Editor’s note: This continues the series in which we review each 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs driver in reverse order of championship finish.

Season in review: Tyler Reddick, No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota
Crew chief: Billy Scott
Final 2023 ranking: 4th
Key stats: Three wins, 12 top fives, 21 top 10s, three pole positions, 597 laps led

How 2024 ended: Reddick’s playoff ride was loaded down with wild swings in momentum, but his points edge from securing the Regular Season Championship and a well-timed triumph at Homestead-Miami Speedway were enough to thrust him into his first Championship 4 appearance for the Nov. 10 season finale at Phoenix. Reddick and the No. 45 Toyota group struggled to contend in the year-ending event, finishing last among the title-eligible quartet in sixth place overall.

Best race: Two top candidates for this accolade stand out — one race that Reddick won, and one that he didn’t. Reddick drove to a signature victory in the middle race of the postseason’s Round of 8, claiming the pole position and then rallying with a bold final lap at Homestead-Miami Speedway. The 28-year-old driver went from third place at the white flag, bypassing Denny Hamlin and Ryan Blaney in the course of the final mile and a half for his third victory of the year and a berth in the final. In the race that he didn’t win, Reddick overcame a significant midrace bout with illness at the demanding Darlington Raceway, gutting out a 10th-place finish to ice the regular-season title by just one point over Kyle Larson.

RELATED: Regular-season title to Reddick | ‘Beast mode’ in Reddick’s Miami win

Other season highlights: Reddick sealed two more victories in 2024, landing his first superspeedway win at Talladega in April, then adding an August triumph at Michigan just before the regular season ended. He also set the tone for the season ahead with a victory in a Daytona 500 qualifying race. His most consistent work, however, came as springtime gave way to summer, when he assembled a string of 10 top-10 finishes in an 11-race stretch. That solid run put Reddick in the points lead, the first time a 23XI Racing driver has topped the Cup Series regular-season standings since the organization’s debut in 2021.

Stat to Know: Reddick established personal-best marks in four statistical categories last season — top fives (12), top 10s (21), laps led (597) and average finish (13.2). He was also one of just five drivers to notch at least three wins and three poles during the 2024 campaign.

Quotable: “I think it’s something that I’ve always had, but a good reminder of it this year, just determination. Pushing through the tough days. That word comes to mind the most: determination.” — Tyler Reddick, asked what he learned about himself during his playoff march and his season overall.

MORE: Reddick through the years | All of Reddick’s Cup Series wins

Looking ahead: Reddick said at the season-ending NASCAR Awards that he’ll find time to reflect on the 2024 season after “catching up on life” with a personal offseason to-do list. The California native provided a small competition look-ahead, however, saying that he and the No. 45 group learned plenty about each other last year, and that the team will aim to find more speed at Phoenix — which is again the site of the championship race in 2025. No major changes are in store for the No. 45 team’s personnel lineup, but the 23XI Racing organization will grow next season with the addition of a third car — the No. 35 Toyota driven by Riley Herbst, who makes the jump up from the Xfinity Series to team with Reddick and fellow 23XI driver Bubba Wallace.

Five years down in the NASCAR Cup Series, Christopher Bell continues to rise as a superstar in the sport.

He matched a career-best in wins with three during the 2024 campaign and set new highs in top fives (15) and top 10s (23) while making the playoffs for a fourth consecutive season.

Despite having his best Cup season to date, Bell missed out on a third straight chance at the Bill France Cup in Phoenix after being eliminated at Martinsville Speedway on the final lap due to a safety violation. While Bell was left frustrated in the moment, he took the time to reflect on some of his high points from a successful year.

RELATED: Bell’s 2024 season in review | 2025 Cup schedule

“Honestly, [Las] Vegas [fall] was one of our all-around best days,” Bell said on Nov. 22 ahead of the NASCAR Awards. “We didn’t get the win. But as a team, the pit crew, [crew chief] Adam’s [Stevens] strategy, myself driving, like we executed that day almost perfectly. I would say Vegas is one of our best races that we had all year. Charlotte was shaping up to be. It’s a shame that it got shortened because I would have loved to see it go the distance. But I felt like Charlotte had that potential of [being] similar to how Vegas turned out. I think that those two races stand out. Phoenix [spring] was awesome. Gateway was awesome. There’s a lot of highs for sure.”

That Las Vegas playoff race in October was the ultimate deciding factor of Bell’s season. He led 155 laps, which was his most in a race in 2024 to highlight a total of 1,145 circuits out front during the year, but a strategy gamble from Joey Logano paid out for the No. 22 Team Penske team as they had enough fuel to get to the checkered flag while Bell settled for second. A win would’ve guaranteed Bell’s berth to Phoenix, which would’ve eliminated the events of Martinsville just two weeks later.

Vegas defined 2024 as a whole for the JGR organization. From Bell to Denny Hamlin, Ty Gibbs and Martin Truex Jr., all four cars and teams had race-winning capabilities on a weekly basis but the final win of the season for JGR came in … June at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

Bell was blunt in the frustrations of the organization not winning in the last five months of the year.

