Gander RV, the Official RV & Outdoor Company of NASCAR, will serve as the title sponsor for the 150-mile qualifying races for the DAYTONA 500 at Daytona International Speedway, part of DAYTONA Speedweeks Presented By AdventHealth.

The races will be known as the Gander RV Duel At DAYTONA. Scheduled for Thursday, Feb. 14, the pair of 150-mile qualifying races will finalize the starting lineup for the 61st DAYTONA 500, the prestigious season-opening event for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series.

“The time-honored tradition of holding qualifying races for the DAYTONA 500 goes back to when we opened in 1959,” said Daytona International Speedway President Chip Wile. “Our fans have always loved the grassroots-type of appeal the qualifiers offer. We are now proud to grow that tradition with a new sponsor and race title.”

RELATED: Buy tickets!

“We are excited to be part of these fun and exciting races that set the stage for the DAYTONA 500,” said Marcus Lemonis, CEO of Camping World Holdings and star of CNBC’s ‘The Profit.’ Both Gander RV and NASCAR brands touch outdoor fans across the country, so the partnership is a perfect fit and we are counting the days till the racing season begins.”

Gander Outdoors, the new sponsor of the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series and a subsidiary of Camping World Holdings, Inc., recently expanded its national footprint with the opening of 13 Gander RV dealerships, with additional dealerships planned for the remainder of the year.

As part of a larger agreement with DIS, Gander RV, along with sister companies Camping World and Good Sam, will host consumer RV shows over multiple years at the DIS facilities, as well as an RV Rally in 2020. The events will feature a large selection of motorized and towable RVs, RV and outdoor accessories, seminars, entertainment and more.

Tickets for the 61st annual DAYTONA 500 and all other Daytona International Speedway events can be purchased online at www.daytonainternationalspeedway.com or by calling 1-800-PITSHOP. Fans can stay connected with Daytona International Speedway on TwitterFacebookInstagramPinterestYouTube and Snapchat, and by downloading Daytona International Speedway’s mobile app, for the latest Speedway news throughout the season.

Editor’s note: NASCAR.com continues its countdown of team previews for the Monster Energy Series season, ranked in order of best finish in last year’s owner standings. Today’s feature: Wood Brothers Racing and driver Paul Menard.

WOOD BROTHERS RACING

Manufacturer: Ford

Engine: Roush Yates Engines (technical alliance with Team Penske)

Drivers: Paul Menard, No. 21

Crew chief: Greg Erwin

2018 standings: Menard finished 19th in the final standings, and the No. 21 car was 19th in the owner standings.

What’s new: It’s that everything won’t be new after a tremendous amount of change last year when Menard came to Wood Brothers Racing after seven seasons at Richard Childress Racing. After spending one year together, Menard and Erwin should know each other better and be able to improve on last season’s performance, which included one top-five finish (Michigan), seven top-10 finishes and one Busch Pole Award (Chicagoland).

Outlook: Menard made some strides in his first year with Wood Brothers Racing, but in order to break through to the playoffs, he will need to quickly take advantage of the new NASCAR rules package and have a few things go his way. However, it wouldn’t be surprising if he made just enough improvement to sneak into the Round of 16 this year.

DRIVER
Paul Menard, No. 21 Ford: Menard has made the playoffs as recently as the 2015 season, and his best average finish was 15.5 in 2012. After showing some regression in his final two seasons at RCR, Menard bounced back last year and provided hope that his second year with Wood Brothers Racing will be even better. Menard has been at his best in restrictor-plate races and on larger tracks like Michigan and Indianapolis, where he has his only Cup win (in 2011). In order to make a run at the playoffs, Menard will need to do just as well on the larger tracks and enjoy improvement on the intermediate and short tracks.

TEAM PREVIEWS
 Jan. 22: Assorted teams
 Jan. 23: Richard Petty Motorsports
 Jan. 24: Germain Racing
 Jan. 25: Leavine Family Racing
 Jan 28: Front Row Motorsports
 Jan. 29: JTG Daugherty Racing
 Jan. 30: Wood Brothers Racing
 Jan. 31: Roush Fenway Racing
 Feb. 1: Richard Childress Racing
 Feb. 4: Chip Ganasssi Racing
 Feb. 5: Hendrick Motorsports
 Feb. 6: Joe Gibbs Racing
 Feb. 7: Stewart-Haas Racing
 Feb. 8: Team Penske

In terms of modern era NASCAR Hall of Fame shoe-ins, Jeff Gordon was instantly in the pole position; the number one slot-in-waiting from before the time he even announced plans to retire in 2015. The four-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion and 93-race winner wasn’t only a talented driver deserving of the special recognition, he was a vital and transcendental presence in the sport.

