CHARLOTTE, NC – As NASCAR prepares to honor its Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion this weekend in Las Vegas and teams finalize their 2018 lineups, FOX Sports has begun stacking its broadcaster deck for 2018.

New to the FOX NASCAR arsenal next year, the network’s 18th consecutive season broadcasting NASCAR races, is veteran driver Regan Smith, who will serve as a pit reporter for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR XFINITY Series, in addition to continuing his role as a NASCAR Race Hub analyst. He took a broadcasting test drive with his race analyst debut last June at Iowa Speedway for FS1’s presentation of the NASCAR XFINITY Series race.

“When I had the opportunity to be in the FOX Sports booth at Iowa earlier in the year, the driver in me was really intrigued by the TV side of the sport,” Smith said. “So, my biggest goal in joining pit road is to be able to give viewers something they didn’t know before or to better help them understand something going on with the driver or the car. Since I am still competing, I can put into perspective what a driver is feeling at a particular moment.”

Smith, winner of the prestigious Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway in 2011 and 2008 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Rookie of the Year, has regularly appeared as a driver analyst on FS1’s NASCAR Race Hub since 2015.

“We’ve enjoyed and appreciated Regan’s insight in the NASCAR Race Hub studio but really had our eyes opened to his broadcasting potential at Iowa last summer,” said Steve Craddock, FOX Sports SVP of NASCAR Production. “A fan and peer favorite, he has proven himself seamless in translating his years of driving experience to the viewers at home.”

MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES
For its broadcast of the first half of the 2018 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series season, FOX NASCAR is armed with seven championships’ worth of analysis and insight. For the third year, Hall of Famer and three-time champ Darrell Waltrip pairs with four-time champion Jeff Gordon in the booth for analysis, with veteran play-by-play announcer Mike Joy, covering his 43rd Daytona 500 in February, and former Daytona 500-winning crew chief Larry McReynolds with race analysis on the strength of his 43 years in the sport.

Delivering stories and updates from pit road are pit reporters Jamie Little, Vince Welch, Matt Yocum and Smith. Chris Myers hosts FOX NASCAR Sunday and the network’s race coverage from the famed Hollywood Hotel alongside Michael Waltrip, Darrell Waltrip and Gordon. FOX broadcasts 10 of FOX Sports’ 16 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series races, while FS1 telecasts the remaining six.

NASCAR CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES
For the 16th consecutive year, FS1 offers exclusive coverage of the entire NASCAR Camping World Truck Series season. Welch calls play-by-play with veteran analysts Phil Parsons and Michael Waltrip. Hermie Sadler, Kaitlyn Vincie and Alan Cavanna deliver pit reports.

NASCAR XFINITY SERIES & “Drivers Only” Broadcast
The NASCAR XFINITY Series returns to FOX Sports for the fourth consecutive season in 2018, with Adam Alexander once again handling full-time play-by-play duties alongside analyst Michael Waltrip and a rotation of prominent Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series drivers to be announced in the near future. Little, Yocum and Smith cover pit road.

Additionally, FOX Sports brings back its “Drivers Only” NASCAR XFINITY Series broadcast in 2018, at a track to be announced in the near future, after a wildly successful and critically acclaimed debut in June 2017 at Pocono Raceway. Throughout the 2017 NXS season, FOX Sports featured five Cup Series drivers in the booth, offering fans a variety of knowledgeable and current viewpoints.

NASCAR RACEDAY
NASCAR RaceDay, FS1’s popular pre-race show, continues to deliver the excitement behind-the-scenes and up-to-the-minute reports from the garage prior to the start of each Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race. John Roberts and Myers share hosting duties, while the entire FOX NASCAR on-air team joins analysts Kenny Wallace, Jeff Hammond, Andy Petree and reporters Cavanna and Vincie.

In addition, FOX Sports offers a dedicated 30-minute pre-race show immediately prior to each NASCAR XFINITY Series and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race. Shannon Spake returns to host NASCAR RaceDay-XFINITY with McReynolds and Wallace providing analysis. Roberts has the honors for NCWTS Setup leading into all Truck Series races with insight from two-time series champion Todd Bodine.

NASCAR RACE HUB
NASCAR Race Hub, FS1’s daily news and update program, continues live at 6:00 p.m. ET every Monday through Thursday. Alexander and Spake co-host the hour-long program with analysts McReynolds, Hammond and Andy Petree, who are joined by a rotating team of active drivers and crew chiefs. The duo of Cavanna and Vincie are back with daily reports from NASCAR race shops, while Roberts hosts most Thursdays.