“That’s sad,” Bell said. “Looking back at Nashville, Nashville was a potential win. Chicago was a potential win. Vegas was a potential win. Like there’s so many races that happened in between our last win and the end of the year that we let slip away. We need to clean it up and if we keep bringing the same car potential back to the racetrack, I think that, hopefully, I will be able to do my job and close the races out.”

To turn those shortcomings into victories, JGR made organizational changes as Chris Gabehart, Hamlin’s crew chief for the past six seasons, will now serve as competition director for JGR while Chris Gayle moves from Gibbs to atop the pit box for Hamlin and the No. 11 team.

MORE: JGR makes organizational changes for 2025 | Hamlin ‘shocked’ Gabehart won’t crew chief No. 11 in 2025

“I think it has potential to help out all the teams,” Bell said of the changes. “Gabehart is a incredibly smart person. He was a huge asset to the 11 car and I think moving him to oversee the crew chiefs and be able to provide input and knowledge and just kind of keep all of the teams in line is a solid move. I think it has potential to increase the performance of all the teams.”

With JGR lifting restrictions on dirt racing, it opens the door for Bell and incoming driver Chase Briscoe to keep competing before The Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium arrives in February.

Bell said he’ll ‘definitely’ be racing at some point but doesn’t have anything set in stone just yet.

“One thing that I typically do whenever it comes to dirt racing is I don’t really like to make a schedule,” Bell added. “I really just kind of go week by week, and if my week turns out to be quiet, I’ll look for opportunities to go race, and then a matter of who has a car available, what car I can get in and stuff like that. So I’m definitely not gonna make a schedule, so to say, but I’ll just kind of take it week by week. It’s nice to know that it is in my hands, and our competition staff’s hands. I’m excited about it and I’m certainly looking forward to reconnecting with my dirt fans.”

As of now, Bell said he doesn’t have plans to compete at the Chili Bowl but will be, at least, in attendance at the Tulsa Shootout in his home state of Oklahoma.

Both Bell and 2021 Cup Series champion Kyle Larson are multi-time winners of the Chili Bowl and with Bell allowed to race on dirt once again, anticipation builds for the two NASCAR heavyweights to do battle in the discipline.

“He’s [Larson] gonna have the upper hand for a little bit,” Belt admitted. “He’s got a two-year head start on me, so I’m gonna have to get my dirt shoes underneath me again and get back up to speed. But I hope, at some point, I can get back up to speed. That’s gonna be the tough part is just being out of the car for so long. Hopefully, it’s like riding a bike. I guess we’re about to find out.”

A return to roots and some time away from the stock car will allow for Bell to get his mind off the pressure of winning in the Cup Series. But once the No. 20 hauler heads down to Daytona to open the season, the expectations will be through the roof for Bell to ascend the mountain following a monster 2024 season.

“It definitely leaves me optimistic and hopeful for what’s to come,” Bell said on his 2024 performance. “I’ve said this same thing, literally for the past two years or three years now, after the season’s over, that we still haven’t performed up to our potential. The 20 team keeps setting new highs and new personal bests, but even this year, we left a ton on the table. It just makes me optimistic and excited about what’s to come, knowing that we can perform better than we did this year.”

Editor’s note: This continues the series in which we review each 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs driver in reverse order of championship finish.

Season in review:
Christopher Bell, No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
Crew Chief: Adam Stevens
Final 2024 Ranking: 5th
Key stats: Three wins, 15 top fives, 23 top 10s, three poles, 1,145 laps led

How 2024 ended: Entering the postseason, Bell was among the favorites to hoist his first Bill France Cup but his hopes were dashed in the penultimate race of 2024 at Martinsville Speedway. Bell was penalized for a safety violation on the final lap trying to gain enough spots to surpass William Byron for the final transfer spot to the Championship 4. Bell’s lap was disqualified, which gave the fourth spot to Byron. In the finale at Phoenix, Bell led 143 laps and finished fifth to cap a fifth-place finish in the standings.

RELATED: Bell lands dominant victory at Phoenix | Bell sweeps weekend at New Hampshire

Best race: There’s a handful of options to select as the No. 20 driver’s best race of 2024 but New Hampshire stood out from the rest as Bell completed a weekend sweep in the New England region. The Cup race in Loudon was a first for NASCAR as rain tires were used in green-flag conditions to finish the race. Bell proved to be the best in both dry and wet conditions around the flat, 1.058-mile oval as he led 149 of 305 laps en route to his third and final victory of the season.

Other season highlights: Despite not winning the championship, Bell’s second half of 2024 can’t go overlooked. In a 15-race stretch from Indianapolis to the Phoenix finale, Bell scored 12 top 10s, with nine of those coming inside the top five. Bell’s first win came at Phoenix where he was the class of the field in the closing laps, setting a margin of victory record in the Next Gen era at 5.465 seconds. He would also grab his first checkered flag in a Crown Jewel race, winning a rain-shortened Coca-Cola 600.

