Jonathan Hassler said he felt he was on the same wavelength with Ryan Blaney even before the two forged what would become a championship-winning driver and crew chief combination. The two shared interests in music with country and its alt-offshoots, and more importantly, both found common ground in their easy-going demeanors.

Midway through the 2021 season, both were at a bit of a crossroads. Hassler was early in an interim stint as crew chief for the Team Penske-affiliated Wood Brothers Racing operation, which was due for a shake-up at season’s end. Blaney’s crew chief – veteran Todd Gordon – had just announced his plan to retire from full-time competition at year’s end, creating a high-profile vacancy with Penske’s No. 12 team.

So, over beers at King Canary Brewing on the edge of Lake Norman, the two sat down and chopped it up.

“It was clear that I was either gonna be with somebody new or get on board with this awesome opportunity with Ryan,” Hassler said.

Two seasons later, Blaney and Hassler celebrated a shared first, breaking through for the NASCAR Cup Series championship with a sterling playoff performance in only Hassler’s second full season as a crew chief. The stock-car racing industry will raise their collective glasses to cheer their accomplishments this week in Nashville, where three days of festivities will lead up to Thursday evening’s NASCAR Awards ceremonies.

RELATED: Champion’s Week on tap in Nashville

There’s more, however, to Hassler’s path to the banquet’s head table than a midseason summit over suds. There’s the background of an Indiana native who got his start with karting and worked his way up the short-track ladder. There’s the high-school athlete who competed in multiple sports, helping his South Putnam Eagles to an appearance in the state-title football game on the home field of the Indianapolis Colts while juggling a racing schedule. There’s the Purdue graduate who found his place in the sport through engineering, even serving as the emcee to the Theta Tau fraternity’s annual Rube Goldberg Machine contest where student competitors create complex, purposely over-engineered contraptions to complete simple tasks. And there’s the long-serving, strong-silent lieutenant for Team Penske who didn’t miss once he got his shot in the big chair atop the pit box.

“That’s cool when you can win the championship with somebody like that, Jonathan, who’s a fairly new crew chief, our second year working together,” Blaney says. “He’s a man of few words, but yeah, super-smart guy. He and I get along great and cool to get our first one together. So I’d love to get some more with him because he does such a good job.”

Sean Gardner | Getty Images

***

Jonathan Hassler says his involvement in racing started when he was 8 years old. “My grandfather and my dad, all my uncles, ran a trucking company growing up,” he says. “So definitely always around machinery, equipment, mechanical things.”

The competitive side of his mechanical bent came by chance. His father had a friend who ran a local go-kart track, and the friend’s son raced there. Hassler received an invite to fill in when the son was absent one weekend. “Two weeks later, we were there with our own stuff, and I never really looked back,” he says.

Hassler’s involvement led to national karting events, including a prominent pavement series in the Chicago region. Appearances at home-state tracks — Bakersfield Raceway Park in Linton, and US 24 Speedway in Logansport among them – were regular occurrences, and Hassler progressed to mini-sprints and eventually Late Model competition along the way.

All the while, Hassler kept his hand in high-school athletics, gradually shedding his sports pursuits as his commitment to racing grew. Baseball was the first to go during middle school, then track and field. Varsity basketball came next after his junior year of high school, but Hassler stuck with football, and with good reason.

Hassler, an Indiana High School Academic All-Star selection in 2002 as a defender, helped lead South Putnam High to a 12-3 record and a berth in the Class A state championship game at the RCA Dome in his senior year. His three interceptions helped to seal a rout against Perry Central in the state semifinals, leading the opposing coach to offer the Evansville (Ind.) Courier and Press a backhanded compliment: “We ended up making that defensive back look good.”

“I definitely couldn’t walk away from that,” Hassler said, noting that some weekends meant suiting up for the gridiron under Friday night lights, then leaving with a loaded-up trailer Saturday morning for the next race on the schedule. “That was definitely a highlight, and certainly being a part of teams like that growing up, I feel like it’s been a big part of kind of preparing me to be in a crew chief, team leader role.”

RELATED: Hassler honored in Fan Choice Awards

Leadership in racing carried into his college years at Purdue University, where he made a close connection with Chris Gabehart – then a Boilermaker classmate and now crew chief for the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing team and driver Denny Hamlin in the Cup Series. The two had run in similar circles in the karting world and shared mutual interests in making a living in racing. Even into his college years, Hassler carried the hope that driving might be his pathway.

“I felt like I knew early on that I was obviously going to pursue driving, but that if driving didn’t work out there would be other opportunities after that,” Hassler says. “I wouldn’t say I gave up the thought of driving until partway through college, honestly. I always saw the potential for it. You’ve seen Purdue blow up with their motorsports involvement over the last couple of years. I always thought that the potential for that and kind of selfishly hoped that would happen while I was there and some driving opportunities might arise out of that, but never really came to fruition.”

His moment of realization led to another outlet for his racing dreams. Hassler helped found a school organization called “Opportunity Motorsports” as a gateway for students to find roles at the track on a local level.

“I kind of saw at that point that there was — no pun intended — just a huge opportunity there for people like me and even maybe people a little bit more separated from motorsports than I was, wanting to work in the sport but had zero idea how to get involved,” Hassler says. “And then there were always car owners who needed help getting them to the race track. So we definitely just tried to bridge that gap and do some good for everybody.”

Both Hassler and Gabehart have carried their Boilermaker roots into successful roles in stock car racing’s big leagues, and the two have remained close. Hassler says their families celebrate their children’s birthdays and have dinner periodically throughout the year as their busy schedules allow.

“I wouldn’t say he’s changed at all,” Hassler said. “He loves the sport, for sure. There’s no question. Like all of us, he devotes tons and tons of time to the sport.”

***

Jonathan Hassler’s first two opportunities to try out for his current role came five weeks apart in the spring of 2021. One arrived after a COVID-mandated absence, and a suspension for a lug nut infraction created the other. No matter the root cause, Hassler proved a point – to others and himself.

The results showed. Hassler stepped in for Greg Erwin at Martinsville in April, helping Matt DiBenedetto and the Wood Brothers’ No. 21 Ford to 12th place. With Paul Wolfe sidelined the following month, the Hassler-led No. 22 Team Penske group placed fifth with Joey Logano at Dover. In each case, the teams overcame early damage to post respectable finishes.

“It was definitely an audition,” Hassler recalled. “For me, it was always a job that I thought I wanted to do, but when you get out there in those fill-in roles, you have the actual crew chief kind of in your ear via other methods of communication most of the race, but you certainly still put yourself in that position, and you realize that it’s something that you either can do or can’t do. For me, it was definitely, all right, now we’re past wanting to do this. I know that I can do this.”

