*Indicates changes from 2015
#Indicates driver to miss start of 2016 season
^Indicates driver will not make every start in car (Michael Waltrip will drive the No. 83 in the Daytona 500, Matt DiBenedetto will drive a third entry for BK Racing.)

2016 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series drivers

Car Number Driver Crew Chief Manufacturer Team
1 Jamie McMurray Matt McCall Chevrolet Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates
2 Brad Keselowski Paul Wolfe Ford Team Penske
3 Austin Dillon Slugger Labbe Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing
4 Kevin Harvick Rodney Childers Chevrolet Stewart-Haas Racing
5 Kasey Kahne Keith Rodden Chevrolet Hendrick Motorsports
6 Trevor Bayne Matt Puccia* Ford Roush Fenway Racing
7 Regan Smith* Tommy Baldwin Jr.* Chevrolet Tommy Baldwin Racing
10 Danica Patrick Billy Scott* Chevrolet Stewart-Haas Racing
11 Denny Hamlin Mike Wheeler* Toyota Joe Gibbs Racing
13 Casey Mears Bootie Barker Chevrolet Germain Racing
14 Tony Stewart# Mike Bugarewicz* Chevrolet Stewart-Haas Racing
15 Clint Bowyer Steve Addington Chevrolet* HScott Motorsports*
16 Greg Biffle Brian Pattie* Ford Roush Fenway Racing
17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Nick Sandler Ford Roush Fenway Racing
18 Kyle Busch Adam Stevens Toyota Joe Gibbs Racing
19 Carl Edwards Dave Rogers* Toyota Joe Gibbs Racing
20 Matt Kenseth Jason Ratcliff Toyota Joe Gibbs Racing
21 Ryan Blaney Jeremy Bullins Ford Wood Brothers Racing
22 Joey Logano Todd Gordon Ford Team Penske
23 David Ragan* Patrick Donahue* Toyota BK Racing
24 Chase Elliott* Alan Gustafson Chevrolet Hendrick Motorsports
27 Paul Menard Justin Alexander Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing
31 Ryan Newman Luke Lambert Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing
32 Jeffrey Earnhardt*/Bobby Labonte Wally Rogers* Ford Go FAS Racing
34 Chris Buescher* Bob Osborne* Ford Front Row Motorsports
38 Landon Cassill* Donnie Wingo Ford Front Row Motorsports
41 Kurt Busch Tony Gibson Chevrolet Stewart-Haas Racing
42 Kyle Larson Chad Johnston* Chevrolet Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates
43 Aric Almirola Trent Owens Ford Richard Petty Motorsports
44* Brian Scott* Chris Heroy* Ford* Richard Petty Motorsports*
46 Michael Annett Jay Guy Chevrolet HScott Motorsports
47 AJ Allmendinger Randall Burnett* Chevrolet JTG Daugherty
48 Jimmie Johnson Chad Knaus Chevrolet Hendrick Motorsports
78 Martin Truex Jr. Cole Pearn Toyota* Furniture Row Racing
83 Matt DiBenedetto^ Gene Nead Toyota BK Racing
88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Greg Ives Chevrolet Hendrick Motorsports
95 Michael McDowell/Ty Dillon* Dave Winston* Chevrolet* Circle Sport — Leavine Family Racing*
98 Cole Whitt* Mark Hillman* TBA Premium Motorsports

The 2016 Charlotte Motor Speedway Media Tour is here with most of the teams and the sanctioning body meeting with the press corps to look ahead to the upcoming season.

NASCAR.com will have you covered with complete coverage of the week, which caps off with Jerry Cook, Bobby Isaac, Terry Labonte, Bruton Smith and Curtis Turner being inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame on the night of Friday, Jan. 22.