Stat to Know: Bell’s 1,145 laps led were second most in the Cup Series in 2024, behind Kyle Larson’s whopping 1,700 laps. He led 100 laps or more in six races, highlighted by leading a combined 280 circuits in back-to-back weekends at New Hampshire and Nashville.

Quotable: “It definitely leaves me optimistic and hopeful for what’s to come. I’ve said this same thing, literally for the past two years or three years now, after the season’s over, that we still haven’t performed up to our potential. The 20 team keeps setting new highs and new personal bests, but even this year, we left a ton on the table. It just makes me optimistic and excited about what’s to come, knowing that we can perform better than we did this year.” — Christopher Bell on his 2024 performance

MORE: Bell quells end of 2024; ‘left a lot on the table’ | 2024-25 Silly Season news

Looking ahead: Five Cup Series seasons down and Bell has grown into a bonafide title contender on an annual basis. The next step for Bell is to break through for his first Cup championship, which is much more easier said than done. He’ll have some young competition alongside him at JGR next season as Ty Gibbs enters his third season while Chase Briscoe replaces Martin Truex Jr. in the No. 19 Toyota. Bell also revealed Dec. 10 that he’ll return to the Chili Bowl after JGR lifted restrictions on their drivers competing in dirt-racing events. Bell and Briscoe will be among Cup Series drivers entered in the event.

Editor’s note: This continues the series in which we review each 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs driver in reverse order of championship finish.

Season in review: Kyle Larson, No. 5, Hendrick Motorsports, Chevrolet
Crew chief: Cliff Daniels
Final 2024 Ranking: 6th
Key stats: Six wins, 15 top fives, 18 top 10s, 5 poles, 1,700 laps led

How 2024 ended: Despite rough outings at Atlanta 2 (37th) and Kansas 2 (26th) and falling short of the Championship 4 round, Larson had an otherwise strong overall showing in the playoffs, including wins at Bristol Night Race and on the Roval at Charlotte, plus five top-five finishes in the post-season overall, including finishes of third and fourth respectively at Martinsville and the season finale in Phoenix.

Best race: Larson earned wins in 2024 at Las Vegas, Kansas, Sonoma, Indianapolis, Bristol and the Charlotte Roval. But without question, his strongest performance in all six of those victories was the night playoff race at Bristol. It was one of the most dominating performances Larson has had in his Cup career, leading 462 of the event’s 500 laps (including 251 of the last 252 laps). It was like the California native was shot from a cannon and didn’t stop until he took the checkered flag.

RELATED: Larson rockets to win at Bristol 

Other season highlights: Larson also dominated en route to his win at Las Vegas 1, leading 181 of 267 laps. And, although he ultimately finished fourth, he led 263 of the 367 laps in the final regular season race of the season at Darlington.

Stat to know: Larson has been a winning machine ever since joining Hendrick Motorsports in 2021. Of his 29 career wins in the NASCAR Cup Series, 23 have come with Team Hendrick over the last four seasons, including 10 in his championship-winning first season with the organization in 2021 and his six wins in 2024. Also of note, since joining Hendrick Motorsports, Larson has earned 13 poles (of the 21 he’s tallied in his Cup career).

Quotable: It was a great year. I was super happy with the performance of our race team all year long. We had a ton of speed from Race 1 to Race 38 (including two exhibition races), really. I was happy. Obviously, you want to make the final four and have a shot at the championship, but I also understand the format and know how crazy it can be, so I don’t let finishing sixth in points take anything away from our season. We led the series in most every category, so I’m really proud of the team and their hard work. And I think we left some out on the table, so I’m excited about next year and hope we can continue to evolve and get stronger as a team and win some more races and lead more laps. … I’m hoping for more good things for next year and I’m already excited to get the year started.”

Looking ahead: Larson has always been the kind of driver who uses misfortune or frustration in one season as motivation for the following season. Example: missed 32 races in 2020 due to suspension and then returned to win his first Cup championship the following season in 2021. Having come so close and falling short of the Championship 4 round in 2024 – and finishing sixth overall – will definitely serve as great inspiration and motivation for what he hopes will be an even stronger season in 2025 and potentially earn his second career Cup championship.

Editor’s note: This continues the series in which we review each 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs driver in reverse order of championship finish.

Season in review:
Chase Elliott, No. 9, Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
Crew chief: Alan Gustafson
Final 2024 ranking: 7th
Key stats: One win, 11 top fives, 19 top 10s, one pole, 431 laps led

How 2024 ended: A year after missing the Cup Series Playoffs for the first time in his championship career, Elliott answered with a strong title run in 2024. He earned top-10 finishes in seven of the 10 playoff races, including a playoff-best showing of runner-up at Bristol Motor Speedway and Martinsville Speedway, the race that set the Championship 4. The 2020 champ was eliminated from title contention in the penultimate round. He led 218 laps in the 10-race post-season stretch — more than half his laps led all season. Ultimately, he finished seventh in the championship — an eighth top-10 finish in the championship in nine full-time seasons.

