HUNTERSVILLE, N.C – Joe Gibbs Racing announced today that NASCAR Xfinity Series driver Brandon Jones will be back behind the wheel of the No. 19 Toyota in 2019.
After his first full season at JGR and third complete Xfinity Series season, Jones is ready to carry substantial momentum into 2019. He earned career-high stats in 2018 with two top-five and 17 top-10 finishes, winning a pole and leading 173 laps. He also qualified for the NXS playoffs and finished ninth in the 2018 driver points standings.
Along with his strong debut at JGR, Jones will be teamed up with a new crew chief, Jeff Meendering. Jones and the No. 19 Team will draw from Meendering’s experience and leadership and will be strong, consistent and positioned to challenge for the 2019 Xfinity Series Championship.
“I couldn’t be more proud of our 19 team and the huge strides and experience we gained last year,” Brandon Jones said. “There is no doubt it was a big team effort and I am very excited about being back at Joe Gibbs Racing this season. With the addition of our new crew chief Jeff Meendering and his leadership, we should be in the mix every weekend competing for a championship. I am really fortunate to have partners like Menards and Juniper Networks returning this season and their support means the world to me.”
Additional sponsorship for Brandon Jones and JGR’s No. 19 Xfinity Series Toyota Supra will be announced soon.
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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: Richard Childress Racing and drivers Austin Dillon and Daniel Hemric.
Richard Childress Racing
Manufacturer: Chevrolet
Engine: ECR Engines
Driver: Austin Dillon, No. 3; Daniel Hemric, No. 8
Crew chief: Danny Stockman, No. 3; Luke Lambert, No. 8
2018 standings: Austin Dillon finished 13th in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series standings. Daniel Hemric will make his rookie debut in NASCAR’s premier series this season; he finished third in the 2018 Xfinity Series standings.
What’s new: Richard Childress Racing announced in December that it would bring back the No. 8 Chevrolet for Daniel Hemric in 2019 for the organization’s 50th anniversary year. Dale Earnhardt Jr. famously drove the No. 8 at the start of his Cup career, while his father Dale Earnhardt won six championship titles for Richard Childress Racing. Hemric’s move into the Monster Energy Series is also new for the team, with veteran driver Ryan Newman moving to Roush Fenway Racing in 2019.
Outlook: Richard Childress Racing brought the No. 3 back to Victory Lane at Daytona International Speedway in the 2018 season-opening Daytona 500 with Austin Dillon. Dillon reunites with crew chief Danny Stockman in 2019, who helped the 28-year-old driver win the Camping World Truck Series championship in 2011 and the Xfinity Series title in 2013. With the established chemistry between the pair, the reunion should be an easy transition, with the natural chemistry between the pair, which could lead to more trips to Victory Lane for Dillon in 2019.
DRIVERS
Austin Dillon, No. 3 Chevrolet: Austin Dillon earned the second-most top 10s of his career in 2018, notching eight top-10 finishes. One of those finishes included Dillon’s Daytona 500 win, marking his second “crown jewel” win in NASCAR’s premier series (the first jewel was the 2017 Coca-Cola 600). Dillon’s new teammate Daniel Hemric, combined with his reunion with crew chief Danny Stockman, should set up an interesting sixth, full-time season for the driver of the No. 3. If he can remain consistent throughout the year, a strong season (with perhaps another win) could be in the cards.
Daniel Hemric, No. 8 Chevrolet: Daniel Hemric makes the jump to the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series in 2019, bringing back the historic No. 8 in his full-time season debut. While Hemric wasn’t able to notch a win in the Xfinity Series, where he’s spent the last two seasons, his consistency (16 top-five finishes and 23 top 10s, leading to a third-place finish in the final standings), is telling of his potential. With some time and nurturing of his talent at RCR, Hemric could be a strong favorite for Sunoco Rookie of the Year in 2019.
