Kyle Busch said Saturday there’s no firm deadline for cementing a potential return to Joe Gibbs Racing next season, adding he has had talks with other teams.

Busch, a 60-time winner in the NASCAR Cup Series, is in his 15th season with the No. 18 Toyota team owned by Coach Joe Gibbs. Busch sits in limbo for 2023 but indicated he’s standing pat until the organization announces a change in plans.

RELATED: Starting lineup | Weekend schedule

“I mean, it would be nice sooner than later, but honestly, it doesn’t matter how soon or how late it gets done,” Busch said before Cup Series qualifying Saturday at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. “Until there’s an announcement that somebody else is driving the 18 car, then I feel like I still have a seat.”

Toyota made a big splash earlier this week with the signing of Tyler Reddick to 23XI Racing, a JGR affiliate, for the 2024 season. Busch hedged on whether that addition to the Toyota camp would impact his negotiations but admitted he’s spoken with other teams.

“The short answer is yes,” Busch said. “But you know, yeah, anything’s possible obviously. There’s all kinds of different things that can play out. It’s just a matter of what does.”

Busch ranks fifth in the current Cup Series standings, notching his lone win this season back in April on Bristol Motor Speedway’s dirt.

LOUDON, N.H. — As one of a small handful of drivers over the age of 40 racing full-time at NASCAR’s top level, 2004 Cup Series champ Kurt Busch isn’t immune to retirement rumors.

They’ve cropped up over the past few years, almost an annual tradition at this point, but here he is still winning races and looking just as competitive only weeks shy of his 44th birthday.

Naturally, with this week’s news that up-and-coming superstar Tyler Reddick had signed with Busch’s team 23XI Racing — currently a two-car operation with Bubba Wallace driving the No. 23 Toyota — the rumor mill sparked right up again that Busch could be the odd man out before Reddick joins the franchise for the 2024 season. Team co-owner Denny Hamlin strongly reiterated during the announcement that Busch would have a seat for as long as he wants it (and has a “cushy office job” waiting for him when he does decide to hang it up) but a lot can change over a year and a half.

RELATED: 23XI signs Reddick for 2024 | Weekend schedule

For now, nothing has changed. In fact, it might’ve even opened up some new “options” for himself and 23XI.

“It’s all on the same timeline,” Busch said Friday at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, site of Sunday’s Ambetter 301 (3 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). “For me, this is just now that it’s out in the open, things that we’ve been working on behind the scenes, part of the process of which drivers we were evaluating and communicating with Toyota and their development program as well. So it’s neat to have these options, that’s the key thing as well as the options part of this. It’s what it does with sponsorship, it’s what it does with Toyota’s involvement, and just the way that we’re developing some things and the infrastructure behind the scenes. This is a key movement. And that’s what we’re trying to do is do it as a team.

“It’s still the same, it’s a matter of what is the right option. And when all signs point towards this or that, the great thing that I have right now is a lot of respect from the race team. Steve Lauletta, MJ, Denny, they’ve all said that I have a seat as long as I want it. That’s so valuable to me. Just … it makes me smile, want to race harder and work harder. So there’s still plenty of options that we’re looking at.”

23XI will have a decision to make at some point, however. No car number or sponsor was made part of the Reddick announcement, just that the Michael Jordan/Hamlin-co-owned organization had signed a “franchise driver.” There was no indication of expansion, either.

It’s extremely unlikely Wallace will be squeezed out for Reddick, and Busch, based on what Hamlin has said, can dictate his future. There’s a possibility, of course, the team expands to three cars to accommodate its newest acquisition, but it’s a bit of a tall order for an organization still working to find its sea legs to a degree in its infancy. This is just its second year of existence, after all, and Hamlin himself has said time and again that it will take years to get to where he wants the team to be.

