Hendrick Motorsports (HMS) is an American professional auto racing organization that competes in the NASCAR Cup Series. The team was founded in 1984 as All Star Racing by Rick Hendrick. Hendrick Motorsports has won a NASCAR-record 311 Cup Series races and 14 Cup Series owners and drivers championships to go with three Truck Series owners and drivers titles and one Xfinity Series drivers crown. Additionally, the team has 28 Xfinity Series race wins, 26 Truck Series race wins, and 7 ARCA Menards Series wins. [1] This page documents the statistical results of Hendrick Motorsports in the NASCAR Cup Series beginning with the team's debut in 1984.
Geoff Bodine (1984–1989)
The No. 5 debuted in 1984 under the banner "All Star Racing" with five employees, rented equipment, and two cars, with the highest-paid person's wages at only $500/week. [2] [3] Initially, the team had planned to field a car for seven-time Cup champion Richard Petty with funding from country music business mogul C.K. Spurlock, but the deal failed to materialize. Afterwards, Hendrick attempted to hire Tim Richmond, then Dale Earnhardt, but did not. As a result, the team signed former Rookie of the Year Geoff Bodine to drive the unsponsored No. 5 Chevy Monte Carlo for 1984. Although the original plan was a partial season, Bodine agreed to drive for the team, believing in the potential of the organization. After a slow start seven races into the season, Hendrick informed Bodine and crew chief Harry Hyde that he planned to shut down the team due to funding trouble. Instead, Bodine and the team won at Martinsville Speedway, leading to sponsorship from Northwestern Security Life; on March 30, 2014, the 30-year anniversary of the win, Hendrick stated, "We owe Martinsville so much. If we hadn't won that race, then literally the next Monday we were going to shut it down." [2] [3] [4] The team won two more times and finished ninth in points. Levi Garrett came on to sponsor the No. 5 Chevy in 1985 as part of a multi-year deal. [2] Despite not winning a race that year, Bodine earned three poles and improved to fifth in points. [2] The team briefly became a two-car operation when Dick Brooks drove the No. 1 Exxon Chevy at Charlotte Motor Speedway, in what proved to be Brooks' last NASCAR race.
Hendrick expanded into a multi-car team full-time in 1986, with Bodine and Tim Richmond as drivers. [5] Bodine won twice, including the 1986 Daytona 500, in the No. 5 and posted an eighth-place finish in points. His younger brother, Brett, raced as a teammate in the World 600 that year. Bodine went winless again in 1987, finishing thirteenth in points. Bodine won one race and finishing in the Top 10 of the point standings each of the next two years before leaving for Junior Johnson & Associates in 1990.
Ricky Rudd (1990–1993)
Ricky Rudd took Bodine's place, [6] winning once at Watkins Glen International, [7] and finishing seventh in points. For 1991, the team received sponsorship from Tide as part of the car's merger with Darrell Waltrip's old team. Winning one race that year, Rudd finished a career high second in points behind champion Dale Earnhardt. [6] On the final lap of that year's race at Sears Point Raceway, second-place Rudd spun out leader Davey Allison on the last turn and went on to win. NASCAR penalized the team for rough driving and awarded Allison the win. Rudd won once each of the next two years. [6] Dissatisfied with the distribution of resources within HMS's multiple teams, Rudd left to form a new team, taking Tide with him. [6]
Terry Labonte (1994–2004)
Rudd's replacement was 1984 Winston Cup champion Terry Labonte. [8] [9] The car received sponsorship from Kellogg's and their Corn flakes brand. [9] Labonte won three races each in 1994 and 1995, and defeated teammate Jeff Gordon for the 1996 Winston Cup championship by 37 points. [8] [9] Labonte won one race each of the next three seasons. The 2000 season was a very difficult year for the team as two long streaks that defined Labonte's career came to an end. In the Pepsi 400, Labonte crashed his car and broke his leg. After an accident at New Hampshire damaged his inner ear, Labonte was not capable of driving, and he ended up missing two races, bringing his streak of most consecutive races to an abrupt end. [8] Todd Bodine and Ron Hornaday Jr. subbed for Labonte. His six-year winning streak was also broken as he failed to visit victory lane that year. [9]
At the end of the 2000 season Labonte's team switched to Kellogg's Frosted Flakes brand for its primary sponsorship. After a couple of low-key years, Labonte finished tenth in the points in 2003. He also revisited victory lane after a four-year drought by winning the Southern 500 at Darlington, the last Southern 500 to be held during the Labor Day weekend until 2015. [8] [9] After slipping to twenty-sixth in points in 2004, Labonte announced his semi-retirement. He would drive a limited schedule for two years in the No. 44 car before leaving HMS after the 2006 season. Labonte scored 12 victories with Hendrick Motorsports, to go along with his championship in 1996. [8] [9]
Kyle Busch (2005–2007)
Hendrick tabbed development driver Kyle Busch, the younger brother of Kurt Busch, as Labonte's replacement for the 2005 season. Over the season, Busch earned 2 wins, 9 top fives and 13 top tens and finished 20th in the season standings. He easily won the 2005 Rookie of the year battle and made history when he took the checkered flag in the Sony HD 500 at California Speedway for his first win, becoming the youngest driver at the time to ever win a Cup Series race at the age of 20 years, 4 months, and 2 days. Busch would win later that year at Phoenix. In 2006, Kyle won once and qualified for the Chase for the Nextel Cup, ultimately finishing 10th in points, with 1 win, 10 top fives and 18 top tens. In 2007, Busch grabbed a win at the Food City 500, the inaugural race for the Car of Tomorrow and finished 5th in the final standings, with 1 win, 11 top fives and 20 top tens. On June 13, 2007 Hendrick announced that Kyle Busch would not return to drive the No. 5 car in 2008.
Casey Mears (2008) & Mark Martin (2009–2011)
On September 4, 2007 it was announced that Casey Mears would drive the No. 5 in 2008. On June 22, 2008, ESPN.com reported that Mark Martin would leave Dale Earnhardt, Inc. to replace Casey Mears in the No. 5 car for the 2009 season. [10] On Friday, July 4 at Daytona International Raceway, Hendrick and Martin announced that Martin had agreed to a two-year contract in the No. 5 car. [11]
Mark Martin scored his first win with Hendrick Motorsports at Phoenix on April 18, 2009. He became the third oldest winner and fourth driver over the age of 50 to win a Cup Series race. [12] The win was also the 36th victory and 400th top 10 of Martin's career. Martin won four more races in 2009, Darlington, Michigan, Chicagoland, and New Hampshire. He also won seven pole positions and finished second in the point standings to teammate Jimmie Johnson. [13] On September 18, 2009, Hendrick announced that Martin had extended his contract through the 2011 season and would race full-time with GoDaddy.com as a primary sponsor. [14]
In 2010, Martin struggled, ending the season 13th in the point standings with no wins and only one pole position, which came in the Daytona 500. His season best finish of second came in October at Martinsville. [15] Lance McGrew took over as crew chief for the No. 5 in 2011 as Gustafson moved to Jeff Gordon's team. Farmers Insurance Group and Quaker State joined as sponsors of the team for a few races. [16] Martin struggled through most of the season with McGrew, not showing signs of his earlier Hendrick success. Teammate Jimmie Johnson drove the No. 5 car in the All-Star Race to promote a discount deal with Lowe's (Martin moved over to the No. 25 for the evening). [17] Martin ended the year 22nd in points, having won two pole positions, the second races at both Daytona and Talladega. The team scored only two top fives all season, a second at Dover and a fourth at Michigan. [18]
Kasey Kahne (2012–2017)
Kasey Kahne and his crew chief Kenny Francis were picked up from Red Bull Racing Team to run the No. 5 in 2012. Farmers and Quaker State returned, with Farmers increasing its sponsorship to 22 races. GoDaddy.com left for Tommy Baldwin Racing/Stewart-Haas Racing to sponsor Danica Patrick, but Time Warner Cable and Great Clips signed on as replacements. [19] After a poor start to the season, Kahne rebounded immensely and picked up a win in the Coca-Cola 600. He won again at New Hampshire in July and made the 2012 Chase, finishing a career-best 4th in standings. Kahne also won four pole positions throughout the season. [20]
Kahne won twice in 2013, at Bristol in March and Pocono in August, and again qualified for the Chase in 2013. However, he fell toward the bottom of the Chase standings and ended up finishing 12th in points. [21] The team struggled immensely in 2014, and it did not appear that Kahne would qualify for the 2014 Chase until a last-minute win at Atlanta in late August locked him into the Chase field. Kahne was eliminated from the Chase following the October Talladega race (as a result of a new Chase format) and finished 15th in the final point standings. [22] Kahne then struggled in 2015 & 2016 as he barely missed the Chase field and failed to reach victory lane in both seasons. On July 23, 2017 Kahne held off Brad Keselowski in an overtime finish that ended under caution to win the 2017 Brickyard 400 for his 18th (& final) overall career victory, 102 races after his 2014 Atlanta victory. The race was also the reason that the NASCAR sanctioning body eliminated the Overtime Line.
On August 20, 2017, Hendrick Motorsports announced that William Byron would take over the No. 5 in 2018, with Darian Grubb as crew chief. Twenty days later, the team announced a number change from No. 5 to No. 24 in 2018, with Chase Elliott's team renumbered from No. 24 to No. 9. [23] [24] Kahne was locked into the Chase field in 2017 with his Brickyard 400 victory but was eliminated after the first round and finishing 15th in the final point standings.
Kyle Larson (2021–present)
On October 28, 2020, it was announced that Kyle Larson would join Hendrick Motorsports for the 2021 season driving the No. 5 car, which replaced the No. 88. [25] The controversy surrounding Larson scared away many sponsors, leading Hendrick to sponsor the driver through his auto dealership company Hendrick Automotive Group, via HendrickCars.com and Nationsguard. Larson would also gain sponsorship from Valvoline, Freightliner, Cincinnati Inc., Metrotech Automotive and Tarlton & Sons. Larson won the Pennzoil 400 at Las Vegas in his fourth start with the team. [26] After three straight second-place finishes at Darlington, Dover, and Circuit of the Americas in May, Larson followed with back-to-back-to-back wins in the Coca-Cola 600, Toyota/Save Mart 350 and the Ally 400. Larson won his fifth race at the 2021 Go Bowling at The Glen, resulting in him tying for the points lead with Denny Hamlin. Following the 2021 Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona, Larson clinched the Regular Season Championship. [27] Larson won the Bristol Night Race to advance to the Round of 12. He went on to win three straight races at the Charlotte ROVAL Race (advancing to the Round of 8), Texas Motor Speedway (clinching a spot in the Championship 4) and Kansas Speedway. At Phoenix Raceway in the Season Finale 500, Larson won the race (his 10th of the season) to secure his first Cup Series Championship. Larson's championship ended a 25-year championship drought for the No. 5 car, when Terry Labonte won the then-called Winston Cup Championship in 1996.
