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Motorsports

Loyalty Defines Ford, Wood Brothers

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NASCAR’s roots may extend back to the days of bootleggers speeding away from law enforcement, but that effort from the pioneers of stock car racing unearthed a growing spirit of competition that sent ripple effects throughout the automobile industry, and thus, motorsports.

Healthy competition has long been an integral component of several aspects of advancements in society, from the economy, to brand promotion, to taste and luxury, and even who the fastest kid on the school playground is.

The unraveling stages of competitiveness spilled over into the automotive industry as manufacturing innovation began to blossom across the market. And as soon as gearheads began fancying what alterations they could make to squeeze in a little more horsepower in their “toys,” those auto companies took advantage through upstart series like NASCAR in the 1950s, seeking to outdo one another concerning car design.

That led to some of the most iconic rivalries in the American market, involving brands such as Chevrolet, Ford, Dodge, Plymouth, Oldsmobile and just about any American car maker you could name. While only some of those companies still exist today, the rivalry between Ford and Chevrolet has blazed on throughout the decades.

In the 1950s, drivers such as Curtis Turner, Joe Weatherly and Buck Baker were stars for Ford Motor Company, which has had a presence in the sport since its founding. Turner and Weatherly both approached the Dearborn, Mich.-based company to advocate for Ford to support Wood Brothers Racing in its racing operations.

Ford listened, and the two sides joined forces in the mid-’50s, leading to one of the most tight-knit partnerships in motorsports history, one that still stands today as the longest-running team-manufacturer relationship in the sport as the team celebrates its 75th anniversary in NASCAR.

“We’ve always been loyal [to Ford],” WBR co-founder Leonard Wood told Frontstretch. “That’s all we’ve ever run, is Ford products. Ford was out of racing there for a little while, and we got offers to go to another brand, but I never did want to, and we never did. I’ve always preferred the Ford brand. I’m not opposed to [other manufacturers], people can drive whatever they want. I have friends from all kinds of different model cars that people drive, but I prefer the Ford brand myself.”

That brief absence Wood alluded to references Ford’s dispute with NASCAR in 1966, leading to a boycott that spring and summer. The dispute circulated around Ford’s 427 SOHC engine, a response to Chrysler’s Hemi Cammer 427 that kept them afloat. NASCAR initially banned Ford’s engine, then allowed it with a weight requirement, leading to Ford’s brief departure.

How did the team navigate those uncharted waters? Through its exceptional quality that the group never ran short of: innovation.

“We built that little, red modified back there,” Wood said, pointing to a modified No. 21 that is on display at the team’s museum in Stuart, Va. “I took a ’66 Ford frame, laid it in the floor, narrowed it and shortened it to fit a ’37 Ford body on top of it. First of all, it had coil springs in the front and leaf springs in the back. The coil springs all the way around, but then I ended up putting leaf springs in the back and a straight axle in the front.”

The ingenious creation didn’t starve for speed either, as Wood recalls Donnie Allison holding off newly-inducted NASCAR Hall-of-Famer Ray Hendrick in a modified race, continuing its winning tradition.

The Wood Brothers’ loyalty to Ford, as well as that sustained partnership, circles back to the core of what has allowed the team to reach the pinnacle of success while maintaining a admirable level of respect throughout the garage: relationships.

“If I picked one single person and relationship that had nothing but positive implications, it would be the friendship that my dad [Eddie Wood] and Edsel Ford [II] have,” WBR co-owner and president Jon Wood said. “That one came about in total happenstance. They have a lot in common, they have a lot not in common. They came from two completely different backgrounds and worlds, but when they’re together, you’d never know it.”

“I think because of that, Edsel had a lot of positive influence in the direction of our team. Not only did he help us, but he helped with guidance as well and helping my dad make positive decisions that affected us more-so down the road than in the immediate. That one friendship probably, in the current era we’re in today, would be why we’re here today.”

Ford II, the great-grandson of the company’s founder, Henry Ford, has always considered the Wood Brothers family, and both sides have been interdependent on one another through thick and thin.

