RELATED: See who’s on the move for 2016

Denny Hamlin enters the NASCAR Sprint Cup season with his third crew chief in three years, the result of a second straight go-round of offseason shuffling at Joe Gibbs Racing.
 
Before last season, Dave Rogers replaced Darian Grubb, who left the No. 11 Toyota team to become Carl Edwards‘ crew chief. This offseason, Mike Wheeler was promoted to replace Rogers, who followed form, leaving the No. 11 to become Edwards’ crew chief.
 
This time, Hamlin’s certain he has his go-to guy.
 
“Carl can’t have this one,” Hamlin said with a laugh during last week’s Charlotte Motor Speedway Media Tour. “That’s how I’m confident.”
 
Joking aside, Hamlin said he always knew he’d one day be paired with his longtime lead engineer, making what the driver called a “handshake deal” long ago. With Wheeler now headed toward his first full season as a Sprint Cup crew chief after making strides in the NASCAR XFINITY Series, the two have come full circle.
 
“He’s been with me in some capacity throughout my career, so he’s my guy,” Hamlin said. “He’s going to be my guy until I retire, there’s no doubt about that. This is what we’ve built towards, this has been in the workings for a very, very long time. From our standpoint, I thought that he’d be in XFINITY a little bit longer, but when he chose to move up, obviously I didn’t want to loan him to anybody else for another year so we made the switch. I think that it’s good for me. Everyone’s kind of got who they want now and everything should be good.”
 
Wheeler has just six Sprint Cup races atop the pit box, serving as interim crew chief for Hamlin during Grubb’s suspension for a technical infraction in 2014. The No. 11 team finished in the top 10 in half those races before Grubb returned to lead Hamlin to the championship round in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoffs.
 
Wheeler dipped down to the XFINITY Series last season, adeptly calling the shots for a rotation of eight different drivers — including Hamlin. The result was a stellar campaign for the No. 20 team, which netted four victories and eight pole positions. Hamlin accounted for three of those wins and four of those poles.
 
When the time came for team owner Joe Gibbs to make changes to keep up with the competition, the venerable coach followed a similar pattern of promoting from within. It paid huge dividends last year with former XFINITY crew chief Adam Stevens lifting Kyle Busch to his first Sprint Cup crown.

RELATED: Busch, Hamlin could be at ‘odds’ over Super Bowl bet
 
“The wild thing now is all four of our Cup guys came from XFINITY for us,” Gibbs said of his organization’s crew chief lineup. “I think what happens there is our Cup guys get to work with them, racing XFINITY, and they develop that relationship. That’s like Adam and Kyle. I think Wheels has always gotten along great with Denny. They’ve always kind of wanted to be together, and so Wheels was willing to go back down to XFINITY last year and did a great job for us down there. We kind of felt like it was a natural deal.”
 
Contending for championships has also come naturally for Hamlin, but despite numerous close calls, his title cupboard remains bare. Last year may have been the flukiest near-miss of all, when a faulty roof hatch — and later, a crash in a green-white-checkered restart — stemmed his progress at an elimination race at Talladega Superspeedway.
 
Hamlin has won at least one race in each of his 10 full seasons in NASCAR’s premier series. The goose egg in the championship column? Hamlin said he thought that void would have been filled long ago.
 
“Oh, no doubt. I thought I’d have one within the first three years of my Cup career and just things didn’t work out for whatever reason,” Hamlin said. “And I look back at all the Chases that I’ve been part of and it comes down to I’m still in it with one race, two races to go and it’s just something bananas happens and it takes me out. Eventually, that wave has got to turn in your favor.”
 
Hamlin hopes Wheeler is a part of that wave, one that includes a welcome return to crew chief stability. Hamlin also hopes for continuity in JGR’s recent upswing, which produced 14 Sprint Cup wins, a championship from Busch, and Chase eligibility for all four of its drivers last season.
 
“It’s as good as it can get,” Hamlin said. “I mean, we all work really, really well together. All the drivers have great chemistry, the crew chiefs have great chemistry. There’s just no reason why we can’t duplicate the same amount of wins and a championship for JGR, so really there’s nothing standing in our way with that.”

RELATED: Schedule times highlights

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Jan. 26, 2016) — NASCAR®, in collaboration with broadcast partners FOX Sports, NBC Sports Group, race teams and the 29 tracks committed to hosting races for the coming season, today announced race start times and network coverage for all three of its national series based on previously released schedule dates for 2016.

 

Entering the second season of 10-year comprehensive media rights agreements, races will be televised by FOX, FS1, NBC and NBCSN, with the exception of select events in August that will air on CNBC and USA due to NBC Sports’ coverage of the Summer Olympics. National series races will also be broadcast live by Motor Racing Network (MRN), Performance Racing Network (PRN), IMS Radio Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, channel 90. Fans can visit www.nascar.com/tv-schedule for weekly tune-in information throughout the season. Tickets to all NASCAR national series events are available at www.nascar.com/tickets.

