorsports organization and now works with William Byron, driver of the No. 24 Chevrolet.

“Shoot, I’ll be frank: I probably go to Cliff more for advice than he comes to me,” Knaus said. “Those guys are going to do good things this year. I’m looking forward to it.”

The Johnson-Daniels pairing had four top-10 finishes in limited time matched up in 2019. It was Daniels’ first crew-chief gig, though he has been a part of Hendrick Motorsports since 2014. He was actually Johnson’s race engineer during his 2016 title run.

Ever since Johnson set an end date, names have been swirling as to who will fill the No. 48 vacancy. No true candidates have been revealed by the team itself. Daniels, though, undoubtedly wants to retain his role and ideally help pick out the next driver.

“When the conversations need to happen, and I’m sure they’re going to happen soon, we’ll see how that goes,” Daniels said. “But right now, we’re really focused on the here and the now.”

Which channels have NASCAR programming this week? We answer that and give the weekly NASCAR television listings here in the NASCAR TV schedule.

Note: All times are ET.

MORE:  How to find NBCSN | Get the NBC Sports App | Get TrackPass today | How to find FS1 | Get FOX Sports App

Monday, February 3
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App

Tuesday, February 4
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App

On MRN
7 p.m., NASCAR Live

Wednesday, February 5
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App

On MRN
1 p.m., NASCAR Coast to Coast

Thursday, February 6
1 p.m., IMSA Racing: Michelin Pilot Challenge at Daytona (re-air), NBCSN/NBC Sports App
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1/FOX Sports App

Saturday, February 8
11:30 a.m., NASCAR Cup Series Busch Clash at Daytona final practice, FS1/FOX Sports App (Canada: TSN5)
12:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub Weekend Edition, FS1/FOX Sports App
1:30 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series Daytona 500 qualifying practice, FS1/FOX Sports App (Canada: TSN App)
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub Weekend Edition, FS1/FOX Sports App
3 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series Daytona 500 qualifying final practice, FS1/FOX Sports App (Canada: TSN App)
4 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub Weekend Edition, FS1/FOX Sports App
4:30 p.m., ARCA Auto Racing: Lucas Oil 200, FS1/FOX Sports App

On MRN
11:30 a.m., Busch Clash at Daytona final practice
1:30 p.m., Daytona 500 qualifying practice
3 p.m., Daytona 500 qualifying final practice

Sunday, February 9
7 a.m., ARCA Auto Racing: Lucas Oil 200 (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
noon, NASCAR Cup Series Daytona 500 qualifying, FOX/Fox Sports App (Canada: TSN1, 3)
2 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: Daytona, FS1/FOX Sports App
3 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series Busch Clash at Daytona, FS1/FOX Sports App (Canada: TSN1)
10 p.m., NASCAR Cup Series Daytona 500 qualifying (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App

On MRN
12:30 p.m., Daytona 500 pole qualifying
2 p.m., Busch Clash at Daytona

We haven’t even run the Daytona 500 yet, but that did not stop the editors at NASCAR Digital Media from making their early Championship 4 and NASCAR Cup Series champion picks. Read on to see which editor is most in line with what you are thinking.

ZACK ALBERT

Championship 4 picks: Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, Kevin Harvick, Kyle Larson.

Why them? Expect three of last year’s Championship 4 to keep their momentum for another run at the title. As for the fourth, Larson and his No. 42 team’s improvement as last season progressed have him poised for a breakout this year. The confidence from an offseason full of extracurricular wins can’t hurt.

Fifth wheel: Joey Logano. With apologies to Chase Elliott, Martin Truex Jr., and a host of other potential bracket-breakers, the No. 22 team holds a great chance to edge into the Phoenix finale if the new driver-crew chief pairing of Logano and Paul Wolfe clicks quickly.

Hoisting the hardware: Denny Hamlin.

PAT DECOLA

Championship 4 picks: Kevin Harvick, Kyle Busch, Martin Truex Jr., Joey Logano.

Why them? It feels safe — and it’s a repeat of 2018’s ‘Big Three and Me’ with Logano filling out the quartet once again — but my gut tells me these are still the elite of the elite as the calendar turns to 2020 and the rules package looks similar to last season. The updated rules for short tracks and road courses likely only helps these four, as they’re already among the best at each type of layout.