“They’ve been there in good times. They’ve been there in bad times,” Ford II said in an article by Autoweek. “They’re a part of the fabric of our company, especially when it comes to NASCAR. Since they are a part of the fabric of our company, I can’t imagine them not being there. They’re always around when we need them.”

Both sides can point to those periods where the other’s support was critical — “life-saving,” even. In addition to the 1966 drama, Ford briefly pulled out of NASCAR in 1971 due to a new corporate strategy to slash costs. By pulling factory support, they hoped to encourage more independent teams to run off Ford parts at a lower cost while being funded by sponsors. However, most companies didn’t have the leverage to foot what would be at least a $150,000 bill.

The consequences included the demise of two-time championship-winning powerhouse Holman-Moody Racing, a three-year hiatus for Junior Johnson (who returned in 1974 with Chevrolet) and the departure of WBR’s star driver, Cale Yarborough, who left for USAC. The Wood Brothers only entered 15 races that season. Yet the team remained loyal to the Blue Oval during that crisis.

In its early years, the Wood Brothers were called upon by Ford to test parts and set-ups, as well as find ways to save time in the pits, leading to the invention of the modern-day pit stop. The team’s pit choreography paved the way for them to be invited by Ford to pit Jim Clark‘s 1965 Indianapolis 500 car, a race Clark went on to win.

As the sport transitioned into the 21st century, it was Ford’s time to return the favor. After nearly two decades of sponsoring WBR, Citgo left the team following the 2000 season. To make matters worse, the team was enduring an eight-year winless drought and hadn’t finished in the top 10 in points since 1994.

That’s when Ford stepped up to the plate.

“We were in another one of those crisis points,” Jon Wood said. “We had lost our Citgo sponsorship and were left without anything, and I wasn’t old enough to know what was going on at that point in time, but we ended up with the Motorcraft deal in 2001.”

Motorcraft is a parts, accessory and fluid company that was launched by Ford in 1972. The brand signed on to support WBR and Elliott Sadler, leading to a turning point for the team.

“Elliott Sadler goes out there and wins Bristol [Motor Speedway], and that was our first win with them in our first season, and it’s just been good ever since,” Jon Wood said. “A lot of people come and go within that company, but most everyone that we’ve worked with has come to appreciate us not only as people, but someone to work with, in a professional sense, and we’re still chugging along.”

The partnership is one of the longest-running sponsor/team pairings among active organizations, and Motorcraft has become synonymous with the red-and-white scheme, accompanied by the gold No. 21, that has been solidified as one of the most iconic schemes in racing. The sponsor has ridden along for five of the team’s 101 wins, including the 2011 Daytona 500 upset with Trevor Bayne.

“The Wood Brothers aren’t just another race team to us; they’re family,” said Chris Wallace, the U.S. product category sales director of the Ford Customer Service Division. “Their history with Ford goes back more than 70 years, and they’ve been a huge part of our brand story in NASCAR. Since Motorcraft became their primary sponsor in 2001, we’ve built a relationship that’s about more than just logos on a car. It’s about shared passion, tradition, and a commitment to performance.”

Both the Wood Brothers and Ford/Motorcraft’s shared passion and vision for motorsports has fueled a partnership that is tighter than the strongest glue. And for the brand, that loyalty is what stands out above all qualities.

“It really comes down to trust, loyalty, and a shared love of racing,” Wallace said. “A lot has changed in NASCAR over the years. There are new rules, new technology, and new ways of doing things, but through it all, our relationship with the Wood Brothers has stayed rock solid. That’s pretty rare in this sport.

“What makes it work is that we’re in it for the right reasons. The Wood Brothers represent everything we love about racing—history, innovation, and the drive to win. We’ve given them the support they need, and they’ve continued to show up and compete at the highest level. It’s been a true partnership.”

Manufacturer loyalty among NASCAR’s fan base has been reserved to a shadow of what it was at the height of manufacturer wars. Much of that can be attributed to technology advancements in the auto industry, the auto economy, and the fact that the cars are only stock in name anymore.

