Zane Smith has opened the 2023 NASCAR Craftsman Truck campaign in the same spot he finished last season – at the top.

There’s been no let-up so far for the reigning series champion, who enters an off weekend for the Truck Series as its points leader with finishes of first and second to start the year. Smith won’t be idle this weekend; the 23-year-old California native is entered in Sunday’s United Rentals Work United 500 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Phoenix Raceway, where he will mark his second Cup Series start of the season and just the third of his career.

RELATED: Truck Series standings | Phoenix 101 preview

His kick-off to his Truck Series title defense has started in almost the best possible fashion. Smith prevailed in the season-opening race at Daytona International Speedway, then drove his No. 38 Front Row Motorsports Ford to a runner-up result at Las Vegas Motor Speedway behind a dominant Kyle Busch, the series’ all-time wins leader, adding a stage win along the way.

“No doubt it’s a long year, but I mean, there’s 21 races left,” Smith said after last weekend’s event at Vegas. “These will go by quick, and the playoffs will be here before you know it. So you try to capitalize on these stage wins and good race finishes, and I felt like that’s what we did tonight. That was our goal last year, and it worked out pretty well for us.”

The Craftsman Truck Series returns to action Saturday, March 18, at Atlanta Motor Speedway with the FR8 Auctions 208 (2 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Smith holds a slim two-point edge over ThorSport Racing’s Ty Majeski, who joined him in the Championship 4 field for last year’s truck title race.

Smith will get to sit on that advantage for an extra weekend before the Truck Series resumes its 2023 schedule. But there’s been little resting on laurels so far, and Chris Lawson – his crew chief for the No. 38 F-150 team – says his driver’s intensity still burns.

“He’s super-focused,” Lawson told NASCAR.com last weekend in the Las Vegas garage. “I saw it last year, toward the end of the year, where he really honed in on that championship, and he literally came into the beginning of this year the same way, like we’re gonna try to come in and win every race, right? Like, we expect to win every race, so he’s got that mentality. He’s got that confidence. I know it ate him tonight to get beat by Kyle. He really wanted that one, but we had speed, we just got a little caught up there, lost our track position. But yeah, it’s there for sure.”

Smith’s Cup Series effort this weekend will be his first in Front Row’s No. 38 Ford Mustang, where he will step in for Todd Gilliland, a second-year driver who will campaign the car in 30 of the 36 races this season. In addition to his Phoenix duties, Smith plans to drive the No. 38 at Talladega Superspeedway, Charlotte Motor Speedway, Sonoma Raceway, Texas Motor Speedway and the Charlotte Roval.

MORE: Phoenix weekend schedule

Smith’s previous two Cup Series efforts came 7 1/2 months apart, and both resulted in respectable top-20 finishes. He filled in for an ailing Chris Buescher last season for RFK Racing, placing 17th at Pocono Raceway, then came home 13th in a third FRM car in this year’s Daytona 500.

Gilliland will be racing at Phoenix for Rick Ware Racing, giving Front Row veteran Michael McDowell a new teammate at the 1-mile Arizona oval. Even though Smith’s sample size at the Cup Series level may be relatively small, McDowell says he still plans to lean on his input as the team prepares for the fourth points-paying race of the year.

“I think Zane is more than qualified and has done a good job in any situation that he’s been in so far, so I think he’s still gonna have a value to the team and to the feedback,” McDowell said. “Race car drivers are race car drivers. For sure, experience helps that when it’s leading an overall direction of development, but as far as balance and feel, and what he’s fighting and what his car is doing, I think it will be valuable.”

United Rentals Work United 500 at Phoenix Raceway
(⏰ 3:30 p.m. ET | 📺 FOX, FOX Sports App | 📻 MRN, SiriusXM)

Everything you need to know for Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series race in Phoenix, the fourth race of the 2023 Cup Series campaign.

Weekend schedule | TV schedule | Weather tracker | Phoenix 101

📍 Location: Avondale, Arizona
📐 Track length: 1 mile
🎟️ Buy tickets: Two races this weekend
💰 Race purse: $7,453,660
📏 Race distance: 312 laps | 312 miles
🔢 Stages: 60 | 185 | 312

🚗 Pit stall assignments:
Where drivers will pit on Sunday
📋 Starting lineup:
Where drivers will start on Sunday
📦 Rules package: New rules for short tracks, road courses
🏆 Most recent winner: Joey Logano, 2022 championship race
📸 At-track photos: Weekend shots from Phoenix


Key things to watch 🔑

Top story line

New winners. Three races down, three unique drivers with a trip to Victory Lane. The historic parity displayed during the 2022 season seems to have carried over so far, but a lot of time still remains for the cream to rise to the top. Will Sunday’s race in Phoenix produce the fourth new winner in a four-race span? Perhaps we will also see the first victory of 2023 for Ford or Toyota after Chevrolet is off to a dominant start to open the new campaign. Of the 2023 winners so far, Kyle Busch is the only one with a victory at Phoenix — three, to be exact — and is among the experts’ early favorites to pick up another this weekend. But three versus the rest of the field, racing with a new rules package? Chances are that this historic pace will continue for at least one more week.

