MORE: About the Women In NASCAR series | Meet the Women in NASCAR
RELATED: Kelley Earnhardt Miller leads JR Motorsports with passion

Every sport needs leaders to aid in its growth, development and sustenance. NASCAR is no exception, with the sport featuring many exceptional leaders who have made racing what it is today.

 

As part of NASCAR.com’s Women in NASCAR series, learn more about JR Motorsports co-owner Kelley Earnhardt Miller, as well as other female leadership figures in racing.

Martha Nemechek



Known as a NASCAR matriarch, Martha Nemechek has long been a staple in the garage.

Born in 1940, Nemechek married Joe Jr., and the couple raised four children. She came into the sport briefly in the late ’80s, racing Powder Puff in the Bomber Division, including a second-place finish at the USA International Speedway — located in Lakeland, Florida — in 1988. Two of her sons, Joe and John, took up racing, but tragedy struck the Nemechek family in 1997 when John passed away from head injuries sustained in an accident during a Truck Series race at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

Nemechek’s son Joe’s U.S. Army sponsorship in 2003 gave Nemechek the perfect avenue to help others: she began to actively reach out to other families who had dealt with loss, including U.S. service members. She also donned Army fatigues and gave tours to military personnel at the track. 

Nemechek’s grandson, and current Truck Series driver John Hunter Nemechek , wheels the No. 8 ride — honoring his uncle John by running the same number — fielded by the Nemechek family-owned NEMCO Motorsports. Nemechek earned his first win of the 2016 season at Atlanta Motor Speedway on Feb. 27 and currently ranks third in the Truck Series driver standings.

RELATED: More about John Hunter

Jodi Geschickter


Jodi Geschickter is more than just a namesake in JTG (Jodi Tad Geschickter) Daugherty Racing — she’s a pioneer in NASCAR.

Along with her husband Tad, Geschickter formed a now-XFINITY Series team called ST Motorsports in 1994. They later partnered with Brad Daugherty, forming the Sprint Cup Series team JTG Daugherty Racing. For six years, Geschickter split her time between the race shop on weekdays and her job as a U.S. Airways fight attendant on weekends.

Today, the team fields the No. 47 entry of AJ Allmendinger, who earned a Chase-clinching win at Watkins Glen International in 2014. As a co-owner, Geschickter is the only active female owner of a Sprint Cup Series team.


MORE: JTG Daugherty team page | More about Allmendinger

Teresa Earnhardt



The third wife and widow of seven-time Cup champion Dale Earnhardt, Teresa Earnhardt is a gifted businesswoman.



With her husband, she founded Dale Earnhardt Inc. in 1984, earning Busch Series championships in 1998, 1999, 2004 and 2005 and two Truck Series titles in 1996 and 1998 as an owner. Dale Earnhardt Jr. scored the organization’s first Cup win in 2000 at Texas Motor Speedway.


Teresa Earnhardt and Chip Ganassi partnered in November 2008 to form Earnhardt Ganassi Racing, which fielded Jamie McMurray ‘s No. 1 Chevrolet that won the Daytona 500 , Brickyard 400 and Bank of America 500 in 2010.

Earnhardt and Ganassi parted ways prior to the start of the 2014 season.

MORE: Women in NASCAR team leadership

RELATED: Photos of women in NASCAR | About the series


Seated among NASCAR’s team owners in a boardroom, JR Motorsports co-owner Kelley Earnhardt Miller finally notices it.



It could be years of being one of the few women on the race track, or it could be Earnhardt Miller’s desire to be seen as equal. But the four enclosing walls of a boardroom do little to disguise the men-to-women ratio.



“I look around and there’s about three women in there – you know, Jill Gregory, myself and maybe Jennifer Jo Cobb,” Earnhardt Miller said. “Then you kind of look and go, ‘This is pretty cool. This is pretty cool to be a woman in the sport.’ “


SERIES DAY 1: Lesa France Kennedy | DAY 2: DeLana Harvick



The family ties


The daughter of the legendary Dale Earnhardt, Miller grew up in the sport, roaming track infields with her brother, Dale Earnhardt Jr.



