| No. | Driver | Sponsor | Make | Organization |
| 00 | Landon Cassill | Whole Harvest | Chevrolet | StarCom Racing |
| 1 | Kurt Busch | Monster Energy | Chevrolet | Chip Ganassi Racing |
| 2 | Brad Keselowski | Autotrader | Ford | Team Penske |
| 3 | Austin Dillon | TBA | Chevrolet | Richard Childress Racing |
| 4 | Kevin Harvick | Busch Beer | Ford | Stewart-Haas Racing |
| 6 | Ryan Newman | Acronis | Ford | Roush Fenway Racing |
| 8 | Daniel Hemric | Caterpillar | Chevrolet | Richard Childress Racing |
| 9 | Chase Elliott | NAPA Auto Parts | Chevrolet | Hendrick Motorsports |
| 10 | Aric Almirola | GoBowling | Ford | Stewart-Haas Racing |
| 11 | Denny Hamlin | FedEx Cares | Toyota | Joe Gibbs Racing |
| 12 | Ryan Blaney | PPG | Ford | Team Penske |
| 13 | Ty Dillon | GEICO Military | Chevrolet | Germain Racing |
| 14 | Clint Bowyer | Rush Truck Centers/Haas Automation | Ford | Stewart-Haas Racing |
| 15 | Ross Chastain | TBA | Chevrolet | Premium Motorsports |
| 17 | Ricky Stenhouse Jr. | Acronis | Ford | Roush Fenway Racing |
| 18 | Kyle Busch | M&M’s Hazelnut | Toyota | Joe Gibbs Racing |
| 19 | Martin Truex Jr. | Bass Pro Shops | Toyota | Joe Gibbs Racing |
| 20 | Erik Jones | DeWalt | Toyota | Joe Gibbs Racing |
| 21 | Paul Menard | Menards/Dutch Boy | Ford | Wood Brothers Racing |
| 22 | Joey Logano | MoneyLion | Ford | Team Penske |
| 24 | William Byron | Hendrick Autoguard | Chevrolet | Hendrick Motorsports |
| 32 | Corey LaJoie | Coin Lotto | Ford | Go Fas Racing |
| 34 | Michael McDowell | Long John Silver’s | Ford | Front Row Motorsports |
| 36 | Matt Tifft | Maui Jim / Surface Sunscreen | Ford | Front Row Motorsports |
| 37 | Chris Buescher | Cottonelle | Chevrolet | JTG Daugherty Racing |
| 38 | David Ragan | MDS Transport | Ford | Front Row Motorsports |
| 41 | Daniel Suarez | Haas Automation | Ford | Stewart-Haas Racing |
| 42 | Kyle Larson | McDonald’s | Chevrolet | Chip Ganassi Racing |
| 43 | Bubba Wallace | Victory Junction | Chevrolet | Richard Petty Motorsports |
| 47 | Ryan Preece | Kroger | Chevrolet | JTG Daugherty Racing |
| 48 | Jimmie Johnson | Ally | Chevrolet | Hendrick Motorsports |
| 51 | Cody Ware | Jacob Companies | Chevrolet | Petty Ware Racing |
| 52 | Josh Bilicki | TBA | Chevrolet | Rick Ware Racing |
| 77 | Reed Sorenson | TBA | Chevrolet | Spire Motorsports |
| 88 | Alex Bowman | Axalta | Chevrolet | Hendrick Motorsports |
| 95 | Matt DiBenedetto | Procore | Toyota | Leavine Family Racing |
| 96 | Parker Kligerman | TRD 40th Anniversary | Toyota | Gaunt Brothers Racing |
CONCORD, N.C. — With their backs against the wall to make the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs, seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson and the No. 48 team needed new life.
That came in the form of a crew chief change atop the pit box, promoting race engineer Cliff Daniels to replace Kevin Meendering after 21 races at the helm for Johnson.
The explanation was simple for Johnson, who is 17th in points and 12 points behind the playoff cutline with five races to go in the regular season.
“We have to act now is the bottom line,” Johnson said. “We don’t have any time to waste.”
But Johnson made it a point to reiterate that Meendering, now set to assume a senior competition role within the organization, did nothing wrong to result in the drastic shakeup.
“We’re always trying to figure out how to make our team better,” Johnson said. “What’s tricky is when it boils down to people and needing to make a change. It’s never easy. It’s never fun.”
This season isn’t the first time Johnson and Daniels have worked closely together. Daniels played a role in Johnson’s record-tying championship season in 2016 as an engineer for then-crew chief Chad Knaus.
“Coming back and being ingrained with the team and those levels of communication, we did in a lot of ways pick up where they left off,” Daniels said. “In some new ways — and I’ve commented to him several times — his fire is so intense right now. The level he is trying to perform, the level we know the team needs to perform is all there. We just have to execute it properly.”
