Ricky Craven has joined FOX Sports as a NASCAR analyst ahead of the 2019 season.

Craven’s move was confirmed by FOX Sports representatives Tuesday morning. The news was first reported by Racer.com.

Craven, 52, had worked as an analyst for ESPN since 2008, providing insights from both the broadcast booth and the studio. With FOX, he’ll be a featured voice on the network’s weekend programming, including NASCAR Race Hub and practice and qualifying broadcasts in FOX Sports’ new virtual studio set.

RELATED: Craven’s career stats | Craven, Busch look back at memorable finish

Craven’s transition to broadcasting came after his career in NASCAR’s top division concluded in 2004. He won two races in what’s now the Monster Energy Series, including a thrilling final victory at Darlington Raceway in 2003, edging Kurt Busch by .002 seconds.

 “I’m honored to join FOX Sports and have always had great admiration and appreciation for the company’s dedication and commitment to our sport,” Craven said in a release provided by the network. “FOX has an amazing team I have felt a connection to since 2003, when they enthusiastically delivered the broadcast of our finish at Darlington. I eagerly await the start of our new season.”

FOX Sports indicated that a full lineup for its 2019 broadcast team was forthcoming. FOX has already announced the offseason additions of former Daytona 500 winner Jamie McMurray and veteran journalist Bob Pockrass to its NASCAR coverage roster.

RELATED: McMurray joins FOX team for 2019

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: JTG Daugherty Racing and drivers Chris Buescher and Ryan Preece.

JTG Daugherty Racing

Manufacturer: Chevrolet

Engine: Hendrick Engines

Drivers: Chris Buescher, No. 37; Ryan Preece, No. 47

Crew chiefs: Trent Owens (Buescher), Tristan Smith (Preece)

2018 standings: Buescher finished 24th in the final standings; Preece did not run at the Cup level at ’18, but Allmendinger finished 22nd in the final standings.

What’s new: Ryan Preece enters the fold to drive the No. 47 Chevrolet for JTG Daugherty Racing after the team parted ways with AJ Allmendinger following five-and-a-half seasons together. Preece, who was the 2013 Whelen Modified champion, scored two victories over the past two seasons running a part-time slate for Joe Gibbs Racing and wouldn’t have changed a thing about his path to the sport’s premier series. “I think the way I came up was the way … I mean, it prepares you,” Preece said. “I’ve been working and learning race cars and then winning. Learning to be a winner. I wouldn’t want to come up any other way.”

The team also flipped its crew chiefs back to the cars they started with in 2018 after a late-season change so Owens is back on the No. 37 and Smith is back on the No. 47.

The organization has a strong relationship with fellow Chevrolet team Hendrick Motorsports and will be utilizing engines and pit crew support from them. “We used their pit crew after the (Coca-Cola) 600, so that part of it we’ve been doing. It’s just a continuation,” Ernie Cope, JTG’s competition director told NASCAR.com. “The engines part is going to be new to us. We built all brand new cars. This year, we are using JTG cars, which we’ve never built our own cars. We used to buy cars from RCR. For the speedway stuff, so Daytona 500, it’s going to be Hendrick car, Hendrick engine. Atlanta will be a JTG car with a Hendrick engine.”

Outlook: Preece will be in a battle for Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors with fellow freshmen Daniel Hemric (RCR), Matt Tifft (Front Row Motorsports) and Tanner Berryhill (Obaika Racing). Buescher will be looking to push for a playoff spot – his first since qualifying for the postseason in his rookie season of 2016. With Hendrick horsepower under the hood, the two-car fully funded team is primed for a solid surge this year.

Team co-owner Tad Geschickter has his eye on one goal in particular. “We need to make the playoffs,” Geschickter told NASCAR.com. “We’ve progressed — we’ve gone from 30th to 25th to 21st. It’s a big jump and we know it’s tough, but we are not going to be satisfied unless we are knocking on the door of the playoffs at the end of the regular season.”

