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.
The story was recounted in The Tampa Tribune on July 5, 1970, the day after Donnie Allison drove to victory in the Firecracker 400 at Daytona. His fifth NASCAR Cup Series win came after Allison and team owner Banjo Matthews had overcome an arm’s-length list of weeklong tribulations and the weight of heavy expectations.
Lacking both a competitive new engine and any last-ditch prospects for securing one, the team filed a late entry for the race just four days earlier. “We were discouraged and ready to junk the whole thing,” Allison recalled after qualifying 15th in a 40-car field, well behind the front-runners. For good measure, he overslept and missed the drivers’ meeting, arriving at the 2.5-mile track at the last possible moment. But Allison awoke to a fresh Junior Johnson motor on loan and newly installed under the hood of his No. 27 Ford, and that was enough to outlast his Firecracker rivals.
Tribune sports editor Tom McEwen wrote that the Daytona 400-miler was another instance of Allison defying long odds, sharing one such story from his modest beginnings in Miami — years before the family settled in Alabama in 1962. His older brother, Bobby, had a 1955 stock car with proven speed, and Donnie’s asking for a turn behind the wheel turned into begging, then nagging after a series of rejections. Bobby finally relented, and Donnie promptly totaled the car on his first try.
Brotherly love turned to tough love and fast. “Give it up, kid,” Bobby said. “You’ll never be a race driver.”
Decades later, Donnie Allison no longer has to prove himself or live up to lofty expectations. A custom-tailored blue jacket and a prized NASCAR Hall of Fame ring can say that for him.
Allison was honored Friday evening with induction into stock-car racing’s shrine, joining seven-time champions Jimmie Johnson and Chad Knaus in the Class of 2024. The hard-nosed driver joined his brother Bobby, his nephew Davey and longtime family friend Red Farmer as Hall inductees from the vaunted “Alabama Gang.”
Allison was a gracious recipient, awestruck as he took the stage to make his induction official: “All I can say is wow.”
Thankfully, Allison had much more to say than just “wow,” spinning yarns rich with racing history and offering thanks to his family and to so many fellow drivers, mechanics and car owners. He was a 10-time winner in the NASCAR Cup Series, prevailing with legendary teams run by Matthews, the all-powerful Wood Brothers and colorful character Hoss Ellington. But he was a winner many times over at the short tracks of the Southeast with his crew from the small Birmingham suburb of Hueytown.
“They knew we were there when we showed up,” Allison said, “and they really knew we were there when we left because we took all their damn money.”
But the appreciation was reciprocal for someone known for extracting the most from his equipment but also for giving back to the sport as a mentor to so many — both during and after his racing career.
Among those was a fellow inductee in Johnson, who fondly recalled testing at Talladega Superspeedway during his Xfinity Series days before his big break in NASCAR’s big leagues. Allison was a fixture at his home-state track, and he roamed the garage during the test session, offering pointers for navigating the 2.66-mile facility’s high banks.
“I remember it very vividly because I walked up in the garage area, and he was standing there, and he introduced himself to me,” Allison recalled. “And he said, ‘I’m Jimmie Johnson from El Cajon, California.’ And I said, ‘Well, what are you doing here?’ He says I’m gonna test the Busch car, Xfinity or whatever they called it at the time. And he said, ‘But I’m gonna run Cup.’ I said, ‘That’s the attitude you’ve got to have. You keep that, and you’ll make it.’ We talked a little bit, and I was impressed because he was very strict in the way he felt. He wasn’t talking with a question mark or anything else. He was sure where he was going.”
Allison also offered help in an earlier era to future Hall of Famer Terry Labonte, albeit inadvertently. His assist came in the form of an impromptu test drive for team owner Billy Hagan in place of Skip Manning, the ’76 Cup Series Rookie of the Year, at Darlington Raceway in the spring of 1978.
