Editor’s note: With Champion’s Week in Nashville ongoing, NASCAR.com will look back at every playoff round of the 2022 season in all three national series.

Race 1: At Texas Motor Speedway, Sept. 24

Noah Gragson celebrates his Texas win
Tim Heitman | Getty Images

Key highlights: Noah Gragson took the checkered flag in a fourth consecutive race, matching Sam Ard’s record from 1983. A handful of playoff drivers were involved in multi-car crashes in the final stage, including regular-season champion AJ Allmendinger.

Winner: Noah Gragson

Full race recap: Gragson wins fourth straight race to open Xfinity playoffs

At-track photos: 2022 Texas playoff weekend

AJ Allmendinger shouts during a rowdy Victory Lane celebration at Talladega Superspeedway
Sean Gardner | Getty Images


Race 2:
At Talladega Superspeedway, Oct. 1

Key highlights: Allmendinger finally overcame his superspeedway woes to nab his first career win at the track type with his playoff win at Talladega. Noah Gragson and Austin Hill’s aggression up front ended up being their downfall as they shuffled themselves to the back of the lead pack in the closing laps.

Winner: AJ Allmendinger

Full race recap: Allmendinger wins first superspeedway race in photo finish

At-track photos: 2022 Talladega playoff weekend

AJ Allmendinger celebrates in Victory Lane at Charlotte Motor Speedway
Jared C. Tilton | Getty Images

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

Key highlights: The Round of 12 cutoff race was the Ty Gibbs and Allmendinger show as both battled for the win in the late restarts. Meanwhile, chaos unfolded in the battle for the final Round of 8 spots as Riley Herbst was involved in late-race incidents that eliminated him from championship contention.

Winner: AJ Allmendinger

Full race recap: Allmendinger fends off Gibbs in overtime finish

At-track photos: 2022 Charlotte playoff weekend

Drivers eliminated: Ryan Sieg, Daniel Hemric, Riley Herbst, Jeremy Clements

Editor’s note: With Champion’s Week in Nashville ongoing, NASCAR.com will look back at every playoff round of the 2022 season in all three national series.

Race 1: At Darlington Raceway, Sept. 4

Erik Jones takes the checkered flag to win the 2022 Southern 500 at Darlington
Logan Riely | Getty Images

Winner: Erik Jones

Key highlights: The opening race of the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs plagued numerous title contenders, including Chase Elliott, Chase Briscoe, Kevin Harvick and Kyle Busch. Busch’s motor expired while leading under caution with 23 laps to go, opening the door for Jones to charge to the win in the Petty GMS No. 43 Chevrolet for his third career win.

Full race recap: Erik Jones pulls off Southern 500 stunner in upset win at Darlington

At-track photos: Best pictures from Darlington


 

Race 2: At Kansas Speedway, Sept. 11

Bubba Wallace performs a burnout at Kansas
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

Winner: Bubba Wallace

Key highlights: Playoff woes continued again for championship hopefuls, including Kyle Busch who spun off Turn 4; Kevin Harvick who crashed early; and Tyler Reddick, whose flat right-rear tire sent him into the wall and ended his day. With one of the quickest cars of the weekend, Wallace led the final 43 laps en route to the victory over his 23XI Racing team owner Denny Hamlin, who finished second in consecutive weeks.

Full race recap: Bubba Wallace plays playoff spoiler, surges to Kansas win

At-track photos: Best pictures from Kansas


 

Race 3: At Bristol Motor Speedway, Sept. 17

Sean Gardner | Getty Images
Sean Gardner | Getty Images

Winner: Chris Buescher

Key highlights: Buescher’s victory completed a clean sweep of non-playoff drivers to win the opening round of the postseason, but not without more issues for the title contenders. Kyle Busch’s playoffs came to an abrupt end with another engine failure; Austin Dillon failed to advance after getting caught up in a crash; Joey Logano’s day ended with a mechanical problem.

Full race recap: Chris Buescher scores Bristol victory, champions eliminated from playoffs

At-track photos: Best pictures from Bristol

Drivers eliminated: Kyle Busch, Austin Dillon, Kevin Harvick, Tyler Reddick

Which channels have NASCAR programming this week? We answer that and give the weekly NASCAR television listings here in the NASCAR TV schedule.

Note: All times are ET.