🤔 💭 : How will the new rules package come into play? | Breaking down the Next Gen changes

History tells us…

Sunday could be Kevin Harvick’s race to lose. Harvick has an astounding nine victories at the Arizona track and is currently on a streak of 19 consecutive Phoenix races with a top-10 finish — yes, you read that correctly. It’s unquestionably the best track for the Cup Series veteran, and that’s saying a lot considering his tremendous success elsewhere over the last two decades. Still, Harvick hasn’t won here since 2018, and in pursuit of his first win of the 2023 season in his final campaign, it just means that much more. When it comes down to the final stage, Harvick is almost always in the mix for the checkered. If he makes it to Victory Lane on Sunday, he will join an elite list of drivers with 10 wins at a single track — and that’s no feat to forget.

He may not be the betting favorite to win, but watch out for…

Chase Briscoe. Briscoe has had a pretty slow start to the year, without any top-10 results through the first three races. But Sunday’s race at Phoenix could easily be where he kicks it into gear and makes a run as the defending spring race winner. Last season, his first full year after his 2021 rookie campaign, Briscoe showed that this 1-miler is one of his better tracks with the victory and a fourth-place finish in the annual finale. In total, he led 112 laps between the two races and could very well add to that number this weekend. At 20-1 odds (DraftKings), it’s worth taking the early jump in case he improves his standing with a strong showing in practice and qualifying. | Who is the betting favorite?

Practice and qualifying

Kyle Larson clearly has the car to beat. Larson showed up in a dominant way during both practice and qualifying, topping the early charts and earning his first Busch Light Pole Award of the 2023 season. Denny Hamlin earned the second front-row starting position, followed by last week’s winner William Byron. Perhaps the biggest story of the sessions may have been the confiscation of Hendrick Motorsports’ hood louvers by NASCAR officials on Friday after the practice session and Justin Haley’s on Saturday before qualifying. | For more info, read the full qualifying recap.

🃏 Fantasy Update: Last-minute roster advice for Phoenix

Familiar favorites ⭐️

Our biggest pieces of the week — get covered for race day from all angles.

• Paint Scheme Preview: Delightful designs for the desert races | Pick a favorite
• Power Rankings: Will the Kevin Harvick of old dominate on Sunday? | Latest driver rankings
• Fantasy Fastlane: Will Stewart-Haas set the standard at Phoenix? | Best plays, lineup advice
• Betting odds: See which driver is favored to win Sunday’s race | Top bets, underdog picks
• Stacking Pennies:
Crew dives into the Chase Elliott situation, more | Listen to the podcast

💎 NASCAR 75: Check out exclusive NASCAR content throughout the anniversary season | Learn more, explore

Hot off the press 📰

Key stories and breaking news from the week leading up to the race.

• Package deal: New rules configuration for short tracks and road courses | Learn more
• Joey Logano:
Record on new configurations, races is ‘unparalleled’ | Read more
• Christopher Bell:
JGR driver optimistic about new rules package | Read more
• Ross Chastain:
Battling confidence and high expectations | Read more
• Chase Elliott:
Expected to miss six weeks; fill-in drivers announced | Read more
• Jensen Button:
Set for Cup Series debut at COTA | Read more
• Ross Chastain:
Rebuilding for confidence after career year | Read more
• Roblox:
NASCAR launches brand new gaming experience | Read more
• Hail Melon:
Ross Chastain helps remove historic wall portion at Martinsville | Read more
• William Byron:
Cup Series driver to drive for KBM in three races | Read more
• Analysis:
Is Hendrick Motorsports the team to beat in 2023? | Read more
• Photo Memories:
Lesa France Kennedy recalls early days of NASCAR | Watch video
• Jordan Taylor:
Road-course ace gets call to drive No. 9 at COTA | Read more
• Kimi’s back:
Räikkönen will return for Project 91 entry at COTA | Read more
• Loose wheels:
New rules mean new questions on pit road | Watch video
• IMSA:
No. 60 GTP team penalized for Daytona infraction | Read more

Get in on the action 💰

Think you know NASCAR? Put your mettle to the test with gaming, fantasy and Fan Rewards.

• Fan Rewards: New in 2023, get rewarded for your participation | Learn more
• Fantasy Live: Still time to get on the leaderboard and win big this season | Tips for 2023
• NASCAR BetCenter: Don’t miss your chance to make picks each week | Visit the BetCenter
• Going the distance:
2023 Cup Series championship odds | See them here

Flashback to Phoenix 📸

Currently the site of the championship race, there’s a lot of history at this Arizona desert short track. 

