NASCAR officials released the 2024 schedule Tuesday for the Xfinity Series’ Dash 4 Cash initiative, which returns for its 16th season with four April races at a variety of oval tracks.
The schedule was released Tuesday afternoon during a preseason competition briefing at the NASCAR Research & Development Center. The program presents an opportunity for four eligible Xfinity Series regulars to collect an extra $100,000 at each race.
The circuit’s 250-lap event at Richmond Raceway on March 30 will serve as a qualifier, setting the four-driver field eligible for the Dash 4 Cash opener. The rest of this year’s Dash 4 Cash schedule:
Martinsville, Talladega and Dover were part of the Dash 4 Cash rotation last season. Texas makes its first appearance in the four-race schedule since 2010, just the second year of the incentive program.
The top-finishing eligible Xfinity Series regular at each Dash 4 Cash event will pocket a six-figure payday and join the other three top finishers in the next D4C field. The process will refresh and repeat for each race until the program’s season finale at Dover.
Xfinity Series director Wayne Auton confirmed Tuesday that Cup Series drivers would not be eligible to participate in either the four Dash 4 Cash races or the final eight events of the season — the regular-season finale Sept. 20 at Bristol Motor Speedway and then the seven races that make up the Xfinity Series’ postseason.
Auton said that Cup Series drivers would not be restricted from the July 6 Xfinity Series event on the Chicago Street Course as they were last year. He also indicated that Cup Series competitors also would be permitted to enter the June 15 Xfinity race at Iowa Speedway the day before the Cup Series’ debut at the 0.875-mile oval.
CONCORD, N.C. — Qualifying procedures for the NASCAR Cup Series will receive an adjustment in 2024, officials revealed Tuesday at the sanctioning body’s Research & Development Center.
Each race’s 36-plus entrants will continue to be split into two groups for time-trial qualification, with the fastest five drivers from each group advancing to the pole round and setting the top 10 starting positions for the main event. That hasn’t changed. What will change is the manner in which positions 11-40 are determined.
Previously, the cars that finished outside the top five in the two groups were seeded 11-40 based on their fastest qualifying lap, regardless of which group the drivers were in.
Beginning in 2024 — and with the exception of the Daytona 500, which has its own unique qualifying procedure — cars that do not advance from Group A will determine the outside row for starting positions 11-40, while the remaining cars from Group B will determine the inside row.
For superspeedways, there will be no groups during qualifying procedures. There will be two rounds, with the fastest 10 drivers advancing from the first round and the best time from Round 2 taking the pole.
Officials landed upon this alteration after feedback from the industry. Because track conditions can change throughout the course of a qualifying session, the goal of defining what row a driver may start from is to limit those possible variances.
Group assignments will continue to be determined by performance metrics, a total number based on the previous event: 15% of a fastest lap time position, 25% of the driver’s final race finish position, 25% of the owner’s final race finish position and 35% of the owner points position, according to the NASCAR Rule Book. Any vehicles entered with a different driver for the event than the previous race, per the rule book, will have its driver-based numbers (fastest lap and finish position) set at 41. Driver metrics are not transferable to another vehicle.
In other news and notes discussed at Tuesday’s competition briefing:
— Next Gen towing will have its first major overhaul in Cup Series qualifying beginning in 2024. Officials have worked with teams and drivers to determine solutions to assist a vehicle stranded with flat tires back to pit road without destroying the underbody of the machine, a particularly sensitive and expensive piece of the vehicle. If a car spins in qualifying and the driver is unable to drive the car back to pit road, a tow truck with a dolly will be sent to retrieve the vehicle and lift it off the ground. Through testing, officials determined they are able to tow the car at speeds up to 70 mph.
For now, towing will remain limited to qualifying and not the race. Qualifying allows more time for the safety crew to retrieve the vehicle while this process is in its early phase, while attempting this during a race may extend a caution period longer than what fans and officials would prefer.
— Wet-weather tires will return to all road courses and most ovals 1 mile in length or shorter in 2024, with the exception of the high-banked concrete tracks of Bristol Motor Speedway and Dover Motor Speedway. This year, the only requirements on those vehicles at ovals will be a defogger. Lights, wiper blades and rear flaps will be additionally required at all road courses, but none will be mandated at the short ovals. NASCAR first used the wet-weather tires in a NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Martinsville in the spring and again for the NASCAR Cup Series during All-Star Weekend at North Wilkesboro Speedway.
— Less grass is in Daytona International Speedway’s future. A portion of grass has already been removed and replaced with fresh pavement, all following Ryan Preece’s tumble down the superstretch in the August 2023 NASCAR Cup Series contest. In reviewing the aftermath of Preece’s crash, including a reconstruction of the incident, officials determined the grass indeed had a negative impact on the car, both creating lift and grabbing the vehicle as it rolled upside down against the lawn. After the 2024 Daytona 500, the remaining stretch on the backstretch will be paved to the middle of Turn 3.
The rumble strips currently in place for IMSA’s Rolex 24 at Daytona will also be removed, set to be replaced by concrete pads where variable rumble strips may be put into place for road racing but removed for oval events.