A young dirt track racer who originally figured the Indianapolis 500 would be his defining race, Gordon still earned the Indianapolis spotlight but as a record five-time Brickyard 400 winner in NASCAR’s big leagues. He won multiple Daytona 500s (three) and a full assortment of championship hardware, too (1995, ’97, ’98, 2001).

And Gordon’s quick and successful rise up the NASCAR ranks through the 1990s and 2000s is one of the most compelling stories in the sport’s history, spanning two distinctive eras. His fierce determination and supreme talent have landed the 47-year old in the NASCAR Hall of Fame in his very first year of eligibility.

RELATED: Everything to know about Friday’s induction | Every Gordon win

He will join longtime team owners Roger Penske and Jack Roush and the late drivers Alan Kulwicki and Davey Allison in the 2019 Hall of Fame class to be inducted this Friday in Charlotte, North Carolina.

“I had a helluva run, there’s no doubt about the timing of my career, when I came into NASCAR what the sport was going through, to compete against some of the legends who are already in the Hall of Fame and future Hall of Famers, I’m so honored to be a part of this class,” said Gordon. 

“And they all have a connection to me in some way or form. It’s an awesome Hall of Fame class to be a part of.”

Ironically Gordon’s ascension to NASCAR stardom shares timing with the fate of Kulwicki and Allison. Gordon’s very first Cup start was in the 1992 season finale at Atlanta, where Kulwicki and Allison were competing for the Cup trophy and Richard Petty was making the final start of his 200-win career.

Allison led the points entering the race, but was collected in a late race wreck. Kulwicki went on to hoist the big trophy. But sadly and tragically, both of these talented and popular drivers perished only months later – Kulwicki in an airplane accident near Bristol, Tennessee and Allison in a helicopter accident at Talladega, Alabama.

It soon became apparent that Gordon would become the kind of breakout star that would have made both Kulwicki and Allison proud. Not only did Gordon quickly begin proving himself one of the best to ever compete in NASCAR, he took the sport to a new level out of the car as well – even becoming the first full-time NASCAR driver to host the hugely popular late night television show Saturday Night Live.

“He was a big reason why NASCAR was big in the 1990s and early 2000s,” said Gordon’s friend, former Hendrick Motorsports teammate and fellow Californian Jimmie Johnson. “He made it more relevant and brought in a new audience. Considering where we grew up, (NASCAR) had been considered such a Southern sport and he was able to shift that perspective too. He had a huge role in where NASCAR is today.”

RELATED: Gordon: The driver who brought NASCAR mainstream | Gordon on future at Hendrick

Gordon was indeed doing legend’s work from his earliest time at the Cup level. In many ways, stardom was his destiny from the beginning. His family moved from his Northern California birthplace to Indiana so that Gordon could legally race more competitive circuits at an earlier age. 

In hindsight, being the “young kid” in races all his life was perfect preparation to show up at the Cup level where he immediately went wheel-to-wheel with a generation of already-crowned NASCAR Hall of Famers. His ability to challenge the greats such as seven-time champion Dale Earnhardt and other Cup champs from Rusty Wallace to Dale Jarrett transcended two of the sport’s most legendary eras.

He raced Dale Earnhardt and he raced (and ultimately teamed with) Dale Earnhardt Jr. He fought Jarrett for a title and he fought seven-time Cup champ Johnson for several titles. He was so good and so young, the great seven-time champion Earnhardt used to kid Gordon with the nickname “Wonder Boy.” When Gordon won his first Cup title, he famously toasted Earnhardt, raising a glass of milk.

“I was always the young kid though,” Gordon said, reflecting on his early career well before he got a ride in Rick Hendrick’s Cup car. “I had gotten used to that.

