Former UFC Featherweight and Lightweight champion Conor McGregor made his long-awaited return in grand fashion on Saturday night in Las Vegas, stopping Cowboy Cerrone 40 seconds into Round 1 by TKO when the referee halted the match.

Cerrone (36-14, one no-contest) is the UFC’s all-time winner and a client of NASCAR Cup Series champion Kevin Harvick’s KHI Management team. Harvick and Cerrone go back years, and the UFC fighter was Havick’s first client when he launched the full-service sports and celebrity marketing agency.

It was a fight between two of UFC’s most electric and outspoken figures, and one that firmly thrust Harvick into the spotlight as a businessman.

RELATED: Kevin Harvick’s career highlights

KHI was on the ground in Vegas all week, following along as the moments unfold between Cerrone and McGregor. Harvick and wife DeLana, an invaluable resource in KHI’s business management, expected to host 140 people and 11 sponsors at the event this weekend.

“He’s actually our original client,” Harvick told NASCAR.com earlier in the week. “And really the reason that KHI Management started was because of Donald Cerrone and him asking the question ‘Why couldn’t you represent me?’ That’s really what started our company, just drinking a beer beside the bus at Texas Motor Speedway. It’s evolved from that into what it is today; he’s responsible for the management company even starting.”

Kyle Larson said he couldn’t make a mistake in his quest to unseat three-time Chili Bowl winner Christopher Bell at the most prestigious dirt Midget race of the year. On Saturday night, Larson was perfect when it mattered most.

A flawless restart on Lap 39 of the 55-lap event that included a precise, bold dart up the track — one that the daring Larson also is known for in the NASCAR Cup Series — allowed the 27-year-old to slip by Bell, and he made the lead hold.

There would be no repeat of 2019, when Larson made a mental error on the final lap, giving up the lead and win to Bell in the final corner.

On this night, Kyle Larson was Chili Bowl champion.

RELATED: Best pictures from Chili Bowl

https://www.instagram.com/p/B7f4rK4FqkO/?igshid=va3vw6d6ails

Bell finished second, ending one of the most remarkable streaks in the history of the fabled race. The Leavine Family Racing driver, who will be a rookie in the NASCAR Cup Series in 2020, started the 55-lap main event second, took the lead out of the opening lap and appeared to be sailing away to his fourth consecutive win. A series of late cautions bunched the field back up, setting the stage for Larson’s heroics.

Bell was attempting to become the second driver in Chili Bowl history to win four straight, which Kevin Swindell did from 2010-13. But Bell’s heartache was jubilation for Larson, who won for the first time in his 13 attempts at Chili Bowl fame.

Cannon McIntosh finished third, followed by Logan Seavey and Rico Abreu, who was a menace in the final laps and drove up to second place before dropping back late.

The Chili Bowl is an annual dirt Midget race that has been held since 1987 and always draws interest from some of auto racing’s most talented drivers. Preliminary heat races began Monday and lasted through Saturday. Each day included a series of heat races and qualifiers, followed by a 25-lap feature event. The top-two finishers in each qualifying night feature event locked themselves into the 24-car A-Feature event on Saturday night.

Larson locked in his spot Tuesday by winning the A-Feature event and an automatic spot in Saturday’s showdown. The talented Abreu, who has 26 career Gander Trucks starts on his resume, joined him in the finale with an A-Feature win the following night. Bell already was locked into the finale, but won his A-Feature on Thursday anyway.

With 10 spots locked in, drivers spent the entirety of Saturday attempting to qualify through a prolonged series of races known as “Alphabet Soup” as drivers who had not previously qualified for the championship race had to drive their way in through a series of transfers, starting with two O-Feature races. The top six finishers advanced upward to the corresponding N-Feature races., in which there were already several drivers who had qualified based off their performance earlier in the week. Then the top six finishers from each N-Feature race advanced into the M-Feature races, where other drivers were also waiting.

RELATED: Recap entire week

The format was used all the way up to the A-Main finale, although the number of drivers advancing upward dropped to five starting at the G-Feature, then jumped to seven for the B-Feature races.

Justin Allgaier, who started Saturday in the first of two B-Feature races, finished third in that event to claim a transfer spot into the championship race. He finished 21st in the big show.

Sammy Swindell, the all-time leader with five Chili Bowl wins, took 13th.

RELATED: GoPro footage of Allgaier

Finishes for notable drivers included:

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. started his day in the E-Feature, finishing third, and then passed two cars on the final lap of the ensuing D-Feature race to claim the final transfer spot into the C-Feature, where he started last based off his previous finishing position. He made up some ground, but not enough, finishing 17th and ending his night.

The Cup Series driver and two-time NASCAR Xfinity Series champion is a talented and well-respected dirt driver and a consistent entrant in the Chili Bowl. Stenhouse will drive for JTG Daugherty Racing in its flagship No. 47 Chevrolet this year.

Ryan Newman won his E-Feature race, where he started the day, to advance to the D-Feature. He finished seventh and did not advance any further. Still, it’s considered an impressive showing for the Cup Series veteran. He hadn’t raced a dirt Midget car since 2000 prior to a tune-up race at Gateway earlier in the month. Prior to Saturday, the 42-year-old was in the A-Feature of his Wednesday qualifying race before being involved in a five-car incident just five laps in, forcing him to attempt and drive his way into the main event on Saturday.