DRIVERS
Chris Buescher, No. 37 Kleenex Wet Wipes Chevrolet: Buescher enters his fourth season at the sport’s top level – and third with JTG – as the team’s elderstatesman. His top performances in 2018 both came at Daytona – a pair of fifth-place showings – meaning confidence is high entering the season’s opening race. Buescher, the 2015 Xfinity Series champion with Roush Fenway Racing, has one career Monster Energy Series win – at Pocono – from his rookie season spent with Front Row Motorsports in 2016. From there, he moved to JGR and being in one place for the past few years is a welcome feeling for the Texas native.

“It is really nice to have that relationship and be able to be in the same place and the same car without a bunch of moving pieces for now the third year,” Buescher said. “For me, that’s something I haven’t had in a long time and can really appreciate. I feel like that can only help going forward. To be able to build a relationship. Not starting fresh every season. You know your team. You know what’s going on in the shop and what’s changed from the previous year to now. I can visually see the improvements going on and just makes me feel more confident heading into it than coming in cold turkey.”

Ryan Preece, No. 47 Kroger Chevrolet: Preece makes the move to the sport’s top series after driving for Joe Gibbs Racing over the past two seasons in a part-time role. During those 19 starts at JGR, Preece scored victories at Iowa (in 2017) and Bristol (in 2018). The 28-year-old Connecticut native has made five career Monster Energy Series starts – all in 2015. His ride at JTG represents a big opportunity for the driver whose bet on himself at JGR paid off in a big way with a full-time ride at the sport’s top level. He will be competing for Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors as well.

Team co-owner and five-time NBA All-Star Brad Daugherty is bullish on what Preece brings to the program. “Ryan, he’s a little bit of a different animal,” Daugherty told NASCAR.com. “He’s a racer through and through. His expectations are extremely high so we want get him through the dog days of being a rookie and learning. Hopefully, he can gain enough insight and keep his confidence when we get into the dog days of racing — June, July — that we start to see a tick up in performance and he can start getting comfortable. I’m really optimistic that he’s going to be really, really great for our program and we’re hoping he can push us because he is a racer.”

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

Davey Allison was perhaps the original “can’t miss” kid.  The drivers he competed against in NASCAR’s premier series liked him so much they would give him advice even as he was beating them.

His father, Bobby Allison, and uncle Donnie had been long considered stock-car royalty and not only did he inherit their immense driving ability, he raced against them so well that he upped everyone’s game.

And in a pivotal time in the sport’s development – the late 1980s and early 1990s – it was clear that Davey Allison’s talent and popularity would be a crucial bridge between NASCAR eras.

Although Allison died in a helicopter crash in the Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway infield in July 1993 at the age of 32, he has ever since been celebrated for his great success on the track and his admirable following away from the track.

MORE: The days of Davey Allison | Allison’s legacy

Later this week, Allison will be formally honored as a member of the 2019 NASCAR Hall of Fame class, joining his father Bobby, a 2011 inductee in NASCAR’s “Great Hall.”

The sport’s legendary team owners Roger Penske and Jack Roush, the late 1992 Cup champion Alan Kulwicki and four-time Cup champion Jeff Gordon join Allison in the NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2019 – one of the most decorated and celebrated groups ever.

MORE: All the 2019 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductees

“He will never be forgotten and that’s been my biggest fear is that he would be forgotten is that people wouldn’t remember him,’’ Allison’s wife Liz said to NASCAR.com after learning of Davey’s honor. “They wouldn’t remember the driver that he was, the competitor that he was, the person that he was. They won’t remember.

“They won’t remember that he played a part, that he made an impact on the sport. He is part of why the sport is the way it is today. And that everybody in that garage area, every driver, they could take the Davey Allison ‘course’ of how to be a fan favorite and they would do really well.

“None of that will ever be forgotten now. That’s just the biggest sense of relief.”

MORE: Davey’s life in his family’s words

In the time since Allison was selected for the Hall of Fame, his widow, Liz, has lovingly filled social media with professionally significant and personally endearing photos of Allison at the race track or pics of treasured keepsakes she’s discovered in the years since he passed away.

Wearing the tall baseball caps he favored, and sporting his trademark mustache, there are photos of Allison on track and off. The vast majority of them include a huge smile that Allison wore like a uniform. He was perpetually upbeat and optimistic, a friend to all those in the garage.