Below is the full schedule of live-streaming events on NASCAR.com

READ MORE: Top story lines heading into 2016 | Drivers, crew chiefs on the move in ’16 | 2016 Paint Scheme Preview

Tuesday, January 19 (Watch live)

— 11 a.m.: NASCAR
— 1:30 p.m.: Joe Gibbs Racing
— 3:15 p.m.: Furniture Row Racing
— 5 p.m.: Fox Sports

DAILY ROUNDUP

READ: NXS, NCWTS to get Chase elimination format

WATCH: Kenseth jokes with Joe Gibbs about playoff football

READ: NASCAR introduces Caution Clock in NCWTS

WATCH: Driver analyzes changes in all three top series

 

Wednesday, January 20 (Watch live)

— 9 a.m.: Richard Petty Motorsports
— 10:45 a.m.: Roush Fenway Racing
— 3:30 p.m.: Team Penske

DAILY ROUNDUP
READ: New team coming into NASCAR
READ: Will more change lead to gains Roush needs?
READ: Scott, Heroy ready for first Cup season together
READ: Logano looks to turn page on Kenseth drama

Thursday, January 21 (Watch live)

—11:10 a.m.: Richard Childress Racing | RELATED: RCR forms new alliance
—1:30 p.m.: Stewart-Haas Racing | RELATED: Stewart, Patrick get new crew chiefs
—3:15 p.m.: Hendrick Motorsports | RELATED: Junior drops ‘Gray Ghost’ hints

 

DAILY ROUNDUP
READ: Johnson on the cusp of breaking records in 2016
READ: Retirement? Not on the radar for Earnhardt Jr.
READ: Ty’s Cup plans revealed
READ: Larson ready for bounce-back with new crew chief

READ: Tony deflects about Chili Bowl altercation 

WATCH: Say What?! Danica’s fancy feet

A 2015 rewind and a 2016 preview for the top five finishers last season in the NASCAR XFINITY and Camping World Truck Series. Today: Erik Jones, the 2015 champion in the Truck Series.

Team: Kyle Busch Motorsports No. 4 Toyota (2015); Joe Gibbs Racing No. 20 Toyota in the XFINITY Series (2016)

Wins: 3 (Iowa, Mosport, Texas-2)

Strides:
Besides the trio of victories and five pole positions, Jones finished outside the top 10 just three times. Once he prevailed on the twisty layout of Canadian Tire Motorsport Park in late August, the talented rookie grabbed a lead in the points standings that he would hold the rest of the year.

Setbacks: An electrical issue and a related 23rd-place result at Gateway stood as Jones’ only finish in the back half of the truck field all year.

Quoteworthy: “I think there were definitely times in the year when I didn’t think we’d be able to do this and looking back and seeing the deficit we were in at some points and just being able to really pull together and make this all happen here at the end of the year, it was just so, so special for everybody here. I couldn’t think of a better way to thank them.”

What’s next: After a resoundingly successful season with starts in all three NASCAR national series, Jones moves up the ladder into the XFINITY ranks. He already has visited Victory Lane twice in that series. He’ll have a new crew chief in Chris Gabehart calling the shots, but will also likely gain more seasoning with a select part-time schedule in the Sprint Cup Series.

CONCORD, N.C. (Jan. 18, 2016) — WIX Filters has joined Hendrick Motorsports as a key technical partner with an agreement that will supply innovative filtration products and provide critical development support to the 11-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champions through 2019.


With a four-year pact, WIX’s air and oil filters will be used in competition by the four Sprint Cup Series teams of Hendrick Motorsports with drivers Kasey Kahne, Chase Elliott, Jimmie Johnson and Dale Earnhardt Jr. Its logo will be featured on team equipment, transporters and underneath the hood of Hendrick Motorsports‘ Chevrolet SS race cars.


“Since the early 1960s when Richard Petty began using our filters, generations of motorsports champions have driven to Victory Lane with WIX,” said Jennifer Gibson, brand manager for WIX Filters. “Adding a team like Hendrick Motorsports only further positions us as the number-one filter in motorsports, and we couldn’t be more excited to see what that means on the track this season.”


“We pride ourselves on our technical superiority and high performance racing filters, and we like to align ourselves with the best,” said Bill Stamey, engineering manager for WIX Filters. “Becoming a Hendrick Motorsports technical partner this race season is an incredible honor and a testament to our ongoing innovation and hard work.”


