The numbers tell Justin Allgaier’s story. His 306 starts in the Xfinity Series dwarf the 76 he notched in the Cup Series. So do the 11 wins, 85 top fives and 176 top 10s when compared to a sole top 10 netted at NASCAR’s highest level.

Allgaier is not only successful in the Xfinity Series, he is also happy as JR Motorsports’ No. 7 Chevrolet driver.

“I love where I’m at,” Allgaier said back in November at the NASCAR Awards in Charlotte, North Carolina. “This race team is fantastic. I wouldn’t want to be anywhere different as far as people go. I love the people I’m around. I’ve been disappointed in the successes we have not had. I want to bring a championship back home.”

With nine full years in the Xfinity Series — sandwiched around two Cup Series seasons from 2014-15 —  Allgaier has yet to do that. The 33-year-old Illinois native ended up fourth in the 2019 final standings. That’s one spot short of his career-best seasons in 2011, 2016 and 2017.

RELATED: Recapping 2019 season | Interesting 2019 stats

Allgaier’s lone win last year was at ISM Raceway near Phoenix during the NASCAR Playoffs, the last race in the Round of 8. It clinched his spot in the Championship 4 battle at Homestead-Miami Speedway, where he ultimately finished 14th.

Phoenix will host this year’s finale.

“Looking at 2020, to compete for a championship, I think we need a few more regular-season wins, obviously go for that regular-season championship and then do the same thing leading up to ISM Raceway,” Allgaier said. “Obviously if we can do what we did last year at ISM Raceway, we’re going to be in great shape.”

The three other Championship 4 drivers will be gone, too. Title-winner Tyler Reddick (No. 2 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet), runner-up Cole Custer (No. 00 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford) and third-place Christopher Bell (No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota) are moving up to the Cup Series.

While those who were dubbed the “Big 3” move up, a 2019 full-time Cup Series driver is actually returning to the Xfinity Series ranks to compete alongside Allgaier and Michael Annett in the No. 1 car with JR Motorsports, and Allgaier thinks the addition will only make the team as a whole stronger.

Daniel Hemric will pilot the No. 8 entry in a part-time role, but perhaps as the headliner. He’s slated for 21 of the 33 races, while Jeb Burton will handle 11 events and Dale Earnhardt Jr. will make his annual appearance behind the wheel once.

“I think Daniel and I grew up a lot the same way in how we were raised,” Allgaier said. “You build race cars, you work all-nighters, and you put stuff together. If you don’t, you’re not going to go to the race track. Having that understanding of the car and how it operates is a big deal. So I think he’s going to be a big part of that.

“But on the other side of it, I think his talent alone is what’s really going to be the big difference-maker. The understanding of how to be fast week in and week out, how to optimize the race car. He’s very good at that. He’s probably one of the best I’ve been around.”

Hemric was full time in the Xfinity Series from 2017-18, placing fourth and third in the rankings each year, respectively, without any wins. In 66 starts, he had 23 top fives and 39 top 10s. He averaged an 8.0 start in both seasons.

Meanwhile, this past year, Allgaier had 16 top fives and 24 top 10s. He averaged a 9.0 finish.

“As long as they keep putting my name above the door,” Allgaier said, “I’ll be back.”

Former NASCAR Cup Series crew chief and current NBC Sports analyst Steve Letarte started RacingJobs.com three years ago for one reason — to give back to the racing community that has given so much to him.

Letarte achieved that simply with the creation and launch of RacingJobs.com, an innovative concept that allows potential employees to seek a new opportunity and racing teams to find talent to help take them to the next level. All of it is done anonymously, with RacingJobs.com using answers from online questionnaires to make recommendations on possible matches.

But it’s taking an even bigger step now. NASCAR.com is partnering with RacingJobs.com. The result: Individuals can create profiles and use the site for free.

“We created this three years ago with the concept of wanting to give back, and give people all over the country an opportunity to work within the sport,” Letarte told NASCAR.com. “That’s what we want to do. The database, it works and works well. Now we can provide the service for free because of our partnership with NASCAR.com.

“We’re providing a service. We didn’t create this to make money, we created it to provide a service. NASCAR.com now taking over the paid side, it opens the service up to whoever wants to use it.”

Identifying talented individuals who are either working in the racing world or want to work in the racing world is just one part of the process, though.

Another is giving those folks an opportunity to get in front of the right team or the right people.

“I’ve had a career in racing with just a bunch of luck, with doors opening for me,” Letarte said. “There are thousands of people with as much talent and skill as I have. The goal of this was to get those doors open.”

And if the doors happen to open in a career outside of racing, well, that’s OK, too. The intent remains the same.

