The No. 4 has been nearly omnipresent this NASCAR season, almost as much as the 75 that’s commemorated the sport’s diamond-anniversary celebration. Both numbers have provided an opportunity to toast enduring success on two accounts — 75 signifying a major milestone for the stock-car racing circuit, and No. 4 in recognition of one of the sport’s greatest participants, who made that car number his own.

Kevin Harvick’s journey with the No. 4 will end this week in the season finale at Phoenix Raceway as the 47-year-old driver — a surefire NASCAR Hall of Famer when eligible — brings his Cup Series career to a close. He leaves a compelling on-track legacy but will continue to write his racing story as an analyst with FOX Sports’ broadcasting team next season.

Before crafting a lasting identity with the No. 4, Harvick forged into NASCAR’s top division under the most traumatic of circumstances with No. 29. He won with both numbers, with both teams that employed him and in four — there’s that number again — generations of Cup Series stock cars.

RELATED: Photos: Kevin Harvick through the years

Four also holds a special place for Harvick when counting the number of crew chiefs who won Cup Series races with him through the years. That impressive total of 60 wins is shared among Kevin Hamlin, Gil Martin, Todd Berrier and current crew chief Rodney Childers, and all four have lifetimes of racing memories in their blood.

In some cases, these crew chiefs worked alongside Harvick during times of tragedy. In all cases, there was triumph, and no denying their driver’s talent, grit and tenacity to push each team forward. There was also that 56-year-old bottle of wine, an all-timer of a post-race press conference, the million-dollar bet sketched out on a napkin and the trip for ice cream that once launched the NASCAR rumor mill into a tizzy.

More on that in a bit.

NASCAR.com interviewed each crew chief during Harvick’s last handful of weekends in Cup Series competition. In keeping with the spirit of the #4EVER theme for Harvick’s farewell season, here is the best of those four conversations.

Richard Childress Racing crew chief Kevin Hamlin
Richard Childress Racing

Kevin Hamlin: Grief, then popping the vintage cork

The first meeting for Kevin Harvick and Kevin Hamlin paired as driver and crew chief came under the darkest of circumstances. Harvick had worked alongside Hamlin as he progressed through the Richard Childress Racing pipeline in different series, but the two were about to start a new chapter in the days immediately after Dale Earnhardt’s death in the 2001 Daytona 500.

“I think Harvick’s told the story before,” Hamlin says now, looking back. “I was kind of on a bender for a couple of days there, but we finally decided that was the decision Richard was gonna make. So Harvick came to the shop or whatever, and I probably didn’t make a real good first impression that day. I mean, it wasn’t the first time Harvick ever met me because we’d worked together. … We all worked as a team there anyway, but I had a bottle of Jack Daniel’s about half-empty, kinda slammed it on the desk and said, ‘welp, this is what we’re doing.’

“It was a tough time, a really tough time, because I mean, I didn’t even know if I could even go to the race track anymore. Everybody had it. It was very, very hard. I mean, Richard had a hell of a time. But at the end of the day, we all knew — or we kept telling ourselves — yeah, this is what Dale would want. Yeah, OK, well. It is probably what he would want, but still, it’s like, it doesn’t make it any easier.”

Hamlin, now 64, had joined the organization at another pivotal moment in its history, becoming Mike Skinner’s crew chief when RCR first expanded to a two-car team in 1997. He shifted to the iconic No. 3 to work with Earnhardt nearly midway through the next season, and he was atop the pit box for five classic Intimidator victories — including the “rattle his cage” win over Terry Labonte at Bristol in 1999 and three dramatic Talladega triumphs, including his last in 2000.

MORE: An oral history of Dale Earnhardt’s final victory

Even as the team was building for a run at an unprecedented eighth Cup Series championship for Earnhardt that fateful year, Hamlin said plans were in place for Harvick to become one of the organization’s leaders. He landed on Childress’ radar after an overachieving start in the Craftsman Truck Series and was tapped for RCR’s Busch (now Xfinity) Series program – then in its infancy.

Richard Childress Racing crew chief Kevin Hamlin with Dale Earnhardt
Richard Childress Racing

Hamlin speaks with a ready chuckle, dotting a thick northern accent that gives away his native Michigan roots. He laughs freely about some of those earlier days, noting the determination Harvick showed at a young age. “He failed to qualify at Rockingham after a good run at Daytona, and then he went missing for a whole week,” Hamlin says of the two-race start to Harvick’s rookie Xfinity season. “We always joked we were going to put his picture on a milk carton and see if we could find him.”

Harvick finished third in the standings that year and was slated for another Xfinity championship go in 2001. But those plans included a partial campaign in the Cup Series in a No. 30 RCR entry, announced just days before Daytona.

“We knew that was going to be the future of RCR either way,” Hamlin said. “Sooner or later, Dale was going to end up retiring, so we needed to have some kind of backup plan. And that was the direction that was supposed to go anyway. It just got accelerated quickly. … The whole deal happened, and it was like, holy smokes, how do you even go on from there?”

The preparations for the following weekend at Rockingham were a blur, Hamlin said. The car was outfitted in white with the No. 29 for Harvick’s Cup Series debut, and the team’s grieving process was shared by the NASCAR community. Hamlin and the team pressed onward into the unknown with Harvick’s name above the door, but the measures that RCR had taken to give Earnhardt a shot at title No. 8 began to show in the performance.

Harvick’s talent stood out, too.

“The whole focus on Harvick that year was supposed to be to win the Busch championship, and that’s the way it stayed,” Hamlin said. “We focused on trying to get through that year and run the best we could, and golly, after we finally got our heads kind of straight — or myself, anyway … I don’t know if any of us really did, but the best we could anyways – hell, Harvick probably could have won three of the first five races that he ran in that car. So that shows you how well Harvick adapted and kind of shows you how well-prepared we were to even race that year.”

As hoped, Harvick did claim the Busch Series crown that year, collecting five wins in a remarkably consistent campaign. But his season was best remembered for the breakthrough in Atlanta on the Cup Series side that provided the entire sport with solace.

RELATED: Harvick relives emotional first Cup Series win

It also marked an upgrade for Hamlin’s beverage menu, from the hard stuff to pricey, top-shelf vino.

“All’s I can tell you is that Richard bought this bottle of wine that was the same year as his birthday — Rothchilds — and we’re on the way home on the airplane, and he goes, ‘Hamlin, I tell you what. You and Harvick win your first race, we’re going to open this bottle of wine.’ I was like, ‘OK, hope you’re planning on opening that pretty soon.’ He’s like, ‘well, I hope we can,’ maybe not really wanting to because it’s pretty expensive.”

Richard Childress Racing crew chief Kevin Hamlin with Kevin Harvick
Richard Childress Racing

The 1945 vintage didn’t stay on the shelf long. Harvick’s narrow victory over Jeff Gordon at Atlanta Motor Speedway in just his third Cup Series race that March gave the team and the stock-car racing family an opportunity for healing.

The public celebration from that day remains etched in NASCAR lore. The private celebration later brought Harvick, Childress, Hamlin and their families together at the team owner’s estate to toast their accomplishment. The wine, however …

“Unfortunately, it wasn’t very good,” Hamlin said with a gleeful chortle. “We opened it, and he’s like, ‘what do you think?’ and I’m like, ‘uh, not sure you want me to really tell you what I think.’ He said, ‘Ah, c’mon.’ Then he went over there and smelled it, and he goes, ‘Oh, my goodness.’ I said, ‘well, we could just pour it back in the bottle, put a cork in it, and say we never opened it.’ But we went ahead and drank it anyway. It was kind of a funny celebration.”

Harvick and Hamlin paired for one more victory together – at Chicagoland Speedway that summer – before a crew chief shift the next season split them up. Hamlin won two more Cup Series races at RCR with Robby Gordon and later worked for team owner Bill Davis and the former Red Bull Racing group. These days, his motorsports involvement is connected to Coughlin Brothers Racing, and he dabbled in various short-track series with the team before shifting to its drag racing operations.

But looking back, Hamlin says he’ll always have the fond memories of helping the young prospect from Bakersfield, California, with his first big-league shot.

“He was a very competitive driver, and he had the talent to back it up,” Hamlin says. “He didn’t necessarily do any big talking, or I didn’t think he did anyway, but he just went out there and took care of business.”

