RELATED: Buy Darlington tickets | ’16 throwback schemes | SHOP: ‘Dinger gear

AJ Allmendinger’s Darlington throwback paint scheme will honor Kansas native Bruce Hill’s 1970s-era No. 47 with a Kroger/Kingsford red, white and blue theme, JTG Daugherty Racing announced today. Allmendinger will drive the car in the Bojangles’ Southern 500 on Sept. 4 (6 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

Allmendinger and Hill, the 1975 Cup series Rookie of the Year, will meet for the first time on Friday at Kansas Speedway.

 

“It is an honor, quite honestly,” Hill said in a release. “Being remembered for something is always an honor, especially as big as the sport has gotten.”

 

Hill made starts in NASCAR’s premier series in eight seasons with his best coming in his rookie year, 1975. He earned three top fives and 11 top 10s on his way to finishing 16th in driver points. He continued racing in the then-Winston Cup series through 1981.

 

Hill now lives in his hometown of Topeka, Kansas, where he raises show horses on a ranch.

“I’m really looking forward to meeting Bruce on Friday,” Allmendinger said in the release. “I think what Darlington Raceway does to recognize former NASCAR drivers and the heritage of the sport is unprecedented. It’s a great way to celebrate our sport and the people who made it what it is today. It’s pretty neat to see all the sponsors and teams really get into it.”

RELATED: Cast your vote now

 

The Sprint Fan Vote is underway, and now, we have updates on (perhaps) your favorite driver.

 

There’s still plenty of time left to vote but, so far, the top-10 vote-getters are as follows, in alphabetical order: AJ AllmendingerTrevor Bayne, Ryan Blaney, Clint Bowyer, Matt DiBenedetto, Chase Elliott, Kyle Larson, Casey Mears, Danica Patrick and Brian Vickers.

 

Patrick, who won the Sprint Fan Vote last year and in 2013, is the first two-time Sprint Fan Vote winner. Elliott and Blaney are the current leaders in the Sunoco Rookie of the Year competition. 

 

Fans are able to vote daily by downloading the NASCAR Mobile App or visiting www.nascar.com/SprintFanVote. Votes that are shared on Facebook or Twitter will count for double, so make sure to post on your social media channels. 

 

So if you’re voting for one of the 10 drivers above, get to it! If your driver isn’t on the list, don’t worry — there’s still plenty of time to help him or her catch up.

 

Fans have until 5 p.m. ET May 20 to cast their votes. NASCAR will announce the winner of the Sprint Fan Vote in Victory Lane after the Sprint Showdown at Charlotte Motor Speedway on Friday, May 20 (7 p.m. ET, FS1/MRN/Sirius XM NASCAR Radio). The NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race is scheduled for May 21.

 

If any of the Sprint Fan Vote candidates wins in the races leading up to the Sprint All-Star Race, he or she will automatically earn a spot in the race and their name will be removed from the Sprint Fan Vote ballot.

 

To purchase ticket packages for the Sprint All-Star Race weekend — which includes the Sprint Showdown, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series N.C. Education Lottery 200, Andy Grammer pre-race concert powered by Rayovac and the Sprint All-Star Race and qualifying — call Charlotte Motor Speedway at 1-800-455-FANS or visit CharlotteMotorSpeedway.com.

 

Fans wishing to engage in the #SprintAllStar Race conversation through the #SprintFanVote window are encouraged to follow @MissSprintCup, @CLTMotorSpdwy and @NASCAR on Twitter.

Ask some of the people who work most closely with Ben Rhodes about him and you’ll get the same sense — that the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series rookie isn’t an ordinary 19-year-old.


Ask his crew chief. “I’ve known this kid since he was 15 years old and he was always very mature, very respectful and acts older than he is,” Kevin Bellicourt says. “I mean, the way he has shown maturity in the race car and everything around that, I do forget that he is 19 years old.”


Ask the sports director who co-hosts Rhodes’ TV show — yes, his own TV show — in his hometown of Louisville, Kentucky. “I’ll look at him sometimes and I’ll just be like, ‘Look, stop it. Just be a kid.’ But he’s not,” Kent Spencer says. “He’s definitely wise beyond his years.”