— Using data collected from drivers’ mouthguards after the 2023 contest at Watkins Glen, the sanctioning body has determined to remove the steep curbing through the bus-stop chicane at the 2.45-mile road course. Curb-hopping triggered notable spikes in forces the drivers underwent each time they raced through the inner loop. Like Daytona, those curbs will be removed and replaced with contact pads. Different temporary strips — whether flat, an inch tall or otherwise — will be tested during a Goodyear tire test at the facility on June 26-27.
Recessed rumble strips will also be implemented in the run-off section of Turn 1, an addition made in effort to limit drivers’ use of the extra pavement on driver-left of the 90-degree right-handed turn.
— NASCAR Xfinity Series director Wayne Auton said that teams will have a limit on the amount and details of their backup cars for each race, with both restrictions meant as a cost-saving measure. Organizations with one or two teams are permitted to have one reserve car at each event, and that car can be fully prepared. Organizations with three or four teams may have two backup cars; one of those cars may be fully prepared, but there can only be one engine between the two.
Auton said that the backup-car restrictions will not be in place in two logistics scenarios – when qualifying and the race are separated by only two hours or less, and potentially in circumstances with West Coast races back-to-back (Portland to Sonoma in June, for instance) where the competition officials will work with the teams to mitigate the logistical hurdles as needed.
Additionally, those backup cars will not have a full vinyl wrap as another economic plus. Each team will designate a solid color for their reserve cars at the start of the season, and decals will be added if a backup car is deployed. Auton said the measures came in collaboration with and at the suggestion of teams in the Xfinity Series garage.
— Cup Series teams will be permitted to have lighted, LED signage attached to their pit boxes, providing another showcase spot for sponsorship placement. Cup Series director Brad Moran said that rules and guidelines about the signboards are expected to be made final next week, but that the expected measurement is 42 inches tall by the width of the pit box. Competition officials will also mandate dimmer switches and require that the display not change or move during green-flag racing.
“Just Cup only and again, for obvious reasons. It’s probably a fairly substantial expense for the teams and the industry, but as well, it’s also an opportunity for them to increase their sponsorship and have more to sell to their sponsors,” Moran said. “At the highest level, we feel it’s a good opportunity for the teams to create some new income with it and give more back to their sponsors.”
— Xfinity and Craftsman Truck Series pit crews will move to a smaller fuel can this season, dropping the capacity from 11 gallons to nine. With the reduction in weight – approximately 15-16 pounds, Auton said – teams would be able to have a less specialized athlete to fuel the vehicles. Auton said he expected delivery of approximately 100 new fuel cans later Tuesday, which would be certified for competition use. He also indicated that teams could reduce the size of existing fuel cans, but that those retrofitted cans would need to fit the competition department’s templates.
Chris Graythen | Getty Images
— No changes are expected to the inspection process or the penalty and deterrence model for 2024, but that the Cup Series will have some new equipment. Moran said a “much beefier” upgraded version of the underbody scanner will have its own station near the scales, and that other equipment has been refurbished for this season.
Competition officials also said plans are underway to build out a remote race control platform in NASCAR’s new production facility in Concord, North Carolina. Scott Miller, NASCAR’s former senior vice president of competition and current competition strategist, will head up the project, which will create a “war room” to supplement the at-track officiating process and provide a training ground for future race-control officials.
— NASCAR officials have made updates to the muffler configurations, which will be run at the Busch Light Clash at the Coliseum in Los Angeles (Feb. 4) and at the Chicago Street Course (July 7). Technical changes have been made underneath the car to help reduce heat and noise in the cockpit, and those enhancements were tested for driver comfort and durability last month at Phoenix Raceway.
— Stage breaks are back for each road race on the 2024 NASCAR Cup Series schedule, meaning caution periods will return at the conclusion of the first and second stages. The sanctioning body began 2023 without stage breaks at road courses, hoping a strategy element would create more excitement throughout the course of the event. But one-caution races at both the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course and Watkins Glen International produced races that officially lasted 2 hours, 10 minutes or less. Stage breaks were subsequently brought back for the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course in October to close the season. Shifting back to stage breaks at all tracks brings consistency across the 36-race schedule of the Cup Series while hopefully adding more on-track excitement to the field.
Max Gutierrez stood just outside the walls of the Los Angeles Coliseum and gaped through the archway at the field below. He couldn’t fathom it — there will be a race track in there, atop that grass, inside that iconic stadium, and he’ll be racing on it.
He walked toward the field, going under the arch and inside toward the famous stairs that lead down to the playing surface, which on this day in December was a soccer pitch.
Few venues boast a history like the Los Angeles Coliseum. The president has spoken there, the pope has performed Mass there, Olympians have triumphed there, the Dodgers have played there. For the last two years, NASCAR Cup Series stars have raced there. And now Gutierrez will join that list as the NASCAR Mexico Series will compete in a race NASCAR sees as a huge step in its push to become more international.
Gutierrez paused and looked around, imagining thousands of fans filling those seats as Mexico drivers race in the King Taco La Batalla en El Coliseo on Feb. 3 at 10:30 p.m. ET after the Busch Light Clash (8 p.m. ET, FS1). He walked closer, stopping at a TV camera at the top of the stairs to get a quick tutorial from the cameraman who was there hours before a soccer match between Gutierrez’s beloved Mexico and Colombia.