They were young children, but they weren’t ordinary children — they were children of the Dale Earnhardt. “The Intimidator.” The famous driver of the black No. 3 Chevrolet.



The Earnhardt name has always been both a blessing and a curse.



“People definitely treat you different — good and bad — with the last name,” Earnhardt Miller said with a chuckle in her office overlooking the JR Motorsports shop. “School — my dad was ‘The Intimidator,’ right? We were either loved or hated, pretty much.



“And the hated part was kind of hard. People automatically thought we were snobby or we had everything that we wanted, and that wasn’t true. My dad made us work for things, and we were definitely not handed things on a silver platter.”



It was during these difficult times that Earnhardt Miller and her brother, Dale, leaned on one another for support.



They were, in a sense, their own team.



“There’s so much more to me that kind of shaped who we are,” Earnhardt Miller said of her brother. “Our parents were divorced early, we lived with our mom early on, we were in a house fire, we went to live with our dad — she felt like that was the best thing for us at the time. At that time, my dad was committed to his own (career) as a driver, we were home with nannies and family and things like that. 



“It just really made Dale and I close and want to look after each other because our world, you know, it was different than the typical family.”


“I think it’s hard for a lot of people to understand how close we are,” Dale Earnhardt Jr. said at Atlanta Motor Speedway in February. “I look at friends and other family members and their relationships with their brothers and sisters, and they’re good relationships.



“But man, ours is super-close because there’s so much we had to do, and we had to lean on each other and depend on each other. We never stopped.”

 

 

On the track

 

The Kelley-Dale duo became more of a racing team in the early 1990s, as both began racing in the Late Model Stock division on local tracks, along with their half-brother, Kerry Earnhardt.

 

But despite being the lone female among her brothers, Kelley was no damsel in distress at the race track.

 

“She was very good at what she did,” Earnhardt Miller’s cousin Tony Eury Jr. told ESPN in a 2010 article. “I raced her several times over at Tri-County (a short track in western North Carolina). We thought she probably had as much or more talent than any of them.”

 

But talent doesn’t always carve out an easy path for a female driver in a male-dominated sport.

 

“When I raced, gosh, being a girl was really hard. I raced against, you know, 40- and 50-year-old men,” Earnhardt Miller said. “And some young ones, too, but not quite as young as they race against today in the Late Model Stock Series. But it was difficult.”

 

Earnhardt Miller brushes off most hardship in the garage with a smile today, always keeping a positive note in her voice. But Earnhardt Jr., who worked on a few of Kelley’s cars during her racing years, saw firsthand his older sister’s struggles.

 

“Certainly as a driver she got pushed around, had guys wrecking her on purpose,” Earnhardt Jr. recalled. “You know, I think I see the same thing with Danica (Patrick) sometimes. Some of these guys, when Kelley was racing, they were waiting on her to give them the opportunity to rough her up. … Whereas if you’re racing another competitor, you sort of avoid those kind of things at all cost. Yeah, you don’t let someone shove you around, but they kind of might seize the opportunity when she’s just running someone hard and clean.

 

“She really took it hard when she struggled. She had this huge standard for herself. She could feel that nobody was overly excited to be a part of her career. People didn’t expect her to succeed, but she did, and she wanted to prove them wrong. And any time she had any kind of setback or struggle, she was super, super emotional and really hard on herself.”

 

From a brother’s perspective, the toll racing took on Kelley was the reason Earnhardt Jr. breathed a measured sigh of relief when she was forced to hang up her fire suit in 1998 due to lack of sponsorship. 

 

But something like sponsorship couldn’t impede Kelley from unearthing success in some facet of racing.

 

After all, her last name is Earnhardt. 


Chase Elliott won the 2014 XFINITY Series championship driving for JR Motorsports.

 

Moving into the boardroom

 

Equipped with a degree in business administration from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Earnhardt Miller focused her efforts on working full-time at souvenir sales company Action Performance. During her six years with the company, she climbed her way up the ladder to vice president of sales and vice president of procurement.