“Absolutely, he learned a lot from his father Bobby and I spent a ton of time with Davey,’’ said Rusty Wallace, the 1989 Cup champion and 2013 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee.

“I enjoyed the competition with both of them. Davey would actually ask me a ton of questions, ‘hey, how you do this?’ He knew I was such good friends with his father, and he and I would talk short-track stuff. He was a great kid.”

In all fairness, Wallace may have learned from the young Allison as well. Davey came from a top-notch racing background that preceded him in NASCAR’s Hall of Fame – his father, Bobby, the 1983 Cup champion, an 84-time race winner and five-time championship runner-up and his uncle Donnie, himself a 10-time premier series race winner despite never running a full season.

A young Davey Allison never left any doubt that he also had the racing chops to make a career in NASCAR. He began competing full-time months after his high school graduation and excelled through the sport’s ranks – officially becoming part of NASCAR’s beloved “Alabama Gang” made up of Bobby, Donnie, Neil Bonnett and their longtime friend Red Farmer, all legendary competitors from dirt track, short track to NASCAR.

The 1987 NASCAR premier series rookie of the year, Allison won 19 races in his career, including multiple races every full-time Cup season he competed in from 1987-1992. He won five times in 1991 and 1992 and had already won once in 1993 at Richmond, Virginia, only four months before his death.

He was considered the 1992 championship favorite heading into the season finale at Atlanta Motor Speedway, leading the championship standings by 30 points over Kulwicki and 40 over Bill Elliott. But a late crash abruptly halted Allison’s title hopes.

He finished third in the standings while his fellow 2019 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee Alan Kulwicki hoisted the big championship trophy –  Kulwicki, ironically losing his life three months earlier than Allison in a plane crash in April 1993.

Allison’s career was punctuated by both dramatic victories and dramatic just-misses. He won the 1992 Daytona 500, leading a dominating 127 of the 200 laps. Yet perhaps a more indelible memory for the Allisons and NASCAR fans is when Davey finished second in the 1988 Daytona 500, two car-lengths off the bumper of his father, Bobby.  It’s the only such father-son finish in the race’s illustrious history.

The photos of the two celebrating in Daytona’s Victory Lane that Sunday afternoon – the joy in their eyes, the pride on Bobby Allison’s face remains one of the sport’s most cherished historical moments.

Another, of course, happened last May when Bobby Allison sat on the front row of seats at the NASCAR Hall of Fame and heard his son’s name called as a new inductee.

“What an incredible day for me and the family, Liz and the kids. … “ Bobby Allison told NBC Sports immediately after the announcement, his voice full of emotion. “Just a great day.

“Davey was always was an upper. Even when things went wrong racing, he’d say, ‘We’ll get them tomorrow, we’ll be fine.’

“This is a great honor.”

RELATED: Davey Allison’s key career moments

Hendrick Motorsports team owner Rick Hendrick has made no secret of Jeff Gordon one day stepping into a larger leadership role at the organization when the time comes for him to retire.

Gordon, who holds an ownership stake with Hendrick Motorsports that includes the No. 48 team of seven-time champion Jimmie Johnson, opened up about the potential of taking on more responsibility before his induction into the National Motorsports Press Association Hall of Fame on Sunday night in Charlotte, North Carolina — less than one week before his official induction into the NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2019 on Feb. 1.

RELATED: Gordon: Hall of Fame honor ‘very surreal’All of Gordon’s victories

“I can tell you how long those conversations have been going on and it’s a long time,” Gordon said during the NMPA Hall of Fame press conference. “I would love to be in that position one day.”

But those conversations between Gordon and Hendrick about his future, along with his decision to retire from full-time competition in 2015, began well before any actual moves have been made.

“When I made the decision to step away from driving, that decision was made three years before I actually did it,” Gordon said. “I went to Rick and told him what I wanted to do and felt like it was the right time. I felt like there were things starting to line up with Chase Elliott, so those things were playing out well, timing-wise, for me and I thought for Hendrick.”

Gordon said that taking over would be just another way for him to show appreciation for his team owner and close friend who gave him an outlet to build a Hall of Fame-worthy career with four Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series championships and 93 race wins.