Hendrick Motorsports has earned 240 points-paying Sprint Cup wins since 1984, and its engines have more than 300 victories across all NASCAR series. Last season, the team’s engines posted wins in 14 of 36 Sprint Cup races and powered six Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup contenders.


“WIX Filters has been involved with NASCAR for nearly five decades,” said Doug Duchardt, general manager of Hendrick Motorsports. “They not only will provide proven filters for our race cars but impressive capabilities in research and development. We know both their products and insights will ultimately help improve our performance. It’s an exciting partnership for our entire competition group, and we look forward to many successes together.”

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (January 18, 2016) – Team Penske announced today that one of its most accomplished engineers will take on a new challenge beginning in 2016, as Brian Wilson has been named crew chief of the No. 22 Ford Mustang in the NASCAR XFINITY Series (NXS).

Wilson will assume the crew chief role while Greg Erwin, who guided the No. 22 team to its third-consecutive NXS Owners’ Championship this past season, will return as team manager of Team Penske‘s NXS program. The No. 22 team has earned an amazing 25 wins with four different drivers (Joey Logano, Brad Keselowski, Ryan Blaney and AJ Allmendinger) over the course of the last three seasons. The No. 22 Mustang is the first car to capture three-consecutive NXS Owners’ Championships.

Wilson joined Team Penske in 2004 and has served as race engineer on both the No. 22 NXS team as well as the No. 2 Miller Lite Ford Fusion NASCAR Sprint Cup Series team over the last several years. A native of Detroit, Mich., Wilson played a key role on Team Penske‘s first two NASCAR championships. He was race engineer on the No. 22 team that captured the 2010 NXS title with driver Brad Keselowski and he served in the same capacity in 2012 when Keselowski and the No. 2 team captured the Sprint Cup Series title.

“Brian has been an integral part of two of our NASCAR championships over the last few years and he has shown he deserves the opportunity to lead a team as he has demonstrated the ability to consistently produce race-winning cars,” said Roger Penske. “Brian has earned this opportunity and we believe he is the right person to lead the No. 22 team as it prepares to race for four-straight titles in 2016.”

After first coming on board as a shock specialist with Team Penske, Wilson became engineer of the No. 2 Miller Lite car in the Sprint Cup Series in 2007. Alongside crew chief Paul Wolfe, he transitioned to race engineer of the newly-formed No. 22 NXS team in 2010. After the team won the title with Keselowski that season, Wolfe moved into the crew chief role of the No. 2 Miller Lite team while Wilson was promoted to the Sprint Cup Series race engineer position.

Over the last five seasons, the tandem of Wolfe and Wilson helped lead the Miller Lite team to 16 wins, 10 poles, 58 top-five finishes and Team Penske‘s first Sprint Cup Series Championship with Keselowski behind the wheel in 2012.

“I am looking forward to this new challenge and the opportunity to lead the No. 22 Discount Tire Ford Mustang team after my last stint there during our first championship season in 2010,” said Wilson. “This is a team that has certainly proven that they know how to win and I want to continue that tradition. I’m excited to get a chance to continue to work with Brad and to get to work more closely with Joey and Ryan. Our goal will be to maintain the level of success that this team has shown since its beginning and continue to race for wins each and every week. Winning that fourth-straight NASCAR XFINITY Series Owners’ Championship would just be the ultimate prize.”

 

The NASCAR XFINITY Series will open its season on February 20th at Daytona International Speedway.

HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. (January 18, 2016) — Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) announced today the No. 20 Toyota Camry driven by 2015 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series champion Erik Jones will carry GameStop, Reser’s Fine Foods, Hisense and Interstate Batteries for his rookie season in the NASCAR XFINITY Series (NXS).
 
Jones has 26 career starts in the XFINITY Series over two seasons of running a limited schedule. He has earned two wins (Texas – April 2015 and Chicago – June 2015), three pole starting positions, 13 top-five finishes, 20 top-10 finishes and led 292 laps with an average start of 4.8 and average finish 8.9.
 