Eventually, Gutierrez, his cousin, William Said, fellow driver Regina Sirvent and NASCAR staffers walked down those stairs and onto the field, where the soccer players warmed up.
Asked what he was thinking now that he was down on the field, right where he will be racing, he pointed to a corner and said, “I can put someone in the wall there …”
He spun counterclockwise and pointed to the next corner.
“… and put someone in the wall there.”
He was kidding.
Mostly.
A little.
Or maybe not at all.
• • •
NASCAR has gone international. For most of its life, the sport that started out as Strictly Stock was strictly American. All of the drivers were American, and all of the races were in the United States. But that started to change early this century. The Xfinity Series raced in Mexico City in the mid 2000s and Montreal from 2007-2012. Colombian driver Juan Pablo Montoya and Australian Marcos Ambrose had full-time Cup Series rides for roughly that same time span.
With the opening last year of NASCAR Brazil, NASCAR now co-owns or licenses its name to four international series — the others are NASCAR Canada (2007), the NASCAR Whelen Euro Series (2012) and NASCAR Mexico (2004).
“There’s the whole rest of the world out there,” says Chad Seigler, NASCAR’s chief international officer — and apparently there are already a ton of NASCAR fans in it. Recent NASCAR races in London and Mexico City have drawn 40,000-plus fans, and 30,000 fans showed up for a race in Brazil.
“Those are big numbers. What that tells us is there is a passion for our style of racing,” Seigler says. “We also see there’s a passion for Americana, that love of the car and love of the race car.”
As those series have grown, there has been a concurrent expansion of NASCAR’s international footprint. Garage 56, NASCAR’s entry into Le Mans, was the talk of that event last summer. New Zealander Shane van Gisbergen won the Chicago Street Race last summer and will compete in Craftsman Trucks, Xfinity and Cup races this year. Daniel Suárez, a Mexican driver who cut his teeth in the NASCAR Mexico Series, won the Xfinity Series championship in 2016 and has been a full-time Cup driver ever since. He’ll compete in both the King Taco La Batalla and the Busch Light Clash.
And Kyle Larson, a Japanese American driver and graduate of NASCAR’s Drive for Diversity class of 2012, won the Cup championship in 2021 and is considered a transcendent talent no matter what race car he climbs into.
Five years ago, Seigler says, NASCAR had one, maybe 1.5, employees dedicated to the international market. Now there are 10-plus, including one dedicated solely to exploring new markets and another dedicated solely to developing drivers.
“We look at it on several fronts. The obvious one is growing the NASCAR brand and NASCAR exposure outside of the U.S.,” Seigler says. “Our approach to it is a little different from other sports leagues. We don’t look at it as we want to take one event into a region, race it there, leave and then come back next year. Our philosophy has always been centered around creating series within a region or a country, creating an infrastructure, creating a knowledge of NASCAR, creating race teams and drivers and developing talent in those specific regions.”
• • •
Regina Sirvent, who has won two races in Mexico’s trucks series and is a member of NASCAR’s Drive for Diversity class, attended the 2021 Busch Clash at the Coliseum as a fan. She also served as an ambassador for NASCAR to talk about the sport to kids from the Boys and Girls Club. Standing outside the Coliseum in December, she recalled watching those stock cars barrel their way around the quarter-mile track. She told herself then that one day she’d get to race there.
“And now, it’s a reality,” she says. “We have a ton of young fans, and hopefully they’ll get inspired by my story or someone else’s story.”
Sirvent, who won a fan vote for entry into the race, is proud of the fact she’ll be the first woman to race a stock car at the Coliseum, and she embraces the opportunity to be a role model for girls with big dreams.
“Since I started racing NASCAR, one of my main focuses was to tell girls that you’re not going to win all the time, you’re not going to lose all the time,” she says. “The most important thing is to try — and learn from your mistakes. If you learn from your mistakes, you’ll become a great driver.”
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images
As Gutierrez and Sirvent walked around the stadium — turning a lap on foot outside, 50 days before they would turn one inside in a stock car — they passed a Toyota Camry painted to look like a race car.
More than an hour before a ceremonial groundbreaking event celebrating the metamorphosis of the field to a race track, a worker held a bottle of Windex in one hand and a cloth in the other as he worked to make the car glisten.
That displayed extraordinary attention to detail, especially considering he was working on the side of the car facing the stadium, which almost nobody would see, and the car wasn’t even part of the event.
That little detail hints at how big of a deal the King Taco La Batalla is. NASCAR sees it as a chance to tap a key market — Los Angeles has the second-largest population of Mexicans in North America, behind only Mexico City.
But the venue can’t just look pretty. The product — meaning the race and the people driving in it — has to be good, which partially explains Gutierrez’s avowed willingness to rub fenders to win. The rest of the explanation is he wants to win, period, big race, small race, Los Angeles, Mexico City, on tricycles in his driveway, wherever.
One of the biggest challenges NASCAR faces when launching a new series is the balance between staying true to the NASCAR brand while at the same time embracing the local racing ethos. The sport’s history of fender-to-fender, aggressive racing is crucial to its identity, and a big part of its appeal to drivers, sponsors and fans. The key is making sure that translates to a new market.