Fifth wheel: Breaking the rules a bit here, but the fifth wheel will be whichever remaining driver among the remaining JGR/Penske groups in Ryan Blaney, Denny Hamlin, Erik Jones, Brad Keselowski. If I had to pick one? Keselowski.

Hoisting the hardware: Kevin Harvick.

RJ KRAFT

Championship 4 picks: Kyle Busch, Kevin Harvick, Kyle Larson, Joey Logano.

Why them? I think Busch comes out of the gate strong on the heels of title No. 2 and the Harvick-Childers combo is too good to expect anything less than a Championship 4 appearance. Larson was one of the most consistent drivers in the second half last year and I expect that to carry over. The Logano-Paul Wolfe driver-crew chief combo should be one the best in the business and tough to top.

Fifth wheel: Ryan Blaney. The crew chief change to Todd Gordon is a boon for YRB and it’s easy to forget that performance wise, Blaney was the best of the Penske trio in the 2019 playoffs.

Hoisting the hardware: Joey Logano.

JONATHAN MERRYMAN

Championship 4 picks:
Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, Kevin Harvick, Ryan Blaney.

Why them? Kyle Busch is the gold standard and Denny Hamlin is driving at his peak. Kevin Harvick and Rodney Childers have had a full season plus the winter break to work out the bugs from 2019 and Ryan Blaney has the talent and a new crew chief who has run for and won a NASCAR Cup Series title.

Fifth wheel: William Byron. Year two with Chad Knaus plus a ton of confidence after a sophomore season that saw tremendous growth towards the back half of the year. This may be Willy B’s year to sneak up on championship regulars.

Hoisting the hardware: Denny Hamlin.

BRAD NORMAN

Championship 4 picks: Ryan Blaney, Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, Kyle Larson.

Why them? Kyle Busch seems to get here every year, and Denny Hamlin and the No. 11 team could be even better in 2020 with a year of experience under the collective belts with crew chief Chris Gabehart. Kyle Larson has won practically everything this offseason, and he seems ripe to make the leap into the upper echelon. The Team Penske crew chief swaps will serve Blaney well.

Fifth wheel: William Byron. Pretty big expectations for a driver still searching for his first NASCAR Cup Series win. With Chad Knaus atop the pit box, a fast Chevrolet under his feet and a swelling internal confidence, Byron is the breakout star of 2020 and pushes for Championship 4 spot.

Hoisting the hardware: Denny Hamlin.

TERRIN WAACK

Championship 4 picks:
Chase Elliott, Joey Logano, Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin.

Why them? Hamlin hit his stride in 2019 but had a tape mishap in the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway, so he’ll be looking for redemption and (still) his first championship. Throwing Busch and Logano into the mix because they’re just talented drivers and the most recent champions. As for Elliott, had his Round of 8 not been beyond rough, he could have been in title contention last season.

Fifth wheel: Kyle Larson. Already expecting Larson to win more races overall in 2020, so to see him sneak into the Championship 4 after a trip to Victory Lane late in the postseason wouldn’t be surprising. The win in the NASCAR Playoffs last season showed he can finish out front when it matters most.

Hoisting the hardware: Denny Hamlin.

ALEX WEAVER

Championship 4 picks: Jimmie Johnson, Denny Hamlin, Martin Truex Jr., Kevin Harvick.

Why them? Denny Hamlin was the strongest crew last year, easily. I think even more so than last year, they are on a championship mission. Truex and Harvick dominate always. I’m sticking with my storybook ending I’ve predicted everywhere else on NASCAR.com and have Johnson making it to Phoenix to compete for a championship.

Fifth wheel: Kyle Busch. I don’t know if you can call Kyle Busch a sneak in. He is the reigning champion but I feel with the slump he went through last season, he may struggle more this year and not have enough to make it in the Championship 4. However, it is Kyle Busch and you never can count him out.

Hoisting the hardware: Jimmie Johnson.

