Motorsports
$1.5 Billion Legal Powerhouse Announces Multi-Year NASCAR Deal With Kyle Busch
America’s largest injury law firm, Morgan & Morgan, has renewed its multi-year, multi-race partnership with Richard Childress Racing (RCR). The renewal continues a historic sponsorship in the NASCAR Cup Series that started in 2023. This pioneering partnership has flourished through a shared focus on cause-driven marketing and a community-first business approach. Kyle Busch Lands Multi-Race […]

America’s largest injury law firm, Morgan & Morgan, has renewed its multi-year, multi-race partnership with Richard Childress Racing (RCR). The renewal continues a historic sponsorship in the NASCAR Cup Series that started in 2023.
This pioneering partnership has flourished through a shared focus on cause-driven marketing and a community-first business approach.
Kyle Busch Lands Multi-Race Sponsorship As Morgan & Morgan Expands NASCAR Investment
Under the renewed partnership, Busch will once again drive the No. 8 Morgan & Morgan Chevrolet. The two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion will debut the 2025 paint scheme at the Cook Out Southern 500 in Darlington on Aug. 31.
“Richard Childress Racing has been an incredible partner to us for the past two years, and we’re thrilled to be able to extend our partnership,” said Dan Morgan, Managing Partner at Morgan & Morgan.
“RCR and their drivers share the same values and passion that we do as a firm in giving back to the community, and we’re excited to continue to work together. We know that Kyle has some of the best fans in NASCAR, and we’re excited to see him continuing to represent Morgan & Morgan on the track beginning with Darlington Raceway in August,” he added.
At its heart, the partnership is built on common ground: a belief in family, integrity, and giving back—principles that both Morgan & Morgan and RCR proudly stand behind.
“We pride ourselves on innovative partnerships and look forward to continuing our relationship with Morgan & Morgan,” said Richard Childress, chairman and CEO of Richard Childress Racing.
“The firm’s family focus and commitment to the communities they serve aligns well with the way we operate our team. We value their support and look forward to building additional success together,” he added.
Kyle and Brexton Busch Feature in Morgan & Morgan Ad
Morgan & Morgan celebrated its renewed RCR partnership with a brilliant ad featuring Kyle and his son, Brexton Busch, which was well received on social media.
In the half-minute-long ad, viewers saw the risks of school zones brought to life: speeding vehicles, distracted drivers, and the erratic movement of children. Kyle faced these challenges as he arrived at the scene in his car.
The ad then reveals Morgan & Morgan’s track record of recovering over $25 billion for their clients, before ending with a lighthearted exchange between Kyle and Brexton. Kyle shared the video across his social media accounts, writing:
“There’s a reason I hate school zones. Just like there’s a reason Morgan & Morgan @ForThePeople is America’s Largest Injury Law Firm. #ForThePeople #ad”
Motorsports
Front Row Motorsports: Charlotte Motor Speedway Competition Notes – Zane Smith
Zane Smith and the No. 38 Benebone Ford TeamCharlotte Motor Speedway Competition NotesCoca-Cola 600 Date: Sunday May 25, 2025Event: Race 15 of 38Series: NASCAR Cup SeriesLocation: Charlotte Motor Speedway (1.5-miles)#of Laps: 400Time/TV/Radio: 6:00 PM ET on Amazon Prime/PRN/SiriusXM channel 90 Zane Smith Notes It’s a home game for the NASCAR Cup Series this Memorial Day […]