Richard Childress Racing crew chief Gil Martin
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Gil Martin: Flying with ‘Chuck Yeager’ and the rollicking post-race Q&A

Gil Martin joined Richard Childress Racing during its most trying year, working on the Busch Series side before eventually returning to Cup, where he’d been a journeyman crew chief through the 1990s. His time with Harvick as an official driver-crew chief pairing wouldn’t start until the next season, but he was involved with the budding star in tests and other aspects of the program early in his RCR tenure.

Early on, he saw a veteran’s poise in Harvick.

“After what happened with Dale and Kevin stepped in right there, he had to completely change directions and change mindsets because he went from a relatively unknown Cup driver to being in the starlight immediately,” Martin said. “He adapted to that pretty well, obviously winning after his third race in Atlanta, but I think that’s kind of his personality. He was so comfortable in the car. It’s like any businessman going to work. His desk was in the car, so he was able to adapt to that quickly. And because he was able to adapt, I think the whole company was able to go forward and just help Richard through that time. I mean, it shows a lot about how much character he had at that young age.”

Character-building was a theme of Martin’s partnership with Harvick, and their stints didn’t take the shape of a straight chronological line. Martin picked up where Hamlin left off in 2002, moved to a team manager role the next year, then reunited with him as crew chief in 2009 for most of Harvick’s last five seasons with the Childress operation.

His first experience with Harvick’s attention to detail came through testing, which teams did without limits in those days. Martin worked extensively on shock packages and set-ups during those trips, and the team championed a different approach that set it on a successful course.

“We basically called him Chuck Yeager all the time,” Martin says. “We were putting things in the car that nobody had done, and the only way to know if they were going to work is to go out and run 100%. An 80% lap wouldn’t produce anything. … So I think that open-mindedness not only led RCR down a path, but other people saw what we were doing, and it led, I think, for the decade from 2002 to probably 2012, it led the sport in a different direction.”

Martin’s experience with Harvick’s tenacity came early, too. In the first of their 13 wins together, the No. 29 Chevrolet spun midrace after Harvick made a bold move to the Chicagoland Speedway apron in the 2002 event there. “I remember he had to go to the back, and he came over the radio and said, ‘tell ’em I’ll be back.’ And so it didn’t take long that he was back to the front,” Martin said.

But the determination Harvick possessed also pushed Martin to be better prepared – for testing, race weekends, everything.

“He wanted to make certain that everybody else was thinking down the road right along with him, and if you weren’t, his delivery could be a little bit harsh at the time,” Martin said. “A lot of the guys, it was too ‘in your face’ for them to be able to handle it … and that’s just the way he operated. If you weren’t on the same page as him on that, he pretty well could be a handful to deal with. But I think that was a good thing because his drive and motivation helped drive everybody else. Whether it was the pit crew, or the guys on the car, or the people in the shop, or sponsors or merchandising, it didn’t matter what it was. He was on top of it and wanted to be a part of it. If you didn’t have the same dedication that he did, he pretty well didn’t want you around because he wanted to be the best at everything he was doing.”

Richard Childress Racing crew chief Gil Martin with Kevin Harvick
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Martin returned to his familiar crew chief role in 2006 to work with a promising young rookie named Clint Bowyer. With RCR in search of a spark during the 2009 campaign, Martin was paired again with Harvick and the timing, he said, was right; both driver and crew chief had matured with Cup Series experience and were willing to find middle ground to make performance gains.

“I know it was good for me in the long run, and it was good for him, too, because sometimes you get complacent with where you’re at, and you think that everything’s always better on the other side,” Martin says. “Sometimes it is, but I think it also helps you to grow, and it helps you to just take a good look at yourself that, knowing that everything you’re doing is not right, that you need to make some changes, you need to be open to change.”

Their second term together ended up being among Harvick’s most successful stretches at RCR. He finished third in the Cup Series standings on three occasions with Martin and won multiple races in three of his last four seasons.

His last victory with the No. 29 team came in the wake of his midsummer announcement that he would depart the Childress organization at season’s end, joining Stewart-Haas Racing for the next phase of his NASCAR career. The lame-duck status didn’t stop the team from closing out strong, with Harvick prevailing on friendly turf at Phoenix Raceway in his next-to-last race at RCR.

MORE: NASCAR Classics, Phoenix 2013

The memories Martin carries from that triumph aren’t necessarily the 70 laps led or Harvick’s decisive grab of the top spot when Carl Edwards’ fuel tank ran dry just before the white flag. What holds in Martin’s mind is the unusually free-wheeling post-race press conference that followed, with Harvick and Childress seated to his left.

“Who knew this was going to be the press conference of the year?” Harvick said midway through their presser as the three sipped on tall, tall cans of their sponsor Budweiser’s product. Martin recalls how loose the three were in celebration, and the crew chief took the opportunity to defend his team from its doubters: “They have to be the toughest group that I’ve been around because the simple reason of everybody’s been expecting us to implode.”

“Most of the time, it’s very professional, and it’s to the point,” Martin says now. “I think with RC and myself there, that it was one of the more laid-back Q&As after a race, I think, just because we were kidding around, and we all knew that that chapter in all of our lives was basically over. Just what an incredible moment it was to be able to experience that, not go out with a bad finish or a bad ending to the year and everything. I think that was a surreal moment for all three of us – at least it was for me, because we were able to joke around and have a Budweiser and just enjoy the moment.”

At 63, Martin still scratches the itch to race. His Cup Series tenure ended in 2015, but he returned to the track in the Trans Am Series last season with High Point, North Carolina-based Silver Hare Racing, now serving as the team’s director of competition. He’s also welcomed a return to winning ways, working with teenage prospect Connor Zilisch, who made history at Virginia International Raceway last month with a sweep of victories in the TA and TA2 classes.

“You write this down,” Martin says when mentioning his name. “As soon as he turns 18, you’re gonna see one of your top Chevrolet teams is going to sign him up.”

If that superstar potential is realized, it will mark the next generation of drivers whom Martin has influenced. The impact of Harvick on Martin’s career and the sport in general is still being felt.

“I think just as far as an innovator, just the way he handled the media, his personality,” Martin says. “I mean, obviously with some of the things he did, whether it’s some of the altercations we had or whatever else, it was ultimately really good for the sport because it let everybody know that it wasn’t so vanilla. To me, that’s one of the things that he’ll always be remembered for, that he was extremely outspoken, and I think we need that even now. … You’ve got to have that person that will stand up and say the things nobody wants to hear or know about. That’s what he was really good at.”

RIchard Childress Racing crew chief Todd Berrier
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Todd Berrier: ‘Business as usual,’ crown jewels and the $1M wager

The Monday after Dale Earnhardt’s fatal crash at Daytona, Todd Berrier, Gil Martin and Kevin Harvick were in Atlanta for testing. Berrier was just starting as a crew chief with Richard Childress Racing’s fledgling Busch Series operation, and 2001 marked his first season paired with Harvick on the No. 2 Chevrolet.

Their participation in the test so soon after the tragedy wasn’t a callous calculation on such a somber day-after. Instead, Berrier says now, that original plan stuck because they were unsure how else to proceed amid the initial shock.

“We went after it as business as usual because we didn’t know what else to do,” Berrier said. “We knew we weren’t going to hear from Richard for a couple of days, and we just had to go do business as usual.”

Harvick’s schedule was already packed for the year, with a spate of testing, a full Busch Series slate and the intent of adding a limited Cup Series audition. Now, the 25-year-old was adding a full, parallel campaign for the balance of the Cup Series season.

“I mean, we weren’t even sure if we were gonna go racing the next day, you know what I mean?” Berrier says now. “So it was a lot handed to Kevin that wasn’t planned. Honestly, I think a lot of that was the circumstances were horrible, and at the same time, there was a lot put on his plate, but I think he was so busy because of that it probably helped enable us more than anything else. I mean, we didn’t have time to dwell on what we were doing right or wrong. … It was just a matter of, we’ve got to really dig deep, press and make this happen.”

Pressing through led Harvick to victories in both series and a championship in what’s now the Xfinity Series with Berrier atop the pit box. By then, Berrier was already a veteran at RCR as a crew chief for the organization’s early Truck Series effort. That program laid the foundation for what Childress’ Xfinity operation would become, with Harvick as its cornerstone.

Their Busch Series championship together eventually led to a Cup Series pairing early in the 2003 season. With Harvick’s gobs of talent behind the wheel, Berrier said that the crew side had to hold its own high standards to match their driver’s.

“Kevin was great, right? I mean, he was phenomenal with car control and his abilities and things like that,” Berrier says. “And I don’t think that anybody would tell you any different than all you can really do as a team is screw it up for someone as good as he is.”