Larson began his 2022 season with a 32nd place finish at the 2022 Daytona 500. He then won at Fontana. On June 14, 2022, crew chief Cliff Daniels was suspended for four races due to a tire and wheel loss during the 2022 Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Sonoma. [28] Larson scored his second win of the season at Watkins Glen. [29] Larson was eliminated in the Round of 12 after finishing 35th at the Charlotte Roval. [30] At Las Vegas, Larson charged aggressively past Kevin Harvick and Bubba Wallace, causing Wallace to scrape the outside wall. Wallace retaliated by wrecking himself and Larson down the frontstretch, severely damaging Christopher Bell's car in the process. During the caution, Wallace engaged in a shoving match with Larson. [31] A week later, Larson won at Homestead after leading 199 out of the race's 267 laps. [32]
Larson began the 2023 season with an 18th place finish at the 2023 Daytona 500. On March 15, the No. 5 was served an L2 penalty after unapproved hood louvers were found installed on the car during pre-race inspection at Phoenix; as a result, the team was docked 100 driver and owner points and 10 playoff points. In addition, Daniels was suspended for four races and fined US$100,000. [33] On March 29, the National Motorsports Appeals Panel amended the penalty, upholding the fine and Daniels' suspension but restoring the owner, driver, and playoff points. [34] Larson scored wins at Richmond and Martinsville. [35] [36] In addition, he won his third career All-Star Race. [37] During the playoffs, Larson scored a win at Darlington, securing him to the Round of 12 and giving Hendrick Motorsports' engine department its overall 500th win. [38] [39] Larson then won at Las Vegas to make the Championship 4. [40] Following the season finale at Phoenix, Larson finished the 2023 season second in the points standings. [41]
Larson started the 2024 season with an 11th place finish at the 2024 Daytona 500. He scored his first win of the season at Las Vegas two weeks later. [42] At Kansas, Larson beat Chris Buescher by 0.001 seconds - the closest finish in NASCAR Cup Series history. [43] On May 26, Larson attempted to do "The Double" at the 2024 Indianapolis 500 and the 2024 Coca-Cola 600, but due to a rain delay, he was unable to make the Charlotte race and was substituted by Justin Allgaier, who finished 13th. [44] Despite missing the Charlotte race, Larson was granted a waiver to remain eligible in the playoffs. [45] He continued the regular season with wins at Sonoma and Indianapolis. [46] [47] At the Bristol Night Race, Larson dominated by leading 462 of 500 laps, breaking a Hendrick Motorsports record for most laps led in a race. [48] Two weeks later, he scored his sixth win of the season at the Charlotte Roval and advanced into the Round of 8. [49]
Year | Driver | No. | Make | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | Owners | Pts. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1984 | Geoff Bodine | 5 | Chevy | DAY 8 | RCH 9 | CAR 6 | ATL 13 | BRI 25 | NWS 14 | DAR 35 | MAR 1 | TAL 34 | NSV 3 | DOV 10 | CLT 5 | RSD 4 | POC 36 | MCH 7 | DAY 12 | NSV 1* | POC 12 | TAL 26 | MCH 34 | BRI 22 | DAR 12 | RCH 4 | DOV 9 | MAR 28 | CLT 6 | NWS 23 | CAR 19 | ATL 24* | RSD 1 | 9th | 3734 | ||||||
1985 | DAY 7 | RCH 2 | CAR 12 | ATL 2 | BRI 18 | DAR 7 | NWS 5 | MAR 3 | TAL 11 | DOV 11 | CLT 16 | RSD 22 | POC 4* | MCH 11 | DAY 14 | POC 4 | TAL 23 | MCH 23 | BRI 25 | DAR 3 | RCH 7 | DOV 25 | MAR 24 | NWS 2 | CLT 3 | CAR 5 | ATL 11 | RSD 6 | 5th | 3862 | |||||||||||
1986 | DAY 1* | RCH 8 | CAR 20 | ATL 10 | BRI 24 | DAR 40 | NWS 3 | MAR 17 | TAL 27 | DOV 1 | CLT 31 | RSD 39 | POC 9 | MCH 3 | DAY 29 | POC 3* | TAL 23 | GLN 19* | MCH 4 | BRI 3 | DAR 8 | RCH 13 | DOV 28 | MAR 2* | NWS 2* | CLT 6 | CAR 32 | ATL 38 | RSD 3* | 8th | 3678 | ||||||||||
1987 | DAY 14 | CAR 32 | RCH 2 | ATL 15 | DAR 11 | NWS 28 | BRI 19 | MAR 3 | TAL 40 | CLT 18 | DOV 28 | POC 9 | RSD 27 | MCH 11 | DAY 39 | POC 34 | TAL 13 | GLN 15 | MCH 10 | BRI 6 | DAR 18 | RCH 6 | DOV 6 | MAR 20 | NWS 5 | CLT 31 | CAR 8 | RSD 10* | ATL 31 | 13th | 3328 | ||||||||||
1988 | DAY 14 | RCH 13 | CAR 18 | ATL 33 | DAR 7 | BRI 3 | NWS 9 | MAR 15 | TAL 3* | CLT 24 | DOV 8 | RSD 34 | POC 1* | MCH 5 | DAY 16 | POC 4 | TAL 2 | GLN 32 | MCH 10 | BRI 3 | DAR 7 | RCH 22 | DOV 5 | MAR 5 | CLT 31 | NWS 3 | CAR 30 | PHO 6 | ATL 15 | 5th | 3799 | ||||||||||
1989 | DAY 4 | CAR 4 | ATL 19 | RCH 18* | DAR 3 | BRI 3 | NWS 7 | MAR 16 | TAL 12 | CLT 4 | DOV 29 | SON 20 | POC 35 | MCH 27 | DAY 22 | POC 17 | TAL 35 | GLN 21 | MCH 5 | BRI 16 | DAR 12 | RCH 3 | DOV 27 | MAR 16 | CLT 22 | NWS 1 | CAR 7 | PHO 28 | ATL 2 | 9th | 3600 | ||||||||||
1990 | Ricky Rudd | DAY 4 | RCH 3 | CAR 31 | ATL 27 | DAR 24 | BRI 3 | NWS 4 | MAR 23 | TAL 33 | CLT 28 | DOV 11 | SON 3 | POC 32 | MCH 9 | DAY 13 | POC 7 | TAL 5 | GLN 1 | MCH 5 | BRI 10 | DAR 7 | RCH 8 | DOV 32 | MAR 28* | NWS 11 | CLT 6 | CAR 7 | PHO 32 | ATL 16 | 8th | 3601 | |||||||||
1991 | DAY 9 | RCH 2* | CAR 4 | ATL 6 | DAR 1 | BRI 5* | NWS 11 | MAR 11 | TAL 13 | CLT 9 | DOV 10 | SON 2 | POC 20 | MCH 8 | DAY 9 | POC 20 | TAL 4 | GLN 2 | MCH 11 | BRI 5 | DAR 15 | RCH 5 | DOV 7 | MAR 8 | NWS 12 | CLT 32 | CAR 12 | PHO 11 | ATL 11 | 2nd | 4092 | ||||||||||
1992 | DAY 40 | CAR 28 | RCH 6 | ATL 12 | DAR 5 | BRI 6 | NWS 3 | MAR 23 | TAL 26 | CLT 9 | DOV 6 | SON 4 | POC 36 | MCH 5 | DAY 7 | POC 4 | TAL 4* | GLN 13 | MCH 36 | BRI 8 | DAR 10 | RCH 6 | DOV 1 | MAR 10 | NWS 15 | CLT 5 | CAR 3 | PHO 30 | ATL 25 | 7th | 3735 | ||||||||||
1993 | DAY 30 | CAR 12 | RCH 15 | ATL 5 | DAR 19 | BRI 26 | NWS 7 | MAR 29 | TAL 41 | SON 3 | CLT 37 | DOV 35 | POC 9 | MCH 1 | DAY 4 | NHA 5 | POC 11 | TAL 24 | GLN 24 | MCH 35* | BRI 22 | DAR 6 | RCH 4 | DOV 21 | MAR 4 | NWS 5 | CLT 8 | CAR 14 | PHO 6 | ATL 2 | 10th | 3644 | |||||||||
1994 | Terry Labonte | DAY 3 | CAR 17 | RCH 9 | ATL 14 | DAR 35 | BRI 24 | NWS 1 | MAR 15 | TAL 32 | SON 28 | CLT 35 | DOV 26 | POC 18 | MCH 20 | DAY 15 | NHA 11 | POC 15 | TAL 10 | IND 12 | GLN 6 | MCH 8 | BRI 33 | DAR 10 | RCH 1* | DOV 7 | MAR 14 | NWS 2 | CLT 7 | CAR 5 | PHO 1* | ATL 8 | 8th | 3876 | |||||||
1995 | DAY 8 | CAR 26 | RCH 1 | ATL 3 | DAR 34 | BRI 7 | NWS 16 | MAR 36 | TAL 26 | SON 5 | CLT 2 | DOV 37 | POC 1 | MCH 9 | DAY 19 | NHA 4 | POC 14 | TAL 33 | IND 13 | GLN 5 | MCH 2 | BRI 1 | DAR 19 | RCH 2 | DOV 15 | MAR 2 | NWS 4 | CLT 3 | CAR 4 | PHO 13 | ATL 13 | 6th | 4146 | ||||||||
1996 | DAY 24* | CAR 34* | RCH 8 | ATL 2 | DAR 5 | BRI 2 | NWS 1* | MAR 24 | TAL 4 | SON 5 | CLT 3 | DOV 2 | POC 7 | MCH 2 | DAY 2 | NHA 6 | POC 16 | TAL 24 | IND 3 | GLN 2 | MCH 3 | BRI 5 | DAR 26 | RCH 5 | DOV 21 | MAR 2 | NWS 5 | CLT 1* | CAR 3 | PHO 3 | ATL 5 | 1st | 4657 | ||||||||
1997 | DAY 2 | CAR 7 | RCH 7 | ATL 9 | DAR 13 | TEX 4* | BRI 3 | MAR 4 | SON 3 | TAL 6 | CLT 8 | DOV 14 | POC 9 | MCH 39 | CAL 2 | DAY 2 | NHA 7 | POC 35 | IND 40 | GLN 8 | MCH 10 | BRI 7 | DAR 6 | RCH 17 | NHA 41 | DOV 37 | MAR 22 | CLT 11 | TAL 1* | CAR 7 | PHO 11 | ATL 21 | 6th | 4177 | |||||||
1998 | DAY 13 | CAR 8 | LVS 15 | ATL 12 | DAR 6 | BRI 2 | TEX 6 | MAR 26 | TAL 4* | CAL 3 | CLT 41 | DOV 10 | RCH 1 | MCH 19 | POC 12 | SON 42 | NHA 14 | POC 31 | IND 9 | GLN 40 | MCH 36 | BRI 13 | NHA 39 | DAR 25 | RCH 21 | DOV 18 | MAR 6 | CLT 38 | TAL 3 | DAY 6 | PHO 10 | CAR 8 | ATL 8 | 9th | 3901 | ||||||
1999 | DAY 38 | CAR 7 | LVS 8 | ATL 13 | DAR 11 | TEX 1* | BRI 13 | MAR 15 | TAL 39 | CAL 9 | RCH 26 | CLT 11 | DOV 17 | MCH 23 | POC 16 | SON 29 | DAY 10 | NHA 11 | POC 6 | IND 11 | GLN 11 | MCH 26 | BRI 8 | DAR 17 | RCH 43 | NHA 31 | DOV 27 | MAR 40 | CLT 21 | TAL 34 | CAR 14 | PHO 28 | HOM 31 | ATL 40 | 12th | 3580 | |||||
2000 | DAY 7 | CAR 17 | LVS 31 | ATL 15 | DAR 11 | BRI 5 | TEX 8 | MAR 23 | TAL 7 | CAL 33 | RCH 2 | CLT 22 | DOV 11 | MCH 26 | POC 12 | SON 27 | DAY 41 | NHA 43 | POC 11 | MCH 20 | BRI 16 | DAR 15 | RCH 25 | NHA 25 | DOV 13 | MAR 17 | CLT 27 | TAL 5 | CAR 38 | PHO 17 | HOM 25 | ATL 17 | 15th | 3669 | |||||||
Todd Bodine | IND 15 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ron Hornaday Jr. | GLN 15 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2001 | Terry Labonte | DAY 24 | CAR 29 | LVS 22 | ATL 5 | DAR 38 | BRI 6 | TEX 13 | MAR 23 | TAL 11 | CAL 30 | RCH 38 | CLT 23 | DOV 17 | MCH 26 | POC 31 | SON 36 | DAY 40 | CHI 25 | NHA 32 | POC 34 | IND 19 | GLN 21 | MCH 29 | BRI 10 | DAR 11 | RCH 38 | DOV 17 | KAN 27 | CLT 27 | MAR 34 | TAL 13 | PHO 20 | CAR 28 | HOM 11 | ATL 32 | NHA 27 | 27th | 3280 | ||
2002 | DAY 20 | CAR 16 | LVS 38 | ATL 14 | DAR 23 | BRI 16 | TEX 10 | MAR 6 | TAL 20 | CAL 21 | RCH 33 | CLT 12 | DOV 15 | POC 38 | MCH 31 | SON 3 | DAY 14 | CHI 13 | NHA 22 | POC 9 | IND 13 | GLN 31 | MCH 33 | BRI 30 | DAR 31 | RCH 41 | NHA 30 | DOV 38 | KAN 12 | TAL 38 | CLT 21 | MAR 22 | ATL 25 | CAR 32 | PHO 26 | HOM 28 | 25th | 3417 | |||
2003 | DAY 30 | CAR 27 | LVS 16 | ATL 20 | DAR 24 | BRI 39 | TEX 16 | TAL 5 | MAR 14 | CAL 12 | RCH 21 | CLT 21 | DOV 10 | POC 7 | MCH 10 | SON 25 | DAY 4 | CHI 15 | NHA 20 | POC 5 | IND 19 | GLN 18 | MCH 13 | BRI 11 | DAR 1 | RCH 8 | NHA 18 | DOV 20 | TAL 22 | KAN 16 | CLT 18 | MAR 6 | ATL 33 | PHO 30 | CAR 12 | HOM 15 | 10th | 4162 | |||
2004 | DAY 20 | CAR 17 | LVS 17 | ATL 24 | DAR 19 | BRI 18 | TEX 41 | MAR 23 | TAL 25 | CAL 7 | RCH 18 | CLT 37 | DOV 7 | POC 7 | MCH 26 | SON 40 | DAY 8 | CHI 6 | NHA 16 | POC 6 | IND 38 | GLN 39 | MCH 27 | BRI 15 | CAL 19 | RCH 18 | NHA 24 | DOV 27 | TAL 21 | KAN 21 | CLT 25 | MAR 25 | ATL 31 | PHO 32 | DAR 28 | HOM 31 | 27th | 3519 | |||
2005 | Kyle Busch | DAY 38 | CAL 23 | LVS 2 | ATL 12 | BRI 28 | MAR 39 | TEX 21 | PHO 8 | TAL 41 | DAR 23 | RCH 4 | CLT 25 | DOV 2 | POC 4 | MCH 9 | SON 40 | DAY 31 | CHI 14 | NHA 4 | POC 39 | IND 10 | GLN 33 | MCH 43 | BRI 33 | CAL 1* | RCH 4 | NHA 27 | DOV 2 | TAL 33 | KAN 21 | CLT 39 | MAR 9 | ATL 12 | TEX 40 | PHO 1 | HOM 41 | 20th | 3753 | ||
2006 | DAY 23 | CAL 10 | LVS 3 | ATL 12 | BRI 8 | MAR 5 | TEX 15 | PHO 36 | TAL 32 | RCH 5 | DAR 7 | CLT 38 | DOV 5 | POC 22 | MCH 14 | SON 11 | DAY 2 | CHI 3 | NHA 1* | POC 12 | IND 7 | GLN 9 | MCH 39 | BRI 2 | CAL 8 | RCH 2* | NHA 38 | DOV 40 | KAN 7 | TAL 11 | CLT 6 | MAR 18 | ATL 27 | TEX 4 | PHO 38 | HOM 38 | 10th | 6027 | |||
2007 | DAY 24 | CAL 9 | LVS 9 | ATL 32 | BRI 1 | MAR 4 | TEX 37 | PHO 7 | TAL 37 | RCH 2 | DAR 37 | CLT 30 | DOV 17 | POC 8 | MCH 6 | SON 8 | NHA 11 | DAY 2 | CHI 13 | IND 4 | POC 12 | GLN 7 | MCH 13 | BRI 9 | CAL 3* | RCH 20 | NHA 4 | DOV 5 | KAN 41 | TAL 36 | CLT 3 | MAR 4 | ATL 20 | TEX 4* | PHO 8 | HOM 20 | 5th | 6293 | |||
2008 | Casey Mears | DAY 35 | CAL 42 | LVS 13 | ATL 17 | BRI 42 | MAR 7 | TEX 22 | PHO 11 | TAL 7 | RCH 36 | DAR 35 | CLT 29 | DOV 17 | POC 26 | MCH 30 | SON 5 | NHA 7 | DAY 34 | CHI 33 | IND 26 | POC 22 | GLN 19 | MCH 18 | BRI 41 | CAL 26 | RCH 11 | NHA 37 | DOV 15 | KAN 14 | TAL 14 | CLT 29 | MAR 6 | ATL 12 | TEX 14 | PHO 36 | HOM 8 | 21st | 3527 | ||
2009 | Mark Martin | DAY 16 | CAL 40 | LVS 40 | ATL 31 | BRI 6 | MAR 7 | TEX 6 | PHO 1* | TAL 43 | RCH 5 | DAR 1 | CLT 17 | DOV 10 | POC 19 | MCH 1 | SON 35 | NHA 14 | DAY 38 | CHI 1* | IND 2 | POC 7 | GLN 23 | MCH 31 | BRI 2* | ATL 5 | RCH 4 | NHA 1 | DOV 2 | KAN 7 | CAL 4 | CLT 17 | MAR 8 | TAL 28 | TEX 4 | PHO 4 | HOM 12 | 2nd | 6511 | ||
2010 | DAY 12 | CAL 4 | LVS 4 | ATL 33 | BRI 35 | MAR 21 | PHO 4 | TEX 6 | TAL 5 | RCH 25 | DAR 16 | DOV 15 | CLT 4 | POC 29 | MCH 16 | SON 14 | NHA 21 | DAY 28 | CHI 15 | IND 11 | POC 7 | GLN 19 | MCH 28 | BRI 23 | ATL 21 | RCH 20 | NHA 29 | DOV 12 | KAN 14 | CAL 6 | CLT 14 | MAR 2 | TAL 11 | TEX 3 | PHO 8 | HOM 16 | 13th | 4364 | |||
2011 | DAY 10 | PHO 13 | LVS 18 | BRI 12 | CAL 20 | MAR 10 | TEX 36 | TAL 8 | RCH 14 | DAR 19 | DOV 2 | CLT 34 | KAN 21 | POC 18 | MCH 9 | SON 19 | DAY 33 | KEN 22 | NHA 22 | IND 8 | POC 13 | GLN 25 | MCH 4 | BRI 38 | ATL 17 | RCH 10 | CHI 9 | NHA 24 | DOV 19 | KAN 10 | CLT 37 | TAL 20 | MAR 28 | TEX 19 | PHO 16 | HOM 24 | 22nd | 930 | |||