CHASE WILHELM

Championship 4 picks: Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, Kevin Harvick, Ryan Blaney

Why them?: I’m going to stick with three of the four NASCAR Cup Series drivers we saw in the Championship 4 in 2019 because they are poised to be the cream of the crop once again this season. But I’m going out on a limb with Blaney. The No. 12 Team Penske driver was only a couple positions away from winning at Phoenix Raceway last November to capture a title-contending spot. With new crew chief Todd Gordon calling the shots, I feel the team shakeup with the Penske brigade is exactly what Blaney will need to launch into the championship picture. Blaney said he’s a big fan of major overhauls and this will haul him right into the finale in the desert.

Fifth wheel: Martin Truex Jr. With the unknowns of a new crew chief in James Small after years of dominance with Cole Pearn, I feel the transition will be seamless. We are going to see the same strong No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing team, but I think he’ll fall just short of competing for a title in Phoenix based on the strength of those I mentioned above.

Hoisting the hardware: Denny Hamlin.

GEORGE WINKLER

Championship 4 picks: Ryan Blaney, Kyle Busch, Chase Elliott, Kevin Harvick.

Why them? Busch and Harvick have each made it to the Championship 4 five times in the six seasons since NASCAR changed to the elimination format, and I can’t think of a reason why they can’t make it six-for-seven. Blaney’s stats are all headed in the right direction, and now he gets to work with champion crew chief Todd Gordon. If Elliott avoids the bad luck that plagued him last playoffs, he will bounce back with a vengeance and finally make a deeper run.

Fifth wheel: Martin Truex Jr. He was a tough first cut for sure, and I wouldn’t be surprised if he proved me wrong by making a fourth consecutive run to the Championship 4. But it can’t be underestimated what Cole Pearn meant to this team, so I think it’s reasonable to expect there will be an adjustment period.

Hoisting the hardware: Chase Elliott.

NASCAR Cup Series driver Austin Dillon and wife Whitney revealed the gender of their first child in spectacular fashion.

The couple found out they are having a baby boy as blue confetti and smoke filled the air during their gender reveal party on Saturday. Dillon announced the news via Instagram.

https://www.instagram.com/p/B8CTjwCHVSU/?igshid=ljcsxc9bg4ie

Married in December 2017, the two found a creative way to spread the news they were expecting in December with a photoshoot at Charlotte Motor Speedway, site of Dillon’s first career NASCAR Cup Series victory in the 2017 Coca-Cola 600.

The days leading up to NASCAR Hall of Fame Induction Night had been a jumble.

Tony Stewart had sorted through mountains of memorabilia to get his enshrinement exhibit just so. He showed up on the Hall’s red carpet with the ink barely dry on his remarks, joking after a frenzied re-write that “two hours ago, I was still writing my damn speech.” And he showed up with the wrong dress clothes, realizing after leaving home that he’d grabbed a tuxedo instead of a suit. At least he bet the over.

SHOP: Hall of Fame gear

“Pretty much everything we’ve done has been some sort of minor catastrophe,” Stewart grinned. “All we’ve done is just laugh and have fun with this week.”

After cheerfully completing red-carpet media obligations, Stewart turned to his handlers to see what was next on the day’s itinerary, all while inching toward the fans clamoring for him on the other side of the velvet ropes. There wasn’t much air in his schedule for ad-libs, but the Hall’s planners relented: “Hey, it’s your night.”

NASCAR’s people’s champion can still draw a crowd, sharing his night with an especially interwoven Class of 2020 that included former teammate Bobby Labonte, his first Cup Series team owner in Joe Gibbs and two people who connected with him in his first baby steps into stock-car racing, Waddell Wilson and Buddy Baker. Stewart closed the night’s festivities with a heartfelt but rollicking speech full of his trademark sense of humorous mischief.

RELATED: Class of 2020 honored | Hall of Fame photos

For a man who typically keeps moving, it was a rare time to pause and reflect. Thank the Hall and their need for display-case mementos for that. Stewart and his inner circle went through storage units full of items collected through a lifetime in racing. The archives went all the way back, as far as the lawn tractor that he used to earn money mowing yards in his younger days.

“When we got in there, I realized I’m probably going to be on an episode of ‘Hoarders’ the next season,” Stewart cracked. “I’m one of those people that anything in racing, I can’t get rid of. … It was like Christmas without the fancy wrapping paper.”

