MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Christopher Bell put forth an early challenge at Martinsville Speedway on Saturday with a lap that stood up against all comers in qualifying for Sunday’s Cook Out 400 (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
The 17th driver to make a run during time trials, Bell navigated the venerable 0.526-mile track in 19.718 seconds (96.034 mph) and waited as the 21 drivers who followed took their respective shots at the standard he set.
No one was up to the task, and Bell had his first Busch Light pole award of the 2025 season in the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, his first at Martinsville and the 14th of his Cup Series career.
Chase Elliott came closest to matching Bell’s lap. The driver of the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet covered the distance in 19.735 seconds (95.951 mph), just 0.003 seconds faster than teammate and third-place qualifier Alex Bowman (95.937 mph).
Despite turning the second fastest lap in Saturday afternoon’s practice, Bell wasn’t optimistic about his chances for the pole.
“I was kind of down in the dumps after practice (because of the position in the qualifying order),” Bell said. “But that was definitely the best qualifying session I’ve ever felt out of my car at Martinsville. It was just easy…
“I went out there and the car just had so much grip. I’m really proud of this 20 team. They’ve been working hard on this Martinsville package. We’ll see what happens [Sunday], but obviously, starting up front will be a big help.”
Kyle Larson, last Sunday’s winner at Homestead-Miami Speedway, qualified fourth at 95.854 mph. Bell’s teammate, five-time Martinsville winner Denny Hamlin, was fifth at 95.840 mph.
Chris Buescher, Joey Logano, Bubba Wallace, Tyler Reddick and defending race winner William Byron filled out the rest of the top 10 on the grid.
Casey Mears, whose No. 66 Garage 66 Ford failed inspection twice before qualifying, will start 37th in his first Cup Series race since the 2019 Daytona 500.
Wallace fastest in practice
Toyota swept the top three spots in practice as 23XI Racing’s Bubba Wallace topped the leaderboard at 94.139 mph, followed by Joe Gibbs Racing drivers Christopher Bell (93.873 mph) and Denny Hamlin (93.826 mph).
Carson Hocevar (93.757 mph) and Cole Custer (93.743 mph) rounded out the top five.
Kyle Larson (93.724 mph), William Byron (93.719 mph), Ryan Preece (93.604 mph), Shane van Gisbergen (93.576 mph) and Chase Elliott (93.543 mph) completed the top 10.
Only one incident stopped practice in Group 2 when Justin Haley saw the hood on his No. 7 Chevrolet pop up, covering the windshield and forcing the Spire Motorsports driver to come down pit road for his crew to fasten the hood.
MARTINSVILLE, Va. — From the afternoon to nightfall, Corey Heim had the fastest machine in the Craftsman Truck Series field at Martinsville Speedway. Unfortunately, for a second straight week, Heim will have to wait for his third victory of the season.
Starting from pole, the 22-year-old phenom dominated most of Friday’s night bout at the 0.526-mile circuit in Virginia, leading 149 of the 200 laps but walked away with a sixth-place finish.
“Pretty disappointing,” Heim said post-race. “Thought we had a really good Tundra tonight. We were pretty much just puttering around there in the lead, trying to keep the tires on it, and felt like we were really good. To struggle so bad at this place last year and be as fast as we were and not win is pretty frustrating. But guess it’s just part of coming to this race track.”
It’s not uncommon for tempers to flare at a track like Martinsville, where the ultimate prize of a grandfather clock ratchets up the pressure amongst drivers. That was the case for most of the evening, where eight cautions were flown for incidents.
One of those incidents came after a Lap 166 restart where Heim was defending series rookie Kaden Honeycutt, who had spent most of the race as a top-three truck. Heim got bumped going into Turn 1 as the race went back green, allowing the No. 45 of Honeycutt to move into the inside lane and challenge for the top spot — something no one had the opportunity to do all night.
The next time around, Honeycutt squeezed Heim against the wall on the frontstretch, leading to the No. 11 Toyota of Heim having a tire go down and spinning in Turn 1.