NASCAR Race Hub Weekend Edition, hosted by Roberts, is a Friday and Saturday fixture on FS1, delivering at-track updates and news as it breaks throughout the course of the race weekend.

RELATED: Behind the scenes with Earnhardt in Vegas

LAS VEGAS – Dale Earnhardt Jr. provided an emphatic “no” on Tuesday when asked about a possible appearance on the upcoming season of the ABC television program “Dancing with the Stars.” 

“That’s never going to happen,” Earnhardt said during a media session prior to the Appreci88ion charity event presented by Nationwide and held inside The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas.

MORE: Junior’s GIF-tastic response to ‘Dancing’ rumor

“I promise you,” Earnhardt said. “There’s nothing in this world that would be able to get me out on the dance floor.”

NASCAR’s 14-time Most Popular Driver was mentioned as a leading candidate for the upcoming season, along with former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick, in what is being billed as an all-athlete edition of the popular show. Hollywoodlife.com first reported that Earnhardt and Kaepernick were the top choices of the show’s producers.

RELATED: Earnhardt, wife Amy, establish fund for Nationwide Children’s Hospital

Earnhardt won 26 times in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series but retired as a full-time competitor in the series at the conclusion of the 2017 season. He is co-owner of JR Motorsports, which fields entries in the NASCAR XFINITY Series, and will do work in the broadcast booth next season for NASCAR television partner NBC.

But dancing? Not Earnhardt. Not even for a healthy monetary donation to the Nationwide Children’s Hospital, which was the recipient of Tuesday night’s charity event.

“I would match it just to stay off the dance floor,” Earnhardt explained.

“I’d be willing to do a lot of things. That’s not one of them, I can promise you.”

RELATED: Behind the scenes with Dale Jr. in Las Vegas

LAS VEGAS – Former teammates and crew chiefs, officials and close friends, competitors, the newest series champion and even retired NBA Hall of Famer Charles Barkley came out to honor Dale Earnhardt Jr. here Tuesday evening as part of a charity event on the opening day of NASCAR’s Champion’s Week.

Earnhardt, who retired from full-time competition in NASCAR at the end of the 2017 season, wrapped up his Appreci88ion tour effort by taking part in an intimate, two-hour program with fans. The event was hosted by Nationwide, one of Earnhardt’s longtime sponsors in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series.

The event, combined with other fundraising endeavors throughout the ’17 season, resulted in a donation of $888,000 to the Dale and Amy Earnhardt Fund for the Nationwide Children’s Hospital.

MORE: Dale and Amy set up fundClick here to donate now

Jimmie Johnson, Earnhardt’s teammate at Hendrick Motorsports for the past decade, was the evening’s first guest and the seven-time series champion admitted that his two biggest accomplishments relating to Earnhardt might have been getting his teammate into cycling and onto Twitter.

“I got this guy in spandex; I’ve got him on social media,” Johnson joked shortly after taking the stage.

RELATED: Johnson’s passion for fitness inspires Hendrick teammates

Earnhardt joined the social media platform Twitter shortly after winning the 2014 Daytona 500. He currently has more than 2.3 million followers, according to the site.

Former NASCAR President Mike Helton was on hand to recount one post-race “discussion” with Earnhardt and crew chief Tony Eury Sr. after race officiating had been called into question.

Helton’s advice as the pair tried to talk their way out of any repercussions?

“Ya’ll two just need to shut up and listen,” Helton said.

Martin Truex Jr., winner of the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series championship and a former teammate at Dale Earnhardt Inc. was on hand, as were members of the Dirty Mo Posse, a group of close friends that formed during the early years of Earnhardt’s Cup career.

MORE: Truex Jr. on Dale Jr.: ‘I wouldn’t be here today without him’

Like Earnhardt, Brandon Bernstein was the son of a famous driver — his father Kenny Bernstein was a championship-winning drag racer — and both sons shared Budweiser as a primary sponsor during their careers.

Former crew chiefs Tony Eury Sr. and Tony Eury Jr. were on hand, leading Earnhardt to quip: “Damn, they’re supposed to be in Pensacola at the Snowball Derby!”

Eury Sr. is Earnhardt’s uncle, Eury Jr. his cousin. Each won races while atop the pit box for Earnhardt.

RELATED: Recap all of Junior’s wins | Dale Jr. through the years

Dale Jarrett, the 2014 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee and 1999 series champion, has had a long friendship with Earnhardt, the two becoming close following the death of Earnhardt’s father in 2001.

“When I lost my dad,” Earnhardt said, “Dale came to my rescue. I don’t know how you knew.”