“I was racing quarter-midgets at a young age, I was racing sprint cars at a young age, I was the young one racing the midgets. I had really gotten used to competing against older, more experienced drivers and trying to learn from them. I was always wanting to learn by watching what they did. If I could pick their brain that would be great too. But I was usually racing with them wheel to wheel and I would say, ‘okay, I see how they’re taking this corner. I see what they’re doing with this car or this track.’

“So when I came into Cup it was really more about me getting the knowledge and the experience from these other guys and also helping my team give me the car to be able to go out there and do that.

“Even in ’93, even though we weren’t winning yet, we were building. I think we won our first pole at the end of that year. We were showing speed. So I was patient with it because I knew it would come if we kept doing what we were doing.”

And it did. 

Gordon’s first win was actually in a Daytona 500 qualifying race in his first full season in 1993. He didn’t win his first points-paying race until the following May – ironically the Coca-Cola 600 run on the same day as the Indy 500. And two months later, Gordon was standing in Indianapolis Motor Speedway Victory Lane – hoisting the inaugural Brickyard 400 trophy.

Through Gordon’s amazing 93 race wins, he hoisted at least one trophy in all but three of his 23 full-time seasons. Three consecutive years  — 1996-97-98 — he won at least 10 races. He won multiple races in 17 seasons – including a streak of 14 consecutive years between 1994-2007.

He has victories on all but one track (Kentucky Speedway) on the current Cup series schedule, plus victories at the Rockingham and North Wilkesboro tracks where the series no longer races.

Gordon is a multi-time winner on every style of track – from short tracks, to one-milers; from road courses to super speedways. He won three Daytona 500s (1997, 1999 and 2005) and has nine road course wins including a Cup record five, fittingly, in Northern California (Sonoma), minutes from his Vallejo birthplace.

He won his first race (1994) from the pole position at Charlotte by 3.91 seconds over Hall of Famer Rusty Wallace. His last victory came at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway in his last full-time season (2015), beating Jamie McMurray by .335 seconds. He finished third in that championship.

Only 200-race winner Richard Petty and 105-race winner David Pearson have won more than Gordon in NASCAR’s premier series. And Gordon will fittingly be joining those two NASCAR legends in the Hall of Fame this weekend – deservedly shoulder-to-shoulder with the sport’s very best.

“It’s such an awesome class to be a part of,” Gordon emphasized again.

CONCORD, N.C. – When Kurt Busch looks at his new Chip Ganassi Racing teammate Kyle Larson, he is immediately reminded of a fellow driver.

That driver happens to be his brother – 2015 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion Kyle Busch.

“To see the talent that Kyle Larson is, it reminds me a lot of when my little brother was coming up and running Legends Cars against me but I had six years more experience,” Kurt Busch said during a preseason media availability at the team’s shop.

“In this case, I have quite a bit more experience than Larson but he’s on a new trend. He’s on the young-guy curve of running new lines on the track and running different setups that I have to adapt to. That’s where I can’t wait to have that banter back and forth, what he feels, what I feel and what Matt (McCall, Busch’s crew chief) is telling me and what Chad (Johnston, Larson’s crew chief) is telling him and just let it rip.”

RELATED: Busch joins Chip Ganassi Racing | Recap Busch’s 2018 season 

Busch is at Chip Ganassi Racing for the 2019 season on a one-year deal to drive the No. 1 Chevrolet. The veteran of 19 Monster Energy Series seasons, 648 Cup starts and 30 premier-series wins is embracing a bit of new role with his new organization — being a mentor.

“Ten years ago I wasn’t in a spot to feel that mentor or take different engineers or drivers, people under my wing to help them,” Busch said. “Something’s clicked, something’s changed.”

In fact, the 2004 champion believes that there is plenty he can learn from Larson as well as the season progresses. 

“He’s definitely got a fun factor about him and I know he knows how to put the serious cap on as well,” Busch said. “That’s what I want to learn more about. That last little level of seriousness. Yeah, you can run the high side all you want, but are we supposed to be doing that right now? Maybe, we’re supposed to be on the low lane. Or he’s going to teach me, ‘no, that high lane was quicker, Kurt. Get up here, old man.’ There’s going to be that back and forth of working together and having that fun.”