“I’m really excited to get 2016 started,” said Jones. “Ending last season with the Truck Series Championship and having the success on the XFINITY side, along with the Cup starts, it was a dream season. Things happened quicker than I’d ever planned, but I’m thankful for all of the opportunities and to be running full-time in the XFINITY Series this year. I can’t wait to get back in the No. 20 Toyota Camry for JGR and to work with Chris Gabehart. We had a great year in 2015 with GameStop and it’ll be another fun year continuing to build on that partnership, as well as with Reser’s, Hisense and Interstate Batteries.”
 
GameStop
Longtime partner GameStop enters their ninth season partnering with JGR and their second with Jones. Their 2016 season will kick off at Auto Club Speedway on March 19 and include two trips to their home track, Texas Motor Speedway. In 2015 in just his ninth career NXS start, Jones earned his first NXS career win at Texas Motor Speedway, starting the race from the pole position and leading 79 laps before taking the checkered flag on April 10, 2015. The win also marked the first win for GameStop in their backyard.  
 
“Erik saw great success in his first year driving for team GameStop, and has become an amazing brand ambassador for us,” said Bob Puzon, Senior Vice President of Merchandising for GameStop. “He not only has great skills on the race track, but is also an avid gamer who our fans and customers connect with.”
 
GameStop will adorn the No. 20 Camry this season for 12 races: Auto Club Speedway (March 19); Texas Motor Speedway (April 8); Bristol Motor Speedway (April 16); Talladega Superspeedway (April 30); Charlotte Motor Speedway (May 28); New Hampshire Motor Speedway (July 16); Watkins Glen International (August 6); Richmond International Raceway (September 9); Kentucky Speedway (September 24); Dover International Speedway (October 1); Texas Motor Speedway (November 5); Homestead-Miami Speedway (November 19).
 
Reser’s Fine Foods
Moving from veteran Matt Kenseth, Reser’s Fine Foods enters their fourth season with JGR as they join Jones for his rookie season. Reser’s previously sponsored Jones at Bristol Motor Speedway in 2014. Jones started the race from the sixth position and finished eighth in his second-career start in the series.
 
“We see it too… Erik Jones is a rising star in the world of NASCAR racing,” states President and CEO Mark Reser. “We’ve had success with veteran Matt Kenseth and now we are fired up to have Erik take the wheel of the No. 20 and make us proud. Our partnership with Joe Gibbs Racing continues to provide a tremendous marketing platform to support our business.”


Reser’s Fine Foods will be featured on the No. 20 Camry for eight races this season: Daytona International Speedway (February 20); Phoenix International Raceway (March 12); Dover International Speedway (May 14); Michigan International Speedway (June 11); Kentucky Speedway (July 8); Bristol Motor Speedway (August 19); Road America (August 27); Kansas Speedway (October 15).
 
Hisense
Entering their second year with JGR, Hisense shifts their sponsorship to include 19-year-old Jones for five races. Hisense made their debut with JGR at Richmond International Raceway on April 24, 2015 with Denny Hamlin piloting the No. 20 Camry. Hamlin started the 250-lap race from the pole position and led 248 laps on his way to securing the first victory for Hisense.
 
“Last year was a great ride with Denny Hamlin leading our introduction into NASCAR,” said Dr. Lan Lin, executive vice president of Hisense Group and general manager of Hisense International Co. “We are proud to add Erik Jones to the JGR/Hisense family and look forward to working together on some exciting projects to elevate the Hisense brand in 2016.”
 
The Hisense colors will appear on the No. 20 Camry for five races this season: Atlanta Motor Speedway (February 27); Richmond International Raceway (April 23); Indianapolis Motor Speedway (July 23); Chicagoland Speedway (September 17); Phoenix International Raceway (November 12).
 
In addition to their five races with Jones in the No. 20 Camry, Hisense will also sponsor Hamlin for one race in the No. 18 Camry at Charlotte Motor Speedway on May 28.
 
Interstate Batteries
Celebrating 25 years with JGR, founding partner Interstate Batteries will team up with Jones for the second year in a row, serving as the primary sponsor of the No. 20 Toyota Camry at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on March 5. Last season Interstate Batteries partnered with Jones where he was running in the top five before an on-track incident took away his chances of earning a trip to the Las Vegas Victory Lane.
 