2012 | Kasey Kahne | DAY 29 | PHO 34 | LVS 19 | BRI 37 | CAL 14 | MAR 38 | TEX 7 | KAN 8 | RCH 5 | TAL 4 | DAR 8 | CLT 1 | DOV 9 | POC 29 | MCH 33 | SON 14 | KEN 2 | DAY 7 | NHA 1 | IND 12 | POC 2 | GLN 13 | MCH 3 | BRI 9 | ATL 23 | RCH 12 | CHI 3 | NHA 5 | DOV 15 | TAL 12 | CLT 8 | KAN 4 | MAR 3 | TEX 25 | PHO 4 | HOM 21 | 4th | 2345 | ||
2013 | DAY 36 | PHO 19 | LVS 2* | BRI 1 | CAL 9 | MAR 4 | TEX 11 | KAN 2 | RCH 21 | TAL 42 | DAR 17 | CLT 2* | DOV 23 | POC 36 | MCH 38 | SON 6 | KEN 11 | DAY 32 | NHA 11 | IND 3 | POC 1* | GLN 34 | MCH 7 | BRI 2 | ATL 36 | RCH 14 | CHI 12 | NHA 37 | DOV 13 | KAN 15 | CLT 2* | TAL 36 | MAR 27 | TEX 5 | PHO 2 | HOM 13 | 12th | 2283 | |||
2014 | DAY 31 | PHO 11 | LVS 8 | BRI 8 | CAL 41 | MAR 22 | TEX 11 | DAR 37 | RCH 14 | TAL 8 | KAN 3 | CLT 14 | DOV 19 | POC 42 | MCH 5 | SON 6 | KEN 8 | DAY 27 | NHA 11 | IND 6 | POC 10 | GLN 12 | MCH 16 | BRI 35 | ATL 1 | RCH 17 | CHI 13 | NHA 23 | DOV 20 | KAN 22 | CLT 10 | TAL 12 | MAR 40 | TEX 38 | PHO 21 | HOM 12 | 15th | 2234 | |||
2015 | DAY 9 | ATL 14 | LVS 17 | PHO 4 | CAL 17 | MAR 11 | TEX 8 | BRI 37 | RCH 6 | TAL 34 | KAN 17 | CLT 12 | DOV 4 | POC 13 | MCH 15 | SON 8 | DAY 32 | KEN 27 | NHA 19 | IND 24 | POC 43 | GLN 42 | MCH 15 | BRI 16 | DAR 12 | RCH 18 | CHI 24 | NHA 9 | DOV 6 | CLT 43 | KAN 4 | TAL 19 | MAR 9 | TEX 20 | PHO 26 | HOM 19 | 18th | 939 | |||
2016 | DAY 13 | ATL 23 | LVS 10 | PHO 22 | CAL 28 | MAR 22 | TEX 8 | BRI 17 | RCH 4 | TAL 39 | KAN 16 | DOV 4 | CLT 22 | POC 6 | MCH 13 | SON 9 | DAY 30 | KEN 14 | NHA 25 | IND 18 | POC 15 | GLN 20 | BRI 13 | MCH 14 | DAR 7 | RCH 6 | CHI 7 | NHA 9 | DOV 12 | CLT 3 | KAN 10 | TAL 35 | MAR 11 | TEX 8 | PHO 13 | HOM 37 | 17th | 898 | |||
2017 | DAY 7 | ATL 4 | LVS 12 | PHO 20 | CAL 20 | MAR 14 | TEX 38 | BRI 20 | RCH 22 | TAL 5 | KAN 15 | CLT 35 | DOV 17 | POC 35 | MCH 21 | SON 24 | DAY 18 | KEN 38 | NHA 28 | IND 1 | POC 11 | GLN 16 | MCH 38 | BRI 24 | DAR 24 | RCH 12 | CHI 21 | NHA 35 | DOV 14 | CLT 9 | TAL 8 | KAN 15 | MAR 16 | TEX 11 | PHO 19 | HOM 34 | 15th | 2198 | |||
2021 | Kyle Larson | DAY 10 | DRC 30 | HOM 4 | LVS 1* | PHO 7 | ATL 2* | BRD 29 | MAR 5 | RCH 18 | TAL 40 | KAN 19* | DAR 2 | DOV 2* | COA 2 | CLT 1* | SON 1* | NSH 1* | POC 9 | POC 2 | ROA 16 | ATL 18 | NHA 7 | GLN 1 | IRC 3* | MCH 3* | DAY 20 | DAR 2* | RCH 6 | BRI 1* | LVS 10 | TAL 37 | ROV 1 | TEX 1* | KAN 1* | MAR 14 | PHO 1* | 1st | 5040 | ||
2022 | DAY 32 | CAL 1 | LVS 2 | PHO 34 | ATL 30 | COA 29 | RCH 5 | MAR 19 | BRD 4 | TAL 4 | DOV 6 | DAR 36 | KAN 2 | CLT 9 | GTW 12 | SON 15 | NSH 4 | ROA 3 | ATL 13 | NHA 14 | POC 5 | IRC 35 | MCH 7 | RCH 14 | GLN 1 | DAY 37 | DAR 12 | KAN 8 | BRI 5 | TEX 9 | TAL 18 | ROV 35 | LVS 35 | HOM 1* | MAR 2 | PHO 9 | 7th | 2354 | |||
2023 | DAY 18 | CAL 29 | LVS 2 | PHO 4* | ATL 31 | COA 14 | RCH 1 | BRD 35 | MAR 1 | TAL 33 | DOV 32 | KAN 2* | DAR 20 | CLT 30 | GTW 4 | SON 8 | NSH 5 | CSC 4 | ATL 36 | NHA 3 | POC 20 | RCH 19 | MCH 5 | IRC 8 | GLN 26 | DAY 27 | DAR 1 | KAN 4* | BRI 2 | TEX 31 | TAL 15 | ROV 13 | LVS 1* | HOM 34* | MAR 6 | PHO 3 | 2nd | 5034 | |||
2024 | DAY 11 | ATL 32 | LVS 1* | PHO 14 | BRI 5 | COA 17 | RCH 3 | MAR 2 | TEX 21* | TAL 21 | DOV 2 | KAN 1 | DAR 34 | GTW 10 | SON 1 | IOW 34 | NHA 4 | NSH 8 | CSC 39 | POC 13 | IND 1 | RCH 7 | MCH 34 | DAY 21 | DAR 4* | ATL 37 | GLN 12 | BRI 1* | KAN 26 | TAL 4 | ROV 1* | LVS 11 | HOM 13 | MAR 3 | PHO 4 | 6th | 2344 | ||||
Justin Allgaier | CLT 13 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2025 | Kyle Larson | DAY | ATL | COA | PHO | LVS | HOM | MAR | DAR | BRI | TAL | TEX | KAN | CLT | NSH | MCH | MXC | POC | ATL | CSC | SON | DOV | IND | IOW | GLN | RCH | DAY | DAR | GTW | BRI | NHA | KAN | ROV | LVS | TAL | MAR | PHO | -* | -* |
Chase Elliott (2018–present)
Following the 2017 season, the No. 24 car driven by Chase Elliott was renumbered to No. 9 in honor of Elliott's father, 1988 NASCAR Winston Cup Series champion Bill Elliott. [24] After struggling through the first half of the 2018 season, Elliott scored his first stage win at New Hampshire. On August 5, Elliott scored his first NASCAR Cup Series win at Watkins Glen, giving Hendrick Motorsports its 250th win and securing Elliott a Playoff spot. He added wins at Dover and Kansas during the Playoffs, and made it to the Round of 8 before a late crash at Phoenix effectively eliminated Elliott from championship contention. He finished the season sixth in points.
Elliott scored just two top 10 finishes in the first nine races of the 2019 season before reeling off five straight top 5 finishes, including his first career superspeedway win at Talladega. He later won at Watkins Glen for the second consecutive year. [50] However, inconsistency, including six DNFs, plagued the team for the entire season. Elliott finished the season in 10th place, just ahead of teammates William Byron and Alex Bowman.
Prior to the 2020 Pennzoil 400, car chief Matt Barndt was ejected after the No. 9 car twice failed pre-race inspection. [51] Elliott won the first two stages of the race before hitting the wall and finishing 26th. Elliott would go on to win the 2020 All-Star Race at Bristol and the inaugural 2020 Go Bowling 235 road course race at Daytona. He also that year won the series championship, Chase's first in the Cup series. Elliott's championship was HMS' 13th championship. In 2021, Elliott won the inaugural 2021 Texas Grand Prix at COTA following that up with two straight runner-up finishes. He finished 13th at the inaugural 2021 Ally 400 at Nashville, but was disqualified when his car had five loose lug nuts during post-race inspection. [52] Following the 2021 Foxwoods Resort Casino 301 at Loudon, the No. 9 was docked 25 points after one of the team's assigned engines was allocated to the No. 48. [53]
Elliott started the 2022 season with a 10th place finish at the 2022 Daytona 500. He scored wins at Dover, Nashville, and the Atlanta summer race. He originally finished third at Pocono, but was declared the winner after first- and second-place finishers Denny Hamlin and Kyle Busch were disqualified. Following his fourth-place finish at Watkins Glen, Elliott was awarded the 2022 regular season championship. [54] During the playoffs, he won at Talladega to clinch a spot in the Round of 8, his second career victory at the track and series-high fifth win of the season; also equaling his career-best from his championship-winning season in 2020. [55] Elliott finished 28th at the Phoenix finale after being spun to the inside wall by Ross Chastain with 119 laps to go. As a result of the finish, he finished fourth in the points standings. [56]
Elliott began the 2023 season with a 38th place finish at the 2023 Daytona 500, but rebounded with a second-place finish at Fontana a week later. On March 3, Xfinity Series driver Josh Berry was announced to drive the No. 9 as a substitute after Elliott sustained a leg injury from snowboarding in Colorado. [57] On March 15, the No. 9 was served an L2 penalty after unapproved hood louvers were found installed on the car during pre-race inspection at Phoenix; as a result, the team was docked 100 driver and owner points and 10 playoff points. In addition, Gustafson was suspended for four races and fined US$100,000. The penalty did not affect Elliott due to his injury while the substitute drivers of the No. 9 were ineligible for points. [33] IMSA driver Jordan Taylor drove the car to a 24th place finish in his NASCAR debut at COTA. [58] On March 29, the National Motorsports Appeals Panel amended the penalty, upholding the fine and Gustafson's suspension but restoring the owner and playoff points. [34] Berry finished second at Richmond, his career best in the Cup Series. [59] Elliott returned to the No. 9 at Martinsville, finishing in 10th. [60] At Charlotte, Elliott was put in the wall by Denny Hamlin, who got loose underneath him. In retaliation, Elliott intentionally right rear hooked Hamlin, wrecking both cars in the process. The next day, NASCAR suspended Elliott for one race. Corey LaJoie was announced as the substitute driver of the No. 9 at Gateway. [61] Because he was unable to win a race to make up for all the races he missed, Elliott missed the playoffs for the first time in his Cup career. Nevertheless, due to the points collected by the substitute drivers, the No. 9 was eligible for the owners' playoffs. [62]
Elliott started the 2024 season with a 14th place finish at the 2024 Daytona 500. On April 14, he won at Texas, breaking a 42-race winless streak. This also marked Hooters' first win as a sponsor since Alan Kulwicki's championship run in 1992. [63] On July 1, Hendrick Motorsports ended their partnership with Hooters after the restaurant chain was unable to fulfill its sponsorship obligations to the No. 9. [64]
Year | Driver | No. | Make | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | Owners | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2018 | Chase Elliott | 9 | Chevy | DAY 33 | ATL 10 | LVS 34 | PHO 3 | CAL 16 | MAR 9 | TEX 11 | BRI 29 | RCH 2 | TAL 3 | DOV 12 | KAN 12 | CLT 11 | POC 10 | MCH 9 | SON 4 | CHI 19 | DAY 34 | KEN 13 | NHA 5 | POC 7 | GLN 1* | MCH 9 | BRI 3 | DAR 5 | IND 15 | LVS 36 | RCH 4 | ROV 6 | DOV 1 | TAL 31 | KAN 1 | MAR 7 | TEX 6 | PHO 23 | HOM 7 | 6th | 2350 |
2019 | DAY 17 | ATL 19 | LVS 9 | PHO 14 | CAL 11 | MAR 2 | TEX 13 | BRI 11 | RCH 15 | TAL 1* | DOV 5* | KAN 4 | CLT 4 | POC 4 | MCH 20 | SON 37 | CHI 11 | DAY 35 | KEN 15 | NHA 29 | POC 38 | GLN 1* | MCH 9 | BRI 5 | DAR 19 | IND 9 | LVS 4 | RCH 13 | ROV 1* | DOV 38 | TAL 8 | KAN 2 | MAR 36 | TEX 32 | PHO 39 | HOM 15 | 10th | 2275 | |||
2020 | DAY 17 | LVS 26 | CAL 4 | PHO 7* | DAR 4 | DAR 38 | CLT 2 | CLT 1 | BRI 22 | ATL 8 | MAR 5 | HOM 2 | TAL 38 | POC 25 | POC 4 | IND 11 | KEN 23 | TEX 12 | KAN 12 | NHA 9 | MCH 7 | MCH 9 | DRC 1* | DOV 5 | DOV 39 | DAY 2 | DAR 20 | RCH 5 | BRI 7 | LVS 22 | TAL 5 | ROV 1* | KAN 6 | TEX 20 | MAR 1* | PHO 1* | 1st | 5040 | |||
2021 | DAY 2 | DRC 21* | HOM 14 | LVS 13 | PHO 5 | ATL 38 | BRD 10 | MAR 2 | RCH 12 | TAL 24 | KAN 5 | DAR 7 | DOV 3 | COA 1 | CLT 2 | SON 2 | NSH 39 | POC 12 | POC 27 | ROA 1* | ATL 7 | NHA 18 | GLN 2 | IRC 4 | MCH 8 | DAY 8 | DAR 31 | RCH 4 | BRI 25 | LVS 2 | TAL 18 | ROV 12 | TEX 7 | KAN 2 | MAR 16 | PHO 5 | 4th | 5032 | |||
2022 | DAY 10 | CAL 26 | LVS 9 | PHO 11 | ATL 6 | COA 4 | RCH 14 | MAR 10 | BRD 8 | TAL 7 | DOV 1 | DAR 5 | KAN 29 | CLT 33 | GTW 21 | SON 8 | NSH 1 | ROA 2* | ATL 1* | NHA 2 | POC 1 | IRC 16 | MCH 11 | RCH 5 | GLN 4* | DAY 29* | DAR 36 | KAN 11 | BRI 2 | TEX 32 | TAL 1 | ROV 20* | LVS 21 | HOM 14 | MAR 10 | PHO 28 | 7th | 2313 | |||
2023 | DAY 38 | CAL 2 | MAR 10 | TAL 12 | DOV 11 | KAN 7 | DAR 3 | CLT 34 | SON 5 | NSH 4 | CSC 3 | ATL 13 | NHA 12 | POC 10 | RCH 13 | MCH 36 | IRC 2 | GLN 32 | DAY 4 | DAR 8 | KAN 6 | BRI 7 | TEX 11 | TAL 7 | ROV 9 | LVS 31 | HOM 15 | MAR 17 | PHO 16 | 10th | 2296 | ||||||||||
Josh Berry | LVS 29 | PHO 10 | ATL 18 | RCH 2 | BRD 27 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jordan Taylor | COA 24 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Corey LaJoie | GTW 21 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2024 | Chase Elliott | DAY 14 | ATL 15 | LVS 12 | PHO 19 | BRI 8 | COA 16 | RCH 5 | MAR 3 | TEX 1 | TAL 15 | DOV 5 | KAN 3 | DAR 12 | CLT 7 | GTW 13 | SON 4 | IOW 3 | NHA 18 | NSH 18 | CSC 21 | POC 9 | IND 10 | RCH 9 | MCH 15 | DAY 36 | DAR 11 | ATL 8 | GLN 19 | BRI 2 | KAN 9 | TAL 29 | ROV 5 | LVS 33 | HOM 5 | MAR 2 | PHO 8 | 7th | 2342 | ||
2025 | DAY | ATL | COA | PHO | LVS | HOM | MAR | DAR | BRI | TAL | TEX | KAN | CLT | NSH | MCH | MXC | POC | ATL | CSC | SON | DOV | IND | IOW | GLN | RCH | DAY | DAR | GTW | BRI | NHA | KAN | ROV | LVS | TAL | MAR | PHO | -* | -* |
The No. 17 car at Hendrick Motorsports came about when Darrell Waltrip left Junior Johnson's team following the 1986 season to join Hendrick Motorsports with Tide as his sponsor and 17 as his car number. [65] Waltrip won nine races in his first three seasons with Hendrick, including the Daytona 500 in 1989, a race that had eluded him for many years.