“He used me up a little bit [Turn] 1 and 2 and then just kind of doored me out of [Turn] 4 and cut down my left rear,” Heim said. “I don’t think it was anything super malicious on his end. I don’t think he intended to do it, but intention’s one thing and result is another. Collaterally, he wrecked us there with the damage. So not super pleased about it.”
It may not have been an intentional move from Honeycutt, but it takes away what could’ve been another win for Heim, who has gone the last two seasons winning three or more races.
“I’ve seen worse. I’ve seen guys just flat-out get dumped here. I’d be a little more angry about that,” Heim said. “I don’t think he intended to wreck me by any means, but I would have liked to been cut a little bit of room, especially with like 35 to go, like it, if it’s overtime or something. But, yeah, we got 35 laps to go which is just a while around this place, so just unfortunate.”
Honeycutt was very apologetic in the moment after Heim came down pit road and restarted 25th as the second-to-last car on the lead lap. Post-race, Honeycutt adamantly wanted to right the wrong he caused Heim and put the whole situation behind them.
“I wanna say we ran out of room, but I really don’t want to say that, it’s really a dumb excuse to use so I’m going to look at it,” Honeycutt said. “I’m going to talk to him about it. I really don’t want to have that happen again. I want to earn his respect because he is a veteran in this series and he’s one to race for a championship at the end of the year.”
Honeycutt, the 2024 Snowball Derby champion, now has 39 Truck Series starts under his belt and leaves Martinsville with a 26th-place finish. More experience running toward the front and dueling with some of the series’ best can help the 21-year-old, who doesn’t want to make any enemies during his rookie campaign, going forward.
“I definitely don’t want to create bad blood early and try to make up for it the next time we race each other,” Honeycutt said. “So I’ll discuss it with him and hopefully we’ll get by it. We were both really fast, just hate that we have the results that we have tonight.”
Both Heim and Honeycutt will get their chance to battle again as the Truck Series returns to action Friday, April 11 at Bristol Motor Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1, NASCAR Radio Network Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
MARTINSVILLE, Va. — During the week before Friday night’s Boys and Girls Club of the Blue Ridge 200 at Martinsville Speedway, Daniel Hemric practiced his backflip.
It was the signature move he had been able to use just once in NASCAR national series competition — when he won the 2021 season finale at Phoenix Raceway to clinch the NASCAR Xfinity Series championship.
But on Friday, the 34-year-old from Kannapolis, North Carolina, had a chance to perform the celebratory move once again after capitalizing on the misfortunes of others — notably series leader Corey Heim — to win the first NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race of his career.
Hemric even stuck the landing, reveling in the race win that earned him a coveted grandfather clock trophy and a $50,000 Triple Truck Challenge bonus as the highest-finishing series regular.
“It’s a funny thing because my wife asked me a couple weeks ago if I was not too old to do it,” Hemric said of the back flip. “I practiced once last week in the backyard and did a back flip on solid ground.
“I thought, ‘The old man’s still got it,’ and I proved that tonight.”
Hemric needed help to win the second national series race of his career. Heim won the first two stages and led a race-high 149 of 200 laps, but side-to-side contact with Kaden Honeycutt’s Chevrolet after a Lap 166 restart cut Heim’s left-rear tire and sent his No. 11 Toyota to pit road for fresh rubber.
Honeycutt inherited the lead, but on Lap 187, Ty Majeski’s No. 98 Ford broke loose under Honeycutt’s Silverado as the two drivers were battling for the lead, and both trucks spun into the outside wall.
That put Tyler Ankrum, Hemric’s McAnally-Hilgemann Racing teammate, at the front of the field. But with four laps left, Hemric used his bumper to dive underneath Ankrum’s truck, made the pass for the lead and pulled away to win by 0.544 seconds.
“Congratulations to Daniel. I can’t think of a nicer guy to win,” Ankrum said. “Yeah, he gave me the bumper, but you’re going to do that at Martinsville. I honestly would much rather have a teammate give me the bumper for the win, so we can just get a win for MHR.”