Zane Smith and the No. 38 Benebone Ford Team
Charlotte Motor Speedway Competition Notes
Coca-Cola 600
Date: Sunday May 25, 2025
Event: Race 15 of 38
Series: NASCAR Cup Series
Location: Charlotte Motor Speedway (1.5-miles)
#of Laps: 400
Time/TV/Radio: 6:00 PM ET on Amazon Prime/PRN/SiriusXM channel 90
Zane Smith Notes
It’s a home game for the NASCAR Cup Series this Memorial Day weekend as Zane Smith and the No. 38 Ford team head to the Charlotte Motor Speedway. This will be Smith’s third Coca-Cola 600 start at the 1.5-mile Concord, North Carolina speedway and has a career best finish of 10th, earning the finish in 2023 with Crew Chief Ryan Bergenty.
Benebone, a leading USA brand of durable dog toys, will join Smith for the 400-lap race in a new scheme featuring Smith’s dogs, Roxy and Kygo. “I’m excited to reignite my partnership with Benebone,” said Smith. “My dogs are a huge part of my life, so it’s great to have a partner who understands this special connection.” This weekend’s race marks the first of three primaries for Benebone on the No. 38 this season. For more information, visit benebone.com.
The No. 38 Benebone Ford will carry the name of Corporal Keaton G. Coffey. Coffey, a 22-year-old Marine from Boring, Oregon, was killed in action on May 24, 2012, during his second deployment in Afghanistan, just weeks before his scheduled return. He had been planning to marry his fiancée, Brittany Dygert, also from Boring, in July. A 2007 graduate of Damascus Christian School, Coffey briefly attended George Fox University before enlisting in the Marines. Deeply committed to his fellow service members, he had a tattoo honoring a close friend lost during his first tour. He served as a dog handler with his canine partner, Denny, who survived and continued serving until his passing earlier this year.
“This is a special weekend for NASCAR,” said Smith. “Honoring a fallen service member is really special to the team and I, so hopefully I can make their family proud. The 600 is one of the hardest races of the year, not just on your body, but your mind too. We have been showing up to the track with a lot of speed, so I’m confident that we can leave Charlotte with a strong result.”
Road Crew
Driver: Zane Smith
Hometown: Huntington Beach, California
Crew Chief: Ryan Bergenty
Hometown: Plainville, Connecticut
Car Chief: Will Norris
Hometown: Bells, Tennessee
Engineer: Jacob Clamme
Hometown: Hartford City, Indiana
Engineer: Chris Yerges
Hometown: Green Bay, Wisconsin
Mechanic: Steve Godfrey
Hometown: West Haven, Connecticut
Mechanic / Engine Tuner: Tyler Podlaski
Hometown: Cranberry Township, Pennsylvania
Interior Specialist: Matt Fowler
Hometown: Spartanburg, South Carolina
Spotter: Ryan Blanchard
Hometown: Bethlehem, Connecticut
Transport Co-Driver: Ernest Mullins
Hometown: Fayetteville, North Carolina
Transport Co-Driver: Rick Grissom
Hometown: Bakersfield, California
Pit Crew
Front Tire Changer: Ryan Flores
Hometown: Manasquan, New Jersey
Rear Tire Changer: Austin Chrismon
Hometown: China Grove, North Carolina
Tire Carrier: Drew Baum
Hometown: Williamsport, Pennsylvania
Jackman: Ryan Selig
Hometown: Lindenhurst, Illinois
Fueler: Chris Webb
Hometown: Concord, North Carolina
ABOUT BENEBONE
At Benebone, we know that dogs make us better people. They help us live healthier and happier lives. Our simple mission is to make life a little bit better for dogs and their humans. We do it through a commitment to quality, community, and giving back. For more information, visit benebone.com.
ABOUT FRONT ROW MOTORSPORTS
Front Row Motorsports (FRM) is a winning organization in the NASCAR Cup and Craftsman Truck Series. The team is the 2021 Daytona 500 and 2022 Craftsman Truck Series champions. The team was founded in 2004 and is owned by successful entrepreneur, Bob Jenkins. FRM fields the No. 4, No. 34, and the No. 38 NASCAR Cup Series teams along with the No. 34 and No. 38 Craftsman Truck Series teams from its Mooresville, N.C. headquarters. Visit teamfrm.com and follow FRM on social media: Twitter at @Team_FRM, Instagram at @teamfrm and Facebook at facebook.com/FrontRowMotorsports.
Motorsports
When and how to watch F1, NASCAR, Indy 500, MotoGP this weekend
Clear all of your weekend plans! One of the biggest weekends in motorsports is upon us as the Formula 1 Monaco Grand Prix, Indy 500, British MotoGP, and NASCAR Coca-Cola 600 are set to kick off as early as tomorrow. Here is everything you need to know to catch all of the on-track action live. […]

Clear all of your weekend plans! One of the biggest weekends in motorsports is upon us as the Formula 1 Monaco Grand Prix, Indy 500, British MotoGP, and NASCAR Coca-Cola 600 are set to kick off as early as tomorrow.
Here is everything you need to know to catch all of the on-track action live.
F1 Monaco Grand Prix

Pierre Gasly, Alpine A524
Photo by: Mark Sutton / Motorsport Images
Formula 1 descends upon the streets of Monte Carlo for the glamorous Monaco Grand Prix. As home hero Charles Leclerc looks to defend his first home victory from 2024, McLaren drivers Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris head into the weekend on the back of a strong start to the 2025 season.
While the race can be followed live via the normal platforms (details below), fans can also head to our special Motorsport Race Center Live show for an interactive watchalong. This weekend, the race hosts will be Red Flags Podcast’s Brian Muller and Matt Elisofon, and Kireth Kalirai will be hosting the qualifying live show.
On top of watching all of the on-track action, the live show comes with the opportunity to chat with other fans and win prizes.
When to watch the 2025 Monaco Grand Prix
Friday, 23 May
Practice 1 – Local time: 13:30 – 14:30
Practice 2 – Local time: 17:00 – 18:00
Saturday, 24 May
Practice 3 – Local time: 12:30 – 13:30
Qualifying – Local time: 16:00 – 17:00
Sunday, 25 May
Grand Prix – Local time: 15:00
How to watch the 2025 Monaco Grand Prix
Fans watching the 2025 Monaco Grand Prix from the UK can watch via Sky Sports F1 or streaming services such as NowTV. United States viewers can watch through ESPN as well as fuboTV and F1 TV.
Additionally, you can watch along on Motorsport.com with our special Race Center Live show.
For a full list of F1 broadcasts for each country, visit here.
For a guide on what you need to know ahead of the 2025 Monaco Grand Prix, click here.
Indianapolis 500