MORE: Retirement not on Dale Jr.’s radar

“NASCAR concluded 2015 with its most-watched championship finale in a decade, a benchmark that serves as a testament to deeper collaboration with our television and radio partners and increased engagement with fans,” said Steve Herbst, senior vice president, broadcasting and production at NASCAR. “We look forward to carrying this momentum into 2016, starting with the DAYTONA 500® and Speedweeks, as the number of homes reached by our broadcast content continues to grow both domestically and internationally.”

2016 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Schedule

Date

Location

Network

Race Start

Radio

2/13

Sprint Unlimited at

Daytona International Speedway

FOX

8 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

2/14

DAYTONA 500 Qualifying at

Daytona International Speedway

FOX

1 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

2/18

Can-Am Duel at

Daytona International Speedway

FS1

7 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

2/21

DAYTONA 500 at

Daytona International Speedway

FOX

1 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

2/28

Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 at

Atlanta Motor Speedway

FOX

1 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

3/6

Kobalt 400 at

Las Vegas Motor Speedway

FOX

3:30 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

3/13

Good Sam 500 at

Phoenix International Raceway

FOX

3:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

3/20

Auto Club 400 at

Auto Club Speedway

FOX

3:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

4/3

STP 500 at

Martinsville Speedway

FS1

1 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

4/9

Duck Commander 500 at

Texas Motor Speedway

FOX

7:30 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

4/17

Food City 500 at

Bristol Motor Speedway

FOX

1 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

4/24

Toyota Owners 400 at

Richmond International Raceway

FOX

1 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

5/1

GEICO 500 at

Talladega Superspeedway

FOX

1 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

5/7

GoBowling.com 400 at

Kansas Speedway

FS1

7:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

5/15

Dover International Speedway

FS1

1 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

5/20

Sprint Showdown at

Charlotte Motor Speedway

FS1

7 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

5/21

NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race at

Charlotte Motor Speedway

FS1

7 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

5/29

Coca-Cola 600 at

Charlotte Motor Speedway

FOX

6 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

6/5

Axalta ‘We Paint Winners’ 400 at Pocono Raceway

FS1

1 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

6/12

Firekeepers Casino 400 at

Michigan International Speedway

FS1

1 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

6/26

Toyota / Save Mart 350 at

Sonoma Raceway

FS1

3 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

7/2

Coke Zero 400 Powered by Coca-Cola at Daytona International Speedway

NBC

7:45 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

7/9

Quaker State 400 Presented by Advance Auto Parts at

Kentucky Speedway

NBCSN

7:30 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

7/17

New Hampshire 301 at

New Hampshire Motor Speedway

NBCSN

1:30 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

7/24

Crown Royal Presents the ‘Your Hero’s Name Here’ 400 at

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

NBCSN

3 p.m.

IMS / SiriusXM

7/31

Pennsylvania 400 at

Pocono Raceway

NBCSN

1:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

8/7

Cheez-It 355 at The Glen

Watkins Glen International

USA

2:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

8/20

Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race at Bristol Motor Speedway

NBCSN

8 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

8/28

Pure Michigan 400 at

Michigan International Speedway

NBCSN

2 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

9/4

Bojangles’ Southern 500 at

Darlington Raceway

NBC

6 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

9/10

Federated Auto Parts 400 at

Richmond International Raceway

NBCSN

7:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

9/18

Chicagoland Speedway

NBCSN

2:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

9/25

New England 300 at

New Hampshire Motor Speedway

NBCSN

2 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

10/2

AAA 400 at

Dover International Speedway

NBCSN

2 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

10/8

Bank of America 500 at

Charlotte Motor Speedway

NBC

7 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

10/16

Hollywood Casino 400 at

Kansas Speedway

NBC

2:15 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

10/23

Alabama 500 at

Talladega Superspeedway

NBCSN

2 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

10/30

Goody’s Fast Relief 500 at Martinsville Speedway

NBCSN

1 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

11/6

AAA Texas 500 at

Texas Motor Speedway

NBC

2 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

11/13

Can-Am 500 at

Phoenix International Raceway

NBC

2:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

11/20

Ford EcoBoost 400 at

Homestead-Miami Speedway

NBC

2:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

 