Jake Garcia finished third, followed by Chandler Smith and Ben Rhodes. Heim rallied to finish sixth after the tire change but fell short in his attempt to win in Toyota’s 500th race in the series.
“I feel like we got used up a little bit there,” Heim said of the contact with Honeycutt. “I don’t think he intended to cut my left rear down. I think if he had wanted to do that, he would have just wrecked me as it is…
“I just needed a better restart, I guess.”
It was the second straight week of frustration for Heim, who won the first two stages at Homestead-Miami Speedway on Mar. 21 before losing power in the late going and finishing third.
Heim nevertheless retains the series lead by 20 points over Majeski.
The Truck Series next races at Bristol Motor Speedway on April 11 (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1, NASCAR Racing Network Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
NOTE: Post-race inspection in the Craftsman Truck Series garage concluded without issue, confirming Hemric as the race winner. The No. 71 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet had one lug nut loose, which will result in a monetary fine. The No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford and No. 98 ThorSport Racing Ford will return to the R&D Center in Concord, North Carolina, for further inspection.
Living in northern Utah, finding a place to race isn’t always easy for Eric Rhead.
Last year while competing in a touring series, he and his team took a trip to Emmett, Idaho to compete in the inaugural race at Motorplex at the Mill. Even before the green flag waved, Rhead was impressed with the new facility.
“For a local short track, that is the coolest facility you’ll ever see in your entire life,” Rhead said. “The track’s the track. It is the coolest facility ever. It’s crazy.”
The NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series track was built on the site of the Old Boise Cascade Sawmill, which was in operation for more than 110 years.
“It’s just got this big, huge, long, wide building,” Rhead said. “It’s probably like 500 feet long, and that’s where the pits are, and they’ve got like a bar at the end of it, and they bring in concerts. It’s just a really cool atmosphere.”
Rhead didn’t know what to expect in that first race, but he wanted to see what the track was like before returning later in the summer with his touring series.
“We figured if we can get a race on the track before the touring series comes here, it’ll be to our benefit,” he said. “And we showed up for the first race, and they had a huge car count, and we actually won the race.”
The win, coupled with a great atmosphere at a great new track, convinced Rhead and his team they needed to make The Mill their home for the summer.
“It was like, ‘You know what, I think we’ll probably just run all the races, then,'” he added. “So, that’s kind of how we did it. We didn’t plan on racing their season. We just showed up for the first race and kind of fell in love with the place.”
Rhead went on to win three races over the summer and became the track’s first champion of the Pro Late Model division.
“It’s an awesome place, and to be able to say that not only did we make the first race and win the first race, we won the first championship, and it was no small task,” he said. “There was really good racing all year long there, and it was really cool. It’s really cool to say that we were the first.”
There was something about The Mill that suited Rhead’s driving style. He finished in the top five in all six races.
“We obviously had a good time,” he said. “We won half the races and we did have really good success there. Just every time I went there, it just felt like I we always had a knack for getting in the front at the end of the race and staying there. The track is really hard to drive. It’s really small. It’s really hard to pass, and for some reason I just took well to it. I really liked that place.”
Rhead began racing at age 14 when his dad bought a race car on a whim. To that point, he played “every sport you could imagine,” he said, including hockey, basketball, track and wrestling.
“My dad bought a race car, and that was the end of my sports career,” Rhead said. “I fell in love with racing, and I’ve never been able to shake it since.”
There was a track not too far from his house for much of his teen years and 20s, but Rhead always enjoyed getting to travel to new places.
Racing the full season in Idaho required a lot of Rhead and his team. Their home was about seven hours away, and he said they put more than 25,000 miles on their motorhome getting to and from races every week.
He’s become accustomed to the travel since there are no NASCAR sanctioned tracks in Utah. They drove to Southern California for the final race at Irwindale Speedway in December. The closest track is about three-and-a-half hours away, and the Las Vegas Motor Speedway Bullring is six hours.
Recently, he was back on the road again, traveling 400 miles to pick up a new race engine. But the success at The Mill made those long drives worth it for Rhead’s team.