Earnhardt recalled returning to Daytona in July of ’01 and winning the race, then the many media obligations that followed. When he arrived back at his motorcoach to have a drink with some close friends, Jarrett had also hung around rather than return home.

“I remember you said you wouldn’t miss it for the world,’ Earnhardt said.

His father, Jarrett said, “did a lot for me early in my career.”

And when Jarrett won the championship while driving for Robert Yates, Earnhardt supplied a plane to transport team members to the awards dinner in New York.

“I kept asking him for the bill; my accountant wanted the bill so we could pay it and include it in our taxes for that year,” Jarrett said. “They had rented us the plane, carried 34 or 35 people to New York and then back home.

“Finally, around Dec. 27, I got the bill. I opened the envelope and on the bill he had written ‘Congratulations on your championship. No charge.'”

Three-time series champion Tony Stewart recalled a beating, banging XFINITY Series race with Earnhardt Jr. at Pikes Peak that resulted in the two drivers getting called to the NASCAR hauler afterward. “That might have been my first trip to the hauler,” Stewart said.

Earnhardt and Barkley met in 2014 and have been friends ever since.

RELATED: Charles Barkley, Dale Jr. take to go-karts

Barkley’s advice for the retired driver?

“You’ve got to find something to do,” he said. “I play golf and I fish pretty much every day.”

Turning serious, Barkley told Earnhardt: “I admire you; I respect you for what you’ve accomplished as a driver.”

The check presentation, made by Nationwide’s Jim McCoy, wrapped up the program.

The Dale and Amy Earnhardt Fund “is really the first charitable work I’ve done with Amy,” Earnhardt said. “And that means the world to me.”

MORE: Click here to donate now

RELATED: Moore passes away at age 92 | Moore through the years

Bud Moore passed away and I guess it’s appropriate, in a way, that most of the industry is in Las Vegas preparing to celebrate a championship.

Moore won a few of those during his career in NASCAR. He was car owner and crew chief for Joe Weatherly when Weatherly won back-to-back championships in 1962 and ’63. He was crew chief for Buck Baker when Baker won what’s now called the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series title in ’57, too.

Some of the very best racers in NASCAR worked with or learned from Moore. Fellow Hall of Fame members Bobby Allison and Dale Earnhardt and Cale Yarborough. Darrell Waltrip and Benny Parsons. HOF nominees Buddy Baker and Ricky Rudd, too.

Those folks collected most of Moore’s 63 wins as a car owner, but drivers such as Geoffrey Bodine and Morgan Shepherd, Darel Dieringer and Billy Wade also put Moore’s cars in the winner’s circle.

RELATED: Bud Moore’s stats as an owner

Moore was a native of Spartanburg, South Carolina, and he was 92, and he will and should be remembered much more for his service to his country than his service to stock car racing.

He was just a teenager when he joined the military and the next thing you know he’s aboard a ship off the coast of France and headed into one of the bloodiest battles of World War II. The D-Day Invasion, Utah Beach, Normandy, France.

More than 9,000 Allied soldiers were killed or wounded. Moore survived, and continued onward with the Third Army under the leadership of Gen. George Patton. Moore received five Purple Hearts and two Bronze Stars, and they say he and his jeep driver even captured an entire regiment of enemy soldiers at one point.

“If you went through what we went through … when they celebrated the 50th year of D-Day in 1994, Union Oil offered to send me and my wife back over there for the celebration,” Moore said in 2011 when he was inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

“I wouldn’t go because I didn’t want to be reminded of what had happened. I left a lot of friends over there.”

Bud Moore was a hero. One of the last of his kind, one of the last of his generation.

RELATED: NASCAR community remembers Hall of Famer

His NASCAR racing career stretched from the early 1960s through 2000. His cars made 958 starts and his drivers scored nearly 300 top-five finishes. There were 43 poles along the way.

Among the 63 victories were wins in the legendary Daytona 500 and Southern 500.

Moore ran Ford entries for much of his career, although the early success in NASCAR came with Pontiac then Mercury. He also enjoyed success outside of NASCAR.

“We ran the Trans-Am series with the Mercury Cougar in ’67; the Cyclone with Tiny Lund in ’67 and ’68,” Moore recalled. “We won the championship for Ford in the Trans-Am series in 1970.

“We were the first ones to run the small block motor; did all the experimental work on it. As things went on, we did a lot for Ford and they did a lot for us too. I’m proud to have been associated with them for as long as we were. It was great to know you had a company stand behind you like that.”

• Bud Moore stories are plentiful. I’ll leave you with this one.

“We were driving back to the hotel in rental cars one year at Riverside (California), and Bud Moore and his group were in another car,” championship-winning crew chief and Hall of Fame member Dale Inman once told me.