Besides the talent, there was also Harvick’s competitive and sometimes fiery nature. Berrier was early in his Cup Series tenure with the No. 29 team when Harvick squared off against nails-tough Ricky Rudd at Richmond Raceway after a late-race incident.

MORE: NASCAR Classics, Richmond 2003

Managing that, Berrier said, had its own challenges.

“I’m sure there are definitely times that we felt like we had to intervene like, ‘OK here, let’s don’t lose sight of the task at hand trying to make sure you stand your ground.’ ” Berrier says. “But you’re not going to back him in a corner, right? I mean, he’s fight or flight, so you’re not going to back him in a corner. So a lot of times that you’d have some altercation or something, I mean at the end of the day, it didn’t matter if he was going against, I don’t care – Big Show — he don’t care. When he’s ready to dang make it right with somebody that’s done him wrong or whatever, I don’t think it would matter to him if they were 500 pounds and 8 foot tall. So at the end of the day, he’s not scared of nothing, for sure.”

Their eight Cup Series victories together included some of Harvick’s most prestigious. The first and last of those wins were bookend crown jewels – the Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in 2003 and Harvick’s thrilling Daytona 500 triumph in 2007.

“We had a streak of success there that was tied together, and that’s when you feel like you were hitting on all eight (cylinders),” Berrier says. “But honestly, man, what we get paid to do is win, and when we don’t do that, we fail. So I don’t know. You look around in Victory Lane pictures, you’re gonna be hard-pressed to find me. I don’t care anything about that. I think that’s when we finally did our job that one event. You know, the rest of the time we completely screwed it up. For him, I know the wins are special, the trophies are cool, and I’m glad to have been a part of it. I just feel like we’re probably letting down on a lot of them that he could have had.”

Berrier was with Harvick for those monumental wins, but he was also there for other life-changing moments. Berrier’s parents were close family friends with the parents of DeLana Linville, and he said he was among the first to help introduce Harvick to his future wife.

But Harvick’s life changed in a hurry that Monday at the Atlanta test. Hamlin, his first Cup Series crew chief, recalled that in Harvick’s earlier days at RCR, he “couldn’t even make a truck payment. Next thing you know, he’s got more money than he knows what to do with.” During a break in test runs, Berrier and Martin tried to educate their driver about his new financial bracket. It led to a friendly wager on a napkin.

“So Gil and I are really being really hard on Kevin saying, ‘Look, save your money. Whatever you do, bank money, and don’t buy a bunch of crap. Let’s be smart, save as much money as you can, and get out of this. Don’t ever be in a spot. Don’t let this happen to you.’ I mean, obviously, you’re not in the best of spirits through all this, right?

“So anyway, Kevin was like, ‘OK well, 10 years from today, I’ll be retired. Zero percent chance that I will not be retired by then.’ Me and Gil are like, ‘You’re completely full of crap, dude. It’s impossible.’ He said, ‘Well, here’s the deal. If I’m not retired …’ and I said, ‘I’ll bet you a million bucks that you won’t be retired 10 years from today.’ And he said, ‘Well, the only reason I won’t retire 10 years from now is I’m making so much money, I can’t afford to retire.’ So, as it turns out, Gil and I didn’t have to pay him, and as it turns out, he lost the bet.”

Berrier, now 53, remains involved in the sport in the competition department at Joe Gibbs Racing. He says he maintains a close friendship with his former driver, who is now more than a decade past his intended retirement timeline – a fact that Berrier resists the temptation to bring up.

“Oh no, I don’t have to remind him,” Berrier says. “He knows it.”

Stewart-Haas Racing crew chief Rodney Childers
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Rodney Childers: ‘When you’re having fun, time flies by in a hurry’

“Some of those times are a little odd,” Rodney Childers can say now, looking back at the birth of his time working with Kevin Harvick. Childers was a mainstay in the final years of Michael Waltrip Racing, but there was mutual interest from both driver and crew chief in going a new direction together.

Much of that maneuvering and negotiation went on in private meetings, but as one long day started to wind down at Dover Motor Speedway during the 2013 season, the secret started to slip out.

“Kevin’s like, ‘you want to go get some ice cream?’ ” Childers recalled. “So here we are, me and DeLana and Kevin on his golf cart, going out to get ice cream out in front of the speedway, and a few people saw us, so the rumors started then.”

That early bonding over freezing-cold cones led to sharing some of their greatest successes in racing and forming one of the longest-running driver-crew chief teams in recent Cup Series memory. The two were an electric pairing from the get-go at Stewart-Haas Racing, winning the Cup title in their first season together and collecting 37 wins over the course of their partnership.

RELATED: All of Kevin Harvick’s Cup Series wins

Even with the potential, Childers admits he had reservations about making the leap back in 2013. One factor was his loyalty to the Waltrip organization, where he scored wins early on with David Reutimann and later with Brian Vickers in that final season. The other hesitation stemmed from Harvick’s reputation. Sure, Childers said, “I felt like he was one of the better guys in the whole garage,” noting his knack for maximizing his equipment and avoiding unforced errors, but he also needed a personal commitment from Harvick before agreeing to a deal.

“I think the part that did scare me was the other side of it, the temper and all the things that you’ve seen being on other teams and yelling and screaming on the radio and all that,” Childers says with his customary laid-back drawl. “We had a lot of conversations about that stuff. It’s crazy how many conversations. We talked about that stuff more than we talked about anything. You know, it finally came down to him making a promise that he wasn’t gonna act that way anymore. And that if I would do it, then he would keep his promise.

“So it was really cool to see him change that much, honestly, and to keep that promise, act the way they did, and to be a leader. I think some of that was just the change in environment, getting out of what he was accustomed to and knowing that he needed to be a leader, not just a driver. He was the leader that we needed.”

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The pairing found a spark before the season ever started. At an organizational test at Charlotte Motor Speedway that December, Childers had outfitted an old No. 39 chassis with new suspension, new geometry and other set-up features based on his best instincts. “Just stupid fast,” is how Childers describes that car now, and it foretold the success that was to come as the No. 4 team took root.

“Throughout that process of hiring people, it seemed like everybody wanted to be involved in it,” Childers says. “Everybody wanted to win races with Kevin and win a championship, and it’s like every single person you hired, you would realize more and more that this was going to be something special.”

Winning in their second race under the SHR banner with a dominant performance at Phoenix served notice to the rest of the field that there would be no first-year jitters for either Harvick or Childers. Their championship came early in their tenure, with Harvick securing the first Cup Series title of the playoffs’ elimination era by winning the last two races of the year. Multiple wins came in nearly every season that followed, running Harvick’s impressive total to an even 60 Cup Series victories.

MORE: NASCAR Classics, Homestead-Miami 2014

The chemistry the two developed, Childers said, helped to foster the on-track success, but the veteran crew chief also noted his driver’s detail-oriented approach — down to noticing seams or cracks in the asphalt of each track and noting how the car reacted to each nuance.

“I think it depends on what side of it you were on,” Childers says. “If you were a competitor, you know how much grit he had, racing against him and all those things. But the people that have worked on teams with him see him completely different. We see him as just how good of a race car driver he is, and the reason he was good was because he worked hard.”

The bonds of their work relationship, the on-track performance and their friendship have kept them together. Only Chase Elliott’s current combo with crew chief Alan Gustafson, a pairing that began in 2016, comes close to matching their decade-long run.

Childers insists there’s no secret ingredient to their staying power.

“I think the biggest thing is, we’ve had a lot of fun. When you’re having fun, time flies by in a hurry. I think the other thing is just that we’ve had the same goals from the beginning, we’ve had the same mindset from the beginning. The last couple years with the new car has been difficult on us as a team, but our goals haven’t changed, and the things that we want to do hasn’t changed. … It’s really just that we have fun, we communicate really well, we talk almost every single day, and we’re always talking about what we can do better.

“It doesn’t seem like it’s been 10 years. It seems like it’s been three or four is how fast it’s all went by, but it’s really hard to be unhappy when you’re winning nearly 10 races like we did in 2018, 2020. We were always in contention all the time, and the whole garage looked up to us as one of the best teams. It’s pretty easy to keep it going when it’s like that.”

This Sunday at Phoenix, that chapter will close. Childers said that Harvick had flirted with retirement a few years earlier, with the lure of the broadcast booth making its first overtures. This offseason, during what Childers called “quiet time” working on their recreational late model program, those transitional talks became more serious.

Through the process of making farewell tour plans, Harvick took special care to keep Childers abreast of his final decision and the timing.

