Driver re-signs with Billy Boat Motorsports and partner 811

Billy Boat Motorsports announced Monday that Mason Mingus will return to the team’s No. 15 Chevrolet for the 2015 season in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.

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The team also announced that Mingus will work with veteran crew chief Dennis Connor, who helped Jack Sprague clinch three Truck championships in a five-year span from 1997-2001. The team said it would continue a partnership with associate sponsor 811, a phone hotline designed to prevent underground damage by excavation projects.

Mingus, 20, finished 11th in the Camping World Truck Series driver standings in his rookie season last year. He started 2014 with the Kevin Cywinski-owned Win-Tron Racing No. 35 team before shifting over to Boat’s organization for the final six races of the season. His best finish was 10th place, coming at Kansas Speedway in the year’s third event.

"Running the last six races of the season with Billy Boat Motorsports last year was a good opportunity," Mingus said in a release provided by the team. "Billy Boat is a successful racer and a great businessman. I definitely saw a lot of potential within those six races, and even improvement in that short amount of time. I think they’ve got a lot of great guys on board, and I think our trucks are going to be solid equipment.

"I’m also excited to work with Dennis Connor. I worked with him for a couple races last year, and I felt like we got along and communicated well. He has a lot of success in the Truck Series and throughout his entire career. I think having his notebook and his experience in the series will help me with my learning curve."

Boat, a one-time winner in the IndyCar Series, is planning to take on his first full-time campaign in a NASCAR national series. In addition to last year’s half-dozen races with Mingus, the 48-year-old Boat also fielded the No. 84 Chevrolet for his son, Chad Boat, in 13 races last season in what is now called the NASCAR XFINITY Series.

"Our goal as a team is to compete at a high level in the NCWTS," the elder Boat said. "I know Mason has the talent to run at the front in the series, and we are working hard to build new trucks and build our team in order to give him that opportunity."

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Monday, January 12
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of the Year (re-air), FOX Sports 1
5 p.m., NASCAR America: Victory Lane 2014 (re-air), NBC Sports Network
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Tuesday, January 13
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Can Johnson rebound from 2014 disappointments?

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Team: Hendrick Motorsports No. 48 Chevrolet

Rank in final 2014 standings: 11th

Wins: 4 (Charlotte in May; Dover in June, Michigan in June; Texas in November)

Year in photos: Johnson’s 2014 highlights

Strides: In a testament to Johnson’s sustained level of success for the bulk of his career, going winless for the first 11 races of 2014 was viewed as something more than a minor slump. But after his fourth Coca-Cola 600 triumph in May, Johnson capitalized for a torrid stretch as springtime drew to a close.

The run of three victories in four races came at venues where he’s dominated — seven career wins at Charlotte, nine at Dover — but it also crossed a track off the short list of speedways where he had never won — Michigan. After posting his third straight win in the fall at Texas Motor Speedway, Johnson reached a career milestone with victory No. 70 in NASCAR’s premier series.

Setbacks: Despite the four victories, Johnson and Co. lacked the bulletproof aura that carried the No. 48 team to six Sprint Cup championships, leading to his lowest finish in the series standings in his 13-year career. A stretch of three crashes in four races during the summer halted any momentum from May and June, and Johnson led laps in just two events during a 15-race span including the start of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoffs.

Johnson made it through the first elimination phase in the new-look postseason format, but saw his hopes for a record-tying seventh series title fizzle after three subpar finishes in the Contender Round. Though the four wins matched the impressive tallies posted by Hendrick Motorsports teammates Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr., being left out of the championship conversation left a sour taste.

"I don’t have a clue, or else we would’ve fixed it," Johnson said. "At times, we felt like, ‘Man, we found it, we got it,’ and then other times, it seemed so far away. We know our cars are capable of going fast. We look at the performance the 24 (Gordon) had all year and then obviously the 4 car (series champ Kevin Harvick). We’ve got the same stuff as those boys, so just getting the ingredients right and getting the feel that I need in the car is key. Again, we had some high spots in the year where I really felt like we were onto it, and then unfortunately we couldn’t maintain it as consistently as we needed to."