 

And after helping brother Dale kick-start his racing career, Earnhardt Miller was hired in 2001 as the general manager of JR Motorsports, a now-XFINITY team owned by Earnhardt Jr.

 

It was the perfect opportunity because for Earnhardt Miller, racing always has been a family affair.

 

“Really, what drives me in my position is because it is family and it is personal at the end of the day,” Earnhardt Miller said. “Carrying on the Earnhardt name … this is our family business. This is carrying on the legacy of my dad and what he built, and Dale and I doing that together — that’s what really propels me because it’s family and that’s very important to me.”

 

With the Earnhardts’ deep racing heritage that extends three generations, it came as little surprise to the industry when Earnhardt Miller’s oldest daughter, Karsyn, began racing go-karts at a young age.

 

“To be quite honest, as a mom, it’s a little scary to think about my daughter wanting to be a race car driver,” Earnhardt Miller admitted. “Not scary in the fact of getting hurt or anything like that, but it is so hard. 

 

“I kind of want to protect her, I guess, as a mom. On the flip side of that, I want her to chase her dreams.”

 

If anyone knows something about cheering young female drivers in pursuit of their dreams, it’s Earnhardt Miller.

 

Just ask Danica Patrick .

 

In 2010, Earnhardt Miller encouraged Patrick to transition from IndyCar to stock car racing, driving the No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet. For Earnhardt Miller, Patrick was more than just a gifted driver — she was living out a dream that Earnhardt Miller once envisioned for herself.

 

“The driving force when we were presented the opportunity to potentially work with her was because she was a female and I wanted to be part of that,” Earnhardt Miller said. “Probably living vicariously through her for the dreams that I had and the dreams of Shawna Robinson and people like that that I followed at the time.”

JR Motorsports celebrates Chase Elliott ‘s first win with the team. From left, front row: L.W. Miller, Kelley Earnhardt Miller, Dale Earnhardt Jr. , Elliott.



‘Show ’em what you’re made of’


While Earnhardt Miller’s racing-filled dreams have been laid aside, she has been dominant in her own right in business. In its 15 years of existence, Earnhardt Miller has helped lead JR Motorsports to 26 XFINITY victories and 53 late model wins. The team achieved its first XFINITY championship in 2014 when young star Chase Elliott swept to the series crown, and has also earned late-model track titles in 2012 and 2014.



With the company booming, it seemed as though her Earnhardt toughness on the race track transitioned seamlessly into the corporate side of NASCAR.



“She (is) so amazing at the business side of it, and she’s real tenacious,” Earnhardt Jr. said. “Nobody pushes her around, especially no male in the boardroom pushes her around. All those people at JR Motorsports … she has complete control of everything going on there and everyone gladly and happily answers to her because they have so much respect for her.”



Earnhardt Miller runs her operations the way she would race: Cleanly. 



“I’m not really a bully — I wouldn’t consider myself that at all — I just want things to be fair and I fight for things to be fair,” Earnhardt Miller said. “And usually you can see the rhyme and reason to that when you state your case and it’s all put out there.”



Fair is what she looks for with women in NASCAR in the future.



“I think obviously women are much more accepted in the garage (today),” Earnhardt Miller said. “I think it’s societal and generational that have really helped the changes overall, and then that’s carried on in our sport. 



“We’re well-received — if you get out there and show ’em what you’re made of, you gain people’s respect and you can sit right alongside the men in our sport.



“For me, I want more doors to open for drivers in the female landscape … I hope the door opens for car owners to believe in women, that they can drive.”


Contributing: Kathy Sheldon

NASCAR driver Kurt Busch ended weeks of speculation Wednesday, stating he will not compete in the 100th running of the Indianapolis 500 in May.



Busch, 37, said that he shelved the idea to compete in the Memorial Day “Double” with NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600 to instead focus on his full-time driving duties in the Sprint Cup Series with the  No. 41 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet team. But Busch also left the door open to potentially compete in future editions of IndyCar’s most prestigious race.



“After seriously contemplating making another run at ‘The Double,’ and in response to the many questions I receive on the subject as the month of May approaches, I wanted to state that I will not be participating in this year’s 100th running of the Indianapolis 500,” Busch wrote in a statement on his personal website.



