Team expands to three cars in Sprint Cup Series
RELATED: See all the changes for 2015
Front Row Motorsports announced Friday that Cole Whitt will drive for the team in 2015 as it expands its NASCAR Sprint Cup Series operation to three full-time cars.
Whitt will drive the No. 35 Ford for team owner Bob Jenkins, carrying sponsorship from Speed Stick deodorant for 10 races, including the season-opening Daytona 500 on Feb. 22 (1 p.m ET, FOX). Whitt will also work with crew chief Randy Cox, who was atop the pit box for all of his Sprint Cup starts last season.
"I’m really excited and grateful for the opportunity to go racing with Front Row Motorsports and continue my relationship with Speed Stick," Whitt said. "Bob Jenkins is a smart businessman and has grown his team the right way over the years, and I’m really looking forward to being a part of that growth. The 2014 season was great for me as a driver. We had some important personal victories and some areas where we’ll want to improve."
Whitt, 23, has 50 career starts in NASCAR’s top series. He drove in all 36 races last season, finishing the year with BK Racing after Swan Racing shut its doors in the spring. Whitt ended the season 31st in the Sprint Cup Series standings after his Sunoco Rookie of the Year campaign.
For his career, Whitt — a former sprint car champ in USAC competition — has four top-five finishes in what is now the NASCAR XFINITY Series and two top-fives and a pole position in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.
The move is the second driver announcement for the Statesville, North Carolina-based team this week. Tuesday, Front Row said that David Gilliland would return to the organization’s No. 38 Ford. David Ragan also drove for Jenkins last year on a full-time basis, completing his third straight season in the No. 34 entry; he indicated in media reports last fall that he hoped to renew his contract with the team for 2015.
"This is an exciting time for Front Row Motorsports," Jenkins said. "Adding Cole Whitt to our program, along with the support of the Speed Stick team, is another big step in our growth as a young team. We’re going to have a diverse mix of experience with our drivers, which, I think, is going to be a big benefit for everyone."
Whitt’s move to the Front Row team was foreshadowed late last November with an early congratulatory tweet from Anthony Marlowe, a co-owner for BK Racing. In it, Marlowe said that Whitt was earmarked for the team’s No. 34 ride, replacing Ragan.
Representatives for Front Row Motorsports denied the rumor, and while Marlowe backed down from his initial tweet, he still indicated he was "98 percent certain" that Whitt would eventually land with Front Row.
Jenkins’ team fielded three cars in a handful of events last season, but the No. 35 Ford had as many starts — four — as it did failures to qualify. Veteran David Reutimann drove the car in three races and Blake Koch one.



(Left to right) NASCAR Senior Vice President and Chief Communications Officer Brett Jewkes, Bryson Byrnes, Steve Byrnes and NASCAR Hall of Fame Executive Director Winston Kelley on Tuesday, Jan. 13, at the Byrnes’ home.