The wisdom has served Rhodes well in all facets of his budding NASCAR career, which carried him to the K&N Pro Series East championship in 2014 and a stint with the NASCAR Next youth initiative that identifies the sport’s up-and-coming stars. The next step is a full-season campaign this year with powerhouse ThorSport Racing in the Truck Series, which makes its next stop Friday night at Kansas Speedway.


Even in casual conversation, Rhodes’ composure comes through in a calm that belies his age, less than one year removed from receiving a high school diploma. It’s a collected nature that helps him feel just as at home in front of a TV camera’s lens as he does behind the wheel.


Rhodes doesn’t have to balance a racing career with schoolwork any more, but his focus is far from singular.


“It’s full-time racing now, and it’s full-time everything that has to do with racing, not just being on the track or working on the cars, but sponsors, events, fans — which is cool,” Rhodes says. “I really like that aspect of it. You can’t be on the track without that.”


The story of how Rhodes came to be on the track isn’t unlike the tale of other youngsters with a dream and a heavy right foot. But it’s the unique wrinkles of his narrative that make Rhodes’ story ready for prime time.


Early beginnings


Around their home state, where the term “racing” is most commonly associated with Thoroughbreds, it’s fitting that Rhodes’ career choice was galvanized by figuratively getting back on the horse.


Rhodes had barely entered grade school when the itch for speed struck him. He recalls helping his older brother, Chris, try to emulate his father’s practice of removing the governor from their go-karts, much to their mother’s dismay. The recreational — and occasionally unrestricted — karting soon led to competition.


“We were having a blast around the house,” Rhodes says, “but when we hit the race track, it didn’t really click at first and it took awhile before I got in a wreck to figure it out.”


Rhodes recalls crashing his first time out — the leader coming around to lap him, clipping one of his back wheels and landing on top of his kart. The wreck naturally made him gun-shy, but it took another altercation to set his course toward making racing a lifelong pursuit.


Rhodes’ family vividly recalls that incident at the Clark County, Indiana, 4-H Fairgrounds, where the 7-year-old driver was on the receiving end of an intentional wreck for the first time. His family worked to repair his kart while the youngster seethed, intent on retaliation. But as Rhodes began to furiously charge back through the pack, something changed in his demeanor.


“Once I passed the other guy, I didn’t even think about wanting revenge or whatever, I just started having a blast,” Rhodes says. “Passing cars was a lot more fun than getting passed, and that’s when it all started clicking for me. We started working on set-ups and had just an awesome time doing it. It was an awesome family experience.”


Into NASCAR


Those first forays led to progression and an eventual place in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East at age 16. After a partial first season, his first full campaign in 2014 netted a remarkable five victories and six pole positions, with Bellicourt serving as his car chief.


The performance drew the interest of JR Motorsports, which fielded Rhodes in a 10-race slate in the NASCAR XFINITY Series in 2015. After a seventh-place series debut at Iowa Speedway in May, Rhodes endured largely uneven results in the JRM No. 88, despite help from the team’s fleet of Sprint Cup drivers — Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kevin Harvick, Chase Elliott and Regan Smith.


“I learned so much from them, but the problem is it was hard to apply it,” Rhodes says of his sporadic schedule. “You have to be in the car feeling it. I had a month between times (in the car) more than once before I could actually feel what they were talking about or actually apply it. All the momentum that you had was lost. It was just really hard for me to get adjusted to and just hard to keep the learning going, but the jump, I felt like if I ran the whole season, the jump maybe wouldn’t have been that bad.”


An offseason to regroup also led to a new opportunity, as one of the newest faces at ThorSport Racing, a championship-caliber team with an evolving driver roster. In the offseason, Rhodes joined two-time Truck Series champ Matt Crafton, second-year driver Cameron Hayley and fellow rookie Rico Abreu under the watch of team owners Duke and Rhonda Thorson.


The team’s drivers have perennially lauded the resources that the Thorsons provide to compete at a high level. Rhodes found this out early on, when they sought his input to hire a crew chief for his No. 41 Toyota. He immediately thought of Bellicourt, who had just finished helping William Byron as crew chief for his K&N East championship run in 2015.