Years of work as a race engineer had prepared Hassler for those moments. He briefly worked for the former Ginn Racing team before landing with Team Penske in 2008, working on the Xfinity Series side for three years before reaching the Cup Series level.

Hassler said a change in his duties curbed his travel for the 2013 season, but that “Paul Wolfe kind of revived me there after a year off the road and brought me on to be the second engineer with him and Brad (Keselowski).” Hassler teamed with Wolfe through his transition from Keselowski to Logano for 2020, but not before winning 20 races with the No. 2 group during a six-year span.

“Honestly, Brad was incredible to work with,” Hassler said. “All the guys are different for sure, but he’s certainly super involved in all the details — maybe sometimes for the good, sometimes not. But it was cool to see his kind of level of devotion. Certainly, one of the things that stands out most about working with him was just, anytime you could you could manage to kind of get through a race. You’re in the top five with like 15 to go, you could just tell he had another gear and it was like he smelled blood in the water and was able to kind of find that that little bit to go and get a lot of wins.”

After Hassler’s two-race tryout in 2021, he finished out the year with the No. 21 team on an interim basis after a midseason switch – a stint that gave him more crew-chief reps as he inched toward a full-time role with the No. 12 bunch. As he prepared, he found a like-minded driver in Blaney, whose character traits balanced well with his own in an easy chemistry.

“Our personalities are very similar, very laid-back, I think,” Hassler said. “Once the race weekend starts, we kind of switch to being a lot more complementary than similar with him being pretty feisty at times when he has the helmet on. I feel like I tend to balance that out and hopefully bring it back a bit more mellow in the race.”

Crew chief Jonathan Hassler celebrates with Ryan Blaney after they claimed the 2023 Cup Series championship at Phoenix Raceway

Chris Graythen | Getty Images

The first year of Blaney’s pairing with Hassler produced an All-Star Race victory, but nothing in the points-paying win column. Consistency carried the No. 12 team and kept it in the upper reaches of the Cup Series standings, and Blaney was the only winless driver to qualify for the postseason based on points.

A breakthrough win for Hassler and the end to a 59-race skid for Blaney came in one of this season’s most prestigious races. Blaney led a convincing 163 of 400 laps in the Coca-Cola 600, converting in what Hassler called “a big relief.”

“I think we both looked back, though, and we could pick seven or eight races in 2022 where if one thing goes a little bit differently, we have that opportunity to win,” Hassler said, “and I think as he’s talked a lot about, he made two mistakes in the playoffs in 2022 that kept us out of the round of four. Take those mistakes out, I think we’re racing Joey for the championship a year ago. So we knew that all the potential was there.

“We certainly started the year lacking a bit of speed to what we were used to in 2022, so it definitely didn’t come easy. But we kept working at it. Honestly, from the 600 on, we knew that if we put all the right pieces together, we’re going to be able to contend. So it just took us some time to figure out what those pieces needed to be.”

MORE: Drivers to win Coca-Cola 600, Cup title in the same year

Acing those details reached its peak as the team navigated a postseason path that seemed to improve as it went along. The 38-year-old crew chief noted how the No. 12 team showed speed from the outset of practice most weeks, a development that instilled confidence in its driver. The pit crew also benefited after a season of ups and downs in 2022, buying into the “family team aspect” thought process that Hassler promoted.

“I’d be lying if I could tell you that it was one specific thing,” Hassler said.

That force was nearly unstoppable as the season drew to a close. Blaney wrangled wins at Talladega and Martinsville that meant advancement through the elimination stages and momentum for the team’s eventual coronation as the curtain closed at Phoenix Raceway.

Hassler celebrated with his driver and his crew into the desert night after the season finale, nearly two and a half years after the taproom discussion of what their partnership might look like. A championship is now part of that fulfilled vision, even if it might not seem like reality for everyone.

“If I’m being really honest, still just trying to soak it in,” Hassler expressed. “It’s hard enough, I feel like, at least for me personally when the season ends to get out of your rhythm of pushing and pushing. You have a pattern of how things happen each and every week, and you get to where you have weekends off. I always tell people I feel like I’m crawling out of the cave or something in the offseason, seeing the light and then just trying to understand how to live and act in the real world. So combine that with doing something that you always dreamed of doing has been a little bit overwhelming.

“I’d say the only things that have kind of made it sink in so far, we had a lunch at the shop where they showed a video and you watch it and you’re like ‘OK, it really did happen.’ I think the banquet for sure is going to be another, a really good sink-in moment.”

With NASCAR’s 75th-anniversary season drawn to a close, it’s time to recognize stock-car racing’s championship performances from all levels of the sport. Recap the hardware-winning seasons for multiple NASCAR, ARCA and touring series, plus the title awards in eNASCAR.

***

Ryan Blaney celebrates his first Cup Series title at Phoenix Raceway
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

CUP SERIES

2023 champion: Ryan Blaney

Season review: The Team Penske No. 12 Ford team and Ryan Blaney celebrated their first Cup Series championship together, finding momentum in the playoffs and outdistancing fellow Championship 4 contenders Christopher Bell, William Byron and Kyle Larson in the finale. The 29-year-old driver won three times in 2023, capturing the Coca-Cola 600 in May to break a 59-race winless skid. In the postseason, Blaney marched to wins at Talladega and Martinsville, then placed second to Ross Chastain in the season-ending event at Phoenix Raceway. The accomplishment marked the second consecutive Cup Series title for team owner Roger Penske, who celebrated Joey Logano’s second Cup crown a year earlier. (Recap)

***

Cole Custer celebrates his first Xfinity Series championship in the season finale at Phoenix Raceway
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

XFINITY SERIES

2023 champion: Cole Custer

Season review: The Xfinity Series title fight went down to the wire in the Phoenix finale, and Cole Custer emerged from a frantic overtime restart for his first NASCAR national series championship. Custer was a three-time winner in 2023, capturing six pole positions. Two of the 25-year-old driver’s victories came on road courses — at Portland and in the inaugural event on the Chicago street circuit — but his third in Stewart-Haas Racing’s No. 00 Ford was a title-clincher in the season-ending tilt. Custer came out just ahead of championship hopefuls Justin Allgaier, Sam Mayer and John Hunter Nemechek. (Recap)

***

Ben Rhodes celebrates his second Craftsman Truck Series championship at Phoenix Raceway
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK SERIES

2023 champion: Ben Rhodes

Season review: A return appearance in the Championship 4 field netted Ben Rhodes his second Truck Series title in the last three years, touching off a spirited celebration into the night at Phoenix Raceway. The 26-year-old driver won once in 2023 — prevailing at Charlotte Motor Speedway — and caught a consistent stride in the later portions of the playoffs. He placed fifth in the ThorSport Racing No. 99 Ford at Phoenix but avoided the pitfalls that short-circuited the title bids of Grant Enfinger, Corey Heim and Carson Hocevar. Rhodes is just the fifth driver to win multiple championships in the Craftsman Truck Series, joining four-time champ Ron Hornaday Jr., three-time honorees Matt Crafton and Jack Sprague, and fellow two-time champion Todd Bodine. (Recap)