“I think he knows what he means to me, and I’ve always been a little of an emotional person. You can see that in every race that we win,” Childers said. “But I think he knew that it was gonna be extremely tough on me all year this year, and he’s definitely respected that.”

The No. 4 team will continue next year, with Childers teaming up with Josh Berry, another rough-hewn veteran racer with a brilliant grassroots pedigree that he brought to his Xfinity Series career. Harvick will take his meticulous manner to FOX Sports’ broadcast team, hanging up his Cup Series driving gloves after Sunday’s season finale.

What Harvick leaves behind is a remarkable legacy with Hall of Fame worth. For Childers, that legacy has a more personal impact.

“I think everybody knew going into the 2014 season that I was a racer through and through, and I’ve worked really hard my whole life and maybe not ever got the right opportunity,” Childers says. “But the reality of it is, I’d won three races as a crew chief, and now I’ve won 40. So, to say that has been life-changing is an understatement. It’s a 4 team legacy, but it’s something that will stand out for me the rest of my life. To have an opportunity to win big races with him, Brickyard 400s back-to-back, Southern 500, just all those different things, it’s stuff you’ll never forget.

“Then the other side of it is, it will also change my life going forward in the garage of different drivers and different teams and different crew members that would want to work for me, that maybe they wouldn’t have wanted to work for me in 2012. So I think it’s been life-changing for sure, and the cool thing I think with him is, I don’t think it’ll ever change. I see the friendships that he has with Todd Berrier and Gil Martin and all the people that have crew chiefed for him, and it’s never changed. He still talks to them all the time, and so I’m hoping it stays that way for us.”

Stewart-Haas Racing crew chief Rodney Childers with Kevin Harvick and the 2014 championship trophy
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Throughout the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs, Advance Auto Parts is spotlighting a series of Home Track Heroes from NASCAR-sanctioned short tracks around the country. Each Home Track Hero, nominated by his or her peers as a result of contributions made to the race track, will have his or her name appear on the C-Post of Ryan Blaney’s No. 12 Team Penske Ford Mustang in a Cup Series Playoff race. The late Jody Deery, the former owner and operator at Illinois’ Rockford Speedway, is the Home Track Hero whose name will appear on Blaney’s car during the NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race at Phoenix Raceway.

The Home Track Hero whose name will appear on Ryan Blaney’s car during the NASCAR Cup Series championship race at Phoenix Raceway is a special one. And it’s fitting as her home track of Rockford Speedway wraps up its final season of operation.

Jody Deery, who passed away last year at 97, was a leader in the short-track racing industry. Her contributions to racing, fellow promotors and racing facilities can’t be measured; she always stood her ground as a positive influence for other women to be involved in a sport dominated by men. In 1994, she became the first woman to win the prestigious “Auto Racing Promoter of the Year” award.

For nearly as long Rockford Speedway has existed, the Deery family has been involved with the speedway and community. The track was built in 1947 by a group of investors, but by 1966, Hugh and Jody Deery had taken ownership of the facility.

Together, they operated the speedway and raised eight children – Gunner, Ted, Jack, Susan, Tom, Brad, Chuck and David. Hugh passed away in 1984, but Jody was determined to carry on and continued to own and operate the track for more than 30 years with help and support from her children.

“We called it the Deery farm,” Jody explained in a story that appeared on NASCAR.com in 2017. “My husband and I both grew up on a farm. We realized the value of family working together. One of the dreams my husband had was to buy a few small acres and put kind of a model farm so people could bring their kids out from Chicago to see what farm life was like.

“Well that never materialized, but then when we got involved in the speedway it became our farm and my kids, as soon as they could talk or walk, they were involved. They grew up here.”

Jody Deery retired in 2020 at the age of 95. While she was perhaps best known for her role at Rockford, she was just as well known for her generosity. A devoted Catholic, she always went out of her way to donate time and money to those in need.

“Rockford Speedway and all of her community involvement kept her going,” David Deery said. “She was a go-getter. She just never quit. She loved helping people out. My brothers and sisters can probably say it in better words, but that was her forte, really. She always felt that everybody could use an extra hand.”

Jody continued her tradition of giving as part of her will. It was recently announced that she had donated a total of $320,000 to 16 organizations, with each organization receiving $20,000.

In addition, the St. James Catholic Church and the Catholic Diocese of Rockford were each given an ownership stake in Deery Properties, the family’s development group that is working to redevelop the land where Rockford Speedway currently resides.

“My mother was a very generous person and a very religious person, very faithful to the Catholic church,” Susan Deery said. “All 16 she was involved in, either as a volunteer, a member of the board, they all meant something important to her.

“My mom lives on through those 16 charities.”

Ford will have a familiar yet fresh look in 2024 as the Mustang Dark Horse heads to the NASCAR Cup Series, the manufacturer announced Wednesday.

The street model of the Dark Horse was unveiled as a street car in late 2022, marking the seventh generation of the Mustang nameplate. Ford has leaned hard into its Mustang heritage, with the brand set to be represented by the Mustang across six continents in 2024.

MORE: See the car from all angles | Championship weekend schedule

“It’s been such a great car for us and a great icon for us since 1964, both as a road car and as a race car for that entire time,” Mark Rushbrook, global director of Ford Performance Motorsports, told NASCAR.com in a teleconference. “When we as a company made the commitment to have a seventh-generation Mustang for the road, we knew instantly in motorsports that that meant a new wave of Mustangs for us on the race track.”

Indeed, 2023 saw a refresh for the manufacturer in each of its other racing series, ranging from IMSA to Australian Supercars and beyond.

“And then, of course, our bread and butter here in the United States is NASCAR,” Rushbrook said. “When we switched from Fusion to Mustang in Cup in 2019, that was a big deal and something we’ve been very happy to see the success of that car. But now to be updating this Mustang in Cup to the seventh-generation Mustang, and especially the new model with a Mustang Dark Horse, to really make a statement about what Mustang is as a road car, as a sports car and as a race car at the highest level in NASCAR is important.

“And it gives us that opportunity to continue racing Mustang in front of great fans, on great race tracks and to kind of wave the flag for the new Dark Horse version was important for us as well.”

The new body style is set to debut in competition for the exhibition Busch Light Clash at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on Feb. 4 with improvements from the 2023 Mustang. Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney represents Ford’s chance at a NASCAR Cup Series title in 2023, winning his way into the Championship 4 at Martinsville Speedway and putting the manufacturer in position to take home consecutive driver championships after Joey Logano scored the 2022 triumph.

This season, Fords have won eight of the 35 points-paying races in the Cup Series. Highs include three-win seasons for both Blaney and RFK Racing’s Chris Buescher, who also advanced to the Round of 8 for the first time in his career. But lows included a span of just two victories in the year’s first 21 races.

“We certainly had strength on certain style (of) tracks, especially superspeedways,” Rushbrook said. “But unfortunately, superspeedways don’t always pan out. And while we had dominant cars and led the most laps in some of those races, we didn’t win all those superspeedways. But we won some of them, and that was important. But we’ve also had some strength on the short tracks, as you’ve seen, especially what Ryan was able to do (Sunday). And we’ve had mixed success on the intermediate tracks.

“Certainly Ryan winning at the Coca-Cola 600 (at Charlotte) was an important win for him and for us and showed that the car can be competitive there but also didn’t convert at a lot of the intermediate tracks. So that’s a lot of learning with the Next Gen car as we’ve had it across ’22 and ’23. And all of that learning has been focused into the targets that were set for the 2024 car that have been delivered to and really optimistic about the race car that we’ll have for 2024.”

The 2024 Mustang Dark Horse set for the NASCAR Cup Series sits on pit road
Photo courtesy of Ford Performance

Most noticeable on the 2024 Mustang Dark Horse that stands apart from the current model is a sleek new nose on the front end of the high-powered Ford, coupled with character lines that stretch from the fender to the door. The manufacturers in NASCAR — Chevrolet and Toyota, in addition to Ford — have a tight window in which they can manipulate their respective vehicles, Rushbrook said, but still enough room to make a difference.

“Where you are within that box is still important,” he said. “So repositioning as you can to truly optimize that, every little bit of performance counts. But there’s also a lot of performance that simply isn’t characterized in that submission process of how the cars are truly race on these variety of tracks, as well as trade-off decisions that are made in terms of drag versus downforce.

“It’s hard to make improvements in both — we certainly did in this case — but in our ’23 car, maybe some of our trade-offs weren’t in the optimal place that you could see. We were really strong on superspeedways, and that hurt the performance a little bit on the intermediate tracks. So being able to reposition where we are in the box is an important step for us, as well as optimizing some of the detailed racing conditions to make sure we’re the most competitive in all those situations.”