“The 2016 season marks Interstate Batteries’ 25th year as a partner with Joe Gibbs Racing,” said Dorothy Jones, Chief Marketing Officer for Interstate Batteries. “When you have a young talent like Erik Jones behind the wheel of our Interstate Batteries Toyota in the Las Vegas XFINITY Series race, it’s a great way to kick off this milestone celebration. With Erik, along with defending Sprint Cup Series champion Kyle Busch driving our Interstate Batteries Camry’s, we are very excited about 2016 and hope to celebrate our 25th year together in victory lane.”


The 2016 NXS season kicks off at Daytona International Speedway on February 20 with Jones in the No. 20 Reser’s Toyota Camry for his rookie season where he will be vying for the 2016 XFINTY Series Championship.

RELATED: NBC Sports Live Extra


All times ET

Monday, Jan. 18
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Jeff Gordon, FS1
2 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FS2

Tuesday, Jan. 19
7 a.m., NASCAR America: Images of the Season #1 (re-air), NBCSN
7:30 a.m., NASCAR America: Images of the Season #2 (re-air), NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
5 p.m., NASCAR America: Stories of NASCAR #1 (re-air), NBCSN
5:30 p.m., NASCAR America: Stories of NASCAR #2 (re-air), NBCSN
3 a.m. NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FS2

Wednesday, Jan. 20

5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
2 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FS2

Thursday, Jan. 21
7 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
3 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FS2

Friday, Jan. 22
7 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Jeff Gordon (re-air), FS1
6:30 p.m., NASCAR America: Hall of Fame Special, NBCSN
8 p.m., NASCAR America: Hall of Fame Special (re-air), NBCSN
9:30 p.m., NASCAR America: Stories of NASCAR (re-air), NBCSN
2 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Jeff Gordon (re-air), FS2

Saturday, Jan. 23
1 p.m., NASCAR America: Hall of Fame Special (re-air), NBCSN
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony, NBCSN

 

Rico Abreu went back-to-back in the Chili Bowl, winning one of the most prestigious Midget Car races in the country for the second consecutive year.

 

Abreu — who on Friday announced his full-time ride with ThorSport Racing in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series — began his ascent into NASCAR with his 2015 win, and he repeated the feat this year in a championship race that started Saturday night and ended after midnight. It was the 30th annual running of the race.

 

RELATED: Abreu excited about 2016 plans

 

Abreu took the lead with less than 10 laps remaining in the 55-lap event and powered to victory in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

 

Much to the delight of the crowd, Abreu celebrated by climbing the fence and turning donuts.

 

Bryan Clauson finished second, followed by Zach Daum, Jerry Coons Jr. and NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Kyle Larson.

 

 

The Chili Bowl is a week long event with five days of practice and qualifying events to set the 25-car field for the A-Main, which is the championship race.

 

Saturday started with two N-Feature races — the top four finishers from each advance to the M-Feature races. The format was used all the way up to the A-Main, making for a long (and exciting) day of racing.

 

Roush Fenway Racing driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr. won his B-Main Feature to transfer into the championship race. Larson also earned a spot in the main event with a top showing in his B-Feature race.

 

Hendrick Motorsports driver Kasey Kahne qualified for the main event prior to Saturday, adding his name to the mix of NASCAR racers.

 

Christopher Bell, who has a full-time ride with Kyle Busch Motorsports in 2016, finished 12th. Kahne took 13th with Stenhouse finishing in 17th after a late wreck with Sammy Swindell sent him back in the pack.

 

Reaction to Abreu’s win was quick to pour in:

NASCAR’s warm embrace of innovation was about to send out a pivotal trial balloon. The snazzy new Pit Road Officiating (PRO) system had been thoroughly tested and troubleshot, closing in on its goal of implementing technology to make officials’ jobs more efficient and safer and to better enforce pit-road penalties.

 

Still, there was a natural anxiety among the sanctioning body’s competition officials ahead of its grand debut.

 

“Just a common, normal apprehension,” Chad Little explained, adding with understatement, “and just a little thing called the Daytona 500.”