2016 NASCAR XFINITY Series Schedule

Date

Location

Network

Race Start

Radio

2/20

Powershares QQQ 300 at

Daytona International Speedway

FS1

3:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

2/27

Head’s Up Georgia 250

at Atlanta Motor Speedway

FS1

1:30 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

3/5

Boyd Gaming 300 at

Las Vegas Motor Speedway

FS1

4 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

3/12

Axalta Faster. Tougher. Brighter 200 at

Phoenix International Raceway

FOX

2:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

3/19

Auto Club Speedway

FS1

4 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

4/8

O’Reilly Auto Parts 300 at

Texas Motor Speedway

FS1

8:30 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

4/16

Bristol Motor Speedway

FS1

12:30 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

4/23

ToyotaCare 250 at

Richmond International Raceway

FS1

12:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

4/30

Talladega 300 at

Talladega Superspeedway

FOX

3 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

5/14

Dover International Speedway

FOX

2 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

5/28

Hisense 300 at

Charlotte Motor Speedway

FS1

2:30 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

6/4

Pocono Raceway

FOX

1 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

6/11

Michigan International Speedway

FS1

1:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

6/19

Iowa Speedway

FS1

1:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

7/1

Subway Firecracker 250 Powered by Coca-Cola at

Daytona International Speedway

NBCSN

7:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

7/8

Kentucky 300 at

Kentucky Speedway

NBCSN

8:30 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

7/16

Lakes Region 200 at

New Hampshire Motor Speedway

NBCSN

4 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

7/23

Lilly Diabetes 250 at

Indianapolis Motor Speedway

NBCSN

3:30 p.m.

IMS / SiriusXM

7/30

U.S. Cellular 250 at

Iowa Speedway

NBCSN

8 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

8/6

Zippo 200 at The Glen at

Watkins Glen International

CNBC

2 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

8/13

Mid-Ohio 200 at

Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course

USA

3:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

8/19

Food City 300 at

Bristol Motor Speedway

USA

7:30 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

8/27

Road America 180 Fired Up by Johnsonville at Road America

NBCSN

3 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

9/3

VFW Sport Clips Help a Hero 200 at Darlington Raceway

NBC

3:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

9/9

Virginia 529 College Savings 250 at Richmond International Raceway

NBCSN

7:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

9/17

Chicagoland Speedway

NBC

3:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

9/24

VisitMyrtleBeach.com 300 at

Kentucky Speedway

NBCSN

8 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

10/1

Drive Sober 200 at

Dover International Speedway

NBCSN

3 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

10/7

Drive for the Cure 300 Presented by Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina at

Charlotte Motor Speedway

NBCSN

8 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

10/15

Kansas Lottery 300 at

Kansas Speedway

NBCSN

4 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

11/5

O’Reilly Auto Parts Challenge at

Texas Motor Speedway

NBC

3:30 p.m.

PRN / SiriusXM

11/12

Phoenix International Raceway

NBC

3:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

11/19

Ford EcoBoost 300 at

Homestead-Miami Speedway

NBCSN

3:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

 

2016 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Schedule

Date

Location

Network

Race Start

Radio

2/19

NextEra Energy Resources 250 at Daytona International Speedway

FS1

7:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

2/27

Georgia 200 at

Atlanta Motor Speedway

FS1

4:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

4/2

Martinsville Speedway

FS1

2:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

5/6

Toyota Tundra 250 at

Kansas Speedway

FS1

8:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

5/13

Dover International Speedway

FS1

5:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

5/20

North Carolina Education Lottery 200 at

Charlotte Motor Speedway

FS1

8:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

6/10

Rattlesnake 400 at

Texas Motor Speedway

FS1

9 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

6/18

Iowa Speedway

FS1

8:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

6/25

Drivin’ for Linemen 200 brought to you by Ameren

at Gateway Motorsports Park

FS1

8:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

7/7

Kentucky 225 at

Kentucky Speedway

FS1

8:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

7/20

#Eldora at

Eldora Speedway

FS1

9 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

7/30

Pocono Mountains 150 at

Pocono Raceway

FS1

1 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

8/17

UNOH 200 at

Bristol Motor Speedway

FS1

8:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

8/27

Careers for Veterans 200, presented by Cooper Standard Foundation and Brad Keselowski‘s Checkered Flag Foundation at

Michigan International Speedway

FS1

1 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

9/4

Chevrolet Silverado 250 at

Canadian Tire Motorsport Park

FS1

2:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

9/16

Chicagoland Speedway

FS1

8:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

9/24

UNOH 175 at

New Hampshire Motor Speedway

FS1

1 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

10/1

Rhino Linings 350 at

Las Vegas Motor Speedway

FS1

8:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

10/22

fred’s 250 Powered by Coca-Cola at

Talladega Superspeedway

FOX

1 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

10/29

Martinsville Speedway

FS1

1:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

11/4

Longhorn 350 at

Texas Motor Speedway

FS1

8:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

11/11

Lucas Oil 150 at

Phoenix International Raceway

FS1

8:30 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

11/18

Ford EcoBoost 200 at

Homestead-Miami Speedway

FS1

8 p.m.

MRN / SiriusXM

 

All times Eastern. Subject to change.

RELATED: Driver Tracker | Offseason moves

HUNTERSVILLE, NC (January 25, 2016) – After making his NASCAR Sprint Cup debut with BK Racing in 2015, Matt DiBenedetto will return to pilot the No. 83 Toyota Camry in 2016.

Veteran crew chief Gene Nead will return atop the pit box for the 83 team.