Yet, the respect and bond between Ford and the Wood Brothers gives glimpses of that old-school rivalry and loyalty that once defined much of what transpired in the sport.

Just like the history of the team itself, it is a partnership that is as beautiful of a tale as old as time.


Entering his fifth year with Frontstretch, Luken Glover is the author of The Underdog House, shedding light on the motivation and performance of NASCAR’s dark horse teams as they strive to fight to the top. Additionally, Glover reports for the site at various events, and he contributes in the video editing department.

A 2023 graduate of the University of the Cumberlands, Glover is a middle school math and PE teacher, as well as a basketball coach. He is passionate about serving in his church, playing/coaching a wide variety of sports, and researching motorsports history.



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Motorsports

How a Truck Brand Is Rewriting the Path to NASCAR

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(TestMiles) – I’ve covered racing long enough to know that most people don’t actually understand how drivers get to NASCAR. The mythology says talent rises, sponsors appear, and everything works out. Reality is messier, quieter, and usually dictated by access. That’s why this caught my attention.

Ram isn’t just returning to NASCAR. It’s using entertainment as a scouting tool, a marketing platform, and a filter for something far harder to measure than lap times. Heart. Grit. Composure under pressure. Race For The Seat isn’t about discovering a driver who already made it. It’s about watching someone become one in real time.

That’s worth your time, even if you’ve never watched a full NASCAR Truck Series race.

Kaulig Racing Named Anchor Team for Ram’s Return to NASCAR

Why does this matter right now?

Motorsports is at an inflection point. Costs are high, sponsorships are concentrated, and traditional ladders are narrowing. At the same time, audiences are fragmenting. Younger fans don’t discover racing through Sunday broadcasts alone anymore. They find it through clips, personalities, behind-the-scenes access, and stories that feel human rather than institutional.

Ram understands this moment. Instead of simply fielding trucks and hoping fans notice, it’s turning the return to NASCAR into a narrative event. Race For The Seat makes the process visible. Fifteen drivers. One opportunity. Eight episodes. No illusion that the path is easy or fair.

This matters to fans because it restores context. Racing stops being abstract and starts looking like work again. It matters to aspiring drivers because it reframes access. And it matters to brands because it shows how motorsports relevance can be rebuilt without pretending it’s still 1997.

How does it compare to rivals or alternatives?

Other manufacturers return to racing quietly. Press releases, paint schemes, sponsor decks. All necessary. All familiar. What Ram is doing here is different.

Instead of talking about heritage alone, it’s manufacturing relevance through participation. Ford and Chevrolet dominate the Truck Series through continuity. Ram is re-entering by disruption. Not technical disruption on the track, but cultural disruption around it.

Reality competition isn’t new. Racing documentaries aren’t new. What’s unusual is tying an actual factory-backed seat to an open competition and broadcasting the process before the season even begins. This isn’t simulated. The outcome matters. Someone wins. Someone doesn’t.

That’s a sharper hook than most traditional motorsports marketing, and it acknowledges that modern audiences want to see the work, not just the trophy.

Kaulig Racing Named Anchor Team for Ram’s Return to NASCAR

Who is this for and who should skip it?

This series isn’t just for diehard NASCAR fans. It’s for people who like competition, pressure, and watching individuals tested in unfamiliar environments. If you enjoy sports documentaries, talent competitions, or behind-the-scenes business storytelling, this fits.

It’s also clearly for Ram’s core audience. Truck owners value toughness, endurance, and function over polish. Race For The Seat leans into that mindset. No glamour shots. No shortcuts. Just people being evaluated under stress.

Who should skip it? Anyone expecting scripted drama or manufactured conflict. This isn’t that. The tension comes from reality. From knowing that only one person walks away with a career-altering opportunity.

What is the long-term significance?

Zooming out, this signals a broader shift in how brands and motorsports may intersect going forward. Access, transparency, and storytelling are becoming as important as outright performance metrics. Not instead of them. Alongside them.

Ram’s return to NASCAR isn’t framed as nostalgia. It’s framed as relevance. By the time the winning driver lines up in Daytona in 2026, fans won’t just recognize the truck. They’ll recognize the person inside it.