All Indy 500 starters
Photo by: Justin Casterline / Getty Images
The Indy 500 returns for the 109th running of the prestigious event, dubbed “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing.” Rookie Robert Schwartzman will line up in pole position on Sunday, with Takuma Sato and Pato O’Ward joining him on the front row.
Team Penske has been flooding the headlines this week as Josef Newgarden and Will Power were relegated to the rear of the grid after IndyCar found their cars to have made technical violations.
When to watch the 2025 Indy 500
Friday, 23 May
Practice – Local time: 11:00 – 13:00
Pit Stop Challenge – Local time: 14:30 – 16:00
Sunday, 25 May
109th Running of the Indianapolis 500 – Local time: 12:45
How to watch the 2025 Indy 500
For fans watching in the United States, the 2025 Indy 500 will be broadcast on FOX Sports. For those watching in Canada, it will be available on TSN, and in the UK, it will be shown on Sky Sports.
For a full list of Indy 500 broadcasters for each country, visit here.
For a guide on the full starting lineup for the 109th Indy 500, click here.
NASCAR Cup Series Coca-Cola 600
NASCAR’s longest race is fast-approaching with the Cup Series Coca-Cola 600 set for Sunday. Taking place at Charlotte Motor Speedway, the drivers will take to the track tomorrow for the Craftsman Truck Series, with the Xfinity and Cup Series action will kick off on Saturday, 24 May.
Hendrick Motorsports driver Kyle Larson is attempting the famous ‘Double,’ which will see him take part in the Indy 500 before hopefully making his way to Charlotte in time for the Coca-Cola 600.
When to watch the NASCAR Truck, Xfinity, and Cup Series at Charlotte Motor Speedway
Friday, 23 May
Craftsman Truck Series Practice – Local time: 15:35
Craftsman Truck Series Qualifying – Local time: 16:40
Craftsman Truck Series North Carolina Education Lottery 200 – Local time: 20:30
Saturday, 24 May
Xfinity Series Practice – Local time: 11:05
Xfinity Series Qualifying – Local time: 12:10
Cup Series Practice – Local time: 13:30
Cup Series Qualifying – Local time: 14:40
Xfinity Series BetMGM 300 – Local time: 16:30
Sunday, 25 May
Cup Series Coca-Cola 600 – Local time: 18:00
How to watch the NASCAR Truck, Xfinity, and Cup Series at Charlotte Motor Speedway
Craftsman Truck Series
Both practice and qualifying for the Craftsman Truck Series at Charlotte Motor Speedway are set to be broadcast on FS2. The race, the North Carolina Education Lottery 200, can be followed live on FS1, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, and MRN.
Xfinity Series
Practice and qualifying for the Xfinity Series at Charlotte Motor Speedway will be broadcast on CW and APP. The race, the BetMGM 300, will be live on CW, PRN, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.
Cup Series
Both practice and qualifying for the Cup Series Coca-Cola 600 will be shown live on Prime. The race on Sunday can be followed live on Prime, Max, PRN, and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.
For the full entry list for the NASCAR Cup Series Coca-Cola 600, visit here.
British MotoGP

Track detail
Photo by: Gold and Goose Photography / LAT Images / via Getty Images
Silverstone, also host of the Formula 1 British Grand Prix, has 75 years of history as one of the fastest tracks on the MotoGP calendar, and has become one of the most prestigious venues in motorsport.
Marc Marquez heads into the race weekend leading the MotoGP riders’ championship with 171 points. His brother, Alex Marquez, is close behind with 149 points, followed by Francesco Bagnaia in third with 120 points.
When to watch the Tissot Grand Prix of the United Kingdom
Friday, 23 May
Moto3 Free Practice Nr. 1 – Local time: 10:10:35
Moto2 Free Practice Nr. 1 – Local time: 10:50 – 11:30
MotoGP Free Practice Nr. 1 – Local time: 11:45 – 12:30
Moto3 Practice – Local time: 14:15 – 14:50
Moto2 Practice – Local time: 15:05 – 15:45
MotoGP Practice – Local time: 16:00 – 17:00
Saturday, 24 May
Moto3 Free Practice Nr. 2 – Local time: 09:40 – 10:10
Moto2 Free Practice Nr. 2 – Local time: 10:35 – 10:55
MotoGP Free Practice Nr. 2 – Local time: 11:10 – 11:40
MotoGP Qualifying Nr. 1 – Local time: 11:50 – 12:05
MotoGP Qualifying Nr. 2 – Local time: 12:15 – 12:30
Moto3 Qualifying Nr. 1 – Local time:13:50 – 14:05
Moto3 Qualifying Nr. 2 – Local time: 14:15 – 14:30
Moto2 Qualifying Nr. 1 – Local time: 14:45 – 15:00
Moto2 Qualifying Nr. 2 – Local time: 15:10 – 15:25
MotoGP Tissot Sprint (10 laps) – Local time: 16:00
Sunday, 25 May
MotoGP Warm Up – Local time: 09:40 – 09:50
Moto2 Race (17 laps) – Local time: 11:15
MotoGP Grand Prix (20 laps) – Local time: 13:00
Moto3 Race (15 laps) – Local time: 14:30
How to watch the British MotoGP
For fans based in the UK, the British MotoGP is set to be broadcast on TNT Sports and ITV. For those watching from the United States, the racing will be broadcast on FS1 and FS2.
For a full list of broadcasters, click here.
In this article
Lydia Mee
Formula 1
IndyCar
MotoGP
NASCAR
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Motorsports
Cool Throwback, Weird Timing
NASCAR sponsorships can typically be separated into two categories. One is your normal brand or product wanting to promote itself to an audience (or a business-to-business deal with a team). The other is a sponsorship that’s promoting an event or a piece of media, like the decade’s worth of movie sponsorships that have come and […]