Name: Angelique Current City: West Caldwell, New Jersey Member since: 2016
Getting to KNOW Angelique
How did you first become interested in NASCAR? “I first became interested in NASCAR after my mom moved to Palm Coast which is 30 mins from Daytona International Speedway. She was the one who suggested I watch it and pick a driver. The first race I watched on TV, I picked Kyle Busch because he had the green crispy M&Ms car which looked awesome. Since I didn’t know much about NASCAR at the time I didn’t realize until after watching that race for a little while that Kyle was in first! Haha! From that day on, I continued to follow NASCAR and haven’t stopped watching since.”
What is your favorite part of NASCAR? “The rivals. The racing. The strategy. I witnessed Kyle Busch’s win at Pocono July 2017, where he had a pit strategy that helped him win the race. It is so much more than just driving around — which is what some people think of. It is calculated moves that add up to taking the lead and winning the race. It is exciting.”
Who are your favorite drivers? “Kyle Busch. My first ever race my mom and I waited in the pit/paddock area and I got Kyle Busch’s autograph! My first race and I got an autograph. What other sport can you get this close? I couldn’t believe it. And Martin Truex, Jr. He is a great driver as well. He is also from NJ, which is awesome.”
Do you have a favorite in any of the following categories? Place to Watch a Race: “At Pocono – Top of turn 1, at Dover top center, at Daytona top center!” Sponsor: “M&Ms because Kyle is my fav driver and I used to live in Hackettstown, New Jersey where they make them.”
FROM ALL OF US AT NASCAR, WE THANK ANGELIQUE FOR HER CONTINUED SUPPORT AND LOOK FORWARD TO HEARING FROM HER IN 2019!
Look for Angelique on the Official NASCAR Fan Council page on NASCAR.COM.
Editor’s note: NASCAR writer Holly Cain has covered the entirety of Jeff Gordon’s career.
It was the mid 1990s — post Richard Petty, prime Dale Earnhardt — and people in the garage, media center and grandstands had taken notice of NASCAR’s mustached newcomer in the bright rainbow-colored Hendrick Motorsports No. 24 Chevrolet.
“Hey, this Gordon kid’s pretty good.”
That was the overwhelming sentiment — part reverence and part wonder. Pretty “great” as it turned out. The car had bright colors, but illumination came from within.
As the then 21-year-old rookie began going door-to-door with NASCAR’s best, it became apparent that NASCAR’s best simultaneously liked the new competition, respected his … uh … gumption, and conceded greatness certainly was on the horizon. The veterans raced him hard. He had to earn every pass, every win, every championship trophy. And Gordon did. Often.
For all his work on track and all his contributions away from the track, Gordon’s amazing, once-in-a-generation career will be honored Friday night in Charlotte, North Carolina, as the four-time NASCAR Cup champion and 93-race winner is formally and reverently inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame — not surprisingly, in his first year of eligibility.
Timing has been something Gordon mastered early on. His career spanned two distinct NASCAR eras. He won championships competing wheel-to-wheel with greats such as Dale Earnhardt, Rusty Wallace, Dale Jarrett and Terry Labonte – all fellow Hall of Famers. The latter part of his career he went door-to-door with new generation of champions in Jimmie Johnson, Kyle Busch and Tony Stewart – all sure-bet eventual NASCAR Hall of Famers, too.
Speaking with Gordon now, he insists that even from the very beginning, it actually was his competitors who taught him most about racing in NASCAR’s big leagues. He was intently watching them, learning from the masters in real time. And clearly, he was a quick learner.
“I was the kind of driver that when you put me in something for the first time I was always kind of anxious wondering what it was going to be like and if I would be capable getting the most out of that car,” Gordon told me last week. “After that, I usually had the answers because it went well. And that helps you build confidence in your abilities.
“So I go all the way back to 1989 when I started driving USAC, really when my pavement career started. I got in the car and we won and that led to 1990 winning a lot of races, all the TV races and started getting recognition. … I go back to all the firsts I did and it always was the same to me. I was nervous, I was unsure and then something good would happen shortly after that and all of a sudden I was like, ‘man, I can do this.’ ”
Although he won one of the Daytona qualifying races in 1993, his first regular-season victory came in his second full year when he won the 1994 Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte. Rusty Wallace was the runner-up followed by Geoffrey Bodine and Dale Jarrett — Wallace and Jarrett already are NASCAR Hall of Famers.