 

Little, named to the new role of NASCAR’s managing director in charge of technical inspection and officiating just 20 days ahead of last year’s season-opening Great American Race, wasn’t alone in sharing some mild anxiety. Media were given a tour of the then-nondescript trailer in the offseason, complete with a demonstration of the eight workstations where officials would cycle through double-time video footage to verify potential penalties against laser-mapped telemetry — all in close to real time. There weren’t vocal doubters, but uncertainty remained about how the system would work in real race conditions.

 

RELATED: See photos from that tour

 

Each event has its own importance, but with the maiden voyage taking place in stock-car racing’s Super Bowl, the stakes were plenty high.

 

“We’re going into Daytona every year for our biggest race with not necessarily on pins and needles, but we’re geared up, we know that we can do the job, but we’re always thinking about the ‘what-ifs,’ and I’d be lying if that wasn’t the case going into last year with the PRO system,” said Jim Cassidy, NASCAR Senior Vice President of Racing Operations. “But we had redundancies, we had a plan in place … for every scenario that we can imagine, but at the same time we know there’s also the unknown.

 

“Sometimes what we’re the best at is dealing with things as they come along. In that case, fortunately, we enjoyed the fruits of it and it was more fine-tuning than dealing with any major issues, which is a credit to everybody involved.”

 

The PRO technology, which returns for its second year with a much higher comfort level entering next month’s Speedweeks at Daytona International Speedway, was on display earlier this week at the NASCAR Summit, the industry’s annual preseason convention for track services, medical, safety and security workers. The record number of almost 900 attendees for the Summit’s 15th year had the opportunity to tour the PRO trailer firsthand and learn about its intricacies.

 

It turns out that many of those worries heading into 2015 were unfounded. All of the system’s fail-safes performed as expected, and fears that the Pit Road Officiating trailer would be especially nitpicky in identifying infractions never materialized: Last year’s Daytona 500 tallied 29 pit-road violations, compared to 31 for the previous season and 28 in the year before that. The races that followed took a similar pattern.

 

“We were pretty much really comfortable with everything, but going into Daytona, we were concerned that what if we have 100 penalties,” Little said. “We don’t want to bog down the race with a bunch of travelling calls. We were real mindful of that, but we didn’t know exactly what we had because it’s a brand-new system. Those things develop throughout the year, but thank gosh we didn’t have any stumbling blocks at Daytona.”

 

WATCH SYSTEM IN ACTION: Footage of over-the-wall penalty for No. 88

 

Learning logistics

 

Attendees at Monday’s sessions at the NASCAR Summit received guidelines about how to best prepare their tracks for year two of the Pit Road Officiating structure. The seminar stressed the importance of uniformity in painting the bordering lines to pit boxes and the need to coordinate with NASCAR officials when mounting the 50 cameras that capture pit stop footage during the course of a race.

 

Adhering to those instructions tends to make life easier for George Grippo, NASCAR’s managing director of technology field and media operations. Beyond the PRO system, his responsibilities include the logistics of the trackside TV compound, timing and scoring, user support and maintenance and all the wiring, cables and power needed to make the technology go.

 

The biggest learnings from PRO’s first season, Grippo said, were that camera placement is paramount and that every track presents its own set of obstacles. Bristol Motor Speedway, for instance, had an accommodating roofline but cameras were mounted at much higher angles than a larger track such as Michigan International Speedway, where cameras were placed over the top row at the back of the grandstands at a greater distance. At Sonoma Raceway, cameras were located on a makeshift mount on heavy scissor-lift equipment aimed at pit road.

 

In each instance, working with tracks became imperative.

 

“Every time we went to a new place, it was a challenge,” Grippo says. “I think now we’ve kind of gotten that stuff dialed in, but first-year growing pains were all around, trying to figure it out on the fly — and you don’t have a lot of time.”

That part of the process figures to be easier in the second year; each eight-pound camera is packed up after a race weekend, but in most cases the custom-made mounts stay behind, ready for the next event.