• Chase Briscoe fell short of the championship A-Feature in agonizing fashion. The full-time Stewart-Haas Racing driver figures to be in the championship picture of the NASCAR Xfinity Series this year, and throughout the week he looked like he’d be a factor in the main event. He nearly was. A third-place finish in one of the C-Feature races advanced Briscoe to the B-Features, but his eighth-place finish — after starting 17th — was one spot short of a transfer.

• Dillon Welch, a NASCAR reporter and lifetime racer who excels every time he gets in the seat, also fell a heartbreaking one spot shy of advancing to the A-Feature. Starting fourth in the second B-Feature, a pair of late cautions bunched up the field, leaving Welch one spot outside the transfer line. A ridiculous last lap with a near-successful slide job wasn’t quite enough.

• Alex Bowman started Saturday in one of the two C-Feature races and finished second to cleanly advance. He couldn’t duplicate the feat, finishing 12th in the following B-Feature. Bowman, who drives the No. 88 Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports in the Cup Series, earned his first career win at NASCAR’s top level in 2019. He’s an avid Midget racer who often tweets his progress on building the latest cars. Driver C.J. Leary gave Bowman a rooting interest in the A-Feature, as he drives Bowman’s equipment.

Longtime veteran racer J.J. Yeley, who has had a number of memorable Chili Bowl moments over the years, couldn’t quite pull off another one. Yeley finished fifth a C-Feature race, where he began Saturday, to advance upward with the final transfer position. A 10th-place finish in the ensuing race was impressive considering his 20th-place start — last in the field — but three spots short of making the A-Feature.

Karsyn Elledge  finished 17th in the E-Feature, bettering her run from last year by two full races.

RELATED: Golden Driller trophy coveted

The 2020 Chili Bowl Nationals are underway from the Tulsa Expo Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma. See how NASCAR drivers and others fared in their respective qualifying nights leading up to Saturday night’s 55-lap A-Feature event, and check back throughout the week for the latest updates.

RELATED: Guide to Chili Bowl Nationals: Can Bell four-peat?

Friday, Jan. 17

In a thriller all the way down to the final laps, Tanner Thorson put on a show on his way to winning Friday night’s final preliminary qualifying night at the Chili Bowl Nationals.

After seven lead changes among four drivers, Thorson took the lead away from Ryan Bernal with just five laps remaining. Bernal was able to hold off Chris Windom, Tucker Klaasmeyer and NASCAR Xfinity Series driver Justin Allgaier at the end to earn the second of two transfer spots into Saturday night’s 55-lap A-Feature finale. Allgaier held on to finish fourth.

PHOTOS: See the scenes from the Chili Bowl Nationals

In what started as a great night turned sour for NASCAR Cup Series driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr. in the A-Feature. Stenhouse Jr. won his respective heat race and finished second in his Team Toyota qualifier after starting fifth, earning enough passing points to start third in the A-Feature. The No. 17bc Clauson-Marshall Racing driver took the lead from Chris Windom on Lap 4 and held on until he lost the lead to Thorson after a Lap 14 restart.

But that’s when things went south for Stenhouse after making heavy contact with the Turn 4 cushion while Thorson was making the pass. The contact damaged the bottom nerf bar on Stenhouse’s midget, rubbing on the left-rear tire. After a short caution period, Stenhouse was forced to go to the pit area with 13 laps to go due to a flat tire. Stenhouse finished 23rd.

Allgaier and Stenhouse will now have to rely on Saturday’s last-chance qualifying rounds if they want to make it into Saturday night’s grand finale. Other NASCAR drivers, including Alex Bowman, Chase Briscoe, Ryan Ellis and J.J. Yeley, will also have a busy Saturday trying to race their way into transfer spots.

RELATED: Lineups for Championship Saturday at the Chili Bowl

Below are drivers who have clinched spots so far for Saturday night’s 55-lap main event:

  • Cannon McIntosh
  • Tyler Courtney
  • Christopher Bell
  • Kyle Larson
  • Jonathan Beason
  • Rico Abreu
  • Colby Copeland
  • Thomas Meseraull
  • Tanner Thorson
  • Ryan Bernal

Thursday, Jan. 16

NASCAR Cup Series rookie Christopher Bell took the checkered flag during Thursday’s John Christner Trucking Qualifying Night.

Bell worked his way into the 30-lap preliminary A-Feature by winning the seventh heat and the fourth Team Toyota qualifier to start sixth in the main event of the night. Bell made quick work of the competition on his way to the front, passing Thomas Meseraull for the lead on Lap 11 in the No. 84x Tucker-Boat Motorsports midget.

But the night wasn’t as smooth toward the end as Bell had to fend off a hard charge by Buddy Kofoid in the closing laps and contact with a slower car on the final lap, but neither slowed him down, capturing his fifth consecutive preliminary qualifying night victory and sixth in Chili Bowl Nationals history.

The defending and three-time Chili Bowl champion is locked into his seventh straight main event, while Meseraull was able to hang on for second to earn the final transfer spot of the night for Saturday night’s 55-lap grand finale.

Other notables included CJ Leary, driving for NASCAR Cup Series driver Alex Bowman, who finished seventh in the A-Feature. Leary was set to start second, but he was penalized for jumping the start in his respective Team Toyota qualifier, forcing the No. 55v Alex Bowman Racing machine back to 12th for the green flag.