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Jesse Love, driver of the No. 20 JBL Toyota, celebrates after winning the Sunset Hill Shooting Range 150 for the ARCA Menards Series at Pocono Raceway
Alex Daus | NASCAR

ARCA MENARDS SERIES

2023 champion: Jesse Love

Season review: Jesse Love’s ARCA Menards Series dominance culminated with the series title to round out the 2023 season. The 18-year-old from Menlo Park, California, finished Race 19 of 20 on the ARCA Menards Series schedule, having won 10 of 19 events. Of his 10 wins, He won four consecutive races starting at Pocono Raceway, Michigan International Speedway, Lucas Oil Indianapolis Raceway Park and Watkins Glen International — stretching into August. Love’s ARCA Menards Series championship adds to his already impressive resume on the platform. He has five West Series wins and one East Series triumph in addition to a pair of West Series titles as he makes the jump to the Xfinity Series in 2024, driving the No. 2 for Richard Childress Racing. (Recap)

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William Sawalich celebrates with his crew in Victory Lane at Berlin Raceway
Eric Bronson | ARCA Racing

ARCA MENARDS SERIES EAST

2023 champion: William Sawalich

Season review: With a victory at the Bristol Motor Speedway, William Sawalich grabbed his first ARCA Menards Series East Championship. Beating eventual ARCA Menards Series Champion Jesse Love in a 10-lap dash to the finish, it was William’s fifth win of the 2023 campaign. The 2023 ARCA Menards Series East Championship was brought home to Joe Gibbs Racing for the third consecutive year, all coming from the No. 18 Toyota. With another full East Series planned with Joe Gibbs Racing in 2024, Sawalich knows he can be the favorite to win every race he enters. (Recap)

***

Sean Hingorani celebrates after his victory at Shasta Speedway in Anderson, California.
Lachlan Cunningham | ARCA Racing

ARCA MENARDS SERIES WEST

2023 champion: Sean Hingorani

Season review: Sean Hingorani more than proved himself in a Venturini Motorsports car with a stellar debut season that saw him take the ARCA Menards Series West championship crown. The 2023 season saw a complete turnaround for the driver of the No. 15 after finishing 16th, three laps down in the opening race at Phoenix Raceway in March. Hingorani immediately responded by tallying his first two West Series victories at Irwindale Speedway and Kern County Raceway Park. He then cemented himself as a championship favorite during the summer with two more triumphs at Shasta Speedway and Evergreen Speedway. Now that he is a West Series champion, Hingorani wants to keep the momentum going and is eager to get a head start on 2024, regardless of whether that involves defending his title or branching out elsewhere. (Recap)

***

Ron Silk celebrates the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour title at Martinsville Speedway
Veasey Conway | NASCAR Roots

WHELEN MODIFIED TOUR

2023 champion: Ron Silk

Season review: With a sixth-place finish in a Thursday night showdown at Martinsville Speedway, Ron Silk claimed the 2023 Whelen Modified Tour Championship, his first title in the tour since the 2011 season. After going the entire 2022 season without obtaining a victory, Silk kicked 2023 off with an impressive win at New Smyrna Speedway, holding off Justin Bonsingnore to do so, a battle that raged on for the entire 2023 season with each driver having five wins on the year. When the dust settled for the Virginia is for Racing Lovers 200, it was Silk raising the title in the air. (Recap)

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Connor Hall in Victory Lane during one of his 14 victories at Langley Speedway during the 2023 NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series season.
Bill Carnes | Langley Speedway

ADVANCE AUTO PARTS WEEKLY SERIES

2023 champion: Connor Hall

Season review: Connor Hall captured his first Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series title in a season that saw him win his opening 11 races at Langley Speedway in Virginia. The win is the first for a Langley Speedway-based driver in Division I competition. Hall’s opening series of wins included 10 Weekly Series Late Model Stock events and the CARS Tour event on June 3. He would go on to tally 18 total wins — the most of any driver in weekly Division I competition — in 26 Weekly Series races across three race tracks: Langley (14 of the wins), Hickory Motor Speedway (three wins) and Southern National Motorsports Park (one win). (Recap)

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Treyten Lapcevich celebrates his fifth Pinty's Series victory of the season after becoming the first driver to sweep a doubleheader at Sutherland Automotive Speedway in Saskatoon
Matthew Manor | NASCAR

PINTY’S SERIES

2023 champion: Treyten Lapcevich

Season review: With his seventh victory in 2023, Treyten Lapcevich was crowned the Pinty’s Series Champion in dominating fashion at Delaware Speedway. With 166 laps led in the race, he amassed 1,149 total during this season, breaking the series record set by his team owner Scott Steckly in 2015 (1,090 laps). Starting off the year strong, Lapcevich won the opening two rounds at Sunset Speedway and Canadian Tire Motorsport Park, never looked back and never lost the points lead through the 14-race schedule. (Recap)

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Gianmarco Ercoli celebrates his NASCAR Whelen Euro Series championship
Nina Weinbrenner | NASCAR Whelen Euro Series

WHELEN EURO SERIES

2023 champion: Gianmarco Ercoli

Season review: The 2023 Whelen Euro Series can be encapsulated in one word — thrilling. In a season that saw six different winners, four different championship leaders and a unique competitive parity at all levels, Gianmarco Ercoli hoisted the championship trophy at the end. Three race wins, nine top-five and ten top-10 results were the building blocks of a championship season in the NWES for Ercoli. The Rome native, who won the EuroNASCAR 2 Championship in 2015, becomes the first driver to top both divisions. (Recap)

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Salvador De Alba Jr. celebrates the NASCAR Mexico Series championship at the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez
NASCAR Mexico Series

MEXICO SERIES

2023 champion: Salvador de Alba Jr.