“I have so much respect for the organization in being not just an equity owner, but for what they’ve done for me, what that organization has done for my career,” Gordon said. “I feel like I owe that back to them to be respectful and try to give all I can back to continue to see it be successful, even when I stepped away. … I knew one day when I stepped away that I would play a larger role.”

Jeff Gordon speaks to a group of reporters at the NMPA Hall of Fame induction ceremony.
Chase Wilhelm | NASCAR Digital Media

But Hendrick, 69, isn’t ready to step away from his full-time ownership role just yet, which allowed Gordon to make the decision to sign a multi-year contract extension with FOX Sports as a race analyst in early January — a decision his former team owner has always fully supported.

“Of course, in those three years with FOX, more and more of those conversations started happening with Rick,” he said. “I just told him, ‘Rick, I’m really liking TV and I don’t think you’re quite ready and I don’t know if I’m quite ready to move into that role, so I’m probably going to sign an extension or new contract with FOX to keep doing that.’ ”

Gordon reaffirmed that he’s thoroughly enjoying his time in the live broadcast booth, and that has allowed him to become more comfortable speaking in front of larger groups. Although he didn’t want to put a date on it, Gordon confirmed that the idea of taking over for Hendrick catches his interest.

“I love the business side of it,” said Gordon. “If that day ever comes, I would be truly honored even though I don’t think I could do the job that he’s done, I would be truly honored to take that role on.

“As I say that, that would be the first time other than when my parents made me sweep floors and run the machine shop when I was a kid during summers where I actually had a real job,” he added. “… Running a race team or being in that role on a race team, that is a real job. … That role Rick would have to put me in is one I would have to work at really, really hard. I hope one day when that time comes, I would be ready to do that.”

MOORESVILLE, N.C. – Kyle Busch Motorsports (KBM) announced today that owner-driver Kyle Busch will pilot the No. 51 Toyota Tundra in five NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series (NGOTS) events in 2019. Busch’s Toyota will carry primary sponsorship from Textron Aviation Inc., the leader in general and business aviation that provides its customers with the most versatile and comprehensive product portfolio in the world. KBM will promote Textron Aviation’s Cessna and Beechcraft brands.

Busch enters the 2019 season with 51 Truck Series victories, tying for the most in series history and with 194 all-time combined NASCAR national series wins he ranks second to NASCAR Hall of Famer Richard Petty (200). The Las Vegas native has been victorious in a remarkable 35.2 percent (51/145) of his Truck Series starts since debuting in NASCAR’s third division in 2001 and has finished first or second 53.1 percent (77/145) of the time. With his win last year at Las Vegas, he now has a victory at every active track that he’s competed at in the NGOTS.

“Rowdy” collected two wins and four top-five finishes across five Truck Series starts in 2018 and has taken Textron Aviation’s brands to Victory Lane four times in 10 starts since the partnership began in 2017.

RELATED: Burton to run full slate for KBM | Gilliland returns to KBM

“I’m thankful to Textron Aviation and the Cessna and Beechcraft brands for coming aboard the No. 51 Tundra for five races again this season,” Busch said. “We’ve been able to celebrate with them in Victory Lane twice in each of the first two seasons of the sponsorship so we’ll see if we can top that number this year and if so, we’ll be starting it off with a historic one.

“The Truck Series is always a lot of fun for me as a driver. And as an owner, it gives me the opportunity to work alongside the young drivers that we have at KBM to get a better understanding of what they are experiencing. From year to year rule changes affect the handling of the trucks. By continuing to be an active driver in the Truck Series I’m able to provide better feedback to our young drivers not only on the weekends I’m racing, but on the weekends when I’m coaching from atop the pit box as well.”<br

Busch will make his 2019 Truck Series debut Saturday, Feb. 23 at Atlanta (Ga.) Motor Speedway and will also race at Las Vegas (Nev.) Motor Speedway March 1, Martinsville (Va.) Speedway March 23, Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth March 29 and finish out his NGOTS schedule May 17 at Charlotte (N.C.) Motor Speedway.

SCHEDULE: See the full 2019 Gander Outdoors Truck Series schedule

Announcements for the rest of the driver lineup that will share driving duties behind the wheel of the No. 51 Tundra with Busch are forthcoming.