Stewart has never been one for fancy frills, but savored the second part of Christmas, which came in a Thursday dinner with previous Hall inductees. Stewart and his contemporary Jeff Gordon have seven championships between them, but even Stewart admitted locking eyes with Gordon over their meal, being starstruck in the presence of stock-car racing greats who were enshrined before them.

“It’s surreal,” Stewart said. “You think of the sport being 70 years old and there’s 55 guys in this Hall. I can think of 55 guys off the top of my head right now that deserve to be in here, I feel like more than me. It’s truly an honor to be here. (Thursday) night’s dinner with the guys that are already in the Hall, to have that intimate dinner with those guys just really put it in perspective. I felt like a little kid who was tagging along.”

MORE: Every Cup win by Tony Stewart | Tony Stewart through the years

Stewart enters the Hall of Fame with plenty to contribute, both in the way of personality and the sheer volume of his racing collection. But he won’t become a museum piece himself. He’s still writing the rest of his Hall of Fame story, both as a team owner, a track owner and a racer at the grassroots level.

Stewart says he has 72 sprint-car races on his 2020 schedule. The retirement rocking chair can wait.

At the end of a star-flecked night, Stewart was asked what he wanted to do with the rest of his career after his Hall induction. He didn’t pause.

“Everything. … I’m just not ready to stop yet. I mean, I just want to keep racing, go win as many races as I can, and it’ll be just like NASCAR. There’ll be a day that I know that it’s time to do something different and step away from it, but that day’s not today and I don’t see it on the horizon anytime soon.”

Even if it’s a jumble along the way.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – In an emotional ceremony Friday night at the Charlotte Convention Center, two champion drivers at NASCAR’s highest level; the owner who fielded cars for both of them; one of the hardest chargers in the history of the sport; and the crew chief/engine builder who guided that driver to victory in the 1980 Daytona 500 all took their places in the NASCAR Hall of Fame. 

Ushered into the Hall were three-time NASCAR Cup champion Tony Stewart, 2000 champion Bobby Labonte, five-time champion car owner Joe Gibbs, 19-time Cup winner and beloved broadcaster Buddy Baker and 19-time race-winning crew chief Waddell Wilson.

RELATED: Hall of Fame merch
PHOTOS: Every member of the NASCAR Hall of Fame | Scenes from the Hall

Introduced by driver Corey LaJoie, Wilson was the first member of the class of 2020 to be inducted.

The fourth crew chief ushered into the NASCAR Hall of Fame, Wilson turned wrenches for a wide array of NASCAR stars, including Baker and fellow NASCAR Hall of Famers Bobby Allison, Cale Yarborough, Darrell Waltrip and Benny Parsons.

In his second start with Baker, and his second start as a crew chief at NASCAR’s highest level in 1980, Wilson guided Baker first to the Daytona 500 pole and then to the race win. Baker led 143 of the 200 laps and took the checkered flag under caution ahead of Allison, the only other driver on the lead lap.

WATCH: Wilson gets first win with Baker

Eleven years later, Wilson got his final victory as a crew chief in the spring race at Darlington with driver Ricky Rudd.

“Well, I have plenty of stories about races and individuals that I could share with you all, but I don’t want to tell my stories,” said Wilson, who was inducted by daughter Lisa Hawkins and sons Gregg and Freddie Wilson. “What I want to do is to thank all of the people that helped me throughout the years.

“I have been blessed to work with some of the best and most talented people in NASCAR, and I will always be grateful.”

Known as NASCAR’s “Gentle Giant,” Baker was the second member of the class of 2020 to be enshrined, with sister Susie Baker accepting the induction for her brother, who passed away in 2015. With a heart and passion for the sport commensurate with his 6-foot-6 frame, Baker ran his first race at Columbia (S.C.) Speedway in 1959 and his last at Talladega in 1992.

In between, he won 19 times in NASCAR’s premier series, the first victory coming in the fall race at Charlotte Motor Speedway in 1967. Baker had a predilection for the big races on the larger tracks, and numbers among his wins the 1970 Southern 500 at Darlington, the 1972 Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte and the 1980 Daytona 500.