After finishing sixth in his heat, former NASCAR Xfinity Series driver Cale Conley finished first in the first of two C-Main events, but the B-Main wasn’t as pretty, exiting early after a front axle failed on the No. 11 midget to end his night.

Both Conley and Leary will revert to the last-chance qualifying round on Saturday before the main event to try to earn a spot in the A-Feature.

NASCAR Xfinity Series driver Justin Allgaier and NASCAR Cup Series driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr. will be in action for Friday night’s final preliminary round of qualifying.

Wednesday, Jan. 15

Rico Abreu took victory in Wednesday night’s Hard Rock Casino Qualifying Night to advance to Saturday night’s A-Feature main event.

After starting second, Abreu never looked back after taking the lead from 2019 World of Outlaws champion Brad Sweet around the halfway point of the 30-lap preliminary event. Sweet dropped back afterward but made a big effort to get back to the front, running third before contact with Blake Hahn with four laps to go sent Sweet for a tumble.

Colby Copeland finished second to Abreu, which also locked him into the main event.

NASCAR Cup Series driver Ryan Newman, making his maiden voyage in the Chili Bowl Nationals, finished third in the seventh heat to advance to the A-Feature. But Newman’s night didn’t pan out after getting caught up in an incident with Giovanni Scelzi, Tyler Thomas, Robby Josett and Chase Jones just five laps into the event. Newman finished 21st and will need to go through the last-chance qualifying rounds Saturday to have a chance at a spot in Saturday’s feature.

World of Outlaw driver and 2019 Knoxville Nationals champion David Gravel finished seventh after starting in the sixth spot. Gravel is set to make six NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoors Truck Series starts throughout the 2020 season with GMS Racing in the No. 24 truck sponsored by Axalta. He’ll also compete in the ARCA Menards Series season opener at Daytona International Speedway with GMS Racing’s alliance team, KBR Development.

Karsyn Elledge, niece of Dale Earnhardt Jr., worked her way into the A-Feature after finishing third in the second B-Feature of the night. After starting 22nd, Elledge was holding her own until she spun with 10 laps to go to bring out the fifth of seven total cautions.

Starting 23rd, J.J. Yeley finished 11th in the A-Feature after overcoming a flat left-rear tire. Yeley paid a visit to the work area and quickly returned to the track to make up time.

Tuesday, Jan. 14

NASCAR Cup Series driver Kyle Larson was perfect in Tuesday night’s Warren CAT Qualifying Night, winning his heat, qualifier and the 30-lap A-Feature preliminary race to earn a spot in Saturday night’s 55-lap finale. NASCAR Cup Series rookie Christopher Bell also earned a victory in the Invitational Race of Champions event in what serves as an all-star race featuring the Chili Bowl’s most talented drivers in history.

But perhaps the most surprising and impactful turn of events occurred after racing action was over. Groundskeeper Brad “Gravel” Chandler didn’t like how the track’s multiple grooves looked from the naked eye following Tuesday night’s action, according to Autoweek. Chandler knew something was off with the dimensions of the track, and reached out to iRacing to verify his notion after checking their digital laser scan of the track from 2018.

After iRacing provided Chandler with the exact dimensions of the corners from its data, Chandler and the grounds crew worked until around 4 a.m. to recut the track based on iRacing’s measurements. The berm at the bottom of the track was moved lower, while the cushion above the top grooved was pushed in.

Kevin Iannarelli, an associate producer at iRacing, spearheads all the scanning work for the racing simulation company. He spent a few hours last night analyzing the track data from the 2018 scan, giving Chandler and his team the radiuses of the corners, banking, height of the berm and basic dimensions of the clay surface.

The result? The racing world and the racing simulation world working together to produce a top-notch product at one of the biggest races of the year.

“I take a lot of pride in building relationships with the people responsible for the tracks when I go and collect the data we need to build our virtual tracks,” Iannarelli told NASCAR.com. “As a company, we are always looking for ways to not only improve our product but also help our partners when we have the tools and technology to do so. With the data we have someone could exactly replicate the Chili Bowl in their backyard, so it is pretty gratifying that we could help Steve and his team out by using our expertise to improve their on-track product. I doubt there are many examples of a software developer helping to change a race track overnight before.”

Monday, Jan. 13

Keith Kunz Motorsports driver Cannon McIntosh earned victory in the preliminary A-Feature during Monday night’s Cummins Qualifying Night. With two automatic spots to Saturday night’s A-Feature event during each qualifying night, McIntosh and second-place driver Tyler Courtney have earned the first pair of positions for the grand finale.

NASCAR Xfinity Series driver Chase Briscoe finished second in the second heat race of the night, rallying from the seventh starting position to earn enough passing points for a spot in the night’s preliminary qualifying race. After starting fourth, Briscoe dropped back to collect a ninth-place finish in the A-Feature, but he’ll have a chance to race his way into the finale through last-chance qualifying races Saturday.

Ryan Ellis, former NASCAR Xfinity Series driver and public relations representative for Go Fas Racing, finished last in the fourth heat race of the night. Starting fifth in the C-Feature, Ellis was unable to advance his position, finishing fifth and just missed one of the top-four transfer spots in an effort to advance to the B-Feature. Ellis will have another opportunity to race his way into the A-Feature finale, but it will be a tall task through Saturday’s multiple rounds of last-chance qualifying events.

