Friday’s NASCAR practice sessions will go on as scheduled regardless of inclement weather at Charlotte Motor Speedway’s combination oval and road course.

Teams in both the Monster Energy Series and Xfinity Series have two sets of Goodyear wet-weather tires available for practice sessions leading up to their first races on the 17-turn, 2.28-mile track. Other road-course rules — including installation of wipers and rear lights — will apply.

RELATED: Roval 101 | Full schedule for Charlotte

A NASCAR spokesperson said that an assessment for potentially conducting Friday’s Busch Pole Qualifying (4:45 p.m. ET, NBCSN) in wet weather would be made closer to its scheduled start.

Monster Energy Series had its first practice at 12:05 p.m. ET ahead of Sunday’s Bank of America Roval 400 (2 p.m. ET, NBC, PRN, SiriusXM). Xfinity Series teams had two practices scheduled Friday ahead of Saturday’s Drive for the Cure 200 presented by Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina (3 p.m. ET, NBCSN).

The National Weather Service forecasts a 30 percent chance of scattered showers and thunderstorms Friday afternoon.

JTG Daugherty Racing announced Friday that Ryan Preece will drive the team’s No. 47 Chevrolet next year in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series.

Preece, who made his mark as a decorated champion in the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour, will succeed AJ Allmendinger, the No. 47 team’s driver the last five seasons. Allmendinger scored a breakthrough premier series victory for himself and JTG Daugherty at Watkins Glen in 2014. The team announced Sept. 25 that Allmendinger would not return in 2019.

“To finally get to this level and earn it, it’s really a short-trackers’ dream,” Preece said. “To get here and to race for people with such class, it’s a family-owned team and that’s something I’ve always been a part of. Hopefully we can start out strong and compete for wins.”

RELATED: Key players in Silly Season

Preece, 27, has driven on a part-time basis for Joe Gibbs Racing in the NASCAR Xfinity Series the last two seasons. In that span, he’s collected two victories — last season at Iowa Speedway and earlier this year at Bristol Motor Speedway. He’s scheduled to run the majority of the races left in the season in JGR equipment.

It was that Bristol race where Preece first hopped onto the radar of team competition director Ernie Cope and team owner Tad Geschickter, who watched the underdog in good equipment give more experienced drivers all they could handle.

“I’m excited,” Cope said. “I started watching him at the end of the year at Homestead, and he drove hard. Watching that Bristol race and watching him go after it and I’m like, ‘This guy is something.’ Then you hear his backstory, and that’s the mold I’m looking for.

“Every time I’ve called him he’s in the shop.”

Preece made five career starts in NASCAR’s top division in 2015 for car owner Mike Curb. He followed that partial schedule with a full-season Xfinity Series slate for JD Motorsports in 2016.

Preece secured the Whelen Modified Tour championship in 2013. He also has four runner-up finishes in that series’ standings. Preece has competed in the majority of the Modified Tour’s races this season, locking up two wins (at Stafford and Langley) in eight starts.

“I’m not saying this is easy,” Preece said of his ascension to the Monster Energy Series. “It’s not. There were a lot of nights where I didn’t know what was going to happen. I was going to try though. I was going to try like hell.”

The team release also stated that JTG would remain a two-car operation next year. Chris Buescher currently drives the organization’s No. 37 Chevrolet, and Geschickter confirmed he would return.

Geschickter added that the team would move to engines provided by Hendrick.

“We’re really looking forward to having Ryan join our team for the 2019 season,” team owner Tad Geschickter said in a release. “Ryan has an impressive list of accomplishments in the NASCAR Xfinity Series and the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Series and is now being given a great opportunity to compete at NASCAR’s highest level full-time. We really believe in him and think he’s a great addition to the team.”

Zack Novak claimed the first-ever eNASCAR Ignite Series Championship Thursday night along with a $10,000 racing scholarship.

The eNASCAR Ignite Series, the first ever youth esports series on iRacing featuring drivers between the ages of 13-16 years old, hosted its Final Championship event last night. In a winner-take-all format at the virtual Martinsville Speedway, Novak bested the top 30 drivers that advanced throughout the four-race playoff format over the past 12 weeks.

“It’s surreal, I don’t even know what to say,” offered Connecticut native Novak. “Everything I have worked for over the past five or six years – this championship means the most to me. Really happy I could close this one out!”