“Billy Hagan had hired me, and I was gonna run like five races later in the year, and so he told me, just go to all the races with the team and, you know, kind of get a feel for things and see how everything’s done and this and that,” said Labonte, a member of the Hall’s Class of 2016. “So we’re at Darlington, in the springtime, and we’ve been out running, and we weren’t very good. And Tex Powell was our crew chief, and they’re only like three guys working for our team, you know. …
“We went out there and practiced and practiced, and all of a sudden, the car came in and the guy got out that was driving it, and Donnie’s standing there. Donnie talks to Tex, and he gets in the car and takes off. And he went out and ran his first lap by, he’s like almost a second faster than our car had been the whole time. Tex looked at me, and he said, ‘I think I figured out part of our problem.’ So I was telling Donnie, the next time we went to Darlington, I was driving the car, so he helped my career right there and didn’t even know it.”
Allison’s expertise and guidance were a boon to many in the NASCAR community, from generations gone by to contemporaries such as Joey Logano, who lauded the 84-year-old legend’s impact in his video introduction. For Allison, it was all part of the journey after surmounting long odds to get here, from those earliest days of tough, brotherly love in Miami with a ’55 stocker.
“We go back in history and in time to Donnie, who was for a lot of the time, he was the other member of the Alabama Gang,” said Class of 2014 inductee Dale Jarrett. “Donnie did everything that he could to make it in this sport, and it’s nice that people recognize what a good talent he was and the things that he was able to accomplish. It’s not always about winning to get here because he took a lot of teams and cars that weren’t capable of running where he put them and made them better. And then after his career, he was always available to help others, so I think that probably had as much to do with him being here, and it’s a well-deserved honor.”
Despite a few rough patches in their 17-year working relationship, driver Jimmie Johnson and crew chief Chad Knaus achieved a level of success at NASCAR’s highest level unparalleled in the current century.
Together, on Friday night in the Crown Ballroom at the Charlotte Convention Center, Johnson and Knaus reaped the rewards of their remarkable accomplishments –induction into the NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2024 in their first year of eligibility.
Johnson and Knaus entered the Hall along with Donnie Allison, elected to NASCAR’s highest honor from the Pioneer Ballot. An original member of the famed Alabama Gang, Allison helped elevate stock car racing’s visibility with both his driving skills and his fists.
Johnson earned high praise from Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jeff Gordon, who lobbied on Johnson’s behalf when team owner Rick Hendrick considered adding a fourth team in 2002.
“He’s the best driver I ever raced against,” Gordon said in a video introducing his teammate.
In his acceptance speech, Johnson demurred with typical modesty, opening his remarks with a story about the motorcycle he found under the Christmas tree in 1979.
“I realize how many people played a role in this Hall of Fame induction,” Johnson said later in the speech. “Thank you to my family, friends, fans — everyone at Jimmie Johnson Racing, former team members and teammates, everyone who has been part of this journey.
“This success story of seven championships and 83 wins, and now this, is all about relationships. I’m truly grateful for the journey and the amazing relationships forged and the incredible companies I’ve represented like Lowe’s and Ally.
“Whether on two wheels or four, in SoCal or Charlotte, in the driver’s seat or up on top of the pit box, moonlighting as race car mechanic or driving a school bus (as his parents did), whether you’re looking up to your heroes, driving for them or competing against them … if you’re with us now or up in heaven, thank you for being a crucial part of this incredible run.
“This is beyond my wildest dreams — and I thought Christmas morning in 1979 was special.”
Johnson reserved special praise for his teammate and team owner.
“I’m forever grateful to Jeff Gordon and Rick Hendrick,” Johnson said after receiving the Hall of Fame ring from his wife Chandra. “You guys selected me for the No. 48 car, and I’m still not sure why.”
“Congrats, brother,” Johnson said to Knaus. “I’m so glad that we’re able to go in on the same ballot.”
After Tony Stewart won the 2005 series title, Johnson embarked on a remarkable run, claiming a record five straight championships from 2006 through 2010 — a streak broken only by Stewart’s unexpected third title in 2011.