“Currently in racing and outside of racing, the economy is so good, so many other industries are hiring,” Letarte said. “Much like military members, racing members are recognized as having a strong work ethic and excellent work quality. The correct thing to do is make the database free and open it up to non-racing industries as well.

“I owe everything in my entire life to NASCAR. I was at Hendrick Motorsports for 20 years, and I’ve been with NBC since then. Racing is all I’ve ever done. That doesn’t mean it will be the same for everyone. If there’s another industry that suits others on RacingJobs.com personally, shame on us for not trying to help that person connect.”

Visit RacingJobs.com to explore the site, learn more or sign up. Email [email protected] if you need more information.

To win a race in your rookie season is no small task. To win two puts you in an even more exclusive club.

Denny Hamlin did just that in 2006, coming out of the gate swinging in his first full-time season in Joe Gibbs Racing’s now famed No. 11 car. He won the 2006 Busch Clash (then called the Budweiser Shootout), a non-points paying race historically run before the Daytona 500, and a few months later locked up a points-paying win at Pocono Raceway in the Pocono 500 in June.

RELATED: Recap all of Hamlin’s wins | Career highlights for Hamlin

Hamlin didn’t stop there. When the series returned more than a month later, Hamlin snagged yet another pole and the win, sweeping both Pocono weekends in the NASCAR Cup Series.

Relive both the Pocono 500 and the Pennsylvania 500 from Hamlin’s rookie season as the short-track racer from Virginia cemented his place in NASCAR’s highest level.

Pocono 500:

Pennsylvania 500:

While the checkered flag waved on the 2019 season many weeks ago, the holidays have allowed the editorial team here at NASCAR.com to look back and reflect on our own personal favorite moments that this past season had to offer.

Zack Albert

July 13, 2019: Rising above some honorable mentions, Kurt Busch’s victory at Kentucky Speedway in July deserves recognition for a pair of reasons, one being his dynamic battle with his brother, Kyle, in a dazzling two-lap shootout. The second enduring memory came in quick succession, with Chip Ganassi Racing’s No. 1 crew riding the car to Victory Lane in a celebration reminiscent of an earlier era.

Kurt Busch Kentucky win
Daniel Shirey | Getty Images

Pat DeCola

Oct. 6, 2019: Katelyn Larson’s Victory Lane shotgun. The more and more I thought about this, I just couldn’t shake the mental image of Mrs. L downing a tallboy with ease while celebrating her husband’s win at Dover International Speedway in the NASCAR Playoffs. It was everything a NASCAR Victory Lane should be and harkened back to the pomp and circumstance — and straight-up partying — of days past. To then go and top herself by doing it again at the NASCAR Awards just brought it to a whole new, memorable level.

DOVER, DELAWARE - OCTOBER 06: Kyle Larson, driver of the #42 Clover Chevrolet, celebrates in Victory Lane after winning the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Drydene 400 at Dover International Speedway on October 06, 2019 in Dover, Delaware. (Photo by Jeff Zelevansky/Getty Images)
Jeff Zelevansky | Getty Images

RJ Kraft

April 13, 2019: In recent years, Martin Truex Jr. had done everything but win on a short track. This was the one blemish on his resume and every year he seemed to get a little closer, but still he was 0-for-80 on short tracks coming into the Richmond Raceway spring race. On this night, Truex was not to be denied holding off foe Joey Logano and friend Clint Bowyer for the victory. Watching Truex keep Logano at bay was especially fun after the duo’s memorable Martinsville Speedway encounter the previous fall that was still fresh in everyone’s minds. Watching Truex exorcise those short-track demons was a long time coming, and he seemed relieved that those questions had been vanquished.

RICHMOND, VA - APRIL 13: Martin Truex Jr, driver of the #19 Auto Owners Insurance Toyota, takes the checkered flag to win the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond Raceway on April 13, 2019 in Richmond, Virginia. (Photo by Sean Gardner/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

Steve Luvender

Oct. 10, 2019: My favorite moment of the season was on the virtual track when Zack Novak took the checkered flag to claim the eNASCAR iRacing World Championship Series title. From the intense-yet-clean racing between Novak and Keegan Leahy on the final lap to the Novak family bursting into Zack’s racing room on live national television to congratulate him, it was an unforgettable series of events and a true display of what esports means.