“We started banging on each other’s cars and Bud yells, ‘When we get to the motel, we’re gonna whip your ass!'”

Those sorts of things took place back in the day, mostly out of fun and more a way to break the monotony of being on the road nearly every week than an actual threat of physical harm.

When the two groups arrived at the hotel, Moore jumped out of his car. But there’s one problem. His crew decides to stay inside the car.

“Bud jumps out and his crew locks their car doors,” Inman recalled. “So we get out and jump on him, toss him around. Just having fun with him.

“And his crew is in the car laughing their heads off.”

RELATED: Champion’s Week schedule | Full coverage

LAS VEGAS – Matthew, a sixth-grader, took a long look at the hero card.

Then he glanced up at Martin Truex Jr.’s face and made the connection.

“Wow!” exclaimed Matthew, a pediatric patient at Sunrise Children’s Hospital, as he recognized the 2017 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion.

Truex smiled back, happy to provide a moment of pleasure to a stricken child whose every step is accompanied by an IV machine.

A knot of reporters and photographers followed Truex on his visit to the hospital, but the champion’s appearance — during a week set aside to celebrate his accomplishments on the track, culminating in his first series title — had a much deeper meaning to the veteran driver than a mere photo opportunity.

MORE: Pollex discusses championship | Truex arrives for Champion’s Week

Truex’s girlfriend, Sherry Pollex, has been battling ovarian cancer. And even before Pollex was diagnosed in 2014, she and Truex had been active in children’s causes through the Martin Truex Jr. Foundation. Their “Catwalk for a Cause” fashion show has raised more than $550,000 in the fight against childhood and ovarian cancer.

“It’s definitely an honor to do it,” Truex said of the visit. “For them to ask us to come here, and for NASCAR to schedule it and put it all together … it’s such a grounding process when you go in there. It’s a constant reminder, when you see those kids, of just how lucky we are to do what we do, and not only that, to wake up and be healthy every day.

“It’s just so unfair to see them, and it breaks my heart to see how much pain they’re in and how tired they are. It’s a tough thing to figure out how to talk to them, what to say and try to just maybe cheer them up a little. It’s definitely humbling to come here and maybe help just a little bit.”

In the children’s playroom, Truex sat at a small table with four children. In front of them at the center of the table were two Pinewood Derby-style wooden cars decorated by the patients. One car bore the markings “MTJ 78.” The other read simply “Champion.”

Truex signed large hero cards and gave them to the children. Before he left the playroom, Truex and several of the children raced the wooden cars on a long, inclined track.

Through his frequent visits to the Levine Children’s Hospital in Charlotte, North Carolina, Truex has interacted with many pediatric patients, but the appearances are never routine. Pollex’s battle against cancer makes them even more poignant.

“That’s why we do it at home,” Truex said. “We’re going to Levine’s in a few weeks to give out Christmas presents, to do the same thing — to try to shed a little light and a little happiness for them. I can’t imagine what they’re going through and how they must think and feel.

“It’s just a reminder of how lucky we are. That’s the biggest thing, I think.”

Visits like the “Giving Tuesday” trip to the Sunrise Children’s Hospital are emblematic of the way Truex hopes to represent the sport as its champion.

RELATED: NASCAR Foundation takes part in #GivingTuesday

“I love NASCAR. I love racing,” Truex said. “That’s what I grew up with as a childhood dream of mine. So I’m going to do the best job I can and try to represent the sport well. There are a lot of great champions who have come before me, and hopefully I’ll be able to hold up my end of the deal.

“I’ll try my best. I’m probably a little different than most have been, I would say, but hopefully I’ll bring something to the table that will help the sport.”

If you were to ask the children at Sunrise Hospital, he already has.

SHOP: 2018 LVMS Races
RELATED: Full scheduleMore info on Champion’s Week

The NASCAR world descends upon Las Vegas for its annual Champion’s Week. The 2017 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Champion Martin Truex Jr. will be celebrated on Thursday evening during the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Awards. Before that, there is an Appreci88ion event with Dale Jr., the Myers Brothers Awards, Victory Lap where drivers do burnouts in the streets of Las Vegas and NASCAR After The Lap, which will include a live episode of the “Glass Case of Emotion” podcast with Ryan Blaney, Kim Coon and Chuck Bush. Keep up with all that happenings during Champion’s Week here.