“It’s a way easier drive home with everybody when you win compared to when you don’t,” Rhead said with a laugh.
Eric Rhead greets a fan ahead of the Star Nursery 150 for the ARCA Menards Series West at the Bullring at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Oct. 13, 2023. (Photo: Ian Maule/ARCA Racing)
It’ll be another summer of logging miles for Rhead and his team. They plan to race in a few different touring series, including one at the Vegas Bullring, as well as Colorado National Speedway, another NASCAR-sanctioned track he had never been to until last season.
When races at CNS don’t conflict, they’ll also be back at The Mill. Rhead said his goal is to win a race in four states — California, Nevada, Colorado and Idaho — while also chasing as many championships as he can.
He won’t be the only driver with his team. His girlfriend Roxi and the son of one of his crew members will both be racing Legends Cars this season.
Rhead wanted to help Roxi and his friends get into racing as a small way to show his appreciation for what their help means to him on the track.
“As I reflect on everything that I’ve done over the long time that I’ve gotten to race, I said to my girlfriend and the crew at the end of last year, I think I’ve pretty much done everything I want to do,” Rhead said. “We’ve won I don’t even know how many championships and in different classes and touring series.
“We’re going to take some time and let some other people have some fun this year — some of the people who helped me get where I am.”
Rhead will kick off his season April 19 at the Vegas Bullring. CNS will open May 3, and The Mill will open May 10.
“I’ve definitely got a problem,” he said with a laugh. “We’ve got too many cars, but it’s a lot of fun. There are way worse problems to have.”
WELCOME, N.C. (March 28, 2025) — Richard Childress Racing announced Friday that NASCAR Xfinity Series standout Jesse Love will make his NASCAR Cup Series debut at Bristol Motor Speedway on Sunday, April 13. Love will pilot the No. 33 C4 Ultimate Energy Chevrolet on the high banks of the Last Great Colosseum.
“Racing in the Cup Series has always been my main goal and dream,” said Love. “Everything that I have done up to this point in my career has been building to this moment. To make my Cup Series debut at this age is very special, and I’m grateful for the opportunity to make it with RCR. Everyone has welcomed me with open arms over the last year and the organization feels like family.”
Love has quickly climbed the motorsports ranks and continues to add to an impressive resume. During his Xfinity Series rookie campaign in 2024, the 20-year-old claimed his first series win, a series-leading five poles, and Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors. Love became the youngest champion in NASCAR history by clinching his first ARCA Menards Series West title at the age of 16 in 2020. The Menlo Park, California native then posted a dominating performance by winning half the races and the championship in the 2023 ARCA Menards Series season.
Earning his first Xfinity Series victory of 2025, Love captured the checkered flag in the season-opening event at Daytona International Speedway and has already locked his team into the playoffs.
“I’m excited to have Jesse make his Cup Series debut in the No. 33 Chevrolet,” said Richard Childress, chairman and chief executive officer of RCR. “From the moment I started watching Jesse race, I knew that he had the talent. He has the passion for wanting to win and doing the best possible for his team. To be a great driver, you have to have passion behind the wheel and Jesse has that. We’ve seen him develop over the last year since he joined RCR, and I look forward to helping him compete at the highest level of our sport.”
Nutrabolt, owner of C4®, is the No. 1 selling global pre-workout brand and one of the fastest growing energy drink companies in the country. Making its C4 Ultimate Energy product line-up more delicious and even cooler, Nutrabolt recently introduced the Frost collection — a product extension available in three flavors that will also unveil a unique can technology that transitions from silver to blue when the can is cold and ready to drink.
The green flag for the Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway will wave at 3 p.m. ET on Sunday, April 13. Watch live television coverage on FS1 and listen to flag-to-flag coverage on the Performance Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Girl Tribe Co., a local Charlotte women-owned business, is teaming up with America’s No. 1 motorsport for the first time to launch an exclusive apparel collection. The collection will feature nine distinctive styles, blending fashionable and race-inspired pieces that capture the spirit of NASCAR while honoring the empowerment of women.