NASCAR sponsorships can typically be separated into two categories.
One is your normal brand or product wanting to promote itself to an audience (or a business-to-business deal with a team).
The other is a sponsorship that’s promoting an event or a piece of media, like the decade’s worth of movie sponsorships that have come and gone in NASCAR.
May 22 brought news of a very cool, yet weirdly specific third type of sponsor activation. It combines the branding promotion with the event promotion.
However, when the related paint scheme finally hits the track, one thing will be … off. In what has to be a first, the event being promoted will have already happened.
Of course, I’m talking about JR Motorsports’ unveiling of the throwback paint scheme Dale Earnhardt Jr. will drive in a zMAX CARS Tour event at Anderson Motor Speedway on Aug. 16.
Twenty-four years later, Earnhardt will once again pilot one of his most iconic NASCAR Cup Series paint schemes. JRM has teamed up with Budweiser and Major League Baseball to re-create his paint scheme from the 2001 Pepsi 400 at Daytona International Speedway.
That’s when Earnhardt won the first Cup race held at Daytona after Dale Earnhardt Sr. was killed on the last lap of the Daytona 500.
Earnhardt Jr.’s car that night was a promotion for that summer’s MLB All-Star Game.
So what’s the 2025 remix promoting?
The first-ever MLB game to be played at Bristol Motor Speedway.
Years after a college football game between the Tennessee Volunteers and Virginia Tech Hokies was played in the track’s infield, baseball fans will get to watch the Atlanta Braves and Cincinnati Reds take their turn … on Aug. 2.
Yes, when Earnhardt pilots his throwback scheme at Anderson, the event emblazoned on the No. 8 — the MLB Speedway Classic — will be two weeks old.
Timing is everything! But let’s not kid ourselves. None of the brands involved probably care when the All-Star throwback is on the track.
The real promotion is going on right now.
More people — 219,000 as of this writing — saw Earnhardt’s tweet announcing the scheme than can fit into Anderson (about 5,000).
North of 787,000 users have seen MLB’s own tweet about the scheme (and the game itself.
I’m willing to bet more people saw those two tweets than will actually watch the CARS race online come Aug. 16.
Simply announcing the paint scheme’s existence — and all the sweet merch you can, and will, buy related to it — lit up the Internet today. The work’s been done.
(The red Budweiser shirt is my favorite. But $45? For a T-shirt? Yikes).
Also, in what can only be an example of Earnhardt synergy, this sponsor partnership was announced the same day the first two episodes of Amazon Prime’s Dale Earnhardt docuseries premiered.
And the same day a really good longform story on Earnhardt Jr. and his relationship with his father by the Washington Post was published.
Sure, it’s the week of the Indianapolis 500 and the Coca-Cola 600 (and some race in Monaco).
But it’s also Earnhardt week. Enjoy it while it lasts. We probably won’t get a week like this again.
Daniel McFadin is a 10-year veteran of the NASCAR media corp. He wrote for NBC Sports from 2015 to October 2020. He currently works full time for the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette and is lead reporter and an editor for Frontstretch. He is also host of the NASCAR podcast “Dropping the Hammer with Daniel McFadin” presented by Democrat-Gazette.
You can email him at danielmcfadin@gmail.com.
Motorsports
Indianapolis Motor Speedway Museum reveals plans for restoration facility – Indianapolis News | Indiana Weather | Indiana Traffic
SPEEDWAY, Ind. (WISH) — The Indianapolis Motor Speedway Museum on Thursday night shared plans for a new Restoration and Event Facility in the town of Speedway, with construction to start in the summer. The cost is estimated around $18 million. This project is fully funded by the museum; more than half have already been raised […]

SPEEDWAY, Ind. (WISH) — The Indianapolis Motor Speedway Museum on Thursday night shared plans for a new Restoration and Event Facility in the town of Speedway, with construction to start in the summer.
The cost is estimated around $18 million. This project is fully funded by the museum; more than half have already been raised from donor support.
The facility should be completed sometime in late 2026 at 1111 Polco St., now a vacant lot in an industrial area near West 10th Street.
The space will be used to restore and exhibit the museum’s vehicle collection not on display at the museum, and to provide a site for meetings and events. It’ll include six restoration bays, two detailing bays, dedicated space for vehicle storage, rotating exhibits, and public tours. The facility was designed to support the museum’s new education program, offering classes for students interested in automotive engineering and restoration. The museum plans to expand its workforce as part of the efforts.
Jason Vansickle, vice president of curation and education, said in a statement in the release, “With the growth of our restoration program, we need to increase our workspace and storage facility to allow for the constant preservation of vehicles.”
This story has been updated with the cost of the project.
Motorsports
NAPA NAMED TITLE SPONSOR OF NHRA MIDWEST NATIONALS AT WORLD WIDE TECHNOLOGY RACEWAY
By Official Release via SpeedwayMedia.com, 5h ago NHRA Featured Share Facebook Twitter ReddIt Email Print NAPA NAMED TITLE SPONSOR OF NHRA MIDWEST NATIONALS AT WORLD WIDE TECHNOLOGY RACEWAY By Official Release May 22, 2025 6 Minute Read Facebook Twitter Instagram Youtube NASCAR PhotosNASCAR Photos ST. LOUIS (May 22, 2025) – World Wide Technology Raceway and […]

NHRA Featured Share Facebook Twitter ReddIt Email Print NAPA NAMED TITLE SPONSOR OF NHRA MIDWEST NATIONALS AT WORLD WIDE TECHNOLOGY RACEWAY By Official Release May 22, 2025 6 Minute Read Facebook Twitter Instagram Youtube NASCAR PhotosNASCAR Photos ST. LOUIS (May 22, 2025) – World Wide Technology Raceway and NHRA officials announced today that NAPA has been named the title sponsor of the NHRA Mission Foods Drag Racing Series’ annual race in St. Louis as part of an exciting new multi-year agreement. The 14th annual NAPA Auto Parts NHRA Midwest Nationals will take place Sept. 26-28, serving as the third of…
Read more at SpeedwayMedia.com
Motorsports
From Winner to Champion, Part 2: Championship material
Editor’s note: This is the second installment in a seven-part series celebrating the 30th anniversary of Jeff Gordon’s first NASCAR Cup Series championship and the first for Hendrick Motorsports in 1995. Join us each Thursday as we relive all the moments and talk to many of the players involved in one of the organization’s and the sport’s […]

