NEW SMYRNA, Fla. — Brad May turns 42 next week, but he showed Saturday night that he has no problem keeping up with the younger generation at his home track.

In fact, when it comes to New Smyrna Speedway, it’s the teenagers that need to catch him.

May opened the 2020 NASCAR race season by winning the 50-lap portion of the RedEye 50/50, pulling away from 15-year-old Jett Noland in an eight-lap dash to the finish. Another 15-year-old, Daniel Dye, followed home in third in his Super Late Model debut for Ben Kennedy Racing.

Derek Griffith was fourth and fastest qualifier Anthony Sergi was fifth after losing out on a fierce battle for the third spot with Dye over the closing laps.

May is the defending and three-time Super Late Model Division champion at the high-banked Florida half-mile, while Dye won the Pro Late Model title last year.

The drivers used Saturday’s extra-distance event as a tune-up for the 54th Annual World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing at New Smyrna from Feb. 7-15.

It’s one event hat has eluded May, who came up second to short-track veteran Bubba Pollard during last year’s week-long championship. The other, until Saturday night, was the track’s traditional opener. The Red Eye 100 dates back to 1984 when it was held on New Year’s Day. Beginning last year, it was split into two 50-lap features for the Super Late Model and Pro Late Model divisions.

May was second in both races last year.

The Oviedo, Florida, driver qualified second Saturday and started seven after a post-qualifying invert of the top eight spots. He took the lead in Turn 4 of Lap 10 from Noland after early race leader David Rogers slipped up the track in Turn 2 earlier in the lap. May was slow to fire off the line on a Lap 23 restart, and it allowed Noland to take over the point.

While May took the lead back two laps later, a Lap 42 caution set up another shot for Noland.

“You just never know what can happen,” said May, who executed a clean restart and rolled to the victory. “The car was definitely good enough to win, I knew I wasn’t going to let that happen again what happened on the first start, but you never know. One little slip or one little bobble getting into the corner and he can stick a nose in and be gone.”

RELATED: RED EYE 50/50 RESULTS

It wasn’t all disappointment for Noland, who won the 50-lap Pro Late Model portion of the season-opening, non-points event.

Other opening-night winners included:

Defending division champion Wayne Parker won the Modified feature, while Michael Trocki (LKQ Super Stock), Jared Zabele (Bombers), Devin McLeod (Sportsman), Kelly Jarrett (Ground Pounders) and Tyler Simpson (Mod Minis) posted wins.

Weekly Jett Noland 010520

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — No, Hailie Deegan conceded with a wide grin, she never expected that her competitive debut on the famous Daytona International Speedway high banks would come in a sports car.

But judging by the smiles and ease she showed Saturday afternoon speaking with reporters at Daytona between Roar Before the Rolex 24 At Daytona practice sessions, she’s eager and mentally prepared for her IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge race debut at the grand track on Jan. 24. The in-car skills and sports car initiation is coming together too, she said.

“I never thought I’d race a road course especially at Daytona, that was new for me,’’ Deegan said. “I always thought my first time at Daytona would be in an ARCA car but I’m happy to be here on the road course.”

MORE: Kyle Busch gets IMSA head-start on Daytona

Deegan’s ARCA Menards Series season debut at Daytona will follow the Rolex 24 race weekend and comes only weeks after the 18-year-old Californian was formally introduced as a Ford Performance development driver. She will co-drive a Ford Mustang GT4 with NASCAR Xfinity Series front-runner Chase Briscoe in the IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge race at Daytona later this month. Austin Cindric, another young Ford talent in the Xfinity Series, will be driving a Multimatic Motorsports team car as well, teaming with Sebastian Priaulx in the No. 15 Mustang.

In February, Deegan will compete in the season-opening ARCA Menards Series race that essentially opens Daytona Speedweeks – the green flag to a much-anticipated full season of stock-car racing. All three of these young NASCAR stars say they are grateful for the chance to begin their season early, confident that the extra laps will only help their skill set.

“I’m really excited just to gain experience in these new cars,’’ Deegan said. “Just everything’s new. A fresh start. It’s waiting to get planned out, meeting new people, new faces, new relationships. I’m excited to grow the relationships in the Ford family and everyone that’s a part of it.

“One thing I haven’t really touched on in my career is road courses, pavement road course type stuff. Coming here and filling that base of what I’m missing as a driver as a hole is definitely going to help me be all around as a driver.

“I feel what makes a good driver is a driver that’s not just good at ovals or road courses, they are good at everything and have that skill set. I think if I can just keep getting better skill sets to bring to my career, it will help even more.”

RELATED: IMSA Roar before the Rolex 24 photos

Deegan and Briscoe certainly gave proof of their talent and ability to learn the new car and course. They were 14th fastest overall in the opening practice, ninth quickest in the second session and finally fifth best in Saturday’s latest round.