While practicing for his 500th career start in the 1990 Pepsi 400 at Daytona, Waltrip's car spun in oil laid down by another car experiencing engine failure and was hit by Dave Marcis. Waltrip suffered a broken arm, a broken leg, and a concussion. He missed the Pepsi 400, but came back to run one lap at Pocono, before giving way to Jimmy Horton as a relief driver. After Pocono, Waltrip sat out the next five races due to his injuries. Despite missing six races, Waltrip finished 20th in driver points and the team finished 5th in owner points with substitute drivers taking turns in the car – Greg Sacks' second-place finish at Michigan, in August, was the best finish of the team's season. The team scored only one DNF for the season, when Sarel van der Merwe crashed late in the race at Watkins Glen. However, in the 23 races that Waltrip did start, he failed to win for the first time since 1974. At the end of the 1990 season, Waltrip decided he wanted to start a new team, so he left Hendrick Motorsports, taking the No. 17 with him. [66] The Tide sponsorship moved to the flagship No. 5 team with Ricky Rudd as the driver and remained there until the end of the 1993 season. [66]
Year | Driver | No. | Make | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | Owners | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1987 | Darrell Waltrip | 17 | Chevy | DAY 8 | CAR 7 | RCH 20 | ATL 6 | DAR 10 | NWS 21 | BRI 12 | MAR 21 | TAL 11 | CLT 5 | DOV 7 | POC 13 | RSD 30 | MCH 7 | DAY 4 | POC 19 | TAL 4 | GLN 11 | MCH 17 | BRI 21 | DAR 10 | RCH 2 | DOV 10 | MAR 1 | NWS 12 | CLT 9 | CAR 3 | RSD 6 | ATL 18 | 4th | 3911 |
1988 | DAY 11 | RCH 4 | CAR 24 | ATL 3 | DAR 24 | BRI 23 | NWS 14 | MAR 5 | TAL 37 | CLT 1 | DOV 23 | RSD 28 | POC 6 | MCH 8 | DAY 5 | POC 5 | TAL 33* | GLN 20 | MCH 17 | BRI 7 | DAR 4 | RCH 8 | DOV 17 | MAR 1 | CLT 2 | NWS 12 | CAR 31 | PHO 13 | ATL 5 | 6th | 3764 | |||
1989 | DAY 1 | CAR 29 | ATL 1 | RCH 7 | DAR 36 | BRI 2 | NWS 8 | MAR 1* | TAL 5 | CLT 1 | DOV 9 | SON 38 | POC 32 | MCH 3 | DAY 19 | POC 4 | TAL 2 | GLN 16 | MCH 37 | BRI 1* | DAR 22 | RCH 6 | DOV 18 | MAR 1 | CLT 14 | NWS 20 | CAR 3 | PHO 4 | ATL 5 | 4th | 3971 | |||
1990 | DAY 14 | RCH 12 | CAR 6 | ATL 26 | DAR 11 | BRI 9* | NWS 2 | MAR 4 | TAL 10 | CLT 22 | DOV 19 | SON 33 | POC 8 | MCH 15 | DAY INQ† | POC 20 | RCH 3 | DOV 19 | MAR 19 | NWS 7 | CLT 9 | CAR 8 | PHO 4 | ATL 5 | 5th | 3691 | ||||||||
Jimmy Horton | DAY 17 | TAL 13 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sarel van der Merwe | GLN 24 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Greg Sacks | MCH 2 | BRI 20 | DAR 30 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tim Richmond (1986–1987)
Car No. 25 was owned for many years by Rick Hendrick's father, Joe "Papa" Hendrick. It debuted in 1986 as HMS's second team, with a Folgers sponsorship and Tim Richmond driving. Richmond was teamed with veteran crew chief Harry Hyde, who moved over from the No. 5 team after chemistry issues with Geoff Bodine. [2] [5] [67] Richmond won seven times that year and finished third in points. [68] [69] He missed the beginning of the 1987 season due to HIV/AIDS, while publicly saying he was suffering from pneumonia. [68] Benny Parsons drove the first eleven races of the season, with the car renumbered 35; [65] [67] Darrell Waltrip was hired to drive Hendrick's third car at this time. [65] Richmond returned midway through the season and won his first two races, at Pocono and Riverside. [68] Following a blown engine at Michigan and deteriorating health, he left the ride after only eight starts. [67] He died in August 1989. [68] Despite two seasons with HMS, Richmond's 9 race victories was the most for the team from 1987 until 1996 (Darrell Waltrip shared the team record of 9 race victories with Richmond from 1989 to 1996).
Ken Schrader (1988–1996)
In 1988, Ken Schrader took over the ride, winning the pole at the season opening Daytona 500. [70] He won two pole positions, won the Talladega DieHard 500, and finished fifth in points. He won four more poles in 1989 and picked up a victory in the fall race at Charlotte. Kodiak replaced Folgers as the sponsor of the No. 25 for the 1990 season. Schrader failed to win a race in 1990, but he won the Daytona 500 pole for the third year in a row. He won two more races in 1991 and finished ninth in points. Schrader did not win again, but he finished a career-best fourth in points in 1994. After that year, Budweiser replaced Kodiak as the sponsor. Schrader left the team after the 1996 season and was replaced by Ricky Craven. Schrader's nine years with HMS was the longest tenure in the team's history until Jeff Gordon surpassed it in 2002 with his then 10th season with the team.
Ricky Craven (1997–1998)
Craven helped Hendrick complete a 1–2–3 finish in the 1997 Daytona 500 by finishing third behind winner Jeff Gordon and second-place Terry Labonte. After suffering a concussion at Texas, he missed two races. Jack Sprague and Todd Bodine filled in for him during the injury. The other highlight for Craven during the 1997 campaign was a Winston Open win. Craven ultimately finished nineteenth in points.
Multiple Drivers and the #50 (1998)
In 1998, to honor NASCAR's fiftieth anniversary, the No. 25 car changed its number to 50 for the season. Shortly after the season started Craven, still feeling the effects from his concussion the year before, was diagnosed with post-concussion syndrome. Randy LaJoie and Wally Dallenbach Jr. filled in while Craven recovered. Craven returned to driving at his home track, New Hampshire, and won the pole for the event, but after four more races Hendrick permanently replaced Craven with Dallenbach, who had put together the stronger run of the two substitute drivers.
Wally Dallenbach Jr. (1999)
With the team back to racing the No. 25 with Dallenbach behind the wheel, the team raced to an eighteenth-place finish in points 1999. However, Dallenbach left the team to drive for a new team and Budweiser moved over to sponsor Dale Earnhardt, Inc.'s No. 8 car in 2000 and the team needed to hire a replacement and find a sponsor. Homebuilder and television personality Michael Holigan came on to sponsor the car for 2000 and Hendrick hired driver Jerry Nadeau. [71] Nadeau had most recently been driving for MB2 Motorsports as a replacement for a retired Ernie Irvan, who – due to injuries – was pulled out of NASCAR midway through 1999.
Jerry Nadeau (2000–2002)
Nadeau had a solid first year with Hendrick, finishing twentieth in points and winning the season-ending race at Atlanta. [72] The team returned for 2001 with UAW and Delphi as co-sponsors, and Nadeau finished a career high seventeenth in points while nearly repeating his Atlanta victory; Nadeau ran out of gas short of the finish and finished fifth. After eleven races in 2002, Nadeau was let go from the team. [72]
Joe Nemechek (2002–2003)
Nadeau's replacement was Joe Nemechek, who had been released from Haas-Carter Motorsports after his team lost its sponsor Kmart due to bankruptcy and had spent much of the early part of the season substituting for an injured Johnny Benson Jr. in the No. 10 car at MB2. Nemechek won at Richmond in 2003 [72] but was let go before the end of the season so he could join MB2 Motorsports as the replacement for an injured Nadeau. [72] [73]
Brian Vickers (2003–2006)
Nemechek's replacement in the No. 25 was Brian Vickers, [73] who was initially supposed to drive the car beginning in 2004 while racing full-time in the Busch Series in 2003 (where he won the championship). UAW and Delphi did not return as sponsors after 2003, so Hendrick replaced them with GMAC Financial (Vickers' primary sponsor in Busch) and sister company Ditech.com. Despite high expectations, Vickers finished third in Rookie of the Year standings behind Kasey Kahne and Brendan Gaughan. [74] 2004 was a sad year for Vickers and the No. 25 team. "Papa" Joe, long-time owner of the No. 25 car, died in July, while Vickers' close friend Ricky Hendrick (the more recent owner of the 25) perished in a plane crash that also took the lives of nine others in October. [75] Vickers improved to seventeenth in points in 2005. Midway through the 2006 campaign, Vickers announced he would leave Hendrick Motorsports at the end of the season. [75]
Casey Mears (2007)
On June 9, 2006, Hendrick Motorsports announced that Casey Mears of Chip Ganassi Racing would take the spot of Vickers in 2007. [75] Vickers collected his first career win later that season at Talladega in a controversial finish, spinning out teammate Jimmie Johnson and Dale Earnhardt Jr. to take the victory. [72] [76] [77]
In 2007, the National Guard joined forces with longtime Hendrick Motorsports partner GMAC to sponsor the No. 25 Chevrolet driven by Casey Mears. Mears piloted the No. 25 to his first career win at Charlotte Motor Speedway in the Coca-Cola 600. [72] After the season, Mears moved to the No. 5, while the fourth full-time ride was given to the new No. 88 for Dale Earnhardt Jr., who replaced Kyle Busch at Hendrick Motorsports. [78] This left the No. 25 as a part-time team.
Part-time (2008–2015)
Making his Cup Series debut at Texas Motor Speedway in the 2008 Dickies 500, JR Motorsports driver Brad Keselowski started 37th and finished 19th in the No. 25 GoDaddy-sponsored Chevrolet. Keselowski would go on to make limited appearances in the No. 25 in both 2008 and 2009 with the intent of eventually taking over the team's No. 5 car. [79] However, after Mark Martin re-signed to continue driving the No. 5 car in 2010, Keselowski replaced David Stremme in the No. 12 car for Penske Racing late in the 2009 season (the ride he had been offered at the beginning of the season), leaving the Hendrick organization. [79] [80]
The No. 25 returned in 2011, being driven by Mark Martin in that year's Sprint All-Star Race while his usual No. 5 was being occupied by Jimmie Johnson. The Farmers Insurance Group-sponsored car sported a retro red paint scheme resembling the Budweiser and Folgers schemes run by the team in the 1980s and 1990s. [81]
In late 2014, it was announced that Nationwide Series Champion Chase Elliott would drive several races in a fifth Hendrick car in 2015, according to Hendrick Motorsports general manager Doug Duchardt. [82] The car was officially announced as the No. 25 on January 29, 2015, and Elliott drove the car in five races with Xfinity Series sponsor NAPA Auto Parts, preparing to take over the No. 24 car in 2016. [83] In those 5 races, Elliott had an average finish of 26.2 with a best finish of 16th at Richmond Raceway.
Year | Driver | No. | Make | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | Owners | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1986 | Tim Richmond | 25 | Chevy | DAY 20 | RCH 22 | CAR 16 | ATL 7 | BRI 8 | DAR 5 | NWS 12 | MAR 20 | TAL 12 | DOV 32 | CLT 2 | RSD 2* | POC 1* | MCH 15 | DAY 1 | POC 1 | TAL 2 | GLN 1 | MCH 2 | BRI 6 | DAR 1* | RCH 1 | DOV 26 | MAR 10 | NWS 11 | CLT 27* | CAR 20 | ATL 4 | RSD 1 | 3rd | 4147 | |||||||
1987 | DAY | CAR | RCH | ATL | DAR | NWS | BRI | MAR | TAL | CLT | DOV | POC 1* | RSD 1 | MCH 4 | DAY 22 | POC 29 | TAL 11 | GLN 10 | MCH 29 | BRI | DAR | RCH | DOV | MAR | NWS | CLT | CAR | 36th | 1063 | ||||||||||||
Rick Hendrick | RSD 33 | ATL | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1988 | Ken Schrader | DAY 6 | RCH DNQ | CAR 10 | ATL 8 | DAR 29 | BRI 10 | NWS 11 | MAR 10 | TAL 5 | CLT 6 | DOV 21 | RSD 20 | POC 9 | MCH 6 | DAY 8 | POC 2 | TAL 1 | GLN 10 | MCH 12 | BRI 21 | DAR 11 | RCH 18 | DOV 35 | MAR 4 | CLT 7 | NWS 8 | CAR 11 | PHO 14 | ATL 6 | 7th | 3755 | |||||||||
1989 | DAY 2* | CAR 25 | ATL 15 | RCH 19 | DAR 27 | BRI 32 | NWS 14 | MAR 7 | TAL 6 | CLT 3 | DOV 3 | SON 37 | POC 4 | MCH 11 | DAY 36 | POC 7 | TAL 4 | GLN 20 | MCH 11 | BRI 23 | DAR 5 | RCH 24 | DOV 3 | MAR 10 | CLT 1 | NWS 13 | CAR 4 | PHO 13 | ATL 4 | 5th | 3876 | ||||||||||
1990 | DAY 40 | RCH 10 | CAR 3 | ATL 4 | DAR 10 | BRI 6 | NWS 19 | MAR 6 | TAL 28 | CLT 11 | DOV 2 | SON 18 | POC 15 | MCH 27 | DAY 3 | POC 11 | TAL 16 | GLN 9 | MCH 40 | BRI 12 | DAR 39 | RCH 10 | DOV 10 | MAR 27 | NWS 5 | CLT 35 | CAR 5 | PHO 2 | ATL 11 | 11th | 3572 | ||||||||||
1991 | DAY 31 | RCH 10 | CAR 2 | ATL 1 | DAR 19 | BRI 29 | NWS 5 | MAR 23 | TAL 7 | CLT 2 | DOV 1 | SON 5 | POC 7 | MCH 6 | DAY 4 | POC 23 | TAL 40 | GLN 30 | MCH 10 | BRI 3 | DAR 3 | RCH 8 | DOV 33 | MAR 9 | NWS 8 | CLT 38 | CAR 5 | PHO 17 | ATL 37 | 9th | 3690 | ||||||||||
1992 | DAY 37 | CAR 5 | RCH 14 | ATL 41 | DAR 12 | BRI 3 | NWS 22 | MAR 7 | TAL 23 | CLT 26 | DOV 23 | SON 9 | POC 4 | MCH 13 | DAY 6 | POC 12 | TAL 9 | GLN 21 | MCH 11 | BRI 3 | DAR 13 | RCH 9 | DOV 30 | MAR 13 | NWS 23 | CLT 7 | CAR 32 | PHO 6 | ATL 36 | 17th | 3404 | ||||||||||