“Last year I learned a lot from everyone here at BK Racing and I’m looking forward to having a full notebook heading into the season,” DiBenedetto said. “Ron, Gene and the team have put in a lot of work over the offseason and we are all looking forward to Daytona.”


“We’re excited to have Matt back with us for 2016,” said Devine. “We were very pleased with the progress he made throughout his rookie season and we look forward to continuing down that path.”

 

Dustless Blasting

 

Returning to BK Racing for 2016, Dustless Blasting will sponsor Matt DiBenedetto and the No. 83 car in the upcoming Daytona 500 and for multiple races this season.

Known as the fastest, most cost effective surface preparation tool on the market, Dustless Blasting’s system can remove virtually any type of coating from most substrates very quickly and without creating heat or a dust plume.

Benny LeCompte, owner of MMLJ, Inc. is proud to say “this is our third year working with BK Racing through sponsoring key races, like the season opener at the Daytona 500, for the number 83 car and Matt DiBenedetto.”


Dustless Blasting is an MMLJ Inc. Company. The original manufacturer of blast equipment, and still the only to offer lifetime warranty on tank assemblies. Built in America with quality.

 

Cosmo Motors Returns

 

Cosmo Motors returns to the 83 for multiple races in 2016. A family owned and operated business in Hickory, North Carolina, Cosmo Motors is well known for their large selection of high-end vehicles.

“We at Cosmo Motors are beyond excited to rejoin BK Racing and Matt DiBenedetto as a sponsor on the No 83 Toyota again for the 2016 race season,” said Cosmo Kogan, owner of Cosmo Motors. “We’re a smaller family run car dealership in Hickory, North Carolina and are very humbled by the ability to be a part of such a great sport, team, and driver.

“Last year was our first year sponsoring a car in NASCAR. It was an amazing experience. Not just working with the team and the driver but overall the entire experience was on a whole other level. We are really looking forward to the upcoming season as we embark on another extraordinary season with Matt and BK Racing.”

RELATED: NBC Sports Live Extra


All times ET

Monday, Jan. 25
4:30 p.m., NASCAR America: Stories of NASCAR #7 (re-air), NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR America: Stories of NASCAR #1 (re-air), NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
5:30 p.m., NASCAR America: Stories of NASCAR #2 (re-air), NBCSN
2 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FS2

Tuesday, Jan. 26
7 a.m., NASCAR America: Images of the Season #1 (re-air), NBCSN
7:30 a.m., The List: Greatest Finishes (re-air), NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR America: Stories of NASCAR #3 (re-air), NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
5:30 p.m., NASCAR America: Stories of NASCAR #4 (re-air), NBCSN
2 a.m. NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FS2

Wednesday, Jan. 27

7 a.m., The List: Texas Motor Speedway (re-air), NBCSN
7:30 a.m., NASCAR America: Top Moments (re-air)
5 p.m., NASCAR America: Stories of NASCAR #5 (re-air), NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
5:30 p.m., NASCAR America: Stories of NASCAR #6 (re-air), NBCSN
2 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FS2

Thursday, Jan. 28
7 a.m., The List: Memorable Moments (re-air), NBCSN
7:30 a.m., The List: Rookie Seasons (re-air), NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR America: Stories of NASCAR #7 (re-air), NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Daytona Rising, FS1
5:30 p.m., NASCAR America: Top Moments (re-air), NBCSN
11 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Daytona Rising (re-air), FS2

Friday, Jan. 29
7 a.m., The List: Iconic Cars (re-air), NBCSN
7:30 a.m., The List: Dale Earnhardt Sr. Moments (re-air), NBCSN
5 p.m., A Perfect Storm: The 1979 DAYTONA 500 (re-air), FS1

Saturday, Jan. 30
2 p.m., Weathertech Sportscar Championship: Rolex 24, FS1
4 p.m., Weathertech Sportscar Championship: Rolex 24, FS2

Sunday, Jan. 31
7 a.m., Weathertech Sportscar Championship: Rolex 24, FS1
Noon, Weathertech Sportscar Championship: Rolex 24, FS1

 

RELATED: Best photos from 2016 Hall of Fame induction

 

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Bruton Smith didn’t make good on the opportunity to become a legendary race car driver.

So he did the next best thing. He became a promoter. He ran race tracks. And then he built and bought speedways. And then he improved those speedways. And then he improved them some more.

Folks noticed.

And pretty soon, everyone else was scrambling to catch up.

Smith, along with drivers Curtis Turner, Bobby Isaac, Terry Labonte and Jerry Cook, was inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame on Saturday. It was fitting – Smith had dealings of some sort with each of his fellow inductees through the years.

Higher powers got him out from behind the wheel. A savvy business sense put him on the road to success operating race tracks.

“I wanted to be a race driver,” Smith, 88, said during his induction speech inside the Crown Ballroom of the Charlotte Convention Center. “I had a real strong desire to do that so I bought a race car for $700 … that’s a lot of money then. …

“So I started driving, and I learned how to drive, and it was not as difficult as I thought it was. I thought, ‘OK, now I’ve got my career going.’