Cindric and Priaulx were fourth fastest in the second session – tops among the two Multimatic team cars.

Usually race fans have to wait until February to see the reigning NASCAR Cup Series champion take to high banks of Daytona International Speedway, but Kyle Busch is providing a sweet treat to race fans this year as he joins Lexus for the 2020 Rolex 24 in the GTD class.

He’s in Daytona this weekend to turn laps in the No. 14 AIM VASSER SULLIVAN Lexus RC F GT3 alongside his co-drivers Jack Hawksworth, Parker Chase and Michael De Quesada.

It took a little persuading to get him behind the wheel of the sports car, but Busch didn’t want to lose the opportunity to try out the road course for the marquee event of the WeatherTech Championship season.

RELATED: New IMSA president John Doonan talks about dream job

“I’ve been asked the last couple years by the folks at Toyota/Lexus to come out here and run their car, and I politely declined them the first couple times,” Busch said Friday afternoon. “I felt like if I didn’t say yes eventually, then I would probably never be asked again.”

Busch has turned laps on the Daytona road course before – over a decade ago in a Daytona Prototype with Scott Speed in the summer sprint race in 2008. And he hopes this time he fares better.

“It was a thousand degrees inside the car, we had the NASCAR race that night, I remember just being flushed after that race was over, it was so hot,” he said. “We didn’t fare too well. I was slow. The car was slow. We were slow. So, I’m looking forward to being a bit faster this time around.”

MORE: Roar Before the Rolex 24 photos

Busch is relying heavily on teammate Hawksworth for advice as the Joe Gibbs Racing driver gets used to the lighter weight and overall different feel of the Lexus compared to the Toyota Camry he pilots in NASCAR. Hawksworth traveled to the Charlotte area to spend a day on the simulator with Busch at TRD. Without Hawksworth’s guidance at the session, “I probably would have been completely lost,” said Busch.

After this first practice session, Busch admitted that he still has his “NASCAR driving techniques just embedded in (his) brain” and he has to shed them as he learns the differences in the car.

RELATED: Kyle Busch’s 2019 season in review

He also acquiesces that his biggest adjustment is to the braking.

“I’m used to our big heavy stock cars where you have to start the slowdown process early, the braking zone is forever, and then by the time you turn in you have to be off the brakes otherwise the inside wheels will lock up,” he said. “You also have to take care of our brakes on the Cup cars because they’re so heavy … you can really overheat them.

“Completely different techniques. On these cars, you can drive the snot out of them.”

The car Busch is driving was fast in the opening practice session. In fact, his co-driver Hawksworth put up the fastest time of the day for the GTD class. Busch’s speed was middle of the pack as he learned the car, with his fastest lap clocking in at 1:48.544 (118.066 mph).

But for all the differences, one thing remains the same. Busch wants to make his way to Victory Lane at the end of the race.

“I didn’t come here to completely have fun, of course I want to have fun,” he said. “But more importantly I want to be able to go out there and win for Lexus and for AIM VASSER SULLIVAN racing.”

The former director of motorsports for Mazda North America Operations John Doonan “finally” saw cars on track as he officially started his third day as the new president of IMSA.

He admitted that watching while in his new role is a bit of an adjustment.

“Little different not having a specific horse in the race,” Doonan said while speaking with media at Daytona International Speedway on the opening day of the Road Before the Rolex 24. “I sat back in my office for the first time all weekend and watched the first session quietly because I didn’t want to show any emotion on pit road for anybody in particular.

“I explained to some people who don’t necessarily understand sports car racing that I used to be responsible for the elephants in the circus, now I’m responsible for the whole circus.”

Being responsible for the whole circus means he gets a chance to expand on what has already been a dream career in motorsports as he takes over the reigns from the now-retired Scott Atherton.

“It was an awesome journey, a boyhood dream to work for Mazda,” said Doonan, who began working alongside Atherton and transitioning to his new role with the sanctioning body in October. “Several people in the garage area said I can’t believe you’re wearing a different shirt.

“But rarely do you get to live out two boyhood dreams. In February of ’79, I was sitting in my living room with my family, at that time there were just regular, I don’t even think it was hourly, I think it was every six or eight hours they gave some updates from Daytona and the Rolex 24. To imagine being a young person like that, I spoke about being that next generation of wanting to be somehow in the game or be part of the action. And now to have had the opportunities I’ve had at Mazda and now to come here, it’s really hard to explain.”

For a leader who started in the sport as a fan, it’s especially important to Doonan that he helps lead IMSA on a path that grows the audience of the sport he has a great passion for. And he knows he can’t do it alone.