Debuting Friday, the collection will be available for purchase at the Girl Tribe Co. store located in South End, Charlotte, as well as NASCARShop.com and GirlTribeCo.com.
“Partnering with Girl Tribe Co. allows us to bring a unique and innovative collection to new and longtime NASCAR fans alike,” said Megan Malayter, vice president of licensing and consumer products at NASCAR. “This collection blends the spirit of motorsports while celebrating and empowering women, and we’re excited to see how fans embrace it both at the track and beyond.”
Founded in 2014 by Charlotte natives and high school best friends Carrie Barker and Sarah Baucom, Girl Tribe Co. is a women-positive graphic apparel brand designed to connect and celebrate women. Built on passion for supporting and uplifting women, the company was created by besties, for besties — a place where women can connect, shop and feel empowered.
“This will be our first launch for the Girl Tribe Co. x NASCAR collection, and we cannot wait to see which products resonate with the fans, as their feedback will guide us in developing future collections and understanding how customers interact with our line,” said Girl Tribe Co. co-founder Sarah Baucom. “Growing up in Charlotte, NASCAR has always been synonymous with Sunday Fundays at the track. We are thrilled to bring our aesthetic into this sport!”
“Social media has helped women curate cute outfits to cheer on their favorite driver at the track, and we’re eager to bring more options for officially licensed wearable women’s NASCAR apparel to the market,” she added.
To shop the collection, visit GirlTribeCo.com andNASCARShop.com.
Wet-weather tires will be available for Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race at Martinsville Speedway (3 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) should rain dampen the race weekend at the 0.526-mile oval.
The National Weather Service indicates sunny skies Friday and Saturday, but a 50% chance of showers Sunday afternoon. Should it actually rain, racing action would return much sooner than in years past with the wet-weather tire on hand.
The wet-weather tire procedure, first introduced into the sport on road courses, debuted on ovals in the All-Star Race at North Wilkesboro Speedway in 2023 and has been used at Richmond Raceway (spring 2024) and New Hampshire Motor Speedway (summer 2024) in the Cup Series since.
A reminder of process: According to the NASCAR Rule Book, the series managing director declares when wet-weather conditions are in place.
Then, when the race is ongoing, NASCAR determines the tire configuration in the event of damp conditions. In simplest terms, on ovals where wet-weather tires are utilized, NASCAR will make the determination on whether “slicks” or “wets” are being used, depending on the track conditions.
Following the New Hampshire race last season, where the tire configuration was used on a damp surface, NASCAR adjusted its procedure, stating that if natural cautions fall under a wet-track condition, teams will manage how to use their allotted sets of wet tires.
Previously, NASCAR dictated when teams could change one set of wet tires to a new set of wet tires on ovals. The adjustment was made to allow teams to strategize. In this scenario, for example, teams could decide to pit for new wet-weather tires or stay out on older wet tires and gain track position.
If track conditions change to dry, as determined by the series director, NASCAR will throw a caution to allow teams to change from wets to the primary sets of tires.
Goodyear will allot a maximum of four sets of wet-weather tires this Sunday at Martinsville. In addition to noticing the tread on the tires, fans can easily tell the difference by the white Goodyear lettering (as opposed to the standard yellow).
Phoenix Raceway, Bristol Motor Speedway and Iowa Speedway are also ovals where wet-weather tires could be used. The list also includes Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park in the Craftsman Truck Series.
At the Wood Brothers Racing Museum, nestled in the Virginia mountain hamlet of Stuart where NASCAR’s longest-running team was founded, two photos tell twin narratives that encapsulate 75 years.
For Eddie Wood, team CEO and the oldest son of late patriarch and WBR co-founder Glen Wood, his personal favorite among a vast collection of 102 Victory Lane moments is among the most famous. It’s the celebration of David Pearson’s classic victory over Richard Petty in the 1976 Daytona 500 after the two legends crashed on the last lap in the signature moment of NASCAR’s greatest rivalry.