While Daniels has no prior experience as a crew chief, it’s the instant connection with the 31-year-old that invigorates Johnson in his quest for an eighth title.
“In this instance, with Cliff coming back at Sonoma, there was just such a spark that he brought,” Johnson said. “As the weeks went on, I noticed, outside people noticed, I think our fans have even noticed. Management even noticed and it was something we felt like we need to pursue to give ourselves the best chance to make the playoffs and have a shot at eight this year.”
Johnson noted that initial talks regarding the move began roughly one week ago. But for Daniels, he didn’t receive official word until a text message from competition director Jeff Andrews on Monday morning, just hours before Hendrick Motorsports made the final decision public knowledge.
Mere days before Sunday’s race at Watkins Glen International (3 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), the pair have to figure out a plan for a very technical road course where pit strategy notoriously comes into play. With a cool nature that mirrors his driver’s persona, however, Daniels is ready to make something happen.
“We will absolutely have a plan that we’ll try to execute through the race,” Daniels said. “With that plan, you have to have contingencies, of course. But with the resources that we have here at Hendrick Motorsports, the recent success we’ve had at road courses. … We have so many factors we can pull from to operate from a position of strength. It’s just going to be on us to execute throughout the weekend.”
Johnson echoed the confidence.
“With the history that Cliff and I have, I know we’ll be able to come to the track and really up our game and hopefully get the job done.”
Daniel Hemric placed seventh in the Gander RV 400 at Pocono Raceway Sunday. It’s Hemric’s second top-10 finish of the season.
Denny Hamlin came away with the victory in the race, with Erik Jones following in second, and Martin Truex Jr. placing third. William Byron took fourth place, followed by Kyle Larson in the No. 5 spot.
Kyle Busch picked up 10 bonus points by winning Stage 1, and Jimmie Johnson won Stage 2 to pad his totals for the weekend.
Hemric earned 30 points over the weekend, giving him 339 on the season. He ranks No. 25 in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series overall standings.
Hemric did not earn any playoff points Sunday and has yet to tally his first playoff points of the season.
The second-year driver qualified in 17th position at 170.455 mph.
In 22 starts, Hemric has yet to pick up a victory in 22 career starts, but boasts one finish in the top five.
There were 38 cars in the field and the race endured seven cautions and 24 caution laps. Prior to the checkered flag there were nine lead changes.
With Hamlin driving his Camry to victory for Joe Gibbs Racing, Toyota added 40 points. Overall, Toyota ranks No. 1 with 767 points, followed by Ford in the No. 2 spot with 744. Chevrolet sits at No. 3 with 708 points on the season.
Daniel Hemric Driver Page | Get Daniel Hemric Gear | Race Center
Hendrick Motorsports driver Chase Elliott will have a fresh look on his No. 9 Chevrolet for the Bristol Night Race next month.
NEW! Chase Elliott Hooters gear
Hooters released the fresh, clean orange-and-blue based scheme that will promote Hooters Spirits, the company’s new branded liquor products that will be released later this year.
Drumroll please 🍗🍗🍗🍗@ChaseElliott will pilot the No. 9 @HootersSpirits Chevy ZL1 under the lights at @BMSUpdates on August 17! #HootersSpirits pic.twitter.com/0NaulPVme3
— Hootie (@Hooters) July 29, 2019
Can’t wait. This car is going to look awesome under the lights at Bristol. https://t.co/ckjcmBiyMy
— Chase Elliott (@chaseelliott) July 29, 2019
One of NASCAR’s most anticipated races every year, the Bristol Night Race is slated for Saturday, Aug. 17 at 7:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN/NBC Sports App.
Perhaps we can attribute it to late July’s soaring temperatures across the nation, but tempers are heating up across NASCAR as the regular-season stretch hits its final weeks.
A week after mixing it up with Erik Jones at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. once again found himself in a dust-up on track, this time with Kurt Busch on Sunday at Pocono Raceway.
The pair tangled late in the Gander RV 400 to send it into NASCAR Overtime, prompting Stenhouse to take his frustrations out on Busch’s No. 1 Chevrolet by appearing to move him from behind and forcing the 2004 champ into the No. 34 of Michael McDowell.
Neither driver attempted to speak to the other after the race, but Busch tweeted early Monday afternoon he’d be looking to move on from the disagreement, adding one more little jab on his way out.
After sleeping on it I’ve decided to take the high road with the Stenhouse incident. Hopefully he won’t wreck me up there as well.
— Kurt Busch (@KurtBusch) July 29, 2019
Stenhouse didn’t appreciate the social media sparring.
Take the road on over if you really want to handle it. You have my number
— Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (@StenhouseJr) July 29, 2019
But wait, there’s more!