Baker went to Victory Lane four times at Talladega, NASCAR’s largest oval, and swept both races there in 1975. The Gentle Giant was especially adept at qualifying, as his 38 poles attest. He is credited with mentoring Ryan Newman, currently foremost among active Cup drivers with 51 poles.

Appropriately, it was Newman who introduced the late driver, who was also known as “Leadfoot.”

“The only thing faster than his wit was his speed in a race car,” Newman said of the man whose 177.602 mph speed record for the Daytona 500 still stands. “…Once he got out front, no one was getting by him.”


Joe Gibbs, the third member of the Class of 2020 to enter the Hall, capped more than two decades of excellence with his fifth Cup championship in 2019, courtesy of driver Kyle Busch. The victory of the No. 18 Toyota in the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway was the second for the elite driver, and it completed a season in which Joe Gibbs Racing drivers won a record 19 of 36 points races.

Gibbs’ induction into the NASCAR Hall of Fame also had a bittersweet aspect, since it came barely more than a year after the death of his son, J.D. Gibbs, who was integral in building JGR’s success as president of the organization. J.D. Gibbs passed away on Jan. 11, 2019.

J.D.’s brother, Coy Gibbs, performed the induction honors, after an introduction by JGR drivers Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin—and a video appearance by former President George W. Bush. Gibbs, who coached the NFL Washington Redskins to three Super Bowl wins, is the first person to be inducted into both the NFL Hall of Fame (1996) and the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

“Whatever he puts his mind to, he achieves it, whether it’s winning the Super Bowl, Daytona 500, NASCAR Championship or just being a great family member,” Hamlin said of the man known simply as “Coach.” “I’m proud to have raced my entire career for a man I’ve looked up to my entire life.”

RELATED: First wins at Joe Gibbs Racing | Memorable 1-2 finishes by JGR

All told, Gibbs has accumulated 176 Cup victories as a car owner—third behind the 268 of Petty Enterprises and the 256 of NASCAR Hall of Fame owner Rick Hendrick—and fielded the cars for Labonte’s championship in 2000 and for two of Stewart’s three titles, in 2002 and 2005.

Gibbs also has been a prolific winner in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, with his drivers having won 165 races and two driver championships, with Kyle Busch in 2009 and Daniel Suarez 2016.

“We had 17 people our first year,” Gibbs recalled of his initial—and successful—plea for sponsorship to Norm Miller of Interstate Batteries. “At that point, JGR was born. I was so nervous coming from football over to racing. How were we going to be accepted, the family, everybody?

“I just want to say big thanks to everybody here. The NASCAR family—just unreal. I want to say to the France family: thanks for your guidance, leadership and the way you accepted us. The fans, the fellow competitors, all you guys … that meant so much to us as we took off in racing.

“The problem was, you’ve got to win.”

That’s exactly what Gibbs did. After a barren inaugural season in 1992, he fielded the race-winning car for Dale Jarrett in the 1993 season-opening Daytona 500.

WATCH: Gibbs’ first win comes in 1993 Daytona 500

Current Roush Fenway Racing driver Chris Buescher introduced Labonte, a fellow Texan.

Labonte, the fourth member of the 2020 class inducted Friday night, follows his brother, Terry Labonte, into the NASCAR Hall of Fame—becoming part of the second “brother act” to earn that distinction, the first being Glen and Leonard Wood. Years earlier, with his Cup championship in 2000, Labonte became the first driver to win titles in what is now the NASCAR Xfinity Series (1991, with his family team) and in NASCAR’s premier division.

Labonte won 21 Cup races and 26 poles during a career that spanned 26 years. His most prolific period came in the 1999 and 2000 seasons, when he collected nine of his 21 victories. During his championship season, Labonte took the checkered flag in the vaunted Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Labonte developed an obvious fondness for Atlanta Motor Speedway, where the claimed six of his 21 wins.

PHOTOS: Bobby Labonte through the years

Terry Labonte, a member of the class of 2016, inducted his brother.

“To be inducted along with legends, to be added to the Hall with the previous inductees and to be a part of NASCAR, I’m very, very grateful,” Bobby Labonte said. “From as early as I can remember, there were two things I did as a kid. I raced quarter midgets in South Texas, and I watched my brother race.

“I idolized him. So, after all these years, I stand before you, following in my brother’s footsteps. I’m even wearing the same tie he wore on his induction night.”


