RELATED: Kennedy named General Manager of Truck Series

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — France family scion Ben Kennedy brings a welcome point of view to his new role as general manager of the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.

As recently as last November, at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Kennedy competed in both the NASCAR Xfinity and Camping World Truck Series. The son of International Speedway Corporation CEO Lesa France Kennedy and the nephew of NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France, Kennedy also fielded a team in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series.

“I think, more than anything, I can kind of bring my own perspective into the series,” Kennedy said Saturday. “I think being on both the driver side as well as the team owner side, I see both lenses, kind of, on the competition side.”

All told, Kennedy ran 73 Camping World Truck Series events and 17 Xfinity races, posting a victory in the Truck Series last year at Bristol. Though he says he will miss the competition, Kennedy is ready for the excitement of a new challenge on the management side.

“I had been thinking about it for a long time, and it was certainly a long decision for me,” said Kennedy, 26. “But I was happy with what I’ve done in my career in the trucks as well as Xfinity, and had some opportunities to continue forward. 

“But I think more than anything, I’m so passionate about this sport and so passionate about the health of the sport, and this opportunity kind of came along, and really weighing out all my options, it made the most sense for me now and for the long run as well.

“I think it’s a good time for it, and the Camping World Truck Series is the best place for it.”

RELATED: Byron leads final practice before 500 qualifying | Full Speedweeks schedule

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — When is “worse” actually “better?”

When a driver talks about the way his race car handles.

“Worse” in racer parlance means tougher to drive, and to the elite drivers in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, that’s a good thing. The stars of the sport would rather see races decided by the person behind the wheel, rather than the power under the hood.

Traditionally, Daytona International Speedway has been a handling track, but a repave in 2010 tipped the scale toward horsepower at the expense of chassis setup. Defending Daytona 500 champion Kurt Busch thinks the equation may change as a result of NASCAR’s elimination of the post-race ride-height requirement.

In other words, cars at the superspeedways of Daytona and Talladega no longer will have to meet a minimum height in post-race inspection, bringing those speedways in line with all other Cup tracks, where a ride-height rule was not in effect last year.

“The way the cars will be pinned to the ground, it’s the first time really that we’re looking at moving around nose weight and the balance of the car to adjust the handling,” Busch told the NASCAR Wire Service. “We haven’t done that really here in Daytona for eight years. They repaved it in (2010), so since then it has been no handling issues whatsoever.

“I’m really excited about this time around to hopefully see what the tire wear shows and how the balance of the car will shake out with the ride height rule.”

Goodyear is bringing the same tire combination the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series ran at Daytona last July, and the tire maker doesn’t expect any issues with the low-slung cars. But that doesn’t mean Goodyear reps won’t be looking with watchful eyes when cars come off the track.

Alex Bowman tested the 2018 package last year. On Feb. 18, he’ll compete in the Daytona 500 for the second time — and the first time as the successor to Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.

During the test, Bowman noticed a difference in the way the car drove, but he conceded that other teams might achieve different results with varying approaches to their chassis setups.

“I thought it made the cars drive worse,” Bowman said. “I was looser on entry, but it was kind of split. Obviously, not everybody tackled it the same way, and not everybody had the same setup in their cars. I think there were only six or seven cars here.

“Some of the guys thought their cars drove better, and the other half of everybody thought their cars drove worse. We’ll just kind of have to see. I think cars, just walking around the garage, are more aggressive coming back here than they were in that test by far.

“I think everybody is going to be a little looser on entry and exit when the spoiler is not up in the air, but we’ll just have to wait and see. I think there is definitely going to be guys that can go faster — but their cars are going to drive worse — and guys that can be aggressive, but their cars are going to be slower. It will be interesting to see how everybody compromises that.”

And it will be interesting to see if “worse” is indeed “better” when it comes to the action on the track in the Great American Race.

A look at the drivers with the top speeds over 10 consecutive laps during practice at Daytona International Speedway.