Gordon’s star-power was further realized when he won the inaugural Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis two months later — beating a field that included four-time Indy 500 winner A.J. Foyt, in addition to NASCAR stars such as Earnhardt, Labonte, Jarrett and Bill Elliott.
Gordon’s first championship came a year later in 1995 at the age of 24. He went from winning a couple races to reeling off a season-best seven victories. He hoisted his first championship trophy having beaten five-race winner Earnhardt by 34 points in the season standings. Sterling Marlin and Hall of Famers Mark Martin and Wallace rounded out the top five in points that year.
The championship celebration included a “milk” toast between Gordon and Earnhardt. It remains one of the most iconic moments in NASCAR championship history.
And it truly was just the beginning. He was so good that his early-career mustache would have had a Twitter handle in today’s time.
Earnhardt and others kidded Gordon for his “khakis and penny loafers” look during a time more of the sport’s stars were about “Wrangler jeans and cowboy boots.” But they respected Gordon’s talent behind the wheel and his foresight out of the car. Perhaps they appreciated that Gordon was the talent and personality that could span the old and new eras — that respected and raced hard against Earnhardt and provided a high-achievement target for eventual up-and-comers too.
Getty Images
Off the track, Gordon was a trailblazer as well. He came to NASCAR via California and Indiana and didn’t speak with a Southern accent. His background was USAC, not short tracks in the Carolinas. And it was OK.
He started a diversification of the sport that is widely evident today. Racers saw NASCAR as a viable option of competition no matter where in the country — or world — they began their careers.
Gordon became the first — and is still the only — NASCAR driver to host the hugely popular NBC show “Saturday Night Live.” And all of this together — Gordon’s “look,” his background, his media savvy — are talents that current seven-time champ Jimmie Johnson thinks changed the entire landscape of the sport.
“I smile and I’m so happy for him,’” said Johnson, a friend and former teammate hand picked by Gordon to drive for Hendrick Motorsports. “We all knew he’d be a first ballot. Just happy for Jeff and his family to experience that and kind of put a cherry on top of an amazing career that was so inspiring for so many.
“His career behind the wheel we know the stats, but I don’t know if people watching the sport today, especially the new fans understand the significance of Jeff making the sport relevant nationally. He really transcended the sport.”
RacingOne
Perhaps a sure-bet sign that Gordon was good, was when the fans started to turn on him. It is a sort of NASCAR tradition. He won 10 races in 1996, 10 more in 1997 and 13 in 1998. Three of his four titles came during that time (1995, 1997 and 1998) and he finished runner-up to Terry Labonte in 1996.
Fans either loved him or hated him — largely depending on their previous driver loyalty. As Gordon’s career went on, however, he won many of them back with his passion. People may not have admitted it at the time, but there was a great appreciation for Gordon’s competitiveness.
He would school drivers on track and he was not afraid to confront them out of the car, producing several famous off-track confrontations that won over fans as much as his racing did.
Gordon and Stewart screamed at each other at Watkins Glen in 2007, Gordon and Jeff Burton got into a shoving match at Texas in 2010 and we all know what almost happened at Phoenix with Clint Bowyer during the 2012 playoffs.
And yet, throughout his career Gordon remained — and still remains — a class act. He was superb at his craft, kind out of his car, honest and motivated.
Gordon is the ultimate example of what uncommon talent and deep passion can produce: A champion. A Hall of Famer.
HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. – Setting the stage for The Great American Race, Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) announced today that Sport Clips will join Erik Jones and the No. 20 Toyota Camry team as the primary sponsor for the Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway on Sunday, February 17, 2019. Debuting a special scheme for the Daytona 500, Sport Clips will feature the Sport Clips app on the No. 20 Toyota Camry.