Next up is Tuesday’s Warren CAT Qualifying Night, where NASCAR Cup Series drivers Kyle Larson and Alex Bowman will have their chance to transfer into the A-Feature for Saturday night.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — The indications were there from that first green flag he took as a little boy growing up in small town Texas. Bobby Labonte was perhaps simply destined to be a winner, a champion. And on January 31, he will officially become a member of the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

Even from those early laps he turned trying out a quarter-midget on a short track near his family’s Corpus Christi home, the elementary-aged Labonte left no doubt about his competitive frame of mind or his talent behind the wheel. There was something special there. Unmistakable.

“When he first started out in quarter-midgets he was either going to wreck or win,’’ Labonte’s older brother Terry recalled with a slight chuckle. “He was wide open.”

RELATED: 2020 NASCAR Hall of Fame induction class

“He did good though. We had quarter-midgets and I remember the first time my dad made him go out and follow me and he wouldn’t even follow me. I was just going to show him the line, but no, he wanted to pass me.”

“I knew from the start he was going to be competitive.’’

Competitive and Hall of Fame-worthy. As it turns out, all those years ago on that South Texas short track, Terry was actually watching and guiding a Hall of Famer in training…his brother.

Bobby Labonte, now 55, went on to become one of the most successful drivers of his generation, earning two national series championships – the Grand National (now NASCAR Xfinity Series) title in 1991 and answering that with the 2000 Cup Series championship. He was the first driver in NASCAR’s long and storied history to win both titles.

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He also earned the prestigious 2001 IROC championship and was the first driver to win races in all three major NASCAR racing divisions – Cup (2002), Xfinity (1992) and the NASCAR Gander RV & Outdoor Truck Series (2005) – at a single track (Martinsville, Va.).

In 1994, Bobby won a second Grand National title – this time as a team owner with driver David Green.

And now Bobby will formally join Terry, a two-time Cup Series champion, in the sport’s grand NASCAR Hall of Fame in two weeks. Labonte’s former Cup Series team owner Joe Gibbs and his former Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Tony Stewart will also be inducted in this Hall of Fame class of high achievement. Joining them are celebrated engine builder and crew chief Waddell Wilson and the late, hugely-popular driver-turned-broadcaster, Buddy Baker.

PHOTOS: Bobby Labonte through the years

The Labonte brothers become only the second pair of siblings to be inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame, joining Glen and Leonard Wood.

As with the Wood Brothers, the Labonte brothers have a celebrated history now marked with a rare and coveted Hall of Fame exclamation point.

While Bobby Labonte and his wife Kristin couldn’t be more genuinely honored or excited to attend the NASCAR Hall of Fame induction gala in Charlotte next month, he admittedly still gets a kick thinking of how he got the big news.

A year prior – Labonte’s first year of eligibility for the Hall of Fame, the couple got dressed up and attended the selection announcement at the Hall. However, Labonte’s name was not among the five chosen for the 2019 class.

So last spring, for his second year of eligibility, Labonte changed the vibe and opted not to attend the formal Hall of Fame announcement in downtown Charlotte. Instead he and Kristin went for a bike ride at the time the news was to be revealed. The two are avid riders and say it just felt like a good way to deal with the natural tension of a potential life-changing moment.

“We’re about halfway into our 20-mile ride and I see on my phone – which is connected through a little computer on my bike – the word ‘Congratulations’ as a text message,’’ Labonte vividly recalled. “Then all of a sudden, a phone call comes, then another, so we just had to stop on the road and answer the phone and the texts. And I called my mom and dad.”

“They told me,’’ he continued with a hearty laugh. “‘You’re not the first to call.’’’

RELATED: Every member of the NASCAR Hall of Fame

Labonte said the pride, the memories and the overall great sense of accomplishment he was able to share with family and friends that afternoon was palpable. After all, so much of his career was family-centric. When his brother Terry – eight years his senior – got a chance in NASCAR’s big leagues in the 1980s, the entire Labonte family relocated from Texas to North Carolina for support.

And it was there that Bobby Labonte really began to flourish, first working in the pits then as a competitor earning that first opportunity to immerse himself and his dreams in the NASCAR culture.

Both Labonte and his father Bob helped work on the Billy Hagan-owned NASCAR Cup Series team that Terry won his first Cup championship with in 1984. But two years later Terry Labonte left the Hagan team to drive for NASCAR Hall of Famer Junior Johnson – and his younger brother and father were let go from the team.

Instead of that being a major setback for Bobby Labonte, however, it really turned into a career send-off.

He and his father worked together to form and fund their own late model team and Labonte began turning heads as he raced throughout the Carolinas – earning a dominating 10 wins en route to the 1987 Caraway (N.C.) Speedway track title, which was a huge highlight of that time. With the prize money he began to earn, Labonte was able to fund occasional starts in the NASCAR Grand National series. And before long, his talent and determination turned humble mid-pack showings into championship caliber headlines.

Labonte soon began capitalizing on the increased opportunity and burgeoning confidence.

He fielded his own team full-time in the Grand National Series, winning the 1991 championship over another future NASCAR Hall of Famer, Jeff Gordon. The following year, Labonte lost the series title to Joe Nemechek by a heart-breaking three points.