Editor’s note: This is the second installment in a seven-part series celebrating the 30th anniversary of Jeff Gordon’s first NASCAR Cup Series championship and the first for Hendrick Motorsports in 1995. Join us each Thursday as we relive all the moments and talk to many of the players involved in one of the organization’s and the sport’s most unforgettable and important seasons.
For Jon.
CONCORD, N.C. – From the outside looking in, Jeff Gordon’s meteoric rise from fresh-faced, hot-shot rookie to world-wide racing phenomenon may have seemed like an overnight success story.
Sure, in becoming a NASCAR Cup Series champion at the ripe-old age of 24, perhaps Gordon and the No. 24 team were a bit ahead of schedule in 1995.
After all Gordon and crew chief Ray Evernham, with their open-wheel background, lack of age and experience and unconventional methods and strategies were perceived by the NASCAR garage establishment as outsiders.
In any sport, certain seasons are bound to stand out as tentpole moments. The NFL certainly has had them; for instance the 1966 season, which ended in the first Super Bowl. Or 2001, which ended in Tom Brady’s first championship. The NBA will forever have 1979-1980, the rookie seasons for Larry Bird and Magic Johnson.
Gordon’s largely unforeseen and rapid ascension to the pinnacle of racing in 1995 certainly included that same kind of historic gravitas complete with a star-making turn from an exciting, young newcomer. But combined with a confluence of other factors – the birth of the Gordon/Dale Earnhardt rivalry, an explosion of popularity in the sport and the arrival of a new, game-changing race car – the year served as a permanent and landmark changing of the guard that lifted Gordon, Earnhardt and NASCAR into the upper reaches of the cultural zeitgeist forever.
RELATED: From Winner to Champion, Part 1: ‘One Hot Night’
Yet, every rocket ship needs a launching pad. And long before the 24 team’s formative years in 1993 and 1994, seasons in which the team steadily built chemistry and momentum toward what would become one of the most dominant and defining eras in American motorsport, the foundation was being laid under the careful leadership and sculpting hands of Rick Hendrick.

By 1995, Hendrick’s venture into stock car racing was an American success story in and of itself, chocked full of storybook moments and driven by the same sort of competitive obsession and outside-the-box approach that would define the 24 team in the coming seasons. Scattered throughout Hendrick Motorsports’ first decade-plus of operation were wins in all of NASCAR’s major events – the Daytona 500, the Southern 500, the Coca-Cola 600 and the inaugural Brickyard 400, won by Gordon in 1994.
Thirty-eight victories in all and yet, somehow, a Cup Series championship had continued to elude Hendrick. There were close calls: Ricky Rudd finished second in 1991 points, Tim Richmond was third in 1986 while Darrell Waltrip won six races in 1989 and finished fourth. Even the year prior in 1994, Ken Schrader came home fourth. All told, 21 times in the company’s first 11 seasons, a Hendrick Motorsports driver had finished in the top 10 overall.
“… a championship is different. It’s the ultimate team accomplishment. I wanted it for our people. For everyone who worked day and night, for the teammates who missed time with their families, for everyone who believed in what we were building.”
Rick Hendrick
Certainly, by the midway point of the 1990s, there was a sense of urgency within the organization to check the last box. But none who were around in those days who spoke to HendrickMotorsports.com for this series recalled any rah-rah speeches or demands from the team’s leader. It’s not Hendrick’s style.
But Hendrick wanted that title. And everyone knew it.
“I knew they had been close. I don’t really remember having that conversation with Rick though, he has a unique way, especially back then, to motivate you,” Gordon told HendrickMotorsports.com. “He’d even come on the radio and say, ‘If you win this, you might have a boat show up at your house or a car show up in your garage.’ We didn’t need that, but it was more of, you knew how much it meant to him. But I think he was feeling the pressure too. I think we all were. And he wanted to get that championship badly.
“But you’ve got to remember, the first two years I was pretty aggressive,” he added with a laugh. “So, I don’t think he wanted to push me too hard. We needed to finish some races.”
RELATED: Hendrick Motorsports Fan Fest schedule, details

Now, three decades later, Hendrick admitted that his desire to win a title was indeed intensifying by the season. But maybe not for the reasons one would think.
“We’d been fortunate to win a lot of big races by then – the DAYTONA 500, the Coca-Cola 600, the Brickyard – but a championship is different,” Hendrick told HendrickMotorsports.com. “It’s the ultimate team accomplishment. I wanted it for our people. For everyone who worked day and night, for the teammates who missed time with their families, for everyone who believed in what we were building. I knew we had the people to do it. I just wanted to see them get the reward.”
As the decade turned from the 1980s to the 1990s, Hendrick upped the ante in that pursuit.
Retool and refocus
Even arriving late in 1992, Evernham quickly observed the doubling down on car building and performance had already begun.
“When we talk about ’95, you have to go all the way back to the changes in ’93 and ’94 that Mr. Hendrick was making within the company,” Evernham recalled. “It was really changing then development wise. We were bringing in engineering, changing the way the cars were built, and we’d really strengthened the engine department and the car department.”
One of the initial stepping stones was the team’s first chassis, ‘Dusty’, which was run at Talladega Superspeedway in 1990 with Greg Sacks finishing second. Two months later, he took the pole at Daytona International Speedway, which sparked confidence and intensified the desire to become an all-in-house race team.