Zack Novak Family Celebrate Iracing

Jonathan Merryman

Nov. 10, 2019: For close to 10 years, Denny Hamlin was best known for coming up short in 2010, when he let Jimmie Johnson come away with the NASCAR Cup Series title. In 2019, Hamlin buried that reputation with a six-win season and a walk-off win at ISM Raceway, giving himself a shot to race Kyle Busch, Martin Truex Jr. and Kevin Harvick for the title. Although a large patch of tape on the nose of the car may have cost him this year, Hamlin’s clutch performance elevated his status from as a guy who lets big moments get away to a big bat who you can count on when you need a run late.

AVONDALE, ARIZONA - NOVEMBER 10: Denny Hamlin, driver of the #11 FedEx Ground Toyota, celebrates with a burnout after winning the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Bluegreen Vacations 500 at ISM Raceway on November 10, 2019 in Avondale, Arizona. (Photo by Matt Sullivan/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Matt Sullivan | Getty Images

Terrin Waack

Oct. 6, 2019: Kyle Larson winning at Dover International Speedway during the NASCAR Playoffs was entertaining for multiple reasons. The victory snapped a 75-race winless streak for Larson and also granted him his first-ever Round of 8 berth. It then threw a loop for everybody else in the postseason field, especially reigning Cup champion Joey Logano (missed the green flag) and reigning race winner Chase Elliott (lasted only eight laps), since Larson entered the competition below the cutline and an elimination race was up next. Great chaos. Oh, and Katelyn Larson shotgunning in Victory Lane afterward was legendary.

DOVER, DELAWARE - OCTOBER 06: Kyle Larson, driver of the #42 Clover Chevrolet, celebrates in Victory Lane after winning the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Drydene 400 at Dover International Speedway on October 06, 2019 in Dover, Delaware. (Photo by Matt Sullivan/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Matt Sullivan | Getty Images

Alex Weaver

Nov. 21, 2019: While there are many moments from this season that come to mind, one day in particular sticks out to me more than the rest. Jimmie Johnson’s retirement press day may mean sadness for some because it’s announcing the end of an incredible career, but it also allowed us to appreciate one of the greatest to ever drive a stock car. We sometimes take for granted the talent we witness when we get to see and cover it every weekend, but seven NASCAR championships and 83 wins are feats not to be ignored. It wasn’t the actual announcement or another member of the old guard passing the torch, but the promise that we get one more year to appreciate the talent of the California champ.

Jimmie Johnson alongside team owner Rick Hendrick during Johnson's retirement press conference.
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Digital Media

Chase Wilhelm

June 30, 2019: Alex Bowman’s first career NASCAR Cup Series victory at Chicagoland Speedway really sticks out as a top moment of the 2019 season. The thrill of watching Bowman battle it out with Kyle Larson in the closing laps had you on the edge of your seat. The road to claiming the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet driver seat after Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s retirement wasn’t easy for the 26-year-old Arizona native, so to see all the hard work finally come to fruition was a cool moment for the sport. The victory was made more special as Bowman’s predecessor was on the NBC Sports broadcast to call his run to the checkered flag.

JOLIET, ILLINOIS - JUNE 30: Alex Bowman, driver of the #88 Axalta Chevrolet, celebrates in Victory Lane after winning the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Camping World 400 at Chicagoland Speedway on June 30, 2019 in Joliet, Illinois. (Photo by Matt Sullivan/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Matt Sullivan | Getty Images

George Winkler

Aug. 17, 2019: I’m a person who doesn’t like it when players from opposing teams pal around after the game, exchanging jerseys (or phone numbers) or whatever. That’s why I am somewhat surprised that my favorite moment of the 2019 season was when Denny Hamlin apologized for outdueling Matt DiBenedetto to win the Bristol Night Race. It’s your responsibility as a competitor to go all-out for every win, but Hamlin’s feeling of regret in that moment was spot-on and totally understandable. It was just such a good battle down the stretch. As a fan, you wished DiBenedetto would hold on for the win, but you knew Hamlin would eventually get him – and he did with just 11 laps to go.

Matt DiBenedetto at Bristol
Tyler Strong | NASCAR Digital Media

So, 2020, you have some pretty big shoes to fill.

The Action Network specializes in providing sports betting insights/analytics and is a content partner with NASCAR. Check out more NASCAR betting analysis here.

NASCAR’s weekly schedule makes it unique from a betting perspective. Odds typically open early in the week, go on and off the board multiple times for practice and qualifying, then finally open again for good the night before or morning of the race.

This is true for 35 points races on the 36-race schedule, with NASCAR’s premiere event, the Daytona 500, being the lone exception.

Because the “Great American Race” is the first event of each new NASCAR Cup Series season, oddsmakers can post odds weeks, and even months, in advance.

And since this race is the most popular NASCAR betting event of the season, sportsbooks are certainly incentivized to do so.