Busch spent the last five seasons at Stewart-Haas Racing where he reached the playoffs each year and won at least one race each season. He totaled six victories during his stint there, including a win in the 2017 Daytona 500. Chad Johnston, Larson’s crew chief on the No. 42 team, saw Busch in action for two seasons at SHR from 2014-15.

“I got to know him a bit when I was at Stewart-Haas with Tony (Stewart),” Johnston said. “He’s a past champion and he’s very competitive, and he’s going to put forth the work and effort to do that. He’s going to bring a sense of accountability to the organization and the teams. He’s not bashful. That brings a lot of good things with it. I would say that (Kyle and Kurt) are on opposite ends of the personality spectrum. Kyle is laid-back and kind of goes with it, and Kurt is not. They both have their benefits; I think it will be a good combination.”

Larson is coming off a season where qualified for the playoffs for the third straight year, posted 12 top fives, 19 top 10s and his best career average finish (12.6) but went winless and ranked ninth in the final standings. The 26-year-old is excited about what Busch’s wealth of experience can bring to the two-car organization.

MORE: Recap Larson’s 2018 season | See Larson’s Credit One lookLarson finishes second at Chili Bowl

“I think he understands the car a lot and he obviously raced for the quickest team last year, so I think he hopefully can bring some knowledge from that,” Larson said. “He’s pretty involved, so I think it’s good to have somebody like that at our shop. And he’ll push everybody in the shop and myself just to be better.”

MOORESVILLE, N.C. — Kyle Busch Motorsports (KBM) announced today the crew chief lineup for its three full-time NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series (NGOTS) teams in 2019. Ryan “Rudy” Fugle will call the shots for Kyle Busch and other drivers yet to be announced in the No. 51 Tundra, Mike Hillman Jr. will guide Harrison Burton’s efforts in the No. 18 Tundra and Marcus Richmond will once again lead the No. 4 Tundra team with Todd Gilliland behind the wheel.

Fugle has guided his team to four Owner’s Championships (2013, 2015, 2016 and 2017) as a crew chief at KBM, including combined Owner’s/Driver’s Championships with Erik Jones in 2015 and Christopher Bell in 2017. The New York native’s drivers have combined for 22 wins, 20 poles, 57 top-five and 71 top-10 finishes across his 114 races calling the shots for the organization. Under his tutelage last season, Noah Gragson collected one win, a series-leading six poles, eight top-five and 17 top-10 finishes en route to a second-place finish in the NGOTS championship standings.

RELATED: Kyle Busch announces Truck slate for 2019

Hillman Jr., is also a two-time NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series champion crew chief. He helped Toyota capture its first-ever NASCAR national series championship when he guided Todd Bodine to the Truck Series title in 2006. Overall in his 11-plus seasons atop the pit box, the New York native’s NGOTS drivers have collected 22 wins and 19 poles. Burton has produced one pole, four top-five and seven top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 6.3 in nine starts with Hillman Jr. calling the shots.

Richmond has collected 10 wins, 17 poles, 61 top-five and 129 top-10 finishes across 265 races in his 13 seasons as a crew chief in the Truck Series. The North Carolina native’s 10 victories have come with six different drivers (Ty Dillon, Noah Gragson, Kevin Harvick, Timothy Peters, Johnny Sauter and Dennis Setzer) behind the wheel. Last year, Richmond’s team collected three poles, 305 laps led, five top-five and nine top-10 finishes with three different drivers. Gilliland competed in 19 events last year, posting one pole, 208 laps led, four top-five and nine top-10 finishes.

MORE: See Kyle Busch’s chocolate M&M’s car for ’19

Thank goodness for moms, am I right?

Moms keep everything. That macaroni necklace you made her for Mother’s Day 2002. Your watercolor painting of a race car that held the on-the-fridge record of a remarkable 14 months straight …

… That one time you met Joey Logano at the precipice of teendom and it was just the doggone cutest thing.

https://twitter.com/kbell4409/status/1090019590808182784

Fresh off his third straight Chili Bowl Nationals victory, Christopher Bell had one of those classic “MOM, stop embarrassing me” moments on Twitter on Tuesday when Mama Bell posted a throwback photo of young Christopher meeting a fellow fresh-faced Joey Logano in 2008.

MORE: Bell captures Chili Bowl crown

Fast forward 10 years to now, and Logano is coming off his first Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series championship.