Season review: Although not winning the final race of the 2023 Mexico Series at the Hermanos Rodríguez race track, it was Salvador de Alba Jr. who came away victorious in the championship battle when they crossed the line in Mexico City with a third-place finish. The race and championship came down to a green-white-checkered finish after championship hopeful Rubén García Jr. was involved in an accident that left him out of the title picture and allowed Salvador to seize the opportunity.  (Recap)

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Steven Wilson with the eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series trophy
eNASCAR

eNASCAR COCA-COLA iRACING SERIES

2023 champion: Steven Wilson

Season review: In a championship spectacle that was hosted in Uptown Charlotte, North Carolina, at the NASCAR Hall of Fame, Steven Wilson was crowned 2023 eNASCAR Champion. The Stewart-Haas Racing driver had the race of a champion as he qualified second and finished second at the virtual Homestead-Miami Speedway, only getting beat by non-championship contender Donovan Strauss. Wilson became the 11th different champion in 14 seasons of the eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series, also pocketing a cool $100,000. Wilson’s only win on the 2023 campaign came at the newly added Atlanta Motor Speedway in March. He was the only driver to make the Championship 4 on points. (Recap)

Editor’s note: With Champion’s Week in Nashville ongoing, NASCAR.com will look back at every playoff round of the 2023 season in all three national series.

Race 1: At Indianapolis Raceway Park, Aug. 11

Ty Majeski celebrates in Victory Lane at Indianapolis Raceway Park.
Justin Casterline | Getty Images

Winner: Ty Majeski

Key highlights: Majseki put an old-fashioned beating on the rest of the field in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series playoff opener, leading 179 of 200 laps. Other playoff drivers, Carson Hocevar and Zane Smith, finished in the top five. Corey Heim, the 2023 regular season champion, finished eighth after being penalized for too many men over the wall.

Full race recap: Ty Majeski dominates Truck Series playoff opener at IRP

At-track photos: At-track photos: 2023 Indianapolis weekend


 

Race 2: At Milwaukee Mile, Aug. 27

Grant Enfinger celebrates at the Milwaukee Mile
Jonathan Bachman | Getty Images

Winner: Grant Enfinger

Key highlights: Grant Enfinger rallied late to clinch his spot in the Round of 8 with his win at the Milwaukee Mile. Enfinger passed Hocevar, who was gambling on old tires after leading the field to the green. Christian Eckes and Corey Heim finished third and fourth, respectively, and both clinched berths in the Round of 8 on points. Matt Crafton moved nine points above the elimination line with a fifth-place finish.

Full race recap: Grant Enfinger dominates to win at Milwaukee Mile, advances in Truck Playoffs

At-track photos: At-track photos: 2023 Daytona-2, Milwaukee weekend


 

Race 3: At Kansas Speedway, Sept. 8

Christian Eckes does a burnout at Kansas Speedway.
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

Winner: Christian Eckes

Key highlights: Already clinched into the Round of 8 on points from Milwaukee, Eckes made a statement to all of the other playoff contenders with his win at Kansas Speedway. In a last-lap, three-wide scramble that saw Zane Smith get loose, turn sideways and fade to fifth, non-playoff driver, Taylor Gray, finished second, 0.363 seconds behind Eckes. Matt DiBenedetto ran third in a valiant effort to try to earn a berth in the Round of 8, but with Ben Rhodes finishing 25th after securing a total of 11 points in the first two stages, Rhodes claimed the final spot in the next round by five points over DiBenedetto.

Full race recap: Christian Eckes seals Truck Series victory at Kansas; Playoffs’ Round of 8 set

At-track photos: At-track photos: 2023 Kansas Speedway-2 weekend

Drivers eliminated: Matt DiBenedetto, Matt Crafton

It was only a few years ago when Jake Johnson raced a Modified for the first time.

Fast-forward to the 2023 season, and the 20-year-old from Rehoboth, Massachusetts can officially call himself the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour Sunoco Rookie of the Year.

Driving the legendary Ole Blue No. 3 for Boehler Racing Enterprises, Johnson competed in 13 of 18 events during the 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season while splitting time in the car with Bryan Narducci.

Johnson, who made six NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour starts last season, collected one top-five and seven top-10 finishes across his 13 starts in 2023.

Jake Johnson
Jake Johnson (Photo: Armond Feffer/NASCAR)

His best performance of the season came in his final start of 2023, which took place at Connecticut’d Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park on Oct. 8.

Johnson had arguably one of the fastest cars that day and battled championship rivals Ron Silk and Justin Bonsignore at the front of the field for most of the race. He led 22 laps that afternoon before ultimately finishing a career-best second to Silk.

So far, in his 19 career NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour starts spread across two seasons, Johnson has scored three top-five and 11 top-10 finishes as well as two Mayhew Tools Dominator Pole Awards.

If those numbers are any indication, the 2023 Sunoco Rookie of the Year could have a bright future with the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour.

Editor’s note: With Champion’s Week in Nashville ongoing, NASCAR.com will look back at every playoff round of the 2023 season in all three national series.

Race 1: At Bristol Motor Speedway, Sept. 15

Justin Allgaier celebrates in Victory Lane
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

Winner: Justin Allgaier

Key highlights: Allgaier rallied late at Bristol to lock his spot in the Round of 8. He roared from 13th place after a restart on lap 257, making the pass for the lead on Daniel Hemric in the closing laps. Playoff drivers John Hunter Nemechek, Cole Custer and Chandler Smith rounded out the top five.

Full race recap: Justin Allgaier takes the lead late and wins Xfinity playoff race at Bristol

At-track photos: At-track photos: 2023 Bristol Motor Speedway


Race 2: Texas Motor Speedway, Sept. 23

John Hunter Nemechek celebrates in Victory Lane.
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

Winner: John Hunter Nemechek

Key highlights: John Hunter Nemechek found his way to Victory Lane after race leader Justin Allgaier got loose in a door-to-door battle with Parker Kligerman and just brushed the wall, avoiding what could’ve been a race-ending wreck. Nemechek took the race lead with seven laps to go, while Kligerman finished 1.005 seconds behind. Allgaier recovered to finish fifth and Joe Gibbs Racing’s Sammy Smith finished third, followed by Kaulig Racing’s Chandler Smith.

Full race recap: John Hunter Nemechek roars to Xfinity playoff win

At-track photos: At-track photos: 2023 Texas Motor Speedway


Race 3: At Charlotte Motor Speedway road course, Oct. 7

Sam Mayer celebrates in Victory Lane.
James Gilbert | Getty Images

Winner: Sam Mayer

Key highlights: Sam Mayer took over at the Charlotte Roval and earned a spot in the Round of 8 with a much-needed win. Mayer led five different times for a total of 50 laps out of 67. Mayer outmuscled Cole Custer on the final restart and escaped with a margin of victory of .909 seconds. Josh Berry struggled with power steering in the race’s final moments and was eliminated despite finishing third in the race. Non-playoff drivers Riley Herbst and Kaz Grala rounded out the top five in the Round of 12 finale.

Full race recap: Sam Mayer lands clutch win at Charlotte Roval

At-track photos: At-track photos: 2023 Charlotte Motor Speedway-2

Drivers eliminated: Daniel Hemric, Parker Kligerman, Josh Berry, Jeb Burton

Editor’s note: With Champion’s Week in Nashville ongoing, NASCAR.com will look back at every playoff round of the 2023 season in all three national series.