With 2020 Daytona 500 odds already available, here’s a 75-1 long shot I’m betting almost two months ahead of the “Great American Race.”

NASCAR loop data via FantasyRacingCheatSheet.com.

2020 Daytona 500 Betting Pick

Chris Buescher (75-1) to win the Daytona 500

Taking Buescher right now is simply a value play because one sportsbook is not properly adjusting for his offseason move to Roush Fenway Racing (RFR).

After spending three NASCAR Cup seasons in JTG-Daughterty Racing’s No. 37 car, Buescher will move RFR’s No. 17, previously driven by Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

Stenhouse consistently over performed at the superspeedway races (Daytona and Talladega), scoring seven of his 15 career top-five finishes at these tracks, including his two victories.

It’s not exactly a secret, but this suggests that RFR’s superspeedway program is far and away better than any other track type for the team, and that continued in 2019 when the Cup Series ditched restrictor plates following the Daytona 500.

In those three superspeedway races with the new package (two at Talladega and one at Daytona), Stenhouse had the fifth-best average running position (10.7) and led the third-most laps (50).

In addition, Stenhouse’s RFR teammate, Ryan Newman, had the best average finish (4.7) at those three races.

Considering Newman’s average finish was 15.2 in all other races last season, it’s reasonable to conclude that RFR’s superspeedway equipment is just that good and results in over performance at Daytona and Talladega.

Now, there’s certainly an argument to be made that Stenhouse is simply a top-notch driver at these race tracks and I really can’t dispute that.

But, as always, value is dependent on price. Stenhouse was 18-1 on Daytona 500 morning last season. However, Buescher is currently 75-1 at FanDuel Sportsbook, a huge price for a driver in such good superspeedway equipment.

For reference, Buescher is 40-1 for the Daytona 500 at both the Westgate SuperBook in Las Vegas and DraftKings Sportsbook, and the new driver of No. 17 Ford closed at 80-1 at Westgate for the 2018 Daytona 500.

The upgrade from JTG-Daughterty Racing to Roush Fenway Racing in terms of superspeedway equipment is significant, and certainly worth more than a move from 80-1 (last year) to 75-1 (this year).

That said, I would not take the 40-1 odds available at other books. In fact, this has value to 70-1 to allow us to preserve as much bankroll as possible to use on more drivers going forward.

Chris Buescher: 75-1 to win the 2020 Daytona 500

NASCAR Cup Series drivers Christopher Bell and Kyle Larson took a pair of heavy tumbles during dirt midget action at Western Springs Speedway in Auckland, New Zealand.

In Day 1 of the United Truck Parts International Midget Series, Larson finished second in the third heat race, winning the fifth heat as well as the first United States vs. New Zealand vs. Australia Test Race.

But the night quickly took a turn for Larson in another test race, losing control of his midget, hitting the outside retaining wall and flipping multiple times down the backstretch.

https://twitter.com/SpeedShiftTV/status/1210105745049608192

Larson later tweeted out his appreciation for the safety equipment in his midget that kept him secure, while also adding a little humor despite the disappointing result.

Shortly after Larson’s incident, Bell also flipped a number of times after hitting the backstretch wall in a similar spot.

https://twitter.com/SpeedShiftTV/status/1210109381284634625?s=20

The incidents eliminated both drivers from competing in the feature race later that evening.

The United Truck Parts International Midget Series is a five-event showdown between drivers from the United States, Australia and New Zealand, featuring the most talented dirt racing drivers from each country. The five races are held at three dirt tracks — Western Springs Speedway, Baypark Speedway and Huntly Speedway. The series finale will be held on Jan. 5 with the World 50 Lap Classic at Western Springs.

Both drivers will be back in action during the second round of the United Truck Parts International Midget Series at Baypark Speedway in the 40-lap Gold Cup event.

The holiday season is a perfect time to sit around the fireplace, reflect on childhood memories … and renew those ultra-competitive sibling rivalries.

And what better way to settle the score than on the sticks like the good ol’ days? Fire up NASCAR Heat 4 on the family big screen and do your talking on the track.

RELATED: BUY NASCAR HEAT 4

Should you need help getting in the zone, we thought it would be fitting to relive some of the best moments from the 2019 eNASCAR Heat Pro League season:

Bump-n-run at Watkins Glen

Sibling rivalries are all about getting the last laugh – and that’s no different in racing. It’s not about who leads the first lap, or the most laps, but rather who leads the last.

wowTHATSgarbage did just that courtesy of a perfectly-executed bump and run at Watkins Glen earlier this year.

Victory at last!

We all remember that time we FINALLY edged out our brother or sister; everything was right in the world. We saw a similar story line play out in the inaugural eNASCAR Heat Pro League season after JRMDohar broke through at Kansas Speedway to earn his first career eNHPL victory.