“David and I had some of the coolest conversations on the radio you ever would hear,” Eddie Wood said with a laugh. “I remember ’76 just as it happened because the really cool thing that showed was the Steve McQueen and Clint Eastwood swagger that David Pearson had. That conversation during the entire last lap, he was talking to me just like he was one of the radio announcers calling the race. That’s my big moment.”
For Len Wood, Eddie’s younger brother and the COO of WBR, his cherished image is recent: A series of photos from Harrison Burton’s victory at Daytona International Speedway last August that signified the oldest team in NASCAR still was fighting to recapture its 20th-century heyday.
Pearson, three-time Cup champion Cale Yarborough, versatile global superstar Dan Gurney and four-time Indy 500 winner A.J. Foyt are on the roster of winners who built Wood Brothers Racing into a Ford powerhouse with an extraordinary pedigree during the first half of its existence.
But the second half of WBR’s history is a much different story of adapting through some very painful and occasionally humiliating hard times.
A team whose epic run of eight winning decades in NASCAR is as much about its survival as its enormous success.
“That’s a true statement,” Len Wood said. “If we look back, there could be probably 10 times a different decision could have been the end of it.”
There’s no talk of turning out the lights now at Wood Brothers Racing, which enters its hometown race weekend at Martinsville Speedway with a future that seems as bright as at any point since entering full-time Cup racing 40 years ago.
Josh Berry’s March 16 victory at Las Vegas Motor Speedway was the latest sign of a rebirth for NASCAR’s most storied organization. A week earlier, Berry had finished fourth at Phoenix Raceway — the team’s first top five ever at the 1-mile track.
With its Team Penske alliance and a reworked organizational structure and succession plan that has ushered in a third generation of leadership to secure its longevity, the family-run team is well poised to soldier on in its unconventional way.
Rather than measure by wins and championships, Jon Wood, Eddie’s son and the president of WBR, likes to view success in “longevity and how long you make it in this sport, and the mark that you make. I feel like (our) mark probably competes with or tops any other team’s relevance in NASCAR.
“We do things quite a bit differently than anybody. Every team has their own nuances, and with that there are pros and cons, but we do things quite a bit different. Some of it may not be the best, but if you add all of it together, I think what we do seems to work.”
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images
Wood Brothers Racing was in only its seventh year the first time its extinction was staved off.
After a winless 1956 season, driver-owner Glen Wood had lost his Ford support but still managed to win at Champion Speedway in Fayetteville, North Carolina — earning a congratulatory call from 1925 Indy 500 winner Peter DePaolo.
“Daddy thanks him and says, ‘But I’m about done. I got a car for Richmond, but I don’t think I can make it,’ ” Len Wood said. “DePaolo said, ‘What do you need?’ They rolled Daddy out a set of six tires.”
Wood won the next Convertible race on April 7, 1957, at Richmond Fairgrounds and got “back on the deal” with Ford Motor Co.
There since have been many inflection points for the team, notably when Eddie and Len took charge of daily operations and secured full-season sponsorship to begin running full time with Kyle Petty in 1985. It was a major step for a team that excelled by cherry-picking (and winning) the biggest races.
“In that timeframe, one wrong decision, and I would have been working in a sawmill,” Len Wood said. “Daddy was a sawmiller who took up racing as a hobby. He could make a little bit more money in racing than sawmilling. It was more dangerous, but it was much easier. I would not want to work in a sawmill. I’ll take the life we had.”
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images
Eddie and Len Wood have been at the helm for some of the team’s lowest points.
After a stretch with two wins in 10 years, the team relocated its racing operations from Stuart to the Charlotte area in 2003 but was met with diminishing results amid a lack of engineering depth.
The nadir came after failing to qualify for the 2008 Coca-Cola 600. At a Pocono Raceway test a few days later, Eddie Wood took a call from Edsel Ford seeking a phone number but also wondering why he never heard from the team. After Eddie said he was “ashamed” to call the Ford scion because of the team’s struggles, Edsel Ford immediately set up a meeting at the company’s Dearborn, Michigan, headquarters with new Ford Motor Co. executive Jim Farley.