MORE: How to find USA Network | How to find FS1 | Get FOX Sports App | Watch on USA Network | Get the NBC Sports App | Watch on Peacock | FloRacing | How to watch NASCAR International

Monday, Nov. 28
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Features (re-air), FS1

Wednesday, Nov. 30
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Features (re-air), FS1

Thursday, Dec. 1
On MRN:
7 p.m., NASCAR Awards and Championship Celebration

Friday, Dec. 2
6 a.m., Greatest Races (re-air), FS2
9 a.m., Greatest Races (re-air), FS2
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Best of Features (re-air), FS1

Saturday, Dec. 3
8 p.m., NASCAR Awards and Championship Celebration, Peacock

MOORESVILLE, N.C. – Front Row Motorsports (FRM) will have new crew chiefs for both the No. 34 and No. 38 teams for the 2023 NASCAR Cup Series season. The announcement is part of several changes within the organization.

Veteran lead race engineer Travis Peterson will assume the new crew chief duties for the No. 34 after spending the last five seasons at Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing (RFK) working with drivers Chris Buescher, Ryan Newman, and Matt Kenseth. Prior to his time at RFK, Peterson served as a race engineer at Hendrick Motorsports for Dale Earnhardt Jr. and JR Motorsports.

RELATED: 2023 Cup Series schedule

FRM is also in the process of making leadership changes with its No. 38 Cup Series team. Former No. 38 crew chief, Seth Barbour, has been named FRM’s Technical Director and will oversee all track engineering and car preparation processes for both FRM Cup Series entries. A new crew chief for the No. 38 team will be announced later.

In other team leadership news, former No. 34 car chief, Ryan Bergenty, has been promoted to Performance Director. In his role, Bergenty will oversee all body and chassis assembly for all FRM entries. On top of Bergenty’s duties on the body and chassis side, he will work with the team crew chiefs to optimize each week’s build while staying within the competitive guidelines each race.

Raised in Kannapolis, N.C., Peterson was born to be a crew chief. Moving with his family to North Carolina from Wisconsin as a child so his father could work at Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR), Peterson spent his high school years at the race shop learning his craft. He later graduated from UNC Charlotte with a degree in Mechanical Engineering while doing his internship at JGR.

Peterson, 31, quickly rose to the ranks of a race engineer at JR Motorsports and Hendrick Motorsports for Dale Earnhardt Jr. before becoming the lead race engineer for the No. 17 team at RFK. Peterson was called upon to be the crew chief for the No. 17 team earlier this year and has earned two top-10 finishes as a crew chief in the Cup Series in only five races. Additionally, Peterson has wins and a championship in the NASCAR Xfinity Series and several wins in the NASCAR Cup Series as a race engineer.

He now takes the reigns of the No. 34 Ford Mustang team that is coming off a season with 12 top-10 and two top-five finishes. Peterson will bring additional ideas and experiences with hopes of propelling the No. 34 back into the Playoffs.

“The past two seasons Front Row Motorsports has seen success and we’re taking the next steps forward,” said Jerry Freeze, General Manager, Front Row Motorsports. “We know that Travis is a person that can immediately come in, take the baton, and continue to move the No. 34 team to the front. We also made several changes internally to help with car preparation and engineering for all our race cars and trucks. Our final piece is finding a new leader for the No. 38 team. We’re confident that with these changes that we’ll be even better next season.”

In a new role, Peterson is ready for his next challenge.

“I think there are a lot of people in the NASCAR garage who are noticing what Front Row Motorsports has accomplished with the new car and their truck program,” said Peterson. “This is an opportunity to come into a winning and championship organization and help take that next step of getting more wins in the Cup Series and be in the Playoffs. I’m ready to get to work. I’ve always had the goal of becoming a crew chief and now I’m ready to take advantage of the opportunity.”

Peterson and all other new roles begin immediately.

The finality of crowning three champions in Phoenix is starting to settle, pumpkin pies will soon be going in the oven and the weather is getting downright brisk.

It’s Thanksgiving season, and we have plenty to be thankful for. Here’s our list of what the NASCAR.com editorial team members are appreciative of after an unprecedented, landmark 2022 season.