• Winner, winner: All-time wins at Phoenix Raceway | See who has the most
• Setting the stage for Phoenix:
Track has long been a focal point of motorsports | Read more
• Do you remember?:
Most memorable moments at Phoenix | Relive them here
• GIFs are great: Key moments from most recent Phoenix race in GIFs | See them here
• Sights and Sounds:
Chase Briscoe tames Phoenix Raceway | Highlights from 2022

Take some notes 📝

Five hard-hitting, race-relevant statistics, brought to you by the experts at Racing Insights.

The last time Kevin Harvick finished outside the top 10 at Phoenix was 3,661 days ago (10 years and nine days).
Alex Bowman is the first Hendrick Motorsports driver to start the season with three top 10s since Dale Earnhardt Jr. in 2015. 
The winner of the last four races on March 12 went on to win the Cup Series championship.
Ford won both poles at Phoenix in 2022, won both races and led 89% of the laps run. 
Five drivers finished top 10 at both Phoenix races in 2022: Harvick, Ryan Blaney, Kyle Busch, Joey Logano, Chase Briscoe and Ross Chastain. 

🔮 Predicting the winner: Using data to set a projected finishing order

Jenson Button will make his NASCAR Cup Series debut at Circuit of The Americas as part of a three-race partnership with Mobil 1 Racing, Button announced Thursday on Race Hub.

Button will drive the No. 15 Mobil 1 Ford Mustang fielded by Rick Ware Racing at COTA, the Chicago Street Course and the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course. Marketing and promotional support is being facilitated by Stewart-Haas Racing, according to a press release, noting prior collaborations between the two programs with numerous drivers. The Englishman is also one of three primary drivers piloting NASCAR’s Garage 56 entry in the 2023 24 Hours of Le Mans.

Button won 15 times during his 17 seasons in Formula One and claimed the 2009 championship with six victories. He was announced to the Garage 56 lineup on Jan. 28, bringing him into the stock-car world for the first time at age 43. He joins seven-time NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson, Le Mans and Daytona winner Mike Rockenfeller and alternate-slash-coach Jordan Taylor.

RELATED: Button gets taste of NASCAR | Garage 56 entry unveiled

A rendered version of Jenson Button's NASCAR Cup Series paint scheme
True Speed Communications

Between his full-time F1 departure in 2016 and arrival to Garage 56 this winter, Button leapt into sports cars, claiming the 2018 championship in the Japanese Super FT Series’ GT500 class ahead of a five-race stint in the 2018-19 FIA World Endurance Championship. From the 24 Hours of Le Mans to the Baja 1000, Button has driving plenty of unique vehicles — but none on that list includes an appearance in a NASCAR Cup Series race.

“Obviously, racing a Cup car is very different than what I’m used to,” Button said in a team press release. “It’s a lot heavier with a lot less power and, basically, no downforce. It’s got a sequential gearbox where you need to blip the throttle, so there’s lots of stuff to learn in a very short space of time. 

“But I just get excited about that new challenge, and when I throw myself into something, I am 100 percent in. I’m not just doing it for fun in some one-off. I want to be competitive, and I know that to be competitive, it’s going to take a bit of time. That’s why doing these three races works very well this season.” 

Sponsoring this year’s three-race effort will be Mobil 1, a longtime sponsor of both Button and NASCAR. In 2013, Button appeared with Tony Stewart, now co-owner of SHR, in the famed advertisement that introduced us to “soda cookies.” Button’s relationship with the company dates back 20 years, proving a fitting match for his inaugural Cup endeavor.

“I won the world championship with Mobil 1, and 14 of my 15 wins in Formula One were with Mobil 1, as well as winning the Super GT championship with them,” Button said. “We’ve had a really close relationship over the years and I can’t think of a better partner.

“Mobil 1 has been a big part of making these NASCAR races happen for me, so I’m very thankful to them for giving me this opportunity. I look forward to working alongside the brand to get the best out of every race weekend.”

Jenson Button gets fitted ahead of his inaugural NASCAR Cup Series start
True Speed Communication

A decade after their commercial debuted, the duo of Button and Stewart is reunited at NASCAR’s premier level. SHR, co-owned by the three-time Cup champion Stewart and F1 team owner Gene Haas, remains the home of 2014 title winner Kevin Harvick, whose 60 wins and 23 seasons of experience speak for themselves.

In a February interview with NASCAR.com, Button noted: “I think if I could do a few races, I would be up for it. Jumping in for one? That doesn’t interest me.”

Consider the wish granted. This also isn’t the first time he has thought about hopping into a NASCAR vehicle.

“I live in the States now, so I’ve looked at races in NASCAR,” Button told NBC Sports. “It’s not something I’m educated in in terms of ovals of experience there. So the road course is always something I’d like to aim for in racing. So this [Garage 56] is a perfect step into NASCAR.”