And 10 years from now?

There’s a good chance we’ll be looking at that picture, thinking of how young those two NASCAR Cup Series champs look.

If Ryan Blaney wants a better understanding of the brand-new Ford Mustang mixed with the 2019 rules package, he’ll have to rely on his Team Penske cohort.

Blaney won’t get his first taste of the changes altogether until he climbs into the No. 12 Ford Mustang at Atlanta Motor Speedway, while defending Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion Joey Logano participated in the Goodyear tire test session at Auto Club Speedway on Jan. 9.  Brad Keselowski will try his hand in an Organizational Open Test at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Jan. 31-Feb. 1.

RELATED: NASCAR.com to host live show for Las Vegas test

But Blaney really isn’t sweating it, he said just anxious to get back in the car as Team Penske drivers and teams gathered for an organizational pit crew competition and media event at Charlotte Motor Speedway on Monday.

“Not really nervous,” Blaney said. “I would just like to test. You like to get behind the wheel of something. It stinks not being behind the wheel of a race car from Miami until, OK, we’re going to go out in a pack at Daytona. So, that stinks for me. I just like to go run.

Ryan Blaney hangs with some of the Wood Brothers Racing crew at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
Chase Wilhelm | NASCAR Digital Media

“Just try to get in that mindset again,” he added. “Try to get your brain thinking fast like it should. As far as information on the cars and stuff, Brad and Joey I’ve always been able to talk to and you look at notes. It’ll be big this year of looking at the notes after Vegas and how’d they drive and talking to them about that.”

What sparks Blaney’s curiosity the most will be what Logano and Keselowski learn about the draft, the new drag ducts and how much grip teams will need to dial in their race cars with the reduced amount of horsepower.

“I’m interested in the drag ducts and how they’re going to be when we have them on and when they’re off,” Blaney said. “Joey touched on it a little bit of how much grip do you want to dial into your car. We go to Atlanta; I think there’s going to be a lot of that.

“Atlanta to Vegas to Fontana … even the short tracks. I’m curious to go to Phoenix and see how it is with that high power and high downforce stuff. We’ll just find out. It’s kind of hard to judge it right now just because you can’t until you get 40 of us out there.”

PHOTOS: See every angle of the Ford Mustang that will be on track

As far as the Mustang is concerned, Blaney feels Ford Performance and Team Penske have collaborated to make the necessary preparations to come out of the gates swinging.

“Honestly, it might not be a bad thing that Ford is kind of the last manufacturer to switch models because maybe you learn what to do and what not to do,” Blaney said. “But I think they put so much work into it and so much time and effort. …Those are two big changes for the Ford company, but I think we’ll do fine. I have so much confidence in the Ford Performance guys over there. They’re doing so much work and you just try to fire off good and if not, you work on it. That’s all you can do.”

Joey Logano, Brad Keselowski and crew chief Todd Gordon gather at the Team Penske pit crew competition at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
Chase Wilhelm | NASCAR Digital Media

Logano echoed Blaney’s comments and added by saying that between the Mustang and the new rules package, he feels it’s a good clean slate for Penske and Ford to build on as the season progresses.

“I think it’s going to be a great thing,” Logano said. “I think Ford has done a good job of learning from the other two manufacturers that have recently made changes. Like I said, learn from those and everything on paper shows that it should be better. We’ll see. I think there will be a learning curve with it because you kind of have to start all over.”

Keselowski, in search of his first Daytona 500 victory after winning two crown-jewel events in 2018 – the Southern 500 and Brickyard 400 – feels it won’t take the Penske squad long at all to put the Mustang out front.

“It’s a beautiful car,” Keselowski told NASCAR.com. “I suspect that it’s going to go on the race track and immediately haul some butt.”

RELATED: Class of 2019 announced | Inductees through the years Every Hall member

Five more legends of stock-car racing were inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame on Friday as part of the 10th class. Jeff Gordon, Jack Roush, Roger Penske, Davey Allison and Alan Kulwicki had their diverse NASCAR legacies secured in a gala enshrinement.

Learn more about the Hall’s newest members.