That’s powerful. And it suggests a future where motorsports doesn’t just crown champions, but introduces them.



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Is NASCAR For Sale? Speculation and Implications

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In the high-octane world of stock car racing, where fortunes are made and lost at 200 mph, a bombshell rumor is revving up the engines of speculation: the France family, the iron-fisted stewards of NASCAR since its dusty beginnings in 1948, might finally be eyeing the exit ramp.

–by Mark Cipolloni–

Valued at a staggering $5 billion by Goldman Sachs back in 2023, the empire that Bill France Sr. built from beachside bootlegger races could be up for grabs—just weeks after a bruising legal defeat and settlement that exposed cracks in the family’s once-unassailable control.

The spark? A landmark antitrust lawsuit filed by Michael Jordan’s 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports, which accused NASCAR of monopolistic practices and unfair charter agreements. The case, settled in December 2025 for undisclosed terms, didn’t just cost the France family millions—it peeled back the curtain on internal frustrations, with leaked texts revealing NASCAR execs like Steve Phelps dismissing team demands as “insanity” and threatening to revoke charters. Adding fuel to the fire, Phelps announced his resignation as commissioner on January 6, 2026, leaving the sport’s leadership in limbo and fans howling for change.

Insiders whisper that the fallout has pushed the Frances—led by 81-year-old Jim France and his niece Lesa France Kennedy—to consider outside investors or even a full sale. Puck News reported on January 9 that media giants and private equity sharks are circling, with names like Liberty Media (owners of Formula 1), TKO (UFC and WWE), Ares, Arctos, and Sixth Street in the mix. This isn’t the first pit stop for sale rumors; back in 2018, the family flirted with Goldman Sachs on a potential deal but backed off. Now, with team valuations skyrocketing and revenues from a new $7.7 billion media deal on the horizon, the timing feels ripe—or desperate, depending on who you ask.

Picture this: It’s a crisp January morning in Daytona, the spiritual heart of NASCAR, where the ghosts of legends like Dale Earnhardt still echo in the grandstands. Jim France, the reclusive patriarch who’s rarely seen without his signature sunglasses, huddles with advisors in a sleek boardroom overlooking the tri-oval. The lawsuit’s sting lingers—teams like 23XI demanded equity stakes, and while the settlement included evergreen charters and revenue tweaks, it didn’t heal the divide. “The France family’s commitment to keeping NASCAR private is being tested after these turbulent months,” noted Sports Business Journal, highlighting fan backlash, declining attendance, and a sense that the sport’s golden era is fading.

On social media, the rumor mill is overheating. Fans and insiders alike are buzzing: “Merry Christmas to everyone who wanted the France family to sell,” quipped a Reddit thread, while X users like @DavidfromMd2 demanded, “When does the France Family announce the sale of NASCAR?” Even team owners are intrigued; Race Team Alliance’s Jonathan Marshall hinted during the lawsuit that squads might bid for equity, turning NASCAR into a more collaborative beast. But not everyone’s cheering—some fear a corporate takeover could dilute the sport’s gritty, American roots, with one X poster warning, “Screw Red Bull, at least these owners are American.”

Dig deeper, and the plot thickens. NASCAR’s CFO testified in court about $400 million in distributions to the France family from 2021-2024, mostly for taxes under their S-Corp setup. Critics call it “wetting their beak” like a mafia cut, with one fan labeling it “pure mafia right there.” And Jim France’s own salary? A cool $3.5 million annually, per his testimony. With charters now fetching nine figures and international expansion lagging, could private equity inject the cash needed for a global push—or just strip-mine the sport for profits?

Yardbarker speculates the Frances might seek “strategic partners” like real estate firms to develop tracks, avoiding a full handover. But The Express reports Jim France is pondering a historic move post-settlement, potentially selling stakes to ease the pressure. Phelps himself floated equity sales in February 2025, signaling the family might bend for the first time.

As the 2026 season looms, with the Clash at the Coliseum just weeks away, the question hangs like exhaust smoke: Will the France dynasty hold the wheel, or hand over the keys to a new era? One thing’s certain—in NASCAR, rumors travel faster than the cars. Stay tuned; this story’s got more laps to run.