Another step closer, Button will have a multitude of other resources to prepare for his maiden competitive debut behind the wheel of a NASCAR Next Gen vehicle. While Johnson provides the easiest connection via his stock-car success and their Le Mans teamwork, Taylor will also compete at COTA, making his Cup debut for Hendrick Motorsports in place of injured 2020 series champion Chase Elliott.

On Wednesday, Button concluded a two-day test at COTA behind the wheel of the Garage 56 entry. Taylor told NASCAR.com it was a “flawless test” by his evaluation as the program strives to find better lap times in preparation for the June 10-11 event.

“The first time I jumped into the Garage 56 car, it was like, ‘What have I done? This is so different,’ and that lasted about four laps,” Button said in a release. “Then it was like, ‘Hang on, it’s still a race car. It’s got four tires that touch the road. It’s a mechanical race car, which is even better for learning.’ I’ve really enjoyed the challenge.

“A Cup car has a lot less downforce and is a lot heavier, but the Garage 56 car has given me an idea of what it will be like along with a direction, which is really useful. I know in my first race I’m not expected to be qualifying right at the front and I’m not expected to be fighting for a victory. I have a lot of respect for the drivers racing in the Cup Series. There’s so much talent there, whether it’s on ovals or road courses.”

In this 2011 photo, Tony Stewart sits in Lewis Hamilton's 2008 F1 car and speaks with Hamilton during a seat swap at Watkins Glen
Nick Laham | Getty Images for Mobil 1

Stewart is also no stranger to open-wheeled racers, claiming the 1997 IndyCar championship and piloting the 2008 McLaren MP4-23 which Lewis Hamilton drove to an F1 title.

“It’s always a challenge to try a new racing discipline, and the best thing you can bring to a new opportunity like this is an open mind,” Stewart said in a release. “Jenson has been doing that his entire career. Those F1 cars evolve every year, and Jenson always found a way to adapt. And when he got out of F1, he jumped into sports cars and won another championship. He’s even done off-road. There’s very little that he hasn’t experienced in a race car. He’s new to NASCAR, but he’s not new to racing. This is going to be fun for all of us, and we’re very appreciative of Mobil 1 for making it happen.” 

NASCAR announced Thursday that the “choose rule” will be implemented at all road courses in 2023, beginning with the March 26 event at Circuit of The Americas.

The rule, which allows drivers to pick which lane they prefer to use for an impending restart, was introduced in August 2020 and originally used on all tracks except dirt tracks, superspeedways and road courses.

The sanctioning body announced in a January rules briefing that lane choice would be introduced at superspeedways and dirt tracks this season, which brought the choose procedures to the 2.5-mile Daytona International Speedway for the first time in February.

RELATED: Cup Series schedule | Points standings

Thursday’s ruling opens lane choice at each of the six road courses on the 2023 Cup Series schedule, beginning at COTA. Other events include races at Sonoma Raceway, Chicago Street Course, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course, Watkins Glen International and the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course.

Additionally, NASCAR officials have added a 50-minute practice to the COTA weekend schedule, which will be held at 2:05 p.m. ET. This will allow teams to better acclimate to a new rules package for short tracks and road courses in 2023.

The package is set to debut at Phoenix Raceway on Sunday (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

MORE: Refresh with new rules details | A closer look with Letarte, Gordon

MOORESVILLE, N.C. — Kyle Busch Motorsports (KBM) announced Thursday that William Byron, the most recent winner in the NASCAR Cup Series and KBM alum, will return to the organization to compete in a three-race schedule behind the wheel of the No. 51 Chevrolet in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series this season.

HendrickCars.com, the online home for everything Hendrick Automotive Group, will be the primary sponsor on Byron’s Silverado when he makes his KBM return April 8 for the Truck Race on Dirt at Bristol Motor Speedway, and the Ricky Hendrick tribute scheme will also adorn the No. 51 for the races on May 12 at Darlington Raceway and May 20 at North Wilkesboro Speedway. All three races on Byron’s schedule will mark his first starts in the Truck Series at the respective venues.

RELATED: Truck Series schedule | Buy tickets 

Byron collected a Truck Series-leading seven victories and 727 laps led driving for KBM in 2016. He earned Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors that season and led the No. 9 team to an owner’s championship with his victory at Homestead-Miami Speedway. The North Carolina native returned to Victory Lane in the Truck Series last year, leading a race-high 94 laps for Spire Motorsports in the HendrickCars.com Silverado at Martinsville Speedway. Across 26 career starts in NASCAR’s Truck Series, the 25-year-old driver has totaled eight wins, three poles, 821 laps led, 12 top-five and 17 top-10 finishes resulting in an average finish of 10.7.