So, to count on Busch walking away after next season to post up in front of a laptop instead of a steering wheel feels less likely at this point with how Busch continues to perform. A win at Kansas Speedway earlier this year has him provisionally locked into the playoffs, and he has been sporty at the “Magic Mile” thus far this weekend, claiming a P3 spot in Saturday’s qualifying session.

MORE: Kurt Busch through the years | All of his Cup Series wins

It’s just a matter of, essentially, how long he wants to keep doing this.

“I need to call Mark Martin and double check where the fountain of youth is,” Busch cracked when asked if he’d want to race into his 50s. “It’s just … it’s respect. And it’s the opportunity that’s around us with so many different variables with the manufacturer filling sponsorships for me and having a place like this to be part of when I’m done racing. That’s important to me as well. So there’s just a lot of options right now. We just don’t have all the exact answers.

“I don’t have an (age) in my head I, again, sat down and did lists and did options and thoughts, pros and cons, when I was going from Roush to Penske, and when I was leaving Penske, and just all the lists.

“The key thing is if the phone keeps ringing, you keep racing.”

Joe Gibbs Racing driver Martin Truex Jr. earned his first pole position in four seasons, taking the top starting spot in Saturday qualifying with a lap of 127.113 mph at the 1.058-mile New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

He’ll start the No. 19 JGR Toyota in Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series Ambetter 301 (3 p.m. ET, USA, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) alongside last week’s race winner, Chase Elliott in the No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.

RELATED: Starting lineup | Weekend schedule

Truex last started on pole at Kentucky Speedway in 2018 – one of two race wins from pole in the last three times he’s started out front. Another showing like that this week would be key for Truex, who is still racing for his first victory in 2022. The 42-year-old driver’s best showing is a fourth place at Richmond, 13 races ago.

It’s the second pole position for Truex at New Hampshire – last earning the top starting spot in his 2017 championship season – and 20th pole position of his career.

“You always want to be the fastest guy, you know, whether it’s practice, qualifying or the race,” Truex said. “And we got a small victory today. So, victories are all good, and hopefully we can make it work for us tomorrow, which is obviously a lot more important.”

Kurt Busch and his 23XI Racing teammate Bubba Wallace will start their Toyotas on the second row, followed by another Toyota, JGR’s Christopher Bell, who has three Xfinity Series wins at the track and finished runner-up to Aric Almirola in last year’s NASCAR Cup Series race at New Hampshire.

Elliott’s Hendrick Motorsports teammate William Byron – who was fastest in practice – qualified sixth, followed by the defending winner Almirola, reigning series champion Kyle Larson, two-time New Hampshire race winner Brad Keselowski and four-time New Hampshire winner Kevin Harvick.

It’s the best start for Keselowski, in his first year as co-owner of the No. 6 RFK Racing Ford, since a third-place qualifying effort at Daytona – his only other top-10 start of the season.

The 36-car field was split into two groups, with the top five in each qualifying bracket advancing to the 10-car final round. Elliott logged the best lap in Group A qualifying, and Busch was the pace-setter for Group B.

Each group had 20 minutes of practice as a prelude to the qualifying session. William Byron was fastest in the Group A session — and fastest overall — at 127.483 mph in the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet. Teammate Kyle Larson’s No. 5 Chevy led Group B with a best speed of 127.091 mph, good for fourth overall.

MORE: Practice results

Kyle Busch, who set the pace on the consecutive 10-lap averages chart, clocked the second-fastest lap in the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota at 127.371 mph. Chase Briscoe was third-fast (127.223) and Truex was just behind Larson in fifth (127.011).