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Austin Hill Returns for Fifth Season in NASCAR

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In the heart of NASCAR’s off-season buzz, Richard Childress Racing (RCR) has locked in one of its most consistent performers for another year. On January 9, 2026, the Welcome, North Carolina-based team announced that Austin Hill (pictured) will return to pilot the No. 21 Chevrolet in the NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series (Xfinity Series) for his fifth consecutive season.

–by Mark Cipolloni–

The news came wrapped in a multi-year partnership extension with Bennett Family of Companies, the anchor primary sponsor that’s been with Hill since his rookie campaign with RCR in 2022. Bennett Transportation & Logistics will once again deck out the No. 21 car in its signature livery, continuing a collaboration that’s proven mutually beneficial both on the track and in the boardroom.

Hill, the Winston, Georgia native, has built an impressive resume during his time at RCR. He’s captured the 2023 regular season championship, qualified for the Playoffs in every one of his four seasons with the team, and racked up 14 wins since 2022—including a standout performance in 2025 that saw him secure four victories and lock the No. 21 into the Championship 4 via owner points after his Talladega triumph.

Austin Hill, driver of the #21 Bennett Transportation Chevrolet, celebrates after winning the NASCAR Xfinity Series Ag-Pro 300 at Talladega Superspeedway on April 26, 2025 in Talladega, Alabama. (Photo by Logan Riely/Getty Images for NASCAR)
Austin Hill, driver of the #21 Bennett Transportation Chevrolet, celebrates after winning the NASCAR Xfinity Series Ag-Pro 300 at Talladega Superspeedway on April 26, 2025 in Talladega, Alabama. (Photo by Logan Riely/Getty Images for NASCAR)

His dominance on drafting-style tracks has even eclipsed records once held by NASCAR Hall of Famers Dale Earnhardt and Tony Stewart.

“We’ve built something special both on and off the track with Bennett Transportation and Logistics,” Hill said in the announcement. “Thank you to Marcia, Lynette and everyone at Bennett Family of Companies for their partnership and friendship over the years. It means a lot to have their support, as well as the support of Richard Childress, Danny Lawrence and everyone at Richard Childress Racing and ECR Engines as I continue to grow in my career.”

The partnership with Bennett isn’t just about paint schemes—it’s a strategic alliance. The Georgia-headquartered, woman-owned company (WBENC-certified) has leveraged its NASCAR involvement to boost customer relationships, promote safety culture, recruit drivers, and spark new business growth in trucking, specialized logistics, and more. With over 4,625 drivers/owner-operators and a nationwide network, Bennett sees the No. 21 program as a rolling showcase of teamwork and performance.

Lynette Mathis, vice president of Bennett Family of Companies, echoed the enthusiasm:

“We are proud to continue our partnership with Richard Childress Racing and Austin Hill in 2026. Bennett customers, drivers, agents and employees continue to find value in the relationship. We love watching the No. 21 Bennett Transportation & Logistics Chevrolet on the track and seeing the sense of community it creates within our company. Our partnership with RCR and Austin Hill continues to reflect the teamwork, performance and professionalism that define success in both racing and transportation and complex logistics.”

RCR president Mike Verlander highlighted the shared values driving the long-term commitment:

 “The Bennett Family of Companies’ long-standing partnership with Richard Childress Racing is a testament to our shared core values and we are thrilled to welcome them back to the No. 21 team for their fifth consecutive year of partnership. Bennett has done an exceptional job integrating our racing program into their broader business strategy. We look forward to continuing the momentum we have built over the last four years.”

With Hill confirmed alongside defending series champion Jesse Love in the No. 2 Chevrolet, RCR’s O’Reilly Auto Parts Series lineup remains unchanged heading into 2026—no driver swaps needed after a strong showing last season. In the Cup Series, veterans Austin Dillon (No. 3) and Kyle Busch (No. 8) round out a stable team ready to chase more checkered flags.