Quoteworthy: "We have plenty of issues. We’re like a married couple. Every married couple’s got issues," Johnson said with a laugh about his occasional squabbles with crew chief Chad Knaus over two-way communications. "Without a doubt, we weren’t happy. We weren’t happy with our performances and unfortunately, it gets aired out over the radio at times, but Chad and I are committed to one another and I can promise that there’s still going to be more animated conversations on the radio — that’s just the way it works in our group. Nothing to freak out over, nothing to worry about. We’ll get geared up and try to win another championship next year."

What’s next: Johnson and Knaus both return to the No. 48 camp in 2015, keeping one of the longest-running driver/crew chief combinations in the sport intact. Johnson said he hoped his team would be able to adapt to 2015’s rule changes more rapidly than it did to 2014’s, but the crew will also need to adjust to shifts within the organization.

Kenny Francis moves over from his longtime role as Kasey Kahne‘s crew chief to the new position of vehicle technical director, serving as the primary go-between for the operation’s crew chiefs and vehicle group. The transition may help shore up the loss of expert engineer Rex Stump, who joined Stewart-Haas Racing in the offseason.

The one adjustment Johnson hopes to avoid? Getting used to being far-removed from the head table at the NASCAR Champion’s Week awards banquet.

"I lived the season, I knew our peaks and valleys, but to come here to the awards and be reminded of it all again, it’s an eye-opening event and it certainly kind of kicked me in the rear — not that I need the motivation," Johnson said during the annual Las Vegas gala in December. "Again, it’s very deep inside me and is there, but maybe it just shows we’re a little mortal as well. We’ve had such an amazing run over the years. (In 2013) when we won the championship, we’d won half the championships we entered so that’s a pretty rare situation. Very thankful for those opportunities but I want a few more."

Youngest national series race winner to run 10 races

JR Motorsports will add a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series team to its stable for 2015, announcing today that the company has put together a 10-race schedule for 16-year-old driver Cole Custer.

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The No. 00 Chevrolet Silverado entry will carry sponsorship from Haas Automation and will be overseen by veteran crew chief Joe Shear Jr.

It will be the first foray into the series for JRM, which fields three NASCAR XFINITY Series teams as well as a pair of Late Model entries.

Custer made his NCWTS debut last season with Haas Racing Development. He also made history, becoming the youngest winner in a NASCAR national series event when he won the UNOH 175 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. He finished the year with six top-10s and two poles in just nine starts.

"They’ve been a top-notch organization and competed for championships every year," Custer said of JRM. "We’re really excited to join them and be a part of that.

"The drivers they have there are some of the best in the sport. … Their whole program from top to bottom is first-class."

JRM’s Chase Elliott won the 2014 NASCAR XFINITY Series title and Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors. Teammate Regan Smith, who opened the season with a victory at Daytona International Speedway, finished second in the points battle.

A third team that featured several drivers finished 12th in owner standings and saw Sprint Cup Series regulars Kevin Harvick and Kasey Kahne pick up wins.

Because of NASCAR’s age restriction for the NCWTS, Custer is limited to competing at road-course venues and tracks 1.1 miles in length or less. In addition to those tracks where he started last year — Martinsville (twice), Dover, Gateway, Iowa, Bristol, Canadian Tire Motorsports Park, New Hampshire and Phoenix — the team will also compete at Eldora Speedway in July.

"I definitely want to run for a championship, but I guess 10 races is good enough for me right now," Custer said. "But even running a partial schedule, I still feel like we can go out and compete for wins at every single track. I’m not upset about it; I guess it’s worth the wait."

JRM will also field cars for Custer in select NASCAR K&N Pro Series events as well as a limited number of ARCA races. He has four career K&N Pro Series victories.