Sport Clips Haircuts has launched a new mobile app that makes check-in for a haircare service faster and easier. The app offers check in, information about wait times, the choice of a favorite store and preferred stylist, and the ability to set personal reminders for the next MVP Experience.
Photo courtesy of Joe Gibbs Racing
“We are excited to have Erik once again represent Sport Clips in the NASCAR Cup Series. It’s been fun to work with Erik as he has developed into one of the sport’s premier drivers,’ said Gordon Logan, founder and CEO of Sport Clips. “Our partnership with NASCAR and Joe Gibbs Racing goes back many years and Erik is a great representative for Sport Clips, NASCAR and JGR. Our franchisees and clients are huge NASCAR fans and we can’t wait to see Erik repeat his July win at Daytona and continue that success throughout the season.”
A longtime partner of JGR, Sport Clips first partnered with Jones in 2015 at Talladega Superspeedway in the NASCAR Xfinity Series. Continuing to sponsor Jones in the Xfinity Series, Sport Clips made the move with Jones to the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series in 2017 during his rookie season. This season will mark the third year Sport Clips has partnered with Jones in the Cup Series.
“Sport Clips has been a great partner for me over the years, all the way back to 2015,” said Jones. “It’s really neat to watch their growth and to have them now sponsor our car for the Daytona 500. Gordon (Logan, CEO and Founder) is such a passionate race fan and supporter of our sport. I’ve really enjoyed representing Sport Clips over the years and what better way to kick off our 2019 season than getting them to Victory Lane at Daytona. That would be pretty cool and we’re going to do our best to make that happen.”
The 2019 season will mark Sport Clips 11th season partnering with JGR. During their 10 year relationship, Sport Clips has been teamed up with multiple drivers including Jones, Denny Hamlin, Carl Edwards and Joey Logano.
Including the Daytona 500, Sport Clips will join Jones and the No. 20 team for multiple races this season:
Daytona International Speedway – Clash and Daytona 500 – February 10 and 17, 2019
Fourteen cars, each from a different Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series team, began to break in the 2019 rules package during an open test Thursday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
Teams were shaking down the full 2019 rules package for the first time at the 1.5-mile track, using aerodynamic ducts and a tapered spacer designed to reduce engine horsepower to a target of 550.
Live-streamed on NASCAR.com and NASCAR’s YouTube and Twitter handles, the initial 25-lap drafting practice three hours into the day yielded the most insights early into this two-day session.
NASCAR Executive Vice President and Chief Racing Development Officer Steve O’Donnell and NASCAR Vice President of Innovation and Racing Development John Probst both were in Las Vegas to watch the action unfold and chat with race teams.
“This is a journey,” Probst told NASCAR Digital’s Jessica Ruffin from the track. “We started a few years ago trying to bring more entertaining and competitive racing to our sport. This was the first time we got to see 14 cars go out there and run 25 laps. So far, so good.”
An early takeaway: Plenty of close racing throughout the entire field as the drivers took to the track together in a coordinating drafting session.
Brad Keselowski led early with Ryan Newman behind him, then Kyle Busch in third. Busch passed Newman and challenged for the lead, Paul Menard and Jimmie Johnson engaged in a multi-lap duel for position and there was near-contact between Ty Dillon and Newman jockeying for position.
Clint Bowyer and Busch also sped to the lead during the session.
That drafting practice was the first of three on Thursday, and the first of five for the entire two-day session.
“We feel like all the big pieces are in place here,” Probst said. “We’re encouraged by what we saw on the track, but we know we have to keep working. I think that what we saw so far, from the front to the back, was pretty tight after 25 laps. Right now we want to see them go out there. They’re testing, they aren’t necessarily up there racing. We do want to emphasize this is a test, but we’re committed to this package and we’re pretty excited.”
Earlier in the day, several drivers checked in with NASCAR Digital’s Jessica Ruffin in the “Neon Garage” to discuss the on-track time and their expectations entering 2019.
“You still have to balance these race cars,” was the takeaway from Austin Dillon after a handful of runs. “You still have to drive well. A lot of people were thinking it would pretty much going to be easy to drive around here. Bubba (Wallace) came up to me after the second run and he’s like, ‘Man, I think you still have to drive these things.’ And yeah, you do.”