Labonte’s hard work and impressive results landed him a full-time job with the Bill Davis Racing Cup Series team in 1993. He earned his first career Cup Series pole (at Richmond, Va.) that fall and finished second to Gordon for the season’s Rookie of the Year honors.

In 1995, Labonte was hired by Joe Gibbs Racing to take over for Dale Jarrett in the famed No. 18 Interstate Batteries car. Labonte won his first Cup Series race that Memorial Day weekend in the series’ longest event, the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

He finished runner-up to Jarrett in the 1999 Cup championship and then answered with a mega 265-point edge over the late seven-time champion Dale Earnhardt for the 2000 Cup title. Labonte finished eighth or better in the championship six times in a seven-year span between 1997 and 2003.

Labonte won 21 career races at 11 different tracks and 26 pole positions at 16 different tracks. Notably, his last pole position came in his home state at Texas Motor Speedway.

And he did it competing against a list of fellow Hall of Famers from iconic champions like Earnhardt, Jarrett, Rusty Wallace, Mark Martin and Bill Elliott to Gibbs teammate Tony Stewart and those undoubtedly future selections such as Jimmie Johnson and Kyle Busch.

“The competition was tough,’’ Labonte said. “It really was in that era.’’

Of course, highest among that great list of legends that Labonte sparred with on-track will always be his brother Terry. They finished first and second in multiple races.

One of the most noteworthy races for them, however, was 1996 in the Atlanta Motor Speedway Cup season finale when Bobby won the race and Terry, who finished fifth, clinched his second Cup title. They celebrated with a victory lap around the track together.

“You can’t write it any better than that,’’ Terry Labonte said. “That was a pretty special day.”

“Usually the last race of the year is the only time two people get to go to Victory Lane and to be able to do that with my brother was pretty special.’’

In many ways it was the only fitting way to celebrate a family that left such a bold mark on the sport. Some would find it intimidating to have an older sibling excel in the career you shared. But Bobby Labonte was inspired by it and learned from it. And he went on to earn his own stripes and celebratory hardware.

In two weeks, the sport and entire industry will honor Labonte’s impressive Hall of Fame-worthy accomplishments. And no one will be prouder than his family, who guided, cheered and took great pride in a career well spent and now again, duly celebrated.

“I think about how I watched my brother race since I was a kid,’’ Labonte said. “We always raced in different divisions growing up so I was always watching his racing, following him. Whatever he did, I was the little brother, I guarantee I was the nuisance brother. But I was always wanting to be like my brother.”

“So for all this to have taken place with the NASCAR Hall of Fame, in my head, I’m thinking I got to be like my brother. That is cool and I never would have thought that would happen and it did.”

“It’s so awesome for our parents. We were all like the steady boat over the high seas. Never drifted.’’

And now essentially, their family “port” is the NASCAR Hall of Fame – alongside the best of the best.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla., Jan. 17, 2020 – When Hailie Deegan makes her official Ford Performance competition debut next week in the IMSA MICHELIN Pilot Challenge race at Daytona International Speedway, she’ll be doing it in a throwback paint scheme of a Ford IMSA star that helped pave the way for women in racing.

Ford Performance unveiled the paint scheme Friday for the No. 22 Multimatic Motorsports Ford Mustang GT4 that will be driven by Deegan and co-driver Chase Briscoe in the four-hour event Friday, Jan. 24. The red, white and blue paint scheme is a modern throwback to the Roush Racing Mustang IMSA GTO car driven by Lyn St. James in her breakout season of 1985, when she captured three victories, including the first IMSA GT win by a woman driving solo.

RELATED: Deegan gets first taste of Daytona in IMSA’s Roar

“We’re certainly excited to have Hailie officially kick off her competition career with Ford,” said Mark Rushbrook, global director, Ford Performance. “She had a great test a couple weeks ago and the pairing with Chase is ideal since he was in her shoes as a sports car rookie just a couple of years back and the experience has made him a more complete racer.

“To have the two of them in a Mustang GT4 with a Lyn St. James throwback scheme is very appropriate. Lyn was a pioneer for women in racing, a winner on the track and a great Ford spokesperson for many years, so this is a bit of a tribute to her and her contributions to our Ford sports car programs in the past.”

MORE: Patient approach for Deegan’s career

“I can’t wait to get behind the wheel of this Mustang,” said Deegan. “My anticipation and excitement level was already sky high, making my debut for Ford in my first ever road race in IMSA, but now we add this cool throwback scheme honoring the only woman to win a major IMSA race solo and it is just that much cooler. I have a ton of respect and admiration for what Lyn St. James did to pave the road for racers like me. It will be really cool to drive a car inspired by her 1985 IMSA GTO Ford Mustang.”

2020 Jan17 Ford Performance 2 Main Image
Ford Performance

“I think it is a really cool way that Ford Performance has chosen to honor its racing legacy,” said Briscoe. “There have been a series of throwback schemes in different racing series by Ford and I just love the look of this one and the way it ties into Hailie being in the car with me and the success that Lyn had in this series with Mustang. I am excited to be a part of it.”

“I’m delighted that Ford is doing this throwback scheme,” said St. James. “The whole goal of every race driver is to win races, and going into that 1985 season I was on the cusp of winning, and to get my first three IMSA wins that year really meant so much to me because they say that once you win once, the others follow, and that was true for me.

