NASCAR announced a reshuffling of the offseason Next Gen testing schedule Wednesday.

A session at Phoenix Raceway, site of the 2022 Championship Weekend, will be moved to Jan. 25-26, replacing the Las Vegas Motor Speedway test scheduled for the same dates. This test was initially set for Dec. 14-15. The remainder of the proposed 2022 organizational test schedule remains unchanged.

PHOTOS: Scenes from Next Gen test at Charlotte oval | Teams get first taste of pit practice 

An additional oval test at Charlotte Motor Speedway is now tentatively scheduled for Dec. 15 and 17. There will be a “cold” day between the two testing days to allow for better data analysis and planning. 

A previously scheduled Next Gen test at Daytona from Jan. 11-12 remains unchanged.

RELATED: Next Gen car ‘performed as designed’ in Austin Dillon tests wreck

Erik Jones’ No. 43 Chevrolet will have a new primary sponsor for the 2022 NASCAR Cup Series season, Richard Petty Motorsports announced Tuesday.

FOCUSfactor, a brain health supplement leader for nearly 20 years, has teamed up with Richard Petty Motorsports for the company’s first-ever NASCAR partnership. FOCUSfactor will be the main sponsor in 26 races next season, and that’s just the beginning. The two parties signed a multi-year agreement.

“I am really happy to welcome FOCUSfactor as a partner with Richard Petty Motorsports,” Jones said in the team’s news release. “With 26 races on board our Next Gen No. 43 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1, it will be great to get behind this program and learn more about how we can support each other. Our team has really gained momentum over the last month of this year’s 2021 NASCAR Cup Series season. We are even more focused on improving those finishes to start the new year strong, and with FOCUSfactor on board, we are guaranteed to be successful. It would be awesome to bring this new partner their first win — I cannot wait to get started with them.”

RELATED: Richard Petty Motorsports’ wins by driver | Erik Jones’ career milestones

The 2021 season was Jones’ first with Richard Petty Motorsports. He ultimately finished 24th in the standings after failing to qualify for the NASCAR Playoffs. Through 36 races, he had six top-10 finishes and averaged a 19.7 finish overall.Focusfactor3 4

Jones has now completed five full seasons in the Cup Series. He has two career wins — Daytona International Speedway in 2018 and Darlington Raceway in 2019 — from his time with Joe Gibbs Racing.

“NASCAR represents a very rich opportunity for FOCUSfactor,” said Jack Ross, chairman and chief executive officer at Synergy CHC Corp. “To be partnered with Richard Petty Motorsports and their rich history of excellence is an amazing opportunity for the FOCUSfactor brand. Having Erik Jones, a proven NASCAR Cup Series winner, and one of NASCAR’s most talented young drivers, behind the wheel of our FOCUSfactor Next Gen Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 is something we are incredibly excited about.”

Richard Petty Motorsports and FOCUSfactor’s deal will begin Feb. 6 with the Busch Light Clash at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum and include the Feb. 20 season-opening Daytona 500 and the May 22 exhibition All-Star Race. Along with the paint scheme, FOCUSfactor will be prominently shown on Jones’ fire suit, the crew’s apparel and on the team’s transporter and pit box.

More information on FOCUSfactor can be found at https://www.focusfactor.com/.

“We are looking forward to the 2022 season — part of that excitement is the rollout of the Next Gen car, but we are equally as excited to establish a new partnership with FOCUSfactor,” Richard Petty Motorsports chief executive officer Brian Moffitt said. “We await the opportunity to assist FOCUSfactor in leveraging our partnership across NASCAR and within the retail segment.”

RELATED: 2022 NASCAR Cup Series schedule

NASCAR and Langley Speedway announced Tuesday that the 2022 race date for the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour event has been moved to Saturday, Aug. 27.

The move from April to August preserves a Virginia bonus program for the series’ three races in the Commonwealth state — Richmond Raceway (April 1), Langley and the season-finale at Martinsville Speedway (Oct. 27).