With his win Sunday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, Byron now has five career NASCAR Cup Series victories. In 2022, he tallied a career-high two victories, finished a career-best sixth in the Cup Series championship standings and ranked third in the series with 746 laps led. Across 183 career Cup Series starts he has totaled eight poles, 1,781 laps led, 27 top-five and 63 top-10 finishes. Between his time at KBM and graduating to the Cup Series in 2018, Byron captured an Xfinity Series championship and Rookie of the Year Honors for JR Motorsports in 2017 after totaling four wins, two poles, 262 laps led, 12 top-five and 22 top-10 finishes.

“I am so excited to return to racing with KBM. I’m looking forward to getting back in their trucks and hopefully having some fun for these three races,” Byron said. “These are three cool race tracks we’re paired up for, and I’m interested in running at them since I haven’t raced there in a truck before.”

“Having William return to KBM for three races is going to be beneficial for our whole organization as we continue to build our notebook as a Chevrolet team,” Busch said. “You expect that he’ll compete for the win each time out, he’ll provide valuable feedback to Brian Pattie and our other crew chiefs and when it comes to the development drivers that we’ve had come through KBM, his race preparation is second to none, so he’ll be a valuable asset as a teammate to the young drivers we have in the building.

“Ricky (Hendrick) was a good friend of mine, so seeing one of my trucks hitting the track with the paint scheme he raced with in the Truck Series is going to be really special. We appreciate Rick (Hendrick) and everyone at HendrickCars.com for stepping up and making this deal possible.”

Phoenix Raceway holds the keys to the NASCAR Cup Series championship as the site of the season finale, but that race date sits some eight months down the road from the circuit’s first visit to the 1-mile track this weekend.

“The championship race is so far away that things will progress, and there’s really nothing in my mind other than this week,” says Kevin Harvick, a nine-time Phoenix winner.

The title hunt will wait, but Cup Series drivers and teams will get their first taste this weekend of a new rules configuration for the tour’s shorter ovals and road courses. Sunday’s United Rentals Work United 500 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) will be run with aerodynamic tweaks made to the Next Gen platform, which is still early in its second season of Cup Series competition.

RELATED: New rules configuration set | Phoenix weekend schedule

NASCAR officials mandated a reduction in the number of downforce-producing aero devices underneath the car, dialing back on diffuser strakes, engine panel strakes and the diffuser’s outer fencing. The more visible update is a smaller rear spoiler, trimmed from a 4-inch height to 2 inches for road circuits and ovals measuring 1.058 miles (New Hampshire Motor Speedway’s length) and shorter. In sum, those aerodynamic alterations should result in roughly a 30-percent decrease in downforce, said Dr. Eric Jacuzzi, NASCAR Vice President of Vehicle Performance.

Six of the 36 chartered Cup Series teams tested versions of the configuration at Phoenix in January. Front Row Motorsports’ Michael McDowell said Wednesday that NASCAR officials and fellow Ford teams have shared data from that two-day session, but this weekend will mark most teams’ first real-world experience with the new package.

“Without having our hands on it and being on track with it, I honestly don’t know what to expect,” said Cliff Daniels, crew chief of the Hendrick Motorsports No. 5 Chevrolet for Kyle Larson. “You know, there’s several other teams that didn’t have car representation there, and so we’re all going to kind of be learning for the first time when we show up to practice. So, hope to have a good practice and, yeah, make the best of it.”

Practice will be expanded for the Cup Series this weekend, with a 50-minute session added Friday (6:35 p.m. ET, FS2) in place of the shorter grouped warm-ups just before Busch Light Pole qualifying. Those Saturday time trials are expected to remain a strong performance predictor; eight of the last nine Phoenix winners have started from the first three rows on the grid. But Harvick said that the first-time uncertainty with the new rules configuration could upend some of the conventional performance wisdom.

“Qualifying is still gonna be important,” Harvick said during a Wednesday morning video call. “I think for this particular race, with everybody not knowing a lot about the package, is going to probably open things up a little bit, just because we don’t know all of the intricate details of what it takes to make the car go fast quite yet. That won’t take long. Obviously, we know a lot more about the car than what we did before, but still different, and I think that opens the window up for probably more passing. The package, in general, is intended to help the cars in traffic. I still think you’re gonna have issues in traffic, so qualifying will be important, but I think the door is open to be able to hit the setup right and be able to pass better than what we have in the past.”

Harvick indicated that with many single-sourced parts and pieces on the current-generation racer, finding a window for performance gains is a smaller opening than it has been in years past. The latest changes to the car, he added, should keep teams and drivers on their toes, but he appreciated the measures and direction that NASCAR officials have taken to make enhancements.

“I’m very interested,” Harvick said last weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. “I love the fact that they’ve been aggressive with it in trying to fix it. And I think that’s as part of the collaboration between NASCAR and the drivers and believing in each other, that they’re going to do something, and they believe what we’re willing to say. And I think as long as everybody collaborates and keeps continuing down that path, the racing can get better.”