“I am certain Hailie and Chase felt the same way after winning their first stock-car races. You just want to win more. Sports-car racing may be different than what they normally do, but the mindset is the same. I am excited to see them race and get to the winner’s circle.”

RELATED: Photos: Roar before the 24 testing

St. James captured six IMSA GTO wins in her career, all with Ford, including two GTO class wins in the Rolex 24 at Daytona. She also competed in Indy car, including seven starts at the Indianapolis 500. She was a consumer advisor for Ford Motor Company from 1981-96, and has been a tireless ambassador for women in sports, especially auto racing.

The four-hour, multiclass Michelin Pilot Challenge race at Daytona starts at 1 p.m. ET on Friday, January 24. The event can be viewed in its entirety via live streaming – TrackPass on NBC Sports Gold domestically and at IMSA.tv globally.

The 2020 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs will see a variety of changes that are sure to shake things up.

Darlington Raceway will kick off the playoff party with the Southern 500 throwback weekend on Sept. 6, while Bristol Motor Speedway’s night race slips into the Round of 16 elimination race slot on Sept. 19. The changes are capped off with the Round of 8 elimination race set for Martinsville Speedway on Nov. 1 leading up to the new championship finale venue at Phoenix Raceway on Nov. 8.

So, which drivers could benefit the most with the new playoffs schedule? NASCAR.com’s Pat DeCola and Chase Wilhelm tighten their seat belts and make their cases.

RELATED: 2020 NASCAR Cup Series schedule | Debate: Most impactful schedule change?

DECOLA: Considering Kevin Harvick has been a part of every single Championship 4 but one in its six years of existence, I’d say the chances of him making it all the way through to the finale again are pretty strong. Anything could happen in a Round of 12 that includes Talladega Superspeedway and Charlotte Motor Speedway’s Roval, of course, but it’s hard to see any potential pitfalls along the way otherwise. Even the two tracks added to the playoffs this year (Darlington, Bristol) have netted three wins for him.

So, under the assumption he’s much more likely to make the championship than not, let’s just take a quick look at how the … Cactus King — clearly an irrelevant nickname — has performed historically out west in 34 races in the Phoenix desert.

Wins Top 5s Top 10s Laps led Avg. start Avg. fin
9 17 23 1,595 14.7 9.2

Easily his best track from a wins perspective, Harvick’s 9.2 average finish is only second on his career list (at playoff tracks with more than two starts) to a 6.4 average at Homestead-Miami Speedway, home of the finale for the bulk of his career. What that tells me is while Phoenix is probably the track he has the most mastery of, the 44-year-old has also found a way to elevate his performance when the title is on the line. Combine the two conditions and we might as well pencil Harvick in now for 2020 NASCAR Cup Series championship.

WILHELM: It’s hard to think the playoff schedule shuffle won’t work out in Kyle Busch’s favor in one way or another — with a particular focus on Bristol’s night event and the Championship 4 finale at Phoenix.

Recently, Busch has been dominant on Bristol’s concrete high banks. Busch has earned victory in three of the past five events at the Tennessee short track, with the last coming in the spring of 2019. Three of the 2019 NASCAR Cup Series champion’s eight wins there have come in the Bristol Night Race.

As far as the postseason finale is concerned, if Busch is able to make his way into the Championship 4 once again to defend his title, he’ll be dangerous in the desert. Of Busch’s three victories at the 1-mile Arizona track, two of them have been earned in the past three Phoenix events. In the past nine starts, Busch has only recorded one finish outside the top four — a seventh-place result in the fall of 2017.

All those numbers are hard to bet against, which is why I’m on Busch’s side to take full advantage of all the playoff changes.

Kevin Harvick is a force as a driver in the NASCAR Cup Series, but he’s also the driving force behind one of his off-track ventures in KHI Management.

The full-service sports and celebrity marketing agency — and NASCAR national series team once upon a time —  has allowed the championship-winning driver of the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford to branch out into different business opportunities, representing clients ranging anywhere from his fellow competitors (Harrison Burton, Ty Dillon, Ryan Preece, Ricky Stenhouse Jr.) to broadcasters (Shannon Spake) to golfers, motocross stars and more.

Harvick also represents an elite athlete that many across the country will be tuning in to see Saturday night in Ultimate Fighting Championship veteran Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone.

RELATED: Kevin Harvick’s career highlights

The UFC’s all-time winner Cerrone (36-13-0, one no-contest, +215 underdog) will hit the octagon this weekend in UFC 246 just outside Las Vegas at the T-Mobile Arena to square off in a welterweight bout with former UFC Featherweight and Lightweight champion Conor McGregor (21-4, -280 favorite), who is making his long-awaited return after a 15-month hiatus.

Two of the sport’s most electric and outspoken figures will capture the attention of the masses on Saturday night. It’s a moment that will only help solidify Harvick’s side hustle which, over the years, has looked more and more like where his full-time passion might lie after the 44-year-old’s racing days are up.

Our business model is a lot different than a lot of agencies because we cross-promote our athletes amongst each other with our sponsors,” Harvick told NASCAR.com Thursday afternoon. “Donald has branched out to do a lot of things from a personal services side and he’s just a good person that really has bought into our model. He’s actually our original client and really the reason that KHI Management started was because of Donald Cerrone and him asking the question ‘Why couldn’t you represent me?’ That’s really what started our company, just drinking a beer beside the bus at Texas Motor Speedway. It’s evolved from that into what it is today; he’s responsible for the management company even starting.”