“We are excited to bring back a bonus program connected to our three races during the 2022 season that will take place in the state of Virginia – Langley, Martinsville and Richmond,” said Jimmy Wilson, senior director of the NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour. “After learning of spring schedule conflicts in North Carolina and Virginia, we decided to move the Langley race to August. It is important to us that all modified drivers who wish to take advantage of the program are available to race in all three races.”

Langley now falls between Thompson Speedway (Aug. 17) and Oswego Speedway (Sept. 3) on the schedule, adding another key stop as the season hits its fall homestretch.

The trip to historic Langley Speedway marks the first Modified Tour race at the facility since 2018, and only the third in series history.

The previous two Whelen Modified Tour events at Langley were won by Timmy Solomito (2017) and current NASCAR Cup Series driver Ryan Preece (2018).

The .397-mile track also hosted eight NASCAR Whelen Southern Modified Tour races from 2010-2015.

CONCORD, N.C. — Spire Motorsports announced Tuesday it will expand its NASCAR footprint and field a team in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series in 2022.

The team will be led by championship-winning industry veterans Mike Greci and Kevin “Bono” Manion.

Greci comes to Spire Motorsports from Hattori Racing Enterprises, where he served as general manager for the last six seasons. Manion has spent the last two years at GMS Racing and will handle the team’s crew-chief responsibilities.

RELATED: Silly Season tracker for Xfinity and Truck Series

“After spending the last three seasons establishing our footing in the NASCAR Cup Series, Spire Motorsports is eager to lean on Mike Greci’s leadership and build a competitive NASCAR Camping World Truck Series team,” Spire Motorsports co-owner T.J. Puchyr said. “Mike’s resume speaks for itself. He’s a proven winner and excels at developing young talent. We’re fortunate to add someone as accomplished as Mike to our roster. Being able to complement him with an experienced, championship-winning crew chief in Bono Manion creates a foundation that we expect to be successful right out of the gate.

“There’s a tremendous amount of interest, enthusiasm and opportunity in the Camping World Truck Series. We’re excited to expand our team, create new jobs and make our mark in the Truck Series garage the Spire Motorsports’ way.”

Greci, a Granby, Connecticut, native with more than five decades of experience, launched his NASCAR career in 1990 as Mike McLaughlin’s crew chief in the ARCA Menard’s Series East (formerly Busch North Series and NASCAR K&N Pro Series East). Since then, he has earned ARCA Menard’s Series East victories with McLaughlin, Mike Stefanik, Ryan Truex and Brett Moffitt.

Greci won consecutive championships with Truex in 2009 and 2010. From 2013-16, he held the competition director’s role for Turner-Scott Motorsports and HSM with Justin Marks when the teams won four straight ARCA Menard’s Series East titles with drivers Dylan Kwasniewski, Ben Rhodes, William Byron and Justin Haley.

He transitioned to Hattori Racing Enterprises as general manager at the end of 2016 where he won four races and earned NCWTS championship honors in 2018 with Moffitt. From 2019-21, Greci and Austin Hill combined to notch eight wins while clinching a spot in the NCWTS playoffs all three years.

“I’m proud to join Spire Motorsports and take full advantage of the opportunity in front of us,” Greci said. “I’ve known both T.J. Puchyr and Jeff Dickerson (Spire Motorsports co-owners) for many years and I’m really impressed with how they go about their business. We’ll have an opportunity to develop some exciting young talent. Being able to pair a young driver with a crew chief as experienced as Bono Manion positions us to be competitive as soon as we hit the track.”

Manion has been a staple atop the pit box since 2002 and boasts wins in all three of NASCAR’s elite touring series. Some of his most recognizable accomplishments include back-to-back NASCAR Xfinity Series championships with Martin Truex Jr., (2004-05) and NASCAR Cup Series wins, including the Daytona 500, Brickyard 400 and Bank of America 500 with Jamie McMurray. He has collected seven NCWTS wins with four different drivers, including Daniel Suarez, Kyle Busch, Tyler Ankrum and Zane Smith.