We are thankful for …

“Thankful, as always, for the continual pursuit of safety. But this year also grateful for the history of the sport and our plans to commemorate where we’ve been and where we’re going with a 75th-anniversary celebration in 2023.” — Zack Albert

“I’m thankful for the 2022 season. Just … all of it. Getting to witness the boldest year in the history of the sport with a front-row seat on a weekly basis was truly a privilege. This year was just a cavalcade of non-stop highlights — and obviously, that one highlight that captured everyone’s attention in late October — and I can’t wait to see how NASCAR finds new ways to set the bar even higher in 2023 and beyond.” — Pat DeCola

RELATED:  NASCAR closes book on extraordinary 2022 | Youth, parity driving factors in ’22

 • “I’m thankful for the opportunity to cover a platonic shift in NASCAR that produced such thrilling story lines, great racing and new title contenders. That’s coupled with gratitude for the teams of crew members, drivers, officials and others working behind the scenes to keep this traveling circus on the road.” — Zach Sturniolo

“I am thankful for a bit more road courses added to the schedule, giving drivers and teams a chance to step outside their comfort zone and expand their racing portfolios. This not only helps full-time NASCAR drivers gain opportunities in other series but promotes the sport and brings in competitors from the international level — all while providing an incredible at-track experience for fans.” — Sean Montgomery

“I’m thankful for NASCAR’s willingness to try new things, which resulted in the Clash inside the LA Coliseum minutes away from where I grew up. Can you believe they play football there sometimes?” — Cameron Richardson

“I’m thankful for the lush parity NASCAR is currently seeing from top to bottom. At some point, every sport seems to be struck with the stereotype of being top-heavy in talent. However, given what last year showed from both the drivers and Next Gen car, NASCAR hasn’t been bitten by this bug as of late. Parity produces excitement, and 2022 certainly illustrated that — and then some.” — John Crane

“I’m thankful for the way that this sport is so dynamic and unpredictable. So many moments over the season were truly one in a million (I’m looking at you, Chastain) and getting to cover them in real-time was amazing.” — Celia Ryan

MORE: NASCAR leadership optimistic about future | Start times, networks announced for 2023

The Garage 56 project is building off NASCAR’s Next Gen platform, but with more freedom for modifications as it readies for a proposed Le Mans run next June. But the program is being closely monitored for potential advancements that could make their way to the NASCAR Cup Series.

NASCAR CEO Jim France, vice chairman Mike Helton and IMSA president John Doonan were among the invested observers during last week’s two-day session at the Virginia International Raceway road course, where the latest edition of the Le Mans test stocker hit the track.

RELATED: Garage 56 VIR test recap | Test days in photos

Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR Chief Operating Officer, indicated last week on the “Stacking Pennies” podcast that wind-tunnel findings from the Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 test car could be given a trial run in a Next Gen test at Richmond Raceway.

“I think there’s gonna be some good things,” O’Donnell said. “At least from what we’ve seen already in the wind tunnel and a lot of the sim data, it looks really good in terms of getting rid of some of the challenges as we’ve seen, particularly on the short tracks.”

Hendrick Motorsports’ Greg Ives, who joined the Garage 56 effort after the Cup Series season, said that the nature of the special Le Mans entry has given the team a bigger window to develop the car outside of the Cup Series rule-book structure. That spirit of innovation was most visibly evident this week with the test car’s advanced aerodynamic additions – dive planes on the front and rear fenders, a larger front splitter and a different rear diffuser.

NASCAR has experimented with more robust aero options before, adding dive planes to the sixth-generation Cup Series car’s body panels in a 2014 test at Michigan International Speedway. Those aero enhancements were among the six configurations tested back then but did not appear in competition.

Ives said that making similar aerodynamic measures seemed unlikely as the NASCAR Cup Series heads toward year two with the Next Gen racer, but that gains could be found when it comes to durability of the car’s systems. More versatility, Ives said, could attract more interest from outside NASCAR’s traditional following.

“There’s always transition, especially when the majority of the car is very similar,” Ives said. “I think some of the add-on aerodynamic pieces to be able to adjust and change balance, probably not something we’re going to look at, but maybe. You have such a huge dynamic of race tracks on the NASCAR Cup circuit, maybe you see that variance, but some of the mechanical items, definitely you can see even with the mechanical issues that we’re going through in just such a different environment, to be able to apply some of that to make the cars a little bit more reliable from an engine, fuel systems, oil systems and electrical standpoint.