The pairing of Johnson and Knaus almost ended before the streak began. At the end of the 2005 season, they were barely speaking, and team owner Rick Hendrick considered splitting them up.
Before making a decision, Hendrick invited Johnson and Knaus to a meeting and served them milk and cookies on Mickey Mouse plates.
“If you’re going to act like children, I’m going to treat you like children,” was Hendrick’s blunt message to his driver and crew chief.
Hendrick made his point, and with the ice broken, the pair became NASCAR’s version of the “Untouchables” for the next five years.
“That shift allowed us to become champions,” Knaus said.
The five straight Cup championships eclipsed NASCAR Hall of Famer Cale Yarborough’s previous mark of three straight (1976-1978) and is one entry in the NASCAR record book that likely will remain unassailable. With two non-consecutive titles each, Kyle Busch and Joey Logano are the only active full-time Cup drivers with more than one.
Johnson added championships in 2013 and 2016, tying the record of seven held jointly by Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt, both members of the inaugural NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2010. Johnson’s latest Cup win — a track-record 11th victory at Dover Motor Speedway — came on June 4, 2017, marking the 16th consecutive year he and Knaus had teamed to win at least two events.
That victory was Johnson’s 83rd, tying him with Yarborough for sixth on the career list. The book on Johnson’s career, however, is not quite closed. As co-owner of NASCAR Cup Series entry Legacy Motor Club, he will compete in select races this season, starting with the season-opening Daytona 500 on Feb. 18.
Knaus’ wife Brooke presented the 2024 inductee ring to her husband.
“As I was growing up in the Midwest, my father taught me what it meant to have the best race cars,” Knaus said during his induction speech, “to have the proper maintenance schedule, to never settle for second and to continuously learn — and to always push the rules.”
Thanking his driver of 17 years, Knaus said, “Jimmie let me find out who I was by believing in me.”
A brilliant innovator dedicated to making Johnson’s No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolets go faster, Knaus manned the pit box for 81 of Johnson’s 83 Cup wins, having been sidelined under suspension for the first two victories of 2006 for pushing the rules too far in trying to gain an aerodynamic advantage at Daytona.
After the Johnson/Knaus pairing ended following the 2018 season, Knaus served as crew chief for William Byron’s first career victory in the summer 2020 race at Daytona. In 2021, Knaus took on a management role as vice president of competition at Hendrick Motorsports.
From a career standpoint, Knaus’ seven championships as a crew chief are second only to NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Inman’s eight. His 82 victories are third all-time.
Allison and brother Bobby Allison accumulated the second-most Cup victories by two brothers (94), a number exceeded only by Kyle and Kurt Busch, who have accounted for 97 wins (with Kyle still active at 63).
Donnie Allison earned his greatest notoriety, however, after he had won the last of his 10 races (1978 at Atlanta). He and Yarborough were battling for the lead on the final lap of the 1979 Daytona 500, the first race featuring live flag-to-flag coverage on national network television, and after repeated contact between their cars, they both wrecked at the end of the backstretch.
The drivers climbed from their cars with anger in their eyes and started the fight that would captivate the television audience with its intensity. After Richard Petty inherited the victory, Bobby Allison parked his car nearby in Turn 3 and joined the fray, as the Alabama drivers ganged up on the South Carolinian.
The race and the fisticuffs that followed sparked interest in the sport of stock car racing and launched the sport’s steady growth over the next two decades.
Allison is the fourth member of the Alabama Gang to enter the NASCAR Hall of Fame, joining brother Bobby, nephew Davey Allison and Hueytown patriarch Red Farmer.
Asked what the induction meant to him, Donnie replied, “The closest thing was the feeling I got when I married my lovely wife Pat.”
Allison was the 1967 Cup rookie of the year. He also turned heads with a fourth-place finish in the 1970 Indianapolis 500, earning rookie-of-the-year honors for the race.