In some respects, the job was a tougher sell than most, requiring Bellicourt to move from North Carolina to within reach of ThorSport’s Sandusky, Ohio, shop. But it was also a commitment for his wife, his 11-month-old daughter and the baby the couple are expecting in early June.


But the opportunity to move from the regional and touring level to a NASCAR national series was too good to pass up. After taking the leap, the driver-crew chief reunion went seamlessly.


“The communication is back to where it was and it’s like we never even left off,” Rhodes says. “I remember the first time that he was up at ThorSport and I was there and we were having such a good time. None of the guys up there had seen us run before or work together, so when we came up there, they were like, ‘We’ve got a feeling that you just brought your best friend in to work on these race cars.’ That was kind of cool that we hit it off right away once again.”


Says Bellicourt: “We just have a good time. I understand what he’s saying when he’s talking about the truck, and he understands when I’m trying to make a point with him. His understanding of the race car has just come a long way since I first met him when he was 15. He understands that a lot, and all the set-up stuff. That just helps a lot, too, with the driver having that knowledge. We’ve just been able to roll with it so far this season.”


Rolling with it has meant gradual gains in the early stages of the year, but one accomplishment stands out — winning the pole position last month at Martinsville Speedway. Though a late-race wreck saddled Rhodes with a midpack 16th-place result, the speed shown in qualifying and out front for 42 laps made a solid impression.


“It felt really good to get the pole because it validates what we know that we have,” Rhodes says. “We’re trying to show others what my crew chief and I know. We have an awesome relationship and we know how to set up the race cars, we know how to get speed, it’s just a matter of getting the experience together now. It just validates that.”


The fact that Sprint Cup star Kyle Busch was among the competitive field in qualifying that day didn’t hurt the team’s confidence, Bellicourt says.


“You look at that and say there’s no reason we can’t run with any of these guys,” Bellicourt says. “Now Ben knows it. We knew it before, but you always want to make it happen and then you just get that extra confidence. I know it, the guys know it, Ben knows it, and hopefully now everybody else sees what we’re capable of.


“We’re looking to continue to do more of that to show that it wasn’t just a flash-in-the-pan, one-time thing. We’re going to try to do it at Kansas again.”


On the mic



Rhodes has visions of keeping his racing aspirations going, climbing the ladder, chasing victories. But if his NASCAR dream somehow ended tomorrow, he has an entertaining backup plan — in television.


The 19-year-old is in his fifth season as co-host of “On Track with Ben Rhodes,” a 30-minute weekly show that chronicles his racing career and allows him to meet and interview personalities in the Louisville area. Kent Spencer — the sports director at WHAS-11, an ABC affiliate in Louisville — has served as the show’s other co-host since its inception.


“I’d met Ben before, but in kind of a different realm,” Spencer says. “He was a young man trying to come up, went to a local high school, trying to make it in NASCAR, so we interviewed a few times there. This was obviously a different beast. He and I have a really good rapport together, we like to be around each other, so we kind of knew early on that this was going to work.”


The experience has allowed Rhodes to interact with community leaders from all walks of life. This season, Rhodes and Spencer have taken their show on the road, spending time with charitable organizations, returning to Holy Cross High School (the driver’s alma mater), and paying visits to Churchill Downs, site of Saturday’s 142nd Kentucky Derby.


Rhodes’ comfort on camera has grown not only in his hometown, but also during media sessions in the garage on race weekends.


“I get to see and build new relationships with people, but it’s also trained me to talk to the media and how to talk on camera,” he says. “Before the show, I was really, really bad. Now that I’ve done the show for a couple seasons, I’ve done a lot better and it makes the job at the race track a lot easier for me.”


Even Bellicourt has noticed. “You give that kid a microphone and you’re going to have to rip it out of his hand before he quits talking,” he says with a laugh. “He’s very outgoing and does a good job with that. He’s kind of a total-package guy. He’s got the marketing side, he’s really good in front of the camera and obviously has performed on the race track great, so he’s got an enormous amount of talent.”


It all circles back to the versatility and composure that extends beyond Rhodes’ years.


“I got that feeling from him back when he was 17,” Spencer says. “You could definitely tell he’s not a normal high school junior, not a normal high school senior. It’s just the way he goes about things and the way he can communicate, and I think a large part of that is because the way that his mom and dad make him do a lot on his own.