His father, he said, didn’t have an issue with his career choice at the time. His mother felt differently.

“He just said, ‘Be careful, boy.’ I was, but my mom had a problem with it,” Smith said, “And she said, ‘I wish you wouldn’t do that,’ and I heard that a dozen times, I guess, and my mother was a very religious person, and my mom started praying I would quit.

“Well, I knew then when she did that it was time for me to quit because I was not going to compete with that. That’s when I quit, and I went over on the other side, and I started promoting races.”

Today Speedway Motorsports, Inc., owns and operates eight tracks that host 12 of the 36 annual premier series points races on the NASCAR schedule. Charlotte Motor Speedway, built by Smith and Turner in 1959, also hosts the series’ annual all-star (non-points) event.

MORE: NASCAR Hall of Fame inducts Class of 2016

 

CMS was the first facility to offer condominiums overlooking the track, and was the first intermediate track to feature lights, allowing races to be run at night.

Atlanta and Texas Motor Speedway, both SMI properties, also feature condominiums; there’s “Big Hoss,” the world’s largest HDTV screen along the backstretch at TMS and a 16,000-square-foot HD screen at CMS. Among the many features at Las Vegas Motor Speedway is the Neon Garage to get fans close to the action, while Bristol Motor Speedway officials are constructing the world’s largest outdoor, permanent, center-hung digital display.

RELATED: Bristol to get ‘Colossus’ for 2016

“I’ve told people before that he doesn’t do things to get awards,” son Marcus Smith said. “He doesn’t really relish a victory as much as he does a challenge, and that’s probably something in common with a lot of Hall of Famers, I would guess.

“He’s certainly someone who just relishes the challenge, loves the climb and when he achieves a goal, he quickly moves to the next opportunity and the next challenge.”

Saturday’s induction ceremony, delayed one day by Winter Storm Jonas, was the seventh since the Hall opened in 2010. Smith, who grew up east of Charlotte in tiny Oakboro, North Carolina is the third non-competitor (driver, owner, crew chief or engine builder) to be inducted. NASCAR founder William H.G. France and son Bill France Jr., were among those in the inaugural class.

“Bruton should have been in the Hall before now,” NASCAR team owner Rick Hendrick said earlier this week. “I remember him calling me one day, wanting me to buy a condo at the track. I said ‘Bruton if I buy a condo it’s going to be overlooking the ocean somewhere and not at a race track.’ About two years later, I paid more to get one.

“His mind is racing all the time; he’s done so much for the sport. He’s so brave to step out and try things that have never been tried before. It’s past time for him to go in the Hall.

“He’s a sharp guy. He helped build this sport and it’s well deserved.”

Fellow team owner Roger Penske called Smith “special,” and “someone who has brought so much to NASCAR.”

“When you think about the Charlotte Motor Speedway and Bristol, and tracks like New Hampshire and Sonoma and Atlanta, he’s been the best,” Penske said. “There’s no question. He set the bar.”

RELATED: Steve Byrnes passes away at 56

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The NASCAR Hall of Fame honored late broadcaster Steve Byrnes on Saturday at the weather-delayed induction ceremony at the Charlotte Convention Center. His son Bryson accepted the Squier‑Hall Award for NASCAR Media Excellence earlier this afternoon at the NASCAR Hall of Fame on behalf of his father, who passed away from cancer in April.

 

“This day is about those who paved the way in our sport,” FOX Sports broadcaster Krista Voda said during Byrnes’ introduction. “Each of us has a person, the one who guided us, who gave us a blueprint. Steve Byrnes was my person, my mentor, my friend. In April, Steve lost his courageous battle with cancer but not before serving as an inspiration to the entire NASCAR community.”

 

The Squier-Hall award is named in honor of legendary broadcasters Ken Squier and Barney Hall and has been presented to influential members of NASCAR media for the past three years. Byrnes’ wife, Karen, and son, Bryson, were among the many family members present at the induction ceremony.

 

“Just be nice to others,” Bryson Byrnes said on lessons his father taught him. “You know, just enjoy what you do, have a great attitude while doing it, and just always going full out when you do do something, and do what you love, and when you do do it, just do it with a heart and a passion of doing it.”

RELATED: Through the years photo gallery

Drivers Darrell Wallace Jr. and Dale Earnhardt Jr. were among those to tweet tributes and remebrances of Byrnes after Saturday’s ceremonies at the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

 

RELATED: NASCAR inducts Class of 2016 into Hall of Fame

For one wintry Saturday afternoon at least, the Iceman almost cracked.
 
Terry Labonte struck the perfect blend of class and appreciation in his NASCAR Hall of Fame induction speech Saturday afternoon, joining four additional worthy members of the Class of 2016. His accomplishments were celebrated, but so was the manner in which he achieved them — with a steady, understated style that earned him the Iceman nickname.
 