Contributing: Staff reports

Whelen Manufactured in America 100

New Hampshire Motor Speedway

 

Pos. No.  Name Sponsor Best Time Best Speed
1 51 Justin Bonsignore Phoenix Communication Inc. 29.125 130.774
2 79 Jon McKennedy Middlesex Interiors 29.306 129.967
3 22 Kyle Bonsignore Chalew Performance/MTT/Munn’s Auto 29.449 129.335
4 7 Doug Coby Mayhew Tools 29.466 129.261
5 92 Anthony Nocella Nocella Paving/K&D Associates/Airgas 29.503 129.099
6 58 Eric Goodale GAF Roofing Chevrolet 29.584 128.745
7 16 Ron Silk Blue Mountain Machine and Future Homes 29.617 128.602
8 17 Corey LaJoie Needham Bank 29.713 128.186
9 64 Austin Beers Dell Electric/Lumiere Electrical 29.753 128.014
10 32 Tyler Rypkema Northeast Drilling/MUSCO 29.759 127.988
11 07 Patrick Emerling Captain Pip Marina & Hideaway 29.784 127.881
12 40 Ryan Preece Hunt Brothers Pizza/www.racechoice.com 29.795 127.834
13 54 Tommy Catalano FX Caprara 29.817 127.739
14 5 Kyle Ebersole Ebersole Excavating Technique Chassis Ford 29.850 127.598
15 3 Donny Lia Propane Plus/Huntington Honda 29.969 127.091
16 44 Bobby Santos Jr. Harshaw Paving/Olivas Market 29.992 126.994
17 36 Dave Sapienza Sapienza Enterprises 30.112 126.488
18 82 Craig Lutz Danny’s Cesspool Pool Services 30.142 126.362
19 18 Ken Heagy Buoy One Seafood Market & Restaurant 31.037 122.718
20 26 Gary McDonald Lakeland Landscape/TRC Electric 32.255 118.084
21 01 Melissa Fifield Pine Knoll Auto Sales 32.965 115.541
22 34 J.B. Fortin Red Camel Racing/Johns Fuel/John Tree Removal 0.000 0.000
23 20 Ed McCarthy McCarthy Marine Sales 0.000 0.000
24 70 Andy Seuss Rockingham Boat 0.000 0.000
25 78 Walter Sutcliffe Jr. Last Minute Racing 0.000 0.000

LOUDON, N.H. — At the height of professional sports such as NASCAR’s Cup Series, the talent-level margin between athletes can be razor thin.

Any edge, advantage, leg-up, etc. gets snatched up and utilized, hidden from the rest of the garage, and sometimes even teammates, with the hope that this can be the ticket to an improvement in performance or, hopefully, a championship.

Sometimes it’s an engineering breakthrough, an intricate diagnosing of a particular track or futuristic analytic statistics.

But sometimes, especially in racing, it’s just as simple as putting your butt in a seat and hands on a steering wheel — no matter when or where.

Certain Cup drivers over the past few decades have always sort of double-dipped in grassroots and other racing disciplines in between Sundays — you don’t have to look past the reigning series champion and his extensive dirt schedule for a prime example — but it feels like we’re starting to see it more and more in recent years as that margin grows ever thinner.

Hendrick Motorsports’ William Byron, on hand Friday at New Hampshire Motor Speedway to practice and qualify for Saturday’s Xfinity Series race (2:30 p.m. ET, USA Network) before Sunday’s Cup event on the 1.058-mile oval (3 p.m. ET, USA), raced — and won — at Wisconsin’s Slinger Nationals Tuesday night.

MORE: Byron claims Slinger Nationals | Full NH weekend schedule

In addition to the two trophies he’s collected in Cup, Tuesday’s win was his sixth late-model victory of the year. His schedule is more packed than ever and he’s not getting as much shuteye as his first few premier-series years, but he’s having fun. And he’s becoming a more confident race car driver.

“I had a great time at Slinger (Super Speedway). … I enjoyed it,” Byron said. “You know, I’ve raced a lot more this year. And I’ve loved what it’s done for just the use of my time, like, I can be back home, you know, trying to prepare for the race as much as I can. But being out at the race track, it’s just fun. I didn’t realize how much I enjoy doing that during the week. And yeah, it’s tougher on the schedule, like you get less sleep, you don’t have as much time at home, all those things are true, but it’s just been a lot of fun to do it. … And yeah, it does bring over some confidence because I feel like I’m in a race car learning. And I can just have some fun.”