Race 1: Texas Motor Speedway, Sept. 24

Winner: William Byron

Key highlights: Playoff driver Bubba Wallace snagged the Busch Light Pole Award and led a race-high 111 laps in the Round of 12 opener. Two-time champion Kyle Busch was running inside the top 10 early but crashed in Turn 1 near the end of Stage 1. Martin Truex Jr. finished the stage 12th but was tagged from the rear and spun after the stage. A late speeding penalty put Blaney to the rear after running inside the top five, and the No. 12 Ford later crashed out due to an incident ahead of him. Kyle Larson, who led 99 laps, was fighting Wallace side-by-side for the lead in Turn 1 when his car broke loose, spun and collided with the SAFER barrier late to end his day. William Byron capitalized on the ensuing restart to pass both Wallace and Chase Briscoe to score the victory and advance to the Round of 8.

Full race recap: William Byron surges late at Texas, seals Round of 8 spot, Hendrick Motorsports’ 300th win

At-track photos: Best pictures from Texas

William Byron does a burnout at Texas
Jonathan Bachman | Getty Images

Race 2: Talladega Superspeedway, Oct. 1

Winner: Ryan Blaney

Key highlights: Postseason hopes for Ross Chastain took a hit on the final lap of Stage 1 when Ricky Stenhouse Jr. ran out of fuel just ahead of Kyle Busch. Busch moved left to avoid the slowing No. 47 Chevrolet and clipped Chastain, sending Chastain spinning into the SAFER barrier while Christopher Bell collected nose damage. Brad Keselowski, the 2012 Cup champion, triggered the “Big One” exiting the tri-oval with 27 laps to go when an errant push to Carson Hocevar spun the rookie driver, collecting at least eight cars and ending Keselowski’s day prematurely. On the final lap, Ryan Blaney used a push from Riley Herbst to dart from right to left in front of William Byron and alongside Kevin Harvick for the lead. Blaney scored the victory, his second of the year, to lock into the Round of 8 for the fifth time in his career.

Full race recap: Ryan Blaney scores clutch Talladega win to lock into Round of 8

At-track photos: Best pictures from Talladega

Ryan Blaney performs a burnout after winning the NASCAR Cup Series race at Talladega Superspeedway
Meg Oliphant | Getty Images

Race 3: Charlotte Motor Speedway road course, Oct. 8

Winner: AJ Allmendinger

Key highlights: Entering the weekend two points beneath the elimination line, Tyler Reddick stormed to 23XI Racing’s second pole in three weeks and led each of the first 27 laps to win Stage 1 with teammate Bubba Wallace just behind him. A spin during the final stage by Denny Hamlin ended his day when he was contacted in the right rear by Mike Rockenfeller, breaking the right-rear toe link. Kyle Busch entered in a must-win scenario and restarted on the front row with 10 laps to go but ultimately finished third as AJ Allmendinger, a non-playoff driver, nabbed the win. Kyle Larson overcame a practice crash to advance, while Ross Chastain, Bubba Wallace, Brad Keselowski and Busch were ousted.

Full race recap: AJ Allmendinger holds off William Byron for emotional Charlotte Roval victory

At-track photos: Best pictures from Charlotte

Drivers eliminated: Ross Chastain, Bubba Wallace, Brad Keselowski, Kyle Busch.

AJ Allmendinger celebrates in Victory Lane at the Charlotte Roval
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

The 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season featured 18 races, 82 drivers and more than 3,000 laps completed from February through October.

While Ron Silk claimed the biggest prize of the season, the 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour championship, several season-end special awards were claimed by a variety of drivers.

Below are the special award winners for the 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season.

Mayhew Tools Dominator Pole Award: Justin Bonsignore

Justin Bonsignore will receive a $3,000 bonus for winning the Mayhew Tools Dominator Pole Award. (Photo: Kostas Lymperopoulos/NASCAR)

For the third consecutive season, Holtsville, New York native Justin Bonsignore earned more No. 1 starting positions than any other driver.

The driver of the No. 51 Modified for Ken Massa Motorsports secured seven Mayhew Tools Dominator Pole Awards in 2023, three more than he earned during the 2022 season when he claimed the same season-long award.

He was able to turn four of those pole positions into trips to Victory Lane, beginning at New York’s Riverhead Raceway in May, followed by wins at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, New Hampshire’s Monadnock Speedway and, to complete the circle, again at Riverhead in September.

His other three poles came at Monadnock in May, New York’s Lancaster Motorplex in August and Connecticut’s Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park in October.

Bonsignore will receive a $3,000 bonus for winning the Mayhew Tools Dominator Pole Award.

Mayhew Tools, founded in 1856, is the oldest punch and chisel manufacturer in the United States, growing their extensive professional grade, American-made product line to include pry bars, pneumatics, cable ties and more. In 2020, the company extended its product line to a complete line of dual drive and socket bits and sets.

Serving the industrial, automotive, hardware and construction industries, Mayhew’s premium hand tools are sold globally through an extensive distributor network. Mayhew Tools started sponsoring the Whelen Modified Tour pole award in 2019 and has continued the partnership ever since. Mayhew also sponsors six-time NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour champion Doug Coby.

In addition to Bonsignore, others to secure poles during the 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season included Austin Beers (six), Coby (two), Tyler Rypkema (one) and Matt Hirschman (one).

Whelen 75th Lap Leader Award: Justin Bonsignore

For winning the Whelen 75th Lap Leader Award, Justin Bonsignore will receive a $7,500 bonus from Whelen Engineering. (Photo: Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)

To celebrate NASCAR’s 75th anniversary, Whelen Engineering officials decided to offer a special year-end bonus award for the 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season.

The honor, the Whelen 75th Lap Leader Award, was awarded to the driver who was the race leader at Lap 75 of the most races throughout the season.

The winner was Justin Bonsignore, who found himself as the race leader at Lap 75 on four different occasions.

Bonsignore actually tied Matt Hirschman, who also was the Lap 75 leader four times in 2023. However, Bonsignore was declared the winner of the Whelen 75th Lap Leader Award based on his higher finishing position in the final 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour standings.

For winning the Whelen 75th Lap Leader Award, Bonsignore will receive a $7,500 bonus from Whelen Engineering.

Phil Kurze Mid-Race Leader Award presented by Josten’s: Ron Silk

Ron Silk will receive $1,000 for winning the Phil Kurze-Mid Race Leader Award presented by Josten’s. (Photo: Jaiden Tripi/NASCAR)

Ron Silk took home plenty of honors during his 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour championship season, including several special awards.