According to team co-owner Kelley Earnhardt Miller, officials were not looking to start a Truck Series team until Rick Hendrick and Joe Custer, Cole’s father, began discussing an eventual ride for Custer in the XFINITY Series.

Hendrick is owner of Hendrick Motorsports in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and also a co-owner of JRM. Custer is executive vice president at Stewart-Haas Racing, which also fields Sprint Cup teams and has an alliance with HMS.

"As we worked through those discussions," Earnhardt Miller said, "we said, ‘Well, why don’t we start now instead of talking about what could be in the future in terms of (Cole’s) moving up the ladder?’

"We were kind of hesitant because we weren’t in the Truck (Series) business. It was something that from a resources standpoint we really had to think about. Where we could even house an operation, because we’re pretty much busting at the seams here … running three full-time XFINITY Series cars (this) year.

"We just kept talking and massaging what it could look like and we’re finally here."

Should things go as planned this season, the next move would be to take the team full-time in 2016. This year’s gameplan is similar to that used for Elliott, who competed in the K&N Pro Series in 2011-12, made nine NCWTS starts and one ARCA start through HMS in ’13, and then moved full-time into the XFINITY Series this past season.

"The way it works for NASCAR approval these days, it seems like that is a good way to go about it," she said. "If you can put him in the truck for the races that he’s of age to run … we were at about 17 (total) races but in looking at the different schedules for the series, I’m not sure of the exact makeup. We will run some K&N East races and ARCA races as well … with the hope that we can do trucks full-time in 2016. We are not looking at it as a one-year deal, but want to keep in mind that it’s predicated on his performance.

"Cole’s dad is very cautious in making sure what they do is successful and they don’t want to lay out his future without it being based on his merit and performance on the race track."

While the addition of another team to the organization initially raised some questions, L.W. Miller, director of motorsports for JRM, said the move has gone smoothly thus far. The Truck Series team will be based near JRM’s headquarters in a shop previously used for the two-car Late Model program. And along with the four crewmen that transition over from the Haas effort, JRM will add four more employees to round out the roster.

"The last thing we want to do is put something else on somebody’s shoulders that might mess up what we have going, because we’re going in such a great direction," Miller said. "I think everybody involved … was talked to about ‘can we carry that extra load? Is it going to make us stronger or is it going to make us weaker?’ And there was nobody here that didn’t believe it would make us stronger in the long run.

"In the grand scheme, it’s a few more people, a little more work for some of the departments, but that being said, it broadens our horizon of what we do and just our knowledge pool alone, I mean Joe Shear coming in to crew chief the truck — he’s a very experienced crew chief. There might be things that he can add to our program here that will (improve it).

"I think everyone was very willing to take on the extra load because they felt like in the big picture it was only going to make us that much stronger."

Custer, whose 2014 results were better than several fellow competitors running a full-time schedule, said he hopes to be stronger as well. Being a part of the JRM lineup should help.

"I felt like we had speed everywhere we went (last year)," he said. "Some of the races didn’t go exactly how we wanted them to, I think mostly just because of my inexperience. … So a couple of times I’ll put it on me that some of our days went wrong.

"But I think definitely we had a top-10 truck every single race and I think this year we can be a top-five if not a race-winning truck."

Larson, McMurray prep for Rolex 24 at World Center of Racing

Photo courtesy of IMSA

The 2015 season got off to a roaring start Friday as TUDOR United SportsCar Championship and Continental Tire SportsCar Challenge teams hit the asphalt at Daytona International Speedway for the Roar Before The Rolex 24. Joey Hand of Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates was fastest overall with a speed of 128.937 mph in the No. 01 Ford EcoBoost / Target Riley DP.

The Ganassi team wasted no time in asserting its dominance and boasted a 1-2 finish in the opening TUDOR Championship practice session. The team’s superstar two-car lineup includes IndyCar and NASCAR stars such as Tony Kanaan, Scott Dixon, Kyle Larson and Jamie McMurray.