Novak, already a regular contender in the NASCAR PEAK Antifreeze iRacing series (NASCAR’s highest-level eSports series), has proven to be a multi-dimensional driver by winning on the biggest eNASCAR stages in both Legends cars and Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series cars as well.

During last night’s Championship event, the top four finishers from each heat race, as well as the last chance qualifier (LCQ) would earn starting positions in the 30-lap final.

Heat No. 1 saw pole sitter Dylan Ault find trouble early and drop out of contention, opening the door for Zack Novak and several others to move to the front. Top seed Garrett Lowe worked his way to a transfer spot before finding trouble on a last-lap pass for the win, and ultimately finishing fifth, just one spot out of an automatic transfer to the final. At the end of the 10-lap race Zack Novak, Daniel Silvestri, Spencer Tart and Aaron Mulrooney Jr. had secured starting spots in the final. Everyone else had one last chance in the LCQ.

Heat No. 2 was a much calmer race with the top three qualifiers holding course and easily transferring to the final. Fifth-place qualifier Mike Neal was able to get the final transfer spot after Niclas Laubisch dropped back to seventh. The transfer drivers from heat No. 2 were: Austin Edwards, Briar, LaPradd, Andy Trupiano and Mikey Serra.

Aggressive driving in Heat No. 3 lead to several incidents on track, ultimately taking out second-, third- and fourth-place qualifiers. This opened the door for the rest of the field to earn the transfer spots to the final. Pole sitter Dave Walsh easily won the race with Jake Matheson, Ryan H. Papasian and Dillion Hodge rounding out the top four and earning transfer spots to the final as well.

The last chance qualifier gave those who didn’t transfer directly from the heat races one last opportunity to earn a starting spot on the grid for the final. Several drivers were able to redeem themselves from disappointing performances in their respective heat races, including series favorite Garrett Lowe and Heat 1 pole sitter Dylan Ault. Devein Serra and Ryan Matthews also earned transfer spots to the final by finishing in the top four.

The 30-lap final race would feature the 16 drivers who transferred with Novak starting on pole. Walsh, Edwards and Silvestri would fill in the rest of the front two rows as the green flag dropped. Novak and Walsh started well  and pulled ahead of  the field. Novak would ultimately lead all the way to the checkered flag. Walsh tried to put some pressure on the leader, but Novak was simply too fast and too consistent to get close enough to even attempt a pass.

The top three finishers, Novak, Walsh and Edwards, showcase the diverse and broad appeal of eNASCAR racing on iRacing. Novak is from Connecticut, Walsh is from Ireland and Edwards is a California native. Utilizing the iRacing eSports platform makes it easy to bring drivers from around the world together to compete on a level playing field.

Novak’s dominant victory in the final earned him the $10,000 racing scholarship as well as a slew of other prizes — a one-on-one driver instructional session with Max Papis (including one of his MPI steering wheels), an introduction to NASCAR racing development personnel, a SimSeat simulation cockpit and seat with monitor stands, a Martinsville Speedway VIP experience with Champion acknowledgement, NASCAR Racing Experience Voucher, and a VIP iRacing account.

To learn more visit www.iRacing.com/NASCARIgnite.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Newly named NASCAR president Steve Phelps had an optimistic message for a group of reporters gathered for a question-answer at NASCAR headquarters.

“We need to come together as a sport, and if we come together as a sport, I have no doubt this sport is going to grow,” said Phelps, whose selection as president was announced Sept. 20.

“But we have to do that. We have to have folks put self-interest aside sometimes and see what’s in the collective best interest of the sport in order for it to be healthy.”

RELATED: Phelps goes ‘Over The Edge’ for good cause

In his new role, Phelps will have responsibility over all competition and business operations.

“For starters, I’m humbled to be in this position,” Phelps said. “There have been four other presidents of NASCAR in our 70-year history, and to be announced as the fifth—since I’m a massive fan of the sport, and I understand the history of the sport—is truly humbling.”

Elevated on April 3 to the role of chief operating officer from his previous position as executive vice president, sales and marketing, Phelps wholeheartedly embraces the collaborative spirit and process that has become the norm in NASCAR racing in recent years.

“With respect to changes I’m going to make, or a vision statement that would be different from where we’ve been, I think the path that we are on right now, which is one of industry collaboration and industry input, is one that we’re going to continue and one that I see as very important to the sport,” Phelps said.