The Class of 2019

Davey Allison

Davey Allison Hall of Fame graphicDavey Allison was born with speed. The son of NASCAR Hall of Famer Bobby Allison grew up more interested in football, but could not escape the racing bug, following his father into the family profession. The younger Allison honed his skills at local Alabama tracks, getting his big break in 1987, taking over for legendary driver Cale Yarborough in Ranier-Lundy’s Ford Thunderbird. Allison got right to work on continuing the family’s legacy, compiling two wins, five poles and nine top fives in his full-season debut to capture 1987 Sunoco Rookie of the Year. Allison won 19 races and 14 poles, including the 1992 Daytona 500, before his tragic death in a helicopter accident in 1993. Months earlier Allison concluded his best premier series season, running first in the championship standings until his car was collected in an accident during the final race at Atlanta. Despite winning his own Daytona 500, Allison’s favorite racing moment was finishing second to his father in the 1988 “Great American Race” as the pair became the first and only father-son combo to finish 1-2 in NASCAR’s biggest event.| Full biography

MORE: Liz Allison: ‘We can stop pinching ourselves’ | Robbie Allison: Dad was determined, dedicated

Jeff Gordon Jeff Gordon Hall of Fame graphic

Blessed with once-in-a-generation talent and charisma, Jeff Gordon helped take NASCAR from a regional sport to the mainstream. Gordon took NASCAR by storm in the 1990s, becoming the youngest driver in the modern era to win a premier series title as a 24-year-old in 1995. He went on to win three more championships (1997, ’98, 2001). In 1998, Gordon led the Rainbow Warriors – named for his colorful No. 24 Chevrolet – to a modern era-record 13 wins. Overall, he won 93 races, which ranks third on the all-time wins list. Gordon is a three-time Daytona 500 champion and won the Brickyard 400 a record five times. Charismatic and gifted in front of the camera, he developed one of the sport’s fiercest rivalries with Dale Earnhardt. The confident, youthful Californian served as the foil to the wily, rugged Intimidator. Gordon was the first NASCAR driver to host “Saturday Night Live.” He retired from full-time racing as the premier series’“Iron Man” with a record 797 consecutive starts, and now delivers the sport to its passionate fans as a race analyst for FOX.  | Full biography

MORE: Leo Gordon goes bananas | Gordon: It ‘just gets to my heart’ | Evernham: Like a son | Hendrick welcomes Gordon

Alan Kulwicki 

Noted Wisconsin short-track racer Alan Kulwicki moved to Charlotte in 1984 with nothing but a pickup truck, a self-built race car and the hopes of competing in NASCAR’s highest series. He had no sponsor and a limited budget. Kulwicki burst onto the scene as the 1986 NASCAR Rookie of the Year with his self-owned AK Racing team. Throughout his career, Kulwicki received lucrative offers from powerhouse race teams, but insisted on racing for himself. That determination eventually led to his first of five career victories at Phoenix in 1988, and the unveiling of his trademark “Polish Victory Lap,” a celebratory clockwise cool down lap with the driver’s window facing the fans. His signature season was his championship-winning 1992 campaign, where Kulwicki overcame a 278-point deficit with six races remaining to capture the NASCAR premier series title. He had two wins, 11 top fives and 17 top 10s to defeat NASCAR Hall of Famer Bill Elliott by 10 points – at the time, the tightest championship margin in series history. Kulwicki never got the chance to defend his title, dying in a plane crash in 1993. Five years after his death, he was named one of NASCAR’s 50 greatest drivers. | Full biography

Roger Penske Roger Penske Hall of Fame graphic

Roger Penske is known, simply, as ‘The Captain.’ A true captain of industry, Penske has steered one of the most successful motorsports ships in the sport’s history. Penske, who celebrated his 50th anniversary in racing in 2016, reached a major milestone and collected a prestigious award during the golden anniversary season. That year, he reached 100 wins in NASCAR’s premier series and capped of the season by receiving the Bill France Award of Excellence. Penske won the premier series championship in 2012 with driver Brad Keselowski, and owns two Daytona 500 wins with Ryan Newman in 2008 and Joey Logano in 2015. And from 2013-15, Penske tied a record with three consecutive owner championships in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. Off the track, Penske likewise left an indelible mark. He built the two-mile Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California in 1996, and previously owned Michigan International Speedway. | Full biography