RELATED: Rick Hendrick presented with his first chassis, ‘Dusty’
As Larry Zentmeyer, current Hendrick Motorsports CNC shop manager remembers, a little movie magic aided in further pushing those efforts.
Hendrick Motorsports provided cars and stunt drivers in addition to serving as a source of inspiration for the film, “Days of Thunder,” filmed early in 1990. While the movie certainly put the sport in front of bigger audiences, Zentmeyer, who was hired in 1987, said it also served as a turning point for the company.
“We started building our own cars right after ‘Days of Thunder’ and I think we started honing in on what we were doing there,” Zentmeyer recalled. “During that era is when we started building our own cars from scratch. There was a learning curve there and once we got our feet on the ground with building a proper chassis, then it started rolling.”
Jeff Andrews, who is now the president and general manager of Hendrick Motorsports, came aboard late in 1991 to work in the engine department under lead engine builder, Randy Dorton. He too recalled a ramping up of efforts around the organization in the years leading up to ’95.
“I do remember Mr. Hendrick’s emphasis on wanting to get resources pulled together and get everybody pulling in a common direction,” Andrews said. “And for sure, spending some money on chassis and development and aero-development and bringing some key people in here and that really started with the construction of building our own chassis. Also bringing in some lead General Motors aerodynamicists to try and understand the aero side of the vehicle. We were getting a lot of funding from General Motors on the engine side to advance engine development. It was definitely a time of transition, and it went in phases. It took us a lot of time and a lot of work and certainly, a lot of Mr. Hendrick’s money, to get it to where it is today, under one roof and four race teams pulling together.”
For Andrews, Zentmeyer and the rest of the engine shop, the early part of the 1990s was a time of rapid technological advances coupled with enough leeway within the NASCAR rulebook to allow for ingenuity and experimentation.
Zentmeyer, in particular, recalled a few, ‘a-ha’ moments born from primitive practices, all aiding in speed and durability for the years to come.
“I know we were having problems breaking the front of the snouts off of the crankshafts in the early 90s and Randy Dorton came up with a way to address that situation,” Zentmeyer explained. “Him and Sonny Bryant (owner of Bryant Racing, an outfit that specialized in custom crankshafts) basically ended up putting a big block snout on a small block crank and got creative with some fasteners and we put a stop to that.
“The snout on the front of a crank on a small-block Chevy was relatively small. We were snapping those things off and Randy came up with a way to take this real long -basically a stud more than a bolt – and we would set the cranks up in a Bridgeport and we’re hanging the crank off the side and it’s below the table. We’ve got the head all turned around and we’re drilling the front of that snout and drilling it deeper to where you’re actually getting into the meat of where the number one main (bearing) is and putting the threads there with this long stud fastener. So, you end up putting the snout in compression because you’re actually squeezing all that together.
“This is early 90s technology. We used to take a rod and slide it through the oil hole of the crank and then bring our drill down and touch off of that and then back up, however much it was, and that was how we knew how far to drill down. And you’re doing all this by hand and you’re like, ‘Oh my God, if I break into this oil galley, this crank is scrap.’ We did that for a while.”
Coopetition and the growing pains of team racing
It’s said that iron sharpens iron.
At Hendrick Motorsports in the early 1990s, the same could be said about steel and fiberglass.
The landscape of team racing that encompasses the sport today – an organization’s cars sharing a garage, crew chiefs exchanging information, free accessibility of SMT data, etc. – was a far cry from the temperature of the shops back then.
Andrews, an engine builder for the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports team in 1995, has seen and had a hand in the growth of collaboration that has helped sustain the company as the years have gone by. However, in the mid 90s, in-house rivalries were only heightened by the pursuit of a long-awaited first championship and the battle lines were clearly drawn.
“There was no doubt, that 24 group, led by Ray, was emerging as kind of the top team on campus and that lit a fire in a lot of other teams around here, specifically the one I was associated with,” Andrews said. “We wanted to beat those guys, really bad. (5 team crew chief) Gary (DeHart) would push very hard.
“It was a bit of a closed-door thing where each of us individually were trying to make more power and bring different things to the table and spending way too much money doing it. It was incredibly inefficient, looking back at it now, but it was a good competition.”

And it was a competition that involved three teams, three crews and three drivers.
Schrader, who by the start of 1995 was the clear elder statesman of the group entering his seventh year with the company, recalled conversations with Hendrick and hearing his grand vision of how a multi-car operation should function.
“I know Rick was looking ahead more than other teams and looking at all the different avenues with the engineers and stuff,” Schrader said. “There were a lot of crew chiefs and drivers that didn’t buy into the team concept as far as sharing. He was explaining it to me, how the dealerships worked and stuff and I said, ‘This seems like a no-brainer to me.’ Just the way everything worked as far as thinking big team and not just your car.”
While Schrader was rooted in place with the 25 team and Gordon and Evernham went full time with the 24 in 1993, it was time for a change in the No. 5 the following year. After his championship near-miss in ’91, Rudd followed with a seventh-place finish in 1992 and after a 10th-place showing in 1993. He chose to leave the organization to build his own race team.

With that news beginning to trickle out by May of 1993, Hendrick began the search for a replacement. Terry Labonte, meanwhile, just happened to be looking for a new opportunity with his second stint at Hagan Racing coming to a close.
The 1984 Cup Series champion, Labonte brought experience and his title-winning pedigree to Hendrick Motorsports’ campus for a visit in the fall of ’93. But it was what the organization presented to him that had Labonte excited.
“A couple of the guys that worked at Hagan knew I was going to go do something different and I told them, ‘You all have no idea how good we’re doing with what we have to work with. There’s a whole other world out there,’” Labonte laughed. “We weren’t even close to what we were racing against. I knew when I went there and toured the facility with Gary DeHart and Randy Dorton and then Mr. Hendrick joined us about halfway through, I said (Hendrick Motorsports) had everything to win a championship, without a doubt. There was no question in my mind. They had all the pieces in place, and it was just a matter of time before they had it put together.”
RELATED: Relive Terry Labonte’s final victory at Darlington Raceway in 2003
Entering his 17th year in the sport, Labonte had accomplished many things in his career already. But one thing he hadn’t experienced was driving for a multi-car operation.
Echoing Andrews and Schrader, Labonte also recalled some rough patches in the early days of team coopetition.
“You would not believe all the people that said, ‘Man, I don’t know if that’s a good idea,’” Labonte said. “Everybody said, ‘You’re going to get the third car, all the leftover stuff.’ I just said, ‘Well, it’s better than what I’ve got right now.’
“There were times it wasn’t that great. I can remember DeHart asking me one day, ‘Hey, have you talked to Ray Evernham lately?’ I said, ‘Yeah, I spoke to him last week at the track,’ and he said, ‘I haven’t talked to him in three months.’ Those guys competed against each other. There were some challenges with that team deal and it took a while to get everybody to buy in.”