“What Brent (Dewar) has done, first as chief operating officer and then as president of NASCAR, to try to bring the industry together—that’s something that we’re going to continue. Our sport has headwinds, for sure, and we’re addressing those headwinds head-on, and we’re going to do it as a sport. We’re going to do it with our teams, with our drivers, with our track and media partners and our sponsors.”

For those who pine for the early days of NASCAR, when founder Bill France Sr. and his son, Bill France Jr., ran the sport with what was perceived an autocratic authority, Phelps points to the importance of collaboration within a structure that gives all stakeholders their respective voices.

“There’s a school of thought out there that NASCAR should go back to the way it was, when Bill France Jr. very, very successfully ran this sport,” Phelps said. “It was Bill’s will, right? He was taking input from people behind the scenes, from drivers and team owners, but at the end of the day, it was his decision.

“Having a formal process in place with councils, I think, allows us to put things onto the calendar, have people understand when they’re going to happen, put agendas together and then collectively decide… When you look at an agenda for the drivers’ council, it will look remarkably similar to an OEM council, to a track council, to a team owner council.

“The general ideas are all the same, frankly, and the agendas are very similar. How we approach them might be a little bit different. With that said, it has allowed us to hear those voices in an environment that is private, but they can all hear what each other are saying as well. So if I’m an OEM, if I’m Toyota, I hear what Ford and Chevy are saying.”

In that spirit, NASCAR is listening to all voices when it comes to possible changes to the racing schedule. Events for 2019 already have been established an announced for all three national touring series, but for 2020, Phelps says almost all ideas will get a hearing.

MORE: Details on Phelps being named NASCAR President

“Obviously, for our ’19 schedule, our ’19 schedule is done,” Phelps said. “We announced that in April, and it’s going to be exactly the same schedule we have in ’18. So, with respect to any changes we make to the schedule moving forward, whether they’re new venues, doubleheaders, midweek racing—all these things that are being thrown around at this particular point—we’re looking at everything.

“We’ll get with our industry and get input from them, and at the end of the day, we will take all that information and cull it down, and we will make a decision that we believe is in the best interest of NASCAR.”

Phelps also promised a revamped approach in underscoring and promoting the individual races on the calendar.

“We need to make sure that the race product that we put on the track is as good as it can be, which is what we’re going to do,” Phelps said. “We do know that the race day experience or the race weekend is really important, and we’re working with our tracks to make them understand that. And we need to reinvent what I would call the event promotion, as to what that looks like.

“That gets back to a collaboration effort which we are going to see between our race tracks, NASCAR, our broadcast partners and our teams and drivers in order to promote the sport in a way that we haven’t in the past. That means really coming together and creating opportunities that reach fans and asks them to come out and see what’s going on in NASCAR.”

Stewart-Haas Racing won the 2018 NASCAR Fitness Challenge Powered by Lilly Diabetes, earning a $15,000 donation to its charity, while Roush Fenway Racing won $5,000 for its charity after winning the social media competition.

Ten teams competed Thursday at the plaza outside the NASCAR Hall of Fame, riding stationary bikes in teams of four riders. Joe Gibbs Racing had four teams competing; Stewart-Haas Racing and Roush Fenway Racing had two each; and Richard Childress Racing/Germain Racing and NASCAR Drive 4 Diversity each had one team.

“We got a ton of NASCAR teams participating and a lot of crew members out tonight,” Roush driver Ryan Reed said. “Just thank you to Lilly Diabetes and all the NASCAR teams for participating in this.”

Reed, who drives the No. 16 Drive Down A1C Lilly Diabetes Ford in the Xfinity Series, competed in the fitness challenge this year, but was a coach for the 2018 event as he was preparing to practice on Thursday at the Charlotte road course.

SHR’s chosen charity is ABC of NC, a school for children who have autism or other special needs. Roush’s charity is JDRF, a global organization funding type 1 diabetes research.

CycleBar instructors conducted the relay race, and SHR won the $15,000 donation — and bragging rights — by generating the most power points during the competition. Roush won the social media challenge by gaining points every time a fan commented or liked its posts with the #NASCARFitChallenge hashtag.