Best race: Elliott earned his only victory — first in two seasons — on the high banks at Texas Motor Speedway in April. He led 39 laps, including the final 17 in an overtime thriller, to claim the win and his ticket to the 2024 playoffs. It was his 19th career Cup Series win and his first series win ever at Texas, a venue where he scored his first career Xfinity Series win in 2014 at 18 years old.

RELATED: Elliott wins Texas thriller in double-overtime

Other season highlights: Elliott put together three top-10 streaks of at least three races over the season. First, early in the year at Richmond Raceway, Martinsville and Texas. Again from Pocono Raceway, Indianapolis Motor Speedway to the Richmond fall race. Finally, he ended the season with three straight top 10s at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Martinsville and Phoenix Raceway. He led double-digit laps seven times, including a season-best 129 laps in his runner-up finish in the Martinsville playoff race. Six of his top-five finishes were top-three showings – the win at Texas, runner-up efforts at Bristol and Martinsville (fall) and third-place finishes at Martinsville (spring), Kansas Speedway (spring) and Iowa Speedway. Elliott also opened the season with 19 straight top-20 finishes.

Stat to know: Elliott’s return to winning form means he’s won at least one race in six of the last seven seasons. His double-digit top-five and top-10 efforts matched a standard he’s had in seven of the last eight years. He was running at the finish at all but two races — tying another career-high mark, along with his average finish of 11.7 being his best mark since 2021 (11.4).

Quotable: “I find a lot of pride in our closing three or four weeks of the season, and just our performance, I thought, was in a really good spot. When I think about that and if we can just carry that forward to next year, I think we’ll have a lot of great opportunities. And I think we intend to do that.

“… We were really, really solid in a lot of areas, truthfully. The two things we didn’t do, unfortunately, were the most important things, and that’s leading laps and winning more races. We were leading more laps there at the end of the season, and those are the types of things that give you more opportunities.” — Elliott on closing the season.

MORE: Chase Elliott grades his ’24 campaign, looks ahead to next year

Looking ahead: Elliott was encouraged with the way this season finished and in particular, his three top-10 finishes to close out the race calendar. It’s the kind of momentum his team hopes to immediately capitalize on in the new year. Capturing the win at Texas means he’s now earned victories at 15 different tracks — from short tracks to famed road courses and from the superspeedway to 1.5-milers that make up the majority of the schedule. Elliott is optimistic that 2025 is a chance to show the Alan Gustafson-led team is back to the kind of form that produced five consecutive multi-win years from 2018-2022 and included the 2020 NASCAR Cup Series championship. Expectations are high on the No. 9 team, and that’s exactly what Elliott insists upon.

Editor’s note: This continues the series in which we review each 2024 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs driver in reverse order of championship finish.

Season in review:
Denny Hamlin, No. 11, Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
Crew Chief: Chris Gabehart
Final 2024 Ranking: 8th
Key stats: Three wins, 12 top fives, 18 top 10s, three poles, 943 laps led

How 2024 ended: With Martinsville Speedway being one of Hamlin’s best tracks, it seemed like a Championship 4 berth was all but guaranteed. However, a practice crash sent Hamlin to the rear at the start of the penultimate race of the year. He rallied to score a fifth-place result but did not have the points to surpass William Byron for the final ticket to Phoenix as Joey Logano, Tyler Reddick and Ryan Blaney all managed to win in the Round of 8 from below the elimination line. Hamlin would’ve been in a good spot to point into the Championship 4 had it not been for a massive L2-level penalty in August that cost the No. 11 team 75 driver and owner points, including 10 playoff points.

RELATED: Hamlin through the years | Hamlin scores win after wild Bristol race

Best race: Arguably the most impressive performance of 2024, Hamlin overcame an event marked by extreme tire wear at Bristol Motor Speedway to score his first of three wins in the past season. The No. 11 driver led 163 of the 500-lap event, while all but five drivers took the checkered flag a lap down. In total, there were a whopping 54 lead changes until Hamlin took command in the final 50 laps and fended off teammate Martin Truex Jr. to score his fourth victory on the concrete short track.

Other season highlights: Hamlin followed up his Bristol win quickly with a Richmond Raceway victory just two weeks later. In April, he held off a hard-charging Kyle Larson over the final laps to win at Dover Motor Speedway, giving Hamlin three checkered flags in the first 11 races.

Stat to know: Between Sonoma Raceway and Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Hamlin suffered the worst seven-race stretch of his career since 2013, scoring an average finish of 23.1, per Racing Insights.

Quotable: “The first few days was a shock, but I’m moving on,” Hamlin said. “There’s nothing I can do to change anything that happened, and JGR is doing what they feel is best for, them and I totally understand that. And if all of our program gets better, the 11 car’s gonna run better as well, right? And I think that all of us, all the teams, knew that we needed to have better results than what we had at the end of the year. They feel like this is the change they need to [make] to get that and that the 11 team will benefit from those changes.” — Hamlin on Gabehart moving to competition director at Joe Gibbs Racing

MORE: JGR moves Gabehart to competition director for 2025 | Hamlin’ shocked’ Gabehart won’t crew chief No. 11 in 2025

Looking ahead: At 44 years of age, that window for Hamlin’s prime inches closer to its end, but as of now, he’s shown no sign of slowing down and will be a title contender going into next season. A championship is all that eludes Hamlin’s illustrious Cup career, and now he’ll have to do it with Chris Gayle atop the box for the No. 11 Toyota team.