"I really have enjoyed my friendship with Scott Dixon," McMurray said. It’s nice to be with Kyle, who I’m on the NASCAR side with, and then Tony Kanaan is just a lot of fun to be around. So we have a really good group of guys. It’s fun racing the car, sharing the car with them, but it’s also fun, all the hanging out, like going to dinners, eating lunch together, and just kind of catching up on what’s going on in everyone’s life."

Scott Pruett is back with Ford full time and going for sole possession of the all-time Rolex 24 win record this year. He and Hurley Haywood are tied with five overall wins apiece.

"It’s exciting for me to be involved with Ford, period, no matter what we do," he said. "Putting them back in victory lane at Sebring overall (in 2014), which I think was their first win since ’69, was magical. If we could get to victory lane here with Ford, it would, again, recreate that magic that’s there."

Two-Car Dodge Viper GT3-R Effort Announced

TI Automotive and ViperExchange.com today announced support for a two-car Dodge Viper GT3-R effort in the Tequila Patron North American Endurance Cup in 2015. The partnership includes support for the No. 33 Dodge Viper GT3-R in the full TUDOR Championship GT Daytona (GTD) class. Full-time drivers will be Ben Keating and Jeroen Bleekemolen.

"We had a one-time chance to work with this team in July of 2014 at the TUDOR race in Indy, and we met some very talented people that are experts at tuning performance and efficiency from the street to the track," said Al Deane, chief technology officer, TI Automotive. "This sponsorship and endurance series gives our company and motorsport enthusiasts an iconic American sports car brand at all iconic American race tracks."

Both cars will feature new paint schemes that includes a white body, featuring a bold blue stripe outlined in bright green, from nose to tail.

Billy Johnson, Greg Liefooghe lead Continental Tire Challenge Testing

Billy Johnson clocked the fastest lap of the day from a pair of Continental Tire SportsCar Challenge sessions in the Grand Sport (GS) class, while Greg Liefooghe led both sessions in the Street Tuner (ST) class.

Johnson’s best lap of 110.679 mph aboard the No. 15 Multimatic Motorsports Ford Mustang Boss 302R came in the second session of the day. Johnson is sharing the car with Canadian Motorsport Hall of Famer Scott Maxwell.

Liefooghe’s best lap of 102.120 mph in the No. 83 Next Generation European Porsche Cayman, also came in in the second session of the day. Liefooghe’s co-driver is Eric Zimmermann.

Organization also named Eddie Pardue as crew chief for Cale Conley

Mike Bliss will be back behind the wheel for TriStar Motorsports in the NASCAR XFINITY Series in 2015, the team announced on Friday.

The 2015 campaign will mark Bliss’ fifth season in the XFINITY Series together. Paul Clapprood will return to serve as the crew chief for Bliss. In the past four seasons with TriStar, Bliss has recorded five top-10 finishes.

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TriStar also announced that Eddie Pardue will serve as the crew chief for Cale Conley and the No. 14 Toyota Camry team. Last season, Pardue served as the competition director for TriStar Motorsports. Pardue has served as a crew chief in the XFINITY Series before, working with Greg Biffle, Matt Kenseth, Jason Leffler and several other drivers. In 280 XFINITY Series races, Pardue has been atop the pit box for three wins. He also has crew chief experience in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (one race) and the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (22 races).

In other announcements, TriStar also said Bruce Cook will serve as the crew chief for Blake Koch in the No. 8 car. Last year, Cook served as the crew chief for nine races with the No. 80 team in the XFINITY Series. In those races, he served as the crew chief for Alex Bowman (one race), Ross Chastain (five races) and Johnny Sauter (three races) in 2014. Before that, Cook served as the crew chief for Ron Hornaday Jr. in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series for the 2013 season. He has one victory in his career in XFINITY competition, overseeing Tony Stewart‘s win in the 2011 season opener at Daytona International Speedway in what was then called the Nationwide Series.