CONCORD, N.C. – Justin Allgaier will return to drive the No. 7 NASCAR Xfinity Series Chevrolet for JR Motorsports next year, he announced Thursday at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

“It’s been an interesting Silly Season for sure, but for us, I’m extremely happy with where I’m at,” Allgaier said. “… From my standpoint, I’ve got a great team behind me right now and the folks at Brandt have obviously supported me for a number of years now and where we’re at for them, whether it’s with me or not, I think JR Motorsports is a great fit for them as well. There’s a lot of talk, but on the flip side of it unless something really major changes, I don’t see anything changing.”

While he’s content in the Xfinity Series now, the 32-year-old driver also said he aims to one day return to the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, where he drove for HScott Motorsports from 2014-2015.

MORE: Key players in NASCAR’s Silly Season

“Don’t get me wrong – I still want redemption on the Cup side, I still want to go drive Cup again in some point in my career, I still think that I have the ability to go do it,” he said. “But it’s going to have to be the perfect scenario.”

Allgaier is a five-time winner in 2018 — most recently reaching Victory Lane at Indianapolis Motor Speedway — and is competing for the 2018 Xfinity Series championship. He won two races in the No. 7 JRM Chevrolet in 2017, finishing third in the final championship standings.

CONCORD, N.C. (Sept. 27, 2018) – 2XU, the world’s most technical sportswear company, has joined 12-time NASCAR Cup Series champions Hendrick Motorsports as the team’s Official Performance Apparel Partner through the 2021 racing season.

2XU (pronounced “Two Times You”) will outfit Hendrick Motorsports’ track personnel, including its elite pit crew athletes, in custom 2XU apparel beginning in 2019. The partnership marks the first in auto racing for 2XU, which has alliances with many of the world’s top sports teams and institutions.

Ben Smith, 2XU’s general manager global custom, called it a proud milestone for the business.

“We’re excited to be named Official Performance Apparel Partner of Hendrick Motorsports and to see 2XU’s world leading garments power the team to future success,” he said. “2XU has a proud history of partnering with the best athletes, sports teams and sports governing bodies, and we’re thrilled to now enter the world of motor sport to share the performance benefits of 2XU garments with such a world class team.

“Just as 2XU propels elite and everyday athletes to achieve their peak, the new custom-designed Hendrick Motorsports range will give the team a sought-after edge over the competition in 2019 and beyond.”

Founded in Melbourne, Australia, 2XU is the world’s most advanced sports apparel company. 2XU compression is independently proven to deliver physiological benefits including 5 percent increased power, 18 percent increased blood flow and 47 percent reduced muscle soreness. Its technical apparel range, which will be worn by Hendrick Motorsports’ track personnel beginning next season, features the world’s leading performance fabrics and technology, with benefits including advanced breathability, moisture management and lifetime odor protection.

“With 2XU, we share a commitment to performance,” said Patrick Perkins, vice president of marketing for Hendrick Motorsports. “Our partnership will allow us to develop customized apparel lines for our athletes and other team members showcasing 2XU’s superior quality and styling. There is no brand in the world that produces more advanced sportswear. We look forward to sharing the 2XU ‘Human Performance Multiplied’ message and working with them to help us perform at our best.”

In addition to wearing 2XU team apparel, Hendrick Motorsports will collaborate with 2XU to develop social media and other digital content featuring pit crew athletes from the organization’s four Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 teams competing in the premiere NASCAR Cup Series.

2XU takes athletes beyond what they thought possible, enabling them to train harder, perform stronger and recover faster. The company rigorously tests its fabrics using state-of-the-art techniques and equipment to ensure its garments are engineered to sustain the demands of sport.

Based in Australia, 2XU has a North American headquarters in Santa Monica, California.

Xfinity Series teams took part in two optional practices on Thursday afternoon at the Charlotte road course ahead of this weekend’s race. This was the team’s first time on track at the new course. Below are the practice speeds from both sessions.