“I must say this was not an easy decision and it does not in any way reflect upon my desire to compete again in one of the world’s greatest races; it is based solely on a need to maintain the focus and momentum we have built early in this NASCAR season with our No. 41 Stewart-Haas Racing, Haas Automation/Monster Energy Chevy team — hopefully all the way to Homestead and the championship weekend.”



Busch has opened the 2016 campaign on a strong note with top-10 finishes in four of the five events so far. He also has two Coors Light Pole Awards to his credit.



Busch made his lone Indy 500 start on May 25, 2014, finishing a commendable sixth for the Andretti Autosport team at the historic Indianapolis Motor Speedway. He then traveled to North Carolina for stock-car racing’s longest event that evening, finishing 40th when engine failure abbreviated his Coca-Cola 600 after 271 of the 400 laps.



“My experience with Andretti Autosport and its drivers was so very positive and the way in which the IndyCar fans and media welcomed me, it is undoubtedly one of the highlights of my career both personally and professionally,” Busch wrote. “Fortunately, Michael (Andretti) and the Indianapolis Motor Speedway have left the door open for a future run, and perhaps one day I will take them up on that, it just won’t be this year.”

Kyle Larson said Wednesday that he is still sore from his hard crash Sunday at Auto Club Speedway and that he has placed some of his extracurricular racing on hold.

Larson was scheduled to drive in the Short Track Outlaw Showdown sprint-car race Wednesday night at Placerville (Calif.) Speedway. But the 23-year-old driver indicated through Twitter that he was still feeling the effects from a heavy, nose-first impact during Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race.

“I am very sorry to say that I won’t be racing at Placerville Speedway today,” Larson wrote. “After the wreck I had in Sunday’s Cup race, my body is still too sore to compete today. With the NASCAR off weekend coming up, I feel it is best to use that time to let my body recover and not risk anything else. It kills me to make this decision because I’ve been looking forward to this race for months now.”

Larson finished last in the 39-car field in Sunday’s Auto Club 400 after a shredded tire sent his Chip Ganassi Racing No. 42 Chevrolet out of control and into the backstretch’s inside retaining wall, which was protected by the SAFER (Steel and Foam Energy Reduction) barrier system.

“I couldn’t slow down and had a hard hit there, head-on,” Larson said Sunday after he was evaluated and released from the infield care center. “I’m OK. I’m thankful for SAFER barriers and thankful that I’m all right. That was definitely probably the hardest hit I’ve ever had in my career. I’m glad to be on my feet right here.”

Larson wrote in his Tweet that he intended to attend Wednesday night’s race at the quarter-mile dirt track where he logged his first sprint-car victory in 2007. He also thanked fans for their support and said he would be signing autographs at the California track.

MORE: Check in with Samantha Busch, Cindy Elliott,  Chandra Johnson, Krissie Newman and Sherry Pollex

RELATED: Photos of women in NASCAR | About the series



About 280,000 people know her as @DeLanaHarvick. A 3-year-old knows her as “Momma,” and a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion knows her as his wife. She can be remembered as “the woman on top of the pit box wearing the fire suit” or currently as the co-owner of a marketing agency representing high-profile professionals such as newly crowned UFC champion Miesha Tate.


However you define DeLana Harvick, no one knows her as a woman afraid to speak her mind.



NASCAR championship-winning crew chief Rodney Childers is familiar with the work and talent necessary to achieve success at a high level. The No. 4 pit boss understands the dynamics of the Harvicks and can speak to DeLana’s prowess in all facets of her life, which now includes her involvement in KHI Management and being a mother.



“DeLana is good at so many things,” Childers said. “She could run any business if she wanted to, she could run any race team if she wanted to. I think that anyone that’s been around her for a period of time realizes that.”

DAY 1: In-depth with Lesa France Kennedy

A native of Kernsville, North Carolina, Harvick was born into a racing family. From 3 weeks old, she was at the track supporting her self-funded racing dad, John Paul Linville. Linville raced without the large, corporate sponsors you see on cars today. As Harvick grew up, she became responsible for managing the day-to-day activities and learning at the grassroots level what it takes to run an organization.