With the understanding that the first laps in the new rules package makes it difficult to offer a wholesale assessment, seven-time champion Johnson appeared to be one of the fastest cars on the track.
The Las Vegas test gives Johnson and first-year crew chief Kevin Meendering plenty of reps together as they try to move on from a winless 2018 for the No. 48 team.
“It’s great to get here and be able to get reps and feel it,” Johnson said. “Last year was a tough year for our company. This year with the rules changes, we are all back at ground zero and starting over. We don’t want to live through again what we did last year, but we’re all kind of on equal footing right now.”
The Monster Energy Series will return to Las Vegas on March 3 for the Pennzoil 400 presented by Jiffy Lube, the third race of the season. All three NASCAR national series will be in action, with the Xfinity Series and Gander Outdoors Truck Series joining the tripleheader bill.
Chase Elliott has a slightly new look on the No. 9 Kelley Blue Book Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 for the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season.
Hendrick Motorsports unveiled the new paint scheme featuring the signature blue-and-gold Kelley Blue Book colors as part of a two-race primary sponsorship. Elliott will run the scheme at Texas Motor Speedway in March and again in July at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, in addition to its full-season associate sponsor backing.
Elliott competed in two races with Kelley Blue Book prominent during the 2018 season, placing third in the Night Race at Bristol Motor Speedway and earning a sixth-place result in the fall race at Texas Motor Speedway — part of a career-best year that saw the 23-year-old rack up three wins, 11 top fives and 21 top 10s.
The California-based company enters its fourth Monster Energy Series season as a primary and associate sponsor with Elliott and the No. 9 team. In January 2018, Kelley Blue Book and Hendrick Motorsports agreed to a three-year contract renewal through the 2020 season.
Richard Petty Motorsports announced a new crew chief Thursday for its No. 43 Chevrolet and driver Bubba Wallace, promoting lead engineer Derek Stamets to the post for the 2019 Monster Energy Series season.
Stamets replaces Drew Blickensderfer, who had been a crew chief for RPM since the end of the 2012 season. Blickensderfer will shift to Front Row Motorsports’ No. 34 Ford team and driver Michael McDowell this year.
Stamets’ transition is effective immediately, with his work for the No. 43 team starting Thursday with a key organizational test at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. He has been a top engineer within the Richard Petty-owned organization since 2012.
“Derek was a logical decision for us to move up,” said Philippe Lopez, RPM’s director of competition. “He spent the full season with Bubba and our Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 program last year and has been with our organization for seven seasons. We want to keep the chemistry that Derek and Bubba built together while continuing the experience we built with Chevrolet and Richard Childress Racing. We are confident in Derek’s leadership of the No. 43 team.”
Wallace finished 28th in his first full season of Monster Energy Series competition last year. He said he looked forward to what the team termed an engineering-focused approach to his new role.
“Derek has a lot of knowledge of our program,” Wallace said. “He’s not having to learn a new program and I’m not having to learn a new personality. I’m comfortable working with Derek and this makes the most sense for improvement. Derek was working as our lead engineer, and I think he’s eager to make more of the decisions and put his footprint on our race team.”
A lifelong commitment to NASCAR and motorsports has earned Roger Penske a rightful place in the NASCAR Hall of Fame as a member of the 2019 class induction set for Friday night.
Starting from humble beginnings, ‘The Captain’ established his storied NASCAR journey at Riverside International Raceway in 1972 with Mark Donohue piloting the No. 16 AMC Matador. Donohue only completed 13 of the 149 laps due to a rear-end failure for a 39th-place result.
But it was the hard work and dedication Penske is so famously known for that allowed him to begin his rise to the top, returning to Riverside for the season-opening race in 1973 with Donohue, scoring his first victory as an owner.
Collecting 113 more victories over the course of 35 years and counting, Penske has given the likes of Bobby Allison, Rusty Wallace, Ryan Newman, Kurt Busch, Jeremy Mayfield, Brad Keselowski, Joey Logano and Ryan Blaney an opportunity to reach Victory Lane in top-notch equipment built from the ground up.