PRACTICE 5: RESULTS

Pos Car Driver From Lap To Lap Avg Speed
1 95 Kasey Kahne 1 10 190.841
2 1 Jamie McMurray 2 11 190.021

PRACTICE 4: RESULTS

Pos Car Driver From Lap To Lap Avg Speed
1 31 Ryan Newman 11 20 200.957
2 78 Martin Truex Jr. 8 17 200.551
3 19 Daniel Suarez 8 17 200.459
4 10 Aric Almirola 5 14 200.263
5 95 Kasey Kahne 3 12 200.230
6 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 10 19 200.197
7 4 Kevin Harvick 10 19 200.197
8 41 Kurt Busch 10 19 200.194
9 14 Clint Bowyer 10 19 200.179
10 18 Kyle Busch 3 12 200.109
11 2 Brad Keselowski 2 11 199.963
12 47 AJ Allmendinger 4 13 199.935
13 34 Michael McDowell 2 11 199.786
14 6 Trevor Bayne 1 10 199.269
15 9 Chase Elliott 7 16 198.643
16 48 Jimmie Johnson 7 16 198.623
17 88 Alex Bowman 11 20 198.515
18 24 William Byron # 6 15 198.467
19 42 Kyle Larson 7 16 198.400

PRACTICE 3: RESULTS

Pos Car Driver From Lap To Lap Avg Speed
1 11 Denny Hamlin 4 13 196.790
2 18 Kyle Busch 3 12 196.673
3 43 Darrell Wallace Jr. # 2 11 196.587
4 19 Daniel Suarez 1 10 196.369
5 7 Danica Patrick 2 11 196.156
6 38 David Ragan 1 10 195.809
7 51 Justin Marks(i) 12 21 195.541
8 41 Kurt Busch 1 10 193.201
9 88 Alex Bowman 4 13 190.909
10 42 Kyle Larson 16 25 188.955

PRACTICE 2: RESULTS

Pos Car Driver From Lap To Lap Avg Speed
1 22 Joey Logano 9 18 198.239
2 11 Denny Hamlin 12 21 198.191
3 21 Paul Menard 4 13 198.063
4 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 4 13 197.885
5 10 Aric Almirola 6 15 197.770
6 4 Kevin Harvick 4 13 197.714
7 38 David Ragan 6 15 197.650
8 12 Ryan Blaney 3 12 197.476
9 19 Daniel Suarez 1 10 195.224
10 13 Ty Dillon 7 16 195.188
11 62 * Brendan Gaughan 1 10 195.015
12 43 Darrell Wallace Jr. # 3 12 194.982
13 95 Kasey Kahne 6 15 194.973
14 24 William Byron # 3 12 192.706

PRACTICE 1: RESULTS

Pos Car Driver From Lap To Lap Avg Speed
1 24 William Byron # 2 11 191.456
2 47 AJ Allmendinger 4 13 188.740

Note: Car must run 10 consecutive laps on the track to be included in the above chart.
*Required to qualify on time
(i) Ineligible for driver points in this series
# Indicates driver is a rookie in this series

MORE: Patrick teams up with Premium for Daytona 500 | GoDaddy returns to Danica

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Dressed simply in blue jeans and a black polo shirt with a GoDaddy-green sponsor patch, Danica Patrick addressed the assembled NASCAR media Saturday morning — one of the last times she will do so as a professional race car driver.

The last time she formally took questions at the November season-finale at Miami, she was at times visibly emotional about this important decision in her career. On Saturday, however, Patrick, 35, was businesslike and frank in addressing her final NASCAR start.

“There was so much loaded emotion in that weekend that to me, that had a lot of a feel for kind of the end on some level, of racing in the (Monster Energy NASCAR) Cup Series,” Patrick said.

“I say I’ll be fine and I’m excited and I mean like, OK, everybody in the room, imagine when you leave here on Sunday, you don’t have anything to do really for a couple of months. Seems pretty exciting, doesn’t it? Right? That’s how I feel.

RELATED: Danica Patrick to step away from full-time racing

“But I think when next Sunday comes, I’m sure I’ll be a lot more retrospective or introspective and emotional about the finality of it and just have a little bit more perspective. But right now, I’m fine. I’m good. I’m excited about it all. I made the decision last year that this is what I was good with. Otherwise, I wouldn’t have been doing it.”

Patrick will make her final NASCAR start driving the No. 7 GoDaddy Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 for Premium Motorsports in next week’s Daytona 500 (Feb. 18, 2:30 p.m. ET, FOX). The deal with the team was announced Jan. 22 — shortly after her former, longtime sponsor GoDaddy had announced it would support Patrick in her Daytona farewell.