Top pick wins opening race at Charlotte

Younger brother vs. older – a tale as old as time.

At the opening race in Charlotte, the top pick in the draft quickly proved he was here to stay. 17-year-old Slade Gravitt went toe-to-toe with his older friend and rival THAbear95 and won, putting Wood Brothers Gaming in Victory Lane.

Exhibition race at Michigan produces thrilling finish

What would the inaugural season produce? How competitive would it be? The questions swirled entering the first year of the eNASCAR Heat Pro League – but those were quickly answered and the doubt was put to bed after this finish in the preseason exhibition race at Michigan.

Those are just a few of the memorable moments from a thrilling inaugural season and the list could go on and on, like Stewart-Haas Gaming capturing the title at ISM Raceway or the wild regular season finale at Daytona – but we know NASCAR Heat 4 is waiting for you.

Don’t have a copy yet? It’s a perfect last-minute gift or present for the new year. Visit NASCARHeat.com to buy the game for as low as $29.99.

Editor’s note: This story originally ran in April of 2015. We’re bringing it back in its full original form to commemorate Johnson, who died Dec. 20 at age 88.

“James Dean in that Mercury ’49
Junior Johnson runnin’ thru the woods of Caroline
Even Burt Reynolds in that black Trans-Am
All gonna meet down at the Cadillac Ranch.”

         — Cadillac Ranch, Bruce Springsteen

• • •

The hair is white (is there anyone still around that can remember when it wasn’t?) and it stands out in contrast against the sedan’s black interior and tinted windows.

Outside, young girls with gym bags slung over slender shoulders hurry past on the sidewalk with their parents in tow, headed to a weekend volleyball tournament, scarcely noticing, or perhaps not noticing at all, the gentleman in the passenger seat.

Fifty years ago, he was aptly described as the Last American Hero by author Tom Wolfe.

Today, at 83, Junior Johnson is a father and a husband and a successful businessman.

Dressed in tan slacks and a dark pullover, Johnson might be a passenger in the sedan, but he’s still in the driver’s seat of life.

He’s here, parked along a side street in uptown Charlotte on a sunny Sunday morning, and there, inside the glass and steel structure next door known as the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

One of the five inaugural members of the Hall back in 2010, Johnson is a stock car racing legend.

And legends can be in two places at once.

• • •

It’s a drive Johnson has made hundreds of times, one that runs through Winston-Salem, home of former series sponsor R.J. Reynolds, then shoots its way through the Walkertown community on the northeast side of the city before settling into the lazy up-and-down, chug-a-lug of a ride east toward Stokesdale.

U.S. 220, that four-lane stretch of highway that splits a sizeable south-central stretch of the Commonwealth of Virginia, lies just beyond. And to the north sits Martinsville, home to the oldest track still hosting NASCAR Cup Series races.

Johnson knows many of the roads, the highways and the less familiar tributaries that seem to trail off into nothingness. He knows them as well as he knows his own name.

“They’ll be ’bout ready to crank ’em up when we get there,” Johnson says as the sedan eases off the curb, away from the tall buildings and into the bright Carolina sunshine.

• • •

In 1965, Junior Johnson swept both races at his home track, North Wilkesboro Speedway, on the way to his best season.

He was only 35 and very much still in his prime when he decided he’d had enough, putting away that white open-faced helmet for the final time. He’d made just seven official starts that final season in ’66, ending with one last top-five at Rockingham, North Carolina in the fall.

“I wasn’t getting anything out of it,” Johnson says of walking away from a successful NASCAR driving career. “If my car didn’t tear up, there wasn’t anyone that could outrun me.”

By then he’d already won 50 times, as many as two-time champion Ned Jarrett and only slightly fewer than Lee Petty, who held what was then a NASCAR-record 54 career victories.

RELATED: Junior Johnson through the years | Johnson passes away in 2019

The NASCAR schedule in those days went on practically non-stop, a nearly eight-year stretch of 50 or more races each season and teams competing as often as three times a week.

Few ran the entire circuit, and Johnson’s name wasn’t on the list of those that did.

He had other things occupying his time and requiring his considerable driving talent. And there was that stretch in ’57 spent at the federal penitentiary in Chillicothe, Ohio, the result of a conviction for manufacturing moonshine.

Yeah, he ran from the law and yeah, he honed his driving skills hauling bootleg whiskey, first for his daddy and later for himself and others. But the seeds of Johnson’s driving abilities were planted long before he’d begun loading up case after case of the clear corn liquor and set off across the state.

