Kaulig Racing announced Wednesday that AJ Allmendinger will return to the NASCAR Cup Series on a full-time basis in 2023, driving the team’s No. 16 Chevrolet.

The news emerged during a presentation at Kaulig Racing’s Fan Day festivities at the organization’s Welcome, North Carolina, race shop. Allmendinger will team alongside Justin Haley in the two-car Cup Series effort for team owner Matt Kaulig and team president Chris Rice next year.

It’s the latest step in a career resurgence for the 40-year-old Allmendinger, who stepped away from a full-time Cup schedule after the 2018 season before wading back into Xfinity Series competition with the Kaulig group the following year. He added to an increased Xfinity workload with partial Cup Series duty last year, bringing Kaulig its first Cup Series win in 2021 at Indianapolis.

“I’ve always told Matt and Chris over these last four years, and especially the last couple of years of doing this full time in Xfinity that I would always do what’s best for the company,” Allmendinger told NASCAR.com last weekend at Talladega Superspeedway, where he brought home his fourth Xfinity Series win of the season. “Something I found out when I thought I was retiring or semi-retiring when I was doing the TV side of things for NBC, I really enjoyed that side of it and needed a break from racing, at least full time.

“But as I started running a few races with Kaulig Racing the first year, and then especially in 2020, having some success, like the weekends I wasn’t there, I kind of really started to miss it. And that’s what led to doing the Xfinity side of it full time. And out of all of it, I’ve just really have enjoyed the team, the atmosphere at the race track, the atmosphere away from the race track, and I thoroughly just enjoy everybody and appreciate and love the hard work, the support and the confidence that they give me. And so yeah, I wanted to be fully open to whatever they wanted to do.”

RELATED: Key figures in Silly Season | Xfinity Series playoff standings

Kaulig went full-time Cup Series racing this season, jumping in with two charters to field the No. 31 Chevrolet for Haley and the No. 16 Chevrolet for a rotating cast of drivers — Allmendinger, Noah Gragson and Daniel Hemric. With Allmendinger moving to a full schedule, Kaulig will now have two drivers eligible to compete for the Cup Series title next season.

Allmendinger said the organization’s plan all along was to run a single driver in the No. 16 ride next season, and that the full-time opportunity was there for him if he’d pressed for it. But Allmendinger said bolstering the Cup Series program couldn’t come at the expense of the Xfinity Series outfit, which gave Kaulig his team-ownership start and what Allmendinger called “the heart of our company.”

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

“That was Matt and Chris’ decision because that program’s gotta be good because that’s Matt and Chris’ baby and it always will be, no matter what,” Allmendinger said. “Cup program, for sure, it’s got to be strong. But you know, that’s a process probably longer than I’m here, right? … To help develop it full time, that’s something I’m really looking forward to, and hopefully, helps us take the next step just whether it’s testing or sim work or just focusing on that car every week.”

That news has a full endorsement from Rice, who was promoted from general manager to team president in 2019.

“I think what AJ brings to us is the familiarity of the same driver in that car all the time and just to continuously grow that program,” Rice said. “I mean, we’re one year in, and I know we won last year, but you know, that’s still hard to do. I’m just really excited. He wants to do it. You know, we love him and we’re gonna miss him doing the Xfinity program. But I think what we’ve got going on there, and him helping with that will still be good. So pretty excited.

“At the same time, I don’t want to be here every Sunday to keep him calm,” Rice added with a laugh, noting Allmendinger’s sometimes animated transmissions over the team radio. “So I don’t know what I’m gonna do.”

It’s also been quite the jump for Kaulig Racing, which entered NASCAR racing as a single-team Xfinity operation in 2016. It’s grown into a three-car armada on that side, and the organization that first dipped its toe into Cup Series waters with a Daytona 500 one-off in 2020 is now finding its footing in stock-car racing’s big leagues.