Jack Roush Jack Roush Hall of Fame graphic

Once a Michigan-based drag racing owner and enthusiast, Jack Roush made his best motorsports decision when he turned south in 1988 to start a NASCAR team. Since beginning Roush Racing (now known as Roush Fenway Racing), the graduate-level mathematician turned engineering entrepreneur has won a record 322 races across NASCAR’s three national series. Overall, Roush boasts five NASCAR national series owner championships, while his drivers have won an additional three driver championships. Roush initially built his powerhouse organization by pairing with fellow NASCAR Hall of Fame nominee Mark Martin, who won 83 NASCAR national series races for RFR from 1988-2005. Known for his trademark Panama hat, Roush has displayed a prowess for discovering and developing talent. He helped Matt Kenseth (2003) and Kurt Busch (2004) grow into premier series champions and also jump-started the careers of Carl Edwards and Greg Biffle. Roush was the 2001 recipient of the Bill France Award of Excellence.  | Full biography

The history

The NASCAR Hall of Fame opened May 11, 2010, and is an interactive entertainment attraction honoring the history and heritage of NASCAR. The 150,000-square-foot facility includes artifacts, exhibits and a 278-person theater. Learn more here about the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

• Class of 2010: Dale Earnhardt, Bill France Sr., Bill France Jr., Junior Johnson, Richard Petty
• Class of 2011: Bobby Allison, Ned Jarrett, Bud Moore, David Pearson, Lee Petty
• Class of 2012: Richie Evans, Dale Inman, Darrell Waltrip, Glen Wood, Cale Yarborough
 Class of 2013: Buck Baker, Cotton Owens, Herb Thomas, Rusty Wallace, Leonard Wood
 Class of 2014: Jack Ingram, Tim Flock, Dale Jarrett, Maurice Petty, Fireball Roberts
 Class of 2015: Bill Elliott, Fred Lorenzen, Wendell Scott, Joe Weatherly, Rex White
• Class of 2016: Jerry Cook, Bobby Isaac, Terry Labonte, Bruton O. Smith, Curtis Turner
• Class of 2017: Richard Childress, Rick Hendrick, Mark Martin, Raymond Parks, Benny Parsons
• Class of 2018: Red Byron, Ray Evernham, Ron Hornaday Jr., Ken Squier, Robert Yates

Pack Racing Practice with the Pros

You never know when your favorite NASCAR up-and-comers might fire up iRacing and turn some laps ahead of Daytona.

 

Larson and Bell talk iRacing and Chili Bowl

Clearly, this interview took place before the contentious finish between the two for the Chili Bowl race win.

 

Bell’s Helmet

Chili Bowl winner and Xfinity Series driver Christopher Bell sent his race-winning helmet to iRacing boss Steve Myers, which Myers half-jokingly suggested Bell donated if he won the race with iRacing sponsorship. Sure enough, Bell came through.

 

eNASCAR PEAK Antifreeze iRacing Series Update

NASCAR and pro eSports teams including JR Motorsports, Joe Gibbs Racing, Wood Brothers Racing, Clint Bowyer Racing, Williams Esports, Richmond Raceway Esports, G2 Esports, FlipSid3 Tactics, and Team Renegades will participate in a driver’s draft January 30 for eligible eNASCAR PEAK Antifreeze iRacing Series drivers.

With over $100,000 in winnings on the line in celebration of the series’ 10th season, some iRacing drivers rose to the occasion as the Pro Series qualification period came to a close.

While attending the Rolex 24 at Daytona, eNASCAR PEAK Antifreeze iRacing Series competitor Logan Clampitt put his iRacing skills to the test, earning himself a test in a real race car in April.

 

eNASCAR Heat Pro League Update

704 Games released the list of top-50 drivers per platform based on performance — but, like in today’s age of racing, being a driver means more than just speed on-track. Draftees must now record and submit a video introduction, proving they can handle the spotlight as marketable eSports racers and that they’re the full package.

https://twitter.com/FluffyRacing/status/1089400753691787264

Soon, actual NASCAR teams will draft participants based on both performance data and off-track intangibles.

 

iRacing Paint Schemes of the Week

Even though Denny Hamlin’s 2019 paint scheme was just unveiled Monday, Brantley Roden re-created it for iRacing for those who want to drive the world’s fastest delivery vehicle in the virtual world.