“This is an exciting opportunity to help build a new team and establish Spire Motorsports as a top-flight organization in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series,” Manion said. “Building something from the ground up is the type of challenge that gets me out of bed in the morning. Collectively, we all envision this as a great opportunity to be competitive and give back to the sport that has given so much to all of us.”

The team will name its driver and announce 2022 schedule plans once they are finalized.

When a driver frequently moves from team to team, he’s often called a “journeyman.” Some may think of the term as derogatory, but Mike Bliss embraces the nickname.

And in the process, Bliss essentially holds an unofficial NASCAR record that likely will never be broken.

Before he retired after the 2016 season, the 56-year-old Milwaukie, Oregon, native developed a reputation that he would drive anything, anywhere and for anybody. As a result, Bliss wound up driving for 49 different teams during his 21-year career.

That’s not a mistake or typo: Bliss drove for 49 different teams. Some were for a race or two, others were for several seasons. Granted, there were a few organizations that may have been owned by the same individual, but the teams were on different NASCAR levels such as Cup, Xfinity and/or Trucks. Hence, one owner may have been counted two or even three times, but that was a rarity.

By checking one of the top statistical sources — Racing-Reference.Info — Bliss drove for 18 different Cup teams, 17 Xfinity teams and 14 Trucks teams. There’s even a YouTube video that breaks down Bliss’s career — although their counting is off: they have him running for only 39 teams.

“So I bounced around a lot, but I had a pretty good time,” Bliss said with a laugh.

He then added with another laugh, “Even I have a hard time believing it was that many (teams).”

While he drove in all three of NASCAR’s premier series, it was in the Camping World Truck Series where Bliss found his greatest success, earning 13 wins, highlighted by capturing the 2002 championship.

“I think at that point, it was the biggest achievement (in NASCAR), but before that I also won the USAC Silver Crown championship (1993) and that was pretty big,” Bliss said. “And there were also a lot of races in there that meant, I don’t want to say meant more than the championship, because I would say the championship was more of a success. But there were races that I won that were pretty special.”

Regardless of who he drove for, be it Joe Gibbs or James Finch, Bliss gave it all he had, no matter what.

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Bliss unceremoniously retired after his final Xfinity Series start late in the 2016 season at Kentucky Speedway, driving just two laps before he pulled the car in the garage due to mechanical failure and earned a last-place DNF.

He was done.

He spent the next few years working for a sandblasting company and also doing some carpentry and touch-up work for a home builder in Atlanta and Charlotte.

“I tried to get out of racing,” Bliss said. “When I first got out, I tried various things, but it just didn’t work. And everything just kind of led me back to racing.

“You race all your life and you don’t know what else to do when it’s over. I struggled on trying to figure out what to do. I wanted to get away from racing, but I just couldn’t.”

Bliss also faced a Catch-22 situation. As much as he missed racing, he also didn’t miss one key element of racing, namely, the driving part. After doing some testing for several ARCA teams for the last few years, he came to a realization.

“I just didn’t have it, I just didn’t feel it anymore,” Bliss said. “What I do miss is a long time ago when I was competitive. I wasn’t (competitive) the last three or four years of my life in racing.”

Bliss got even more involved in somewhat of a comeback to racing — albeit not behind the wheel — at the beginning of this year when he went to work for Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s JR Motorsports late-model program.

But when 2020 USAC National Midget Championship winning team owner Chad Boat called Bliss in late April, offering him a job as a jack-of-all trades, Bliss couldn’t say no, especially since sprint cars and midget cars were his first racing love.

Bliss has become an integral part of Boat’s CB Industries operation, including driving the team hauler, working on race cars and whatever other duties that need to be done for the team’s USAC midget and sprint cars, as well as their POWRi teams.

Bliss doesn’t have an official title with the team, but jokingly calls himself a “vice principal,” similar to high-ranking “principals” in Formula One and IndyCar teams.

But some of Bliss’ duties are, well, below the pay grade of a usual team principal.