“If you want this dream, it’s not easy. You’re going to have to work for it. Every week, we get done taping the show and Ben helps tear down the set. He does a lot setting up his own schedule. He’s out there and he’s doing it, getting the job done, but there’s a lot of times where it just blows me away.”


Several drivers with successful NASCAR credentials have made smooth transitions to the broadcasting booth for second careers after their driving days are done. Four-time series champion Jeff Gordon added his name to the list this season, joining FOX Sports for its coverage of the sport.


Rhodes says he’d love to see a similar trajectory for his career, but right now he’s one-upping it — by taking on both jobs at once.


“Hopefully my racing career goes on for a long time and I can build up a great reputation and go out on TV broadcasting,” he says. “I think it’s really cool that drivers do that once they’re done, and they’re able to go up in the broadcast booth and shine new light on the subject and able to give fans kind of the inside scoop on things. As things change and progress, maybe some of the other broadcasters might not be aware of it.


“New drivers like Jeff Gordon and the guys that are fresh out of the race car can show them and talk about what’s changing in the sport. I think that’s really cool that drivers can do that.”


Spoken like a kid who is wise beyond his years.

RELATED: Junior explains steering wheel mistake  

MOORESVILLE — Barely 50 laps had been completed when Dale Earnhardt Jr., his team and his No. 88 Chevrolet were found in the garage Sunday at Talladega Superspeedway.


Repairs to fix the damaged entry, which had unexpectedly swung around and collected Hendrick Motorsports teammate Kasey Kahne, took time.


Rain was threatening to shorten the 188-lap GEICO 500, which was nearing the halfway point when the car was deemed ready to return to action.


But in a rush to get back out on the track and avoid a potential DNF (Did Not Finish), the series’ Most Popular driver didn’t notice that his steering wheel was not fully engaged as he rolled back out onto the 2.66-mile track.


Until it came off in his hands.


“I put the wheel on and never grabbed the coupler and made sure it was locked,” Earnhardt said Tuesday. “… You’re out of your element because you’ve crashed, you’re in the garage, they’re fixing the car, it’s starting to rain, the caution’s coming out, you’re going to climb back in.”


Before the race went back green, crew chief Greg Ives asked his driver to check his safety belts and steering wheel. When Earnhardt pulled back on the wheel, it came off the column.


Earnhardt quickly grabbed the column to momentarily steer the car before reattaching the steering wheel.


“I was out of my element,” he said. “Just scrambling, trying to get going and I didn’t check it. We always put the wheel on and pull it and I didn’t do it.”

RELATED: What grade did Junior get for the day?

While his chances at victory were non-existent, to be still running whenever the race ended was important.


“There are these little things that people don’t think about that are a source of pride for drivers, teams, crew chiefs,” Earnhardt said. “You don’t want a DNF. Even if that means get back out and run the last lap. That counts; you finished. …


“Anytime you crash a car, you load it up and you know you might, could have fixed it, it’s a feeling you just can’t get over. Because you didn’t do everything you could have. And if you take that home with you, it’s just an empty feeling.


“You go there to run all the laps. When you get kicked and beat down and knocked off the top or you’re having a bad day … the best thing you can do to go home with a clear conscience is to work as hard as you can to do everything you can before the checkered flag. You run every lap you can run, even if it’s pointless.”


This time, it was just that as the Toyota of Joe Gibbs Racing driver Carl Edwards collected Earnhardt just a short time after his return.


“Literally, it was pointless for us to be back out there,” Earnhardt said. “We might have gotten one point.


“That’s what you do. You get out there and you fix it. You’ve got all that crash-cart (equipment) there for a reason. You make your guys go through the process of fixing the car because next time they fix it, they might do it 15 minutes quicker because they find some shortcuts and that might be important in the Chase.”


The car, now-famously nicknamed “Amelia” by Earnhardt won’t be making any more starts. The combination of damage from the two incidents was too severe.


Instead, it’ll eventually be added to Earnhardt’s “graveyard” of crashed vehicles on his private property.


“I’ll put it in the dirt, in the woods, and let the weeds take it,” he said. “We’ll build a new one and it will be good at Daytona.