There was plenty of ice in the Charlotte area with accumulation still lingering from the fringes of Winter Storm Jonas, which delayed the ceremony from its original Friday date. But the two-time premier series champion, rarely given to heavy doses of emotion, nearly melted during his heartfelt 12-minute, 15-second acceptance speech.
 
“Well, if I ever have to give another speech or anything like that, I’m not going to let my wife sit on the front row because I looked at her and she was crying, and I looked at my mother and she was crying, and I thought, ‘Oh, God, I’m going to cry, too,’ ” Labonte said after the ceremony, the seventh induction gala for the NASCAR shrine. “I can’t look at them no more. I don’t know, I wasn’t anticipating that at all.



“But you know, my family is very excited about it, and it’s quite an honor to be in the NASCAR Hall of Fame.”
 
Provided with a tough act to follow after Bruton Smith’s entrancing speech before him, Labonte welcomed the crowning accolade with exceptional grace. The soft-spoken Texan showed his appreciation for the NASCAR Hall of Famers who preceded him in enshrinement before thanking NASCAR for their devotion to the sport of stock-car racing.

SEE THE SPEECHES: Bruton Smith | Labonte | Jerry Cook | Turner’s daughter | Isaac’s family
 
When Labonte’s speech turned to his family — many of whom were in attendance at the Charlotte Convention Center — the emotions hit home.
 
“He was telling a story about his parents and he knew they hadn’t heard that, and he told me that he might get a little emotional at that point,” said Kim Labonte, Terry’s wife of 37 years who sat front and center for the ceremony. “I was trying to keep it together. It means a lot when you look back at his career and just the things he’s accomplished and sacrifices that people made, like his parents. It just brings all the memories back closer this last week, getting ready for the Hall of Fame induction.
 
“I kept trying not to tear up, but they were just there and I couldn’t stop them. When he saw me, it triggered the same response in himself.”
 
For Bobby Labonte, who joined his brother as a premier-series champion in 2000, the quiver in his older brother’s voice resonated as he mentioned the measures his parents took to further their racing careers.
 
“It probably didn’t hit me until his speech just how big it really is,” Bobby Labonte said. “I kind of came in here like, this would be a nice little dinner or lunch, so anyway, when it was all said and done, I was watching like, ‘Holy cow.’ I’m looking around and going, ‘This is pretty big.’ It’s exciting to see.
 
“Being his little brother and watching him all those years, good gosh, I got to see all that stuff. So it really is cool to see his accomplishments and what all he’s done and being able to follow right behind him watching him. It gave me goosebumps when I was listening to him.”

RELATED: Best images from the NASCAR Hall of Fame induction
 
The elder Labonte’s on-track prowess did much of the talking for him. His 22 wins and 27 pole positions in NASCAR’s top division were only surpassed by the two championships, spread a record 12 years apart in 1984 and ’96. He transformed from Iceman to Iron Man by setting the sport’s longevity record with 655 consecutive premier-series starts, a mark that stood until 2002.
 
Asked to pull a favorite memory from his 37 seasons behind the wheel, Labonte actually recalled a race where he finished fifth. The 1996 season finale came on a chilly November day at Atlanta Motor Speedway, where Labonte led 28 laps and recorded his 21st top-five result in 31 races. It was enough to make him a two-time champion.

RELATED: See the past champions of the sport’s top series
 
His younger brother joined the celebration in Victory Lane, but his attendance there was compulsory. Bobby Labonte led a dominant 147 of 328 laps to win the season-ending race from the pole position, touching off a brotherly bash in one of the sport’s most memorable moments.
 
“For our parents, they’re standing there and kid No. 1 and kid No. 2 are both in Victory Lane on the same day, at the same time, the moment, in the same race,” Bobby Labonte said. “How does that work? How many times does that happen? That was a pretty surreal moment that that all took place for me to be able to win, he was able to win — all in the same day. It was like, wow — that kind of blew us away. Our emotions don’t get too high, but that blew us away.”
 
The emotions ran high for most of the two-hour ceremony for Terry Labonte, his family members, and the estimated two dozen “rowdy friends” who made the long-distance trek from his home state. Labonte ended his speech by saying that he’ll fondly recall being introduced as a champion two times over, but that recognition as a NASCAR Hall of Famer trumps all.
 
“You don’t start out saying, ‘I want to be in the Hall of Fame someday,’ ” Labonte said. “It’s something that, you know, when you look back and you kind of race from week to week and season to season and you win some races and win some championships and when it’s all over and said and done with and you’re selected to be in the Hall of Fame, then that’s quite an accomplishment.”

RELATED: Check out the rings and jackets that the inductees receive


Four legendary drivers and one titan of a track owner are the latest additions to the NASCAR Hall of Fame.
 
On Saturday afternoon at the NASCAR Hall of Fame in Charlotte, N.C., O. Bruton Smith, executive chairman of Speedway Motorsports Inc., entered the Hall with “Iceman” Terry Labonte, six-time NASCAR Modified champion Jerry Cook, 1970 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Bobby Isaac and flamboyant Curtis Turner, who was instrumental in raising the profile of stock car racing during NASCAR’s early days.
 