“I’m sitting here in front of a dryer in Placerville, California,” Bliss said with a laugh in our phone conversation. “We’re heading to a USAC Midget car race later this morning.”

Hey, it’s a job, and somebody has to do it, especially since the team is currently on a one-month West Coast swing. (Its final race of the season is Dec. 1 near St. Louis before heading home for the winter in North Carolina.)

“This is, you know, going back to kind of where I started,” Bliss said. “This is what I did do, raced midgets in the past when I was first coming up.”

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Bliss is glad to be back in racing, albeit not behind the wheel. Still, he’s able to give the teams’ drivers the benefits of his experience, a great knack on how to set up a car and any other advice his nearly 40 years of racing might provide.

But he’s also still learning himself, as well. He’s seeing a side of racing he never really saw or gave much thought to when he was chasing checkered flags during his USAC and NASCAR days.

That is, how a crew member sees a race differently than how a driver might see it. The differences really are quite fascinating at times, Bliss said.

“It’s exciting, you understand now what the guys on the team, what it felt like to win a race and lose a race,” he said. “As a driver, you just get out and go, but you never really realize how much the whole crew feels good about what they’ve done.

“You understand the crew chief or the car chief or the tire guy, they take pride in everything they do. And I’m not saying when the driver lets them down or they lose a race or don’t feel like the driver put everything into it, you just totally see a different part of the racing.”

Bliss has learned so much in what has kind of become an apprenticeship of sorts with Boat’s USAC/POWRi operation that he offers up a good bit of advice to up-and-coming and even veteran NASCAR drivers.

“I think it’d be good for a driver to go backwards in life just once to see what it feels like (as a crew member),” he said. “I think that might make them a better driver.”

Bliss is still at an age where he potentially could get back into some type of race vehicle. He was asked if he might consider joining fellow former NASCAR drivers like Greg Biffle and Bobby Labonte in competing in the upcoming second season of Ray Evernham and Tony Stewart’s Superstar Racing Experience, which begins its second six-week season next June.

Bliss demurred.

“I don’t know if I would,” he said, before quipping, “My thing is I don’t want to get in a car again and like it. I don’t want to go back. I want to stay away.”

********************************

There’s no question Bliss’ most successful season was 2002, when he won the Truck Series championship, including earning five of his 13 career Truck Series wins.

And what a back story there is.

Xpress Racing had been caught cheating with one of its Xfinity Series cars (then known as the Busch Series) in mid-June 2001. Team owner Steve Coulter and driver Tim Sauter were each penalized, but crew chief Dave Fuge suffered the biggest hit: He was suspended indefinitely from the sport and fined $30,000.

The team promptly shut down and went up for sale within days of the punishment being handed down. But by the end of the season, Fuge had convinced Coulter — a successful trucking company owner — to return to the sport in 2002 and field a Truck Series team because operating costs were significantly lower, and with Bliss as the driver.

But, there were initial problems that left the team’s future in question.

“It started off the year that we weren’t going to run,” Bliss said. “We didn’t know. (Fuge) was suspended … and didn’t get reinstated until five races into the year. We didn’t know what we were doing, there was no plan, no plan to run the whole year. But we just started winning and finishing good, were leading the points and it just all came together. (Fuge) got his license back and we put everything all together. It was really pretty cool.”

Given the uncertainty the team faced at the beginning of the season, Bliss wasn’t totally convinced he had won the championship right away.

“Like everything else, it doesn’t really sink in until you get home or maybe a few days later, and then it all sinks in,” Bliss said. “I mean, it was really cool because there was no pressure, we didn’t know what we were doing, we were just kind of having fun.

“After it was all over, you want to do it again. But I moved on to the next year and an Xfinity car for Gibbs (Joe Gibbs Racing) and didn’t get a chance to come back and do the Truck again.”

Travis Kvapil replaced Bliss in the Xpress Motorsports Truck and won the championship in 2003. Fuge purchased the team and owned it from 2004-07. In 2009, Kyle Busch bought the team, forming the foundation for what would become Kyle Busch Motorsports.