A member of the Ford camp since 2013, Blaney will seek his first championship on Sunday at Phoenix Raceway (3 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App). Rushbrook’s connection with Blaney dates back a decade to the Craftsman Truck Series season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway, which marked Rushbrook’s first NASCAR event as part of what was scheduled to be a three-year motorsports assignment.

“He was young and very early in his career,” Rushbrook said with a laugh. “And when I think back to that point in time, that Ryan Blaney, and what we’ve seen him develop into both as a race car driver sitting inside the car but also a person and a leader outside of the car, it’s been great to watch that. And I even made a comment to him at the beginning of the season after one of our meetings, just how happy we were with where he is and that maturity level and a leader across, not just within Team Penske, but as we work with all of our drivers across all of our teams. He’s become a leader in that process as well, which we really appreciate.

“He’s still young. But he’s got a great head on his shoulders and certainly knows how to wheel the car OK and look forward to seeing what he can do on Sunday.”

Editor’s note: This is the second in a series of four stories examining why each Championship 4 driver could win the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series Championship.

Tuesday: Kyle Larson
Wednesday: Christopher Bell
Thursday: William Byron
Friday: Ryan Blaney

• • •

Christopher Bell will win the 2023 championship because …

It’s closing time, baby.

We anointed Bell as the sport’s new “Closer” in this space last year — and, remarkably, before incumbent Kevin Harvick announced his retirement — after the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing driver redefined the definition of clutch by winning back-to-back elimination races in 2022 at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course and Martinsville Speedway. The Norman, Oklahoma, native did not win last year’s title, but he did follow last season up with an arguably better one in 2023 that saw, yet again, a patented Bell breakthrough playoff performance when he needed it most at Homestead, even leading NASCAR.com colleague Zack Albert to double-down on the “Closer” sentiments.

JGR could have had three cars vying for the title in Sunday’s Phoenix finale, but instead, it was Bell who outlasted his teammates Denny Hamlin and Martin Truex Jr., who own a combined 85 Cup Series wins. And it’s no fluke.

Even with Ty Gibbs rising in the stardom ranks, Bell is the future face of JGR, and that could fully come into focus on Sunday if he delivers something that his future Hall of Fame teammates haven’t yet — a championship for team owner Joe Gibbs.

RELATED: All of Christopher Bell’s national series wins

“The opportunity in front of me to become a Cup champion is the opportunity every race car driver dreams of,” Bell said. “I can’t wait to get out there and enjoy the moment and try and make it happen. I feel like Phoenix is one of my best tracks on the schedule; it’s a place I know we can go out and win.”

After hearing for years — in a not too dissimilar vein to friendly Championship 4 rival Kyle Larson — that he’s the “next big thing,” Bell appears poised for this moment, has arguably the best pit caller atop the box in championship crew chief Adam Stevens and seems to live for these moments. The extra week to prep probably didn’t hurt, either.

Sunday could mark Bell’s first NASCAR Cup Series championship — and it could be the first of many.

Key stats: 2 wins, 19 top 10s, 10 top fives, 6 poles, 599 laps led, 9.5 average start, 12.3 average finish.

Championship 4 history: This is Christopher Bell’s second Championship 4 appearance after making it for the first time a season ago. He’s the only returner from the 2022 Championship 4.

Defining 2023 moment: Winning at Homestead to lock himself into the Championship 4, with a tip of the cap to finally capitalizing on his dirt background by winning the Bristol Dirt Race.

Watch out for: Pit-road mistakes. Far too often this season, it seemed Bell was out in front early in a race — often from the pole — because of the raw nature of the speed in his No. 20 Toyota, only to get shuffled back for the ensuing restart after a slow or disjointed pit stop. The crew will need to be on their game on Sunday, and they’ll have to be perfect to get it done.

CONCORD, N.C. — Being the best pit crew when it matters most is no accident. That status is the result of a collective daily effort from all individuals working toward a common goal: Put your driver in the best position to win the race.

Such is the recipe that the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports crew has used to produce elite-level service for driver Kyle Larson. So it should come as no surprise that front changer Blaine Anderson, tire carrier R.J. Barnette, rear changer Calvin Teague, jackman Brandon Johnson and fueler Brandon Harder have helped either keep or propel Larson in winning contention throughout the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season.

MORE: Youngest Championship 4 set for Phoenix | Ranking all Champ 4 contenders

The No. 5 team will vie for this year’s Cup title after a Las Vegas Motor Speedway win locked Larson into the Championship 4 for the second time in three years. A blazing fast pit stop in 2021 launched Larson to the win and championship at Phoenix Raceway. Four of the five current members of Larson’s pit crew — Anderson the lone exception — were servicing the No. 5 Chevrolet two years ago when they rocketed Larson from fourth to first on the final stop of the day en route to title glory.

Together, this crew, its driver Larson and crew chief Cliff Daniels have the opportunity to create new memories in the Arizona desert this weekend. According to Racing Insights, the team ranks second in the series in average four-tire pit stops this season at 11.071 seconds — only behind their teammates pitting William Byron’s No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.

The unit was elite with the old car — thinner tires, steel wheels, five lug nuts — and remains elite with the Next Gen car — thicker tires, heavier aluminum wheels, a single lug nut — two years later.

“It really wasn’t that easy,” Barnette told NASCAR.com. “And we didn’t get it as quick as other teams.”

•   •   •

CHEMISTRY AT ITS CORE

Barnette, Harder and Teague have worked together at Hendrick since 2010 — 13 years ago, when they collectively pitted the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet driven by Jimmie Johnson and crew chiefed by Chad Knaus. There have been moments of separation over those 13 seasons, but this core has been intact for the better part of a decade and a half.

R.J. Barnette, Calvin Teague and Brandon Harder work with teammates to perform a pit stop for Jimmie Johnson in a 2016 NASCAR Cup Series race at Charlotte Motor Speedway
Jerry Markland | NASCAR via Getty Images

That sort of tenure is uncommon on pit road — let alone with the same teammates at your side for over 10 seasons. It is an unquestionable advantage for this particular group, whose moves have been painstakingly choreographed to replicate perfection — or its closest comparison — as tenths, hundredths, thousandths of seconds are hopefully shaved off every stop.

“It’s knowing his move without having to see it,” Barnette explained. “I don’t have to think about what he’s going to do. I know exactly what he’s gonna do. I can close my eyes and I kind of just know where everyone’s going to be. The longer you’re with someone, the more comfortable you get, the more things are going to flow.

“We’ve been together for three years,” he continued, referencing jackman Johnson. “I’ve worked with Blaine in the past and I’ve been with Harder and Calvin for 15, 16 years, something like that. So you know, you’re a family. You’re with these guys more than you’re with your family at times. The more you’re together, the smoother things get. You do butt heads from time to time, but it’s family.”

With so many years at each other’s side, the group’s notebooks grow with every rep, each stop a reminder of how things can be improved.

“Having that experience together and then leading through all the years has been a big benefit for us,” Harder said. “And just learning how the team operated at a younger age like (Teague) said and growing that I guess from 2010 until now, and keeping that discipline and drive and everything that entails has been a huge benefit for us.”

•   •   •

ADAPTING TO CHANGE

The No. 5 team ended the five-lug-nut era of the Cup Series with its fastest time of 2021 — a four-tire pit stop that featured refueling, adding tape and making a chassis adjustment all in a stop timed at 11.8 seconds.

Then came the Next Gen car — a radically different machine with independent rear suspension and, more importantly for the crew, a single lug nut responsible for holding these thicker, heavier wheels on the race car. As Barnette alluded, the transition was not easy.

“Coming off ’21, we didn’t start practicing for one lug until several weeks before the season,” Barnette said. “So we were a little behind the eight ball when it comes to that. This group of guys, we are pretty quick at adapting and figuring it out. And you know, we started ’22 and we weren’t good. To our standards, we were — actually, we were really bad. So we just, you know, figured it out. We made some changes personnel-wise and it kind of clicked in the middle part of last year to this year.”

Indeed, a turning point came midway through the 2022 season, the inaugural year with the Next Gen car on track. The right front wheel of Larson’s No. 5 car detached during competition in June at Sonoma Raceway, resulting in four-race suspensions for Daniels, Johnson and then-front-changer Donnie Tasser.