Leaving the Pocono garage in T-shirts and jeans, Eddie and Len Wood flew directly from Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, to Detroit, but they had time to get new clothes at a mall when Farley was called away on business.
Farley, now the CEO of Ford, put a plan in place two days later to nurse Wood Brothers Racing back to health while staying on a part-time schedule. Two and half years later, in his second career start, Trevor Bayne won the 2011 Daytona 500 in the No. 21 the day after he turned 20.
“That was a kid who didn’t know what he couldn’t do,” Len said. “A fairytale story.”
Said Eddie Wood: “We went from almost being out of business because we couldn’t make races, to winning the biggest race of the year in a matter of three years.”
A return to full-time racing came in 2016, two years after Team Penske began supplying engineering and technical support. As Len explains it, the “worker side” of the car’s final preparation still involves longtime Wood Brothers Racing employees.
“Penske has been firm from the beginning that they need to keep their DNA and their identity, and we need to keep ours,” Jon said. “We’ve maintained our way of doing things, and ours is a little bit more edgy at times. Theirs is more cleaned up and proper, but it’s a good relationship, and it seems to work. It’s mutually beneficial, and it’s helped us tremendously. But they are Team Penske, and we’re Wood Brothers, and there’s a difference, and that will never change.”
Sean Gardner | Getty Images
The “edginess” that Jon references is evident in the Wood Brothers Racing social media accounts where he often serves as a de-facto admin who revels in irreverence (check out the posts after Berry’s victory).
Jon also is the team’s president since taking over day-to-day operations from his father nearly a year ago in a generational passing of the baton. His sister, Jordan Wood Hicks, also became the chief marketing officer, and his first cousin Keven (Len’s son) was named executive vice president.
The transition began five years ago as Eddie and Len realized they were too “low tech” to adapt in the new world.
“We’ve got Jon, Keven and Jordan on the high-tech side,” Len said. “When the pandemic hit and all these Zoom calls started happening, Eddie and I are not particularly fond of that or sitting around listening and talking about die-cast cars or T-shirts or team president meetings for two hours or whatever. So Jon was doing all that.”
Eddie still handles sponsors. Len organizes the budget with Penske and helps oversee the operations in Stuart (where 90-year-old team co-founder Leonard Wood still works on engines and carburetors with several machinists). Their sister, Kim Wood Hall, keeps the team’s books as chief financial officer.
“When they say the prayer, sing the anthem and fire those things off, it’s still racing and as good now as it was back then to me,” Eddie said. “But everything else is different. So now Jon and Jordan and Keven are kind of leading the thing. They understand the technology landscape. If I had to deal with social media back in my day, I don’t know if I’d have made it.”
Jonathan Bachman | Getty Images
Jon Wood stresses he still wants to maintain the “vision” of Eddie and Len and keep pace with modern-day NASCAR without making fundamental changes to WBR.
And what is that vision?
“If you come to a hard spot in a decision, it’s ‘Well, what’s the right thing to do?’ and you do that, and it usually works out,” Eddie said. “That’s kind of the way we raced.”
It’s often antithetical to how someone with an MBA would run a company. Built on a foundation of handshake deals and implicit trust, Wood Brothers Racing has remained operational for 75 years without a delineated business plan. Jon has struggled with reconciling decisions made by his father and uncle that seem unsound in the short term but work out over time.
“I always would make fun of them and say that their CPA worked for the IRS because it seemed like they paid more taxes than anybody,” Jon said. “But they would take the approach that there’s a fork in the road, and there’s two routes, either what benefits us or what’s the correct and the right thing to do, and they always do what’s the right thing, whether it benefits us or not. And in the end, it turns out is the right decision.”
One recent example would be the team’s decision last year to pull Burton’s winning car at Daytona from rotation so it could be displayed in race condition at the museum in Stuart with its original engine, interior and Victory Lane confetti still on the hood.
Beyond the logistical hurdles of rearranging inventory timelines and ordering new parts and pieces from a few dozen suppliers, there also was the unbudgeted expense of buying an entirely new car for its fleet.