He’s not the only one turning extra laps at the grassroots level this week, either. Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing driver/owner Brad Keselowski was in Vermont for the Governor’s Cup on Thunder Road Speedbowl’s 1/4-mile high banks and Richard Childress Racing’s Tyler Reddick will race his spotter Derek Kneeland on Friday Night in the Granite State at Lee USA Speedway’s 3/8-mile oval.

Even if the tracks, cars, banking or any other variable are different, it’s still racing. It’s still fine-tuning that competitive edge. It’s still experience.

And there’s a reason champions do this.

“I think a lot of people don’t understand how difficult like each race track you go to, or each series you go to there’s the people in that series are the best at what they do,” Byron said. “So, you know, when we went up to Wisconsin and raced Slinger, like, I was 29th in practice at the beginning. I mean, my car was a lot better than that. And I was probably going to get better than that, too. But it’s not easy just to go to these different places and just, you know, insert yourself and so that’s what makes it so impressive what Kyle Larson did last year and what other guys have done in the past. I mean, Kyle Busch used to travel to all these places. Matt Kenseth, people like that. So I think that it’s, it’s cool that Brad went and did that last night. And it’s just, it’s fun to see the different environments.”

Of course, it never hurts to win, too.

Byron was one of the hottest drivers in the early portion of the Cup season, becoming the first two-time winner with wins at Atlanta Motor Speedway and Martinsville Speedway. In the 11 races since? Just one top 10.

At no point has Byron been down on himself and his team in this stretch, however, and it’s probably helping keep the mojo up that he’s still collecting trophies and oversized replica checks.

“I think winning does wonders for drivers, in terms to, I mean, I think that you see momentum build when our Cup team won those two races really close together within a couple events and you see momentum from that from a driver perspective. And then when I go in the late model side, like, you know, we’ve obviously won six in a row, which is, you know, we would not have expected that, but it builds momentum.

“ … I think going to do all this stuff during the week is trying to get me back to that level. And me as a driver, us as a team. So we’re spending more time than ever, in the simulator, things like that, trying to just get ourselves back to where we feel like we need to be even though it’s not playoff time. And people can say oh, well, you know, you’re locked in with two wins, we definitely see like, right now is a really critical point to get us back to where we want to be.”

Every advantage matters. And if Byron regains his early-season momentum, now you know why.

Whelen Manufactured in America 100

New Hampshire Motor Speedway

Pos. No. Name Sponsor Best Time Best Speed In Lap Laps Diff.
1 51 Justin Bonsignore Phoenix Communication Inc. 28.904 131.774 26 42
2 7 Doug Coby Mayhew Tools 28.991 131.379 26 28 0.087
3 22 Kyle Bonsignore Chalew Performance/MTT/Munn’s Auto 29.053 131.098 26 41 0.149
4 5 Kyle Ebersole Ebersole Excavating Technique Chassis Ford 29.097 130.900 37 37 0.193
5 16 Ron Silk Blue Mountain Machine and Future Homes 29.116 130.815 29 29 0.212
6 92 Anthony Nocella Nocella Paving/K&D Associates/Airgas 29.147 130.676 18 31 0.243
7 58 Eric Goodale GAF Roofing Chevrolet 29.165 130.595 27 31 0.261
8 32 Tyler Rypkema Northeast Drilling/MUSCO 29.181 130.523 35 40 0.277
9 17 Corey LaJoie Needham Bank 29.203 130.425 39 44 0.299
10 07 Patrick Emerling Captain Pip Marina & Hideaway 29.206 130.412 19 28 0.302
11 79 Jon McKennedy Middlesex Interiors 29.246 130.233 29 31 0.342
12 64 Austin Beers* Dell Electric/Lumiere Electrical 29.247 130.229 21 52 0.343
13 3 Donny Lia Propane Plus/Huntington Honda 29.254 130.198 23 56 0.350
14 40 Ryan Preece Hunt Brothers Pizza/www.racechoice.com 29.310 129.949 13 30 0.406
15 54 Tommy Catalano FX Caprara 29.321 129.900 27 43 0.417
16 44 Bobby Santos Jr. Harshaw Paving/Olivas Market 29.371 129.679 23 34 0.467
17 36 Dave Sapienza Sapienza Enterprises 29.377 129.652 33 33 0.473
18 82 Craig Lutz Danny’s Cesspool Pool Services 29.625 128.567 47 48 0.721
19 18 Ken Heagy Buoy One Seafood Market & Restaurant 29.886 127.444 21 34 0.982
20 34 J.B. Fortin Red Camel Racing/Johns Fuel/John Tree Removal 30.249 125.915 9 11 1.345
21 20 Ed McCarthy* McCarthy Marine Sales 30.587 124.523 7 14 1.683
22 70 Andy Seuss Rockingham Boat 30.757 123.835 2 2 1.853
23 78 Walter Sutcliffe Jr. Last Minute Racing 31.973 119.126 25 29 3.069
24 01 Melissa Fifield Pine Knoll Auto Sales 32.367 117.675 31 31 3.463
25 26 Gary McDonald Lakeland Landscape/TRC Electric 33.812 112.646 5 6 4.908