Pit crew members perform a pit stop on Kyle Larson's car during the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series race at Homestead-Miami Speedway
James Gilbert | Getty Images

In came Blaine Anderson, a member of Hendrick Motorsports’ pit crews since 2018 who clicked instantly with the No. 5 crew.

“When I had my opportunity to fill in for the four weeks that I was kind of guaranteed to fill in for, I didn’t really know what my future was gonna look like after that,” Anderson said. “So it was kind of just my job just to keep us where we left off and not really skip a beat — if anything, add to the team. And once I was kind of given the role permanently, I just did everything I could to be a good teammate, you know, kind of learn from the veteran guys. I knew they had been in championship settings before and just trying to do what I could to lean on them to keep that elite status.”

In a team full of strong personalities who know what ingredients lead to success, Anderson’s newfound teammates saw something in him the No. 5 team needed.

“This team’s different than other teams as when we get someone new, it’s not necessarily the crew chief or upper management that makes that decision. It usually comes from us,” Barnette said. “We’re the ones that (say) ‘Hey, we like this guy. He fits our mold.’ When you look at it — and it’s happened with countless other positions well before Blaine. Chad wanted a guy and we got together like, ‘No, like, that’s not the guy. This is the guy we want.’ And then, you know, we get him and we move on.

“But this team is different in that we kind of build our own team and kind of groom our own guys. And that’s just the three of us, I think, just being around and knowing that you gotta like the person. You got to want to be around them because you know you’re going to spend a lot of time with them.”

The other benefit to Anderson’s addition? A clean slate mentally with less to forget from the old style of pit stops.

“I think he adapted,” Teague, his tire-changing counterpart, said of Anderson’s attitude to the single-lug stops. “You know, some people have pushed back. They don’t like change and they’re set in their ways and they don’t want to change the way that they do things. And as it’s been touched on, our team is a little different where we have certain expectations, and we are very disciplined. And there’s things that we do that a lot of other people did not do. And he was very open-minded to taking all of that in and basically accepting the challenge to be a part of this team.”

•   •   •

CHAMPIONSHIP MOMENTS

Rarely is a single pit stop so revered as the final dash of service given to Kyle Larson’s No. 5 Chevrolet in 2021 at Phoenix. But two years later, its staying power rings as a loud reminder of how critical a role these five crew members can play in determining the outcome of a sequence — a race — a season.

The No. 5 team performs a pit stop at Phoenix
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR

The success produced that day was no accident, crew chief Daniels is keen to note. Daniels knows these crew members about as well as they know themselves, joining what was then the No. 48 team with Jimmie Johnson and Knaus as the team’s race engineer from 2015-18 before becoming crew chief midway through the 2019 campaign.

So there was full trust in his crew in 2021 when Larson needed a stellar pit stop to shoot from fourth to first on pit road to have the optimal opportunity to win the championship.

“I think it highlighted the importance that a lot of folks may not see because it always sits below the surface of how valuable your process is as a team,” Daniels told NASCAR.com. ‘Whether you play football, basketball, baseball, or you’re in racing, your process is everything. And so what led to that moment wasn’t some magic for the moment. It was a tried and true, beaten-up, battle-tested process that we had established all year throughout the year.”

Daniels has experienced two championships in his career — 2016 with Johnson and 2021 with Larson. Most of these crew members have three or four, with Johnson triumphant in 2010 and 2013 to add to the tally. The run-up to Phoenix wasn’t all roses with Daniels and the crew, though.

“I want to say it was the week before in Martinsville,” Daniels recalled. “We had just won three in a row, and at Martinsville, there was something that Calvin and I were talking about with his approach. And we ended up getting in a screaming match — an actual screaming match at each other about how we were going to handle that week and on and on.

“I guess the point I’m making is even after winning three races in a row, going to the next week — the race hasn’t even started yet. So we don’t even know if we’re gonna win four in a row. We were still pushing on each other that hard to be better that we were willing to fight each other to continue to build our process. Now, that’s not a moment that you want to have happen often. That’s not something that you’re going to celebrate. But the point I’m making is that is one of the building blocks to the process.”

That process is a key part of why while the team’s routine stops are solid, the high-intensity, impactful moments are when this group shines brightest.

“Personally, I think because we don’t let pressure get to us,” Brandon Johnson said. “I think you can’t really think about those kind of moments. When people do tend to think about those moments, that’s when you tend to I guess fold to the pressure, and this team is very good at not coming to that.”

•   •   •

THEN AND NOW

Of course, there’s a difference between the glory of what those 11.8 seconds meant in 2021 and where the No. 5 team is right now.

Kyle Larson enters the NASCAR Cup Series championship race Sunday (3 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) as the only eligible driver who has experienced title-winning nirvana. He has the crew to do it.

More critically, they proved they can rise to the challenge in 2023 already.

A yellow flag waved at Lap 210 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway when Chase Briscoe crashed in Turns 1 and 2. Christopher Bell was leading ahead of Brad Keselowski and Larson in third. The field hit pit road with 55 laps remaining, and Larson’s crew again propelled Larson to the lead, this time besting Keselowski and Bell.

There was pride within the team that they executed, but there was no exceptional jubilation, a reminder that this is simply the expectation.

“Anytime you can put your driver out front, it’s exciting for the team and it’s exciting for all people back at the shop that have worked all week on the car,” Anderson said. “The driver still has to go out there and finish the race and there’s only so much you can do, and that’s just kind of what we’re here for: Take care of what we can control and do our job in the moment.”

They did. Again.

Larson went on to win that race by merely a car length over Bell, locking him into the title round once again. Now a 23-time winner in the Cup Series, Larson praised his crew after the win.

“I love cautions and I love pit stops,” Larson said with a smile. “I do. I look forward to coming down pit road. I have got a ton of confidence in my guys. They showed today why they’re one of the best on pit road.”

The No. 5 pit crew for Kyle Larson practices at Hendrick Motorsports in Concord, North Carolina
Zach Sturniolo | NASCAR Studios

Per Racing Insights, the stats back that up: On a race-by-race basis, the No. 5 crew had a top-10 crew in 18 of 34 races this season (excludes Bristol Dirt) including seven of the nine playoff races. And while the crew shines, Barnette noted the critical role Larson plays in the equation too.

“The other thing that no one talks about is Kyle puts us in this position a lot,” Barnette said. “Whether it be the championship race or whatever race we’re talking about, he can come in third for the money stop, so we’ve been in this situation more times than probably any other pit crew. So when it comes down to Phoenix again, like, we’ve been there multiple times, and that’s a strength that we have that there’s not really any other consistent driver that is always up front putting his pit crew in position for the money stop.”

It’s a mindset that permeates the entire crew. Sunday, they will have a chance at another NASCAR Cup Series title.

“Hell, I hope Kyle has a five-second lead and it goes green,” Barnette said. “But we’re there if you need us, and we’re comfortable in the moment. We’re ready. That’s kind of how we look at it.”

Editor’s note: This is the first in a series of four stories examining why each Championship 4 driver could win the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series Championship.

Tuesday: Kyle Larson
Wednesday: Christopher Bell
Thursday: William Byron
Friday: Ryan Blaney

• • •

Kyle Larson will win the 2023 championship because …

Cooler heads prevail when chasing the NASCAR Cup Series title.

Kyle Larson proved himself as a championship favorite by winning two races in the 2023 playoffs, both opening-round wins (Round of 16 at Darlington Raceway, Round of 8 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway). With his win at Las Vegas, Larson was the first driver to lock himself into the Championship 4, and with that, basically earned a two-week opportunity to focus on the season’s final race at Phoenix Raceway.

RELATED: Larson’s road from hot prosepct to phenom

Larson intends to replicate his dominant performance at Phoenix earlier this year, where he led for an impressive 201 of 317 laps and finished in fourth place.

“I’ll study that a lot in case I’m in that position again and try to do a better job going forward,” Larson said. “But, yes, Phoenix is a great track for us. Short tracks, in general, have been our strong suit this year. We’d love to go to Phoenix and have a great car again.”

In 2023, the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports driver has two wins and one runner-up finish in short-track races in the Cup Series. Larson additionally won the All-Star Race in dominant fashion during the series’ historic return to the 0.625-mile track of North Wilkesboro Speedway.

Heading into the season finale, Larson is the only driver out of the Championship 4 to have won the NASCAR Cup Series Championship, coming with his victory to cap the 2021 season in Phoenix. He did so on the strength of his final pit stop in which his team serviced his car and sent him off pit road first — the majority of that team returns intact this weekend.