The news that Patrick would stop racing after such a celebrated and successful career was emotional for her, stunning to her fans and important in the sport.

Patrick is the answer to a multitude of historical racing statistics.

She is the first woman to lead the Indianapolis 500 — 19 laps en route to a fourth-place finish in her 2005 debut — and upped that with the highest ever finish for a woman — third place in 2009.

The year before, she earned huge headlines and hero status to girls around the globe with a victory in the 2008 IndyCar Series race at Motegi, Japan.

She will make her final racing start in May, in this year’s Indy 500 but first, there is a lot of expectation for her last NASCAR start at Daytona Beach.

Patrick started the 2013 Daytona 500 from the pole position — the first woman in history to do that — and properly punctuated the milestone with an eighth-place finish, also the best for a woman in this race.

All the historic moments Patrick has earned have encouraged other young women and girls to consider auto racing as a career option. But just as she has always maintained, providing inspiration is a positive offshoot, but still isn’t and never was her primary motivation. She just loves to race, to contend and to win.

In nearly every press conference she participates in, there are questions about how she has inspired others and what advice she may give a young woman who wishes to race.

“I think that if there is one difference, I feel it is that you have to get a team behind you, to believe in you and maybe it’s a little harder because women have not proved themselves as much as men, but every driver has to prove themselves to their team,” Patrick said.

“There is still that responsibility, and that challenge is still at hand for every single driver to find a group that believes in them and gives them what they need and puts them in the right scenario. Perhaps it’s a little bit harder for me, just based on history, but I’ve had great opportunities as a driver. Sometimes I think it’s been better than others, but that could probably be said for every single driver out there.”

She has lived and prevailed in this ultimate racing dichotomy.

RELATED: Danica Patrick through the years

Should women feel extra pressure to succeed?

“Only if they feel like they do; I mean, I really believe that,” Patrick said. “I’ve never felt like that. I don’t. My own banner is bigger than any other banner for what I want to accomplish for myself and then the trickle-down effect is what it is. But, no one expects more than me.”

That expectation here at Daytona is high and qualified.

She ran 31st in Saturday’s opening practice — turning eight laps. She briefly led the second session of the day before settling in at 16th. The focus at this time is getting her car faster, earning a decent starting position in Sunday’s pole qualifying and Thursday’s Duel 150-mile qualifying races and then preparing for the sport’s greatest race — and her last.

“I’ve had a lot of time to mentally transition, and that transition started last year,” Patrick said. “So, I’m good. I’m ready. But, we just have to keep my dad away from me, to be honest. He’s always the emotional one that’s going to be like all choked-up and tearing with sunglasses and crunching on his water bottle and he’s going to be like, ‘Just have fun out there!’

“And, I’m going to be like, ‘Gosh keep it together, because I have to.’ So, I’m sure my whole family will, but I know my dad.”

And when it’s all done next Sunday afternoon?

“Well, I really hope that I finish and that I’m hopefully in contention,” Patrick said. “That’s really my hope for the Daytona 500.”

Daytona 500 qualifying on Sunday, Feb. 11 (12:15 p.m. ET on FOX) will set the front row for the “Great American Race” on Sunday, Feb. 18 (2:30 p.m. ET on FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Here is a look at the order cars will go out for their qualifying runs during the single-car/two-round session. The top 12 in Round 1 will advance to the final round.