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Another of Bliss’ career highlights also came unexpectedly in 2004.

He was racing full-time in the Xfinity Series for JGR, but he and his team were given an opportunity to compete in four Cup races that season, as well.

On Sept. 11, 2004, Bliss wasn’t on anyone’s radar. He qualified 33rd and probably would have been lucky just to finish the race — likely at least a few laps down.

But he and his team surprised everyone, finishing fourth in a race that was won by Jeremy Mayfield. Dale Earnhardt Jr. finished second, followed by Jeff Gordon, Bliss and Mark Martin.

“That we finished (fourth) at Richmond was really cool,” Bliss said. “That was an achievement we didn’t expect to happen. But there were also several USAC wins that happened that were pretty cool, like it came down to the last lap and were pretty exciting.”

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There also was an unexpected regret to his racing career, one Bliss still thinks about, especially when the month of May rolls around every year.

“When I was in USAC, that was about the time that the IRL (Indy Racing League, now known as IndyCar Series) was starting to form (eventually began in 1996),” Bliss said. “I had some chances to do that and I turned them down to go Truck racing.

“I always wish I would have ran Indy (the Indy 500) in an Indy car and never did. That’s one thing I really missed out on. I’m not saying I really wanted to do a whole, full open-wheel career. But Indy (the 500) was one thing that I kind of missed and not ran. I tested an Indy car a couple times (1994), but I just went Truck racing.”

Bliss also has one key regret when it comes to his time in NASCAR.

“I was driving a truck for Jack Roush in 1999 when I went to drive in Cup for A.J. Foyt in 2000,” Bliss said. “It’s not really a bad thing to go drive for a guy like Foyt, that’s what I thought, but it didn’t turn out.”

After finishing 33rd in the season-opening Daytona 500, Bliss failed to qualify in the next three races (Rockingham, Las Vegas and Atlanta) and was fired.

He eventually hooked up with team owner Jack Birmingham, driving 24 races the rest of that season (ultimately finished 39th). After competing in just one race each in the Xfinity and Truck Series in 2001, he bounced back to full-time competition in 2002, essentially going from zero to hero and Truck Series champion.

********************************

So there you have it, the story of Mike Bliss, NASCAR race-car driver.

Wait, scratch that, make that the story of Mike Bliss, journeyman NASCAR race-car driver.

“I never really thought about it (being called a journeyman),” Bliss said. “I just wanted to drive race cars. People would call me to drive ‘em and I just did it, you know? I look back and I wouldn’t want to have to do that (again), but I had to do it (then).”

*****************************

The Mike Bliss File:

* Age: 56

* Hometown: Milwaukie, Oregon

* Personal: Has been married to wife Sue for 33 years. The couple has one child, a daughter, Brittney, 21.

* Notable: Won the 1993 USAC Silver Crown championship. He likely would have continued running sprint cars and midgets but received an offer to drive in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series in 1995, the series’ first year of operation, from team owner Jim Smith. Bliss would finish eighth in the standings. … Bliss likely would have won Rookie of the Year honors in 1995, but the series did not name a ROY that season.

Career highlights:

* NASCAR Cup Series career: 179 races, zero wins, one top-five and seven top-10 finishes. Best season finish: 28th (2005).

* NASCAR Xfinity Series career: 359 races, two wins, 29 top-five and 76 top-10 finishes. Also three poles. Best season finish: fifth (2004, 2008 and 2009).

* NASCAR Truck Series career: 206 races, 13 wins, 61 top-five, 109 top-10 finishes. Also 18 poles. Best season finish: won the championship (2002).

Veteran motorsports writer Jerry Bonkowski is writing a number of Where Are They Now? stories this year for NASCAR.com. Check out stories he has already done on Doug Richert, Brian Scott, Robby Gordon, Ricky Craven, Terry Labonte, Kenny Wallace, Trevor Bayne, Ken SchraderShawna RobinsonSam Hornish Jr.Bobby Labonte, Greg BiffleRicky RuddDarrell WaltripMark MartinMarcos Ambrose and Juan Pablo Montoya. Follow Jerry on Twitter @JerryBonkowski.