“I hate that that car ran those two races and had those two awful finishes because it did have such a good 2015. We should have parked it and built a new one and said that’s the end of the deal with that one.”


Earnhardt drove the car to victory last season at both Daytona (in July) and Talladega (in May), and finished second (at Talladega in fall Chase race) and third (Daytona 500) in ’15 as well.

RELATED: Edwards finishes off Junior’s bad day

This year, he crashed at Daytona and the car was repaired in time for Talladega. But there’ll be no more fixing for this one.


“We need to build a new car and we probably should have done that in the offseason,” he said. “We got attached to this thing and really liked what it did last year. We were hoping we could keep having success with it; it was still a pretty good car.”

The two-time 2016 winner couldn’t make it three in a row at chaotic Talladega, limping away with a 35th-place result. Look for that to change at Kansas, where he’s finished four of the last five races in the top eight.

https://www.nascar.com/drivers/kyle-busch/
0
Joe Gibbs Racing

Busch survived "The Big One" at ‘Dega to earn a solid runner-up result. Historically, Kansas is one of his worst tracks — but that appears to be changing; "Rowdy" has finished his last two races there in the top five.

https://www.nascar.com/drivers/jimmie-johnson/
1
Hendrick Motorsports

"Six-Time" came away with a subpar result at Talladega following his involvement in two wrecks. No matter for the two-time ’16 race winner as he heads to Kansas, where he’s the reigning race winner and leads in all-time victories with three trips to Victory Lane.

Harvick finished second to Johnson in the spring Kansas race last season and earned his lone win at 1.5-mile track in 2013. Look for the ’14 champ to make his way to the front early — and stay there.

Logano has been stellar at Kansas in recent years, winning two of the last three races at the 1.5-mile track and finishing in the top five for five straight races.

https://www.nascar.com/drivers/dale-earnhardt-jr/
-1
Hendrick Motorsports

Junior Nation was heartbroken when Earnhardt’s No. 88 "Amelia" crashed twice at Talladega, a track where he’s consistently a favorite. That luck could change at Kansas: Earnhardt appears to fare better in spring events there, boasting an average finish of 6.6 in the past five.

https://www.nascar.com/drivers/denny-hamlin/
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Joe Gibbs Racing

The No. 11 driver has been fairly quiet since his season-opening Daytona 500 win. Hamlin won at Kansas back in 2012, but given recent finishes, he doesn’t appear to be a favorite heading into the 400-miler.

https://www.nascar.com/drivers/brad-keselowski/
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Team Penske

Keselowski got it done at Talladega, surviving several multi-car melees for his fourth career win at the superspeedway. Expect the momentum to continue, as the 2011 Kansas winner has only finished worse than 23rd once in his 12 starts there.

The Stewart-Haas Racing driver nabbed a solid eighth-place result at Talladega, a style of track where he doesn’t typically excel. As he’s finished the past two races at Kansas in the top eight, Kansas could be similar.

https://www.nascar.com/drivers/chase-elliott/
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Hendrick Motorsports

Elliott drove like a veteran at Talladega, as the pole-sitter held off several experienced drivers to lead 27 laps en route to a fifth-place finish. This will mark his first Cup start at Kansas, but expect the No. 24 driver to continue his strong run.

Truex has yet to land a top-five finish since his closerthanthis runner-up result to Hamlin in the Daytona 500. That being said, he did lead a race-high 95 laps in this race at Kansas last season. So, the No. 78 could be a factor this weekend.

Kenseth can’t seem to catch a break this season, as his run at Talladega ended with another trip to the garage. But with the second-highest driver rating at Kansas, the No. 20 team could turn its luck around this weekend.

https://www.nascar.com/drivers/austin-dillon/
1
Richard Childress Racing

Dillon earned his fifth top-10 of the ’16 season at ‘Dega, equaling his top-10 total from all of 2015. But Kansas may throw a wrench in his run, as the RCR driver has an average finish of 23.2 at the speedway.

Kahne’s No. 5 looked like it had the speed it needed at Talladega, but he couldn’t avoid "The "Big One(s)" and wound up 39th. Hendrick Motorsports’ mile-and-a-half program is strong, so he could rebound.

The Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate survived Talladega for a solid top-10 result. At 22 years old, Blaney has only run at Kansas twice, but made an impression last fall with a seventh-place finish.

The fourth-place finish at Talladega was what McMurray & Co. needed, as it marked the team’s first top-five of ’16. Will that momentum carry to Kansas? Chances aren’t great — he has yet to finish better than seventh in 18 starts.

While he’s only won at Kansas once (back in 2003), Newman’s best ability at the 1.5-mile track is his consistency; the RCR wheelman has finished the past four races there in the top 11.

Larson lost the ’14 fall race at Kansas to Logano by .479 seconds. But his other finishes there — 12th, 15th and 29th — do not bode well for the No. 42 driver’s chances at Victory Lane this weekend.

https://www.nascar.com/drivers/ricky-stenhouse-jr/
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Roush Fenway Racing

Stenhouse and his No. 17 team have certainly made gains in the ’16 season. Just don’t expect huge steps Saturday night at Kansas, where the Roush Fenway Racing driver has an average finish of 19.8 and no top-10 results.

‘Dinger survived the ‘Dega mayhem for a 14th-place result and now heads to Kansas for a race that he finished 14th in last season. But keep in mind he has an average career Kansas result of 21.4.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Chip Wile has flown into the Daytona Beach, Florida, airport dozens of times during his nearly two decades in NASCAR, working in racing public relations or for Motor Racing Network or more recently as the president of Darlington Raceway.

But NASCAR’s most famous track — Daytona International Speedway — looked different to Wile this past weekend as he landed at the airport next door.

It’s home now.

“The ‘aha moment’ for me was flying in from Talladega Sunday night and landing right alongside the race track,” said Wile, who started his tenure as Daytona International Speedway president on Monday. “I’ve flown in 50 times over the past 15 years but it felt different this time. You fly in and look over and get excited because you’re going to Daytona, but knowing I have a different role now here and this is now my home was the ‘aha moment.’

“I’m trying to take a deep breath and really appreciate this opportunity. This is a game-changer for me and for my family. I understand how important (Daytona) is and what it means to our sport, and I’m looking forward to the challenge.”

For sure, the 36-year-old Wile knows a little something about challenges.

For the past three years he has led the iconic Darlington Raceway into a modern era, ironically, by celebrating its storied past. Under his leadership, the “throwback” theme he created for Darlington’s Southern 500 has been something praised and celebrated by fans, media and drivers alike.

One of the most historic weekends of competition has also positioned itself as one of the most popular weekends in NASCAR — a feat not lost by those International Speedway Corporation executives who tabbed Wile to run the facility as Joie Chitwood III takes a new role as ISC’s Chief Operating Officer.

Chitwood oversaw the recently completed $400 million Daytona Rising project that has propelled the speedway into one of sport’s greatest modern facilities. And now Wile will shepherd the project and expand the opportunities.

The Darlington experience is all fantastic background for Wile, who follows Chitwood in a place Chitwood aptly steered into the top level of innovation.

“When I got the opportunity to go work at Darlington, I knew how important Darlington was to NASCAR and what it meant to lead that team,” Wile said. “The obligation to hold people to a high standard because of its history and nostalgia, and certainly over the past three years, we’ve been able to do that with the community. Making sure we hold the Bojangles’ Southern 500 to a high standard and make it a unique event with the throwback. So, that certainly is something I’m really proud of.

“This is an even more prestigious brand. The Daytona 500, I would argue, is the most prestigious brand in our sport and we have to hold it to a higher standard. And this race track, and what it means to our community and our sport, transcends really anything else that is out there.”

That race in particular has always held a special place in Wile’s heart. He remembers working at Penske Racing, where he was reminded of the iconic Daytona track on a near daily basis.

“I remember Roger Penske, who I worked for, he won 16 Indy 500s, but when you walk into his shop, the first trophy you see is that 50th running of the Daytona 500 trophy,” Wile recalled. “And he’s won just about everything you can win, but I’d argue that was, at the time, the biggest win in his motorsports career.”

 

Wile’s extensive background working in so many facets of the sport will undoubtedly be useful for him. He spent almost a decade working with teams such as Bill Davis Racing and Penske Racing before joining ISC as director of business development with its radio network, MRN. He served as a liaison between the network and the tracks in that role before moving to Darlington. All of that is why he was the logical choice for the Daytona position and why he is confident and excited in leading the charge.