“All I can say is wow!” Allison said during his induction speech, during which, with tongue in cheek, he disputed the characterization of his altercation with Yarborough in 1979. “Fought? I never fought … I never touched that man. He never touched me …”
During the ceremony, pioneering driver Janet Guthrie was honored as the recipient of the Landmark Award for outstanding contributions to NASCAR. An accomplished sports car racer, Guthrie finished 15th in her NASCAR Cup debut in the 1976 Coca-Cola 600 and went on to compete in 33 Cup races, with a best finish of sixth at Bristol.
NASCAR Hall of Famer Rusty Wallace received the Buddy Shuman Award for his charitable endeavors. Also recognized at the ceremony were two titans of the sport who passed away in 2023 — broadcaster Ken Squier, co-founder of the Motor Racing Network, and Yarborough.
It was Squier, providing play-by-play for the 1979 Daytona 500 for CBS, who called the fight against Yarborough that Allison insists never really happened.
Squier’s legacy also extends to the Squier-Hall Award of Media Excellence, conferred on the late Shav Glick of the Los Angeles Times this year.
Rusty Wallace, NASCAR Hall of Famer, champion and philanthropist, has been awarded the 2023 Buddy Shuman Award, NASCAR announced Friday.
Wallace, inducted into the Hall of Fame as a member of the Class of 2013, receives the prestigious award in recognition of efforts and contributions made to advance the sport.
The 1989 NASCAR Cup Series champion Wallace’s numbers on the track speak for themselves, with 55 victories, 202 top fives and 349 top 10s in 706 starts across more than 20 years behind the wheel.
What may not be as well-known — Wallace’s philanthropic work behind the scenes. The dynamic Wallace has served on the board of The NASCAR Foundation since 2006, the year after he retired from Cup Series racing.
“(The NASCAR Foundation) has been something very, very special in my heart, and it all started back in 2006 when I got a phone call from the late Betty Jane France,” Wallace told NASCAR.com in August. “And she says, ‘Well, Rusty, I want to start a foundation, and I want you to be on the board. And I said, ‘Why me?’ And she laughed and said, ‘Well, now you’re not controversial because you’re not driving any longer.’”
Additionally, Wallace has overseen the Buffalo Chip’s Rusty Wallace Charity Ride since 2019. Last year marked the fifth edition of the motorcycle ride, a featured addition of the famed Sturgis Motorcycle Rally in Sturgis, South Dakota.
The now-annual ride benefits The NASCAR Foundation and the Rapid City (SD) Special Olympics, which evenly split the proceeds. The 2023 edition was the most productive yet with more than $160,000 raised.
“One of the things I really love as far as having fun is the motorcycles, and Mike Helton is the one that actually started that,” Wallace said in August, noting former NASCAR President and current Senior Advisor Helton’s involvement in the ride. “Mike started bringing a lot of the NASCAR drivers out to Sturgis for the motorcycle rally almost 20 years ago, and I just really got hooked on it. I just love Sturgis and all the people we get to meet, and my wife started coming out with me about the last six or seven years, and she just loves it and the family, too.”
Wallace joins a list of notable honorees to receive the Buddy Shuman Award. Goodyear’s Stu Grant was awarded the honor in 2021; former Atlanta Motor Speedway president Ed Clark in 2020; and former Dover Motorsports Inc. president and CEO Denis McGlynn in 2019.
MOORESVILLE, N.C. – Tommy Baldwin Racing (TBR) announced today that six-time NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour champion Doug Coby will pilot the No. 7NY for select Tour events in 2024.
The team will begin the season at New Smyrna Speedway for the World Series of Asphalt Stock Car Racing and the Whelen Modified Tour opener on Saturday, February 10.
The team plans to run seven of the 16 Whelen Modified Tour events.
TBR will compete at Richmond Raceway on Friday, March 29, Riverhead Raceway on May 18 and New Hampshire Motor Speedway as part of NASCAR’s National Series weekend on June 22. The combination will return to the track on Wednesday, August 14 at Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park, Saturday, October 5 at North Wilkesboro Speedway and Saturday, October 26 at Martinsville Speedway.