Growing up, Harvick wanted to pilot a race car. She didn’t get the chance to get behind the wheel until she was in her 20s, and by then, she felt the opportunity to be a successful driver had passed. She went to college with the intention of becoming a high school teacher, and graduated from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro with a degree in English.



But that wasn’t where she really wanted to be. With her knowledge of the business facets of racing and an urge to jump-start her career, Harvick got a public relations internship and dove head first into the world of NASCAR.



“I had a lot of the background of what I felt like was a good avenue to start the team side of it, but I didn’t understand the PR and the marketing and all that because we didn’t have that,” Harvick told NASCAR.com. “We were just racing out of what my dad could afford.


“When I realized there was this whole other world, and as NASCAR continued to grow and evolve, I became very interested in the PR and marketing side of it.”



Harvick’s first job was with PPR Plus, which, at the time, was managing Jeff Gordon‘s publicity.



“I came in doing hospitality, slinging bratwurst and waking up at four in the morning, giving pit tours and things like that,” Harvick said. “And then I slowly started to be allowed to write for them and I handled a lot of the Make-A-Wish (Foundation) side of things at that point. So I really got a whole education on the business side of NASCAR that I didn’t know.”



Fast cars, fast change of pace



The racing world Harvick grew up in was a much different environment for women than it is today.



“Growing up in the sport, there weren’t that many women that were allowed into the garage, so you didn’t really see a lot of the women,” Harvick said. “I remember spending a lot of time in the infield in the car because we weren’t allowed to come in. But that got better as I got older.



“Today, it’s not just women that are involved in the PR and marketing side. There’s engineers, tire specialists, they’re working on teams, they’re doing so many things. That makes me really proud — just because you feel like this is a man’s sport or people say that doesn’t mean that women shouldn’t come and try to fulfill their dreams.”


Prevailing over social norms, Harvick made her way up through the professional NASCAR world, met husband Kevin Harvick and the two were married Feb. 28, 2001 in Las Vegas.

 

As they built a marriage, the Harvicks also built a business. DeLana Harvick became co-owner and manager of Kevin Harvick Incorporated, a race team owning cars and trucks in the NASCAR XFINITY and Camping World Truck Series, along with the ARCA Racing Series.

 

The KHI teams saw success, eventually winning championships with truck driver Ron Hornaday Jr. in 2007 and 2009. But as the next decade approached, the Harvicks were ready to start a family, and with that meant saying goodbye to one baby and hello to another.

 

And Keelan makes three

 

In 2011, it was announced that KHI would merge with Richard Childress Racing the following season. On July 8, 2012, Keelan Harvick was born, forever changing the way both DeLana and Kevin lived their lives.

 

“It’s made me really prioritize my life,” Harvick said. “I want to be the best parent that I can be and I think that just goes back to when we decided to own race teams, I wanted to be the most successful, the most competitive that we could possibly be. And when we made the shift to start our family, one of the reasons we shut down the race team — the race team was my baby — and I didn’t feel like I could give less of myself to the race teams because it would just be too hard.”

 

Harvick had control of things at KHI, but motherhood has been different. She soon learned that her tiny human had the reins, and her job as a mother was to guide him in the right direction.

 

“I’m happy that my day is not the same everyday,” Harvick said. “I never know what’s going to happen. … We kind of make up our travel routine on the fly. We don’t know if we’re going next week. Whatever happens, happens. And I know that will get a little more rigid as Keelan gets into school, but right now we’re just trying to expose him to as much as we can. Travel with him, and show him the world, and that, to me, is the most important.”

 

Getting back to business

 

Even after closing the KHI race teams, the Harvicks still had the same core group of people who were instrumental in securing and maintaining sponsorships within KHI. This led to a conversation with UFC fighter Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone.

 

“While we never really thought about life after the race team, in that discussion with ‘Cowboy’ we realized that there were opportunities outside of racing where people didn’t really have the best representation,” Harvick said.