“Well, I know I had … five or 10 years driving experience on them other boys,” he says now of his fellow racers.

“When I was about 10-12 years old, I could drive the (expletive) out of a car. ‘Cause my daddy would let me run these little ’39 Fords and stuff like that; he had up-to-date cars too where he’d haul liquor. I’d run from the house down about a mile to the highway; it was a dirt road, and I’d run it all day long.

“He wouldn’t say a thing to me. I’d just get in it, go down through there sideways and everything.”

Years later, talents cultivated in dirt outside his house and the switchback mountain roads across which he made numerous whiskey runs transferred seamlessly onto the race track.

NASCAR drivers of the day fell into two groups — those that went hell-bound for the front from the very start, and those who chose to pace themselves and their equipment, electing to try and outlast if not outrun their opponents.

Anyone that saw Johnson behind the wheel knew what to expect.

“Junior was wide open every lap,” Richard Petty, Lee’s son and NASCAR’s first seven-time champion, says. “It was one of those deals where if he brought the steering wheel back, he’d had a good day.

“He was one of those that when he drove there was no strategy except just to pass everybody in front of you. It didn’t make any difference if they were on the same lap, leading the race or 40 laps behind. He did everything he could to get by you.”

 

Junior Johnson and chief mechanic Herb Nab celebrate a 1965 win at Richmond, one of the first short-track races to be covered by ABC’s ‘Wide World of Sports.’

• • •

The end of a driving career didn’t mean the end of NASCAR for Johnson. Instead, he turned his attention to ownership, and by the time that had run its course, Johnson walked away as one of the most successful owners the sport had ever seen, with six championships, 132 victories and top 10s in more than half of his teams’ 1,000-plus starts.

Johnson hadn’t just built a team, he’d built a dynasty.

NASCAR Hall of Fame drivers Cale Yarborough, Darrell Waltrip and Bill Elliott were among those that drove for the Wilkes County based team.

“Up in Owensboro, when I was a little guy, I used to listen to the races on my transistor radio when I could get them,” Waltrip says. “There was always this guy named Junior Johnson from Ronda, North Carolina, driving a white ’63 Chevy, No. 3 with a 427 mystery engine in it.

“And I thought, ‘what a cool guy.’ I mean how much cooler can you be? A guy that drives a Chevy, which was kind of unique at the time, he had a 427 mystery engine. He was a moonshiner. He’d been in prison and here he is out here outrunning all of these guys.

“All the drivers in that era, whether it was LeeRoy Yarbrough, Cale (Yarborough) or any number of guys that drove his cars, they were legends in the sport. To think I had the opportunity to follow in their footsteps and drive for the great Junior Johnson, it was a thrill of a lifetime.”

• • •

Junior Johnson and Darrell Waltrip share a laugh in 1982, their second consecutive championship season.

The sedan eases off I-85, slipping unnoticed onto U.S. Route 52 north. Welcome, North Carolina, home of the Richard Childress Winery and RCR’s NASCAR headquarters are nearby.

Who was his best driver? Maybe that depends on whom you ask, or when you ask it.

Told that Waltrip has said Junior claimed he was his top driver (“He might hedge a little bit when it comes to Cale because he doesn’t want to hurt Cale’s feelings,” Waltrip explained), Johnson chuckles.

Maybe it was DW. Maybe it was Cale. Maybe Johnson didn’t want to hurt the feelings of either one.

“The one … I think was the best driver that ever drove a race car was LeeRoy (Yarbrough),” Johnson says. “Buddy, I tell you we could put it on anybody.”

Yarbrough won 10 times for Johnson, Cale 45 and Waltrip 43. There were others as well. Labonte, Bonnett, Spencer …

“He could put it on Cale or Darrell or any of ’em, just the most natural driver I ever seen,” Johnson says of Yarbrough. “If he needed to step it up, he could always step it up just a little bit more than they did.”

They were of different ages, different skill sets. But they all had one thing in common — all enjoyed some measure of success driving Johnson’s cars.

“You’ve got to remember, he won 50 races as a driver himself,” Waltrip says of Johnson. “He knew what he was doing as a driver. He understood drivers. When I first started driving for him, if I wasn’t getting the job done, if I wasn’t running as hard as he thought I should, he’d call me Cale on the radio and it would always make me mad. And that was always worth three-tenths (of a second) and he knew it.

“I knew when I got with Junior Johnson that it was a career changer.”

• • •

North now on U.S. 220, the Virginia state line is just ahead and a quick side-trip is necessary.

The building is nondescript, just another business set back off the highway. If anything stands out, it’s that nothing stands out.