The green flag for the 2026 season drops soon: The United Rentals 300 at Daytona International Speedway kicks things off on Saturday, February 14, airing live on The CW Network at 5 p.m. ET. For Hill and the No. 21 squad, it’s another shot at turning strong momentum into that elusive series championship—backed by a sponsor and team that believe in the driver and the dream. Stay tuned; the road to Victory Lane looks promising.



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ARCA Menards Series at Daytona International Speedway: Austin Green Leads Day Two of Daytona Pre-Race Practice – Speedway Digest

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Former ARCA Menards Series winner Austin Green (No. 82 PRG Chevrolet) led the way on the second and final day of the ARCA Menards Series annual pre-race practice at Daytona International Speedway. Green timed in at 49.202 seconds/182.919 miles per hour. 

Green’s lap was just 0.002 seconds quicker than reigning ASA STARS National Tour super late model champion Cole Butcher (No. 30 Rette Jones Racing Ford). Butcher’s lap of 49.204 seconds/182.912 miles per hour was just in front of the Kitzmiller duo, reigning ARCA Menards Series East champion Isaac (No. 79 A.L.L. Construction / Carter CAT Chevrolet), and his father Jason (No. 97 A.L.L. Construction / Carter CAT Chevrolet). Isaac timed in at 49.217 seconds/182.864 miles per hour in his first-ever laps in the draft, while Jason was just behind at 49.230 seconds/182.815 miles per hour. 

NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series regular Gio Ruggiero (No. 18 JBL Toyota) was fifth quickest on Saturday at 49.261 seconds/182.700 miles per hour. 

Mini Tyrell (No. 17 Cook Racing Technologies Chevrolet), Taylor Reimer (No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet), Carson Brown (No. 82B PRG Chevrolet), Nolan Wilson (No. 69 Kimmel Racing Ford) and his teammate Alli Owens (No. 69 Kimmel Racing Ford) rounded out Saturday’s top ten. 

Gus Dean (No. 25 Nitro Motorsports Toyota) set the fastest lap of the weekend on Friday, running in a tight six-car draft with his teammates at the end of the day. Dean’s lap at 48.744 seconds/184.638 miles per hour was nearly a half-second quicker than the lap Green turned on Saturday. The top seven speeds of the weekend were set on Friday, with the remainder of the weekend’s top ten speeds turned on Saturday. 

Saturday’s activities were only slowed for track inspections and debris, but Friday’s action was stopped twice for accidents on the racetrack. The first was for Amber Balcaen (No. 24 Sigma Performance Services Ford), who spun exiting the tri-oval after debris punctured her left rear tire. Balcaen’s car had heavy nose damage and was done for the weekend, although she did return to the track in the backup car. The second incident on Friday happened exiting turn two when Bob Martin (No. 52 Martin Racing Toyota) lost control and made slight contact with the outside wall, damaging the left rear of the car. Martin was also uninjured in the crash. 

The 2026 ARCA Menards Series season revs into action on Saturday, February 14 with the 64th annual Daytona ARCA 200 at Daytona International Speedway. The race will be televised live on FOX starting at noon ET; the race will also be broadcast live on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90 and on select MRN Radio affiliates nationwide. 

For live Timing & Scoring data for all on-track activity, please visit ARCARacing.com; follow @ARCA_Racing on X (formerly Twitter) for up-to-the-minute updates. 

ARCA PR



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RCR makes major announcement ahead of NASCAR season – Motorsport – Sports

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With just over a month to go until the NASCAR O’Reilly’s Auto Parts Series gets underway in Florida with the United Rentals 300 at Daytona International Speedway, Richard Childress Racing has confirmed that 2023 regular season champion Austin Hill is back.

The 31-year-old will return behind the wheel of the No. 21 Chevrolet for a fifth season in a row in search of the team’s seventh championship, while he’ll also be looking to add to his 14 series wins to date.

Furthermore, the team’s announcement also added that Bennett Transportation & Logistics would be returning as a part of its multi-year partnership to serve as Hill’s anchor primary sponsor.