Whatever the challenges and in spite of the warnings, Labonte found success almost immediately at Hendrick Motorsports.
Prior to his first season with the team, Labonte hadn’t won a Cup Series race since taking the checkered flag at Talladega Superspeedway in 1989, carrying a winless skid of 129 races into the 1994 season. In just his seventh race behind the wheel of the No. 5, that streak came to an end. The team would win three events that season, finishing seventh in points, one spot ahead of Gordon.
RELATED: Terry Labonte becomes NASCAR’s, ‘Iron Man’ in 1996
Suddenly, in new equipment with a fresh outlook, Labonte was rediscovering his championship form. Gordon had certainly taken a step forward in 1994, winning his first two races, but Andrews said the prevailing thought was that if Rick Hendrick was to break through in 1995, it would likely be with Labonte in the cockpit.
“Mr. Hendrick put Terry Labonte in that 5 car and there was quick success and multiple wins and it was thought and felt that it was probably our lead car for a potential championship,” Andrews said. “It was a tremendous quest to be that team that brought the championship to Mr. Hendrick first. I don’t think any of us on this campus expected that to be the 24 team.”
The most productive blind date in racing history
In the fall of 1990, not long after “Days of Thunder” wrapped, in a hotel lobby in Charlotte, the most productive professional blind date in auto sports history was taking place. Unbeknownst to Hendrick, the two central characters in what would become his championship fairy tale were getting acquainted.
That’s where Evernham first connected with Gordon. It was an introduction set up by Andy Petree, who would go on to play a pivotal role in 1995 as well, serving as the crew chief for Earnhardt.
At the time, Petree was atop the box for Harry Gant and the No. 33 Leo Jackson Motorsports Oldsmobile. As Petree tells it, he was approached by Jackson and tasked with putting together a Busch Series operation for his son-in-law, Hugh Connerty, who had a certain young driver in mind.
“He came back from a weekend off and said, ‘Hey, I’ve got a problem. My son-in-law bought a car that he wants to run in the Busch Series, and he’s got this kid he wants to run in it. He bought this car, and we’ve got to run it for him,’” Petree recalled in an interview with HendrickMotorsports.com. “We had a small team anyway and we were trying to run for a championship with Harry, so I said, ‘Look, we don’t have the bandwidth for that.’ He said, ‘Well, we’ve got to figure it out.’”
Like many in the racing scene, Petree was already aware of Gordon, due largely to his exploits on “Thursday Night Thunder”, a now-defunct ESPN series showcasing United States Auto Club dirt and pavement midget and sprint car events from around the country.
So Petree turned to friends Phil and Steve Barkdoll for help in preparing the car. As far as someone to call the shots atop the pit box, Petree thought of Evernham, who he’d formed a friendship with after working together in the IROC series.

Evernham recalled his first encounter with Gordon in his book, “Trophies and Scars”, claiming Gordon’s mother, Carol, accompanied the young driver as he was too young to rent a car. But regardless of Gordon’s youth, Evernham said the connection betwixt the two was apparent from the start.
The memory that most sticks out to Gordon, wasn’t necessarily that first impression, but a now-legendary test session shortly thereafter at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Working with Evernham his first time in a stock car, Gordon displayed his raw talent from the start, clocking faster lap times than reigning Busch Series champion, Chuck Bown.
It was the rapport with Evernham that day and the instant feeling that the pieces were falling into place that now resonate with Gordon.
RELATED: Relive Jeff Gordon’s first Cup Series win in the ’94 Coca-Cola 600
“Just instantly, it was, ‘Oh man, this guy is on it. He’s sharp. He’s listening to me. He’s got confidence in me and I have instant confidence in him,'” Gordon said.
Gordon failed to qualify in his first Busch Series attempt at Charlotte Motor Speedway. In his second try, he put his No. 67 Pontiac sponsored by Outback Steakhouse on the outside of the front row before a crash relegated him to a 39th-place finish.
The following year in 1991, Gordon was nabbed by Bill Davis Racing for a full-time Busch Series campaign. Davis had gotten his start just a few years prior, building cars for Mark Martin, a friend from Arkansas who had signed in 1988 to run in the Cup Series for Jack Roush.
At Martin’s insistence, Davis relocated to the Charlotte area and spent the 1988 and 1989 seasons backing his Busch efforts. In 1991, Martin would run just one race in the Busch Series, at North Carolina’s Hickory Motor Speedway. But his garage shared a space with a young driver-crew chief combination, one that made an immediate impression on him.

“My Busch car was in the same shop as (Gordon’s). Him and Ray Evernham were eyeballing the hell out of my race car and asking a lot of questions,” Martin told HendrickMotorsports.com with a laugh. “They were good learners and good racers. They saw what I was doing to my car and took it further. I respected that. That’s what racers do.”
Gordon expressed how integral a role Martin played in his career in his formative days, weeks and months as a stock car driver.
“I tapped into Mark on a regular basis,” Gordon concurred. “The very first time I’d heard of that car and team was watching him dominate a (Busch Series) race at Dover before I ever got the call. And then I get that call from Ford and it’s like, ‘It would be this car,’ and I’m like, ‘Oh, I know that car. I just saw Mark Martin dominate in that car.’”
“So, because of that relationship and interaction and getting to meet Mark in that way, I just became a big admirer of his, but I also picked his brain as much as I possibly could because I knew how good he was. He knew a lot more than I knew and I didn’t know anything about stock car racing at that time. So, I needed somebody to gather information from and there was nobody better I could’ve gotten that from than Mark.”