The first of those is the Phil Kurze Mid-Race Leader presented by Josten’s, named in honor of former Whelen Engineering vice president of motorsports Phil Kurze and awarded to the driver who is the leader at the halfway mark in the most races throughout the year.

The late Kurze, who was honored in 2021 at the NASCAR Hall of Fame in Charlotte, North Carolina with a plaque in the Whelen Hall of Champions, was a strong advocate for short-track racing. He helped elevate the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour prior to his passing in 2018.

Silk was the leader at the halfway mark four times throughout the course of the season, enough to give him his first of several special awards. He will receive $1,000 for winning the Phil Kurze-Mid Race Leader Award presented by Josten’s.

Josten’s, the official provider of the NASCAR Cup Series championship trophy, the Daytona 500 championship ring, the Indy 500 championship ring and more, coins itself as the Most Trusted Partner in Celebrating Moments That Matter and is a proud supporter of the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour.

Hoosier Tire Lap Leader Award: Austin Beers (KLM Motorsports)

Austin Beers will take home $6,000 for winning the Hoosier Tire Lap Leader Award. (Photo: Kostas Lymperopoulos/NASCAR)

NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour tire supplier, Hoosier Tire, is the sponsor of a trio of special awards each year. They include the Hoosier Tire Lap Leader Award, which goes to the car owner of the driver who leads the most laps in a race the most times during the season.

This year the award goes to Austin Beers, who led the most laps five times during the 2023 season.

In all, Beers led a whopping 633 laps during the 2023 season. Surprisingly, that wasn’t the most laps led throughout the year. That honor went to Ron Silk, who led a season-high 644 laps on his way to the 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour championship.

Justin Bonsignore, who ranked second in the 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour standings, was third on the laps led list at 626. They were the only three drivers who led more than 600 laps during the season.

Beers will take home $6,000 for winning the Hoosier Tire Lap Leader Award.

Whelen Engineering Winner of the Race Award: Ron Silk

For winning the Whelen Engineering Winner of the Race Award, Ron Silk will receive an extra $2,000. (Photo: Veasey Conway/NASCAR)

The second of Ron Silk’s special awards is the honor bestowed upon the driver who wins the most races during a given season, the Whelen Engineering Winner of the Race Award.

This season, Ron Silk won five times, the same as his championship rival Justin Bonsignore. But Silk walked away with the award thanks to his higher finishing position in the series standings.

Silk’s first victory of the season came in the opener at Florida’s New Smyrna Speedway in February. He followed that up with wins at Riverhead Raceway, New Jersey’s Wall Stadium Speedway, New York’s Oswego Speedway and Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park.

Silk and Bonsignore were two of seven drivers to earn trips to Victory Lane during the 2023 season. Other race winners in 2023 included Matt Hirschman, Austin Beers, Kyle Bonsignore, Doug Coby and Ryan Preece.

For winning the Whelen Engineering Winner of the Race Award, Silk will receive an extra $2,000.

Hoosier Tire Hard Charger Award: Ron Silk

Ron Silk will take home an extra $6,000 for winning the Hoosier Tire Hard Charger Award. (Photo: Ryan M. Kelly/NASCAR)

It would be accurate to say Ron Silk wasn’t the best qualifier during the 2023 NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour season. In fact, unlike his title rival Justin Bonsignore, Silk didn’t score a single Mayhew Tools Dominator Pole Award throughout the year.

However, that set Silk up to claim his second straight Hoosier Tire Hard Charger Award.

The Hard Charger award is given to the driver who advances the most positions during a race.

The postseason award is given to the driver who earns the award in the most races compared to his competitors throughout the season.

Silk will take home an extra $6,000 for winning the Hoosier Tire Hard Charger Award.

Hoosier Tire Most Improved Award: Brian Robie

Brian Robie will receive a $6,000 bonus for winning the Hoosier Tire Most Improved Award. (Photo: Adam Glanzman/NASCAR)

A new face on the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour in 2023, Brian Robie managed to secure a special honor based on his limited performance throughout the season.

Despite making just five starts, Robie was able to earn the Hoosier Tire Most Improved Award for team owner Kayleigh Eastman.

The Hoosier Tire Most Improved Award goes to the eligible new team/organization whose driver improves the most positions during the course of each race.

In the team’s first year, Robie secured a best finish of eighth, which came in his final race of the season at Monadnock Speedway. Robie will receive a $6,000 bonus for winning the Hoosier Tire Most Improved Award.

CONCORD, N.C. — A little more than a year ago, a media conference at Charlotte Motor Speedway was an unfathomable idea for the CARS Tour.

But Monday afternoon, the series’ core ownership group consisting of Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kevin Harvick, Jeff Burton and Justin Marks convened inside the track’s media center to unveil their full plans for 2024, which include the schedule of events, an extension on their deal with FloRacing and a new title sponsor in zMAX.

Earnhardt said Monday was a culmination of the hard work he, the co-owners and everyone else with the zMAX CARS Tour put in during their first year together. Despite this, Earnhardt admitted there are a lot of boxes left to check on his agenda as the series moves through the offseason.

“As someone involved in the series ownership group, it’s never enough,” Earnhardt said. “We’re ambitious, and the value of the series is still unrealized. We’ve got a lot of potential with good, quality racing and a lot of great storylines. I’m pretty bullish, but there’s not enough days in the year to accomplish all your tasks.

“I wish I could wake up in the morning and work on the CARS Tour until I went to bed every single day of the year.”

Having been with the series since its first season back in 2015, Earnhardt knew there was room for the CARS Tour to grow into a premier division for short track racing.

Every CARS Tour race weekend sees an even mix of local short track heroes and future NASCAR stars coalesce to battle at some of the southeast’s most storied facilities. Some of the most successful drivers to come from the series include Deac McCaskill, Bobby McCarty and all-time wins leader Josh Berry, who is set to move into the NASCAR Cup Series in 2024.

Each member of the ownership group expected an onerous task when it came to building upon the foundation Jack McNelly constructed from the remnants of the USAR Pro Cup Series in 2015. This ranged from emphasizing the talent already on the CARS Tour to exposing the series to a much wider audience.

For Harvick, the key to attaining those goals was to ensure he, Earnhardt, Burton and Marks could utilize their own viewpoints to build an efficient blueprint toward sustainable, long-term success.

“When you look at the first year, there’s a lot of things I’ve learned a lot about,” Harvick said. “I love the group of guys we work with because it’s a great communicating group who look at things from a much different perspective but also understand that we’re trying to reach the same goal. It’s been a lot of work, but a lot of fun, as well.”

A key first step for the new ownership group was coming to terms with FloRacing on a deal that would see the streaming platform provide live, flag-to-flag coverage of all 19 events on the 2023 CARS Tour schedule.

With more eyes now on the CARS Tour, the series proceeded to sell itself.