Stewart’s long-time hero, A.J. Foyt, provided an introductory video, citing Stewart’s accomplishments in a wide variety of racing disciplines, but concluding with the statement, “But you know, Tony, you could never beat me.”

Stewart-Haas Racing driver Kevin Harvick followed with an introduction from the stage.

Stewart, Friday night’s final inductee, earned two of his three NASCAR Cup titles with Gibbs before embarking on a partnership with Gene Haas to form Stewart-Haas Racing in 2009. In 2011, Stewart won five of 10 Playoff races, including the season finale at Homestead, to claim his final championship in a tiebreaker over Carl Edwards.

The quick-witted Stewart retired from full-time Cup racing in 2016 after winning his 49th and final event at Sonoma Raceway that same year. As a co-owner with Haas, he fielded Harvick’s championship-winning car in 2014. Since its inception, Stewart-Haas has accumulated 55 Cup wins and 53 poles.

RELATED: Every Stewart Cup win | ‘Smoke’s schemes through the years 

Stewart said he felt honored to be one of such a small number to become a NASCAR Hall of Fame member.

“I’m not old … or, at least, I don’t feel like I’m old,” said Stewart, who was inducted by Haas. “I’m still racing. In fact, I’m racing now more than I ever have in the past. And in my mind, the NASCAR Hall of Fame is there to honor the completion of one’s career… 

“But in the eight months since being nominated to this year’s class, I’ve come to appreciate what an honor it is. I’m one of just 55 people to be inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame. And, considering that NASCAR has been around for more than 70 years, I think that’s pretty much nuts for me to be here. It truly is an elite group, and it’s incredibly humbling to be a part of it.”

Edsel Ford II, great-grandson of Henry Ford and current board member of the Ford Motor Company, received the Landmark Award for Outstanding Contributions to NASCAR from NASCAR Chairman and CEO Jim France and Vice Chairperson of the Board of Directors of NASCAR Lesa France Kennedy.

At the NASCAR Hall of Fame dinner that preceded the induction ceremony, long-time broadcaster Dick Berggren was honored with the Squier-Hall Award for NASCAR Media Excellence.

Name: Anna
Current City: Colton, CA
Member Since:  2017

Getting to know ANNA:

Q.  How did you first become interested in NASCAR? 

“I grew up around cars as a kid. My father was an auto body mechanic for several years and took my brothers and myself to our local racetrack at Orange show speedway in San Bernardino, California. This is where my love for auto racing was born and carried on through the years as I began watching NASCAR.

In 1997, I had my son Christopher. That was the year Jeff Gordon won the inaugural Auto Club 400. Amazingly, Chris became a fan of the sport and of Jeff Gordon at the age of only 2 years old. To this day, he’s still a fan and we’ve gone as a family to Auto Club speedway eight years in a row now. I’d say it’s become a family tradition, and it’s all thanks to my Dad, his love of cars, and the sport of racing.”

Q. What is your favorite part about NASCAR?

“I like the sport as a whole, the excitement of the competitiveness between the teams and the drivers. I believe this is truly the best sport out there. It has a real sense of family, within the crews, the teams, the drivers, and the fans as well. Aside from the competition, we can all come together as one family within the racing community. And where else can a fan have a voice within the sport and have their opinions be heard.”

Q: Do you have a favorite in any of the following categories?

Driver: “Joey Logano.”
Track: “Auto Club Speedway.”
OEM: “Ford.”

Q. What are some of your Raceday Traditions? 

“First things first, we fire up the grill. We cook up some delicious food. Before the race starts, we go around and we each make our predictions. For example, which lap will bring out the first caution or who will cause it. We even sometimes try and guess the reason for the caution. It’s always fun to see which of us can predict the outcomes. Raceday is always about good food, family fun, and good ol’ racing.”

Q. What are some of your Hobbies? 

“I love drawing, music, and reading about NASCAR news.”

FROM ALL OF US AT NASCAR, WE THANK ANNA FOR HER CONTINUED SUPPORT AND LOOK FORWARD TO HEARING FROM HER IN 2020! Look for Anna on the Official NASCAR Fan Council page on NASCAR.COM.