In Mexico, that’s not a problem. Gutierrez says if anything, Mexican race car drivers are more aggressive than American race car drivers. But the racing culture in Europe is different because of the influence of the FIA. Early in the NASCAR Whelen Euro Series’s life, drivers were warned not to use their fenders to move competitors out of the way and that any intentional contact would be penalized. But that has loosened in recent seasons.
“We talk about it all the time,” Seigler says. “And it is a fine balance. We always tell people going into the market that we feel confident educating people and showing people what we believe NASCAR-style racing is. With that said, we’re always going to be very cognizant of what the local culture and officiating side wants to see.”
What’s next for NASCAR’s international push? Holding a Cup Series race outside of the United States sits high atop the sport’s to-do list. Wherever that race is, it will be in a market in which the sport already has a presence. And it won’t necessarily be on an existing track. One benefit of NASCAR’s recent willingness to try new things with its schedule — racing on dirt at Bristol, on a street course in Chicago, and on a temporary track at the Coliseum — is those efforts have shown the sport can go anywhere and put on a good race.
As for the next region that might see a NASCAR series, nothing is imminent; finding likely candidates is as easy as looking at a map. Asia, the Middle East and Australia are all on NASCAR’s radar.
In 10 or 15 years, Seigler wants the sport to be ready to create what he calls a Champion’s League. In his vision, all the international series — however many there are by then — will run the same cars, and drivers from the different series will race against each other in what amounts to an international all-star series.
As those series develop drivers, Seigler says the industry needs to create pathways for them to go Cup racing if they want, much like Suárez has.
For years, NASCAR’s drivers came mostly from the Southeast. Now they come from all over the United States. Two years ago, a record seven foreign-born drivers competed in the race at Watkins Glen. Long-term, Seigler imagines walking the grid at the Daytona 500 and seeing drivers from all over the world climbing into their cars.
All of this opens huge sponsorship options for teams, drivers and the leagues themselves.
Dollars, yen, pounds, pesos — sponsors aren’t picky, they’ll pay in all of it.
Tosin Oladokun | For NASCAR
• • •
As a young driver, Gutierrez raced on the same team as Suárez. He watched him closely and learned an important lesson: “He was the most selfish driver. He wanted to win,” he says. “You have to be selfish. You have friends at the track. But it doesn’t matter.”
The application of that lesson is that he expects the race at the Coliseum to be barren of friendships. “Everybody’s going to be like, I’m going to win. If I’m in second place on the last lap, I’m going to spin you out. It’s going to be way aggressive. For the fans, they’re going to love it.”
He meant that as a hypothetical. Asked if he would spin someone out to win, he smiled sheepishly.
“Yes … no … what?” as if he was desperate to change the subject. But he couldn’t keep a straight face so he confessed: “Absolutely, yes. I want to win.”
Sirvent was slightly less committal. Like Gutierrez, she expects the race to be an aggressive, beating and banging slugfest, of which she will be a more than willing participant. “I’m not going to say I’m going to be wrecking people,” she said. “But I’m going to say I’ll be as aggressive as I need to be. If they don’t want to respect me because it’s a short track, I’ll make them respect me.”
Gutierrez said Mexican drivers’ desire to win the race is the rough equivalent of wanting to win the championship. Aside from bragging rights, there is the obvious boon to a career from winning on such a big stage. Sponsors want to be affiliated with drivers who win big races.
So do fans.
An interesting wrinkle in NASCAR’s international strategy is in its star-making goals. NASCAR does not want to make, say, Kyle Larson and Ryan Blaney superstars in Mexico. It wants to make Mexican drivers superstars in Mexico (and Brazilian drivers in Brazil, Canadian drivers in Canada, etc.)
“If you were going into Mexico City tomorrow and asked who’s your favorite NASCAR driver, I would be thrilled if they said it’s Regina Sirvent or Max Gutierrez because that tells me they are locked in, and when they think of NASCAR, they think of those drivers,” Seigler says.
In pursuing that goal, NASCAR is following the same model it used at the Cup level: identifying young drivers as stars in the making and promoting them aggressively. That’s why NASCAR flew Gutierrez and Sirvent from Mexico City and Charlotte, respectively, to Los Angeles for the soccer game.
Both are young and overflowing with charisma. They talked easily with reporters, switching from English to Spanish based on how the question came to them. They laughed and joked with each other, with writers, with NASCAR staffers and with fans.
Sirvent was recognized by fans as she stood on the field before the game and later as she watched from an open-air suite. A woman in the next suite over got her attention. Her 5-year-old son is the proud new owner of a go-kart. His first race had been a week earlier, and he recognized Sirvent and wanted to meet her.
Sirvent posed for pictures, gave him her NASCAR scarf, and offered him advice: Come back and watch the stock cars race here. It’s going to be a great race.
Editor’s Note: Today’s Richard Childress Racing preview continues NASCAR.com’s countdown of team previews for the 2024 Cup Series season, ranked in reverse order of best finish in last year’s owner standings.
RICHARD CHILDRESS RACING
Manufacturer: Chevrolet Engine: Earnhardt Childress Racing Engines Driver-crew chief pairings: No. 3 Austin Dillon-Keith Rodden; No. 8 Kyle Busch-Randall Burnett Team outlook: Richard Childress Racing scored three wins courtesy of Kyle Busch and the No. 8 team in 2023, marking the first time since 2010-11 that RCR won three or more races in consecutive seasons. This season will be the second with Busch and Dillon as teammates at the storied organization, eyeing more trophies ahead in 2024.