“I mean, it’s hard because you can be a little bit more creative in this environment without the rules. NASCAR’s here, Goodyear’s here, Dallara’s here, the heads of NASCAR and IMSA and there’s a lot of very important people, but also very passionate people about racing to put a better product on the race track so anything’s possible. Even other OEM reps are here, so collectively we can work through and create a better product on Sunday, but maybe make people outside of the standard NASCAR Cup Series a little more excited about what the versatility of this car could be.”

As the holiday season inches closer and the weather continues to turn, voting polls for the 2022 National Motorsports Press Association (NMPA) Most Popular Driver Award presented by Hooters remain open for those eager to cast a ballot or three.

Fans can vote for a single driver once daily at nascar.com/mostpopulardriver/ or on the mobile app. Ballots can also be cast for Most Popular Driver in the Xfinity Series and Camping World Truck Series. Voting closes at noon ET on Nov. 30.

RELATED: Cup Series standings | List of 2022 Cup Series drivers

Through one week of voting action, here are the top 10 vote-getters in each series (alphabetical order):

Cup Series:

Christopher Bell

Ryan Blaney

Alex Bowman

Kyle Busch

Ross Chastain

Chase Elliott

Kevin Harvick

Kyle Larson

Joey Logano

Martin Truex Jr.

Xfinity Series:

Justin Allgaier

AJ Allmendinger

Josh Berry

Jeremy Clements

Sheldon Creed

Ty Gibbs

Noah Gragson

Austin Hill

Brandon Jones

Sam Mayer

Camping World Truck Series:

Matt Crafton

Hailie Deegan

Matt DiBenedetto

Stewart Friesen

Carson Hocevar

Ty Majeski

John Hunter Nemechek

Ben Rhodes

Zane Smith

Chandler Smith

Since 1983, the NMPA has presented the award annually. The award remains the only major NASCAR award determined solely by fan vote. The 1988 Cup Series champion Bill Elliott holds the record for Most Popular Driver Award with 16 (1984-88, 1991-2000 and 2002). Dale Earnhardt Jr., meanwhile, won the award for 15 consecutive seasons (2003-2017).

RELATED: Every NMPA Driver Award winner

Formed in 1965, the National Motorsports Press Association consists of qualified media members who report on the sport of auto racing through affiliations with print, radio, television and/or Internet news-gathering organizations. In addition to the NMPA Most Popular Driver Award, the NMPA presents an array of significant honors in auto racing, including the Richard Petty Driver of the Year Award, the Myers Brothers Award, the NMPA Pocono Spirit Award and the Wood Brothers Award of Excellence.

Additional information about the NMPA can be found at nmpaonline.com.

TIMMONSVILLE, S.C. – Dale Earnhardt Jr. returned to his roots Saturday night at Florence Motor Speedway by competing in the 30th running of the South Carolina 400 late model stock car event.

Earnhardt, driving a car sporting a throwback scheme to the Bass Pro Shops car his father drove in the 1998 NASCAR All-Star Race, started deep in the field and overcame a pair of late-race penalties to finish ninth.

The NASCAR Hall of Famer qualified 26th and methodically worked his way into contention ahead of the final 50-lap run to the checkered flag. With 13 laps left, Earnhardt made contact with Matt Cox down the backstretch while the two were racing for third.

The contact sent Cox into the inside wall, and event officials penalized Earnhardt by sending him to the tail of the field for causing the crash.

Earnhardt marched back through the field a second time, but an incident with Landon Pembelton with less than five laps left saw Earnhardt penalized a second time, resulting in a ninth-place finish.

The race was Earnhardt’s first at Florence Motor Speedway since his formative years in the 1990s. Earnhardt is a major supporter of grassroots racing and has gone out of his way in recent years to support local short tracks like Florence.

The path to Victory Lane for three-time Langley Speedway track champion Brenden Queen in the South Carolina 400 at Florence Motor Speedway came down to a matter of survival.

An evening dominated by tire conservation, intense racing and heated rivalries culminated with Queen holding off Carson Kvapil for a crown jewel victory in his debut race with Lee Pulliam Performance.

Queen admitted Saturday’s triumph in the South Carolina 400 served as major validation for him by proving to the entire short track community that he can win at any facility on the East Coast.

“I finally win away from [my home track of] Langley,” Queen said. “Everybody questioned if I was a one-track wonder, but we proved [on Saturday] we can get it done down South. We’re taking [this] trophy back to Virginia.”