Knowing how crucial his small faction of clients has been to his business successes, Harvick doesn’t hesitate to pump them up any chance he can.

KHI has been on the ground in Vegas this week as well, following along as the moments unfold between Cerrone and McGregor. Harvick and wife DeLana, an invaluable resource in KHI’s business management, are expected to host 140 people and 11 sponsors at the event this weekend.

It’s little things like that — overwhelming support for your biggest client on one of the greatest stages of his career — that help the small-statured, big-minded KHI stand out as an attractive destination for athletes far and wide across several disciplines.

“Sometimes I feel like there’s a lot of things that the really big agencies can do for you if you’re a really big athlete and a really big household name, but most of us aren’t that,” said the 2014 Cup Series champ. “For us, it’s a little bit different world. I’d refer to us as a boutique agency just because of the fact that we’re a lot smaller and it’s something that is run based upon the things that I’ve experienced and gone through and refined through the years.”

Wednesday’s press conference for Cerrone and McGregor was expected to be a bit fierier between the two strong-headed competitors after a serious jawing between them at a 2015 news conference — when they weren’t even slated to fight each other.

It appears McGregor has a sincere appreciation for his counterpart, however, as the press conference was fairly subdued and without drama.

“It’s hard not to respect Donald right now at this stage,” McGregor said, according to ESPN. “He has my respect. And although there will be blood spilled on Jan. 18, it will not be bad blood.”

So where does that leave things heading into the fight? While Harvick is hesitant to make any sort of prediction on Saturday’s winner — he’s admittedly biased and careful with his forecasting, he noted — he’s comfortable with the work Cerrone has put in to put himself in the best possible position to succeed.

“I feel good about where Cowboy’s at, the things he’s done, where he’s at mentally,” Harvick said. “I think, obviously, he’s fighting a tough opponent. There’s a lot of things that come with fighting Conor that aren’t like fighting with other people, just with all the outside noise. I think Cowboy’s dealt with that well. Watching the press conference, there’s obviously a lot of respect between them. They’re both pretty experienced guys, but in fighting it usually comes down to a moment. Sometimes you’re on the right side, sometimes you’re on the wrong. … We’re confident in Donald and the things that he’s done and love being a part of his team.”

And as the 36-year-old Cerrone is likely nearing the final rounds of his fighting career, it appears the bell has just rung on a long and prosperous stretch for Harvick’s KHI Management group.

“It’s definitely turned into a real business accidentally,” Harvick said. “… It’s not something that’s going to go away any time soon because of the way that it has morphed into what it is today and we’re going to keep trying to grow in ways that let us still be small and capitalize on opportunities. That’s really the way it started.”

UFC 246 goes down Saturday night with prelims starting at 6:15 p.m. ET and the main card starting at 10 p.m. ET on ESPN+ PPV.

Erik Jones became just the third NASCAR Cup Series competitor to take a spin in the Next Gen car this week at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

The Joe Gibbs Racing driver spent two days on Florida’s 1.5-mile track piloting the prototype in its third test. Throughout the process, Jones definitely noted a few differences between this future car and the current model. Next Gen is set to make its competitive debut in the 2021 season.

PHOTOS: Jones tests Next Gen at Miami

“It’s definitely a big aero change,” Jones said Thursday. “We have a lot of sideforce in our cars now and there is a lot to lean on – when you get loose the car kind of corrects itself and straightens itself out. This car doesn’t really have any of that. The quarter panels are so short and there’s no offset in the car – it’s very symmetrical – so there’s not a lot to lean on in this car. I think a lot of the aero changes they’ve done are going to help as far as racing goes, especially racing in a pack.

“Other than that, as we were working on things, some driving characteristics are similar. I think there is definitely more grip to be had as far as what the car is capable of. I think as far as development goes, there is going to be a lot more mechanical grip available than what we currently have.”

Jones posted a video to Twitter midway through the second day of testing to share initial thoughts and a sneak peek inside the Next Gen car.

In the video, Jones brings viewers into the cockpit, pointing out the sequential shifter he was able to test. It’s different from what drivers use now in that shifting is a quick hit rather than more conventional throws. This will allow drivers to change gears faster.

“I’ve never done anything other than normal H-pattern shifting in my career,” said Jones, who has been full time in the Cup Series since 2017. “You can bang right through the gears; we did a restart at the end of the day (Wednesday) and it was fun learning about that and how you can push that gear box. That really gets you excited for the road courses and what it’s going to be capable of there.”

Road courses, along with superspeedways, have yet to be tested.

A Next Gen vehicle first hit the track in 2019. Austin Dillon piloted the prototype built by Richard Childress Racing in collaboration with NASCAR back in October at Richmond Raceway. Joey Logano then had a run with it in December at Phoenix Raceway, home of the 2020 season finale.

RELATED: Dillon’s initial thoughts | Logano’s early impressions

All three testing spots so far have been a different length by virtue. Richmond is a short track at 0.75 miles. Phoenix is a 1-miler. Miami is then the first intermediate oval. This has allowed officials to progress through different lengths, speeds and loads to help further develop and improve the Next Gen car before 2021.