Ty Dillon said Friday he will not return to the No. 42 Petty GMS Motorsports Chevrolet in 2023.

Dillon, 30, made the announcement on social media before the NASCAR Cup Series’ visit this weekend to New Hampshire Motor Speedway. Dillon is midway through his first season with the organization, which launched last December as a two-car team after the merger of Richard Petty Motorsports and GMS Racing.

RELATED: 2022-23 Silly Season tracker

“I am grateful for the opportunity to drive the No. 42 for Petty GMS this year,” Dillon wrote. “However, at the conclusion of the 2022 Cup Series season, we have mutually agreed to go our separate ways. I’m looking forward to what is next in the future.”

Dillon ranks 27th in the Cup Series standings with one top-10 finish – 10th on Bristol Motor Speedway’s dirt in April – to date. He made his Cup Series debut in 2014 and joined the series full-time from 2017-20.

Dillon competed part-time in all three NASCAR national series last year after the closing of Germain Racing. He returned to full-time duty this year, first hired by Maury Gallagher’s GMS operation last October and retained after the merger was announced.

“Petty GMS and Ty Dillon have mutually agreed to part ways following the 2022 NASCAR Cup Series,” Petty GMS officials said in a statement later Friday. “We are appreciative of what Ty has done this year to help grow Petty GMS. As we continue the season, we remain focused on strong runs and getting the No. 42 Chevy Camaro to Victory Lane. We wish Ty all the best in the future.”

Dillon has one win in Xfinity Series competition and is a three-time winner in Camping World Trucks.

A Joe Gibbs Racing driver was passed for the win in seven of the last eight Cup Series races at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

The streak dates back to 2016, when the Cup Series raced in Loudon, New Hampshire, twice a season; that stopped in 2018. The one instance that doesn’t fit the scenario was just last year. So, really, there were seven consecutive races where a Joe Gibbs Racing driver lost the final lead.

NEW HAMPSHIRE: Weekend schedule | Paint schemes | Betting odds

Take a look. Races go from past to present.

Joe Gibbs Racing stats at New Hampshire.

There are some caveats here.

Matt Kenseth is no longer a full-time competitor, though he was with Joe Gibbs Racing in those 2016-17 races. Martin Truex Jr. was technically competing for Furniture Row Racing in 2017, but that now-defunct operation was an affiliate of Joe Gibbs Racing, and Truex moved to the larger team after the other closed.

And then there’s the fact that three of the instances saw a Joe Gibbs Racing wheelman win regardless. Can’t say the organization failed.