UFC fighter Miesha Tate is a client of KHI Management.

 

In 2013, KHI Management was established as a celebrity marketing agency that now represents a smorgasbord of talent that includes everything from country music artists, to UFC fighters, to PGA golfers to a 10-year-old motorcross phenom and even Kevin Harvick himself.

 

“It’s been great to learn different business models because I feel like we had a really good understanding of NASCAR and what we needed to do to make our teams be successful,” DeLana said. “I think sometimes you just get in a funk and I feel like we could have done so many things in NASCAR with our eyes closed. That’s not to say it’s easy. You just know.”

 

Taking on the challenge of starting up a business she knew little about didn’t scare Harvick. The once small-town girl turned big-time NASCAR PR professional was eager to learn.

 

As DeLana Harvick plays a large role at KHI Management, it allows Kevin time to focus on racing. Which, if you look at his recent career statistics, has helped tremendously. The 40-year-old Bakersfield, California, native won his first Sprint Cup Series championship in 2014 and led nearly a quarter of all the laps in the 2015 season.

 

“I think between the two of us, it’s been a great partnership to really balance things at home,” Kevin Harvick says of his wife’s involvement in KHI. “I can keep myself busier, and it keeps me from being too busy, so it’s been a great balance for the both of us.”

 

Kevin Harvick‘s Stewart-Haas Racing co-owner Tony Stewart can attest to that.

 

“I think for Kevin it’s a great peace of mind of knowing that he’s got somebody on his side that’s day-to-day with him,” Stewart said. “She’s very active in that organization and she understands what it takes to be successful at this level. It’s more than just being a supportive spouse. She truly gets every aspect of this sport and understands why everything happens the way it does.”



Socially speaking



Twitter has been an important outlet for Harvick, and she has gained about 280,000 followers since creating her account in 2009.



“My whole thing with social media is just to keep it real,” Harvick said. “I don’t have time to make up a persona or be fake. What you see is what you get. Sometimes it’s not pretty. But I’m not afraid to say what I think, and I never have been — whether it’s been in the boardroom or at the race track or even to Kevin. I don’t hold back and I don’t hold back on social media, and I think that people probably appreciate that.”



In 140-character messages, Harvick has opened up her life to thousands of followers and given them raw content from the start. From pre-race question-and-answer sessions and in-race updates, to videos of Keelan wheeling his dune buggy in circles around their driveway, Harvick’s Twitter content gives her audience a true, inside look at her family.



“People who have been long-time followers of mine say, ‘We didn’t like Kevin at all, and now we’ve grown to love your husband and your family.’ And it’s funny because I’m not here to make you like Kevin,” Harvick said. “You can like who you want. If I can convert someone to be a Kevin fan, great. If not, no worries, it’s no big deal.”



Through the social media gateway, Harvick’s genuine character and personality has been exposed to the world. She’s OK if not everyone agrees with it.



“I’m very independent, I’m a free thinker and I have my own opinions and I’m not afraid to share those,” Harvick said. “Sometimes women with strong opinions aren’t received very well, and that’s OK. Everybody doesn’t have to be my friend. But as I ran a race team, I was going to do what was 100 percent best for my sponsors, for my team, for my employees, and sometimes that’s not always the most popular thing.”



Harvick is happy where she is today, wearing many hats as a mother, wife, businesswoman and even a social media maven, but she didn’t get there without first experiencing and overcoming views of how she should live her life based on her gender.



“I think I was so terrified; everyone tells you when you’re a woman that you need to grow up and have a family and that was by far the last thing I wanted to do,” Harvick said. “I was not going to get married, I was not going to have a family because I was really happy with my career and I wanted to make a name for myself in the industry.”



And make a name for herself she has. Just Google, “DeLana Harvick.” You’ll find a lot more interesting results than simply, “Kevin Harvick‘s wife.”


RELATED: DeLana and Keelan make a guest appearance on ‘Tweets You Might Have Missed’

He helped re-create “Smokey and the Bandit” and brought the phrase “soda cookies” into the NASCAR vernacular. Both with the help of sponsor Mobil 1.
 