“We – as a collective, and I continue to use the word ‘we’ and that’s not just ‘we’ IMSA, it’s ‘we’ the team owners, ‘we’ the drivers, ‘we’ the media – need to do our ever best to continue to grow our platforms and to grow our value,” Doonan asserted. “For me, it starts with our audience.”

“I think growing the audience, growing the outreach of how people can take in the IMSA content is critical. We also need to look at our audience, especially the younger generation.”

That will include developing initiatives to encourage fans to follow along with IMSA in new ways, such as through eSports or platforms like the newly launched TrackPass on NBC Sports Gold.

Another key tenet of Doonan’s leadership will be preserving and elevating the values on which the France and Bishop families founded IMSA.

“I’m honored to work for the France family,” he said. “I had a chance to talk with Jim France and then called Mitch Bishop. I said to both of them, IMSA was founded on a set of values that would allow racers, drivers, manufacturers to go racing on a variety of levels. It would be my personal goal to make that those original value statements of what IMSA was founded on are carried through to today.

“I think without a doubt the staff at IMSA has done that with a lot of passion. A lot of professionalism. And I’m here and fortunate enough to be the next caretaker of it.”

Name: Brandon
Current City: Tallahassee, Florida 
Member Since: 2014

Getting to KNOW Brandon:

Q. How did you first become interested in NASCAR?
“I started loving NASCAR at a young age starting around 8 years old seeing a few races on TV with family. For my 10th birthday I was surprised with tickets to the Pepsi 400 at Daytona in July 2000. It only took one race to get me hooked! From that point on I have been an avid NASCAR fan ever since following the sport in many different ways and only missing a couple races a year in the last 20 years. I have had the privilege of attending over 15 races at a variety of tracks with plans to attend many more in the future.”

Q. What is your favorite part about NASCAR?
“I love that the drivers are all authentic, like someone you could go hang out with and they would just be a normal person and down to earth. I love the accessibility that us fans have to the drivers and the access that the sanctioning body gives us with pit passes and tours of the garage that other sports do not have. The action and excitement of a NASCAR race is awesome. From the green through the race, to the pit stops and strategy used during the race, all building up to the end where a driver is chasing down the leader… There is no better feeling than your driver winning and no greater defeat then losing a race that your driver dominated. But that’s what keeps us fans coming back for more!”

Q: Do you have a favorite in any of the following categories?
Driver: Chase Elliott.”
Track: “Martinsville.”
OEM: “Chevy.”

Q. What are some of your race-day traditions?
“I can’t start a race day without a good cup of coffee out of my NASCAR coffee mug! After that while watching at the house, the pre-race shows play while we grill out or eat lunch. Then race time comes and we are focused on the action!”

Q. What are some of your hobbies?
“I love traveling, seeing new places and experiencing new cities. While at home I enjoy spending time hiking, kayaking, and fishing.”

FROM ALL OF US AT NASCAR, WE THANK BRANDON FOR HIS CONTINUED SUPPORT AND LOOK FORWARD TO HEARING FROM HIM IN 2020!

Look for Brandon on the Official NASCAR Fan Council page on NASCAR.COM.

Jimmie Johnson hasn’t found his way to a Victory Lane in the NASCAR ranks since 2017, but he’s not done winning.

The Hendrick Motorsports driver and seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champ teamed with 9-year-old daughter Genevieve, Aspen Olympian Alex Ferreira and the rest of his six-person group — the “West Side Hillbillies” — to win Monday’s 10th annual Audi Ajax Cup on Aspen Mountain in Colorado. Ferreira, the team’s pro, won the Gorsuch Cup on the final race of the afternoon.

“Resume builder,” Johnson joked to the Aspen Times. “It feels great winning and to have this experience with my daughter and with Adam Lewis, who is on our team and his two sons, to watch our kids work through the challenges of the day, dealing with nervousness, is so special.”

Johnson’s “West Side Hillbillies” had twice been the Ajax Cup runner-up but never won before Monday. The future NASCAR Hall of Famer calls Aspen home on a part-time basis, and Evie, who is part of the Aspen Valley Ski and Snowboard Club, won a couple of races in the finals to propel the team to victory.

“She did great. Every year it gets a little better, but something happened three or four days ago where she really found her edges and she’s been flying ever since,” Johnson said of Evie. “But then to see Alex, it was all on his shoulders at the end. For Alex to pull it off, and for the AVSC, it’s so cool.”

It’s just another of Johnson’s varied forays into non-motorsports racing, as he also placed 4,155th overall in the 2019 Boston Marathon, completing the 26.2-mile course in 3 hours, 9 minutes and 7 seconds.

RELATED: Johnson finishes first Boston Marathon

After a frustrating 2019 campaign in which he missed the playoffs for the first time in his career, perhaps this is the spark Johnson needed ahead of his final season racing NASCAR full time.

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.