Fellow youth movement drivers — and off-track friends — Daniel Suarez and Bubba Wallace also got into it at the “Tricky Triangle,” prompting a heated, non-violent discussion on pit road after the race.
Wallace acknowledged the incident on Twitter once video emerged, with a simple explanation.
Family doesn't always get along. https://t.co/qwcB9pkYH4
— Bubba Wallace (@BubbaWallace) July 28, 2019
On Monday, he was back to messing with his pal in the comments section of @NASCAR’s Instagram.

Suarez later replied: “tough man now?? And yesterday after the race? but for real don’t, save it for someone else.”
With just five races remaining before the field is set for the 2019 NASCAR Playoffs, it’s not like things will scale back on the intensity level.
Expect the feuding to continue (hello, Bristol Night Race), unless they all take Wallace’s suggestion to work things out in a different way.
Post Pocono cage match.. with myself, @Daniel_SuarezG, @StenhouseJr and @KurtBusch
Hell I'd pay to see it.🤘🏽 pic.twitter.com/7dQBwGKWEq
— Bubba Wallace (@BubbaWallace) July 29, 2019
(Can confirm: All of the above drivers did not just become best friends.)
For the first time since 2002, the championship-deciding finale will have a new host track in 2020 – and now, you can book your ticket to see NASCAR history.
Officials at the 1-mile ISM Raceway at Phoenix — which recently completed a $178 million renovation project designed to improve the fan experience, and one which included a reconfiguration for the track’s start/finish line — announced Monday that 2020 season tickets are now on sale.
RELATED: Buy tickets now!
The day is here. ISM Raceway's 2020 Season Tickets are on-sale now!
Among the many benefits + savings, ISM Raceway Season Ticket Holders will receive the first opportunity at 2020 @NASCAR Championship Weekend tickets. Join the ISM Raceway family today! 🎟 https://t.co/ZEt0Vo3YeJ pic.twitter.com/dzQt4PFo6t
— Phoenix Raceway (@phoenixraceway) July 29, 2019
The phone lines have been buzzing all morning for our Account Executives! 📞 2020 season tickets are on-sale NOW, and availability is limited.
Visit https://t.co/GZ7XTT2KHj or give us a call at 866-408-RACE to join the Season Ticket Holder family! pic.twitter.com/RTuSbq5ki0
— Phoenix Raceway (@phoenixraceway) July 29, 2019
ISM Raceway has hosted the Round of 8 finale since the introduction of the NASCAR Playoffs elimination format in 2014, and it has served as the penultimate race of the season every year since 2005.
A season tickets package guarantees race fans out West the lowest prices, includes free gifts (like FanVision rental in the spring), speedy access around the facilities and more.
MORE: On season tickets
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Cliff Daniels, the race engineer who helped Jimmie Johnson win the 2016 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series championship, has been named as the new crew chief for Johnson’s No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet team, the organization announced Monday.
Daniels, 31, replaces Kevin Meendering, effective immediately, and will guide the No. 48 team this weekend at Watkins Glen International. Daniels had been working in Hendrick’s competition systems group before rejoining the No. 48 team as race engineer for the June event at Sonoma Raceway.
RELATED: Playoff bubble analyzed | Johnson driver page
Meendering, who took over as Johnson’s crew chief this year after longtime pit boss Chad Knaus moved to William Byron’s car, will remain with Hendrick Motorsports in a senior competition role.
“We have great confidence in Cliff’s ability to win races with Jimmie and the team,” said team owner Rick Hendrick. “He’s a natural leader and tremendously talented from both a technical and communication standpoint. Cliff’s familiarity with Jimmie and the No. 48 team culture will benefit us a ton. He will bring the spark that’s been our missing ingredient.”

A seven-time champion at NASCAR’s highest level, Johnson hasn’t won a race since June 2017 at Dover International Speedway. He is currently 17th in the series standings, 12 points outside the cutline for the playoffs with five events left in the regular season.
Two of Johnson’s teammates, Chase Elliott and Alex Bowman, already have qualified for the postseason with victories this year. Byron is 12th in the standings, 62 points ahead of the seven-time champion.
Daniels earned his engineering degree from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and served for two years as race engineer for Tony Stewart at Stewart-Haas Racing (2013-2014) before moving to Hendrick Motorsports. A former driver himself, Daniels raced late models at short tracks in Virginia before embarking on his career as an engineer.
“Cliff has really shined since he came back to the ’48’,” Johnson said. “When he returned, there was an immediate change in the team dynamic that all of us felt. We’ve worked together for a long time, have a ton of mutual respect and a shared vision. I have no doubt the strong connection and working relationship is going to pay dividends right away.
“I’m so grateful to Kevin. He’s a truly awesome person who I think very, very highly of. I’m looking forward to continuing to work with him in his new role. He’s a brilliant guy and will make all of us better.”