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Kyle Larson named Mobil 1 Driver of the Year
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Bruton Smith receives Buddy Shuman Award
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FOX Sports, NBC Sports honored with 2017 NASCAR Marketing Achievement Award
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RELATED: Career stats for Kyle Larson

LAS VEGAS – Kyle Larson wasted no time making NASCAR’s Champion’s Week in Las Vegas a cause to celebrate Tuesday afternoon with his Chip Ganassi Racing team formally introducing Credit One Bank as a primary sponsor for the No. 42 Chevrolet in 2018.

The bank, which is also the Official Credit Card of NASCAR, will be the team’s largest sponsor and most prevalent logo on the car for multiple races. Exact details of the agreement weren’t disclosed. It will begin its multi-year association with the 2018 Daytona 500.

“It’s great that Credit One Bank will be expanding their partnership with our team next season,” said Larson, a four-time 2017 race winner and playoff driver. “It’s been cool to see their excitement and interest in our team and NASCAR grow throughout this year. We’ve had some exciting races with them on board and hopefully there’s more to come next year.”

For the past four seasons, Target had been Larson’s primary sponsor, but the retail company decided to move to other interests after the 2017 season.

“Our sales people at the shop with our team were never worried,” Larson told NASCAR.com. “They felt confident in the relationship they had with Credit One, and for Credit One to step up shows how much they appreciate our team and I know how much we appreciate them.”

Credit One will also appear as an “associate sponsor” on the No. 1 Chevrolet of Larson’s teammate Jamie McMurray next season, the same car its brand debuted with in 2016. 

The partnership between Larson and Credit One comes just weeks after Larson, 25, was named to the Forbes 30 Under 30 in Sports 2018 List. He had a breakout year in NASCAR’s premier ranks scoring an impressive eight runner-up finishes in addition to his four victories – two of the second-place showings came with Credit One on the hood.

RELATED: Larson makes prestigious Forbes list

“Credit One Bank is thrilled to continue our partnership with Chip Ganassi Racing and the No. 42 team and Kyle Larson by becoming the leading team sponsor,” said Laura Faulkner, Vice President of Marketing Communications for Credit One.

The bank’s increased sponsorship of Larson caps a significant year in sports for the company, which is also a sponsor of the NHL’s expansion Vegas Golden Knights team located near a brand-new 154,000-square foot corporate headquarters in Las Vegas and opening in December.

RELATED: Full Champion’s Week schedule | Champion’s Week events, more

STAMFORD, Conn. – November 28, 2017 – NBCSN commemorates the conclusion of the 2017 NASCAR Season, with complete coverage of the 2017 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Awards, this Thursday, November 30 at 9 p.m. ET. A special two-hour edition of NASCAR America kicks off the evening at 7 p.m. ET, with on-site red carpet coverage from the Wynn Las Vegas, in Las Vegas.

NASCAR on NBC’s Krista Voda (@KristaVoda) and Rutledge Wood (@RutledgeWood) host Thursday evening’s award ceremony honoring 2017 Monster Energy Series Champion, and driver of the No. 78 Furniture Row Racing Toyota, Martin Truex Jr. Coverage will include a special tribute to Dale Earnhardt Jr., as NASCAR celebrates the final season for motorsport’s most iconic driver of his era. In addition, the show will feature the announcement of the National Motorsports Press Association’s Most Popular Driver award, won by Earnhardt Jr. for the past 14 years.

Carolyn Manno (@carolynmanno) will anchor Thursday’s red-carpet edition of NASCAR America. Manno will be joined on set by NASCAR on NBC analysts Kyle Petty (@KylePetty) and Parker Kligerman (@pkligerman), from NBC Sports Group’s headquarters in Stamford, Connecticut. NASCAR on NBC pit reporters Kelli Stavast (@KelliStavast) and Marty Snider (@HeyMartysnider) will contribute on-site from the NASCAR Awards red carpet at the Wynn Las Vegas. Highlighted by exclusive interviews with all 16 NASCAR Cup Series playoff drivers, Thursday’s special pre-awards edition of NASCAR America will also include interviews with NASCAR legends and the many celebrities in attendance.

MORE: 2017 season review in GIFs

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Twitter was buzzing Tuesday morning after a Hollywood Life report emerged saying newly-retired Dale Earnhardt Jr. was high on the list of stars being considered for a spot on the upcoming, all-athlete season of “Dancing with the Stars.”

Could NASCAR’s most popular driver become the next stock car star to appear on the hit show, following in the nimble footsteps of Michael Waltrip?

MORE: Recap Waltrip’s time on DWTS

For a quick second, NASCAR Nation was all like …

But then Earnhardt responded to Adam Stern of Sports Business Daily’s tweet linking to the report.

And emphatic fist pumps quickly turned to …

Welp, so much for that.

Here’s to hoping that Matt Kenseth is second on producers’ list.