 

“I think certainly what I bring is relationships,” Wile said. “The only jobs I’ve ever had are in this sport. And I’ve been fortunate over the years. People have taken a vested interest in me and helped me be successful. I feel like I have relationships in the garage and with people that are true. I value those relationships and those are the reasons I’m getting the opportunity to come here and lead this team in Daytona.

 

“Understanding how NASCAR works and how the race teams operate and certainly on the media side with my short time with MRN, I know what makes them tick, how their business runs and now, obviously, on the race track side.

“It does give you a little bit of perspective on how you view things and look at things. I think that has helped me be successful so far. And certainly the relationships, in my opinion, are the most important thing in the sport and I will continue to lean on those.”

NASCAR Chairman & CEO Brian France has gone from Talladega, Alabama, to Los Angeles over the past several days, taking in and sending out a wide view of the sport in the process.
 
France kicked off a Drivers Council meeting at Talladega on Friday, then served on a prestigious speaking panel for sports business leaders in L.A. on Monday
 
The initial stop was well-received by both the drivers and France himself — the NASCAR Chairman & CEO kicked off the meeting with remarks, and listened to driver discussion on a variety of topics.
 
France also met privately for a one-on-one discussion with driver Tony Stewart, a three-time premier series champion.
 
“The Drivers Council meeting in Talladega was very productive,” France told NASCAR.com. “Tony and I also met one-on-one, and it was great to hear his thoughts. I think the key is to build trust with the drivers, and we structured the Council in a way that lets them express their views in a free-flowing manner.  
 
“We want them to know that we are listening, trying to understand their issues and that it is important for us to get it right. I think the level of collaboration between us is better than ever.”

The drivers agree.

“It was great Brian came (to the meeting),” Dale Earnhardt Jr. told reporters at Talladega. ” … It was just a good, positive meeting, a lot of good things moving in a good direction. … I think what we are doing is pretty amazing.”
 
Stewart, Earnhardt Jr., Kevin Harvick, Joey Logano, Denny Hamlin and Kyle Larson were all on the Drivers Council when it was formed last year, and remain members in 2016. Jimmie Johnson, Brad Keselowski and Kyle Busch are three new members this year, bringing the total council to nine drivers.
 
The sanctioning body strategically shaped criteria for the Drivers Council so a variety of drivers are included.
 
Four spots are automatically filled by performance the previous season — the top-finishing driver for Chevrolet, Toyota and Ford, plus the top-finishing driver with less than three seasons of experience.
 
The remaining slots are filled by driver votes from the following categories: Two drivers from the top 10 in points from the previous season; one driver from positions 11-20 in points from the previous season; one driver from positions 21-30 in points the previous season; and one driver with the most votes who doesn’t fit into the previous categories.
 
A team can have a maximum of two drivers on the Drivers Council.
 
“The meeting on Friday was terrific,” NASCAR Executive Vice President and Racing Development Officer Steve O’Donnell reiterated on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. “It was scheduled for an hour and a half and almost went three hours. Brian was there and talked about where we see the sport going, answering a number of questions that the drivers had, and then we had some great exchanges about what we think of the current rules package, some things we may look at in the future. All in all, my perspective, … but I really believe in the process and think it’s paying huge benefits for the sport and ultimately the race fans.”
 
The Drivers Council is the latest group to be formed within the industry, joining the NASCAR OEM Council, Tracks Council and the Teams Council. The intent of council creation is for better collaboration across the sport, with the manufacturers and teams — and now, the drivers — having an avenue for discussion and a process to elevate those discussions to industry leadership.
 
At the Milken Conference days later, France was on a five-person panel for a session called “Stewards of the Game: The Business Leaders Behind Major Sports” that also included former NBA Commissioner David Stern and New England Patriots team owner Robert Kraft.
 
The NASCAR Chairman & CEO answered broad-ranging questions on his family legacy, the successful Daytona Rising project and the importance of digital and social media to reach and engage new fans.