# Car Driver Team
1 23 Gray Gaulding Toyota
2 72 Corey LaJoie Schluter Systems Chevrolet
3 66 * Mark Thompson Phoenix Air Racing Ford
4 47 AJ Allmendinger Kroger ClickList Chevrolet
5 37 Chris Buescher Kleenex Chevrolet
6 92 * David Gilliland(i) Black’s Tire Service/Carquest Auto Parts Ford
7 78 Martin Truex Jr. Bass Pro Shops/5-hour Energy Toyota
8 31 Ryan Newman Bass Pro Shops/Cabela’s Chevrolet
9 41 Kurt Busch Haas Automation/Monster Energy Ford
10 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s for Pros Chevrolet
11 9 Chase Elliott NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet
12 42 Kyle Larson Credit One Bank Chevrolet
13 88 Alex Bowman Nationwide Chevrolet
14 95 Kasey Kahne Procore Chevrolet
15 43 Darrell Wallace Jr. # Click n’ Close Chevrolet
16 00 Jeffrey Earnhardt VRX Simulators Chevrolet
17 96 * DJ Kennington LORDCO/Castrol Toyota
18 62 * Brendan Gaughan Beard Oil Distributing/South Point Hotel & Casino Chevrolet
19 32 Matt DiBenedetto The Hurricane Heist Ford
20 1 Jamie McMurray McDonald’s/Cessna Chevrolet
21 3 Austin Dillon DOW Chevrolet
22 13 Ty Dillon GEICO Chevrolet
23 7 Danica Patrick GoDaddy Chevrolet
24 51 Justin Marks(i) HARRY’S Chevrolet
25 14 Clint Bowyer Rush Truck Centers Ford
26 4 Kevin Harvick Jimmy John’s Ford
27 10 Aric Almirola Smithfield Ford
28 2 Brad Keselowski Discount Tire Ford
29 34 Michael McDowell Love’s Travel Stops Ford
30 20 Erik Jones DeWalt Toyota
31 18 Kyle Busch M&M’s Toyota
32 12 Ryan Blaney Menards/Peak Ford
33 19 Daniel Suarez ARRIS Toyota
34 6 Trevor Bayne AdvoCare Ford
35 21 Paul Menard Omnicraft Auto Parts/Quick Lane Tire & Auto Center Ford
36 38 David Ragan Speedco Ford
37 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Express Toyota
38 22 Joey Logano Shell Pennzoil Ford
39 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Fastenal Ford
40 24 William Byron # AXALTA Chevrolet

* Required to qualify on time
(i) Ineligible for driver points in this series
# Indicates driver is a rookie

RELATED: Practice 2 results | Best 10-lap averages

Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series rookie William Byron led the final practice round before Daytona 500 qualifying Saturday, circling Daytona International Speedway at 201.681 mph in the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.

Byron earned the top spot despite a couple of close calls with other drivers when the No. 24 drifted up the track in the draft.

“Yeah, that was one of those ‘Oh, shoot!’ moments, but that was a lot of fun,” Byron said. “That was the best chance for me to really learn what I needed to do in the draft.” 

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. was second-fastest in practice, logging a speed of 201.649 mph in the No. 17 Roush Fenway Racing Ford.

Joey Logano was third in the No. 22 Team Penske Ford at 201.608 mph, while Denny Hamlin finished fourth in the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota at 201.464 mph.

David Ragan rounded out the top five in the No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford.

NASCAR told teams to make a gear change for Saturday’s final practice, though speeds still increased from the initial practice, where Kyle Busch had the fastest car at 199.743 mph.

The practice was the final one before Daytona 500 qualifying Sunday at 12:15 p.m. ET (FOX).

RESULTS: Practice 1

Kyle Busch led all drivers in Saturday’s opening Daytona 500 practice for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series at Daytona International Speedway, circling the track at 199.743 mph in the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

Busch led all four JGR drivers, who all finished in the top five: Denny Hamlin was second-fastest in the No. 11 Toyota at 199.623 mph, Daniel Suarez was third in the No. 19 Toyota at 199.610 and Erik Jones was fourth in the No. 20 Toyota at 199.517 mph.

Austin Dillon was fifth-fastest in the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet at 197.278 mph.

The red flag came out for 16 minutes of the 50-minute practice session as NASCAR officials worked to clean fluid on the track.

 

RELATED: Wallace among 10 Daytona 500 dark horses

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – New motor coach. Friends and family tickets to the Daytona 500. Lively media mixer at local go-kart track. Motivational call from Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Check, check, check and CHECK. Darrell Wallace Jr. figures he’s pretty set for his debut driving Richard Petty’s No. 43 Click n’ Close Chevrolet in NASCAR’s biggest race, the Feb. 18 Daytona 500 at Daytona International Speedway (FOX, 2:30 p.m.).