RELATED: Larson’s crew on dealing with money-stop pressure

When it comes to the 2023 Cup Series Championship, Kyle Larson is as laser-focused as they come.

Key stats: 4 wins, 14 top fives, 17 top 10s, avg. finish of 15.0

Championship 4 history: This is Kyle Larson’s second Championship 4 appearance. He has one championship (2021).

Defining 2023 moment: Winning at Las Vegas Motor Speedway to lock into the Championship 4.

Watch out for: Late restarts — Larson was dominant at Phoenix in the spring, but a late restart caught him off guard and relegated him to fourth. With a championship on the line, anything can happen in the closing laps.

During the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs, fans have the opportunity to compete in The Playoffs Grid™ Challenge presented by Ruoff Mortage on their own or as part of a created league.

Fans can enter by visiting The Playoffs Grid™ Challenge page and select their picks for the Championship 4, which takes place this Sunday at Phoenix Raceway (3 p.m. ET, NBC, Peacock, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App). Register for a free NASCAR.com account before filling out a bracket. From there, choose from a list of playoff-eligible drivers, and you’re on your way to compete for prizes. Picks for this round close at 3:20 p.m. ET on Sunday, so sign up and select who you think will win it all!

RELATED: How the NASCAR Playoffs work

Why do I need an account?

Registering for an account allows you to score points and keep track of your progress throughout the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs. Additionally, a NASCAR.com account allows you to keep track of the latest news, customize updates and learn inside information throughout the playoffs and beyond. If you already have a registered NASCAR.com account, simply logging in with the same credentials will allow you to compete without additional steps or the creation of a new account.

Can I create multiple entries?

All entrants are eligible to create up to three entries per person.

Does The Playoffs Grid™ Challenge work on mobile?

Participants are able to access the challenge and fill out brackets on mobile web and desktop applications.

Can I set up a league?

In addition to joining the overall leaderboard, participants can create their own leagues to compete with friends and others throughout the community. Leagues can be public and available for anyone to join or private and password protected. To join or create a league, follow the instructions on the Leagues tab. There, you can see participants, standings and point totals for each of your league entries. Creating or joining a league does not impact the eligibility to win prizes.

When do I make my picks?

The Playoffs Grid™ Challenge is conducted in a round-by-round format, mirroring the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs elimination rounds. Beginning with the first opportunity to register on Aug. 29, each round has a window for participants to make their picks. When choosing drivers, list them in the correct order you think they will finish in.

Selections for the playoff-opening Round of 16 (drivers you believe will advance to the Round of 12) can be submitted before 6 p.m. ET on Sept. 3. Not long after the elimination at Bristol Motor Speedway, points are awarded and the Round of 12 selections (drivers you believe will advance to the Round of 8) will open until 3:30 p.m. ET on Sept. 24. After the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval, Round of 8 selections (drivers you believe will make it to the Championship 4) will be available until 2:30 p.m. ET on Oct. 15. The Championship 4 and final round opens after the race at Martinsville Speedway (picking the driver you believe will win the title) and must be submitted before 3 p.m. ET on Nov. 5.

What am I picking?When does it open?When does it close?
Which drivers from the Round of 16 will advance to the Round of 12?The Playoffs Grid™ Challenge launches Tuesday, August 29. Participants, start your selections!Sept. 3 at 6 p.m. ET — before the playoff race at Darlington Raceway
Which drivers from the Round of 12 will advance to the Round of 8?Within 12 hours of the race at Bristol Motor Speedway on Sept. 16Sept. 24 at 3:30 p.m. ET — before the playoff race at Texas Motor Speedway
Which drivers from the Round of 8 will advance to the Championship 4?Within 12 hours of the race at the Charlotte Motor Speedway Roval on Oct. 8Oct. 15 at 2:30 p.m. ET — before the playoff race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway
Which driver will win the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series Championship?Within 12 hours of the race at Martinsville Speedway on Oct. 29Nov. 5 at 2:30 p.m. ET — before the Cup Series Championship race at Phoenix Raceway

RELATED: Cup Series schedule | Cup Series Playoffs hub

Is there a points system?

Yes. During each round, participants will earn points based on their selections. Participants will receive 10 points for each driver correctly selected to advance to the next round of the playoffs, except for the Championship Round™. For the final round, all coming down to the finale at Phoenix Raceway, the correct driver chosen to win the 2023 Cup Series championship earns participants 40 points.

Five bonus points (per correct pick) are also awarded for arranging playoff drivers in the correct finishing order and one point for finishes one spot before or after. Points carry from round to round, and the eligible participant with the most points at the end of the Championship Round™ will be declared the winner.

Scoring factors in official finishing order after post-race inspection.

What are the prizes I can win for competing?

Cash prizes for The Playoffs Grid™ Challenge are awarded to the top three eligible entrants in the overall standings. One first-place winner will receive $10,000, one second-place winner will receive $5,000 and one third-place winner will receive $2,500. Participants can track their place in the standings with the live leaderboard throughout each round of the playoffs. Accounts listed in the top three positions – or any other position – may not necessarily be the top participants eligible to win prizes.

See the official rules for additional information on eligibility, prizes and tiebreak procedures.

RELATED: Analyzing the full playoff field

Who are the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs drivers?

William Byron, Martin Truex Jr., Denny Hamlin, Chris Buescher, Kyle Busch, Kyle Larson, Christopher Bell, Ross Chastain, Brad Keselowski, Tyler Reddick, Joey Logano, Ryan Blaney, Michael McDowell, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Kevin Harvick, Bubba Wallace

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Phoenix has its four.

Christopher Bell, Ryan Blaney, William Byron and Kyle Larson — the drivers who will vie for the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series championship in Sunday’s season finale at Phoenix Raceway — make up the youngest title-eligible quartet since the elimination-style playoff format was introduced in 2014. It’s a group of four that includes:

Two first-time Championship 4 qualifiers (Blaney, Byron)
One past champion (Larson, 2021)
Three organizations representing all three manufacturers
The Cup Series’ three most recent winners (Larson, Bell and Blaney, in order)
The most recent Phoenix winner (Byron in March)
An average age of 28 years, 11 months, 25 days, younger than last year’s record group

For that matter, let’s include no clear-cut standout as a favorite to take home the Bill France Cup in Sunday’s championship race (3 p.m. ET, NBC, Peacock, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App), with each driver building a compelling case for the title laurels.

RELATED: Championship 4 field set | Weekend schedule: Phoenix

Blaney punctuated the final elimination bracket Sunday with a clinching victory at Martinsville Speedway, finally breaking through to his first title shot in his fifth Round of 8 appearance. His sterling performance continued a recent run of strong results, with two victories among his four top 10s in the last five weeks.

Blaney’s record at the mile-long track at Phoenix is worth examining. The 29-year-old driver has finished among the top five in four consecutive Phoenix races, and he has been runner-up the last two times there. He led roughly a third of last year’s Phoenix finale before Team Penske teammate Joey Logano — who similarly blossomed during last year’s postseason — took command to wear the 2022 crown. Blaney now has the chance to hand team owner Roger Penske back-to-back titles.

“The playoffs for us, for Joey last year and me this year, have been fairly similar,” Blaney said. “Peaking at a really good time — that’s kind of what that group did last year. We’re definitely doing that this year.”

Blaney will be carrying the banner for Ford this weekend, and Bell will have the hopes of Toyota riding on his shoulders. The pressure was off Bell and his No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing group at Martinsville after a decisive victory the previous week at Homestead-Miami Speedway, and he finished a solid seventh to cap a more than respectable Round of 8.

Bell is the lone returning driver from last year’s Championship 4, and his eagerness to head west and better his third-place result in the 2022 standings was measurable.

“We are going to have a rocket ship,” Bell said. “I can’t wait to get out there.”

The last two entrants in the title fray are also teammates, with Larson and Byron placing their two Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolets among the final four. At 31, Larson is the senior-most Championship 4 driver, and Byron ranks as the youngest, just 25.

MORE: Best photos from Martinsville

Both have their own fondness for Phoenix based on recent results. Byron won the most recent race in the Arizona desert, scoring the second of what is now a series-leading six wins this season with the No. 24 team. Larson, however, won the pole and led the most laps in that race (201 of 317) before his No. 5 Chevy slipped to a fourth-place outcome.

Larson’s veteran group has had two weeks to prepare for the finale, based on his clinching win in the Round of 8 opener at Las Vegas. Byron, however, enters the Phoenix final after a mettlesome Martinsville slog that left both his points cushion and physical state exhausted.