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Dale Earnhardt Jr. took to social media — as he so often does — Monday afternoon to reveal a new paint scheme. Specifically, to reveal his No. 88 Nationwide Children’s Hospital Chevrolet for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Kentucky Speedway on July 9.


What’s different about this look is the campaign that goes along with it. Five hundred fans who make a donation will have their names printed on the hood of the car.

Nationwide will serve as Earnhardt Jr.’s primary sponsor for 21 races in 2016.

RELATED: Buy tickets

NEWTON, Iowa (May 3, 2016) — Iowa Speedway today announced American Ethanol will serve as the entitlement sponsor and Enogen as the presenting sponsor for the NASCAR XFINITY Series race during Wide Opening Weekend on June 18-19. The NASCAR XFINITY Series American Ethanol E15 250 presented by Enogen on Sunday, June 19, represents the fifth consecutive year of the American Ethanol partnership and the fourth consecutive year with Enogen at Iowa Speedway.
 
While the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series idles for a week, the green flag will wave at Iowa Speedway for a first-of-its-kind doubleheader weekend in central Iowa. For the first time ever, the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and the NASCAR XFINITY Series are paired together during Wide Opening Weekend on June 18-19.
 
“American Ethanol and Enogen stepping up to sponsor our NASCAR XFINITY Series race is another great indicator of the important platform Iowa Speedway and NASCAR provide to brands,” said Iowa Speedway President Jimmy Small. “The adoption of biofuels grown and made in the USA, creating much needed green jobs in Iowa and across the Heartland is one of the tenets of NASCAR Green. American Ethanol has proven to be a tremendous partner not only for Iowa Speedway, but for NASCAR’s teams, fans and the industry as a whole.”
 
American Ethanol and Enogen were the former title and presenting sponsors of the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Iowa Speedway. American Ethanol, along with Enogen, join the Iowa Corn Growers Association in renewing their long standing relationships with the speedway in 2016.
 
“As NASCAR approaches 10 million flawless miles running on Sunoco Green E15, we’re excited for yet another opportunity to showcase the power and the high-quality performance ethanol brings to the race track,” said Jeff Broin, co-chair of Growth Energy. “It’s no secret biofuels create jobs in our country and work great in our engines. American Ethanol is proud to partner with Iowa Speedway and the NASCAR XFINITY series to show that an ethanol-based bio-fuel is the future.”
 
Representing a wide array of ethanol supporters, from farmers to bio-engineering firms, American Ethanol was established by Growth Energy in partnership with the National Corn Growers Association to increase awareness of the value of American-made ethanol. Ethanol represents the most commercially-viable alternative to 100% petroleum-based fuel that America currently holds, and corn ethanol reduces emissions by 59 percent.
 
“Ethanol is helping America reduce its dependence on foreign oil, lowering prices at the pump, improving the environment with lower emissions, and growing the economy with jobs that can’t be outsourced,” said Jack Bernens, head of Enogen at Syngenta. “Ethanol is an important success story and the American Ethanol E15 250 is an excellent opportunity to engage consumers and help increase awareness for the benefits of earth-friendly American ethanol. Syngenta is pleased to once again be working with Iowa Speedway and Growth Energy to support the ethanol industry through our sponsorship of this event to tell ethanol’s story.”
 
In 2011, NASCAR launched its long-term biofuels program to reduce emissions of the fuel used in all its racing series. As part of the partnership, NASCAR’s three national touring series began using Sunoco Green E15; a 15% ethanol blend bio-fuel, made from American-grown corn. By utilizing Sunoco Green E15 race fuel, NASCAR has demonstrated that ethanol-blended fuel performs when held to the highest standards.
 
Iowa Speedway season tickets, which are currently on sale, include eight high-powered races over three weekends. Wide Opening Weekend will feature both the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and the NASCAR XFINITY Series American Ethanol E15 250 presented by Enogen during Father’s Day Weekend on June 18-19. The second weekend of racing will showcase the ARCA Racing Series 150 presented by Casey’s General Stores, the INDYCAR Series Iowa Corn 300, Indy Lights and Pro Mazda Championship on July 9-10. The 2016 race season will close on July 29-30 with the NASCAR K&N Pro Series Casey’s General Stores 150 and NASCAR XFINITY Series U.S. Cellular 250.