1993 | DAY 8 | CAR 24 | RCH 20 | ATL 29 | DAR 4 | BRI 34 | NWS 3 | MAR 18 | TAL 21 | SON 4 | CLT 4 | DOV 5 | POC 2 | MCH 16 | DAY 3 | NHA 38 | POC 6 | TAL 32 | GLN 5 | MCH 27 | BRI 24 | DAR 9 | RCH 12 | DOV 2 | MAR 13 | NWS 10 | CLT 9 | CAR 8 | PHO 33 | ATL 27 | 9th | 3715 | |||||||||
1994 | DAY 10 | CAR 9 | RCH 11 | ATL 16 | DAR 7 | BRI 2 | NWS 9 | MAR 31 | TAL 5 | SON 9 | CLT 24 | DOV 3 | POC 3 | MCH 6 | DAY 5 | NHA 24 | POC 39 | TAL 4 | IND 7 | GLN 4 | MCH 11 | BRI 19 | DAR 32* | RCH 9 | DOV 4 | MAR 6 | NWS 14 | CLT 4 | CAR 32 | PHO 15 | ATL 11 | 5th | 4060 | ||||||||
1995 | DAY 9 | CAR 39 | RCH 4 | ATL 27 | DAR 11 | BRI 26 | NWS 12 | MAR 6 | TAL 40 | SON 9 | CLT 30* | DOV 11 | POC 3 | MCH 27 | DAY 6 | NHA 10 | POC 40 | TAL 32 | IND 19 | GLN 36 | MCH 26 | BRI 14 | DAR 23 | RCH 9 | DOV 12 | MAR 32 | NWS 8 | CLT 35 | CAR 33 | PHO 10 | ATL 42 | 17th | 3221 | ||||||||
1996 | DAY 3 | CAR 29 | RCH 14 | ATL 6 | DAR 28 | BRI 29 | NWS 9 | MAR 7 | TAL 20 | SON 8 | CLT 5 | DOV 10 | POC 18 | MCH 16 | DAY 8 | NHA 8 | POC 15 | TAL 26 | IND 16 | GLN 25 | MCH 15 | BRI 13 | DAR 4 | RCH 13 | DOV 22 | MAR 30 | NWS 18 | CLT 29 | CAR 23 | PHO 35 | ATL 30 | 12th | 3540 | ||||||||
1997 | Ricky Craven | DAY 3 | CAR 5 | RCH 14 | ATL 35 | DAR 40 | MAR 22 | SON 39 | TAL 27 | CLT 37 | DOV 13 | POC 16 | MCH 18 | CAL 9 | DAY 37 | NHA 16 | POC 18 | IND 16 | GLN 17 | MCH 12 | BRI 13 | DAR 31 | RCH 18 | NHA 5 | DOV 41 | MAR 8 | CLT 25 | TAL 6 | CAR 3* | PHO 43 | ATL 39 | 18th | 3244 | ||||||||
Todd Bodine | TEX 25 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jack Sprague | BRI 40 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1998 | Ricky Craven | 50 | DAY 14 | CAR 10 | LVS 27 | ATL 34 | NHA 29 | POC 41 | IND 17 | GLN 35 | 27th | 2814 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Randy LaJoie | DAR 38 | BRI 10 | TEX 25 | MAR 5 | TAL 10 | CAL 36 | CLT 38 | DOV 43 | RCH 31 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Wally Dallenbach Jr. | MCH 10 | POC 7 | SON 27 | MCH 8 | BRI 28 | NHA 43 | DAR 31 | RCH 30 | DOV 25 | MAR 32 | CLT 23 | TAL 39 | DAY 30 | PHO 25 | CAR 36 | ATL 25 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
1999 | 25 | DAY 12 | CAR 17 | LVS 13 | ATL 39 | DAR 38 | TEX 23 | BRI 30 | MAR 18 | TAL 20 | CAL 8 | RCH 20 | CLT 21 | DOV 20 | MCH 14 | POC 39 | SON 41 | DAY 26 | NHA 7 | POC 5 | IND 14 | GLN 7 | MCH 23 | BRI 28 | DAR 21 | RCH 28 | NHA 22 | DOV 15 | MAR 22 | CLT 33 | TAL 35 | CAR 39 | PHO 9 | HOM 9 | ATL 23 | 18th | 3367 | ||||
2000 | Jerry Nadeau | DAY 35 | CAR 29 | LVS 20 | ATL 42 | DAR 37 | BRI 19 | TEX 43 | MAR 20 | TAL 19 | CAL 13 | RCH 30 | CLT 38 | DOV 42 | MCH 23 | POC 20 | SON 8 | DAY 15 | NHA 4 | POC 27 | IND 4 | GLN 38 | MCH 12 | BRI 32 | DAR 29 | RCH 10 | NHA 21 | DOV 33 | MAR 12 | CLT 36 | TAL 13 | CAR 27 | PHO 23 | HOM 12 | ATL 1* | 22nd | 3273 | ||||
2001 | DAY 32 | CAR 15 | LVS 15 | ATL 3 | DAR 20 | BRI 30 | TEX 29 | MAR 10 | TAL 25 | CAL 8 | RCH 41 | CLT 13 | DOV 38 | MCH 28 | POC 19 | SON 31 | DAY 6 | CHI 37 | NHA 33 | POC 24 | IND 38 | GLN 6 | MCH 34 | BRI 20 | DAR 9 | RCH 14 | DOV 2 | KAN 12 | CLT 40 | MAR 24 | TAL 35 | PHO 24 | CAR 5 | HOM 33 | ATL 4 | NHA 6 | 18th | 3675 | |||
2002 | DAY 28 | CAR 25 | LVS 15 | ATL 30 | DAR 18 | BRI 8 | TEX 32 | MAR 39 | TAL 32 | CAL 26 | RCH 41 | 34th | 2946 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Joe Nemechek | CLT 30 | DOV 43 | POC 41 | MCH 29 | SON 18 | DAY 36 | CHI 33 | NHA 41 | POC 24 | IND 20 | GLN 38 | MCH 35 | BRI 27 | DAR 21 | RCH 25 | NHA 32 | DOV 23 | KAN 4 | TAL 39 | CLT 40 | MAR 41 | ATL 2 | CAR 28 | PHO 33 | HOM 2* | ||||||||||||||||
2003 | DAY 22 | CAR 23 | LVS 9 | ATL 9 | DAR 13 | BRI 27 | TEX 35 | TAL 21 | MAR 15 | CAL 32 | RCH 1* | CLT 11 | DOV 24 | POC 38 | MCH 21 | SON 35 | DAY 38 | CHI 42 | NHA 29 | POC 7 | IND 37 | GLN 17 | MCH 20 | BRI 19 | DAR 21 | RCH 26 | NHA 3 | DOV 43 | TAL 25 | KAN 37 | CLT 31 | MAR 20 | 27th | 3334 | |||||||
Brian Vickers | ATL 43 | PHO 13 | CAR 24 | HOM 34 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2004 | DAY 39 | CAR 16 | LVS 23 | ATL 21 | DAR 23 | BRI 35 | TEX 12 | MAR 13 | TAL 27 | CAL 29 | RCH 8 | CLT 15 | DOV 23 | POC 13 | MCH 9 | SON 22 | DAY 9 | CHI 14 | NHA 34 | POC 14 | IND 29 | GLN 30 | MCH 22 | BRI 20 | CAL 13 | RCH 37 | NHA 22 | DOV 38 | TAL 36 | KAN 19 | CLT 40 | MAR 27 | ATL 7 | PHO 18 | DAR 21 | HOM 18 | 26th | 3521 | |||
2005 | DAY 21 | CAL 21 | LVS 43 | ATL 6 | BRI 12 | MAR 35 | TEX 34 | PHO 5 | TAL 37 | DAR 16 | RCH 32 | CLT 31* | DOV 6 | POC 2* | MCH 41 | SON 34 | DAY 29 | CHI 4 | NHA 11 | POC 14 | IND 3 | GLN 8 | MCH 9 | BRI 20 | CAL 3 | RCH 37 | NHA 13 | DOV 14 | TAL 6 | KAN 11 | CLT 12 | MAR 36 | ATL 15 | TEX 19 | PHO 26 | HOM 43 | 17th | 3847 | |||
2006 | DAY 7 | CAL 18 | LVS 22 | ATL 23 | BRI 37 | MAR 8 | TEX 43 | PHO 13 | TAL 3 | RCH 37 | DAR 41 | CLT 37 | DOV 23 | POC 4 | MCH 17 | SON 14 | DAY 18 | CHI 13 | NHA 17 | POC 4 | IND 17 | GLN 16 | MCH 15 | BRI 33 | CAL 41 | RCH 24 | NHA 5 | DOV 29 | KAN 8 | TAL 1 | CLT 10 | MAR 17 | ATL 19 | TEX 27 | PHO 11 | HOM 21 | 15th | 3906 | |||
2007 | Casey Mears | DAY 20 | CAL 31 | LVS 40 | ATL 28 | BRI 10 | MAR 42 | TEX 23 | PHO 37 | TAL 39 | RCH 18 | DAR 35 | CLT 1 | DOV 13 | POC 4 | MCH 4 | SON 27 | NHA 23 | DAY 19 | CHI 5 | IND 35 | POC 10 | GLN 15 | MCH 11 | BRI 22 | CAL 15 | RCH 17 | NHA 8 | DOV 6 | KAN 4 | TAL 6 | CLT 21 | MAR 20 | ATL 12 | TEX 31 | PHO 13 | HOM 16 | 15th | 3949 | ||
2008 | Brad Keselowski | DAY | CAL | LVS | ATL | BRI | MAR | TEX | PHO | TAL | RCH | DAR | CLT | DOV | POC | MCH | SON | NHA | DAY | CHI | IND | POC | GLN | MCH | BRI | CAL | RCH | NHA | DOV | KAN | TAL | CLT DNQ | MAR | ATL | TEX 19 | PHO | HOM 23 | 49th | 225 | ||
2009 | DAY | CAL | LVS 38 | ATL | BRI | MAR | TEX 23 | PHO | TAL | RCH | DAR 7 | CLT | DOV DNQ | POC | MCH | SON | NHA | DAY | CHI 32 | IND | POC | GLN | MCH 24 | BRI | ATL | RCH | NHA | DOV | KAN 13 | CAL | CLT 12 | MAR | TAL | TEX | PHO | HOM | 46th | 734 | |||
2015 | Chase Elliott | DAY | ATL | LVS | PHO | CAL | MAR 38 | TEX | BRI | RCH 16 | TAL | KAN | CLT 18 | DOV | POC | MCH | SON | DAY | KEN | NHA | IND 18 | POC | GLN | MCH | BRI | DAR 41 | RCH | CHI | NHA | DOV | CLT | KAN | TAL | MAR | TEX | PHO | HOM | 46th | 89 | ||
Jimmie Johnson (2001–2020)
Hendrick Motorsports' No. 48 team began Cup Series competition in 2001 when Hendrick signed Jimmie Johnson, a second-year Busch Series driver for Herzog-Jackson Motorsports. [84] The team is co-owned by Hendrick and Jeff Gordon. Johnson made his debut at the fall Charlotte race, qualifying 15th and finishing 39th after crashing out. Johnson competed in two other races that year before moving to the Cup Series full-time in 2002, making Hendrick Motorsports a 4-car operation. The No. 48 team took over old cars from the No. 24 team, which built new cars for the 2002 season. Johnson won three races and finished fifth in points, behind only Ryan Newman among rookies. He won three more races in 2003 and finished second in points.
Johnson led the Cup Series in points for much of the 2004 season, and entered the first Chase for the Nextel Cup second behind Gordon. Johnson won four races during the Chase, but finished in second, just eight points behind Kurt Busch. Johnson again led the Cup Series in points for much of the 2005 season, but lost the points lead after a hard crash at the Brickyard 400, and finished the season fifth in points. Johnson scored his first Daytona 500 victory in 2006, despite crew chief Chad Knaus serving a four-race suspension for rules infractions. [85] Johnson also won the All-Star Challenge, Brickyard 400, and his first Nextel Cup championship in 2006. Johnson won the championship again in 2007, winning 10 races, the most by a driver in a single season since Gordon won 13 in 1998. Hendrick Motorsports won 18 of 36 races in 2007, including four in a row during the Chase.
Johnson tied Cale Yarborough's record by winning his third consecutive championship in 2008. In 2009, Johnson won seven races, had 16 top fives, and 24 top tens to become the first NASCAR driver to win four consecutive championships. Johnson eclipsed his own record in 2010 with his fifth straight title, finishing second in the final race of the season to pass Denny Hamlin in points.
The 2011 season's most memorable moment occurred at Talladega, when Johnson used a push from teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr. to beat Clint Bowyer by just .002 seconds, the closest finish in Cup Series history. However, Johnson failed to win a sixth consecutive championship, winning only two races, and his sixth-place points finish was the first time he finished outside the top five in his career. The No. 48 team's performance improved in 2012, winning five races, but late-season mishaps at Phoenix and Homestead relegated them to third in points.
In 2013, Johnson won his second Daytona 500 and fourth All-Star Race on his way to a sixth Cup Series championship. Johnson's 11th-place points finish in 2014, however, marked the first time he finished a season outside the top ten. Johnson won five races in 2015, but again struggled during the Chase and finished tenth. In 2016 Johnson won another five races on his way to his record-tying seventh championship in 2016, joining Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt.
In 2017, Johnson won his final 3 races (Texas, Bristol, and Dover) and made it to the round of 8 but a crash at Phoenix ruined his chance to make the final four. He finished 10th in points
Johnson made the Playoffs in 2018 despite not winning a race, his 15th straight appearance in NASCAR's postseason. At the inaugural Charlotte Roval race, Johnson nearly overtook Martin Truex Jr. to win, but locked his brakes on the final turn and spun out both drivers. Ryan Blaney won the race, and the six spots Johnson lost as a result of the spin eliminated him from the Playoffs.
On March 14, 2018, Lowe's announced they would end their sponsorship of the No. 48 team after the season. [86] To commemorate the longtime partnership, Johnson drove the No. 48 car with its original Lowe's paint scheme in the season-ending race at Homestead-Miami. [87] Following the season, Kevin Meendering from JR Motorsports replaced Knaus as crew chief of Johnson's team, with Knaus moving to the No. 24 team in 2019. [88] Ally Financial (formerly GMAC, a past Hendrick Motorsports sponsor) signed a two-year deal to sponsor the No. 48 team starting in 2019. [89]
Midway through 2019, following a string of disappointing finishes, race engineer Cliff Daniels replaced Meendering as crew chief of the No. 48. [90] [91] [92] However, Johnson still failed to make the postseason for the first time since its inception in 2004, after a crash at Indianapolis knocked him out of Playoff contention. After the season, Ally agreed to extend its sponsorship of the No. 48 team through 2023. [93] [94] Johnson finished a career-worst 18th in points, registering only three top-five finishes the entire season. 2020 would mark Johnson's final season as a full-time NASCAR driver. Johnson again failed to make the Chase due inconsistent finishes and missing the 2020 Brickyard 400 due to being diagnosed with COVID-19. In his final NASCAR race at the 2020 Season Finale 500 at Phoenix, Johnson would finish fifth as teammate Chase Elliott won the race and the 2020 NASCAR Cup Championship. As Elliott took a victory lap, Johnson met Elliott to congratulate him. Many considered the moment as the passing of the torch.
The 48 team had arguably the best driver-crew chief duo in NASCAR history in Jimmie Johnson and Chad Knaus, a former rear tire changer on the pit crew of Jeff Gordon's 24 team. The team also had notable engineers like Charlie Langenstein, who won the Papa Joe Hendrick Award of Excellence in 2009 and was also inducted to the Northeast Modified Hall of Fame. [95] [96]
Alex Bowman (2021–present)
On October 6, 2020, Hendrick Motorsports announced that Alex Bowman and crew chief Greg Ives would move from the No. 88 to the No. 48 for the 2021 season. [97] Bowman scored wins at Richmond (breaking a 139-race winless streak for the No. 48 car, dating back to Dover 2017), Dover (this was also the team's first ever 1-2-3-4 finish), and Pocono to make the playoffs. Following the 2021 Foxwoods Resort Casino 301 at Loudon, the No. 48 was docked 25 points after the car was discovered to be using one of the No. 9 team's engines. [53] During the playoffs, Bowman made it to the Round of 12, but struggled with poor finishes at Las Vegas and Talladega. Following the Charlotte Roval race, he was eliminated from the Round of 12. [98] Despite being eliminated from the playoffs, Bowman secured his fourth win of the season at Martinsville, the final Round of 8 race in 2021.