“That’s the right thing to do,” Len said. “If we took a shortcut or put in another seat or another transaxle, then it wouldn’t be the car.”
Jon said “authenticity” is the simplest way to explain the ethos of Eddie and Len.
“They take it a step further that not only are they friends with Jim Farley, but they know what sport Jim Farley’s kids are into,” Jon said. “They actually care, and that’s the difference. They’re genuine people.
“You can’t just keep doing exactly the same things. But you still have to stay true to what your fundamentals are and the way this team was founded and run for 75 years. And the way they’ve done things is primarily built on relationships and treating people right. We don’t have flowers and a really pretty interactive display behind our hauler and all this other crap that a lot of these teams have shifted to that is fluff and puff. But that also doesn’t make you who you are as a race team, and that part for us will never change.”
Case in point: Jon and Eddie Wood interrupted a family vacation to the Hoover Dam to conduct the phone interview for this story from a minivan that was parked on a dirt road 10 feet from the edge of Lake Mead under gathering storm clouds.
“I’m worried it’s going to rain so much; we’re not going be able to make it back because, again, we’re in a minivan,” Jon said with a laugh. “But that’s how we do things.”
Things worked out as they always do. Three days later, Berry scored his stunning victory at Las Vegas that locked Wood Brothers Racing into the playoffs for the fourth time and earlier than ever before.
That’s encouraging for a business that already is overperforming expectations by just continuing to race. Out of curiosity, Jon Wood recently Googled how many Fortune 500 companies had been on every list since 1955. The answer was less than 50.
“And only one Cup team from 1950 is still around today,” he said. “You don’t just do that by being lucky. There have been a lot of opportunities that we probably should have gone out of business and didn’t, and it was just total luck, but there’s been more where things happened because the right decision was made. That’s how you keep it going.”
Nate Ryan has written about NASCAR since 1996 while working at the San Bernardino Sun, Richmond Times-Dispatch, USA TODAY and for the past 10 years at NBC Sports Digital. He is a contributor to the “Hauler Talk” show on the NASCAR Podcast Network. He also has covered various other motorsports, including the IndyCar and IMSA series.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – NASCAR and Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park have postponed this weekend’s NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour event due to a forecast of continued rain and cold temperatures forecasted for Sunday. The race has been rescheduled for Saturday, April 5. The start time will be announced at a later date.
The Icebreaker 150 was originally scheduled for this Sunday, March 30.
The Saturday portion of the 51st Icebreaker at Thompson Speedway is still on as scheduled for Saturday, March 29, as is Friday’s planned Practice Day. However, the entire Sunday schedule of divisions and events have been moved to Saturday, April 5.
For updated event information as available, fans may go to nascar.com/regional.
On Friday night, Toyota will mark its 500th race in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series in the Boys and Girls Club of the Blue Ridge 200 at Martinsville Speedway (7:30 p.m. ET, FS1, NASCAR Radio Network, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
In 499 previous races, Toyota drivers have claimed 236 combined victories, led by Kyle Busch with 56, Todd Bodine with 22 and Johnny Benson with 14.
That prolific winning record, which began with Travis Kvapil’s victory at Michigan on July 31, 2004, has led to nine drivers’ championships and 13 manufacturers’ titles.
Driving the flagship Tundra for Toyota on Friday is Corey Heim of Tricon Garage, who has contributed 13 victories to the manufacturer’s total since his series debut in 2021.
Heim has two wins in four starts this season and leads the series standings by eight points over reigning champion Ty Majeski.
Heim won at Martinsville in 2023 and has posted three top 10s in four starts there.
Chevrolet driver Grant Enfinger, however, may be a strong candidate to spoil the Toyota party. Enfinger comes to Martinsville with a career-best streak of nine straight top 10s, dating back to last season.
In addition, Cup Series regular William Byron returns to the Truck Series in the No. 07 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet. Byron gave Spire its first win in the series at Martinsville in 2022.
Also, the Craftsman Truck Series’ Triple Truck Challenge gets underway this Friday at Martinsville with the highest finishing Truck Series regular taking home a $50,000 bonus in prize money.