AUSTIN DILLON, NO. 3 CHEVROLET
Experience: 10 full-time seasons in the NASCAR Cup Series 2023 stats: 29th in final standings; 0 wins, 1 top five, 7 top 10s 2024 championship odds (DraftKings): 130-1 Outlook: Dillon’s first campaign with crew chief Keith Rodden marked an unfortunate career-worst year, resulting in his lowest points finish and emphasized by a 100-point penalty in the spring that weighed down his overall results. But Dillon — winner of the 2017 Coca-Cola 600 and 2018 Daytona 500 — has proven he can contend for wins in big races with a capable car.
KYLE BUSCH, NO. 8 CHEVROLET
Experience: 19 full-time seasons in the NASCAR Cup Series 2023 stats: 14th in final standings; 3 wins, 10 top fives, 17 top 10s, 1 pole 2024 championship odds (DraftKings): 12-1 Outlook: Busch made the transition to RCR from Joe Gibbs Racing appear nearly seamless, winning in his second race with the company, but the team’s performance petered off in the second half of 2023, ultimately resulting in his lowest points finish since his rookie year in 2005. After a three-win run last year, the two-time Cup champ eyes more high-level consistency in Year 2 at RCR.
BOUNCE-BACK CANDIDATE: Despite a downtrodden 2023 season, there is plenty of reason to believe Dillon will return to the top half of the field in 2024 with eyes set on the postseason. With a teammate like Busch to lean upon and his own wins and a near-decade of experience in his pocket, Dillon should be expected to rebound with a far more productive campaign in the months to come.
Team outlook: Rick Ware Racing will have a new look to its driver operation in 2024, with Grala and Haley piloting the majority and the entirety of the season, respectively. The 2023 campaign saw a collection of a dozen drivers pilot RWR Fords, with the team tallying two top-10 finishes, both at superspeedways (Daytona International Speedway in February and Atlanta Motor Speedway in July). Haley and Grala will be two brand-new additions to the Ford team, with their combined Cup experience solely stemming from Chevrolet camps. Together, these two drivers, in conjunction with additional part-timers in the No. 15, will look to cash in on more superspeedway success in the future. And who knows, perhaps this success can branch into other track departments, too.
KAZ GRALA AND OTHERS, NO. 15 FORD
Experience: 7 starts in the NASCAR Cup Series (Grala) 2023 stats: 17th in final Xfinity Series standings; 0 wins, 2 top fives, 9 top 10s (Grala) 2024 championship odds (DraftKings): N/A
Outlook: If there’s one area Grala has excelled in, it’s in national series experience. Through the 2023 season, the 25-year-old has piloted 77 races in the NASCAR Xfinity Series — including a full-time season with Sam Hunt Racing in 2023 — and 51 in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series. This experience should pay dividends while racing under the RWR moniker in 2024, with Grala scheduled to drive in 25 races for the team. Grala’s most recent Cup participation came in 2022 when he drove the No. 50 Chevrolet for TMT Racing. His two best finishes in the series are sixth at Talladega Superspeedway in 2021 and seventh at the Daytona International Speedway road course in 2020.
The 25-race stint will be ample opportunity for Grala to get acclimated to consistent driving time in the Cup Series. With five of his seven career Cup races coming at Daytona, Talladega or Charlotte Motor Speedway, there is a touch of superspeedway experience he brings as well. His 2023 Xfinity stint with Sam Hunt Racing additionally saw Grala excel at short tracks and road courses, with top-10 finishes at Bristol Motor Speedway, Richmond Raceway and the Chicago Street Course, to name a few. Although this success came in a different car compared to the Next Gen model, this experience can’t hurt to have on file as he navigates a bigger Cup workload. Such experience could be something both Grala and his new team can use to build more upward momentum.
Experience: Two full-time seasons in the NASCAR Cup Series 2023 stats: 26th in final standings; 1 top five, 6 top 10s 2024 championship odds (DraftKings): 400-1
Outlook: 2024 will mark a transition of sorts for the 24-year-old, who will move from the bowtie to the blue oval. The Indiana native departs from Kaulig Racing, where, in two full-time Cup seasons, compiled four top fives, 10 top 10s and led 68 laps, with 23 of those circuits coming in a runner-up finish during the inaugural Chicago Street Race. This contest also doubled as Haley’s best Cup finish outside of his victory at Daytona with Spire Motorsports in 2018. In addition to his lone Cup win, Haley additionally boasts two Xfinity wins apiece at Daytona and Talladega.
A superspeedway acumen has followed Haley since his time in the Xfinity with Kaulig. With a touch more seasoning, Haley can perhaps take another upward trajectory there and in other track types, too. Every young Cup driver undertakes a learning curve, and in RWR’s case, they will look for this learning curve to vault Haley forward in terms of on-track consistency.
BOLD PREDICTION: Haley matches his single-season top-five finish total (three in 2022) at the minimum in 2024. The saying goes that anything can, well, go at a superspeedway. Sometimes, being at the right place at the right time makes all the difference. Luckily for Haley, there is past superspeedway experience that could help the young driver find the right time to strike. Couple that with two career top-five finishes on road courses — including a runner-up result at Chicago last season — and there is a perfect storm for Haley to put together a successful debut season with RWR.