“We’ve built something special both on and off the track with Bennett Transportation and Logistics,” Hill said. “Thank you to Marcia, Lynette and everyone at Bennett Family of Companies for their partnership and friendship over the years.

“It means a lot to have their support, as well as the support of Richard Childress, Danny Lawrence and everyone at Richard Childress Racing and ECR Engines as I continue to grow in my career.”

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RCR president Mike Verlander also released a statement, saying, “The Bennett Family of Companies’ long-standing partnership with Richard Childress Racing is a testament to our shared core values and we are thrilled to welcome them back to the No. 21 team for their fifth consecutive year of partnership.

“Bennett has done an exceptional job integrating our racing program into their broader business strategy. We look forward to continuing the momentum we have built over the last four years.”

Hill will be hoping to continue his impressive winning streak in 2026, having recorded at least two victories in each of his last four seasons, never finishing lower than sixth in the driver standings after going full-time.

A championship, however, continues to elude him, having come closest in 2024 when he finished fourth, while JR Motorsports’ Justin Allgaier took the silverware.

Last season, despite Hill’s four wins, including two at Talladega Superspeedway, he failed to make the final four, where teammate Jesse Love pulled off a shocking upset to beat JRM’s Connor Zilisch to the title. This came after Zilisch had won 10 races in what was just his first full-time season, while Love was credited with two wins, including the finale at Phoenix Raceway.

With both Love and Hill now confirmed as RCR’s representatives in the O’Reilly’s Series for 2026, it means that, along with Austin Dillon and Kyle Busch in the Cup Series, the team has not made any driver swaps this offseason.

The latter two are set to return behind the wheel sooner than their RCR compatriots, with the non-points scoring Cook Out Clash at Bowman Gray Stadium set to kick off the Cup Series season on February 1. Barring any as yet unconfirmed changes, Zilisch will make his Trackhouse Racing debut at “The Madhouse” as he makes the move to full-time Cup Series racing.



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SPE Motorsport’s ’20-’22 GT500 DCT Cooler Line Kit Cures Leaks

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A marvel of modern drivetrain engineering, TREMEC’s TR-9070 DCT pairs with the 760-horsepower Predator engine in the 2020-2022 Shelby GT500 to deliver an incredible driving experience. Blindingly fast shifts and ample torque capacity make the TR-9070 a standout, but the factory transmission cooler hard lines and seals don’t always hold up their end of the bargain. Leaks, sealing issues, and cracked factory lines can rain on your performance parade.

SPE Motorsport DCT Cooler Line Kit
The SPE Motorsport DCT Cooler Line Kit replaces the factory hard lines with stainless braided, PVC-coated hoses that are pre-made to the proper length, improving routing and durability while eliminating common leak and cracking issues. (Photo Credit: SPE Motorsport)

To ensure that you can enjoy all the performance that the Blue Oval intended, SPE Motorsport developed a complete replacement that eliminates the factory problem areas. The company’s 2020+ GT500 DCT Cooler Line Kit (P/N SPE-P100136; $399.99) is a true end-to-end solution, replacing the OEM hard lines with a direct-replacement upgrade that installs without cutting, adapting, or relying on compression fittings.

SPE Motorsport DCT Cooler Line Kit

SPE Motorsport DCT Cooler Line Kit


Billet T6 aluminum adapter fittings with O-ringed quick disconnects provide a precise seal without cutting or modifying factory components. The 100-percent bolt-on design eliminates compression fittings, delivering a complete fix for the factory GT500 DCT cooler lines that are prone to failure. (Photo Credit: SPE Motorsport)

The kit utilizes T6 billet aluminum, anodized adapter fittings that are paired with O-ringed quick-disconnects to deliver a precise, repeatable seal. Stainless braided lines with a clear PVC jacket improve durability and remain flexible for clean, straightforward routing. Each hose is pre-made to the correct length with fittings already installed, which makes installation easy.

By retaining compatibility with factory-style seals while addressing the known weaknesses of the OEM line design, the SPE kit resolves the full range of cooler line failures in a single upgrade. Whether the car is driven hard or just hard parked, the result is improved reliability and peace of mind.



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