NASCAR announced significant Xfinity Series penalties on Monday for a pair of isolated infractions.

Owner/driver of the No. 74 Chevrolet Mike Harmon was assessed an L2 penalty for violating Section 5.1.a.c.d: Vehicle testing in the NASCAR Rule Book. He’ll incur a loss of 75 owner points and 75 driver championship points, to be applied in the 2022 season. NASCAR fined crew chief Ryan Bell $50,000 and suspended him from the next six championship points events, also to begin starting in 2022.

RELATED: Xfinity Series standings | Xfinity Series schedule

Earlier this month, Mike Harmon Racing posted images of the No. 74 car turning laps at Rockingham Speedway. Harmon competed in one Xfinity race in 2021, finishing 39th in October at Martinsville Speedway.

Separately, NASCAR indefinitely suspended driver Caesar Bacarella for violation of Sections 12.1; 19, substance abuse policy. Bacarella competed in five Xfinity races in 2021 behind the wheel of the No. 90 Chevrolet with a best finish of 12th in the season-opener at Daytona. Bacarella also co-owns Alpha Prime Racing.

CONCORD, N.C. — It felt like a first day of school for Trackhouse Racing employees, getting a first look at their new shop Monday morning.

Formally decked out in Chip Ganassi Racing red, the facility located in Concord, North Carolina, is now covered in blue as the organization, co-owned by Justin Marks and music superstar Pitbull, officially took over after its purchase back in June.

RELATED: Trackhouse Racing’s new shop in photos

Employees filed their way into the front entrance, taking time to gather together in the front lobby and listen to a welcome speech from Marks over breakfast. Pitbull also appeared in a video message, telling the employees how proud he is of their efforts while offering words of encouragement for next season.

Trackhouse’s pair of drivers, Daniel Suárez and Ross Chastain, were also on hand for the official unveiling. Suarez even raced executive vice president and general manager Ty Norris to the door when it was time to head into the shop floor.

 

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“Now, it feels like home,” Suárez told NASCAR.com. “I knew something cool was going to happen to this place in the last week. Nobody saw this coming, I can guarantee you that. It looks very, very cool. Before, everything here was red. Now, almost everything is blue and it’s turning into blue slowly. It’s very, very nice to be part of this project. Just a year-and-a-half ago, all this was on paper and to know that today we are on this level, it’s pretty remarkable.”

Still in search for his first career Cup victory, Suárez ended his fifth full-time NASCAR Cup Series season with one top five and four top 10s, including a highest finish of fourth in the Bristol Dirt Race.

With the introduction of the Next Gen car for 2022, the 29-year-old driver didn’t have to think twice about continuing his run with Trackhouse.

“Justin always told me you have to trust me, I have a big mission for this,” Suarez said. “Ty Norris said the same thing. A lot of people thought I was a little bit crazy for taking a leap of faith for a second year in a row on a new team. My gut feeling was telling me this was the right place for me to be, not just for the short run but also for the long run and to grow together and be able to win races and championships.”

RELATED: Tracking the 2022 driver-crew chief lineups 

After racing a full year without a teammate, Suárez will now work alongside Chastain, who was brought into the fold after one season with Ganassi driving the No. 42 Chevrolet. Chastain will now drive the No. 1 Chevy, while Suárez will stick with the No. 99.

The welcome-home celebration was more of a welcome back for Chastain and other crew members who transferred over from Ganassi. But Chastain described a new energy in the air upon entry.

“It’s different,” Chastain said. “It’s more than a building, but it takes a building to be a home. We’ve got to have a place to work. This place has had a lot of race cars come in and out of it and a lot of people pour their careers and craftsmanships into race cars. We’re in the dawn of a new time with this car where it doesn’t take the amount of people. It’s not hand-fabricated and welded together. We’re buying a lot of it, so the group that’s going to appear to assemble it and to make these race cars better than the next, they have to be special because we’re all going to have the same tools as every other team in the sport.”