One year ago, Kole Raz fell just a few feet short of winning the Chilly Willy 150 at Tucson Speedway.
On Saturday night at the 3/8-mile oval, Raz made up for that defeat by holding off 2023 ARCA Menards Series West champion Sean Hingorani for his first victory in the prestigious, season-opening event.
Raz dominated the second half of the race, which was marred by more than a dozen yellows and multiple red flags. With 78 laps to go, he took the lead from Kyle Reid, who fell out of the race shortly after following a tire failure.
Raz spent the rest of the race battling Hinograni for the lead. Hingorani challenged Raz for the lead during every restart, but each time, once Raz got a few laps under his belt, he pulled away.
The final caution flag waved with nine laps left, when Joe Paladenic made contact with the outside wall and subsequently slowed to a stop.
Hingorani gave it his all during the final nine-lap dash to the checkered flag and was able to get to Raz’s bumper with a few laps left, but he was unable to complete the pass. Raz held on for the victory to earn the $15,000 top prize.
“I love racing here; it’s so much fun. [It has] multi-lane abilities, and it just provides some great racing,” Raz said. “I’ve been wanting this one for a while.”
Kasey Kleyn finished third, with the father-son pairing of Bruce and Brett Yackey finishing fourth and fifth, respectively.
John Dillon, Zandar Peters, Rudy Vanderwal, Darrell Midgley and David Smith completed the top-10. Only eight of the 28 starters finished on the lead lap.
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — “They were just honestly the best.”
There is perhaps no better, more succinct way to define newly minted NASCAR Hall of Fame inductees Jimmie Johnson and Chad Knaus at their peak on the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet team.
The numbers are absurd — and speak for themselves with a record-tying seven NASCAR Cup Series championships (including a record five straight), 83 wins and a slew of other statistics that prove the No. 48 was No. 1 for a decade and a half.
But on the red carpet on the night of the driver-crew chief duo’s enshrinement into stock-car racing’s eternal glory, NASCAR legends offered their own insight into what made Johnson and Knaus so tough to compete against as they charged toward record-setting careers.
That sufficient description of the No. 48 team’s success came Friday night courtesy of Matt Kenseth, a Class of 2023 inductee to the Hall himself. Kenseth’s day job today is serving as Competition Advisor at Legacy Motor Club, where Johnson serves as a team co-owner. But 20 years ago, Kenseth was driving the No. 17 Ford for Roush Racing, celebrating the 2003 Cup championship at the end of Johnson’s sophomore season.
In Johnson’s first two years in the Cup Series, both he and Kenseth won six races respectively. But Johnson’s ascension to the peak of NASCAR history came at his competition’s expense, including Kenseth.
“They were just honestly the best, which is a very obvious statement,” Kenseth admitted. “But they were the best at figuring things out before other people, figuring out ways around things to make their car faster until they change the rules where they couldn’t do it anymore. Like, they were usually the first to most of those things, and obviously Jimmie could drive the heck out of a race car, make great decisions, and always was there when it counted at the end. So they were just a team that was all but impossible to beat.”
Ray Evernham, inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame as a member of the Class of 2018, was crew chief of Jeff Gordon’s No. 24 team when Knaus showed up to Hendrick Motorsports in 1993. Knaus fibbed out of work at Stanley Smith’s race shop to drive from Birmingham, Alabama, to Concord, North Carolina for a job interview.
In their first meeting, Knaus didn’t mince words with Evernham and told him he wanted Evernham’s job. Eventually he got it — thanks to Evernham, who gave Knaus his first job as crew chief in 2000 with Evernham Motorsports for two races with Casey Atwood when Evernham fired up his own team. Fast forward to the success Knaus enjoyed with the No. 48 team at Hendrick, and Evernham was left with mixed emotions.
“Chad actually was working for me when they offered him the job on the 48,” Evernham recalled Friday. “And he came in, he said, ‘I got a job offer.’ I said, ‘Well unless it’s Rick Hendrick, I don’t want to hear about it.’ He said, ‘It’s Rick Hendrick.’ I said, ‘Well, you gotta go then.’ But watching him and Jimmie mature together to where they came in as rookies and immediately became competitive, I was really proud on one hand, you know, having known Chad for so long. On the other hand, it was like damn it, we’re gonna get beat again.”
The frustration wasn’t limited to competition outside the doors of Hendrick Motorsports. Four-time NASCAR Cup Series champion and Hall of Famer Jeff Gordon served as co-owner of Johnson’s No. 48 team and was largely responsible for selecting its driver. All four of Gordon’s titles came before the little-known prodigy named stepped into the Cup Series. The No. 24 team’s winning ways never vanished, but they were immediately challenged by the young hotshot from El Cajon, California.
“I mean, in all seriousness, because I was friends with Jimmie, I wanted to see them succeed and I’m proud of them of everything that they’ve done,” Gordon said. “And I think that that overshadows some of the challenges that they brought for me. But I will say the intent was to bring them in and lift up all of the cars and the teams at Hendrick because we were working closer together and sharing more information. And they did. Unfortunately, they just kept stealing the show.