Practice 1 speeds

Pos Car Driver Team Time Speed Lap # # Laps
1 22 Austin Cindric # (P) MoneyLion Ford 79.998 102.603 10 11
2 21 Daniel Hemric (P) South Point Hotel & Casino Chevrolet 80.871 101.495 6 6
3 11 Ryan Truex (P) LeafFilter Gutter Protection Chevrolet 81.156 101.139 6 14
4 18 Ryan Preece Rheem Toyota 81.207 101.075 7 15
5 42 Justin Marks Chevrolet Accessories Chevrolet 81.250 101.022 10 14
6 2 Matt Tifft (P) Nexteer Chevrolet 81.346 100.902 10 15
7 1 Elliott Sadler (P) OneMain Financial Chevrolet 81.569 100.626 10 13
8 3 Brendan Gaughan South Point Hotel/Beard Oil Distributing 81.590 100.601 13 15
9 7 Justin Allgaier (P) Vannoy Construction Chevrolet 81.652 100.524 8 9
10 36 Alex Labbe # Larue/Cyclops Gear Chevrolet 81.680 100.490 2 2
11 9 Tyler Reddick # (P) BurgerFi Chevrolet 81.693 100.474 9 17
12 00 Cole Custer (P) Haas Automation Ford 81.759 100.393 9 11
13 60 Ty Majeski Ford Ford 81.818 100.320 10 11
14 20 Christopher Bell # (P) GameStop Fallout 76 Toyota 81.910 100.208 8 9
15 90 Andy Lally Alpha Prime USA Chevrolet 81.965 100.140 6 6
16 16 Ryan Reed (P) Drive Down A1C Lilly Diabetes Ford 82.847 99.074 17 21
17 61 Kaz Grala # IT Coalition Ford 82.917 98.991 3 4
18 98 Chase Briscoe Nutri Chomps/Ford Ford 82.935 98.969 7 12
19 51 Jeremy Clements RepairableVehicles.com/Travers Tool Chevrolet 83.037 98.848 6 8
20 5 Michael Annett TMC Chevrolet 83.045 98.838 12 20
21 19 Brandon Jones (P) Juniper Toyota 84.759 96.839 6 7
22 35 Joey Gase Sparks Chevrolet 85.276 96.252 6 6
23 13 John Jackson OCR Gaz Bar Dodge 86.289 95.122 3 3
24 52 David Starr Xtreme Cleaners Chevrolet 88.266 92.992 4 4
25 4 Ross Chastain (P) teamjdmotorsports.com Chevrolet 90.707 90.489 1 3
26 23 Spencer Gallagher Allegiant Chevrolet 0.000 0.000 0 0
27 01 Lawson Aschenbach teamjdmotorsports.com Chevrolet 0.000 0.000 0 0

Practice 2 speeds

Pos Car Driver Team Time Speed Lap # # Laps
1 00 Cole Custer (P) Haas Automation Ford 79.517 103.223 14 25
2 22 Austin Cindric # (P) MoneyLion Ford 79.770 102.896 12 23
3 9 Tyler Reddick # (P) BurgerFi Chevrolet 79.771 102.895 8 24
4 21 Daniel Hemric (P) South Point Hotel & Casino Chevrolet 79.876 102.759 14 19
5 7 Justin Allgaier (P) Vannoy Construction Chevrolet 79.916 102.708 11 20
6 1 Elliott Sadler (P) OneMain Financial Chevrolet 79.969 102.640 8 18
7 11 Ryan Truex (P) LeafFilter Gutter Protection Chevrolet 80.154 102.403 4 21
8 60 Ty Majeski Ford Ford 80.339 102.167 11 14
9 18 Ryan Preece Rheem Toyota 80.365 102.134 12 18
10 42 Justin Marks Chevrolet Accessories Chevrolet 80.584 101.856 3 4
11 36 Alex Labbe # Larue/Cyclops Gear Chevrolet 80.613 101.820 9 9
12 20 Christopher Bell # (P) GameStop Fallout 76 Toyota 80.724 101.680 17 20
13 51 Jeremy Clements RepairableVehicles.com/Travers Tool Chevrolet 80.729 101.674 16 16
14 2 Matt Tifft (P) Nexteer Chevrolet 80.867 101.500 13 23
15 16 Ryan Reed (P) Drive Down A1C Lilly Diabetes Ford 81.043 101.280 18 18
16 98 Chase Briscoe Nutri Chomps/Ford Ford 81.121 101.182 22 26
17 4 Ross Chastain (P) teamjdmotorsports.com Chevrolet 81.393 100.844 5 7
18 90 Andy Lally Alpha Prime USA Chevrolet 81.457 100.765 3 8
19 61 Kaz Grala # IT Coalition Ford 81.485 100.730 15 16
20 3 Brendan Gaughan South Point Hotel/Beard Oil Chevrolet 81.563 100.634 14 15
21 01 Lawson Aschenbach teamjdmotorsports.com Chevrolet 81.644 100.534 9 14
22 19 Brandon Jones (P) Juniper Toyota 82.156 99.908 5 13
23 66 Timmy Hill Leithcars.com Toyota 82.348 99.675 3 5
24 5 Michael Annett TMC Chevrolet 82.598 99.373 5 17
25 23 Spencer Gallagher Allegiant Chevrolet 82.845 99.077 8 13
26 39 Ryan Sieg Night Owl Chevrolet 83.535 98.258 14 18
27 35 Joey Gase Sparks Chevrolet 84.106 97.591 8 10
28 0 Garrett Smithley teamjdmotorsports.com Chevrolet 86.866 94.490 3 3
29 76 Spencer Boyd # Grunt Style Chevrolet 88.411 92.839 10 10
30 13 John Jackson OCR Gaz Bar Dodge 89.333 91.881 3 3