RELATED: ‘Kept a lot of 42 group’ at Trackhouse, says Ross Chastain

Both Suárez and Chastain have put a massive amount of faith in Marks and his plan, and rightly so. Marks hasn’t let off the throttle on his vision for Trackhouse’s future since his dream began, turning it into a reality on a timeline that is nothing short of impressive on one of motorsports’ biggest scales.

“This started as just an idea in my head and to see where we’ve gotten right now with it and as much as we’ve accomplished up to this point, it’s exciting but at the same time it really motivates me for the future and the opportunity that we have,” Marks said. “Seeing all these people in Trackhouse logos … I’m just ready to get to work.”

One of Marks’ various goals for Trackhouse is to create a work environment where his employees feel they have the best jobs in the sport. A new shop to complete that work is just the beginning of creating a family culture that’s capable of achieving unique things.

“It’s every day committing to the process of empowerment, accountability, recognizing that these people are truly the best at what they do and getting behind them and lifting them up and giving them all the tools to be successful,” Marks said. “That’s something that we will continue to do every day. But walking in here specifically and seeing all this … I mean, there’s been a race team in here for 20 years, but the air feels different today.”

One of the NASCAR Cup Series’ most iconic race teams, Wood Brothers Racing, took to social media Monday to unveil its new paint scheme for the 2022 Next Gen Ford Mustang and rookie driver Harrison Burton.

The cinematic reveal was created in iRacing and featured the storied No. 21 with gold chrome numbers on both sides of the car.

The team announced in July that Burton would be promoted from the Xfinity Series,  replacing Matt DiBenedetto after the veteran’s two years behind the wheel of the 21. Burton tallied four wins in a pair of full-time Xfinity seasons. He is the son of former Cup Series driver and current NBC Sports analyst Jeff Burton.

RELATED: 2022 Cup Series schedule | Season-opening 2022 Busch Light Clash explained

The paint scheme will make its on-track debut at the 2022 Busch Light Clash at The Coliseum in Los Angeles, California.

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 NBCSN | Get the NBC Sports App | How to find FS1 | Get FOX Sports App

Tuesday, Nov. 23
1 p.m., IMSA Auto Racing — Michelin Pilot Challenge at Petit Le Mans, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
3 p.m., IMSA Auto Racing Special — Mazda MX-5 Cup: Road Atlanta, NBCSN/NBC Sports App
4 p.m., IMSA Auto Racing Special — Prototype Challenge: Road Atlanta, NBCSN/NBC Sports App

Thursday, Nov. 25
2 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: 2021 Champion Season Review, FS1
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: 2021 Champion Season Review, FS2 (re-air)

Friday, Nov. 26
6:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: 2021 Champion Season Review, FS1 (re-air)

PLACERVILLE, Calif. — Kyle Larson has faithfully had a ladybug image tucked away on his race cars, a good-luck charm that’s followed him from childhood all the way to NASCAR’s top levels. How it got there is its own charming piece of racing lore.

Mike Larson, Kyle’s father, recounts a story about three-time Indianapolis 500 winner Johnny Rutherford. One race-day morning just before his third Indy win in 1980, “Lone Star J.R.” noticed that a ladybug had landed on him. Believing in the good fortune of the omen, Rutherford told his crew that the rest of the field was racing for second that day. He loaded in and drove his “Yellow Submarine” Chaparral to a convincing victory.

RELATED: Photos from Kyle Larson and Chase Elliott’s trip to California

Mike Larson liked the story so much that he once said that if his son ever got involved in racing that he’d include a ladybug somewhere in the paint job. Now here we are, his son a Cup Series champion and still carrying the charm on his cars and many of his T-shirts and other racing souvenirs.

The Larsons said they had a chance encounter with Rutherford at the Chili Bowl Nationals in Tulsa years ago, jumping at the opportunity to tell him how they had adopted his good-luck mascot as one of their own. Rutherford shared a laugh and wished them well, bringing the origin story full circle.