 

But even as NASCAR officials learned more about the PRO system’s nuances, teams also picked up a few tricks of the trade. Among them, Grippo said, was the practice of wearing uniforms or shoes that matched the color of pit road — from off-white concrete to the darker grays from more freshly laid asphalt. The lack of contrast, Grippo explained, could potentially help crewmembers muddle officials’ task of determining whether a team member has come over the wall too soon.

 

“The teams are no dummies,” Grippo said. “They see the video, too, because we provide that video for them as a training piece. They can figure some of that stuff out. If I’m going to Dover, I’m wearing a white sneaker so that nobody can tell that I’m hitting the concrete versus a black shoe. They don’t do anything to help us, that’s for sure. They get smarter as we go along.”

 

One newfound advantage for officials is the use of footage to better explain to crew chiefs why certain rulings were made. Some calls, Little said, remain subjective but that video replays — delivered to teams atop the pit box in just a handful of minutes — typically help to clarify any disputed infractions. And the PRO system isn’t solely a watchdog; teams are able to download its pit-stop footage typically the day after a race for use as a training tool.

 

The system wasn’t without its fluky hiccups — the flyover pilot at one race who opened the back of a camera out of curiosity, the vapor-locked backup generator at another track and the occasional camera replacement to name a few — but because of the widespread use of redundant cameras, backup power generators and other safeguards, no race-altering issues crept up.

 

The goal for the new style of Pit Road Officiating was to seamlessly blend into the flow of a race, much like the adage of how the best referees are the ones you don’t notice. After 36 Sprint Cup points races last season, the system’s naysayers were relatively few.

 

“You’ve got the capability of our officiating team to take what they know and what they applied when they went over the wall and apply it to the PRO trailer in a way that buttons us up even further,” Cassidy says. “To get through season one and not have stories about it in any other way but to expose a positive approach, the tie-in with technology and letting our folks do what they are very good at but do it in a different way, it was impressive.”

 

Year two and beyond

 

With any remnants of 2015’s opening-day stage fright in the rear view, the Pit Road Officiating trailer enters its second year on steadier ground, thanks to a season’s worth of reps.

 

What’s next for 2016? Any advances in technical know-how as part of the never-ending search for enhancements at the NASCAR Research & Development Center may tell the tale.

 

“We get our best people that are available to manage the races from a pit-stop standpoint and we’ll continue to do that,” Little said. “From a technology standpoint, we continually look at faster and more efficient ways to look at the pit stops. But I think we’re entering the second year with more comfort in what we have to make it better and take advantage of that technology, because we just touched the tip of the iceberg.”

 

New challenges abound, especially at tracks where construction projects will make camera-mounting alterations necessary, but the strides made with the PRO system in its debut season have already secured a firm foundation.

 

“We were pretty fortunate,” Grippo says. “There were a lot of people that thought the thing wasn’t going to work. They were scratching their heads trying to figure out how we kept it going all year long. I think our greatest compliment was (NASCAR vice chairman) Mr. (Mike) Helton saying it looked like we’d been doing this thing for 10 years. If we can pull that off with all the technology we’re putting out there, we’re in a good spot.”

RELATED: Learn more about the NASCAR Hall of Fame


DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Some label Terry Labonte the NASCAR premier series’ least flamboyant champion.

 

Perhaps it just seemed that way, when measuring Labonte alongside such colorful contemporaries as NASCAR Hall of Famers Dale Earnhardt and Darrell Waltrip.

 

His calm, quiet demeanor at least partially explains why Labonte became known as “The Iceman.”

 

The Corpus Christi, Texas driver may not have personified flash, but Labonte got the job done.

 

Labonte won his first of two championships in 1984 and figuratively fell off the radar for a dozen years before resurfacing to claim a second title driving for Hendrick Motorsports.

 

MORE ON 2016 CLASS: Jerry Cook | Bobby Isaac | Bruton Smith | Curtis Turner

 

His 22 premier series victories don’t accurately measure the breadth of Labonte’s career. Consistency is a much better measure: 17 different seasons among the top 10 in the championship standings along with 361 top-10 finishes, the latter ranking 10th all-time. Labonte also won in the NASCAR XFINITY and Camping World Truck Series, as well as the International Race of Champions (IROC) and shared the GTO class-winning entry in the 1984 24 Hours of Daytona.