Doug Coby driver of the #7 Mayhew Tools Troyer car reacts with crew chief Tommy Baldwin after winning the Duel at the Dog 200 for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at Monadnock Speedway in Winchester, New Hampshire on May 6, 2023. (Nick Grace/NASCAR)
“Tommy has a deep racing history in the Modified community and when you drive for him, you know he’s going to bring fast cars to the track,” Coby said. “Having the opportunity to work with them again in 2024 to simply try to win races is something I’m really excited for.”
Coby and Baldwin first paired together in 2022 and won events at Riverhead Raceway and Lee USA Speedway in their first two races together. They also picked up a victory at Langley Speedway that season – one that saw Tommy Baldwin Racing seal the Whelen Modified Tour owner’s championship with multiple different drivers. Coby drove the No. 7NY in 13 events last season with one victory and six top-five finishes.
“Doug is a proven winner and champion and we’re happy he’s back with us for 2024,” Tommy Baldwin Jr. said. “We’ve selected a great list of events to compete on the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour at some of their biggest races. We’re looking forward to having Doug back in the seat and it will be all about trying to get trophies.”
In the spring of 1978, Busch Gardens Williamsburg unveiled a roller coaster that would become the theme park’s centerpiece. Built in relative secrecy in the Tidewater woods and billed as the fastest, tallest and steepest ride of its kind, the twisting ribbon of steel track was called the Loch Ness Monster.
The amusement park had opened just three years earlier, and the campaign to drum up publicity for the new attraction in the Scotland section of ‘The Old Country’ was a full-court press. Besides the traditional ballyhoo, Busch Gardens marketers played up the terror, touting the ride as a must-see destination for thrill-seekers and ominously entrusting bagpipers to play “Amazing Grace” before the inaugural voyage.
Accordingly, at the coaster’s grand opening celebration, the park’s management assembled a select group of eight brave, tenacious souls from the world of sports and adventure to be among the test pilots.
“We could think of no better way to open the Loch Ness Monster than with people whose exploits reflect the sort of individual courage it will take for everyone to ride it,” Busch Gardens general manager John B. Roberts told reporters. “Besides, someone has to go first.”
Two of those courageous eight who went first were Janet Guthrie and Cale Yarborough.
The two drivers will be honored Friday evening at the NASCAR Hall of Fame ceremonies, where Jimmie Johnson, Chad Knaus and Donnie Allison will be inducted as the Class of 2024. Guthrie will be lauded as the recipient of the Hall’s Landmark Award for her pioneering contributions to the sport, and Yarborough – a Class of 2012 inductee – will be commemorated three weeks after his death at age 84.
But back on June 2, 1978, the connection between the two was a mythical creature presented in roller-coaster form, 13 stories tall. The ride — state-of-the-art for its time — achieved speeds between 60 and 70 mph after a 114-foot initial drop, and the two interlocking loops were a historic engineering first.
The modern-day marvel was befitting of the fanfare. Virginia Governor John Dalton was present for the ride’s inauguration. After some customary glad-handing, he sat in the front row of the delegation alongside August Busch III, then the Anheuser-Busch company’s president and chairman.
Besides the promotion and politics, the draw was the all-star cast of athletes and explorers. Both Guthrie and Yarborough arguably were at the height of their careers. Yarborough was on the way to his third consecutive Cup Series championship with the Junior Johnson-owned team, and Guthrie had achieved a career-best ninth-place finish in the Indianapolis 500 just five days earlier.
A delegation of first riders with the Loch Ness Monster as a backdrop at Busch Gardens Williamsburg. Cale Yarborough is at left in the group. Janet Guthrie is near the center, next to August Busch III, Anheuser-Busch president and chairman. (Richmond Times-Dispatch archive photo)
Guthrie recalled the event fondly in interviews last week, saying she accepted the invitation to Busch Gardens on a lark. “Somebody called me up and asked if I would be willing to do this,” she said. “It was right after a race, possibly at Pocono, and I said sure, why not? And it was a great deal of fun.”