Iracing Hamlin 2019 Paint

Painter Julian Madore put a spin on the famous 2001 Rolex 24 at Daytona ride for Dale Earnhardt and Dale Earnhardt Jr — creatively porting their Corvette to a modern-day Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Chevrolet Camaro ZL1.

 

NASCAR Heat 3 Video of the Week

We must admit, this is a fine last-lap photo-finish pass at Dover against one of the game’s greats.

 

iRacing Video of the Week

Yeah, the Charlotte road course is a little tricky, even on iRacing.

 

Chase Elliott’s three Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series wins in 2018 marked a breakthrough in his young career.

The 98 winless races leading up to his first victory at Watkins Glen were trying for the No. 9 driver. The racing industry knew that; his weekly interviews conveyed his frustration.

But perhaps fewer knew just how heavily the burden weighed on his shoulders.

“I underestimated how it was wearing on him and how personal he was taking not winning races,” No. 9 crew chief Alan Gustafson said at the Hendrick Motorsports campus on Jan. 22. “And once he won, I realized ‘wow, it was something he was taking very personal and something that was weighing on him.’”

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Elliott enters into his fourth full-time season in the Monster Energy Series this year, a feat he noted is “hard to believe.” The pressure of a first win has evaporated in the confetti of three Victory Lane celebrations, but that doesn’t mean much for the 23-year-old driver.

Because he can’t really ride the coattails of last year’s wins, he said.

“It’s kind of a fresh start in a lot of ways,” Elliott said on this season during a teleconference on Monday. “I mean, I think definitely there was nothing negative about the wins and things. I obviously wish we could have finished a little stronger those last handful, but it’s hard to piggy‑back off of a win and the month of, what was it, September‑October and then continue that in the end of February. But we’ll try our best and try to get rolling.”

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The 2019 season also marks Elliott’s fourth season with Gustafson, who guided Jeff Gordon atop the No. 24 pit box before Gordon’s retirement from full-time driving at the end of 2015. The 43-year-old crew chief’s confidence in his young driver is high – it has been from the beginning, when Elliott was still finding his footing in the series.

“His talent has always been really good,” Gustafson said. “He has been really skilled from the start. I feel like from the first race we had him we felt like we could win. In all actuality, ifs and buts, we probably should have won some races before last season.

“ …I am 100 percent confident if we give Chase a car that he wants he will win the race with it,” he added. “He can adapt really well and there hasn’t been anything that he has not been able to overcome. He is still young enough to where he doesn’t have too many habits, so change isn’t going to be as difficult for him as it is maybe some of the other guys. You know you look at his level of talent he is in a pretty elite level, but most of the guys that he is around have been doing this for a while, so change might be a little bit more difficult for them.”

Gustafson noted the biggest transformation is the way he races others.

“He doesn’t take anything that really isn’t his real estate or force people in bad positions,” he said. “I think he has been taken advantage of a few times because of that and I think that has frustrated him. I’ve seen that change in him. He certainly races some people that kind of consistently have not given him the same respect, he has adjusted how he races them. I think that is a good thing and a good idea. Certainly, helps his performance. You can’t consistently come out on the bad end of deals or altercations or whatever.

“… That process has given him a little bit of an edge,” Gustafson added. “… He has raced the guys that run up front pretty much every week enough where they know what he is and what he’s about. I certainly think they know he is going to be there week in and week out, they better think twice if they are going to do something that might be a little bit questionable.”

Just as a crew chief needs to believe in his driver, a driver also needs to believe in his leader’s guidance. The confidence is certainly mutual from Elliott to Gustafson.

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“I have a lot of confidence in him, and nice to feel from his end it’s mutual,” Elliott said. “I think that goes a long way. …

“Our relationship really has been pretty simple. … I kind of let his do his thing and he lets me do mine, and we really just go about our business that way. Our friendship has grown, I think, over the past couple years.  We’re by no means best friends.  I think he would tell you the same thing.

“But we work well together, and I think that we enjoy the competition aspect at a similar pace, and he and I, I feel like, view a lot of things the same way from that aspect, and when you’re working with somebody and you’re in the roles that he and I are both in, I’m not real sure that there’s a much better fit or a better way to go about it.”