Introduced by current NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Ryan Newman, Isaac was first to be inducted during a ceremony delayed for one day by winter storm Jonas. Son Randy Isaac performed the honors, with wife Patsy accepting on behalf of her late husband.


MORE: Best photos from 2016 induction ceremony

“Bobby Isaac is a true American rages-to-riches story,” Patsy Isaac said. “He was born into a poor family in Catawba County in 1932. He was the second youngest of nine children and was on his own by the age of 12.
 
“One fateful night, Bobby attended a race at Hickory Speedway. Not having enough money to purchase a ticket, he watched the race from a tree outside the track. He was inspired to believe that racing was his opportunity for a better life.
 
“He loved to win, but he hated to lose, and he used this passion to drive his success.”
 
Isaac passed away in 1977, seven years after winning his championship in NASCAR’s premier division, and those who weren’t fortunate enough to have seen him on the track missed one of the fiercest competitors in the history of NASCAR racing.
 
In 308 starts, Isaac won 37 races and 49 poles, 10th most all-time in the latter category. Remarkably, he converted 20 of those poles into race wins. Thirty-six of his victories came during a prolific period from 1968 through 1972, when Isaac was driving the No. 71 K&K Insurance Dodge owned by Nord Krauskopf.
 
During his championship season, Isaac visited Victory Lane 11 times in 47 starts, a year after winning an extraordinary 17 times in 50 races and finishing sixth in the series standings. Isaac still holds the record for poles in a single season (19 in 1969).
 
Cook, part of a remarkable era in NASCAR Modified racing, was the second member of the class of 2016 to enter the Hall. During a 15-year span, Cook and Richie Evans, a nine-time champion and a 2012 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee, kept the Modified trophy in Rome, New York, where they both lived.

    
WATCH THE SPEECHES: Isaac’s family | Jerry Cook | Curtis Turner’s daughter | Bruton Smith | Labonte’s speech


It’s a tribute to Cook’s talent and tenacity that he was able to win six titles, including four straight from 1974 through 1977, going head-to-head against the foremost Modified driver in the history of the sport.
 
Cook’s contribution, however, isn’t limited to his on-track performance. As a long-time NASCAR executive, Cook has been instrumental in the streamlining, development and promotion of the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour.
 
Three-time Cup champion Tony Stewart introduced Cook with the words “Today one of my favorite drivers takes his rightful place among the immortals in the NASCAR Hall of Fame.”
 
An emotional Cook humbly accepted the honor, which was conferred on him by old friend and former NASCAR senior vice president of competition Robin Pemberton.
 
“I have been very fortunate to make a living doing something that I really love, and I would not trade it for anything,” Cook said during his induction speech. “When I first started racing, I wondered how long I could do this before I had to get a real job, but somehow, I always had money in my pocket, so I just kept racing.
 
“In fact, my Mother never thought that I had a real job until I went to work for NASCAR … NASCAR’s a family, and this is our house. Thanks for bringing me to our house.”
 
Always larger than life, and sometimes controversial, Turner earned the well-deserved nickname “Babe Ruth of stock car racing” for his hard-charging aggressiveness on the race track and his equally full-throttle lifestyle off the dirt and pavement.
 
A 17-time winner at NASCAR’s highest level, Turner collected most of his victories on short asphalt and dirt ovals, but he also triumphed in the 1956 Southern 500 at Darlington and the 1965 American 500 at Rockingham, driving a No. 41 Ford fielded by the Wood Brothers in the inaugural Cup race at the one-mile track.
 
Turner is the only driver in the history of NASCAR’s top division to have won from the pole while leading every lap in two consecutive races, a feat he accomplished at Rochester, New York, and Charlotte in 1950.
 
“Curtis was recognized nationally as THE race driver,” said fellow inductee Bruton Smith, who joined forces with Turner in spearheading the construction of Charlotte Motor Speedway.
 
Turner, who also won 38 races in 78 starts in NASCAR’s Convertible Series was introduced by 2014 Sprint Cup champion Kevin Harvick and inducted by Hall of Fame member Leonard Wood. Turner’s daughter, Margaret Sue Turner Wright, accepted the honor.
 
“Curtis Turner was really many things to many people,” Wright said. “He was a star to some people, a great race car driver to many people, a track president, track promoter and an owner—and entrepreneur. But we just called him ‘Dad’ or ‘Daddy.’
 
“…If there was anything he ever wanted to do—a project or a new business—he never let doubt get in the way. He just went full speed ahead into his dreams, and that’s inspiring.”
 
Smith, the fourth inductee from the 2016 class, set a new standard of opulence in NASCAR facilities. Many consider Bristol Motor Speedway his most visionary contribution to the sport. There, he took a half-mile short track in rural Tennessee and transformed it into a 160,000-seat racing coliseum.
 