Yarborough said he wasn’t sure why he was invited, but his wife, Betty Jo, speculated that his habit of regularly collecting Busch Pole Award prize money may have had something to do with it. Half a year later, Busch was the primary sponsor of Yarborough’s No. 11 car.
Their co-riders on that first voyage were an accomplished lot:
• Pittsburgh Steelers great “Mean” Joe Greene, who uttered a word the newspapers couldn’t print after he disembarked from the first go-round on the Monster. “On that first drop, I felt like I had three stomachs,” he added. Offered a second helping of the ride, the member of the vaunted “Steel Curtain” defense declined. The NFL Hall of Famer would add the third of his four Super Bowl rings just seven months later.
• Stuntwoman and land-speed record holder Kitty O’Neil, a 5-foot, 98-pound dynamo from Texas who went deaf as a youngster, raced a little bit of everything and was officially clocked at 512.7 mph behind the wheel of a rocket-powered car a year and a half earlier in the Oregon desert. “I did it. I really did it,” O’Neil said after her coaster ride before reporters reminded her that she’d leaped from buildings 100 feet high or more, sometimes in a suit of flame and as a stunt double in the original Wonder Woman TV show. “But riding the Loch Ness Monster isn’t nearly as dangerous,” she volunteered.
• Offensive lineman Conrad Dobler, dubbed by Sports Illustrated as “pro football’s dirtiest player” nearly one year before his appearance at the Virginia theme park. “I’m not usually one to put myself into life and death situations. … I enjoyed it most when I knew it was over,” Dobler – then with the New Orleans Saints – said after the coaster’s train reached the station.
• Daredevil George Willig, who one year earlier captivated New York City by illegally scaling the South Tower of the World Trade Center, earning him the nickname “The Human Fly.” He was fined $1.10 for his feat – a penny for each story he climbed – but his ride at Busch Gardens was free. “I wasn’t apprehensive because I knew it would all be over quickly,” Willig said. “It wasn’t like the climb when I was hanging off the side of that building with plenty of time to think about what I was doing. On a ride like this, all you can do is react emotionally and then it’s done.” Willig was one of the few celebrities who reboarded for a return trip, wanting to experience the ride from the front car after sitting in the back for Round 1.
• Washington defender Pete Wysocki, a hard-hitting outside linebacker and special teams expert who once described his approach to football thusly: “I try to stay just this side of being rabid.” After his tour of the park aboard “Nessie,” Wysocki said, “It’s been years since I felt anything like that. After the first drop, I decided that they ought to rename the thing the Loch Mess Monster instead,” a crack that helped foretell his foray into stand-up comedy after his six-year NFL career ended.
• Hockey enforcer Bob “Hound” Kelly, an integral member of the Philadelphia Flyers’ punishing “Broad Street Bullies” roster that won two Stanley Cups earlier in the decade. “With all the publicity, I wasn’t sure what I was getting myself into,” Kelly said. “They said the ride went 70 miles per hour, but when we went down that first drop, it felt more like 170 miles per hour.”
That sort of speed was week-to-week currency for the two guests from the NASCAR world, but something new for many in the celebrity group. Guthrie’s seatmate was the “Human Fly” Willig. “I remember him saying, ‘oh, we should scream!’ ” Guthrie recalled. He did, but newspaper accounts of the day indicated that she did not join him.
After all the hullabaloo, the ride itself was over in a tidy two minutes, 10 seconds. Photos of the governor, smiling and with wind-mussed hair, ran in papers all over the state. Both Yarborough and Guthrie emerged from the train and shared a common critique. Yarborough said he wished for a steering wheel to have some say in the ride’s direction; Guthrie agreed, saying, “I’d rather do something where I’m in control.”