Fred Lorenzen, a thinking man’s racer who became one of NASCAR’s biggest money winners during the sport’s rise in the 1960s, has died. The NASCAR Hall of Famer was 89.

Lorenzen’s passing was confirmed by his family. The former driver had battled dementia in his later years.

Lorenzen won 26 times in his premier-series career, vaulting to stardom after connecting with the powerful Holman-Moody Ford factory team in the early part of the decade. Many of those victories arrived as both speedways and purses grew in size, and he became the first driver in NASCAR to earn more than $100,000 in a single season in 1963. Among those prized wins were the Daytona 500 in 1965 and two victories in the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

RELATED: Fred Lorenzen: NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2015

“Fred Lorenzen was one of NASCAR’s first true superstars. A fan favorite, he helped NASCAR expand from its original roots,” NASCAR Chairman & CEO Jim France said. “Fred was the picture-perfect NASCAR star, helping to bring the sport to the silver screen — which further grew NASCAR’s popularity during its early years. For many years, NASCAR’s ‘Golden Boy’ was also its gold standard, a fact that eventually led him to the sport’s pinnacle, a rightful place in the NASCAR Hall of Fame. On behalf of the France family and all of NASCAR, I want to offer our condolences to the friends and family of Fred Lorenzen.”

Lorenzen went by many nicknames, known as NASCAR’s “Golden Boy” for his dashing looks. His charm, combined with his racing success, led him to win the series’ Most Popular Driver Award on two occasions.

He was also called the “Elmhurst Express” in a nod to his Illinois hometown, in addition to the alliterative “Fast Freddie” or “Fearless Freddie.” But those nicknames belied a smooth, measured approach that was in sharp contrast to go-for-broke predecessors, such as Junior Johnson and Curtis Turner.

Frederick Lorenzen Jr. was born Dec. 30, 1934, growing up in the suburban Illinois town of Elmhurst, about 20 miles west of the Chicago Loop. He was drawn to stock car racing at first by listening to broadcasts during backyard campouts or on his father’s car radio. His first competitive driving experience came in drag racing at age 19. When not racing, carpentry was his trade.

After four years of straight-line competition, Lorenzen turned to oval tracks, making his NASCAR debut in 1956. After a fruitless seven-race stint in his own equipment, he soon turned to driving in the rival U.S. Auto Club (USAC) Stock Car division. He won 12 times in USAC competition, claiming the series championship in back-to-back seasons in 1958-59. Meanwhile, Lorenzen was becoming a regular winner at O’Hare Stadium’s quarter-mile oval near his hometown, and the lure of a NASCAR return became strong.

“I had an important decision to make — to stick with USAC and eventually get into the big race at Indianapolis or join NASCAR, the world’s largest auto race organization which specializes in stock-car events,” Lorenzen told the Arlington Heights Herald in July 1960. “Since stock cars are the type of racing I know the most about and since NASCAR’s prize monies are the highest anywhere, I made my change. Up to now, however, I must admit that I had begun wondering if I had made the right move and if I was actually good enough for NASCAR.”

His performance that year during his venture south helped to prove his worth, as he netted top-five finishes in a pair of races at Daytona International Speedway and one at Atlanta Motor Speedway in his own equipment. Lorenzen’s results in both series sparked interest from other car owners, but so did his studious approach to the sport.

Other teams mocked his insistence on pit-stop coaching and drills during an era when the practice was uncommon, but that emphasis paid off with quicker service and positions gained during the race.

“(Other drivers) partied, they were out to go fast and live the life, but when my dad came in, he was business,” daughter Amanda Lorenzen Gardstrom said in a 2014 interview. “… After every time he won a race, he’d call the stock broker and want to know the best way to invest that. He insisted that his pit crew was ready to go at 7 o’clock in the morning every day — clean white suits and ready to work. They all worked, and they planned and had strategies as a team.”

Said Herb Nab, later his chief mechanic: “Freddie was a stickler. He worried about everything. He wanted everything to be just so. He was never satisfied unless it was. Maybe that was the key to his success. He wanted perfection, and he made sure he got it.”

Fred Lorenzen poses for a photo.
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images

Lorenzen had already moved his family south to Charlotte, North Carolina, before the 1960 season, connecting with team owners John Holman and Ralph Moody to aid his racing efforts in NASCAR. A phone call on Christmas Eve changed his career arc, with the invitation to compete for Holman-Moody full-time, becoming one of the centerpiece drivers for Ford’s factory effort.