 

Rick Hendrick believed Labonte’s attitude — which often put others first — may have kept him from winning more frequently.

 

“Terry could’ve accomplished even more in his career had he been a little more selfish,” Hendrick told The Associated Press in 2006. “But there’s not a selfish bone in his body. He’s a great talent, but he’s just a great human being.

 

“He’ll always do what’s best for the team, even if it puts him in an awkward spot.”

 

Labonte will be inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame in Charlotte, North Carolina on Jan. 22, along with the other four members of the Class of 2016: Jerry Cook, Bobby Isaac, O. Bruton Smith and Curtis Turner. Ceremonies will be broadcast live on NBCSN at 8 p.m. ET.

 

Born Nov. 16, 1956 and raised in south Texas, Terrance Lee Labonte was introduced to racing by his father, who worked on race cars for friends. He was a quarter-midget champion by age nine and won stock car titles in Corpus Christi, Houston and San Antonio from 1975 to 1977.

 

Labonte met Louisiana oilman and sports car racer Billy Hagan, who fielded the NASCAR premier series team that carried Skip Manning to the rookie of the year title in 1976. Labonte joined the Stratagraph Racing team for the final five races of 1978 and became Hagan’s permanent driver the following season in which he finished 10th but lost rookie of the year honors to Earnhardt.

 

Labonte notched his first premier series victory in the 1980 Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway. With sponsorship from Piedmont Airlines, Labonte, Hagan and NASCAR Hall of Fame crew chief Dale Inman captured the 1984 championship with victories at Bristol Motor Speedway and the Riverside (California) International Raceway road course.

 

Success, however, was fleeting.

 

“We weren’t supposed to win it and we didn’t know what to do with it,” said Inman, who left the team to rejoin Richard Petty.

 

Labonte agreed, reminiscing after his second title, “I thought it was a pretty neat deal and we’d win it the next year. Next year took a long time coming.”

 

Labonte departed the Hagan outfit for Junior Johnson’s Budweiser team, then went to Precision Performance followed by a second stint with Stratagraph. He joined Hendrick Motorsports in 1994.

 

“I looked at his statistics early in his career and I couldn’t believe how well he’d run with the equipment he was in,” Hendrick later told The Associated Press.

 

Labonte responded by winning the 1996 championship, edging Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jeff Gordon by 37 points. His younger brother, Bobby, won the season-ending NAPA 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway and the two celebrated together. Bobby Labonte became a NASCAR premier series champion himself in 2000, making the pair the first brothers to win a title in the top division.

 

Terry Labonte continued fulltime with the Hendrick team through the 2004 season, winning for the final time at Darlington in 2003. He continued to race on a part-time basis, calling it an 890-race career at Talladega Superspeedway on Oct. 19, 2014.

 

Labonte has said his two favorite victories were those in his home state — at Texas Motor Speedway. But he may be better-remembered for a pair of slam-bang races at Bristol battling the late Earnhardt. In 1995, Labonte won a final-lap duel despite a shove by Earnhardt that sent his car into the wall. Fast-forward to 1999, when Earnhardt spun and wrecked Labonte on the final lap and famously said in Victory Lane, he was “just trying to rattle his cage.”

 

The driver — and his fans — were livid, but Labonte admitted 15 years later in a Popular Speed Magazine interview that he was at least partially to blame for the ruckus.

 

“If I had gotten into the corner at a better angle then he wouldn’t have got the chance to hit me. But I was passing him low and couldn’t carry the speed into the corner and he took advantage of it,” Labonte said. “I don’t think he really intended to wreck me. He wanted to move me out of the way. That was his only shot. I had four new tires and he didn’t.

 

“It was just one of those deals.”

 

Labonte is a member of the National Quarter Midget Hall of Fame and in 1998 was named one of NASCAR’s 50 Greatest Drivers.

 

Tickets are available for the NASCAR Hall of Fame Induction Dinner and Ceremony (limited quantities available). Individual ticket and ticket packages are available at ticketmaster.com, the NASCAR Hall of Fame Box Office or by calling 800.745.3000.