Bowman started the 2022 season with a 25th place finish at the 2022 Daytona 500. He then scored a win at Las Vegas to make the playoffs. A concussion sustained from his crash at Texas forced him to miss the races at Talladega, Charlotte Roval, Las Vegas, Homestead, and Martinsville, with Noah Gragson filling in the No. 48 for him. [99] [100] [101] Due to his injury, Bowman was eliminated in the Round of 12. [30] Bowman was able to return at Phoenix, finishing 34th.
Bowman began the 2023 season with an fifth place finish at the 2023 Daytona 500. On March 15, the No. 48 was served an L2 penalty after unapproved hood louvers were found installed on the car during pre-race inspection at Phoenix; as a result, the team was docked 100 driver and owner points and 10 playoff points. In addition, Harris was suspended for four races and fined US$100,000. [33] On March 29, the National Motorsports Appeals Panel amended the penalty, upholding the fine and Harris' suspension but restoring the owner, driver, and playoff points. [34] On April 6, the No. 48 was served an L1 penalty after alterations to the car's greenhouse were discovered during post-race inspection following the Richmond race; as a result, the team was docked 60 driver and owner points and five playoff points. In addition, interim crew chief Greg Ives was suspended for two races and fined US$75,000. [102] On April 25, Bowman suffered a back injury from an accident during a sprint car race at West Burlington, Iowa. Josh Berry, who substituted for Chase Elliott earlier in the season, was announced as the relief driver of the No. 48 while Bowman recovers. [103]
Bowman started the 2024 season by finishing second to teammate William Byron at the 2024 Daytona 500. [104] He broke an 80-race drought by winning at the Chicago street race. [105] At the Charlotte Roval, Bowman finished 18th, but was later disqualified after post-race inspection revealed his car did not meet the minimum weight requirement; as a result, he was eliminated prior to the Round of 8. [106]
Year | Driver | No. | Make | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | Owners | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2001 | Jimmie Johnson | 48 | Chevy | DAY | CAR | LVS | ATL | DAR | BRI | TEX | MAR | TAL | CAL | RCH | CLT | DOV | MCH | POC | SON | DAY | CHI | NHA | POC | IND | GLN | MCH | BRI | DAR | RCH | DOV | KAN | CLT 39 | MAR | TAL | PHO | CAR | HOM 25 | ATL 29 | NHA | 52nd | 210 |
2002 | DAY 15 | CAR 28 | LVS 6 | ATL 3 | DAR 6 | BRI 7 | TEX 6 | MAR 35 | TAL 7 | CAL 1 | RCH 31 | CLT 7 | DOV 1 | POC 3 | MCH 14 | SON 35 | DAY 8 | CHI 4 | NHA 15 | POC 15 | IND 9 | GLN 16 | MCH 7 | BRI 34 | DAR 9 | RCH 13 | NHA 9 | DOV 1 | KAN 10 | TAL 37 | CLT 6 | MAR 6 | ATL 22 | CAR 37 | PHO 15 | HOM 8 | 5th | 4600 | |||
2003 | DAY 3 | CAR 8 | LVS 11 | ATL 32 | DAR 27 | BRI 8 | TEX 8 | TAL 15 | MAR 9 | CAL 16 | RCH 19 | CLT 1 | DOV 38 | POC 12 | MCH 16 | SON 17 | DAY 18 | CHI 3 | NHA 1 | POC 15 | IND 18 | GLN 4 | MCH 27 | BRI 5 | DAR 3 | RCH 11 | NHA 1 | DOV 8 | TAL 34 | KAN 7 | CLT 3 | MAR 2 | ATL 3 | PHO 2 | CAR 2 | HOM 3 | 2nd | 4932 | |||
2004 | DAY 5 | CAR 41 | LVS 16 | ATL 4 | DAR 1 | BRI 16 | TEX 9 | MAR 4 | TAL 4 | CAL 2 | RCH 2 | CLT 1 | DOV 32 | POC 1 | MCH 4 | SON 5 | DAY 2 | CHI 2 | NHA 11 | POC 1 | IND 36 | GLN 40 | MCH 40 | BRI 3 | CAL 14 | RCH 36 | NHA 11 | DOV 10 | TAL 37 | KAN 32 | CLT 1 | MAR 1 | ATL 1 | PHO 6 | DAR 1 | HOM 2 | 2nd | 6498 | |||
2005 | DAY 5 | CAL 2 | LVS 1 | ATL 2 | BRI 6 | MAR 8 | TEX 3 | PHO 15 | TAL 20 | DAR 7 | RCH 40 | CLT 1 | DOV 4 | POC 6 | MCH 19 | SON 36 | DAY 6 | CHI 3 | NHA 13 | POC 12 | IND 38 | GLN 5 | MCH 10 | BRI 36 | CAL 16 | RCH 25 | NHA 8 | DOV 1 | TAL 31 | KAN 6 | CLT 1 | MAR 3 | ATL 16 | TEX 5 | PHO 7 | HOM 40 | 5th | 6406 | |||
2006 | DAY 1 | CAL 2 | LVS 1 | ATL 6 | BRI 30 | MAR 3 | TEX 11 | PHO 7 | TAL 1 | RCH 12 | DAR 4 | CLT 2 | DOV 6 | POC 10 | MCH 6 | SON 10 | DAY 32 | CHI 6 | NHA 9 | POC 6 | IND 1 | GLN 17 | MCH 13 | BRI 10 | CAL 11 | RCH 23 | NHA 39 | DOV 13 | KAN 14 | TAL 24 | CLT 2 | MAR 1 | ATL 2 | TEX 2 | PHO 2 | HOM 9 | 1st | 6475 | |||
2007 | DAY 39 | CAL 3 | LVS 1 | ATL 1 | BRI 16 | MAR 1 | TEX 38 | PHO 4 | TAL 2 | RCH 1 | DAR 3 | CLT 10 | DOV 15 | POC 42 | MCH 19 | SON 17 | NHA 5 | DAY 10 | CHI 37 | IND 39 | POC 5 | GLN 3 | MCH 3 | BRI 21 | CAL 1 | RCH 1 | NHA 6 | DOV 14 | KAN 3 | TAL 2 | CLT 14 | MAR 1 | ATL 1 | TEX 1 | PHO 1 | HOM 7 | 1st | 6723 | |||
2008 | DAY 27 | CAL 2* | LVS 29 | ATL 13 | BRI 18 | MAR 4 | TEX 2 | PHO 1 | TAL 13 | RCH 30 | DAR 13 | CLT 39 | DOV 7 | POC 6 | MCH 6 | SON 15 | NHA 9 | DAY 23 | CHI 2 | IND 1 | POC 3 | GLN 7 | MCH 17 | BRI 33 | CAL 1 | RCH 1 | NHA 2 | DOV 5 | KAN 1 | TAL 9 | CLT 6 | MAR 1 | ATL 2 | TEX 15 | PHO 1 | HOM 15 | 1st | 6684 | |||
2009 | DAY 31 | CAL 9 | LVS 24 | ATL 9 | BRI 3 | MAR 1 | TEX 2 | PHO 4 | TAL 30 | RCH 36 | DAR 2 | CLT 13 | DOV 1* | POC 7 | MCH 22 | SON 4 | NHA 9 | DAY 2 | CHI 8 | IND 1 | POC 13 | GLN 12 | MCH 33 | BRI 8 | ATL 36 | RCH 11 | NHA 4 | DOV 1 | KAN 9 | CAL 1 | CLT 1 | MAR 2 | TAL 6 | TEX 38 | PHO 1 | HOM 5 | 1st | 6652 | |||
2010 | DAY 35 | CAL 1 | LVS 1 | ATL 12 | BRI 1 | MAR 9 | PHO 3 | TEX 2 | TAL 31 | RCH 10 | DAR 36 | DOV 16 | CLT 37 | POC 5 | MCH 6 | SON 1 | NHA 1 | DAY 31 | CHI 25 | IND 22 | POC 10 | GLN 28 | MCH 12 | BRI 35 | ATL 3 | RCH 3 | NHA 25 | DOV 1 | KAN 2 | CAL 3 | CLT 3 | MAR 5 | TAL 7 | TEX 9 | PHO 5 | HOM 2 | 1st | 6622 | |||
2011 | DAY 27 | PHO 3 | LVS 16 | BRI 3 | CAL 2 | MAR 11 | TEX 8 | TAL 1 | RCH 8 | DAR 15 | DOV 9 | CLT 28 | KAN 7 | POC 4 | MCH 27 | SON 7 | DAY 20 | KEN 3 | NHA 5 | IND 19 | POC 4 | GLN 10 | MCH 2 | BRI 4 | ATL 2 | RCH 31 | CHI 10 | NHA 18 | DOV 2 | KAN 1 | CLT 34 | TAL 26 | MAR 2 | TEX 14 | PHO 14 | HOM 32 | 6th | 2304 | |||
2012 | DAY 42 | PHO 4 | LVS 2 | BRI 9 | CAL 10 | MAR 12 | TEX 2 | KAN 3 | RCH 6 | TAL 35 | DAR 1 | CLT 11 | DOV 1 | POC 4 | MCH 5 | SON 5 | KEN 6 | DAY 36 | NHA 7 | IND 1 | POC 14 | GLN 3 | MCH 27 | BRI 2 | ATL 34 | RCH 13 | CHI 2 | NHA 2 | DOV 4 | TAL 17 | CLT 3 | KAN 9 | MAR 1 | TEX 1* | PHO 32 | HOM 36 | 3rd | 2360 | |||
2013 | DAY 1 | PHO 2 | LVS 6 | BRI 22 | CAL 12 | MAR 1* | TEX 6 | KAN 3 | RCH 12 | TAL 5 | DAR 4 | CLT 22 | DOV 17 | POC 1* | MCH 28 | SON 9 | KEN 9* | DAY 1* | NHA 6 | IND 2* | POC 13 | GLN 8 | MCH 40 | BRI 36 | ATL 28 | RCH 40 | CHI 5 | NHA 4 | DOV 1* | KAN 6 | CLT 4 | TAL 13* | MAR 5 | TEX 1* | PHO 3 | HOM 9 | 1st | 2419 | |||
2014 | DAY 5 | PHO 6 | LVS 6 | BRI 19 | CAL 24 | MAR 2 | TEX 25 | DAR 3 | RCH 32 | TAL 23 | KAN 9 | CLT 1* | DOV 1* | POC 6 | MCH 1 | SON 7 | KEN 10 | DAY 42 | NHA 42 | IND 14 | POC 39 | GLN 28 | MCH 9 | BRI 4 | ATL 4 | RCH 8 | CHI 12 | NHA 5 | DOV 3 | KAN 40 | CLT 17 | TAL 24* | MAR 32 | TEX 1* | PHO 39 | HOM 9 | 11th | 2274 | |||
2015 | DAY 5 | ATL 1 | LVS 41 | PHO 11 | CAL 9 | MAR 35 | TEX 1* | BRI 2 | RCH 3 | TAL 2 | KAN 1 | CLT 40 | DOV 1 | POC 3 | MCH 19 | SON 6* | DAY 2 | KEN 9 | NHA 22 | IND 15 | POC 6 | GLN 10 | MCH 39 | BRI 4 | DAR 19 | RCH 9 | CHI 11 | NHA 6 | DOV 41 | CLT 39 | KAN 3 | TAL 18 | MAR 12 | TEX 1 | PHO 5 | HOM 9 | 10th | 2315 | |||
2016 | DAY 16 | ATL 1 | LVS 3* | PHO 11 | CAL 1 | MAR 9 | TEX 4 | BRI 23 | RCH 3 | TAL 22 | KAN 17 | DOV 25 | CLT 3 | POC 35 | MCH 16 | SON 13 | DAY 35 | KEN 32 | NHA 12 | IND 3 | POC 16 | GLN 40 | BRI 7 | MCH 6 | DAR 33 | RCH 11 | CHI 12* | NHA 8 | DOV 7 | CLT 1* | KAN 4 | TAL 23 | MAR 1 | TEX 11 | PHO 38 | HOM 1 | 1st | 5040 | |||
2017 | DAY 34 | ATL 19 | LVS 11 | PHO 9 | CAL 21 | MAR 15 | TEX 1 | BRI 1 | RCH 11 | TAL 8 | KAN 24 | CLT 17 | DOV 1 | POC 36 | MCH 10 | SON 13 | DAY 12 | KEN 40 | NHA 10 | IND 27 | POC 35 | GLN 29 | MCH 19 | BRI 11 | DAR 12 | RCH 8 | CHI 8 | NHA 14 | DOV 3 | CLT 7 | TAL 24 | KAN 11 | MAR 12 | TEX 27 | PHO 39 | HOM 27 | 10th | 2260 | |||
2018 | DAY 38 | ATL 27 | LVS 12 | PHO 14 | CAL 9 | MAR 15 | TEX 35 | BRI 3 | RCH 6 | TAL 12 | DOV 9 | KAN 19 | CLT 5 | POC 8 | MCH 20 | SON 11 | CHI 14 | DAY 23 | KEN 14 | NHA 10 | POC 17 | GLN 30 | MCH 28 | BRI 9 | DAR 39 | IND 16 | LVS 22 | RCH 8 | ROV 8 | DOV 36 | TAL 7 | KAN 22 | MAR 12 | TEX 15 | PHO 15 | HOM 14 | 14th | 2242 | |||
2019 | DAY 9 | ATL 24 | LVS 19 | PHO 8 | CAL 17 | MAR 24 | TEX 5 | BRI 10 | RCH 12 | TAL 33 | DOV 14 | KAN 6 | CLT 8 | POC 19 | MCH 15 | SON 12 | CHI 4 | DAY 3 | KEN 30 | NHA 30 | POC 15 | GLN 19 | MCH 34 | BRI 19 | DAR 16 | IND 35 | LVS 11 | RCH 10 | ROV 9 | DOV 8 | TAL 38 | KAN 10 | MAR 38 | TEX 34 | PHO 14 | HOM 13 | 18th | 835 | |||
2020 | DAY 35 | LVS 5 | CAL 7 | PHO 12 | DAR 38 | DAR 8 | CLT 40 | CLT 11 | BRI 3 | ATL 7 | MAR 10 | HOM 16 | TAL 13 | POC 21 | POC 16 | KEN 18 | TEX 26 | KAN 32 | NHA 12 | MCH 12 | MCH 11 | DRC 4 | DOV 7 | DOV 3 | DAY 17 | DAR 18 | RCH 31 | BRI 17 | LVS 11 | TAL 29 | ROV 13 | KAN 31 | TEX 36 | MAR 30 | PHO 5 | 18th | 837 | ||||
Justin Allgaier | IND 37 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2021 | Alex Bowman | DAY 35 | DRC 10 | HOM 9 | LVS 27 | PHO 13 | ATL 3 | BRD 22 | MAR 34 | RCH 1 | TAL 38 | KAN 18 | DAR 17 | DOV 1 | COA 8 | CLT 5 | SON 9 | NSH 14 | POC 1 | POC 7 | ROA 22 | ATL 4 | NHA 9 | GLN 20 | IRC 17 | MCH 16 | DAY 7 | DAR 26 | RCH 12 | BRI 5 | LVS 22 | TAL 38 | ROV 10 | TEX 33 | KAN 11 | MAR 1 | PHO 18 | 14th | 2240 | ||
2022 | DAY 24 | CAL 25 | LVS 1 | PHO 14 | ATL 10 | COA 2 | RCH 8 | MAR 12 | BRD 6 | TAL 9 | DOV 5 | DAR 29 | KAN 9 | CLT 10 | GTW 13 | SON 16 | NSH 36 | ROA 12 | ATL 32 | NHA 35 | POC 11 | IRC 32 | MCH 9 | RCH 20 | GLN 14 | DAY 14 | DAR 10 | KAN 4* | BRI 32 | TEX 29 | PHO 34 | 15th | 2191 | ||||||||
Noah Gragson | TAL 19 | ROV 23 | LVS 11 | HOM 25 | MAR 25 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2023 | Alex Bowman | DAY 5 | CAL 8 | LVS 3 | PHO 9 | ATL 14 | COA 3 | RCH 8 | BRD 29 | MAR 11 | TAL 13 | CLT 12 | GTW 26 | SON 15 | NSH 17 | CSC 37 | ATL 26 | NHA 14 | POC 24 | RCH 18 | MCH 33 | IRC 5 | GLN 23 | DAY 6 | DAR 33 | KAN 10 | BRI 13 | TEX 12 | TAL 28 | ROV 8 | LVS 34 | HOM 19 | MAR 32 | PHO 17 | 20th | 747 | |||||
Josh Berry | DOV 10 | KAN 25 | DAR 30 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2024 | Alex Bowman | DAY 2 | ATL 27 | LVS 18 | PHO 20 | BRI 4 | COA 4 | RCH 17 | MAR 8 | TEX 37 | TAL 5 | DOV 8 | KAN 7 | DAR 8 | CLT 9 | GTW 28 | SON 15 | IOW 8 | NHA 36 | NSH 14 | CSC 1 | POC 3 | IND 31 | RCH 28 | MCH 27 | DAY 16 | DAR 19 | ATL 5 | GLN 18 | BRI 9 | KAN 6 | TAL 16 | ROV 38 | LVS 5 | HOM 7 | MAR 13 | PHO 14 | 9th | 2318 | ||
2025 | DAY | ATL | COA | PHO | LVS | HOM | MAR | DAR | BRI | TAL | TEX | KAN | CLT | NSH | MCH | MXC | POC | ATL | CSC | SON | DOV | IND | IOW | GLN | RCH | DAY | DAR | GTW | BRI | NHA | KAN | ROV | LVS | TAL | MAR | PHO | -* | -* |
Dale Earnhardt Jr. (2008–2017)
On June 13, 2007, Dale Earnhardt Jr. announced he would join Hendrick Motorsports for the 2008 season. On September 14, 2007, it was announced that he would drive the No. 88 car, after a deal with Robert Yates Racing that sent the No. 88 car to Hendrick Motorsports. The No. 88 replaced the No. 25, which scaled back to part-time. Amp Energy (owned by longtime Hendrick sponsor PepsiCo) and the National Guard (which had sponsored the No. 25) stepped up to sponsor the car. Earnhardt Jr.'s crew chief and cousin, Tony Eury Jr., also made the move to Hendrick Motorsports. However, this partnership only lasted until April 2009 when Tony Eury Jr. was replaced by Lance McGrew, a technical advisor and part-time crew chief with HMS for the No. 25 car.