MORE: Win a garage makeover from Bubba, The King

The popular driver known by friends and fans simply as “Bubba” showed up to participate in the “NASCAR Road To Daytona 500 Tour” in Orlando fresh off an unexpected cell phone call from the sport’s longtime Most Popular Driver, the recently retired Dale Earnhardt Jr.

“Twenty minutes before we walked in the door, Dale Junior called me and he said, ‘You have the potential of doing things outside of the box, which means outside the sport, that a lot of people don’t have,'” Wallace said.

“I’m excited to see what those things are. As long as I keep hitting every note right, we’ll see what happens. But it was encouraging to hear from him.”

Earnhardt’s sentiment is shared by many. Wallace, 24, is the first African-American full-time competitor in NASCAR’s premier Monster Energy Cup Series since Wendell Scott in 1971.

It’s a distinction that Wallace recognizes and embraces. However, it doesn’t affect his already highly motivated will to win.

“It means a lot to be here,” Wallace acknowledged to reporters.

“To be here in front of you guys talking today about my first full-time rookie season, going for the Daytona 500 is all surreal. To look back where I was say six years ago in the Truck Series, just thinking ‘maybe one day I’ll get there.’

“Well, I’m here and it’s fun to talk about and be a part of and let it all sink in. To enjoy the moment.”

There have already been plenty of big moments. But Wallace knows that first Cup win, that first Cup pole position – qualifying for the Daytona 500 pole position is Sunday – wouldn’t just be a historic moment for the sport, it would be a life-changing moment for himself.

Wallace has always been a bright star shining in the stock car world.

He won a pair of pole positions and collected three top-10 finishes in four starts as an 18-year old in the NASCAR Xfinity Series in 2012.

He won six times in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series including a dramatic victory in his only 2017 truck start at Michigan.

After driving full time in the Xfinity Series from 2015-16, Wallace’s team disbanded in early 2017 after the 12th race of the season leaving one of the sport’s great talents looking for his next opportunity.

When Petty’s driver Aric Almirola was sidelined with an injury last summer, Wallace got “the call” from the team to make a handful of starts.

He improved in each of his four starts in the Richard Petty Motorsport’s car, culminating with an 11th place at Kentucky Speedway. He finished a highly respectable 15th in a summer start here at Daytona.

“That by far exceeded my expectations and I think we can build off that, granted this is totally different, but the attitude we have and the confidence we have, definitely built up from Kentucky is going carry us through the season,” Wallace said. “We kind of set our mark where we want to be.

“I have so much faith in my guys,” Wallace continued. “It’s a new team for me but we worked together for my debut for my first four races in the 43 car. Same group of guys and the same amount of energy coming from them if not more.

“They are all excited I think we’ll have a really fast Camaro.”

Listening to Wallace speak and seeing the genuine excitement in his smile, it’s easy to see the importance of this career move to him. He is taking in all the trappings of finally having achieved the job he wants.

It’s actually a lesson in living in the moment – albeit with an eye on a hugely promising future.

“There’s still a lot [going on] in between now and next Sunday and I’ve got to get through from practice to qualifying to the Duels,” Wallace said. “I’ve got my mind full of a lot of things. I’m pretty sure next Sunday morning when I wake up and doing those couple appearances and time starting clocking down and it’s go time, I’m sure the nerves will start flowing.

“Right now, just good to get back to the race track. It’s been since September for me.

“It hasn’t hit me yet,” Wallace conceded with a smile.

“I think about it constantly and think about how the race will shake out watching past races. Watching what guys did and how aggressive they were, the biggest thing for me is paying attention to little details like that.

“It doesn’t matter how much you practice. You could have a week of practice and be taken out on Lap 1 and be done. The alliances you build up on the track during practice, they’ll go out the window because by the end of it, there’s only one trophy,” said Wallace. “If two guys work together, only one’s getting it. I’ll leave that guy hanging to get it, just to get that trophy.”

“NASCAR’s back. It’s a new season, 2018. A lot of exciting things happening for the sport.”

RELATED: Clash practice results | Scenes from Daytona | Team rosters

Ryan Blaney topped the leaderboard in Daytona International Speedway’s opening weekend practice for The Clash on Saturday, rounding the track at 199.601 mph in the No. 12 Team Penske Ford.