“We continue to work in the wind tunnel,” said John Probst, NASCAR’s senior vice president of racing innovation. “We’re developing rear diffusers to generate more rear downforce. One of the big things we have here that we didn’t have at Phoenix is we added some of the lift-off devices that we’ve developed over the winter, including roof flaps. We also have a few other related items in development that aren’t on the car right now such as flap-down doors for the diffuser to get the liftoff speed even higher than what we run today.”

Probst also revealed construction of the Phase 3 prototype is underway. Once that is built, the car that Jones, Logano and Dillon have already tested will be used to start simulating traffic.

The Next Gen car will go through its fourth on-track test at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California, after the NASCAR Cup Series’ race in March. Once again, it’ll be a two-day trial. A driver has not been announced.

“I’ve never been a part of developing something new in any series,” Jones said. “So, to be the first guy in it on a mile-and-a-half has been cool. It’s been a learning experience for everybody, but it’s been fun. I think we’ve come a long way in a short time here. I think NASCAR’s learned a lot, I know I’ve learned a lot, and there will be a lot of cool stuff going forward.”

The 2020 NASCAR Cup Series schedule will offer a variety of changes that are set to spice up the action and create fan interest.

Drivers will race under the lights for the first time at Martinsville Speedway in May, Daytona International Speedway is home to the regular-season finale in August and Bristol Motor Speedway’s night race sneaks into the NASCAR Playoffs, just to name a few.

But with all the swaps in the 36-race stretch, how is it even possible to pick one you’re looking forward to the most? Well, NASCAR.com’s Pat DeCola and Chase Wilhelm take a crack at it.

RELATED: 2020 schedule

DECOLA: I’m well aware I named the finale at Phoenix Raceway as the most impactful change for the 2020 schedule on Wednesday — and trust me, I’m looking forward to that one, too — but scanning up and down the schedule, I can’t help but land on Daytona’s summer race as the one I’m circling.

Superspeedway racing has always been incredibly captivating to me as-is. Moving Daytona’s summer event from its traditional July 4 weekend to later on in the schedule … so it can be the regular-season cutoff? If I wasn’t already sitting down while typing this, I most certainly would need to.

I think we’ll definitely see some drivers attempt to play it safe, hoping they can get through and advance on points if they’re on the good side of the bubble. I also expect that tactic will quickly dissipate as every driver in the top 30 in points who needs a win scrambles to get to and stay at the front. Superspeedways are the great equalizer among the field and putting one in position to be the last opportunity to make the playoffs only ramps up the excitement.

Just imagine a scenario where someone like Corey LaJoie — who placed 29th in points last year but finished in sixth place in the second Daytona race — makes the playoffs because of a last-ditch, last-lap effort at the “World Center of Racing.” Pure madness. Pure entertainment.

RELATED: Debate: Most impactful schedule change?

WILHELM: NASCAR Cup Series racing at Martinsville from start to finish under the lights … do I really need to say more?

This is what we’ve all been waiting for since the installation of the track’s state-of-the-art LED lighting system in 2017. We’ve seen three NASCAR Playoffs races end under them, and all of them had about as much drama as we could handle.

In 2017, Denny Hamlin bumped Chase Elliott out of the way for the lead, sending Elliott into the outside wall and a heated confrontation between the two after the race. More of the same came in 2018 when it was a head-to-head battle to the finish line between Joey Logano and Martin Truex Jr., as Logano took the victory, leaving Truex heated on pit road after the race. As for 2019, it was Hamlin and Logano left ready to throw hands on pit road after an on-track incident late in the race.

When the lights come on for the green flag in May at the 0.526-mile Virginia short track, we can grab a Martinsville hot dog, sit back and watch tempers flare as history is made.

LAS VEGAS – Two-time and reigning NASCAR Cup Series Champion Kyle Busch will make his return to The Bullring at Las Vegas Motor Speedway Feb. 20 to compete in the Star Nursery 100 Super Late Model Open Comp.

Busch, a Las Vegas native and Durango High School graduate who developed his skills on the 3/8-mile Bullring track, will compete in the 100-lap race, which will be followed by the Star Nursery 150 ARCA Menards Series West race.

Busch compiled more than 50 wins on LVMS property between 1999 and 2003, as well as a U.S. Legends-Pro season points championship in 2000. He last competed at the Bullring in 2007 in the Fall Classic.

“It’s going to be great to get back to where it all began,” Busch said. “My family and I spent many Friday and Saturday nights racing at the Bullring, and it will always hold a special place for me. I’m really looking forward to racing against a few guys I raced against back in the day as well as some of the new drivers who are cutting their teeth coming up through the ranks.”

Busch has accumulated 208 career wins across all three NASCAR national series including 56 in the NASCAR Cup Series. His 96 NASCAR Xfinity Series wins and 56 NASCAR Gander RV and Outdoor Truck Series wins rank him first all time for both series.

RELATED: Kyle Busch 2019 season review

Busch, along with all other drivers in both the super late model and ARCA races, will take part in a pre-race autograph session from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. on race day. The Super Late Models race begins at 7 p.m. followed by the Star Nursery 150 at 8 p.m. Tickets for the doubleheader can be purchased here.

The full 2020 NASCAR weekend schedule can be viewed here.