At the start of the 2011 season, Hendrick Motorsports would shuffle the organization, and Earnhardt Jr, the No. 88 and his sponsors moved into the 24/48 shop, with Jeff Gordon's former crew Steve Letarte taking over as Earnhardt's crew chief. [16] For 2012, PepsiCo decided to replace the struggling AMP Energy brand with the Diet Mountain Dew brand. The team won for the first time since 2008 and for the second consecutive year made the Chase, but Earnhardt suffered a concussion during an August Hollywood Casino 400 tire testing on the reconfigured Kansas Speedway, and was not tested for the concussion until the Good Sam Roadside Assistance 500 at Talladega, where he was involved in a second hard crash. After testing, Earnhardt was deemed medically unfit to race. Regan Smith, scheduled to drive for Phoenix Racing, instead drove the No. 88 at Charlotte and Kansas in what turned out to be a tryout that led to Smith joining Earnhardt's Xfinity team for 2013. Earnhardt returned at Martinsville and finished out the season.
Earnhardt finished fifth in Cup Series points in 2013, after winning two poles (at Kentucky Speedway and Dover International Speedway), and posting five-second-place finishes.
The No. 88 returned to prominence in 2014 when Earnhardt won four races – the Daytona 500, both Pocono races, and the fall Martinsville race. Letarte joined NASCAR on NBC in 2015, and JR Motorsports crew chief Greg Ives was hired to replace him. [107] On August 6 of that year, the National Guard decided not to renew their sponsorship with Earnhardt. [108] They would be replaced by Nationwide Insurance, outgoing sponsor of the now-Xfinity Series and longtime sponsor of Earnhardt, for the 2015 season.
Late in 2015, it was announced that Axalta Coating Systems, longtime sponsor of Hendrick's No. 24, would move to sponsor the No. 88 in 2016. [109]
In 2016, concussion-like symptoms ended Earnhardt's season after Kentucky. His replacements were Alex Bowman and Jeff Gordon. 2017 marked Earnhardt Jr.'s final full-time season in Hendrick's No. 88 as he announced his retirement in April of that year.
Alex Bowman (2018–2020)
It was announced on July 20, 2017 that Bowman would take over the No. 88 car for the 2018 season. [110] Despite being winless, Bowman made the Playoffs until he was eliminated from the Round of 12 at the fall Kansas race.
The 2019 season saw improvement in Bowman's finishes, including three consecutive second-place finishes at Talladega, Dover, and Kansas. Bowman also made the starting grid of the 2019 Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race by winning the Fan Vote. It was announced on June 12, 2019, that Nationwide Insurance would not be sponsoring Hendrick Motorsports or the No. 88 after 2019, ending a five-year relationship prematurely. [111] At the 2019 Camping World 400 at Chicagoland Speedway, Bowman held off a late charge from Kyle Larson to win his first career NASCAR Cup race. [112] On June 13, 2019, Nationwide Insurance announced the end of their five-year sponsorship of the No. 88 after the 2019 season. [113] [114] On September 20, tool company Cincinnati Inc. signed a 10-year partnership deal with HMS, including primary sponsorship of the No. 88. [115] [116] He went to get eliminated after the Round Of 12 in the playoffs and finished 12th in the standings with one victory.
The 2020 Daytona 500 saw him finishing 24th after getting collected in multiple wrecks. Then, he was close to winning Las Vegas until he had to make a final stop and finished 13th. His luck finally came at Auto Club when he dominated the race, leading 110 laps to capture his 2nd career victory in the NASCAR Cup Series. Although it was his lone victory of the season, Bowman improved dramatically by finishing a career-best 6th in the final standings.
It was announced on October 6, 2020 that Alex Bowman and his crew chief, Greg Ives, will move over to the No. 48 car for the 2021 season. [97] Later in the month, it was announced that Kyle Larson will join the team in 2021 as the driver of the No. 5 car, discontinuing the use of the No. 88 in the Cup Series by Hendrick Motorsports. [25]
Year | Driver | No. | Make | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | Owners | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2008 | Dale Earnhardt Jr. | 88 | Chevy | DAY 9 | CAL 40 | LVS 2 | ATL 3 | BRI 5 | MAR 6* | TEX 12 | PHO 7 | TAL 10 | RCH 15 | DAR 4 | CLT 5* | DOV 35 | POC 4 | MCH 1 | SON 12 | NHA 24 | DAY 8* | CHI 16 | IND 12 | POC 12 | GLN 22 | MCH 23 | BRI 18 | CAL 11 | RCH 4 | NHA 5 | DOV 24 | KAN 13 | TAL 28 | CLT 36 | MAR 2 | ATL 11 | TEX 20 | PHO 6 | HOM 41 | 12th | 6127 |
2009 | DAY 27 | CAL 39 | LVS 10 | ATL 11 | BRI 14 | MAR 8 | TEX 20 | PHO 31 | TAL 2 | RCH 27 | DAR 27 | CLT 40 | DOV 12 | POC 27 | MCH 14 | SON 26 | NHA 13 | DAY 39 | CHI 15 | IND 36 | POC 28 | GLN 39 | MCH 3 | BRI 9 | ATL 17 | RCH 21 | NHA 35 | DOV 20 | KAN 36 | CAL 25 | CLT 38 | MAR 29 | TAL 11 | TEX 25 | PHO 35 | HOM 28 | 25th | 3422 | |||
2010 | DAY 2 | CAL 32 | LVS 16 | ATL 15 | BRI 7 | MAR 15 | PHO 12 | TEX 8 | TAL 13 | RCH 32 | DAR 18 | DOV 30 | CLT 22 | POC 19 | MCH 7 | SON 11 | NHA 8 | DAY 4 | CHI 23 | IND 27 | POC 27 | GLN 26 | MCH 19 | BRI 13 | ATL 22 | RCH 34 | NHA 4 | DOV 23 | KAN 22 | CAL 16 | CLT 29 | MAR 7 | TAL 39* | TEX 25 | PHO 14 | HOM 27 | 21st | 3953 | |||
2011 | DAY 24 | PHO 10 | LVS 8 | BRI 11 | CAL 12 | MAR 2 | TEX 9 | TAL 4 | RCH 19 | DAR 14 | DOV 12 | CLT 7 | KAN 2 | POC 6 | MCH 21 | SON 41 | DAY 19 | KEN 30 | NHA 15 | IND 16 | POC 9 | GLN 14 | MCH 14 | BRI 16 | ATL 19 | RCH 16 | CHI 3 | NHA 17 | DOV 24 | KAN 14 | CLT 19 | TAL 25 | MAR 7 | TEX 7 | PHO 24 | HOM 11 | 7th | 2290 | |||
2012 | DAY 2 | PHO 14 | LVS 10 | BRI 15 | CAL 3 | MAR 3 | TEX 10 | KAN 7 | RCH 2 | TAL 9 | DAR 17 | CLT 6 | DOV 4 | POC 8 | MCH 1* | SON 23 | KEN 4 | DAY 15 | NHA 4 | IND 4 | POC 32 | GLN 28 | MCH 4 | BRI 12 | ATL 7 | RCH 14 | CHI 8 | NHA 13 | DOV 11 | TAL 20 | MAR 21 | TEX 7 | PHO 21 | HOM 10 | 12th | 2245 | |||||
Regan Smith | CLT 38 | KAN 7 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2013 | Dale Earnhardt Jr. | DAY 2 | PHO 5 | LVS 7 | BRI 6 | CAL 2 | MAR 24 | TEX 29 | KAN 16 | RCH 10 | TAL 17 | DAR 9 | CLT 39 | DOV 10 | POC 3 | MCH 37 | SON 12 | KEN 12 | DAY 8 | NHA 14 | IND 6 | POC 5 | GLN 30 | MCH 36 | BRI 10 | ATL 8 | RCH 13 | CHI 35 | NHA 6 | DOV 2 | KAN 8 | CLT 15 | TAL 2 | MAR 8 | TEX 2 | PHO 4 | HOM 3 | 5th | 2363 | ||
2014 | DAY 1* | PHO 2 | LVS 2 | BRI 24 | CAL 12 | MAR 3 | TEX 43 | DAR 2 | RCH 7 | TAL 26 | KAN 5 | CLT 19 | DOV 9 | POC 1 | MCH 7 | SON 3 | KEN 5 | DAY 14 | NHA 10 | IND 9 | POC 1 | GLN 11 | MCH 5 | BRI 39 | ATL 11 | RCH 12 | CHI 11 | NHA 9 | DOV 17 | KAN 39 | CLT 20 | TAL 31 | MAR 1 | TEX 6 | PHO 8 | HOM 14 | 8th | 2301 | |||
2015 | DAY 3 | ATL 3 | LVS 4 | PHO 43 | CAL 6 | MAR 36 | TEX 3 | BRI 16 | RCH 14 | TAL 1* | KAN 3 | CLT 3 | DOV 14 | POC 11 | MCH 2 | SON 7 | DAY 1* | KEN 21 | NHA 5 | IND 22 | POC 4 | GLN 11 | MCH 10 | BRI 9 | DAR 8 | RCH 5 | CHI 12 | NHA 25 | DOV 3 | CLT 28 | KAN 21 | TAL 2* | MAR 4 | TEX 6 | PHO 1 | HOM 40 | 12th | 2310 | |||
2016 | DAY 36 | ATL 2 | LVS 8 | PHO 5 | CAL 11 | MAR 14 | TEX 2 | BRI 2 | RCH 13 | TAL 40 | KAN 15 | DOV 32 | CLT 14 | POC 2 | MCH 39 | SON 11 | DAY 21 | KEN 13 | 18th | 895 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Alex Bowman | NHA 26 | MCH 30 | CHI 10 | NHA 14 | CLT 39 | KAN 7 | TAL 36 | TEX 13 | PHO 6* | HOM 16 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Jeff Gordon | IND 13 | POC 27 | GLN 14 | BRI 11 | DAR 14 | RCH 16 | DOV 10 | MAR 6 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2017 | Dale Earnhardt Jr. | DAY 37 | ATL 30 | LVS 16 | PHO 14 | CAL 16 | MAR 34 | TEX 5 | BRI 38 | RCH 30 | TAL 22 | KAN 20 | CLT 10 | DOV 11 | POC 38 | MCH 9 | SON 6 | DAY 32 | KEN 12 | NHA 18 | IND 36 | POC 12 | GLN 37 | MCH 14 | BRI 23 | DAR 22 | RCH 13 | CHI 17 | NHA 34 | DOV 7 | CLT 12 | TAL 7 | KAN 7 | MAR 11 | TEX 35 | PHO 10 | HOM 25 | 21st | 668 | ||
2018 | Alex Bowman | DAY 17 | ATL 20 | LVS 16 | PHO 13 | CAL 13 | MAR 7 | TEX 28 | BRI 5 | RCH 18 | TAL 8 | DOV 23 | KAN 18 | CLT 9 | POC 27 | MCH 16 | SON 9 | CHI 10 | DAY 10 | KEN 39 | NHA 11 | POC 3 | GLN 14 | MCH 19 | BRI 8 | DAR 23 | IND 33 | LVS 19 | RCH 12 | ROV 4 | DOV 28 | TAL 33 | KAN 9 | MAR 17 | TEX 14 | PHO 30 | HOM 29 | 16th | 2204 | ||
2019 | DAY 11 | ATL 15 | LVS 11 | PHO 35 | CAL 21 | MAR 14 | TEX 18 | BRI 23 | RCH 17 | TAL 2 | DOV 2 | KAN 2 | CLT 7 | POC 15 | MCH 10 | SON 14 | CHI 1 | DAY 21 | KEN 17 | NHA 14 | POC 20 | GLN 14 | MCH 10 | BRI 15 | DAR 18 | IND 21 | LVS 6 | RCH 23 | ROV 2 | DOV 3 | TAL 37 | KAN 11 | MAR 30 | TEX 5 | PHO 23 | HOM 9 | 12th | 2257 | |||
2020 | DAY 24 | LVS 13 | CAL 1* | PHO 14 | DAR 2 | DAR 18 | CLT 19* | CLT 31 | BRI 37 | ATL 12 | MAR 6 | HOM 18 | TAL 7 | POC 27 | POC 9 | IND 30 | KEN 19 | TEX 30 | KAN 8 | NHA 15 | MCH 21 | MCH 36 | DRC 12 | DOV 21 | DOV 5 | DAY 7 | DAR 6 | RCH 9 | BRI 16 | LVS 5 | TAL 14 | ROV 8 | KAN 3 | TEX 5 | MAR 6 | PHO 16 | 6th | 2371 |
Car No. 35 (1987)
In 1987, Benny Parsons drove for Hendrick's second team as a replacement for Tim Richmond. Hendrick kept the No. 25 available for Richmond to run a limited schedule, so Parsons drove the No. 35 car instead with Richmond's crew chief Harry Hyde. [65] [72] [117] Parsons opened the year with a second-place finish at the Daytona 500. [117] Parsons ended up running the entire season, with the team temporarily expanding to four teams when Richmond returned for eight races, [67] and finished sixteenth in points with six top-fives and nine top-tens. [72]
Car No. 44 (2005–2006)
In 2005, Terry Labonte took over the car after he announced he became semi-retired; the number had been changed to No. 44, used by Labonte during his first championship season in 1984. Kyle Busch, meanwhile, moved to his No. 5 car full-time. Sponsored by Kellogg's, Pizza Hut, and GMAC/Ditech.com, Labonte drove the car in a limited schedule over the next two years. [8] His final race with the team was at his native Texas Motor Speedway in November 2006, in a special commemorative paint scheme sponsored by longtime-partner Kellogg's. [8] Though Labonte planned to retire following the race, he would race on a part-time or substitute basis until 2014. [118]
Car No. 46 (1993)
In 1993, Hendrick fielded a car numbered 46 for two races. The first race was that year's Daytona 500 as Al Unser Jr. qualified for his only career NASCAR race in a Valvoline-sponsored car (Valvoline being his then-primary sponsor in the IndyCar Series). [6] The second saw Buddy Baker fail to qualify a DuPont-sponsored car at Talladega in the spring. [119]
Car No. 58 (1995)
In 1995, Hendrick fielded the No. 58 Racing for a Reason Chevrolet. The sponsor is a leukemia marrow sponsor founded by Rick Hendrick. The car was originally entered as a safety car for Jeff Gordon to clinch his first championship. The No. 58 was driven by Jeff Purvis, as Gordon had to finish 41st or better in the 42 car field. Gordon clinched the championship by staying out on green flag pit stops. Purvis came in 26th place. The No. 58 would not return until 2001 as the No. 48 car.