“Biggest day of my life. A miracle, that’s what it was,” Lorenzen told TNT Sports in 2009. “Everybody waits for this, but you make your own way. I earned it, I guess. That’s what Ralph (Moody) said, you’re here because they want you. They like the way you ran it, the way you drive. You don’t jump out front, you just cool it and wait, take your time.”

Holman’s son, Lee, said Lorenzen was a natural fit with the Holman-Moody operation, known for its meticulous attention to detail.

“All he’d ever done is race,” Lee Holman told NASCAR.com in 2014. “He was a famous Illinois dirt-tracker before he came to us and had done real well in other series, so it wasn’t like we trained him and made him what he was. We just gave him an opportunity to move into NASCAR.”

Lorenzen wasted little time getting acclimated to his new surroundings, winning three times and netting four pole positions in his 15 starts in 1961. Holman-Moody focused on NASCAR’s larger and higher-paying events, so Lorenzen never ran a full campaign at the Cup Series level in his pearly white No. 28 entry; the closest he came was participation in 29 of 55 events in 1963, when he won six races and became the first driver to break the six-figure mark in prize money in a single season.

By the time he assembled an eight-win season in 1964, which included a stretch of five consecutive victories and a grand slam at NASCAR’s four biggest speedways at the time, Lorenzen had gone from a promising newcomer to one of the sport’s most compelling stars. Though he was considered by some to be an outsider because of his northern roots, Lorenzen quickly earned the respect of established stock-car racing peers.

“Certainly, Freddie is for real, and I have nothing but praise for him,” Hall of Famer Fireball Roberts told The Charlotte News in May 1964. “He has so many things going for him as well as luck which you must have in this business. First, Freddie has the finest machinery. He also has splendid mechanics in Herb Nab and Wayne Mills, who know how to set up a car. But the man who makes this team go is Lorenzen.”

Lorenzen’s legend on NASCAR’s largest tracks was already established by the time he prevailed in the “Great American Race” in 1965, claiming the first rain-shortened Daytona 500. He drove away from late contact with Marvin Panch as a shower sprang up on the backstretch, staying in front when more rain halted the event after 133 of the scheduled 200 laps.

Though he kept plucking wins at a substantial clip, Lorenzen’s career began to slow the next two seasons. In 1966, Ford’s boycott of NASCAR’s engine rules limited Lorenzen to just 11 starts. The next season, Lorenzen made just five appearances before abruptly retiring on April 24 at just 32 years old, battling health issues and tiring of the racing circuit’s travel demands.

“I guess every athlete wants to quit when he’s on top,” Lorenzen told the crowd gathered as a retirement banquet thrown by Ford’s racing division. “I know I’m slowing down and have been a little more cautious in the last year and a half. Plus I haven’t been feeling too well lately. The ulcer is a small one, but it sure takes a lot out of you. I added up all these things and decided that now was the time to quit.”

Lorenzen had invested much of his prize money and endorsement revenue, and he remained active in the stock market. He also stayed busy by offering occasional help to Holman-Moody and car owner Bondy Long, working as a realtor and making his movie-screen debut playing himself in the campy 1968 film, “The Speed Lovers.”

But the draw of competition remained strong with Lorenzen, who hinted in November 1969 that he might attempt a return. His comeback race was the next year’s World 600, which he led for 47 laps before the engine let go on his Richard Howard-owned Dodge.

“The day I quit I said I knew I’d be back someday,” Lorenzen said, also admitting, “I think I waited too long.”

Lorenzen’s return spanned 29 races from 1970-72. He claimed two pole positions, but the closest he came to winning was a runner-up finish at Dover International Speedway in 1971. That return was marred by heavy crashes at Darlington Raceway and the former Ontario Motor Speedway, plus a head-on highway accident that injured Lorenzen and his father and killed the other driver in January 1971. A final comeback attempt with the Wood Brothers at Darlington resulted in a severe wreck in testing. His second retirement stuck after his dissatisfaction with some of his Hoss Ellington-led crew boiled over before Charlotte’s 500-miler.

“I had gone to the track before 8 a.m. My crew wasn’t there,” Lorenzen later recalled to Bob Myers of The Charlotte News. “Others teased me that they’d been in a lounge partying all night. I just couldn’t tolerate mixing business with pleasure or the razzing. I had not won in 30 races. I had lost my Holman and Moody crew. The driver cannot do it alone. I got disgusted and left.”

Fred Lorenzen smiles.
NASCAR Research & Archives Center | Getty Images

Lorenzen continued as a top-earning realtor in the Chicago area after his driving days. Even in retirement, the racing accolades kept coming — he was inducted into the National Motorsports Press Association in 1978, the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 1991 and the NASCAR Hall of Fame in 2015.

As his health declined and his memory loss advanced in his later years, Lorenzen became the second known driver to pledge his brain in 2016 to the Concussion Legacy Foundation and Boston University, both leading partners in the research of concussions among athletes and chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a degenerative brain disease. Lorenzen’s family drew inspiration from Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s decision to do the same weeks earlier and his advocacy for neurological health.

It’s another layer in the legacy of a Golden Boy from a golden era, one whose popularity endures.