Allmendinger is regaining that footing after a circuitous path back to Cup competition. He earned veteran status with stops at the former Red Bull team, teams owned by Richard Petty and Roger Penske before settling down with JTG-Daugherty Racing — a union that produced the first Cup Series victory for both, in 2014 at Watkins Glen.

When that partnership ran its course after five-plus seasons together, Allmendinger stepped away and found a role for 2019 with NBC Sports as a broadcaster for multiple forms of motorsports. When Rice came calling later that year with the chance for a handful of spot starts in Xfinity, Allmendinger found his future home.

“When we hired him five years ago, I took a leap of faith when I called him. And it was like, ‘Hey, can you come help us?’ He did,” Rice said, noting the multitude of stories that have emerged since. He can laugh about it now, but issues in post-race tech led to Allmendinger being disqualified from his first two Xfinity starts with the team. Adding an extra layer of insult to the latter DQ, Rice said the team had neglected to book him a hotel room for the weekend. Much more recently, the stories involve trophies — including the hardware earned for two consecutive Xfinity regular-season crowns.

AJ Allmendinger wheels the No. 16 Chevrolet through the esses during Cup Series action at Watkins Glen
Chris Graythen | Getty Images

“He bought in and he believed,” Rice says. “He bought in and that’s what’s key to mine and his relationship. I buy into no matter how he feels, how crazy he sounds on the radio. I mean, I’m still gonna love him no matter how mad he gets. And that’s what makes us a good … I want to say a couple, but it’s like a weird couple, right? So he’s just, he’s one of those guys that you want on your side, you know. No matter what — good or bad — you want him on your side.”

The buy-in has been mutual.

“Chris, the first thing he said, from day one, he’s like, I don’t want you miserable. Like, I just don’t want you to go back to that place that you were at before,” Allmendinger says. “At the end of the day and probably as weird as it sounds because I’ve raced my whole life, I’m probably more comfortable in my skin than I’ve ever been, meaning we’ve had success and I’ve checked off a lot on my wish list of what I’d love to do. And you know, that was tough because as I thought I was ending the first time, I was like, ‘well, you know, I’ve had an OK career I guess, you know, I’ve won in a lot of different things, which not a lot of people can say that but man, I wish I could have done this or done that or just had some success.’ Well, it’s kind of happened now.”

Though Wednesday’s announcement turned some of the organization’s attention toward next year, Allmendinger has plenty still to achieve in the remaining weeks of this season. He has one Cup Series start left on his 2022 schedule — Sunday’s Bank of America Roval 400 (2 p.m. ET, NBC, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM) — and the five-race home stretch to the Xfinity Series Playoffs, where he is already locked into the Round of 8.

MORE: Charlotte weekend schedule | Xfinity Series playoff standings

It’s a distinctive pair of opportunities for Allmendinger to help further the mission for Kaulig’s long-term goals, but also to continue the veteran driver’s career revival.

“There’s so much more to do, like really wanting to work as hard as I can to keep pushing forward and hopefully help us,” Allmendinger says. “And that’s what I’ve told them is, as long as you think I’m helping us, I want to keep doing it. The moment you think I’m not helping us, please tell me and then we can talk about something else. We can go a different direction or I can move away from driving and be just part of the team if that’s what you want it to be, but I do feel like I’m at the best I’ve ever been in my stock-car life, and I’ve gotten better and so it was more about why I wanted to do it.

“It may be because of confidence, it may be naïve, it may be dumb and it might be a combination of everything, but I truly believe if we keep getting better, and I keep getting better, we can go run with the top teams. I may be dumb as hell to think that right now, and it’s naïve or confidence that maybe shouldn’t be there, but I really believe if we keep doing the right things and keep pushing forward and getting better, like we can go run with these guys.”

Alex Bowman will not return to competition at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course this weekend, Hendrick Motorsports announced Tuesday.

Bowman is recovering from concussion-like symptoms resulting from a crash in the Sept. 25 race at Texas Motor Speedway. Noah Gragson, who wheeled the No. 48 Chevrolet to a 19th-place finish at Talladega Superspeedway, will again substitute for Bowman this weekend.