Car No. 60 (2002–2003)
In 2002, Hendrick fielded the No. 60 Haas Automation/NetZero-sponsored Chevrolet, fielded jointly between Hendrick and Gene Haas in preparation for Haas to field a new team, Haas CNC Racing. Hendrick driver Jack Sprague attempted six races (qualifying for three) with a best finish of 30th at Homestead Miami Speedway. [5] [120] [121] While Haas and Sprague moved over to the No. 0 Pontiac, the No. 60 returned as a Hendrick R&D car in 2003 with test driver David Green [122] and continued sponsorship from Haas and NetZero. [123] Green attempted the four restrictor plate races (missing the first Daytona and Talladega races) with a best finish of 32nd. Brian Vickers made his Cup Series debut at the fall Charlotte race, finishing 33rd, before moving to the 25 car. [73] The 60 was entered at the Homestead-Miami season-finale with Kyle Busch and Ditech.com, but withdrew after the car failed pre-race inspection. [124]
Car No. 84 (2004)
18-year-old Kyle Busch took over the car the following season, selecting the number 84 (reverse of No. 48) for the Carquest Chevy. He made his debut at his hometown track Las Vegas Motor Speedway where Busch qualified 18th but brushed the wall early in the race and ended up not finishing the race after 11 laps with engine issues. [125] Busch made five more starts that year with a best finish of twenty-fourth at California. In those six starts, Busch had an average finish of 35.2 with 4 DNFs and 3 DNQs.
In 1989 and 1990, Hendrick Motorsports served as a technical consultant during the filming of Days of Thunder, including providing camera-equipped race cars to capture racing footage. The team prepared 14 race cars for the filming. In-race footage was taken at the 1989 Autoworks 500 at Phoenix International Raceway, and the 1990 Daytona 500, in addition to stunt footage shot outside of NASCAR events. At each race, the cars would run 100 miles before start-and-parking. At Phoenix, Hendrick qualified two movie cars: the No. 46 City Chevrolet Lumina driven by Greg Sacks, and the No. 51 Exxon Lumina driven by Bobby Hamilton. An additional car, the No. 18 Hardee's Lumina driven by Tommy Ellis, failed to qualify. [119] [126] [127] [128] [129] Though the cars were not intended to run competitively, Hamilton qualified fifth and led five laps before pulling off the track. [127] [130] Sacks would run the 46 in the Busch Clash exhibition race at Daytona in early 1990, finishing second in one of the movie cars. [131] [132] After the incident at Phoenix, the two cars fielded at the Daytona 500 with Ellis (No. 18 Hardee's Lumina) and Hamilton (No. 51 Mello Yello Lumina) were not officially scored. [126] [133]
Following the production of the film, Sacks continued to drive for Hendrick's research and development team on a part-time basis in 1990. Sacks attempted two races (1 DNQ) in the No. 46, twelve in the No. 18 with sponsorship from Ultra Slim Fast, and three in the No. 17 as a substitute for Darrell Waltrip. Sacks earned a second-place finish at Talladega in May, and a pole at Daytona in July. [66] [131] [132] [134] [135] The team was shut down and Sacks released at the end of the year, due to Slim Fast ending its sponsorship. [66]
William Clyde Elliott Sr., also known as "Awesome Bill from Dawsonville", "Million Dollar Bill", or "Wild Bill" is an American former professional stock car racing driver. He last competed in the Camping World Superstar Racing Experience part-time in 2022. His accolades include the 1988 Winston Cup Championship and garnering 44 wins in that series, including two Daytona 500 victories in 1985 and 1987, three Southern 500 victories in 1985, 1988, and 1994, one Winston 500 victory in 1985, one Brickyard 400 victory in 2002, one "The Winston All-Star Race" win in 1986, and a record four consecutive wins at Michigan International Speedway between 1985 and 1986.
Terrance Lee Labonte, nicknamed "Texas Terry" or "the Iceman", is an American former stock car driver. He raced from 1978 to 2014 in the former NASCAR Winston Cup and Sprint Cup Series. A two-time Cup Series champion in 1984 and 1996 and the 1989 IROC champion, he is the older brother of 2000 Cup Series champion Bobby Labonte, and the father of former Nationwide Series driver Justin Labonte. He also co-owns a Chevrolet dealership in Greensboro, North Carolina with Rick Hendrick. He appeared on the CBS series The Dukes of Hazzard in 1984, where he played an unnamed pit crew member.
Hendrick Motorsports is an American professional auto racing organization that competes in the NASCAR Cup Series. The team was founded in 1984 as All-Star Racing by Rick Hendrick. Hendrick Motorsports has won a NASCAR-record 312 Cup Series races and 14 Cup Series owners and drivers championships to go with three Truck Series owners and drivers titles and one Xfinity Series drivers crown. Additionally, the team has 28 Xfinity Series race wins, 26 Truck Series race wins, and seven ARCA Menards Series race wins.
The YellaWood 500 is a NASCAR Cup Series stock car race held at Talladega Superspeedway in Lincoln, Alabama, hosting an event in the NASCAR playoffs. The race is one of four NASCAR Cup Series races currently run with tapered spacers, the others being the GEICO 500 in May, the Coke Zero Sugar 400, and the Daytona 500. Through 1996, this race was normally held in early August or late July. In 1997, it was moved to early October due to the uncomfortably hot summer temperatures, and sometimes unpredictable summertime thunderstorms in the Alabama area. In 2009, the race moved again, this time to November 1 as part of a realignment agreement with Atlanta and Fontana.
Stewart–Haas Racing was an American professional stock car racing team that competed in the NASCAR Cup Series and the NASCAR Xfinity Series. The team was co-owned by three-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Tony Stewart and Haas Automation founder Gene Haas. It was founded in 2002 as Haas CNC Racing after Haas, whose company was a sponsor of Hendrick Motorsports, elected to form his own team. In 2009, Stewart, who had been driving for Joe Gibbs Racing, made a deal with Haas to drive for the team and in return receive a 50% stake in it. The team closed at the conclusion of the 2024 season.
Chad Anthony Knaus is an American former NASCAR crew chief. He is currently employed at Hendrick Motorsports as the Vice President of Competition. Knaus has 81 victories as Jimmie Johnson's crew chief and is the only NASCAR crew chief to win five consecutive championships. He has worked in NASCAR since 1991. Over this time, he has worked for four teams: Dale Earnhardt Incorporated, Melling Racing, Tyler Jet Motorsports and Hendrick Motorsports. He has been a crew chief in NASCAR for 19 years and is considered to be one of the greatest NASCAR crew chiefs of all-time. He was inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame on January 19, 2024.
The 2003 NASCAR Winston Cup Series was the 55th season of professional stock car racing in the United States and the 32nd modern-era Cup Series season. The season began on February 8 at the Daytona International Speedway with the Budweiser Shootout and ended on November 16 at Homestead-Miami Speedway with the Ford 400. Despite only winning one race throughout the whole season, Matt Kenseth, driving the No.17 Ford for Roush Racing, was strongly consistent following the lone win, and was crowned the Winston Cup champion. His only win came in the third race of the 36 race season. Chevrolet took home the NASCAR Manufacturers' Championship after capturing 19 wins and 264 points over second-place finisher Dodge, who had nine wins and 203 points. Ford finished the year third with seven wins and 200 points, and Pontiac finished fourth with one win and 125 points.
Regan Lee Smith is an American former professional stock car racing driver and a current pit reporter for Fox NASCAR. He most recently drove part-time in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, driving the No. 8 Chevrolet Camaro SS for JR Motorsports.
The 2001 NASCAR Winston Cup Series was the 53rd season of professional stock car racing in the United States, the 30th modern-era Cup series. It began on February 11, 2001, at Daytona International Speedway and ended on November 23, 2001, at New Hampshire International Speedway. Jeff Gordon of Hendrick Motorsports was declared as the series champion for the fourth time in seven years.
JR Motorsports is an American professional stock car racing team that currently competes in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, eNASCAR Coca-Cola iRacing Series, CARS Tour, and occasionally in the NASCAR Advance Auto Parts Weekly Series. The team is based in Mooresville, North Carolina, co-owned by former NASCAR Cup Series driver Dale Earnhardt Jr., his sister Kelley Earnhardt Miller, Kelley's husband and former racer L.W. Miller, and the owner of his former Cup Series team, Rick Hendrick. As of 2023, the team fields four full-time entries in the Xfinity Series: the No. 1 Chevrolet Camaro SS full-time for Carson Kvapil, the No. 7 Camaro full-time for Justin Allgaier, the No. 8 Camaro full-time for Sammy Smith, and the No. 88 Camaro full-time for Connor Zilisch.
William Clyde "Chase" Elliott II is an American professional stock car racing driver. He competes full-time in the NASCAR Cup Series, driving the No. 9 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 for Hendrick Motorsports and part-time in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, driving the No. 17 Chevrolet Camaro for the same team. He won the 2014 NASCAR Xfinity Series championship, becoming the first rookie to win a national series championship in NASCAR and the youngest champion in that series.
Alexander Michael Warren Bowman is an American professional stock car racing driver and team owner. He competes full-time in the NASCAR Cup Series, driving the No. 48 Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 for Hendrick Motorsports and part-time in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, driving the No. 17 Chevrolet Camaro for the same team. He owns a Dirt Midget and Sprint car racing team Alex Bowman Racing. He is known for a record six consecutive front-row starts in the Daytona 500, from 2018 to 2023, winning the pole in 2018, 2021, and 2023.
The 2015 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series was the 67th season of professional stock car racing in the United States and the 44th modern-era Cup season. The season began at Daytona International Speedway with the Sprint Unlimited exhibition race, the Budweiser Duels, and the Daytona 500. The season ended with the Ford EcoBoost 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Kyle Busch won the championship, despite missing the first third of the season due to severe leg injuries suffered in an Xfinity Series race at Daytona. Busch also became the first Toyota driver to win a Cup championship. Despite not running the full season, Brett Moffitt was named Rookie of the Year.
The 2016 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series was the 68th season of professional stock car racing in the United States and the 45th modern-era Cup series season. The season began at Daytona International Speedway with the Sprint Unlimited, the Can-Am Duel and the Daytona 500. The season ended with the Ford EcoBoost 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Jimmie Johnson of Hendrick Motorsports won his seventh drivers' championship, tying Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt for most all-time. Toyota won the manufacturer's championship, becoming the first manufacturer to win the manufacturer's championship other than Chevrolet since 2002.
American stock car racing driver Jeff Gordon enjoyed a successful career in the Cup Series, the top category of NASCAR. Gordon spent his entire driving career with Hendrick Motorsports, making 797 starts between 1992 and 2015 in the No. 24 Chevrolet for 24 seasons. He briefly came out of retirement during the 2016 season by competing in HMS' No. 88 Chevrolet for eight races, giving him a career total 805 starts. Gordon's career achievements include four championships, 93 points-paying victories, and 81 poles.
The 2017 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series was the 69th season of professional stock car racing in the United States, and the 46th modern-era Cup series season. The season began at Daytona International Speedway with the Advance Auto Parts Clash, the Can-Am Duel qualifying races and the 59th running of the Daytona 500. The season ended with the Ford EcoBoost 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Jimmie Johnson entered the season as the defending champion, having won his record-tying seventh Cup championship that he shares with Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt. Martin Truex Jr. of Furniture Row Racing won the championship, his first in the series. Toyota won the Manufacturers' Championship for the second year in a row.
The Hendrick Motorsports No. 24 car is a NASCAR Cup Series team that has been active since 1992. The team began with driver Jeff Gordon, who spent his entire full-time career behind the wheel of the No. 24. Gordon won 93 points-paying races, the most of any driver in NASCAR's modern era, and four series championships before retiring from full-time racing in 2015. The No. 24 was driven by Chase Elliott in 2016 and 2017. Elliott earned a spot in the NASCAR playoffs both seasons but failed to win a points-paying race. Since 2018, the No. 24 has been driven by William Byron. Gordon, Elliott, and Byron each earned Cup Series Rookie of the Year honors while using the No. 24.
The NASCAR operation of Chip Ganassi Racing was established in 1989 by Cuban-American businessman Felix Sabates. The team was known as SABCO Racing, formed after Sabates purchased an R&D team from Hendrick Motorsports. The team was renamed Team SABCO in 1996. In 2001, Ganassi bought 80% of the ownership interest in the then-two-car team to form Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates; the same year the team switched from Chevrolet to full-works Dodge and received a same partnership treatment as Penske Racing, Evernham Motorsports, Bill Davis Racing, Melling Racing and Petty Enterprises teams. In 2009, Ganassi partnered with Dale Earnhardt, Inc. owner Teresa Earnhardt to merge their NASCAR operations into Ganassi's shop and entered under the Earnhardt Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates banner, while returning to Chevrolet equipment. The NASCAR team dropped the Earnhardt name in 2014, and Ganassi revealed that Teresa was never truly involved with the team. Rob Kauffman, chairman of the Race Team Alliance, purchased a stake in the team in 2015. The NASCAR program has fielded full-time entries for notable drivers including Kyle Petty, Joe Nemechek, Sterling Marlin, Jimmy Spencer, Juan Pablo Montoya, Jamie McMurray, Kyle Larson, Kurt Busch, and Ross Chastain. After already having his name removed from the team previously, at the end of the 2019 season, Sabates announced his retirement as a co-owner from the team, taking effect after the 2020 season.
The 2021 NASCAR Cup Series was the 73rd season for NASCAR professional stock car racing in the United States and the 50th season for the modern era Cup Series. The season started at Daytona International Speedway with the Busch Clash, where it was the first year that the non-points event was run on the track's road course layout instead of the oval. That race was followed by the Bluegreen Vacations Duel qualifying races, and the 63rd running of the Daytona 500, the first points race of the season. The regular season also ended at Daytona with the 2021 Coke Zero Sugar 400 on August 28, where Kyle Larson won the Regular Season Championship. Following the 2021 Xfinity 500 at Martinsville Speedway on October 31, Chevrolet claimed its 40th Manufacturer's Championship and its first since 2015. The NASCAR playoffs ended with the NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race at Phoenix Raceway on November 7 with Larson earning his first Cup Series championship after a 10-win season.