“I don’t know internally that we have a favorite between the two of them,” said Jeff Andrews, Hendrick Motorsports president and general manager. “We’ve been working on both of those race cars equally as hard — really, all four of our cars. But we were counting on going to Phoenix with the 24, so that’s been underway here for a couple weeks, working very hard on both of those cars to take the very best we can. The spring results (at Phoenix) are at this point, they kind of are what they are, you know? We ran good here, too, right, and obviously, we were not where we needed to be today. A lot of things have changed, and a lot of people are running better, and we’re going to have to be a whole lot better than we were today to go compete for a championship next weekend. But I believe in Hendrick Motorsports and the heart and fire in all those people. We’re ready to go.”

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — There was no celebration for Denny Hamlin after 500 hard-fought laps Sunday at Martinsville Speedway, and he wore a familiar shell-shocked look as he leaned against his No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota post-race, the same one he sported after last year’s stunning playoff exit.

There was no immediate celebration for William Byron, either, after he forged through the heat of a long green-flag stretch to the end of Sunday’s Xfinity 500. He exited his No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet and dropped to the pit-road pavement for ice-cold water and a soaked towel, exhausted by the conditions and the intensity of his challenging but ultimately fruitful playoff pursuit.

Byron eked his way into the final spot in the Championship 4 field with a 13th-place outcome in Sunday’s elimination race at the 0.526-mile bullring, edging out third-finishing Denny Hamlin for the title opportunity by a scant eight points in the Cup Series Playoffs standings. Ryan Blaney bulled into the other remaining open berth with a sterling drive of his No. 12 Team Penske Ford to set the final-four postseason grid alongside Kyle Larson and Christopher Bell in next Sunday’s season finale at Phoenix Raceway. Hamlin joined JGR teammate Martin Truex Jr., 23XI Racing’s Tyler Reddick and RFK Racing’s Chris Buescher on the sidelines of title eligibility.

RELATED: Race results | Championship 4 field set

Byron eventually composed himself to savor the moment as he caught his breath sitting on the pit wall, receiving words of congratulations from Hendrick Motorsports vice chairman Jeff Gordon and teammate and fellow title contender Larson — both of whom acknowledged the difficulty of Byron’s Sunday drive.

“Really happy for my team. I can’t state that enough,” said Byron, who will have his first shot at competing for the Cup Series crown next weekend. “With like 50, 60 laps to go, man, I just couldn’t … it was so blurry in the car, and I just wanted to pull in, but you’re not going to do that. I was gonna have a failure do something first. Just really proud of the team. I can’t reiterate that enough. They gave me the opportunity, and this is my dream. I mean, I love to race cars. I didn’t grow up doing it, but I love what I do, and they believe in me.”

Byron entered the Round of 8 finale with a 30-point cushion, and he needed nearly every bit of it to advance. The 25-year-old hotshot leads the Cup Series with six wins this year, but the Martinsville weekend presented a struggle, and he set sail from a subpar 16th starting spot. Emblematically, Byron said he had a fitful night of little sleep on race-day eve, and he arrived at the Virginia short track with his stomach in a pit.

Improvements on his starting perch were modest and measured at best, and Byron missed out on adding any stage points to his buffer on the bubble with placements of 24th and 20th at the breaks.

“It was kind of hell in a bottle,” Byron said. “I’ve never been so mad at a race car. I’ve never wanted to get out so much. I’ve never been so frustrated at the car.”

Denny Hamlin looks on after exiting his No. 11 Toyota at Martinsville Speedway
Alejandro Alvarez | NASCAR Studios

While Blaney and Hamlin controlled large portions of the race up front, Byron was managing his own race further back with a margin that stood at just three points as he became more fatigued. No. 24 crew chief Rudy Fugle kept his driver engaged over the team communications, saying, “These are all spots here,” as he methodically added to his total.

“I mean, just total focus on everything he had and every little bit of energy he had,” Fugle said. “You can see it at the end of the race as he got out of the car. He did everything. He willed us to a win today. So, you know, disappointed and kind of embarrassed on how the car was for him today, but the team stuck with it, and we’ve got a shot next week.

“Certainly not the day the team from a performance perspective on track wanted, but championship-caliber teams at this time of year find a way to get done what they need to get done,” Hendrick Motorsports president and general manager Jeff Andrews told NASCAR.com. “I felt like a whole team from top to bottom under Rudy’s leadership, including William, just dug a little bit deeper today and executed. In these situations where points are so close, just no mistakes. When you know you don’t have the performance necessarily to go up there and lead laps and be competitive as you want to be, you just have to figure out a way to execute the rest of your day flawlessly, and they did that.”

There was no catching Blaney for Hamlin, who ended up on the last step of the podium behind a strategy-aided Aric Almirola, who drove home a season-best second a day after announcing he’d leave his Stewart-Haas Racing team at year’s end. Hamlin had led a race-high 156 laps — just 11 more than Blaney — and finished first and second in the stages to offset the 17-point deficit he started with Sunday and his crippling DNF from last weekend at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

MORE: At-track photos: Martinsville

Hamlin had bettered his playoff chances throughout the day but was 4.140 seconds back of Blaney’s winning car at the checkered flag. “Missed it by eight points,” said No. 11 crew chief Chris Gabehart on the radio during the cool-down lap. “Had a good race, just let ourselves down last week, but the effort was there. Yet another year where we should have made it and didn’t.”

“He definitely had the best car. We were next in line,” Hamlin said of Blaney. “And you know, I just wouldn’t do anything different. There’s nothing I could have done, I feel like, through these playoffs to be any different. And then on a day where we had to have a phenomenal day, we did; it just, it wasn’t quite good enough because we were in such a hole last week.”

Buescher and Reddick did not contend for victory Sunday, with Buescher placing eighth and Reddick faltering to 26th with voltage and cooling issues on his No. 45 Toyota to finish two laps down. Truex was a factor early, but his playoff-hindering trouble arrived in Stage 2.

The regular-season champ started from the pole and led the opening 47 laps, but his solid standing among the top three faded with a pit-road speeding penalty on Lap 219, forcing him to restart 27th. He regained five spots by the end of the second stage, but his No. 19 Toyota fell off the jack during his next stop, further stalling his progress.

A 12th-place finish left him 28 points back of the elimination line.

“You can’t speed on pit road, go to the back here and make it up,” said Truex, who won two poles but has placed no better than ninth (Las Vegas) through the nine playoff races so far. “I feel like we did good for where we got to. Our car was really fast, and we always got to the next guy, just could never pass. So, that one’s on me. I didn’t think we were speeding, but obviously we were. First time we ever had that pit stall, and (crew chief James Small) told me four reds (lights on his tachometer), I’d be safe leaving my box, and I went to two, and we’re speeding, so a little confusion there. But just one of those years. It wasn’t our year. We gave it a hell of an effort. The car was really good today. I think we were good enough to run second or third, but I think Blaney was class of the field, so they earned that one.”

The 2023 NASCAR Cup Series championship picture came fully into focus Sunday afternoon in the Round of 8 finale at Martinsville Speedway.

RELATED: Race results

The following four drivers will compete for a NASCAR Cup Series championship next Sunday at Phoenix Raceway (3 p.m. ET, MRN, NBC, Peacock, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NBC Sports App):

1. Ryan Blaney, No. 12 Team Penske Ford
2. Christopher Bell,
No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
3. Kyle Larson, No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet
4. William Byron, No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet

Of the four above, only Larson and Bell entered Sunday’s race at the 0.526-mile short track with their spots in the Championship 4 secured. Larson won the Round of 8 opener at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, followed by Bell, who claimed victory at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Blaney managed to snatch a clutch win in Martinsville, while Byron skated through via points.

With the Cup Series title field now set, we have a full picture of who is racing for a championship crown in the season finale. Here are the other two Championship 4 fields.

2023 NASCAR Xfinity Series Championship 4

Race: Saturday, 7 p.m. ET (USA Network, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

1. Sam Mayer, No. 1 JR Motorsports Chevrolet
2.Justin Allgaier, No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet
3. John Hunter Nemechek, No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota
4. Cole Custer, No. 00 Stweart-Haas Racing Ford

2023 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Championship 4

Race: Friday, 10 p.m. ET (FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

1. Corey Heim, No. 11 Tricon Garage Toyota
2. Carson Hocevar, No. 42 Niece Motorsports Chevrolet
3. Ben Rhodes, No. 99 ThorSport Racing Ford
4. Grant Enfinger, No. 23 GMS Racing Chevrolet