RELATED: Weekend schedule: Roval | Cup playoff standings

Bowman, who is in the Round of 12 of the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs, will be eliminated from championship contention following the conclusion of Sunday’s race. The seven-time Cup Series winner sits 12th in the standings heading into the event, 54 points beneath the elimination line. Eight drivers will advance to the Round of 8, the penultimate round of the playoffs.

Since joining Hendrick Motorsports full time in 2018, Bowman has never missed the playoffs and earned a career-best points finish of sixth in 2020. Bowman qualified for this year’s postseason with a win in March at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

Chase Briscoe currently holds the final spot in the preliminary Round of 8 ranks courtesy of a tiebreaker over Austin Cindric. On the outside looking in are Cindric, William Byron (-11), Christopher Bell (-33) and Bowman.

“Alex’s health is our first priority,” said Jeff Andrews, president and general manager of Hendrick Motorsports. “We’re focused on supporting his recovery and seeing him back in his race car when the time is right. Alex has a long career ahead of him, so we will invest the necessary time and take our guidance from medical experts. We’re putting no pressure on him to return before he’s 100% ready.”

Hailie Deegan will make her NASCAR Xfinity Series debut at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, she announced Tuesday via YouTube.

Deegan, a Camping World Truck Series regular, will pilot the No. 07 SS Green Light Racing Ford with sponsorship from Pristine Auctions in the Alsco Uniforms 302 on Oct. 15 (3 p.m. ET, NBC, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

MORE: Xfinity Series schedule | Xfinity playoff standings

“I really wanted to make my Xfinity debut for sure on a mile-and-a-half (track) because that’s where I feel most comfortable,” Deegan said in her announcement video.

Deegan is in the midst of her second full-time season in the Truck Series, where she drives the No. 1 Monster Energy Ford with David Gilliland Racing. Deegan said plans for racing in 2023 are not yet set.

“I wish I knew and had it figured it out already,” Deegan said, “but we’re still working through a few things.”

Deegan, 21, just posted a career-best finish of sixth at Talladega Superspeedway, her second top-10 finish of the Truck season and third of her career. The Temecula, California native scored three victories in ARCA West, including a two-win campaign in 2019.

Cody Ware will not compete in the NASCAR Cup Series race at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course, he announced Tuesday through his social media channels.

Ware suffered an ankle injury in a crash at Texas Motor Speedway on Sept. 25 but was able to race at Talladega Superspeedway with a boot on his right foot. On Twitter, Ware clarified he suffered an impact fracture and torn ligaments in the Texas incident.

MORE: Weekend schedule: Roval | Cup standings

The driver of the No. 51 Rick Ware Racing Ford cited the intricacies of road-course racing as part of his decision to sit out Sunday’s Bank of America ROVAL 400 (2 p.m. ET, NBC, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). JJ Yeley, who has made 15 Cup starts this season — 14 of which have been for RWR — will substitute for Ware.

https://twitter.com/CodyShaneWare/status/1577335338133032961

Ware scored a career-best sixth-place finish at Daytona International Speedway in the regular-season finale and was on pace to complete his first full-time season in the NASCAR Cup Series. Ware has 86 career starts at the sport’s top level in addition to 28 Xfinity Series starts and seven starts in the Camping World Truck Series.

RELATED: Ware details recovery from Texas accident

Ware, 26, confirmed his return to competition at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Oct. 16.

Kaulig Racing plans to shed light on its 2023 NASCAR driver lineup Wednesday as part of Fan Day activities at the team’s Welcome, North Carolina, race shop.