Aside from Penske’s vast financial success that has granted him the ability to put winning machines on the race track for so long, it’s his prowess in selecting the right drivers for the job that has been valuable beyond measure.
When Penske hired Logano in September 2012, he took a risk. Although Logano had only won two races in four full-time seasons with Joe Gibbs Racing, Penske saw something in the young man that stuck out to him. He promised Logano would be a champion someday.
It’s more than just the opportunity Logano appreciates. It’s the fact that perfection is the expectation, not just the hope.
“I think with Roger, his ability to lead by example is probably the biggest piece for me,” Logano told NASCAR.com. “He doesn’t have to go in and give pep talks or really say much at all. Just knowing that you work for Penske at this point, everyone knows what’s expected. There’s a perfection that is expected from all of us. … I want to be part of an organization like that and somebody that expects to be perfect and win.”
The desire for perfection isn’t because Penske sits back and expects his drivers to carry the work load, it’s because that’s what he expects out of himself, first and foremost. You’ll never find Penske resting on his laurels or even taking a break, because that’s when you get beat.
That type of aura is not only frightening for the competition, it can also be intimidating for his very own employees as Blaney recollected the first time he met Penske in his bus a few years back.
“We came in and I was very nervous because he’s got a reputation of being a very straight-cut, white-shirt guy,” Blaney recalled. “I was really nervous because I was like, ‘I don’t know if I’m going to be up to standards.’ But he was a really great person and still is.”
Blaney also remembers the time he really got a glimpse of the kind soul Penske possesses after giving away a potential victory during an Xfinity Series race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
“I thought I was going to get fired,” Blaney said. “I thought I was done. I talked to him the next morning in his bus and it was really, really reassuring. Really good advice he gave me – learn from your mistakes and move on. That kind of solidified that this is one of the best people that I know.”
Keselowski, who brought home Penske’s first Cup Series championship in 2012 along with his first Brickyard 400 triumph in 2018, looks up to Penske’s continuous efforts to learn regardless of the endless knowledge he has about the business.
“He’s committed to always learning new technology, always pushing forward, never happy with what was good enough yesterday as being good enough for today,” Keselowski told NASCAR.com. “It’s that drive that I think makes him so special.”
Keselowski also shed light on Penske’s experience with owning and building race tracks, including his ownership of Michigan International Speedway from 1972 through 1999 and the creation of Auto Club Speedway in 1997 – serving as another notch on his Hall of Fame belt.
“He’s done so much for the sport, I can’t think of anyone more deserving that’s not already in, that’s for sure,” Keselowski added. “What he’s done on the track and off the track, quite frankly, as a car owner and track owner. He’s a guy that’s really pushed the sport forward in a number of ways with a high level of professionalism and innovation.”
Penske has proven it’s nearly impossible for him to get outworked, from staying up for the full 24 hours to watch his sports car team in the Rolex 24 at Daytona to countless hours of managing his various businesses and race operations.
“I think that’s great and the way he does that is by always looking out the windshield,” Logano said. “The guy doesn’t stop, he does not stop. That’s what makes him so great.”
For Blaney, the respect for his car owner’s work ethic is so substantial, he admittedly feels he can’t match it despite the 56-year age difference.
“For how hard he’s been going for so long, that’s pretty amazing to me,” Blaney said. “He has more drive than I do and he’s 81 years old. It’s pretty amazing what he does and how his mind still is. That part is very neat to get to know.”
Although Blaney voiced that the Hall of Fame enshrinement is long overdue in his honest opinion, he’s thankful the day has finally come and he’s proud to be one of the drivers in his fleet for the momentous occasion.
“This weekend is going to be really cool being part of the Penske group for a handful of years and get to know Roger over that time,” Blaney said. “For someone who’s done so much, not only in NASCAR but in motorsports in general, very deserving. It’s going to be a special couple days and couple nights at that place.”