Now, as Tony Stewart prepares to ride off into the sunset, he and the folks from one of his longtime sponsors are at it again.
 
“Tony’s Next Chapter,” a digital video series consisting of four 30-second pieces, debuted March 3 with the three-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion exploring potential hobbies following his impending retirement from competition at season’s end.
 
The winner of 48 points races in NASCAR’s premier series, Stewart will remain in the sport as co-owner of Stewart-Haas Racing, the four-team Sprint Cup Series group that includes drivers Danica Patrick, Kurt Busch and Kevin Harvick.
 
Two of the Mobil 1 episodes — “Tony’s Meat Smoker” and “Tony Learns French” — began airing two weeks ago.
 
“Tony Picks Up Painting” and “Tony Becomes a Cheese Connoisseur” launched on Tuesday.
 
Each of the videos can be found on the Mobil 1 YouTube channel, as well as the Mobil 1 and SHR Facebook pages.
 
Stewart, currently sidelined due to a non-NASCAR related injury sustained before the start of the 2016 season, spoke with NASCAR.com earlier this year during a break in filming of the episodes.
 
“It’s fun, that’s the great thing,” Stewart said. “From Day 1 when we’ve worked with Mobil 1 it’s all been funny, off-the-wall stuff that is not super serious. The stuff we’re shooting today, we’re all laughing with each other, cutting up and having a good time.”
 
The “we” consisted of SHR teammates Harvick and Patrick.
 
“It’s bad when you get Kevin and Danica and I all in the same deal because you know no matter what it is, we’re going to find a way to make it fun,” he said. “But they’re funny spots to begin with.”
 
The content and cast of characters, he said, made any attempt at being serious a bit more difficult.
 
“I tried … and then Danica said something that actually embarrassed me and I couldn’t even do the next take,” Stewart said. “It was the only time we had to start over in the middle of a take.
 
“Everybody thinks she’s sweet little innocent Danica and then she’ll say something that nobody hears and I’m like, “Did you really just say that?’ “
 
Perhaps the most difficult aspect was arranging the busy schedules of all three drivers with the start of the ’16 racing season just weeks away.
 
“That’s really the challenge, getting Danica’s schedule, Kevin’s schedule and my schedule to where we can all give them a day like that. When we can get a day when we can get organized like this it’s best to take as much time as we need so we can get it done,” Stewart said.
 
Mobil 1, an official NASCAR partner, has been affiliated with Stewart’s Sprint Cup efforts since 2011. Nine of his 48 career wins have come with Mobil 1 as a primary or co-primary sponsor of his No. 14 SHR Chevrolet.
 
“It’s a big deal to us,” he said. “Mobil 1 has been a great partner and the stuff that they are putting into my last year … that’s the fun part about these spots. They’re celebrating it being my last year and … making it fun.”

MORE: In-depth with DeLana Harvick | About the Women In NASCAR series

NASCAR’s reach extends far beyond the race track, into charities, social media and other business realms. At the leading edge of those offshoots are some very familiar faces: the wives, girlfriends and mothers of race car drivers. 

 

These five notable women, who all have husbands who are current or former Sprint Cup Series drivers, represent the innumerable women being honored in NASCAR.com’s weeklong celebration of Women In NASCAR.

Samantha Busch

 

Samantha Busch — who is married to 2015 Sprint Cup champion Kyle Busch — has always held a passion for fitness and fashion. She channels these interests through her work with Kyle Busch Motorsports — where she works with the retail division to create fan merchandise — and through her lifestyle blog: www.SamanthaBusch.com. Samantha, mother to young social media darling Brexton, is also involved in the Kyle Busch Foundation, which aims to increase the quality of life of children, their families and communities.

 

Samantha also played a key role in Kyle’s 2015 Sprint Cup championship. In an emotional champion’s speech in Las Vegas, Kyle cited Samantha as an instrumental part in his return to racing after serious injuries in the XFINITY Series’ opening race at Daytona sidelined him for the first 11 races of the 2015 Sprint Cup season.