NASCAR.com will plan to live-stream the driver announcement portion of the event, starting at 11 a.m. ET. You can watch it on Press Pass or on the NASCAR YouTube channel:

Kaulig Racing, which fields two full-time entries in the NASCAR Cup Series and three in the Xfinity Series, will host a day full of festivities. Those begin with a 5K run at 8 a.m. ET, a paint-scheme reveal at 9:45 a.m. ET and driver autograph sessions after Wednesday’s announcement. Fans can also bid on race-used driver uniforms and car sheet metal in a silent auction, with proceeds from that event and the 5K going to the Carolina Breast Friends Self-Image Program.

More information about Kaulig’s Fan day can be found at kauligracingfanday.com.

Phoenix Communications 150

Thompson Speedway Motorsports Park

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  • Entry list
Car No. Driver Car Owner Crew Chief Chassis Mfg Sponsor
01 Melissa Fifield Kenneth Fifield Jake Marosz FURY Race Cars Pine Knoll Auto Sales
2 Chuck Hossfeld Joseph Bertuccio Michael Bologna Troyer Gershow Recycling
3 Ryan Preece Jan Boehler Greg Fournier Boehler Racing Propane Plus, ACG, Island International
07 Patrick Emerling Jennifer Emerling Jan Leaty Troyer Captain Pips Marina & Hideaway
7 Mike Christopher Jr. Tommy Baldwin Tommy Baldwin Troyer Stuart’s Automotive
10 Doug Coby Josh Bowley John Mckenna LFR Mayhew Tools
15 Kyle Soper Wayne Anderson Tom Soper Troyer Eastport Foods
16 Ron Silk Tyler Haydt Philip Moran FURY Race Cars Blue Mountain Machine and Future Homes
18 Ken Heagy Robert Pollifrone Greg Gorman FURY Race Cars Buoy One Seafood Market and Restaurant
22 Kyle Bonsignore Kyle Bonsignore Cam McDermott FURY Race Cars Chalew Performance/MTT/Munns Auto
26 Ed Brunnhoelzl III Sean McDonald Chad McDonald Troyer Lakeland Landscape Supply
27 Gary McDonald Chad McDonald Sean McDonald Chevrolet Lakeland Avenue Landscape Supply
32 Tyler Rypkema Dean Rypkema Zach Truesdail FURY Race Cars Northeast Drilling / MUSCO Lighting
34 J B Fortin Nicole Fortin Kenneth Lechner FURY Race Cars Red Camel Racing, Johns Fuel, John Tree Removal, Golden Jalapenos
36 David Sapienza Judy Thilberg Tommy Grasso LFR Sapienza Enterprises
44 Bobby Santos III Lawney Tinio Danny Gamache Jr. LFR Harshaw Paving / Olivas Market
50 Ronnie Williams Paul Les Adam Skowyra Troyer Empower Financial Service, RB Enterprises
51 Justin Bonsignore Kenneth Massa Ryan Stone FURY Race Cars Phoenix Communications, Inc.
54 Tommy Catalano David Catalano David Catalano Troyer FX Caprara
58 Eric Goodale Edgar Goodale Jason Shepphard FURY Race Cars GAF Roofing
64 Austin Beers Mike Murphy Ron Yuhas Jr. LFR Lumiere Electrical, Dell Electric, Andrew James Interior, AP Marquadt & Sons
78 Walter Sutcliffe Jr. Steven Sutcliffe Kevin Anderson Troyer Last Minute Racing
79 Jon McKennedy Tim Lepine Dale Hedquist LFR Middlesex Interiors
82 Craig Lutz Danny Watts, Jr. Vince Isabella LFR Horton Avenue Materials
92 Anthony Nocella Anthony Nocella Chris Burdell Chevrolet Nocella Paving, K+D Associates, Airgas

Before the Round of 12 finales in the NASCAR Xfinity Series and Cup Series take place Saturday and Sunday, respectively, at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course, drivers will be in action in a much different capacity.

Corey LaJoie’s second annual Charity Kickball Klassic, featuring a star-studded cast of drivers and celebrities, returns Thursday, Oct. 6 at Atrium Health Ballpark, home of the Kannapolis (N.C.) Cannon Ballers. The Spire Motorsports driver-led charity event will see proceeds donated to the Kannapolis YMCA and LaJoie’s organization of choice, Samaritan’s Feet.