Intense, side-by-side racing dominated both CARS Tour divisions from the season-opener at Southern National Motorsports Park to the finale at Caraway Speedway. JR Motorsports driver Carson Kvapil ended up pulling away with the Late Model Stock title, while the Pro Late Model championship saw Caden Kvapil prevail in a year-long fight with Katie Hettinger.

Heated battles like this one between Bobby McCarty (6) and Brenden Queen (03) dominated the CARS Tour throughout 2023. (Photo: Susan Wong/NASCAR)

The on-track product translated into stellar streaming numbers for the ownership group and McNelly, who now operates as the CARS Tour general manager. While he was ecstatic to see the FloRacing partnership pay dividends, McNelly found himself more impressed by how many people attended CARS Tour events in person.

“The most important thing to me was the growth in the grandstand area,” McNelly said. “The last half of the year had tremendous crowds. Langley probably had their largest crowd ever. I know we cheated at Caraway [Speedway] with Kyle Larson there, but a fellow told me he had not seen a crowd like that there in 30 years.”

Burton had nothing but praise to offer toward the racing that permeated the CARS Tour during the year along with the assistance provided by McNelly as he and the other owners worked through growing pains.

Even with all the positives the CARS Tour experienced, Burton still chalked up year one as a learning experience more than anything else. There were many aspects about the day-to-day operations that genuinely surprised Burton, but he gradually got acclimated to his environment and began to understand what it would take to help the CARS Tour thrive.

“I personally wanted to learn about the series,” Burton said. “What was it I didn’t know? I wanted to get smarter, put myself in the shoes of the car owners, drivers and pit crew members to understand what we could do to make things better for the competitors and the fan base.”

A full year with the CARS Tour has given Burton and the other owners a general idea of how to build off the momentum from 2023.

One goal the owners would like to accomplish is a condensed race-day schedule that sees CARS Tour events start on time and guarantees a reasonable departure from the track. They have not ruled adjustments to the rulebook that would make weekends easier for the competitors.

The core ownership of the CARS Tour (Kevin Harvick, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Justin Marks and Jeff Burton from L-R) intends to grow the series by listening to feedback from drivers, team owners and tracks. (Photo: Adam Fenwick/NASCAR)

Earnhardt said the series has made progress in that regard through regular communication with team owners.

“We kind of put an owner’s council together,” Earnhardt said. “There’s about eight different owners we get together with on a Zoom call, and we talk to them about things that could be better. We don’t want to do anything our owners don’t want, but we also don’t need to change anything, because the series is doing great.

“We’d just like things to be more streamlined.”

Harvick added that the ownership group is also trying to figure out how to ensure the CARS Tour veterans remain a part of the series for years to come.

The presence of drivers like McCarty, McCaskill and others is a quality Harvick finds essential for numerous reasons. By just having them at the track, Harvick said the new generation of drivers can lean on them for advice, so they do not carry any bad on-track habits into the NASCAR ranks.

“Our veterans are the group of guys that teach our young guys how to race,” Harvick said. “It’s really an old-school approach, and when you look at the CARS Tour, they have a group of guys that race a lot and those guys showing up year after year is important because they have a great fan base. You need those veterans that have those followings and can teach along the way.”

Harvick and the rest of the owners expect healthy car counts for the Late Model Stock and Pro Late Model divisions next season to go along with a rigid infrastructure that includes Kip Childress as the series’ executive director.

The introduction of zMAX as the title sponsor and FloRacing returning to broadcast events also provides the CARS Tour some stability as they prepare to tackle an ambitious schedule that features two trips to North Wilkesboro Speedway, one of which is the season finale.

The CARS Tour rides momentum into 2024 following a successful first year under the new ownership group that featured guest appearances from drivers like Kyle Larson. (Photo: NASCAR)

McNelly finds himself amazed at how quickly the CARS Tour has grown under the new ownership group in a short amount of time. He envisions a bright future for the series he helped create and knows the right people are overseeing its burgeoning growth.

“I know [the CARS Tour] is going to continue to grow,” McNelly said. “It’s just like a child. You and the wife have a child, you watch that child grow and do everything to nourish it when you can, but at some point, you have to turn it loose.

“When you do, you have to make sure it is in good hands.”

Earnhardt sometimes finds himself overwhelmed at the challenges he, Harvick, Burton and Marks face on a regular basis trying to run a series. The days might be long, but Earnhardt remains committed to giving short track competitors a platform to excel with the CARS Tour.

“You’ll never listen to your favorite song the same when you go into the studio to see how it’s made,” Earnhardt said. “I used to go the track and everything was about me, but [the CARS Tour] has really opened up my perspective to seeing the challenges of a series owner, the promoters and team owners that are trying to make a living doing this.

“It is a whole lot to get this series up and down the road and makes me appreciate the France family and what they’ve done.”

Toyota introduced its new model for the NASCAR Cup Series on Monday, taking the wraps off a race car with a fresh look and a familiar nameplate for 2024 — the Camry XSE Next Gen.

The model replaces the Toyota Camry TRD that competed in the first two seasons of NASCAR’s seventh-generation stock-car platform, and the design emulates the road-going 2025 model-year Camry that’s set to go on sale this spring. It’s the fifth model that Toyota has introduced for NASCAR’s top division, and it continues the industry-wide push in recent years toward strengthening carmakers’ brand identity, incorporating many of the passenger car’s design cues.

“What’s most important, really, is the process, the commitment that the OEMs have with NASCAR, to make sure that we race what we sell,” said David Wilson, Toyota Racing Development (TRD) USA president. “It wasn’t always that way. It was just since 2013 that we came to this new way of doing it, and honestly, I think it’s still one of the best initiatives that NASCAR has brought to the sport because it’s allowed our fans to truly identify a Toyota Camry versus a Ford Mustang and a Chevrolet Camaro. …

“All of those features are incorporated in our new Camry, and somehow, our really smart aerodynamicists have got it to look pretty good in the wind tunnel. So I love it when we can build a great-looking car and a car that’s true to the design, but it’s going to be good on the race track as well.”

Toyota is the second original-equipment manufacturer (OEM) to reveal a new Cup Series model this month. On Nov. 1, Ford released images of its 2024 Mustang Dark Horse for NASCAR competition. Chevrolet, the third automaker involved in NASCAR’s three national series, will continue with its Camaro ZL1 this season but could potentially shift to a new model for future Cup and Xfinity Series campaigns after the Camaro’s production run ends early next year.