It’s time for a sweet new scheme for Kyle Busch in 2019 as Joe Gibbs Racing has revealed the look that the 2015 champion will have on track for multiple races in the upcoming Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season.

The new look features what we will call a chocolate-infused look over the yellow base of the No. 18 Toyota Camry, promoting the new M&Ms Chocolate Bars.

Kyle Busch
A look at Kyle Busch’s 2018 M&M’s paint scheme. (Getty Images)

Last year’s primary car featured a plethora of colors atop the yellow base of the scheme.

MORE: Hamlin unveils new-look No. 11 

Entering the 2019 season, Busch is looking to make his fifth straight Championship 4 while battling for his second premier series championship. He enters the year just six wins away from 200 national series victories in NASCAR.

MORE: JGR cars to honor J.D. Gibbs with sticker

DENVER, NORTH CAROLINA – On Point Motorsports officials announce that driver Brennan Poole has joined the organization for the 2019 season. Poole will pilot the teams No. 30 Toyota Tundra in a full schedule as the duo take aim at a run for the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series Championship.

“I am extremely excited about driving for On Point Motorsports this season,” stated Poole. “From the very first moment I set foot in the On Point Motorsports facility, I continue to be so impressed with what the team has put together for the 2019 season. We have a great opportunity to surprise a lot of people and we are ready to go racing.”

RELATED: On the Move tracks every driver change for the season

Poole, one of racing’s top young talents, is coming off two successful campaigns in the NASCAR Xfinity Series where he competed in the Championship Playoffs finishing eighth and sixth in both the 2016 and 2017 seasons respectively. Unfortunate circumstances sidelined him for the majority of the 2018 season and he looks to rebound with a strong showing in 2019 with the No. 30 Toyota Tundra.

On Point Motorsports is a fairly new team in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series but one that is deep with NASCAR experienced personnel. The team made five starts in the NGOTS in 2018 with strong performances with drivers Scott Lagasse, Jr., Jeb Burton and Austin Theriault. The organization also fields a part-time effort in the ARCA Racing Series presented by Menards with the No. 29 Toyota Camry.

“We have put a tremendous amount of sweat and tears into the development of On Point Motorsports and the results show when a driver of the caliber of Brennan Poole is excited about being a part of this,” stated Steven Lane, manager of On Point Motorsports. “We have worked very hard as an organization to build this program and we are very excited to welcome a driver with the talents of Brennan to our team. We definitely have some exciting times ahead for all of us.”

Poole has 83 career starts in the NASCAR Xfinity Series to his credit earning eight Top-5 and 36 Top-10 finishes, a pole, and three previous starts in the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series. The Texas native also has 35 career starts in the ARCA Racing Series presented by Menards highlighted by six wins. The driver known as “The Bull” looks to utilize all of this experience to his advantage as he makes a Championship run with On Point Motorsports.

“I can’t wait to get down to Daytona to start off this season,” said Poole. “Everyone here at On Point is moving in the right direction and we have high expectations for the 2019 season. I feel confident in the program the team has put together and we have some exciting announcements coming up as we head into the beginning of the season.”

This dynamic duo of driver and team will kick things off with the season opening NASCAR Gander Outdoor Truck Series event at Daytona International Speedway. The running of the NextEra Energy Resources 250 will be on Friday, February 15 and will be broadcast live on FS1 at 7:30 p.m. (ET).

HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. — Joe Gibbs Racing revealed a clean, new look for the No. 11 Toyota to be driven by Denny Hamlin in the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series on Monday, carrying longtime sponsor FedEx’s familiar logo but as part of a prominent, brighter design.

Hamlin said Monday that he hopes the outlook is also brighter, as he tries to rebound from his first winless season since joining NASCAR’s top division in 2005.

“We had that (previous) one for two years,” Hamlin said. “I’m deeming that one as bad luck, and now we’re moving on from scratch.”

RELATED: See every angle of the new lookSticker to honor J.D. Gibbs 

Denny Hamlin No. 11 car
Zack Albert | NASCAR Digital Media

The design breaks from the darker paint schemes that had adorned the No. 11 in years past, with large swatches of white on the hood and doors replacing the predominantly purple and black schemes from previous seasons. The patches of white evoke the classic design of FedEx’s delivery trucks and envelopes.