Through the years, Johnson’s name has been attached to a variety of items — hams and ham products, for instance — but the best known by far is the one that landed him in the federal pen all those years ago.

This is Piedmont Distillers, makers of Midnight Moon, a brand of legal moonshine (meaning it’s taxed by the government).

“He comes up about once a week,” says Joe Michalek, founder of the Madison, North Carolina-based company. “He’ll come up and have lunch, see how business is doing, hang out with the folks. It’s a real treat and an honor to have Junior around.”

Piedmont currently produces eight different flavors of the whiskey. One of the first to jump into the market, Piedmont launched in 2005 and quickly outgrew its original base of operations. In ’07, a deal was struck for the Midnight Moon brand and today the product is sold in all 50 states.

“It’s cleaned up a lot, but the recipe is exactly like my daddy’s,” Johnson says. “He’s the only one I ever knew that made corn whiskey. Everybody else made sugar whiskey. … Over time sugar will turn and get muddy. But corn won’t do that. It stays just like you fixed it.

“When we got into it, there wasn’t nobody on the corn side of it, and still ain’t much. They advertise a lot of stuff that ain’t what they say it is.”

Johnson, part-owner in the Piedmont operation, often makes promotional appearances for the company — he was in St. Louis and Branson, Missouri, earlier this year; more recently, he showed up at a local charity golf tournament in Charlotte.

“Running somewhere all the time,” he says as we head out the door and resume the trip to Martinsville.

• • •

The name of Junior Johnson’s modern moonshine hearkens back to his days running the alcohol through ‘the woods of Caroline,’ as Bruce Springsteen crooned in ‘Cadillac Ranch.’

Why Midnight Moon? Some smart marketing company’s idea?

No, the name is as original as the man himself.

“That’s when I’d get out and haul the liquor,” Johnson said of his bootlegging days. “I’d haul from about 11 o’clock until daylight. Midnight moon was what I’d run by.

“Used to, a lot of times at night you didn’t even have to have car lights. It was just like daylight the moon was so bright. Fog and smog and all that stuff got it now to where you have to turn your lights on at 6 o’clock.

“I’ve hauled a lot of liquor from where I lived to Lexington, Salisbury, Spencer and all in there. Sometimes I wouldn’t even turn on the dad-gum headlights. You could see the highway without them. That’s where midnight moon came from. I basically waited until midnight to haul my whiskey.”

• • •

The traffic is backed up for miles, and the delay means Johnson won’t make it to the speedway in time for the drivers’ meeting. No problem, he sat through enough of them in his day.

Fingers point and heads turn as Johnson is ferried from outside the tiny track into the crowded infield. Fans with hot passes want his autograph and those with cameras want their picture with the Hall of Famer. Johnson smiles and nods, pausing long enough to accommodate each of the requests.

• • •

Friends and neighbors Junior Johnson and Rick Hendrick meet up before the race.

“I’m getting tips,” says team owner Rick Hendrick. “We started running better when he moved in next door.”

Johnson smiles. Hendrick, owner of a four-team operation, has become a close friend, a confidant. When Junior cut his ties with Wilkes County, he landed next door to Hendrick in the affluent Quail Hollow community in Charlotte.

“We tell him about all the things we’re trying, and they’re things he’s already done 20 years ago,” Hendrick says.

Occasionally, Johnson can be found with Hendrick at the track; other times he may be visiting the vast Hendrick Motorsports complex, where the teams of Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kasey Kahne are housed.

Today, Johnson is in the media center, and Hendrick has stopped by to say hello to his friend.

“It’s been really amazing how our guys, from the ones that travel to those in the engine shop and other areas that get to talk to him about different things, about what they think about doing,” Hendrick says. “It really means a lot to our guys for him to be on the (pit) box and be around us; he’s such a legend. I never thought we’d be friends and neighbors; it’s turned out to be really cool.

“The thing that blows me away is how innovative he was back when no manufacturer, nobody else was doing things, he was thinking so far out of the box. I’m glad I didn’t race against him back then. I’m glad he retired.”

• • •

Junior Johnson enjoys a Martinsville hot dog.

With the pre-race festivities getting underway, Johnson’s ready to head upstairs to watch the start of the race from one of the suites that overlook the track.

But not before a stop at the infield concession stand.

“I used to eat about six of these things,” Johnson says, munching on a one of the track’s famous hot dogs.

Fans notice, crewmen smile and wave. Others, embarrassed but not enough to interrupt a man and his meal, ask if he has time for a picture. With hot dog in hand, Johnson once again accommodates the requests.

• • •

Junior Johnson wins the 1965 Old Dominion 500 at Martinsville, holding off fellow future NASCAR Hall of Famers Richard Petty, David Pearson and Ned Jarrett.