“The fans are what make you run, and they were my heroes. They make you go fast,” Lorenzen told TNT in 2009. “It was a dream come true. All the work you did all your life, it’s something you can’t describe.”

Wisconsin is known for producing some of short-track racing’s greatest stars.

Drivers like Dick Trickle, Rich Bickle and Joe Shear set the bar for excellence on short tracks across the Badger State, winning so many races that historians have lost count of exactly how many wins each driver earned during his respective career. Others like Matt Kenseth, Ty Majeski, Johnny Sauter and Travis Kvapil used the skills they acquired at Wisconsin short tracks to claim championships in NASCAR’s national divisions.

Jerry Auby is well versed on the history of short-track racing in Wisconsin. He spent 25 years racing at short tracks across the Midwest before becoming the general manager and later the owner of Dells Raceway Park in Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin.

He has made it his personal mission to help prepare the next generation of NASCAR stars, which is why he recently announced Dells Raceway Park would join the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series beginning in 2025.

“It’s about strengthening the growth of short-track racing in Wisconsin,” Auby said about becoming part of the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series. “We can’t lose any more tracks, and we need to have fan-friendly entertainment that people can tie into what they see on TV and see the growth of the sport from the grassroots level and get to NASCAR.

“There is some fan excitement to be built by having NASCAR tracks in Wisconsin and these drivers competing at several tracks in the state.”

Dells Raceway Park, a third-mile paved oval, opened for business in 1963. It’s been a fixture of Wisconsin short-track racing culture for decades despite a few periods of inactivity.

Auby first became associated with Dells when he started working with former track owner and promoter Wayne Lensing, who also owns the renowned chassis manufacturer Lefthander Chassis.

Lensing became owner of Dells Raceway Park in 2012, and with the help of Auby, he made it one of the most successful short tracks in Wisconsin. Auby purchased the track from Lensing in 2021.

“I had an injury from snow shoveling, believe it or not, and I was out (of racing), and I started helping Wayne Lensing at Dells Raceway Park,” Auby explained. “It progressed to taking over the place and then finally buying the place.

“I didn’t actually ever think the dream (of owning a race track) would ever come true. I didn’t think I would make it to this point, but it was always in the back of my mind.”

Dells Raceway Park
Dells Raceway Park hosts racing from April to October each season, including the Alive for 5 Series and the National Short Track Championship. (Photo: Courtesy Dells Raceway Park)

Dells Raceway Park hosts weekly racing from April to October. Auby says Late Models will be the track’s Division I class, but Super Late Models will continue to be a key part of the track’s racing program thanks to the popular Alive for 5 Series.

Created by Auby and Lensing, the Alive for 5 Series is a five-race miniseries for Super Late Models that features larger race purses and a championship purse.

Dennis Prunty, a veteran Midwestern short track competitor, won the inaugural Alive for 5 Series championship in 2018. Other series champions include Dalton Zehr, Casey Johnson, Luke Fenhaus and Gabe Sommers.

“When I was looking at the schedule, it was exhausting for these teams to race 20, 40, 60, 80 times a year, and the money simply wasn’t in the budget as Super Late Model costs escalated,” Auby said. “My thought process on the whole deal was we need to come up with something that matters and make each race worth coming to.

“Just having one-off events wasn’t drawing the cars, wasn’t drawing the fans, wasn’t drawing the support that it needed to survive. So we had to make something work, and that’s where the five-race series came from.”

The 2025 season at Dells Raceway Park begins April 12 with the running of the IceBreaker 100, the first race in the Alive for 5 Series. The weekly racing opener is scheduled for May 3.

Additional Alive for 5 Series events are scheduled for June 7 (Trickle 99), June 28 (Dairyland 100), Aug. 9 (Badger State 100) and Oct. 18 (Falloween 100).

RELATED: Full 2025 Dells Raceway Park schedule

Another notable part of the Dells Raceway Park schedule is the National Short Track Championship. Initially created by the Deery family and held at Illinois’ Rockford Speedway for more than half a century, the event moved to Dells Raceway Park last season following the closure of Rockford.

The move, which came with the blessing of the Deery family, allowed one of Midwest short track racing’s greatest traditions to continue despite the closure of Rockford. The 60th edition of the National Short Track Championship is scheduled for Sept. 12-13.

“Our slogan is Wisconsin’s best racing entertainment, and we truly live up to that,” Auby said.

With the addition of Dells Raceway Park, the state of Wisconsin now has two tracks in the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series. LaCrosse Fairgrounds Speedway, the home of Oktoberfest Race Weekend, is also part of the program.

Auby is adamant that the future of NASCAR rests squarely on short tracks across America and vice versa. By joining the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series, he believes he’s doing his part to help NASCAR thrive while also developing future NASCAR stars as well as future NASCAR fans.

“It comes from the top down,” Auby said. “If NASCAR is healthy, we need to try and make NASCAR healthy. We need to work together. We need NASCAR’s numbers to go up, and we’re begging that their stands are full, because when their stands are full, our stands are full.