It’s time to level up your NASCAR adventures and win a pair of UBCO 2X2 Electric Motorcycles! Originally designed for New Zealand’s rugged farmland, this AWD electric motorcycle is one of the toughest on the market. But it’s not just about brute strength — the 2X2’s versatility is what’s turning heads.

For racers and fans, there’s no better way to get around the track than a UBCO 2X2. It’s twist-and-go simplicity, superior cargo capacity and extended range will have you grinning ear to ear whether you’re trying to get around a NASCAR campground, on city streets or getting out on the local trail. And for those who like to customize your ride, kit it out with a full line of accessories to help extend every adventure.

Extend Your Adventure

As record numbers take to the road and attend spectator events with RVs and overlanding setups, UBCOs are finding a sweet spot as a much-loved part of the experience.

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Despite its motorcycle-like design, the UBCO 2X2 is a breeze to ride and can be charged straight from RVs or off-grid power packs. It’s also light enough to be mounted onto vehicles just like a regular pedal bike.

To celebrate UBCO’s partnership with race fans UBCO are giving away two UBCO 2X2 Electric Motorcycles, complete with a double bike carrier to power your adventures.

Enter to win today and take your camping trips and race weekends to the next level with UBCO Electric Adventure Vehicles!  Visit https://ubco.com/pages/nascar to enter, submissions close April 9, 2023.

One last stop on NASCAR’s West Coast swing as the Cup Series treks to Phoenix Raceway Sunday for the United Rentals Work United 500 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Three races deep into the season, and it has been all Chevrolet so far as three different teams under the bow’s banner have marched their way to victory. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. took home his first Daytona 500 win last month, followed by Kyle Busch’s rousing maiden victory with Richard Childress Racing. Last Sunday, Hendrick Motorsports sported its prowess, leading 241 of the 267 laps in Las Vegas and sweeping the podium as William Byron took the checkered flag.

Heading into the Grand Canyon State, a new challenge awaits the 36-driver field as Sunday’s race will debut a new rules package that significantly decreases the downforce created by the Next Gen car.

Let’s get ready for the fourth race on the schedule with trends to watch, notable moments and the on-track schedule for the weekend.

RULE CHANGES/GOODYEAR TIRE NOTES

Sunday will see the first race for the rules package that drops the rear spoiler from four inches to two inches. Several updates will also be made to the underbody of the car, such as the removal of three diffuser strakes, engine panel strakes and trimming of the diffuser’s outer fencing.

NASCAR will give an extended 50-minute practice session to Cup teams Friday afternoon (6:35 p.m. ET, FS2) to adapt to the updates.

Goodyear will run the same tire setup they ran at both Phoenix races last season.

A new addition to the rules for 2023 includes a wet-weather option in case conditions aren’t optimal for racing. Along with Sunday’s Phoenix race, wet tires will be available at Martinsville Speedway, North Wilkesboro Speedway for All-Star Weekend, New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Richmond Raceway, The Milwaukee Mile and Indianapolis Raceway Park.

RELATED: Go in-depth on new aero rules | See rules changes for 2023

FOUR-BADGER FOR CHEVROLET? 🎳

At Las Vegas, Chevrolet became the first manufacturer since 2010 to win the first three races on the Cup Series schedule. Chevy can continue to display their dominance so far in 2023 by matching their 2001 start of four consecutive wins. That year saw three different Chevy teams take home victories in that span, and with three organizations already winning for the bowties, a fourth can very well join the likes of JTG Daugherty Racing, Hendrick Motorsports and RCR with Trackhouse Racing yet to join the party.

Last season, Ross Chastain placed second and third, respectively, in the two Phoenix trips. However, Chevy has only been victorious twice on the 1-mile Arizona track in the last 11 races.

TRENDS TO WATCH

— Ford and Toyota have split 10 of the last 13 wins at Phoenix.

— Kevin Harvick is seeking his all-time leading 10th win at Phoenix.

— Joey Logano, Ryan Blaney, Chase Briscoe, Kyle Busch, Chastain and Harvick scored top 10s in both Phoenix races in the first year of the Next Gen car.

— Four different organizations have won the last four Phoenix races.

NOTABLE MOMENTS

1988: Alan Kulwicki wins inaugural Phoenix Cup race | WATCH

2007: Jeff Gordon ties Dale Earnhardt on the all-time wins list | WATCH

2012: Gordon, Clint Bowyer crash and brawl ensues | WATCH

2016: Harvick, Edwards race to photo finish | WATCH

ON-TRACK SCHEDULE

Friday, March 10

— 6:35 p.m. ET: Cup practice (FS2)

Saturday, March 11

— 2:05 p.m. ET: Cup qualifying (FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

Sunday, March 12

— 3:30 p.m. ET: United Rentals Workers United 500 (FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

FAN REWARDS

Fans can get in on the action all season long with NASCAR Fan Rewards, a free program that rewards fans for participating in the action when they watch races and play NASCAR Fantasy.