The black sedan glides out of the track and onto U.S. 220, southbound now and headed back toward Charlotte.

Johnson won at Martinsville twice as a driver, and several more times as an owner. But with no dog in the fight today, he’s ready to move on down the road.

Five decades. It’s been five decades since Wolfe pulled into the “lil’ ol’ beer joint” as Johnson calls it, looking for a story and discovering an icon.

“I had been to the race track testing or something, might have been getting ready for the race,” Johnson said as the tires sing on the concrete of the highway and the countryside passes outside the tinted windows. “He walks in and it’s about 90 degrees and he’s got a damn wool suit on. A brand-new wool suit. And I think to myself when I saw him get out, I said, ‘That’s a crazy son of a bitch. He don’t know the sun’s shining.’ “

It’s one of those “you had to be there” moments, Johnson recalling with clarity the arrival of the young city-slicker author come to find the bootleggin’ racing star in the backwoods of the Carolinas.

To hear Johnson tell it:

“He come in and said ‘I’m looking for Junior Johnson.’

“And I said ‘What do you want with him?’

“He said ‘I want to talk to him about a story.’

“I was eating a cheese cracker and drinking a drink; I took a couple more bites of that cheese cracker and I said ‘Where you from?’

“He said, ‘Why? Do I have an accent?’

“I said “I can’t hardly understand you.’

“I told him, I said, ‘I guess you’re talking to Junior Johnson.’

“He said, ‘Well I want to write a story on you and I’d like to talk to you.’

“I said ‘If you want to write a story, you better get it from somebody else, ’cause I ain’t gonna give it to you. ‘Cause you’d think I was bragging.’

“He never did ask me anything. He went and got his own deal.”

Wolfe was in and out of Wilkes County and the surrounding North Carolina hill country numerous times after that initial meeting. He traveled to locales a bit further out, trying to grasp the enormity of a sport and a man so many folks outside the southeast knew so very little about.

“He’d come in and stay four or five days and nights and leave, and folks would say, ‘Well, that son of a bitch is gone,’ ” Johnson says. “Then he’d show up again somewhere or another; somebody’d call and tell me he’d been talking to them. He got out there and got his information.”

“Junior Johnson is the Last American Hero. Yes!” appeared in the March 1965 edition of Esquire magazine. It is still considered by many to be one of the finest pieces of sports journalism ever written.

In the Martinsville Speedway media center, Junior Johnson poses next to a picture of Jeff Bridges, Gary Busey and other actors from the movie ‘Last American Hero’, which was shot at Martinsville.

• • •

NASCAR has changed tremendously since Wolfe penned his piece on Johnson and the burgeoning southern sport. It expanded, exploded, gained national attention, sponsorship from Fortune 500 companies and lucrative TV contracts.

Johnson divorced, remarried, had kids and moved from the country to the city. He walked away from racing, selling off his team in 1995, but maybe he never really cleansed it entirely from his system.

Deep down, they both remain the same. NASCAR’s still about fast cars and brave drivers, pushing the limits, and by the end of the day we’ll just see who’s best.

Johnson, full of confidence when Wolfe found him inside that country store, is just as sure of himself today.

But for now he’s just a passenger in a black sedan headed back down the highway.

“You want to listen to the rest of the race?” Johnson asks, reaching for the radio dial.

Moments later, the voice of the turn announcer is ratcheting up as another caution has slowed the action on the track.

Outside, the sedan’s tires continue to hum and the world slides by.

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 | How to find FS1 | Get FOX Sports App

Monday, December 23
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Features Part 2, FS1/FOX Sports App

Tuesday, December 24
On MRN
7 p.m., NASCAR Live

Wednesday, December 25
1 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Features Part 1 (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
2 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Fans’ Choice Awards (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
3 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Pop Quiz (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
4 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Radioactive (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Features Part 2 (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
6 p.m., Coke Zero Sugar 400 (re-air), FS1/FOX Sports App
9 p.m., Beyond the Wheel, FS1/FOX Sports App

Sunday, December 29
3 p.m., Beyond the Wheel (re-air), FS2/FOX Sports App

Tuesday, December 31
On MRN
7 p.m., NASCAR Live

The motorsports world offered its remembrances after word spread of the passing of NASCAR legend Junior Johnson, who died Friday at age 88. Johnson leaves a legacy that spans stock-car racing’s moonshining roots to its modern era.

MORE: Junior Johnson dies at 88  | Johnson through the years

Friday and into the weekend, many prominent figures came forward on social media to pay their respects:

https://twitter.com/odsteve/status/1208292422452563968