The new look debuted on Joe Gibbs Racing’s social media channels Monday morning. The first full glimpse of the No. 11’s primary design is scheduled next month at Daytona International Speedway, where Hamlin claimed the Daytona 500 crown in 2016.

SHOP: Hamlin gear | RELATED: Active drivers to win a Daytona 500

“Typically it’s either been all purple, kind of all black with a little bit of color, but bringing back the white, something we haven’t had on the FedEx car since the inaugural season; it’s awesome,” Hamlin said. “Just to me, I like white race cars — just very clean. And then when you add in the purple and the orange, it’s a great combination and it’s a car that will be easily seen on the race track, no doubt.”

The paint scheme ranks as one of several new wrinkles for Hamlin this season. Chris Gabehart will be the No. 11 team’s new crew chief, replacing Michael Wheeler, who joins Leavine Family Racing after a three-season pairing with Hamlin at JGR.

RELATED: Gabehart named Hamlin’s crew chiefOn the move: 2019’s changes 

Gabehart has worked with Hamlin in a total of four NASCAR national series races, including an Xfinity Series victory at Michigan International Speedway in 2017. His challenge this year includes a jump to the premier series after three seasons on the Xfinity side, plus an adjustment to a new rules package for 2019.

“There is a lot of new, whether it’s the look of the race car, the look of the race team or the rules package, on pit road … there is a lot of new and a lot to look forward to,” Gabehart said. “Certainly the results aren’t anything that’s promised, you’ve got to go out and earn them, but I can promise you that the approach is going to be a lot different, by default.”

All Joe Gibbs Racing teams will run a special sticker to honor the former JGR president and co-chairman J.D. Gibbs, who passed away on Jan. 11.

The team revealed the sticker via Twitter on Monday morning.

Denny Hamlin personally applied the J.D Gibbs Legacy decal to his No. 11 Toyota during a Monday morning paint scheme reveal. Hamlin said that he would honor Gibbs by personally donating $111 for every lap he leads this season to the J.D. Gibbs Legacy Fund.

RELATED: See Hamlin’s new on-track look

“J.D. did so much for my career,” Hamlin told NASCAR.com. “He was the person that drove to Hickory Motor Speedway while I was running a Late Model and watched me make laps around there and called his dad and said that, ‘Hey, I think we’ve got something here that we should pay attention to.’ He’s ultimately the guy that got me here. I’m driving his race car, his number. He was my car owner throughout my career, so it’s just special to be able to remember him in this kind of way — all the positives that he did for not only me, but for this organization. For me to be able to donate back to that legacy fund, it’s just a simple choice.”

Before joining the organization’s senior management, Gibbs was an over-the-wall crew member and a part-time driver, making 13 NASCAR national series starts from 1998-2002. Gibbs’ life was remembered during a service held in Davidson, North Carolina on Friday morning.

RELATED: J.D. Gibbs’ life in photos

JGR fields four Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series cars for drivers Hamlin, Kyle Busch, Martin Truex Jr. and Erik Jones, as well as three Xfinity Series cars — two of which are driven by regulars in the series — Christopher Bell and Brandon Jones.

— Zack Albert contributed to this story

Hooters unveiled its paint scheme for Chase Elliott’s 2019 No. 9 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 on Monday morning, giving the Hendrick Motorsports driver and three-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series winner a fresh look heading into a new year.

Earlier in the morning, Hendrick Motorsports revealed Elliott’s fire suit for when Hooters is the primary sponsor for the No. 9 car.

The company announced last year that it was expanding its relationship with Elliott and Hendrick Motorsports. The American restaurant brand will sponsor three races per season from 2019-2021.

2019 Jan 28 Chase Elliott Hooters

RELATED: Details on sponsorship

“We have a great relationship with Hooters,” Elliott said when the extension was announced. “It’s a place where you can just relax and enjoy yourself. Working with them is always a lot of fun, and their laid-back style is a really good fit for me. I’m looking forward to continuing the partnership with Hooters and doing more to build on their history in racing.”

SHOP: Buy Hooters gear