There’s no cost to join. Fans must be 18 years or older to participate in the program.

Earn points by checking into a race from home or at the track, setting your Fantasy Live lineup, making purchases on the NASCAR.com shop and more. Points can be redeemed for race tickets, merchandise and VIP experiences at the track, including pace car rides and waving the green flag at qualifying.

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Jordan Taylor’s phone rang Monday, and on the other end was Hendrick Motorsports vice chairman Jeff Gordon — yes, the same Jeff Gordon that has the full allegiance of Taylor’s alter-ego Rodney Sandstorm, who is never seen without his vintage Rainbow Warrior jacket and trademark jorts.

“Would you be available?” was Gordon’s question, pointing toward an open interim seat in Hendrick’s No. 9 Chevrolet with Chase Elliott sidelined for several weeks by a leg injury. Presented with the opportunity for his NASCAR Cup Series debut in a fill-in role for the Circuit of The Americas later this month, Taylor’s response came quick.

“I was like, definitely, no question. What a ridiculous question that is, if would I want to do it,” Taylor says with a laugh. “Yeah, definitely.”

RELATED: Berry, Taylor to sub for Elliott | Cup Series standings

Gordon told Taylor he’d keep him posted, and that the team was still sorting out the necessary arrangements. Less than 24 hours later, Taylor walked in on a phone conversation with Chad Knaus, Hendrick’s VP of competition. “Hey, Jordan just walked in,” Taylor recalled Knaus saying. “I’ll put you on speaker.” The next voice Taylor heard was Gordon’s: “Hey, so it’s a done deal if you’re up for it.”

“I’m like, 100 percent. I’m in. Whatever it takes. I’ll move to Charlotte for the next two weeks if I need to, to prep for it,” Taylor told NASCAR.com by phone Wednesday during a break in Garage 56 Le Mans testing at the same COTA circuit. “So it was amazing. It’s amazing that it has come full circle with Jeff himself, from back meeting him and racing with him in 2017 and always talking about one day doing a road course. I don’t think either of us ever imagined it would be in a top Cup car like this driving for him. But it’s, yeah, a dream come true, for sure.”

Taylor, a four-time IMSA champion, was announced Tuesday as one of the two drivers set to substitute for Elliott in the No. 9 Chevrolet in the coming weeks. Xfinity Series standout Josh Berry, who was a late-hour fill-in for Elliott last weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, will return to handle the oval-racing duties. But the EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix on March 26 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) will belong to Taylor, who has two IMSA victories on the 3.41-mile road course in Austin, Texas.

“I mean, it’s honestly hard to believe and still kind of feels like it’s a little bit of a dream,” Taylor said. “Talking with Jeff Gordon, Chad Knaus, (No. 9 crew chief) Alan Gustafson, arranging things to get to the shop to do seats and sim time, it’s still a little surreal. Still going through the paces, it still feels like it happened yesterday, and we’re getting in the race car tomorrow, so it feels a bit rushed. But obviously, I’ve always talked about openly wanting to do a road course race in a NASCAR, and never in my craziest dreams would have expected it to be in pretty much the best car with the best team possible.

“Obviously, under really unfortunate circumstances with Chase being unable to drive right now, so I was super-honored to be asked to fill in for COTA for them to have the belief in me to do a good job. But yeah, I’m hoping to just make everyone proud and prove to them that they made the right decision.”

Taylor expressed his gratitude for the opportunity on social media shortly after the team’s announcement, hinting that “a heck of a learning curve” awaited him. It promises to be a busy handful of weeks for the 31-year-old sports car veteran, who is wrapping up a two-day test as a driver coach and reserve pilot for the Garage 56 project. He will compete in IMSA’s Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring on March 18, a week before NASCAR arrives at COTA.

Aside from those already scheduled engagements, Taylor says he hopes to immerse himself in preparations on the NASCAR side of things and to draw on Hendrick Motorsports’ resources.

“I’ve already told Chad and Alan that I’ll make myself available any day that I can around my commitments to the Sebring 12-hour next week,” Taylor said. “I can be up there any of those other days to spend with the team and get an understanding of what I need to do to prepare, whether it’s pit stop practice or sim time. Unfortunately, there’s no way to actually drive a real car to get a feel for it, so that’s all going to come down to race weekend. There’s a lot of amazing people at Hendrick Motorsports, a lot of amazing drivers that I can kind of reach out to and talk to, to get tips here and there. So I’m sure we can prepare as much as possible, but I’m sure once we get to the race track, it’s gonna be a completely different animal to kind of figure out, but it’s gonna be a really cool challenge.”