“That’s how I envision this thing. We need NASCAR at the local level.”

Parker Retzlaff will drive the No. 4 Chevrolet full-time for Alpha Prime Racing for the 2025 NASCAR Xfinity Series season, the team announced Wednesday.

The 21-year-old Wisconsin native, who raced for Jordan Anderson Racing from 2023-24, brings a solid resume, with three top fives, 12 top tens and two pole positions across 75 total Xfinity Series starts. Retzlaff also scored a top ten in the Cup Series summer race at Daytona International Speedway.

After a challenging sophomore season, which included 12 DNFs, Retzlaff is eager to prove himself with his new team.

“We all want to win races, be consistent and prove we’re here to compete,” Retzlaff said in a press release. “Everyone here has told me how much they believe in me and what I can do.”

RELATED: 2025 Xfinity Series schedule 

Owner Caesar Bacarella, who scored two top 10s as a driver in limited starts for the team in 2024, shared his enthusiasm toward the signing.

“I’m just super excited to have him join us,” Bacarella said. “He’s a young, really talented race car driver, and he’s going to help elevate the team.”

Bacarella highlighted the progress Alpha Prime Racing has made in its first three years and the effort he and team president Tommy Joe Martins have put in to elevate the organization, emphasizing the strength of the team and its future prospects.

“There’s been a lot of ups and downs, but he [Tommy] and I agree it’s all about the people. It’s so hard. We’re racing against the best teams in the world. But we’ve got great people, and that’s what’s made it work,” Bacarella said. “And now we’ve got two ace drivers in the stable full-time.”

Retzlaff will join alongside Brennan Poole to complete Alpha Prime’s driver lineup next season.

“I’m humbled, honestly,” Retzlaff said. “Obviously, I wouldn’t be here without the support of my partners — who I’m really excited to announce later,” he added. “Tommy and Caesar have put together an awesome team. It’s a big confidence booster for me to go into 2025 with a group that really wants me here.”

Details on sponsorship and crew chief will be announced at a later date.

The 2025 Xfinity Series season kicks off at Daytona International Speedway on Feb. 15 (5 p.m. ET, The CW, MRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

In a year full of chatter surrounding the safety of his employment at Hendrick Motorsports, Alex Bowman responded with a career year.

Bowman, winner of the Chicago Street Race in July in the No. 48 Ally Chevrolet, netted eight top-five finishes in 2024 to match a career-high, collected a career-best 17 top 10s and notched a career-tops 28 lead-lap finishes. To boot, half of the 10 playoff races resulted in top 10s for the veteran racer, ending the campaign on a much-needed upswing.

“Hopefully, we can start there as a baseline, right?” Bowman said on Nov. 22 ahead of the NASCAR Awards. “I think that’s the biggest thing is trying to operate at that that level to start and have that be our baseline and go up from there. So yeah, excited to see what 2025 holds. I think we did a really good job to end the season, and looking forward to it.”

MORE: 2025 Cup schedule | Recap Bowman’s 2024 season

To finish strong in 2024 was a mighty contrast to how his 2023 season ended. That season was marred by inconsistency, asterisked by a mid-spring back injury that ousted him from the car and resulted in poor finishes, especially as the year wound to a close. In 2023, Bowman finished 12th or worse in seven of the final eight races — three of those landing 28th or worse in his first winless season since 2018. All of that followed a 2022 effort in which Bowman was sidelined for five races as he recovered from a concussion.

“I don’t know if I questioned myself, but I think definitely after two back-to-back bigger injuries, it’s easy to get in that spot, right?” Bowman said. “Like, it wasn’t much fun, right? Especially, we were so good before I broke my back, and came back and we were good for two weeks and then we were just terrible the rest of the season. Like, it was crazy how bad we were at places that I’m typically really good at even. So that was really frustrating.

“This year, it didn’t start the year great, but we turned it around pretty quickly. So yeah, I mean, I think we’ve done a lot of the right things. I think just kind of being on the other side of it, it definitely feels good.”

Alex Bowman competes in a NASCAR Cup Series race at Phoenix.
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

Indeed, there was a bounce-back quality to Bowman’s 2024 season, kicking the season off with a runner-up finish in the Daytona 500 and finishing inside the top 10 three times in a four-race stretch early in the spring. Coupled with his end-of-year upturn was critical heading into the offseason.

“I think getting some confidence back that maybe it’s not me and maybe I can actually do this was nice,” Bowman said. “I think we’re in a good spot as a team, and I think we have some positive things coming that are going to be better.”

But inconsistency was still a flaw of the No. 48 team, and that is top of mind for the Arizona native heading into his eighth season at Hendrick Motorsports.

“We just need to figure out how to put the whole year together, right?” Bowman said. “I mean, the guy that won the championship (Joey Logano) wasn’t great for most of the year, right? But the drama on his side of things is much less than the drama on my side of things. So yeah, now he’s a champion. The system makes it weird. But from optics side of things, we need to run well all year. We want to run well all year, and yeah, trying to figure out how to make it happen.”