Greg Connor will be back as the crew chief for the No. 44 team. Connor has been with the organization since 2013. A driver and sponsor announcement will be made in the upcoming weeks, according to a team release.

Wes Ward will now serve as the shop foreman at TriStar as he hangs up his crew chief hat. Ward had over 15 years of crew chief experience with his lone NASCAR national series win coming with Kasey Kahne in the 2003 season finale at Homestead in what is now the XFINITY Series.

Rick Viers has come on board as the team’s new general manager, while Keith Barnwell will serve as the new executive vice president.

Actor teams with NASCAR Productions for docuseries on Hispanic drivers

William Levy, star of movies and television, has teamed with Emmy Award-winning NASCAR Productions to produce a non-scripted reality series about Hispanic race car drivers.

"I’m truly thrilled about partnering with NASCAR and I can’t wait to show my fans worldwide this creative endeavor," the Cuban-born actor and star of telenovela "Triunfo del Amor" ("Triumph of Love") said.

The show will follow drivers as they attempt to make it in NASCAR while transitioning to life in America, and it will be pitched to networks in February.

Levy, who will join Vince Vaughn on the big screen in "Term Life" later this year, attended the NASCAR Sprint Cup Championship race at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

"Our goal is to produce original TV, film and digital projects that highlight some of the most compelling stories in NASCAR," Zane Stoddard, NASCAR’s vice president of entertainment marketing and content development, said. "We are excited about the opportunity to partner with William Levy and his team on a project we believe both sports and non-sports fans alike will enjoy."

Pit boss heads to Red Horse Racing to run the No. 11 team

Red Horse Racing announced Friday afternoon that Scott Zipadelli will be crew chief for the No. 11 Toyota to be driven by Ben Kennedy next season in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.

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Since 2007, Zipadelli has had a recurring role as a crew chief in what is now the NASCAR XFINITY Series. The Red Horse job will mark his first venture into the truck circuit.

"Red Horse Racing is a well-respected organization that has had a lot of success in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, and I am very excited to be a part of it," Zipadelli said in a release provided by the Tom DeLoach-owned team. "Ben (Kennedy) is a talented driver and I have high expectations for him and the No. 11 team. He had an outstanding rookie season, and our goal this year is to win races and put ourselves in position to contend for the 2015 championship."

Zipadelli has posted three XFINITY Series wins in his career — two last season with Kyle Larson at the wheel, and one with Boris Said on the Montreal road course in 2010. His brother, Greg, is a 34-time winner as a crew chief in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and is currently the vice president of competition for Stewart-Haas Racing.

Last month, Red Horse announced that Kennedy — the Sunoco Rookie of the Year in the NCWTS in 2014 — would join its driver lineup and that the field of crew chief candidates had been whittled to a short list. The hiring of Zipadelli fills the lone vacancy in its driver-crew chief pairings for 2015.

"Scott Zipadelli has great experience on top of the pit box and brings a lot to the program," Kennedy said in the team’s release. "I am really looking forward to working with him and can’t wait to unload our No. 11 Toyota Tundra at Daytona in February."

The 23-year-old Kennedy netted seven top-10 finishes for Turner Scott Motorsports in his rookie truck season, highlighted by having the number one starting spot for the season-opening race at Daytona International Speedway. In making the switch, he’ll take on the role of teammate to Timothy Peters and crew chief Marcus Richmond in the organization’s No. 17 Toyota.

The Camping World Truck Series’ 23-race schedule opens Feb. 20 with the NextEra Energy Resources 250 (7:30 p.m., FOX Sports 1) at Daytona.

Switch from Toyota includes conversion to ECR Engines

NEMCO Motorsports announced Friday that it will be re-establishing its partnership with Chevrolet for the 2015 season.

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The team will field Chevrolets in the Camping World Truck Series and Late Model competition with drivers Joe Nemechek and his son, John Hunter Nemechek. With the move to Chevrolet, NEMCO Motorsports will now use ECR Engines.