Daniels brings an air of confidence to his new role.
“We have an opportunity to win an eighth championship and a lot more races with Jimmie,” Daniels said. “I’m proud to be in this position and have total faith in the team and our ability to perform at the level everyone expects.
“We have the best driver, the best organization and the best leadership, so everything we need to be successful is in place. It’s always been my goal to become a crew chief, and I’m thankful to Mr. Hendrick for his confidence.”
Inopportune cautions foiled the best-laid plans of drivers Kyle Busch and Kevin Harvick — and their respective crew chiefs.
Even though those two arguably had the best cars in Sunday’s Gander RV 400 at Pocono Raceway, neither was in position to challenge for the victory when the race went to overtime and Denny Hamlin ultimately finished in first place.
RELATED: Updated points standings | Official Pocono results
The winner of Stage 1, Busch, stayed on the track and retained the lead for a restart on Lap 119 of 163. Unable to reach the end of the race on fuel, however, Busch came to pit road on Lap 134 and fell to 26th in the running order. He spent the rest of the event working his way back up to ninth at the finish, while his Joe Gibbs Racing teammates — Hamlin, Erik Jones and Martin Truex Jr. — swept the top three spots.
Busch led 56 laps, second only to Harvick’s 62.
Harvick drove his No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Ford to third place in Stage 1, second in Stage 2 and led the field to green to start the final stage on Lap 104. But then he lost the top spot to Hamlin on the restart lap and never regained it.
The way Harvick saw it, the pair of cautions in the last 10 laps deprived him of the chance to win in a car that was set up for long runs.
“If the caution doesn’t come out, I think we were in good shape, but that’s the way it goes, especially at this place,” said Harvick, who was trying to double up on last Sunday’s victory at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. “You have to have the cautions fall your way, and you have to have everything go right.
“We just had a few little things here and there that didn’t go our way and wound up sixth.”
For the second straight week, Kyle Larson started a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race from the rear of the field in a backup car, but his run in Sunday’s Gander RV 400 at Pocono Raceway was considerably more satisfying than the day he had last weekend at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.
Larson crashed 10 minutes into opening practice Saturday morning and had very few laps on his backup No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet before qualifying. He was the 29th fastest in time trials but, under NASCAR rules, had to drop to the back of the field for the start.
RELATED: Full Pocono-2 results | Complete standings update
At times during Sunday’s race, Larson had the fastest car on the track. By the end of the first stage, he was sixth and remained in contention throughout the balance of the race, though his running position varied according to divergent strategies and pit stop cycles.
When the race went to overtime, Larson lined up fourth and pushed race winner Denny Hamlin out front on the final restart. Larson had a close call with the wall in overtime and lost a position when he slowed to avoid contact with the barrier.
“I didn’t hit the wall, but I got close,” said Larson, who finished fifth. “I knew I was going to be close to the wall, so I bailed out of the throttle to keep myself from hitting the wall and lost momentum. I felt bad, but it was better than ending up torn up like the last time I was aggressive on a restart.
“It was a good day. It was a lot better car than I thought I was going to have, so it just goes to show how good our team is right now and how good our cars are. Last week, I felt like we had one of the fastest cars and we didn’t get to show it (because of two wrecks during the race). Today, I felt like we were one of the fastest cars. If I could just race a primary car, who knows what we could do? I just have to clean up a little bit of what I’m doing in practice and the races, and hopefully we can get a win.”
You’d never know from William Byron’s demeanor or his language that the 21-year-old driver of the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet had just finished fourth in Sunday’s Gander RV 400 at Pocono Raceway.
“It was a struggle,” said Byron, who restarted sixth in overtime and passed both Kyle Larson and Kevin Harvick to post his second top five of the season. “I felt like the guys did a good job with strategy, and being able to maximize on restarts. We got fortunate on a couple of things.”
MORE: Full Pocono race results
With five races left in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series regular season, Byron remains 12th in the standings, but he increased his margin over Hendrick teammate Jimmie Johnson — the first driver currently out of a playoff-eligible position — to 62 points.
Nevertheless, after the strong run at Pocono, Byron seemed more focused on the difficulty he faced at the “Tricky Triangle,” where he started 31st after his car failed pre-race inspection. After pitting for the last time on Lap 115, Byron saved just enough fuel to make it to the end of the race, which went three laps beyond its posted distance.
“It was a tough day,” Byron said. “We didn’t really have a lot going our way. In the first stage, and even the second stage, we were just kind of hanging on.
“We just found a way to kind of make it work. We had good strategy and just found a way to kind of settle in there in a decent spot and save the right amount of fuel. We ran out of fuel coming across the (finish) line, so that was great. We saved the right amount of fuel, and that was about it.”