The passenger-car version of the 2025 Toyota Camry line was unveiled Nov. 14 at the Los Angeles Auto Show. The race-ready rendition will make its competition debut roughly two miles south in the Busch Light Clash exhibition at the LA Memorial Coliseum on Feb. 4 (8 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) before starting the season in earnest with the 66th running of the Daytona 500 on Feb. 18 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

RELATED: 2024 Cup Series schedule | Toyota’s United by Opportunity program

When the Camry XSE does hit the track, viewers should note significant differences from nose to tail. Toyota, its TRD arm and the Calty Design studio collaborated on the race car’s design, and much of the street-car version’s thoroughly restyled look carries over.

Up front, the Camry XSE race car features what the manufacturer calls “hammerhead styling” with the slim upper grille opening that connects to the sharply angled headlights. Below that feature, an expanded lower grill is flanked by a pair of curved vents; above, the hood is shaped by distinctive new lines and reworked duct exits. Out back, slimmer taillight details cap off the updated rear of the car, with sloping corners that lead to the bumper from the redesigned quarter panels.

The overall design of Toyota’s new Cup Series racer serves to bolster the brand identity tied to one of its longest-running and best-selling vehicle names. But there’s also a competition component, Wilson says, that’s another important piece to the effort. So far, the early tests and computer modeling have him hopeful that the Camry XSE ticks both boxes, staying competitive within the series’ performance equation.

“We don’t race in wind tunnels, and we don’t race downforce and drag numbers, but that does give us the best indication of what we can expect, and we were really pleased with that,” Wilson says. “And then the collaboration we have with our fellow OEMs is pretty important because the only way that this process works is for us to agree what the performance parameters are that we have to work within. So there is a box, we call it, and in every OEM, when we submit a new body, it has to — the downforce, drag, side-force, all of those parameters — have to fit within this box.

“Now the trick is, there’s a corner of that box that you want to get as close to as possible, which is the optimization of downforce and drag, and you only get so many attempts to do it. And so, again, it’s a real credit to our folks here at TRD who were able to really optimize our numbers in the wind tunnel. Again, the proof will be in the pudding when we get to the race track, but we’re certainly optimistic at this point.”

The street-car Camry’s other twist is that it is only available as a hybrid-electric vehicle, carrying a “Beyond Zero” badge that reflects Toyota’s pledge to reduce carbon emissions. Press releases for the new vehicle included a reference to “electrification for all,” with hybrid technology standard across all four Camry trim levels, including its front-wheel-drive and all-wheel-drive versions.

That movement toward carbon neutrality for consumers and a more modest-sounding power delivery might run crosscurrent to the race-ready version and the growl of full-bodied V8s. NASCAR competition officials, however, have explored the potential of fuel alternatives and other technologies, building an electric vehicle as part of its research and launching the NASCAR Impact initiative this year with a commitment to net-zero operating emissions by 2035.

Wilson says NASCAR is not alone in the motorsports world in addressing those issues and moving toward a carbon-neutral future, but that keeping the immersive sound of stock-car racing should also remain a priority.

“As to the product that we race, certainly we can’t ignore that. That’s the sexiest part of the event when we show up at the race track,” Wilson says. “And yes, the OEMs have been working in concert with NASCAR. This is something we address every quarter when we get together to talk about the sport and where we go forward in the sport. NASCAR is looking at electrification, but they’re not focused on one technology over another right now. And I think we all want to make sure that we don’t lose sight of the fact that we’re in the entertainment business, and if we don’t have a fan base if the fans don’t show up to watch a race, if they don’t turn the television or their streaming device on, then we don’t have a sport.

“So I think there’s certain facets of the sport that that you can’t turn off, and you can’t turn off the volume. That is integral to our sport, and so I think there are other solutions that can address carbon reduction and still maintain the volume that our fans love, and that’s something that we’re working on. It’s something that all the automakers are working on, and so we’ve got work to do, but again, I think we’re doing a good job of getting out in front of it and looking at its options moving forward.”

For now, one of the bigger differences for Toyota teams in the 2024 season is that there will be more of them. Joe Gibbs Racing will mark its 17th year with the automaker, and 23XI Racing will continue its alliance for its fourth Cup Series season. But the number of Camrys on track will swell from six to eight with the addition of Legacy Motor Club, which has evolved rapidly in recent years since the merger that brought team owners Maury Gallagher and Richard Petty together, with Jimmie Johnson joining the ownership group last year.

Wilson said TRD has long maintained a “quality vs. quantity” approach to adding new Cup Series teams, saying that “the sweet spot is somewhere between eight to 10” cars. But that transition for the Legacy M.C. group will also mean a hectic offseason, shifting its bodies, engines and other components from Chevrolet to Toyota – including preparing a new Camry for Erik Jones, incumbent driver of the No. 43, for a test at Phoenix Raceway on Dec. 5-6.

MORE: Six teams set for Phoenix test

Wilson said that Legacy Motor Club has made significant progress in meeting those goals and that Toyota was hands-off as the 2023 season wound down out of respect to the team’s existing agreement with Chevy. Wilson said that the Monday after the season finale at Phoenix, the switch flipped to “all hands on deck” to provide assistance to LMC, which has opted to enter its new era without a technical alliance to an existing Toyota team.

“I’ll also be fair to say that we have to moderate our expectations in year one,” Wilson says. “I would say the measuring stick would be the first year of 23XI. Now, to be fair, they won in their first year and arguably, I would say, they punched above their weight their first two years as a brand-new racing team. So what Legacy Motor Club has going for them is they’re not a brand-new team, and so that should help them, but, again, we have to be realistic.

“The other part … is Maury and Jimmie have decided by and large to do this on their own and not to lean on big technical alliances with JGR or 23XI. So, of course, TRD, we are a technical partner, and we’re going to be engaged in various capacities. Obviously, we’re going to be providing our Toyota TRD engines to them from Southern California, but many other facets of technology out of our facilities in North Carolina.”

The race cars may be stored away for the year, but NASCAR is set to take over the city of Nashville for this year’s Champion’s Week. Celebrating the conclusion of the 75th season, there is no shortage of events taking place in Music City this week, all culminating in the awards ceremony where Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney will be officially crowned as the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series champion.

It will highlight a year of prominent personalities and high achievements from both on and off the track.

RELATED: NASCAR’s history in Nashville

Fans are welcome to visit the NASCAR House on 5th and Broadway on Wednesday, Nov. 29, from 11 a.m.–5 p.m. CT, where there will be a round of appearances from the sport’s biggest stars who will answer fan questions — also a one-of-a-kind immersive fan experience with engaging activities and post-worthy photo displays.

The NASCAR Champions Parade will be held the same day on Broadway Street from 2:30–3:30 p.m. CT, where patrons can welcome each NASCAR champion to town.

Finally, the week concludes with the NASCAR Awards and Champion Celebration, which will be held at Nashville’s Music City Center, and fans will be able to tune in on Sunday at 7 p.m. ET on Peacock to watch the ceremony.