“I think 2007 was disappointing (for) me. We had them, I felt like. Had them behind us in points, won a couple of races in the Chase or whatever it was called then. And they just came back as they did many times and took it away from us.”
But what separated Johnson and Knaus from the pack was a tenacious determination that led them to every crevice of advantage they could find.
“We were just a few steps ahead,” Johnson said on the night of his induction. “And Chad was just tireless with his development of our race cars. We would test nonstop back before the testing rules. We were just always on the road — test, test, test test — and I was open to it. I was in a great place in life and can make all the time available to do it. And we got into this practice to where he wouldn’t even tell me what he was doing with the car. Occasionally, he’d said, ‘Hey, tiptoe into this one.’ Other times, he’s like, ‘No, this is going to be good.’
“And he just had this stuff kind of waiting. And at times we had so much stockpiled that we could actually take our time when we needed to release it and save it for the end of the year and save it for the championship battle. Because oftentimes when you take it to the garage area, you’re surrounded by a lot of very intelligent people. And everybody’s studying what we were doing. And if we showed up too early with our stuff, everybody around us would have it. So there was this way to manage the environment that he was so good at and I didn’t realize it at the time. But looking back on it, he had many more management skills than I wanted to admit at the time.”
The fervor by which Knaus and Johnson operated was seemingly unmatched, leading the No. 48 team to stunning success against other NASCAR greats — from legends like Mark Martin, Rusty Wallace and once-teammate Terry Labonte in the early 2000s to the modern-day stars of Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, Joey Logano, Martin Truex Jr. and everyone in between.
“We worked really hard,” Knaus said. “We were tenacious. We had a passion for the industry. We outworked most people. We did more testing — whether it be at the race track or in the lab or the wind tunnel or whatever it may have been. And we bought into one another. You know, Jimmie and I, we had a great vocabulary and a great communication style to where I was able to really understand what he was saying about the car and I can almost visualize it. So I think all of that was great.
“And then we had the resources. Mr. Hendrick never told me no. Now, he may have told me I was in trouble and I shouldn’t be doing this or shouldn’t be doing that. But if it was something that we needed to go out there and win races, it was there.”
And so they capitalized — 83 times on the race track, and with seven championships, unheard of in the modern era. It’s only fitting Johnson and Knaus went in together.
Super Late Models and Legends will take over the 0.375-mile paved oval from Friday and Saturday for a weekend full of action-packed racing that is sure to excite and entertain fans across the country.
The main event is the O’Reilly Chevrolet Super Late Model Chilly Willy 150, which serves as the finale. However, a full weekend schedule of racing, including features on Friday and Saturday, will precede Sunday’s main event.
All of the Chilly Willy racing action can be seen live on FloRacing. Below is the schedule and entry list for this year’s kickoff to the short-track racing season at Tucson Speedway.
What TV channel is the Chilly Willy on in 2024?
All racing action from the 2024 Chilly Willy at Tucson Speedway can be viewed live on FloRacing, the streaming home of all NASCAR Roots properties.
The Chilly Willy will not be shown on a traditional television network.
Below is the complete schedule for Chilly Willy coverage on FloRacing.
Action during the 2022 Chilly Willy at Tucson Speedway in Tucson, Arizona. (Photo: NASCAR)
2024 schedule
Not including Thursday’s practice day, the 2023 Chilly Willy at Tucson was originally scheduled to feature three days and nights of racing involving three divisions: Super Late Models, Legends (Semi Pro/Young Lion) and Legends (Pro/Master).
However, with bad weather in the forecast for Sunday, officials made the call Friday night to condense the Chilly Willy schedule. The $15,000-to-win Super Late Models Chilly Willy 150 is now scheduled to take place Saturday night.
Below is the complete track schedule for the 2024 Chilly Willy at Tucson Speedway.
Friday, Jan. 19
Time
Event
8 a.m.
Registration/Pit Gates Open (SLM NASCAR Driver Membership Required)
8:30 a.m.
Tech & Tire Barn Open
10 a.m.
Legends Mandatory Drivers & Spotters Meeting
10:30 a.m.
Super Late Model Mandatory Drivers & Spotters Meeting
11 a.m. – 3 p.m.
Rotating Practice
4 p.m.
Qualifying – Super Late Models / Legends
5:55 p.m.
Opening Ceremonies
6 p.m.
Heat Races & Main Events – 50 Lap Super Late Feature(s) / 30 Lap Legends Feature (Semi Pro/Young Lion) / 35 Lap Legends Feature (Pro/Master)
(All times MT)
Saturday, Jan. 20
Time
Event
8 a.m.
Registration/Pit Gates Open
8:30 a.m.
Tech & Tire Barn Open
9 a.m.
Legends Mandatory Drivers & Spotters Meeting
9:30 a.m.
Super Late Model Mandatory Drivers & Spotters Meeting
10 a.m. – noon
Scheduled Practice
1 p.m.
Front gates open
1:30 p.m.
Super Late Model Scuff
2 – 2:30 p.m.
Qualifying (Legends, Super Late Model)
4 p.m.
Racing begins
(All times MT)
Brett Yackey makes a turn in the O’Reilly Chevrolet Super Late Model Chilly Willy 150 during the Chilly Willy at Tucson Speedway in Tucson, Arizona, on Jan. 23, 2022. (Photo: Rebecca Noble/NASCAR)
2024 entry list
(Entry list as of Jan. 15)
Super Late Models
Car No.