After carefully conserving his equipment during the first two stages, the opportunity for Queen to pounce on the lead came with 20 laps remaining.

Mason Diaz, who had worked vigorously to get back to the front following an earlier spin, found himself battling South Carolina short track veteran and 2007 Myrtle Beach 400 winner Sam Yarbrough for the win over a handful of late restarts.

As Diaz tried to clear Yarbrough off Turn 2, the latter was forced off track before miraculously saving his car in front of oncoming traffic. Yarbrough was not pleased with Diaz’s aggressive maneuver but was allowed to maintain his spot on the front row.

Yarbrough retaliated against Diaz on the following restart in Turn 4, which prompted Diaz to retire from the race by climbing out of his car in Florence’s frontstretch Victory Lane and doing a mock celebration with his crew.

With two of the fastest cars eliminated from contention, Queen and Kvapil were left to settle the South Carolina 400 amongst themselves during the closing laps. Queen perfectly executed all his restarts to keep plenty of distance between himself and Kvapil.

Fresh off another second-place finish in the ValleyStar Credit Union 300 at Martinsville Speedway, Kvapil wanted to end his stellar rookie season with JR Motorsports by earning a crown jewel victory while competing alongside his boss Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Despite the disappointment, Kvapil admitted he was relieved to avoid the chaos that broke out between Diaz and Yarbrough.

“I honestly didn’t know if we were going to wreck out,” Kvapil said. “It was getting pretty sketchy with [Diaz and Yarbrough]. They were beating and banging pretty good before they decided to wreck each other. It was a battle just to finish, but once those guys cleared themselves out, we were focused on winning.”

Saturday’s performance highlighted Kvapil’s efficiency at Florence in his limited starts, as he finished second to Ty Majeski in last year’s South Carolina 400 after leading 38 laps.

Kvapil’s trips to Florence have taught him many valuable lessons regarding patience behind the wheel. He is confident he can one day utilize that knowledge by parking his Late Model Stock in Victory Lane.

“It’s basically been a letdown for us with every race [at Florence],” Kvapil said. “This one doesn’t hurt as bad knowing we didn’t have the best car. We had the best car in last year’s race, but luck didn’t favor us. There’s always next year.”

Rounding out the top three finishers in Saturday’s South Carolina 400 was Isabella Robusto, who was thrilled to put together a strong performance in the physically demanding event.

Robusto’s goal for the weekend was to simply gain valuable experience in tire conservation at Florence. As the carnage started to unfold during the final stage, Robusto methodically picked off her competition to provide herself a much-needed confidence boost heading into the offseason.

“We started 30th in this race and just wanted a Top 10 finish,” Robusto said. “I was able to keep the nose clean for the first 150 laps, and then I knew we had to go 110 percent with the new tires on. Next thing I knew, I was restarting fourth with three laps to go.”

Queen also enters the winter with plenty of high expectations following his first outing with Lee Pulliam Performance.

Piloting a car for a successful driver like Pulliam, whose accomplishments include four NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series, was something Queen knew would carry plenty of significance when he first signed the deal, which is why he wanted to make a strong first impression in the South Carolina 400.

Queen responded by adding his name to the list of South Carolina 400 winners that include Pulliam, Josh Berry, Timothy Peters and Scott Riggs, a feat Queen said is very close to his Hampton Heat triumph he obtained at Langley in 2020.

“This might be the biggest win of all with how everything played out,” Queen said. “Luckily, I didn’t wreck anybody to win it, but I did use her up a little bit. She had enough left in her to get the job done.”

Now that he knows the potential he and Pulliam possess as a combination, Queen is eager to keep working with the Late Model Stock legend and continue to bolster his growing resume in the discipline.

“This gives us such huge momentum,” Queen said. “We really feel we can win every race we show up to. When you have confidence in yourself to win, the sky is the limit.”

In a unique stroke of rooming accommodations, Greg Ives experienced a first, sleeping above the Garage 56 Le Mans test car that hit the track for the first time earlier this week.

Ives drew pole position on the lodging list for the rooms overlooking the pit lane at Virginia International Raceway. Just below Room 1 was Garage 1 on the ground level of VIR’s north paddock, where the Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 tester made its home for two days of on-track duty.