MORE: The Busches’ foundation website

Cindy Elliott


Cindy Elliott’s role in NASCAR is unique, as she is wife to Hall of Famer Bill Elliott and mother to up-and-coming driver Chase Elliott, who made his full-time series debut in the iconic No. 24 Chevrolet this season. Cindy started out her career as a photographer/photo editor, which is how she met future husband Bill. She served as the marketing director of Bill Elliott Racing and currently works with the Georgia Racing Hall of Fame in Dawsonville, Georgia.

Chandra Johnson



Chandra, whose husband is Sprint Cup’s six-time champion Jimmie Johnson, is the co-founder of the Jimmie Johnson Foundation. Launched in 2006, it focuses on funding K-12 public education in California, Oklahoma and North Carolina. Since its inception, the foundation has raised more than $8.8 million for a variety of charitable causes. A mother of two young daughters, Chandra also founded an art gallery in 2014 called Southern Comfort (SOCO) Gallery. Located in Charlotte, North Carolina, where the Johnsons reside, the gallery represents both established and emerging artists, with a focus on photography.


MORE: Foundation home page | SOCO Gallery

Krissie Newman

 

Krissie Newman graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice Pre-Law with the dream of becoming an attorney. But now, the wife of Ryan Newman and mother of two young daughters aims to find justice for a different group — animals. Along with her husband, Newman helps run the Rescue Ranch, a charitable organization that aims to provide animal education and rescue, find homes for animals in need and to spay and neuter pets in an attempt to end overpopulation. 

 

MORE: Rescue Ranch website

Sherry Pollex



Longtime girlfriend of Martin Truex Jr., Sherry Pollex has inspired many through her fight against ovarian cancer. Diagnosed in August 2014, Pollex underwent chemotherapy treatments for 17 months, completing her final one on Jan. 11, 2016 — less than two months before the season-opening Daytona 500.


Truex and Pollex continue to work with the Martin Truex Jr. Foundation, an organization they started in 2007 to aid in the fight against childhood, and later, ovarian cancer after Pollex’s diagnosis. Pollex also started Catwalk for a Cause in 2010, a highly successful annual fashion show that raises money for childhood cancer. The 2015 event raised $253,000.


MORE: Foundation home page | Catwalk for a Cause

Five races into the 2016 season and we’ve hit a break in the action, so it’s time to evaluate a few stats and compare to last year.

Through the first five races of 2015 there were a total of 137 pit road penalties, compared to 93 this year. However, the percentage of penalties on pit crews has actually increased.

During 2015, there were 36 penalties (26 percent) on pit crews at this point in the season, but this year there have been 28 (30 percent). That marks a four-percent increase of penalties on pit crews.

What’s being called this year compared to last season?

In 2015, there were 13 (over-the-wall-too-soon) penalties and 19 (tire-not-in-control) penalties. This year, there have been 15 and 11, respectively.

For more pit crew news, visit PitTalks.com.

RELATED: Watch live stream here | Inside look on official NASCAR inspection


From 8-11 a.m. ET on Wednesday, NASCAR.com will live stream the post-race inspection process.


The three-hour look takes you behind the scenes as NASCAR officials inspect NASCAR Sprint Cup Series vehicles following Sunday’s Auto Club 400 at Auto Club Speedway.



The cars being inspected this week are: the No. 48 Chevrolet of Jimmie Johnson (won Sunday’s race) and the No. 4 Chevrolet of Kevin Harvick (finished second in Sunday’s race). There was no random car selected this week.


For more information on what the inspection process entails, click here.

The off week could not have come at a better time for NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver David Ragan.

The 30-year-old Georgia native and his wife, Jacquelyn, welcomed a baby girl into the world.

Meredith Leigh Ragan was born on Tuesday morning, March 22, at 2:45 a.m. ET at seven pounds, three ounces and 19 inches long, according to a spokesperson for the driver. Their first daughter, Julia, was born in June of 2014.

 

A second child is not the only change for Ragan this year. He is in his first season with BK Racing, driving the No. 23 Toyota for the two-car team. Last weekend’s race at Auto Club resulted in his best finish with the team in the season’s first five races, a 22nd-place finish.