Well, it has still been since 2017 that a Toyota from the Joe Gibbs Racing camp (which really was the only one until 23XI Racing was introduced in 2021) has landed in New Hampshire’s Victory Lane. The four-car shop’s next opportunity is Sunday with the Ambetter 301 (3 p.m. ET on USA Network, NBC Sports App, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). According to BetMGM, as of Friday, Kyle Busch (13-2) has the best odds to win out of his teammates. Denny Hamlin (17-2) is the next-best bet, followed by Truex (9-1), then Christopher Bell (16-1).

Busch and Hamlin have three wins apiece at the “Magic Mile,” their latest both coming in 2017. Bell and Truex have none in two and 28 career starts, respectively. Bell was runner-up last year while Truex has finished third three times.

The win trend tracks to overall present day, too. Hamlin has two victories this season. Busch has one. Bell and Truex are still winless through 19 races.

All of them are currently qualified for the 16-driver playoff field. Hamlin and Busch earned provisional berths with their wins. Bell and Truex have accumulated enough points to sit above the cutoff line. Truex is 62 points safe in 15th. Bell is 19 points OK in 16th, the last spot.

There have been 13 different winners, though. If that trend continues in the seven remaining regular-season events, and neither Truex nor Bell join the crowd, then they’re at risk of not having a shot at the title.

“With the playoff picture being as tight as it is, every point matters,” Bell said. “Loudon is a great track for us and we need a good showing. I’m ready to see what we can do this weekend.”

Julia Landauer’s racing career has never quite fit into neat little boxes. Instead of the more traditional progressions that racers often take on the ladder to NASCAR’s national series, hers has taken enough turns to fill a passport book.

On the eve of her Xfinity Series debut at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Saturday’s Crayon 200 (2:30 p.m. ET, USA Network, NBC Sports App, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), it’s worth a reflection on the path that led Landauer to an opportunity with Alpha Prime Racing.

RELATED: New Hampshire weekend schedule | Paint Scheme Preview

The New York City native, now 30 and making North Carolina her home, was a fresh prospect in the NASCAR Next class of 2016 – a group that included current Cup Series rookies Harrison Burton and Todd Gilliland, who each made a fairly standard climb to their present-day roles. Landauer’s path was more of a zigzag.

“I had this vision of you know – K&N, Trucks, Xfinity, Cup, and it didn’t quite go that way,” Landauer said. Instead, her route included stints in what’s now known as the ARCA Menards Series West, the Canada-based Pinty’s Series and the NASCAR Whelen Euro Series. That last stop on her journey, in 2020, meant three months living abroad before returning to America.

“It was really fun to get back on road courses, but I’m happy to be back stateside and to be running all these bigger tracks,” Landauer said. “But I’m very grateful for the unexpected opportunities that I had, and I feel like it’s cool to race in so many different types of cars.”

2022 July13 Julia Landauer 1 Main Image
Zack Albert | NASCAR Digital Media

Her background as a “Survivor” contestant, a noted public speaker and a recent explorer in the NFT (non-fungible token) and Web 3 space have made her stand out in the crowd. But the unconventional journey and passion for the racing side kept her in the conversation when Alpha Prime owner Tommy Joe Martins had openings in his driver roster for 2022.

Instead of one party reaching out to the other during the offseason, their collaboration was mutual, stoked by both sides – and an invested third party in the NASCAR hauler – all connecting nearly simultaneously.

“(Xfinity Series director) Wayne Auton said, ‘Hey, do you guys have any races available? There’s somebody that I want you to meet, her name is Julia Landauer,’ ” Martins said. “And of course, I laughed because I was like, we’ve already talked about this earlier this year. So it just kind of all fell into place.

“It’s somebody that I had, when I first started racing at the national levels, she was racing I’m wanting to say in K&N West. So I just happened to see some of those races and thought she did a really good job. So I think, for me, when I look at Julia, I see somebody that I just don’t feel like ever really got an awesome opportunity, like she’s had to really kind of grind for it. And you might notice there’s probably other people on my roster that are kind of the same way, right? But that’s kind of a relatable story to me, with Ryan Ellis and Stefan Parsons, kind of the same way where maybe these are guys that drove for smaller teams, and maybe this is a better opportunity for them.”