The post-event interviews with the assembled press soon turned to the topic of racing for Guthrie, who was still wearing an ace bandage on her right wrist, fractured in a celebrity tennis function just days before her top-10 result at Indy. Guthrie had faced questions about the ability of women to compete in motorsports’ major leagues at virtually every turn of her career, but at Busch Gardens, those questions came in cascades – stoked by the harsh post-race criticisms lobbed her way by Al Unser Sr., who secured his third Indy 500 crown that day.
By then, Guthrie had had enough. Dismissing the notion of female frailty, she punctuated one of her responses with an expletive. “In the Southeast, this is something a woman just doesn’t do, drive a race car. There are a lot of capable women out there, but they’re all busy being helpless and incompetent,” she told the Richmond (Va.) Times-Dispatch, with some sarcasm amid her skepticism. “Around here, they think if a woman can do it, it must be easy … (but) stock-car racing is a very complex sport. Winning takes time … some say five years. I don’t care who you are.”
Those same questions came Yarborough’s way, perhaps surprisingly at Guthrie’s suggestion: “I felt all that had calmed down. Why don’t you ask Cale?”
Yarborough clearly still had his doubts about Guthrie, but didn’t want to put a full damper on the day’s festivities. “She’s a heckuva driver for a lady, but she won’t ever be competitive enough to win races,” he said, before backpedaling a touch. “She’s better than some we’ve got out there.”
Later interviews suggest that Yarborough’s stance eventually softened on Guthrie, turning into a measure of acceptance that grew as she disproved her doubters with her racing days winding down. Johnson, his team owner, had been an advocate for Guthrie earlier in her career, and that prevailing thought gradually took root with his driver. “There’s no question she can run with us,” Yarborough told The Pensacola (Florida) Journal in 1980. “She’s made it, so far as I’m concerned. More power to her.”
Guthrie recalled not having much interaction with Yarborough at the Busch Gardens event, but newspapers recounted at least one instance of the two being chummy for the cameras. “I don’t reckon you’d pose for a picture with Janet, would you?” one fan asked Yarborough, who said sure, why not.
Yarborough made a hasty exit as the group dispersed, flying to Nashville later that afternoon. The next day, Yarborough made easy work of a rain-delayed race at the Music City’s fairgrounds track, leading all 420 laps. The victory helped him leapfrog Benny Parsons in the series standings, giving him a points lead he would not relinquish for the rest of the season. Yarborough’s family – his wife, Betty Jo, and their three daughters – opted to stay behind and make a weekend of it in Williamsburg, exploring more of the amusement park and taking in some colonial sightseeing.
Guthrie returned to the Cup Series circuit a month later, driving her No. 68 Kelly Girl Chevrolet to a finish of 11th in the Firecracker 400 at Daytona International Speedway. She started just seven more races in her Cup career, but matched that 11th-place result a few years later in the 1980 Daytona 500.
As for the Loch Ness Monster’s postscript, the ride still stands, currently undergoing a sweeping renovation designed to take it into the next 45 years. Though it’s now dwarfed by the rise of newer space-age coasters built to stratospheric heights, “Nessie” remains a registered landmark certified by the American Coasters Enthusiasts group and a signature Busch Gardens attraction.
At the ride’s 40th-anniversary celebration in 2018, the park estimated that more than 58 million riders had followed the elite first-time group in braving the Loch Ness Monster’s drops, loops and tunnels. As it turns out, Guthrie and Yarborough weren’t the only famous racers to give it a go. When Busch Gardens opened the Italy section of the park two years later, Mario Andretti presided as the grand marshal. Andretti wanted a steering wheel for his ride of the Monster, too.
“It’s not as much fun, but it’s easier,” he said when asked about the coaster’s sensation compared to racing. “All you have to do is sit there and enjoy it.”
The roller-coaster is scheduled to reopen this spring for a new generation of riders to accept the challenge. They’ll all be following in the steps first blazed by Janet Guthrie and Cale Yarborough on the Loch Ness Monster some 45-plus years ago.