Team owner Joe Nemechek is no stranger to the Chevy bowtie; he and NEMCO Motorsports won 19 races in NASCAR national series competition with the manufacturer from 1991-2011, according to the team. During that period, Nemechek also earned the 1992 driver and owner championships in in what is now the NASCAR XFINITY Series, prior to winning the manufacturers’ championship for Chevrolet.

"We look forward to joining the Chevrolet NASCAR program this season," Nemechek said in a statement released by the team. "I’ve had a long-term relationship with Chevrolet for the majority of my career and I look forward to continuing that relationship."

The father-son team plans to run a split schedule in the team’s No. 8 entry until the younger Nemechek’s 18th birthday (June 8), when he will be cleared for NASCAR competition on tracks longer than 1.25 miles. After that milestone, John Hunter Nemechek will be the team’s lone driver for the rest of the season, starting July 9 at Kentucky Speedway.

See the schedule for when NASCAR’s national series will kick off in 2015

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Daytona International Speedway released start times Friday for its 2015 Speedweeks slate of events, including a 1 p.m. ET start for the sixth straight year for the 57th running of the crown jewel Daytona 500 on Feb. 22.

The start times include no major deviations from the 2014 schedule at the 2.5-mile Florida track. The most significant change is a move for the NASCAR XFINITY Series season opener to 3:30 p.m. ET; last year’s first event was scheduled for a 1:15 p.m. ET start.

All events will be televised on the FOX family of networks.

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IMSA TUDOR United SportsCar Championship schedule will get underway Jan. 24 at 2:10 p.m. ET with the 53rd Rolex 24 endurance race (FOX Sports, IMSA.com), the kickoff event for Budweiser Speedweeks. NASCAR racing activity is scheduled to begin Saturday, Feb. 14 with the annual Sprint Unlimited non-points event for the Sprint Cup Series, starting at 8:15 p.m. ET (FOX).

The field for the Daytona 500 will be set through Coors Light Pole Qualifying on Sunday, Feb. 15 (1:30 p.m. ET, FOX) and the Budweiser Duel at Daytona qualifying races Thursday (7 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1).

This year, pole qualifying will adopt the knockout-style, group format that was used at every Sprint Cup race except the Daytona 500 last season. The two 150-mile qualifiers will be run at night for the second consecutive year.

The season-opening events for all three NASCAR national series kick off Friday night with the Camping World Truck Series’ NextEra Energy Resources 250 (7 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1), continue with Saturday’s debut of the newly named XFINITY Series and its Alert Today Florida 300 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1) and culminating with Sunday’s main event, the Daytona 500 (1 p.m. ET, FOX).

Speedweeks will also offer fans a preview of portions of the Daytona Rising project, with 40,000 new seats available on the track’s west side along the short chute to Turn 1.

Start times for 2015 Speedweeks events at Daytona (all times Eastern)

Saturday-Sunday, Jan. 24-25 — IMSA TUDOR United SportsCar Championship, Rolex 24 At Daytona, 2:10 p.m. (FOX Sports and IMSA.com)

Saturday, Feb. 14 — ARCA Racing Series, Lucas Oil 200 Presented By American Real MAV TV, 4:15 p.m. (FOX Sports 1); NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, The Sprint Unlimited, 8:15 p.m. (FOX)

Sunday, Feb. 15 — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Daytona 500 Coors Light Pole Qualifying Presented By Kroger, 1:30 p.m. (FOX)

Thursday, Feb. 19 — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Budweiser Duel At Daytona, 7 p.m. (FOX Sports 1)

Friday, Feb. 20 — NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, NextEra Energy Resources 250, 7:30 p.m. (FOX Sports 1)

Saturday, Feb. 21 — NASCAR XFINITY Series, Alert Today Florida 300, 3:30 p.m. (FOX Sports 1)

Sunday, Feb. 22 — NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, Daytona 500, 1 p.m. ET (FOX).