Three more Fords recorded top speeds in the practice, with Joey Logano clocking in at 199.543 mph in the No. 22 Team Penske Ford, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. logging a lap in 199.508 mph in the No. 17 Roush Fenway Racing Ford, and Brad Keselowski recording a speed of 199.490 mph in the No. 2 Team Penske Ford.

Kyle Larson rounded out the top five in the No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet at 199.468 mph.

The qualifying draw takes place Saturday evening, and competitors for The Clash will be back on the track for the 75-lap, 187.5-mile race Sunday at 3 p.m. ET (FS1).

NASCAR fans, get ready.

The 2018 season update for NASCAR Heat 2 is now available, 704 Games has announced.

From new drivers and paint schemes to the new Chevrolet Camaro, this update has it all. The biggest addition, however?

Let’s just say — it’s time to hit the road.

A major feature of the 2018 NASCAR Playoffs, players will be able to take their favorite driver for a spin on Charlotte Motor Speedway’s newly-unveiled road course.

Part road course, part oval — and with nearly 20 turns — the road course at Charlotte creates racing like never seen before. Compete on this one-of-a-kind track before anyone else in the NASCAR Heat 2 2018 Season Update.

The update, which focuses on the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, will also include updated teams and rosters and the updated 2018 season schedule.

After purchasing the 2018 Season Update, players will choose between the 2017 and 2018 Season. In the 2018 Season, players will be able to choose between Quick Race, Championship, Split Screen, and Career modes. The new 2018 paint schemes and road course cannot be used online; however, you can customize the new 2018 Chevrolet Camaro in the 2018 car customization area.

In the 2018 Career mode, you’ll start fresh in the 2017 versions of the Camping World Truck Series and NASCAR Xfinity Series. When you hit the Monster Energy Series, you’ll have the 2018 paint schemes, schedule, and more. 2017 Career mode progress will remain untouched.

The 2018 Season Update is available now for $9.99 on the PlayStation Store, Xbox Marketplace, and Steam.

2018 MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES ROSTER

  • Jamie McMurray, Cessna
  • Brad Keselowski, Discount Tire & Miller Lite (for players ages 21 and up) or BRAD K
  • Austin Dillon, DOW
  • Chase Cabre, Max Siegel Inc.
  • Kevin Harvick, Jimmy Johns
  • Trevor Bayne, AdvoCare
  • Chase Elliott, NAPA Auto Parts
  • Aric Almirola, Smithfield
  • Denny Hamlin, FedEx Express
  • Ryan Blaney, Menards
  • Ty Dillon, Geico
  • Clint Bowyer, Haas Automation
  • Ricky Stenhouse, Jr, Fastenal
  • Kyle Busch, M&M’s
  • Daniel Suarez, Arris
  • Erik Jones, DeWalt
  • Paul Menard, Menards
  • Joey Logano, Shell/Pennzoil
  • William Byron, Axalta
  • Ryan Newman, Caterpillar
  • Matt DiBendetto, Can-Am
  • Michael McDowell, Love’s
  • Chris Buescher, Kleenex
  • Hailie Deegan, Monster Energy
  • David Ragan, Shriners Hospital
  • Kurt Busch, Haas Automation/Monster Energy
  • Kyle Larson, Credit One
  • Darrell Wallace Jr, Click ‘n Close
  • Todd Gilliland, Pedigree
  • AJ Allmendinger, Kroger Click List
  • Jimmie Johnson, Lowe’s
  • Harrison Burton, DEX Imaging
  • Ty Majeski, Roush Fenway Racing
  • Brendan Gaughan, Beard Oil Distributing
  • Carl Long, CrashClaimsRUs
  • Cole Whitt, RTIC Coolers
  • Martin Truex Jr, Bass Pro Shops/5 Hour Energy
  • Alex Bowman, Nationwide Insurance
  • Kasey Kahne, Procore
  • DJ Kennington, LORDCO/Castrol

RELATED: Overview of 2018 rules updates

NASCAR announced this offseason that it will standardize at-track team rosters across all three national series in 2018, providing a structure for the number of personnel working on each vehicle during the course of a race weekend.

On Saturday, official team rosters for Sunday’s Advance Auto Parts Clash (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) were unveiled.

Simply click the “print” icon above, next to the headline and social media icons, to get the full list.