“No, I’ve slept under my car. I’ve slept in my car,” said Ives, making a strong nod to the tireless days he spent racing and wrenching on the Late Model circuit before reaching NASCAR’s national-series level. “Never had that nice of accommodations above my car, that’s for sure. Yeah, growing up as a racer, you put yourself in a lot of situations that prepare you for times like this, especially a new project and new parts, pieces, people, and learning every lap.

“So it’s been a fun experience so far, but for sure, sleeping around a race car is nothing new to me.”

RELATED: Garage 56 VIR test recap

Ives was in a familiar place with his headset back on in testing sessions Monday and Tuesday for the Garage 56 project, a collaborative effort among NASCAR, Hendrick Motorsports, Goodyear, Chevrolet and others. The longtime crew chief had just completed his tenure with Hendrick’s No. 48 Chevy team in the season finale at Phoenix Raceway on Nov. 6. After returning to Charlotte the next day, his transition to Garage 56 began.

“Got home from Phoenix about 5 or so and went in to work and, you know, started thrashing on seeing how I can contribute and help make the project a little more successful,” Ives said.

The Garage 56 test car is guided back into the first stall at Virginia International Raceway.
Zack Albert | NASCAR Studios

The Garage 56 initiative was announced March 17 with the intent of competing in the 2023 edition of the 24 Hours of Le Mans on June 10-11. The proposed entry is based on the Next Gen car that debuted this season in the NASCAR Cup Series. The modified Camaro test car that road-racing ace Mike Rockenfeller drove Monday and Tuesday on VIR’s 3.27-mile full-course configuration is said to closely resemble what the final version will be for its planned trip to Le Mans.

Ives indicated Aug. 26 that he would retire from his role as a full-time crew chief after eight seasons at the Cup Series level. At the time of his announcement, Ives said that he would remain with the organization to work closely with VP of competition Chad Knaus, the Garage 56 project lead, and would take direction from executive leaders Jeff Gordon and Jeff Andrews.

Monday and Tuesday depicted the first illustration of that next phase, with Ives getting up to speed with the personnel who have been involved with the project since the first blast of fanfare last March. By design, his new role shared a resemblance with his former duties on the No. 48 team.

“That’s my official role on here is crew chief, but ultimately we have a lot of smart people on this team that collectively, if we can work together and come up with a common solution, I feel it’s gonna be a better program,” Ives said. “But yeah, I think you have to have those people in place to have the titles and have where the responsibility lies, but I feel like everybody on this team contributes at a high level. And this is one of the first of many tests that we’re going to have going to Le Mans, and we’re going to kind of figure out what our roles are as we go and try to understand each other. I think a lot of different personalities and dynamics we have to work through, but that’s ultimately where it’s going to lie.”

MORE: Garage 56 test days at VIR in photos

Ives found himself meshing with the Garage 56 team early on at VIR, getting hands-on and in the trenches to sort through a Monday morning electrical issue and then maximizing the learnings from the test car’s on-track time. The group made adjustments to the car’s balance and aerodynamics, and squeezed in some wet-weather runs after the already cold weather turned damp Tuesday morning.

“We’ve been through a lot of trials here, and I think we’ve been able to fix about every one of them, so a lot of experience there,” Ives said during a midday break Tuesday. “Obviously, we want more laps on track, but if the downtime here and trying to fix and understand what the problems are helps us when we get to Le Mans in June, it’s going to pay off big time. We’re going to know right where to look, understand where the issue is, what’s causing it, and be able to remedy it quickly.

“That all comes from experience and track testing allows you to gain that experience without failures. So, we’re going to come out of this test with a lot of successes.”

Ives also assisted in keeping team owner Rick Hendrick apprised of all the developments by phone and text during the two-day test. Ives says he’s been on the other end of those types of phone calls, when other obligations have kept him from his son’s go-karting events.

“As soon as they get there, I want to see how it looks and what’s going on and how the car is going, if we’re performing on the race track and what issues we’re running into, and Mr. H. is kind of the same way,” Ives says. “So I love his enthusiasm in it. I can kind of look in the mirror and say, hey, that’s kind of me when my son’s away and I’m stuck doing something different. But it’s an interesting balance and dynamic in every level. No matter your level within racing, whether you’re an owner, a mechanic, a crew chief, an engineer, we all have to have the same passion and the same desire and the same concern — whether our car is capable of going faster or how the test is going or eventually how the race is going to go.”