MORE: Xfinity Series standings

As for her well-traveled journey to get here, Martins appreciated all the patches to the quilt.

“It also tells you a lot about how bad she wants to do it, right?” Martins said. “She’s done it through unconventional ways and kind of gone different routes and just hung around, and that’s something that I’ve had to live with that myself, right? Everybody goes, ‘Man, why are you even doing this? You’re running 30th every week? Why are you even doing this, running for a small team?’ It’s like, well, this is what I want to do. And so you just find a way, and that’s what Julia has done.

“She’s found a way to get sponsorship, she’s found a way to kind of stay in the sport, even if it’s not what we consider the primary spot, right? But she’s done it in K&N, she’s done it overseas. She’s done it at the lower levels, and now she’s finally kind of getting an opportunity at a higher level.”

Like Landauer, her sponsors are newcomers to the series, too. Landauer said she did a “nerdy deep dive” into the world of Web 3 and NFTs last year. The connections she made in the technology field with NFT communities Boss Beauties and Garage XYZ shared a common thread with her beliefs.

“These two groups have an ethos and synergies with me and my missions, and it’s all about women’s empowerment, helping support people who are going after their dreams, being able to provide access to really cool experiences like racing,” Landauer said. “And so to be able to work with them, and to have built a really solid relationship over a long period of time, I feel like now I’m kind of working with my friends more than just a business partnership. And so it’s, it’s really cool, and it’s really cool to be able to have them be the first NFT communities to sponsor a NASCAR driver.”

2022 July13 Julia Landauer 2 Main Image
Alpha Prime Racing

Both driver and team revealed a vivid No. 45 Chevrolet earlier in the week. How well that car will perform at the New Hampshire oval in Landauer’s first stock-car race in 17 months remains a question mark.

The goals for her debut are modest, with Landauer hoping to run every lap, get a feel for live pit stops and potentially fit inside the top 20 by the end. She said she has kept her skills sharp with simulation work and rigorous personal training, but with limited track time in practice and qualifying this weekend, the challenge is steep.

“What Julia’s about to do is extremely hard. It is extremely, extremely hard,” Martins said. “You’re about to come off the couch, basically, and just climb in an Xfinity car and you’re gonna get 20 laps of practice, right? That’s really, really hard to do, I don’t care who it is, much less somebody that doesn’t have any experience at this level. So I think we’re trying to be really realistic with what we’re going to expect out of her. And I think she is, too. I think anything around the top 25 would be an awesome day. So we know that it’s probably not gonna start there. It’s probably going to start a little further back to that. And we’re hoping that by the end of the day, we’re seeing the times improve, and obviously her spot on the race track improving as well.”

Landauer hopes to add more events to her schedule this season, putting her in position to assemble her 2023 racing slate.

“That is the plan,” she said, “and I’m cautiously optimistic that they’ll come to fruition.”

For now, Landauer has become part of the fabric at Alpha Prime, which has rotated 10 drivers – Martins included – through its two cars this season. Landauer will become the 11th.

“I think she’s an important part of what we’re doing,” Martins said. “First of all, I’ve made it a priority to make diversity a big part of our race team. That’s something that really matters to me, and so I look at what Rajah Caruth has done for us, just really being front and center for our race team all the time, and one of the best prospects in NASCAR. And I look at what Julia could become, and it’s like all she really needs is just an opportunity. She’s got everything that it takes off the track, and I believe on the track as well.

“So it’s really just about getting her in front of other people. Because behind closed doors, working with her on the level that I’ve worked with her, she’s been really, really impressive and really easy to work with. And I know all the guys in my race shop are really looking forward to her driving for us this weekend and they really want to help her out. They want to give her as good an opportunity as we can give her.”