Gordon would score the first NASCAR win of his career the following season at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Martin, who is still the second-winningest driver in the history of the Busch Series (now Xfinity Series) with 49, finished eighth in that race, driving for Roush.
By then, Martin had long known what everyone else was only beginning to discover.
“They had speed from day one,” Martin said of Gordon and Evernham. “It was never a question of, ‘If?’ It was a question of, ‘How long was it going to take?’
“We knew the potential was there. It was just a matter of time.”
And Petree knew it too. So much in fact, he went to Jackson with a proposal for a succession plan for Gant, who would turn 52 after the 1992 season.
“I knew Harry was getting older and I begged Leo to hire Jeff, and he was adamant that he hadn’t proven himself yet,” Petree said. “I said, ‘OK,’ but I felt like that was my shot to win a championship.”
Arriving at Hendrick Motorsports
Just how and why Gordon slipped through the fingers of Cup Series owners throughout the early 90s remains one of the mysterious and miraculous fortunes of Hendrick Motorsports.
But Hendrick has long had an eye for talent and the ability to maneuver pawns on the chessboard, pairing the right people at the right time to achieve success. And he’s never been afraid of taking a risk. Or being ahead of the curve.
The first time Rick Hendrick laid eyes on Gordon was as he took his car to victory lane that same fateful day in Atlanta.
And Hendrick wasted no time.

As Gordon told HendrickMotorsports.com’s RJ Craft in January of 2024:
“(Hendrick) was at Atlanta and I was running in the Busch Grand National Series for Bill Davis and driving a Ford. He just happened to be there on a Saturday, which was pretty rare for him. (He) was walking to a suite along the side of the track and saw smoke rolling off the right rear tire of the car I was driving.
“It made him stop, look and tell the people he was with, ‘Let’s see what’s going on here. He’s got a tire going down or he’s blowing up or something.’ I just kept going and I was still smoking the tire and he was like, ‘This driver is going to wreck. Who is this?’
“They said, ‘Oh, that’s Jeff Gordon. You might know him from Thursday Night Thunder. Let’s keep watching.’ I went on and won the race.
“The next day he happened to be on campus at Hendrick Motorsports and at that time (former general manager) Jimmy Johnson was who was running Hendrick Motorsports. He walks into this office and says, ‘… a shame, I think that Gordon kid has a deal with Ford.’ It just so happened, one of my roommates, Andy Graves, who was working in the R&D and engineering department, happened to be sitting in there at the time when Rick said this. Jimmy said, ‘This is Jeff’s roommate, maybe he can tell us what the deal is.’ Andy said, ‘I’ll find out, but I am pretty sure he doesn’t have a deal next year that locks him in with Ford.’
“Andy came home and he says, ‘Hey, you are not going to believe this. I was in Jimmy Johnson’s office and Rick Hendrick walked in and asked about you.’ I think the next day I was at Rick’s office and we were talking about, ‘How do we get you to Hendrick Motorsports?’ At that time, there wasn’t even a third team. It was a two-car operation with Ken Schrader and Ricky Rudd as the drivers. I want to say that was March or April in 1992 and by the end of that year, I was driving in my first race as a rookie and starting my (full-time career) in 1993 with Hendrick Motorsports. From that point, the rest is history.”

Gordon was just 21 years old when he made his first Cup Series start at Atlanta in the 1992 finale, which coincidentally was also the final race for Richard Petty.
And yet, the early returns on Hendrick’s investment weren’t exactly earth shattering, although plenty of race cars returned to the shop in pieces. In 30 races in 1993, Gordon fell victim to 11 DNFs and only registered 11 lead-lap finishes.
“Jeff bounced off of a few things,” Martin said. “He was setting it on fire but he hit a few things. But some guys never learned and you just knew he was going to get his arms around all of that.”
There were signs. Gordon led 230 laps as a rookie and showed improvement late, winning the pole at Charlotte in the fourth-to-last event of the year and later, leading 48 laps before bowing out in the season’s penultimate race at Phoenix Raceway. Ultimately, it added up to a 14th-place finish in the points standings.

The first true shots to the bough of the establishment, however, came in 1994. One of those, of course, was a breakthrough win in the Coca-Cola 600, a crown-jewel event in which a late two-tire pit call from Evernham gave the team the track position it needed.
But Gordon’s first win was a mere body blow compared to the second, a landmark victory at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in the inaugural Brickyard 400. Nearly everyone in the Hendrick Motorsports fold at the time now circle that triumph as the spark that would become the fire in 1995. And for several reasons.
First, the mere prestige of NASCAR’s maiden voyage to Indy cannot be understated. Estimates put the race day crowd around 300,000.
But second and more importantly, for the first time, Hendrick Motorsports’ young driver-crew chief combination went to a track on even footing in terms of experience and notes. And won.
RELATED: Read up on Jeff Gordon’s historic win in the inaugural Brickyard 400
“We were getting experience, learning to read race tracks, understanding racing and strategies and how the game was played and we won two big races,” Evernham said. “We proved when we went to Indianapolis if we could get on common ground with everybody and they didn’t have a 10-year-old notebook, we could win. That gave us a lot of confidence going into ’95.”
Labonte’s first impression of Hendrick Motorsports late in 1993 was correct: It was a sleeping giant, an organization on the verge of a title. And in retrospect, Gordon’s Brickyard beatdown was certainly a harbinger as to which driver and team that championship would come from.
And regardless of who realized it or not, most of the fragments had snapped into place.
But there was still one, vitally important piece of the puzzle missing.
It was developed throughout the fall and winter of 1994.
It would arrive in 1995.
It came in the form of the meticulously shaped, aerodynamically pioneering, Chevrolet Monte Carlo.
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