Driver
Hometown
1
Tyler Herzog
Madera, California
1k
Kasey Kleyn
Quincy, Washington
3
Cassidy Hinds
Arvada, Colorado
05
John Lashley
Tucson, Arizona
05s
David Smith
Sidney, British Columbia (Canada)
5
Garrett Archer
Maple Valley, Washington
7
Zach Riehl
Troutdale, Oregon
8
Mariah O’Neil
Vail, Arizona
11
John Dillon
Eagle, Idaho
12
Bruce Yackey
Greeley, Colorado
13
Sean Hingorani
Newport Beach, California
14
Vanessa Robinson
Las Cruces, New Mexico
14c
Brandon Carlson
Victoria, British Columbia (Canada)
22
Ryan Phipps
Burley, Idaho
27
Kole Raz
Lake Oswego, Oregon
28
David Levitt
Sierra Vista, Arizona
32
Brett Yackey
Greeley, Colorado
34
Rudy Vanderwal
LaSalle, Colorado
36
Jeff Hillock
Cedar Hills, Utah
42
Kyle Reid
Fort McMurray, Alberta (Canada)
43
Kody Vanderwal
LaSalle, Colorado
52
Ryan Philpott
Livermore, Colorado
57
Jen Hall
Tucson, Arizona
63
Joe Paladenic
Sierra Vista, Arizona
69
Zander Peters
Graham, Washington
80
Andre Prescott
Mesa, Arizona
81
Darrell Midgley
Sidney, British Columbia (Canada)
82
Michael Scott
Hillsdale, Wyoming
100
Weston Marthaler
Glenwood, Minnesota
Legends
Car No
Driver
Hometown
2b
Stephen Brucker
Alpine, California
3
Nina Lynn Kik
Hermiston, Oregon
3
Darrell Stewart
Arvada, California
4
Tanner Reif
Henderson, Nevada
4d
Rodney Dowless Jr.
Dix Hills, New York
4
Cole Brown
Ukiah, California
5d
Jerry Davis
Emmett, Idaho
5
Robert Cuzb
Huntington Beach, California
6
Tyler Hicks
Encinitas, California
9
Tyler Reif
Las Vegas, Nevada
11
Andrew Riehl
Troutdale, Oregon
12
Byranne Bruce
Wheatland, Wyoming
12a
Aaron Brockhouse
Shakopee, Minnesota
12d
Deeahmee Malone
Sparks, Nevada
13m
Ben Mack
Fisherville, Kentucky
13h
Andy Hulcy
Piano, Texas
13
Tim Brockhouse
Shakopee, Minnesota
15d
Davis Jacobson
Bonney Lake, Washington
15m
Mikey Lovell
Willits, California
15x
Kai Lovell
Willits, California
17
David Mayhew
Bakersfield, California
17m
Taylor Mayhew
Bakersfield, California
18m
Keller Meechudhone
Las Vegas, Nevada
19
Brenden Ruzbarsky
Tracy, California
19w
Brandon White
Eureka, California
20a
Ashton Williams
Yucapa, California
21
Madilyn Lange
Wheatland, Wyoming
22c
Chase Burgeson
Yucapa, California
24c
Cole Dasenbrook
Deer Park, Idaho
25
Dustin Meier
Lakeport, California
25b
Brandon Giannini
Henderson, Nevada
28
Tryson Meyer
Bisbee, Arizona
32
Scott Anderson
Austin, Texas
33
Brent Schmich
Tucson, Arizona
37
Bryant Dawson
Surprise, Arizona
40
Samantha Schwarz
Mercer Island, Washington
42
Stephen Bazen
Saugus, California
43
Dylan Wolf
Auburn, Washington
43b
Christian Bazen
Saugus, California
47
Michael Vanderlip
Carlsbad, California
55
Justin Johnson
Willits, California
55j
Johnethan Davis
Emmett, Idaho
63x
Jacob Perkins
Tucson, Arizona
68
Wyatt Dent
Brighton, Colorado
71
Jake Bollman
Huntington Beach, California
75
Mike Doss
Upperlake, California
78
Bryceton Meyer
Bisbee, Arizona
78c
Colton Crocker
Brighton, Colorado
84
Mike Weber
Tonopah, Arizona
88
Cade Fox
Wellington, Colorado
88m
Max Reaves
Trinity, North Carolina
88x
Cody Brown
Las Vegas, Nevada
97
Jake Baker
Eagan, Minnesota
99
Brody Whitbeck
Golden Valley, Arizona
99j
Jovon Fox
Las Vegas, Nevada
99t
Tessa Marine
Littleton, Colorado
Results
Created in 2014, the Chilly Willy has quickly become the biggest event of the season at Tucson Speedway. In the 10-year history of the race, only one driver has managed to win the event more than once.
That honor belongs to Preston Peltier, who won the event in 2020 and again in 2022 and 2023. He is not currently entered for the 2024 edition of the event.
Other previous winners include Dustin Ash, Tayler Riddle, Chuck Wares, Owen Riddle, Chris Eggleston, Michael Scott and Christian McGhee.