Everybody likes a good video. In the spirit of this year’s NASCAR Playoffs, we’ve assembled and ranked the greatest random videos from YouTube starring each of the 16 championship contenders for your viewing pleasure.

16: Ryan Blaney

Watch Ryan Blaney attempt to provide a commercial voiceover for Blaney’s Balloons on NASCAR.com’s Glass Case of Emotion podcast. He does have that dreamy radio voice, after all.

15: Joey Logano

While Joey Logano looked like a solid bet to win at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in 2014, lapped car Morgan Shepherd had other plans, accidentally sliding up into Logano and ending his race. You don’t see that every day.

 

14: Martin Truex Jr.

In this old NASCAR commercial, we learn Martin Truex Jr.’s true identity once he removes his … uhh, mask?

13: Clint Bowyer

Clint Bowyer gets some mid-race advice from a fan during this NASCAR Fantasy Live commercial.


12: Aric Almirola

Many forget Aric Almirola held a longstanding rivalry against his eventual teammate, now-retired Brian Scott.


11: Erik Jones

Woo! How about this video, boys and girls? Even though it occurred just months ago, Erik Jones’ post-win interview at Daytona was a memorable one.

 

10: Kyle Larson

When Kyle Larson scored his first NASCAR national series victory in the Camping World Truck Series at Rockingham in 2013, he performed an impressive burnout — holding his steering wheel out the window as his car burned donuts into the frontstretch.

 

9: Kevin Harvick

Did you know Kevin Harvick was in a commercial that featured Stephen Colbert? Yep — in 2003, then-future The Late Show with Stephen Colbert star sought the elusive Mr. Goodwrench, back when Harvick raced for Richard Childress Racing.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zSBaCbfuNr4

8: Austin Dillon

After Austin Dillon won a Camping World Truck Series race at Nashville, his attempt to slide across the infield grass on his stomach didn’t go precisely as planned — but, hey, when you win a race, it’s hard to look bad, no matter how you celebrate.

 

7: Chase Elliott

2007 might not seem like a long time ago (well, for some of us), but in this interview, budding racer Chase Elliott expresses his bandolero racing success at age 11 — and you might feel old now knowing he’s racing for a Monster Energy Cup Series championship today.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jo4wRjiyqXc

 

6: Kurt Busch

“Dip? I’m racing neck-and-neck and that’s all you can think about is dip?”

 

5: Jimmie Johnson

The Lowe’s “Boom! Confetti!” commercial has reached iconic levels of meme fame.

 

4: Denny Hamlin

During driver introductions in the 2012 Bristol Night Race, Denny Hamlin showed off his dance moves. Denny delivered quite a wobble.

 

3: Brad Keselowski

In a series of commercials for sponsor Miller Lite, Brad Keselowski answered fan questions. In this one, geared around racing superstitions, Brad showed off a very special voodoo doll resembling a certain competitor.

 

2: Kyle Busch

In this commercial for Toyota’s promotion giving fans carte blanche to design their drivers’ paint schemes, Kyle Busch put aside his usual tough-guy persona to ask us all, “Who doesn’t like kittens, bunnies, and little baby seals?”

 

1: Alex Bowman

It’s hard to watch this video just once. When Alex Bowman’s car erupted in flames at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in 2015 (long before he’d become a rookie competing for the championship, of course), his afternoon quickly soured even further when the track safety crew experienced a slight mishap when extinguishing the fire. Bowman’s reactions as he watches his car burn are priceless every time.