Taylor’s name adds more intrigue to an already compelling entry list for the first road course of the 2023 Cup Series schedule. IndyCar regular Conor Daly is set to compete with The Money Team Racing at COTA, and Trackhouse Racing announced earlier Wednesday that Kimi Räikkönen will join the field through its Project 91 initiative.

RELATED: Räikkönen to make Project 91 return

Taylor said that he’s looking forward to joining in on the participation from other walks of motorsports but that his chance to mix it up with stock-car regulars in the No. 9 Chevy holds its own appeal.

“It’s gonna be awesome,” Taylor said. “I mean, I’ve known Conor since we were kids and racing against each other, so that’ll be full circle as well. Watching Kimi Räikkönen race Formula One all those years when I was growing up was awesome, so to kind of share the race track with someone like him will be super special. But the same thing goes for all the Cup regulars, you know. I grew up watching all these guys compete and race, so I feel like I know them in some aspects from watching them on TV so much, and I kind of know a lot of the racing styles, so maybe I know who to kind of watch out for and who I can lean on a little bit more.

“But yeah, I think it’s going to be a crazy weekend. I think it’s gonna be a lot to take in, but I’m definitely gonna do my homework and come to the weekend as prepared as possible, kind of knowing the guys that I’m racing against.”

Taylor officially joined the Garage 56 program in January, taking on a key role in bringing a Next Gen Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 to the 24 Hours of Le Mans classic June 10-11. His sports-car expertise and long-running relationship with Chevrolet’s Corvette racing program made him a natural choice to work alongside primary drivers Jenson Button, Jimmie Johnson and Mike Rockenfeller.

MORE: Garage 56 livery unveiled | Photos: All angles of Le Mans entry

The Garage 56 project has two tests in the books already this year – Jan. 31-Feb. 1 at Daytona and Feb. 20-21 at Sebring — both with a focus on endurance. The team’s aspirations for this week’s test at COTA are building speed and feeling out the limits for making adjustments.

“Obviously, our Sebring 24-hour test was very strong, and I think that was kind of the true test before going to Le Mans,” Taylor said. “This one is more performance-based to get some lap time and pace out of it, just doing some more handling work on that aspect. So, it’s been interesting. We’ve done a lot of big swings on setups to kind of get an idea of what the car does to kind of prepare ourselves for what we need to do at Le Mans, so yeah, it’s been super positive.

“I think we’ve got one more real track test before heading over there, so this one’s kind of one of our key tests to kind of lock everything down from a parts point of view and those things. It’s been good so far, and we’ve got one afternoon to go to get some more laps. Flawless test so far, I’d say.”

Trackhouse Racing announced Wednesday that Kimi Räikkönen will drive the team’s No. 91 Chevrolet at the Circuit of The Americas, securing a return engagement with the organization’s Project 91 initiative.

Räikkönen, the Finnish Formula One great, is set for his second NASCAR Cup Series start in the EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix on March 26 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). His previous entry into the Cup Series came at Watkins Glen International in a 37th-place debut, abbreviated by a midrace crash.

RELATED: Chastain savors Martinsville return | Cup Series schedule

The Austin, Texas race is the second race for Trackhouse’s Project 91, a third entry that will compete alongside the team’s regulars – Ross Chastain and Daniel Suárez. The project was launched last May as a place for international motorsports stars to explore competition in NASCAR’s top series.

“When we announced Kimi last year, I said he was the global superstar I had in mind when we created Project 91,” said Trackhouse team founder Justin Marks. “I think you saw the fan reception across the world, and Kimi’s performance in the car was proof of the concept. Kimi’s following is massive, and it’s great for NASCAR, Trackhouse plus I think Kimi really enjoys our racing.”

Räikkönen, 43, is the 2007 champion of the international Formula One circuit with 21 race wins during the course of 19 seasons. He also made one start in both the NASCAR Xfinity Series and Craftsman Truck Series in 2011.

MORE: Räikkönen’s journey to inaugural Cup start | What went wrong at Watkins Glen

Räikkönen has a level of familiarity and success at the 3.41-mile Texas circuit, scoring a victory there for Ferrari in 2018 as part of his eight COTA starts.

“Obviously, it’s helpful that I know the track,” Räikkönen said in a video released by the team. “Obviously, an F1 car and NASCAR is slightly different how the track feels when you go around it. So I need to remember that there’s slightly less downforce the first time going out of the pits. That side helps for sure, but obviously, like I said, this is a different car. So the track will be completely different in a way as it feels. I have some experience from last year from that race with the car, so we’ll see.”

Trackhouse is also the most recent winner at COTA, where Chastain notched the first victory of his Cup Series career last March. The triumph was also a breakthrough for Marks’ organization in just its second year of competition.

“As a company, we’ll be coming back with a lot of confidence because we won that race,” Marks said, “but also, now we’ve got three cars instead of two.”