Charlotte Motor Speedway, however, was the foundation of Speedway Motorsports Inc., which has grown to include eight race tracks that host a combined total of 12 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series points races, as well as the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race.
 
Introduced by 2012 Cup champion Brad Keselowski, Smith, the top vote-getter in the 2016 class, was ushered into the Hall by three-time Cup champion and Hall of fame member Darrell Waltrip.
 
“I want to thank all the people that voted for me,” the effervescent Smith said. “That was wonderful. You took a chance, but you know how it is. When you got married, you took a chance. I’m glad you voted for me—and I’m here!”
 
Smith said originally he wanted to be a race car driver and bought a car for $700.
 
“But my mom had a problem with it, and she said, ‘I wish you wouldn’t do that.'” Smith said. “I heard that a dozen times, I guess, and my mother was a very religious person. My mom started praying I would quit.
 
“I knew then, when she did that, it was time for me to quit, because I was not going to compete with that. So that’s when I quit and went over to the other side, and I started promoting races.”
 
Known as “Iceman” for his cool demeanor and “Iron Man” for his streak of 655 straight starts in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (fifth most all-time), Labonte was the fifth and final inductee of the day.
 
Labonte won championships in NASCAR’s top series 12 years apart, the first for owner Billy Hagan in 1984 and the second for Hendrick Motorsports in 1996. Labonte’s primary competition for the second title was teammate Jeff Gordon, who finished second in the standings during a run of three championships in four years.
 
“He battled Jeff Gordon for the championship when Jeff Gordon was in his prime—and beat him,” team owner Rick Hendrick said during a question-and-session with reporters on the recent Charlotte Motor Speedway Media Tour. “He’s one of the toughest people I’ve ever met, but he’s a team player, and such a good person.”
 
Labonte was introduced by reigning Sprint Cup champion Kyle Busch and inducted by daughter Kristy Garrett. Labonte then gave a nod to the corps of drivers who had preceded him into the Hall.
 
“I might be in the Hall of Fame today with you guys, but you guys will still always be my heroes, and I appreciate everything that you guys did for our sport,” he said.
 
In his acceptance speech, the typically reticent champion couldn’t resist a joke at the expense of his wife Kim.
 
“We were riding down the road the other day, and Kim looked at me and said, ‘Hey, have you even thought about a speech for the Hall of Fame?’
 
“And I looked at her and said, ‘That’s news to me. Nobody’s told me anything about a speech for the Hall of Fame’ … I thought right there, you know I’ve got the perfect wife. We’ve been married 37 years, and she still believes everything I tell her.”
 
Labonte got uncharacteristically emotional, however, in address brother Bobby Labonte, who won the Cup championship in 2000.
 
“It’s not everybody who gets to do this and race in this series, much less do it with your brother,” Labonte said. “And I’ll tell you what, we had some great years that we raced together. We have some memories that will last a lifetime. And I love you, too, buddy.”
 
Also honored on Saturday were Darlington Raceway developer Harold Brasington, who was named Landmark Award Winner for Outstanding Contributions to NASCAR, and popular Fox Sports broadcaster Steve Byrnes, who earned the Squier-Hall Award for NASCAR Media Excellence.
 
Beloved by colleagues, competitors and fans alike, Byrnes passed away in April after a long, courageous and inspirational battle against cancer.

RELATED: Official NASCAR release on postponement

Wintry weather postponed Friday night’s NASCAR Hall of Fame induction ceremony, pushing the Class of 2016’s enshrinement to Saturday afternoon.

The Hall’s seventh class — Jerry Cook, Bobby Isaac, Terry Labonte, Bruton Smith and Curtis Turner — will be inducted at 2:30 p.m. ET Saturday. The event will be broadcast live on NBCSN and NBC Live Extra, with radio coverage from MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

Plans to hold the induction as scheduled were in place until Friday morning, but accumulations of snow and ice that made travel around the Charlotte, North Carolina area treacherous forced the postponement.

The NASCAR Hall of Fame planned an early closing Friday at 2 p.m. ET with Hall of Famer autograph sessions canceled. Saturday’s altered schedule will kick off with a 1 p.m. ET luncheon.

With winter precipitation expected to continue overnight Friday and into the morning hours, the NASCAR Hall of Fame also canceled Saturday’s Fan Appreciation Day. Autograph sessions and driver meet-and-greets were canceled. According to a release provided by the venue, the Hall is exploring options to accommodate fans who obtained autograph session tickets, with a decision to be announced later next week.

The Hall announced reduced hours Saturday from noon-5 p.m. ET with free admission.

The postponement means a mere one-day delay for five stock-car legends. Modified stalwart Cook, early star Isaac, two-time premier series champ Labonte, speedway mogul Smith and the hard-charging Turner will have their names called Saturday, bringing the NASCAR Hall of Fame’s list of inductees to a total of 35.

RELATED: For more updates see Official NASCAR release