Three years ago, LaJoie put Samaritan’s Feet on his car at Watkins Glen International and donated a month’s salary to the organization. The group provides shoes and socks to those in need across the globe.

MORE: LaJoie waives a month’s salary

Special guests for the event will include drivers Bubba Wallace, Ryan Blaney, Joey Logano, Ross Chastain, Noah Gragson, William Byron, Austin Cindric, Kurt Busch, Brad Keselowski, IndyCar’s Scott McLaughlin and former Carolina Panthers running back Jonathan Stewart.

NASCAR will stream the celebrity championship game (7:30 p.m. ET) on NASCAR’s YouTube page. The event will be sponsored by Built Bar, which is the Official Protein Bar of NASCAR.

Full schedule of events

All times ET

1 p.m., Tournament begins
5 p.m., Championship Game
6:30 p.m., Celebrity Semi-Final Games
7:30 p.m., Celebrity Championship (streamed live)

BUY TICKETS: Corey LaJoie’s Kickball Klassic

Jennifer Jo Cobb’s versatility as a full-time racer in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series — along with her role as a published writer, motivational speaker, entrepreneur and inaugural participant in the Busch Light Accelerate Her program — has helped her become a role model for women in motorsports and beyond.

Cobb holds several competition records in NASCAR’s Camping World Truck Series, including highest-finishing female driver in overall season points and most starts by a female driver in the series. She has also broken into the 200-plus mph club with a land speed record and is one of just a handful of women with a top-10 finish at the highest levels of NASCAR.

A strong advocate for entrepreneurship, Cobb is a speaking ambassador for the U.S. Embassy and has toured several countries to lead educational sessions on business leadership and empowerment. This experience has led Cobb to embrace a new opportunity as executive director for nonprofit Driven Diplomacy International.

Most recently having joined the Busch Light Accelerate Her program as an inaugural participant, Cobb is proud that her hard work has caught the attention of a brand with historic ties to NASCAR and says the program has connected her with new fans from across the country.

To the women who want to follow in her footsteps and chase their dreams, Cobb says: “Be ready for a long, hard road and if it’s really what you want, never give up. Consider every failure a lesson and know that lesson is going to serve you in the future. With the right attitude, you can find purpose in almost every part of your journey.”

ABOUT THE BUSCH LIGHT ACCELERATE HER PROGRAM

The Busch Light Accelerate Her Program is a three-year commitment that takes aim at the inequity of resources available to women drivers by investing directly in every 21+ woman driver in NASCAR, providing brand-building opportunities to increase fan visibility of drivers and the sport. The Busch Light Accelerate Her program is the next step in a proud, 40-year partnership between Busch Light and NASCAR that has propelled the sport forward, bringing fans closer to the action and expanding NASCAR throughout the U.S. Busch Light asks that fans show their support by heading to Busch.com/accelerateher where they can learn more about the inaugural drivers, including Jennifer, that are receiving this opportunity.

Hendrick Motorsports’ appeal of a penalty it received after the NASCAR Cup Series race at Texas Motor Speedway will be heard Thursday ahead of the Round of 12 elimination race at the Charlotte Motor Speedway road course.

MORE: Talladega results | Weekend schedule: Roval

Driver William Byron and his No. 24 team were docked 25 points, respectively, and Byron was fined $50,000 after his intentional contact to Denny Hamlin under caution sent Hamlin spinning out of the top five at Texas. NASCAR penalized Byron for violating Sections 4.3.A & 4.4.C of the NASCAR Rule Book, which pertain to the NASCAR Member Code of Conduct.

Section 4.4.C states that member actions that can result in a loss of 25-50 driver and team owner points and/or $50,0000-$100,000 fine and/or suspension includes “intentionally wrecking another vehicle, whether or not that vehicle is removed from Competition as a result” and “any actions deemed to compromise the safety of an Event or otherwise pose a dangerous risk to the safety of Competitors, Officials, spectators, or others.”

Three members of the National Motorsports Appeals Panel will hear the appeal and rule on whether to uphold, modify or rescind the penalty.

RELATED: Byron preps appeal before ‘Dega

The Round of 12 comes to a close Sunday with the Bank of America Roval 400 (2 p.m. ET, NBC, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Byron is currently scored 10th in the playoff standings 11 points beneath the elimination line. Eight drivers will advance to the penultimate round of the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs.

TALLADEGA, Ala. — If documenting Chase Elliott’s starts so far in the NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs were done by line graph, the resulting chart would resemble a jagged connection of points with high peaks and precipitously low valleys. Sunday’s race at Talladega Superspeedway marked another striking zig.

Elliott righted the ship in a big way Sunday, earning safe passage into the next round of the Cup Series’ postseason with a convincing final charge to a narrow victory in the YellaWood 500. The outcome tamped down the heartache of his early crash-out in the Round of 12 opener at Texas, enhancing his chances at a second Cup Series championship and taking the pressure off for Sunday’s elimination race at Charlotte Motor Speedway’s Roval.

RELATED: Playoff standings | Elliott surges to ‘Dega win

The undulations along the way? For Elliott, that’s almost part of his job description.

“Yeah, I mean, I feel like I’ve been doing this long enough now to understand the roller coaster that is racing,” Elliott said. “It’s going to roll on, right? You either learn to ride it during the good days, during the bad days, too, or you don’t. That’s just part of the deal. So, yeah, just try to ride the wave. Had a bad week last week, had a good week this week. Obviously great to move on into the next round, get six more bonus points. All those things are fantastic, we’re super proud of that.”

Elliott cruised to the Cup Series’ Regular Season Championship this year, with few blips in his chain of consistency. The playoffs have presented quite the reset, especially in round-opening races.

A Stage 1 crash in the postseason opener at Darlington Raceway left Elliott with a last-place finish. The Hendrick Motorsports driver overcame that dent with an 11th-place run at Kansas, followed by a runner-up result at Bristol to keep his title hopes alive.

The second-round opener at Texas dished Elliott another finish outside the top 30, with a downed tire and subsequent crash dropping him to the edge of the elimination line with only a four-point buffer for Talladega. Sunday’s pivot in the right direction left a positive impression on team owner Rick Hendrick, who noted and lauded Elliott’s ability to withstand the buffeting of ever-oscillating playoff winds.

“We had a lot of momentum going, then we had the tire failure. We just kind of hit a bump,” Hendrick said. “So this is good momentum to have the points now to go into the Roval where he’s really good, get into the Round of 8 and move on. This is great momentum for him. This race means a lot to Chase. It was great to see the fans excited. Boy, it was a heck of a race.”

MORE: Elliott’s rank among all-time winners | Hendrick wins by driver

While the victory buoyed Elliott’s playoff hopes, it also provided another momentous point in his climb up the all-time Cup Series win list. Elliott’s 18th win places him near Hall of Fame-caliber company, drawing him even with a handful of drivers with connections to his Hendrick Motorsports team.

Career win No. 18 has pulled Elliott even with current teammate Kyle Larson, but also has him all square with Hendrick forebearers Geoff Bodine and Kasey Kahne. Bodine scored win No. 1 for Hendrick’s fledgling All-Star Racing outfit in 1984; Elliott’s most recent win marked the team’s 290th.

“That’s really cool. Kind of hard to believe honestly, I mean, 18,” said Elliott, who is just one win behind the career totals of Hall of Famers Davey Allison and Buddy Baker. “Yeah, I’m super proud of that honestly. Just knowing how hard one was, to have 18 now is really special. I would love to keep adding to that obviously as time goes on. Very grateful for the 18 that we have.”

“Proud that we’ve been able to grow together and give ourselves that many opportunities to grab checkered flags. Hopefully we can get some more.”