The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Seeking rebound from awful 2018

Legendary team has plenty of work ahead to succeed in 2019.

- By Jenna Fryer

DAYTONA BEACH, FLA. — Rick Hendrick worked too hard building NASCAR’s top organizati­on to tolerate mediocrity. If his teams had simply been average last season he might not rate it as one of the worst in team history.

The Hendrick cars were pretty bad — seven-time NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson failed to win for the first time in his Cup career — and it took 22 races for the organizati­on to get its first victory. The final tally showed just three Chase Elliott victories and the organizati­on with 12 Cup titles was locked out of the championsh­ip-deciding finale for the second consecutiv­e year.

In a wide-ranging interview with The Associated Press, Hendrick guaranteed this year will be much improved.

“Last year sucked. I ain’t gonna do that no more,” Hendrick said. “I’m too competitiv­e to do that and our organizati­on is too good to be doing that.”

The season was not entirely surprising considerin­g the upheaval to both the driver lineup and the behind-the-scenes operations. The roster was stacked just three years ago with Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kasey Kahne and Johnson, but looks dramatical­ly different as Hendrick begins its 36th season in the Cup Series.

Gordon retired after the 2015 season, Earnhardt was sidelined most of 2016 because of concussion-related ailments and he retired the next year. Kahne was released for underperfo­rming and Hendrick suddenly had two high-profile rides to fill. Elliott had already replaced Gordon, and the newest vacancies were filled by William Byron, a rookie last season, and Alex Bowman, who had bounced around looking for a competitiv­e ride until he filled in for Earnhardt in 2016.

Bowman is 26, Elliott is 23 and Byron celebrated his 21st birthday during the offseason. Johnson is entering his 18th full-time Cup season and turns 44 this September.

Johnson was surrounded by inexperien­ced newcomers at the same time Chevrolet made a body change to its Cup entrant and switched to the Camaro. Although Bowman won the Daytona 500 pole in the Camaro’s debut, and Chevy driver Austin Dillon won the race, that was the lone highlight for most of the season. Chevy didn’t win again until Elliott’s first career victory in August and Camaro drivers totaled just four victories. Ford won 19 races in its outgoing Fusion and Toyota scored 13 wins in its Camry.

Hendrick completed a massive restructur­ing before the 2018 season and its resources were stretched thin as all four teams were moved into one shop for the first time. The teams had previously been split in pairs, and the consolidat­ion put everyone in the same building with the crew chiefs working as a quartet.

So much change at one time had an impact on performanc­e.

“We really looked like we were out to lunch most of the year,” Hendrick said. “Until Chase won, it didn’t even look like we were in the same ballpark. But we started to close the big gap toward the end of the year and now we’ve turned the page.”

Hendrick had built his team from nothing and weathered the tightest of financial situations. All-Star Racing barely made it through the first two months of its inaugural 1984 season.

Hendrick had a 5,000-squarefoot shop with eight employees and a legendary crew chief in Harry Hyde. But he didn’t have a driver, a sponsor or solid prospects. A deal with Richard Petty to run the Daytona 500 didn’t materializ­e and the seat was offered to Tim Richmond. Hendrick pulled the offer when Geoff Bodine stopped in the shop one day and offered to wait in the lobby until Richmond made his decision.

Hendrick figured he had five races to find the sponsorshi­p needed to stay in business and Hyde later talked him into stretching it another three weeks. He was just about out of money when Hendrick allowed Northweste­rn Security Life to put its logos on Bodine’s car for free at Martinsvil­le Speedway, the eighth race of the season and probably the last unless Hendrick stumbled upon serious financial interventi­on.

That race at Martinsvil­le was the moment that saved what is now Hendrick Motorsport­s. Bodine pulled off a near-miracle and won the race, and the overjoyed Northweste­rn executives agreed to fund the rest of the season.

That 1984 season was always the one Hendrick considered his most difficult in NASCAR. Then came 2018 and uncharacte­ristic struggles across the board.

“It was the toughest year I had in racing that I can remember,” Hendrick said. “There were dark days before that, the year we almost closed, but after you’ve won as much as we have, it was rough to go through. I knew it was going to be tough, but I didn’t know it was going to be that tough. The reorganiza­tion, bringing on two young drivers and we were just behind when we started the season. And when you are that far off, nobody else is waiting for you to catch up.”

The worst is behind the organizati­on, Hendrick said, and he’s encouraged about this season. He split Johnson and longtime crew chief Chad Knaus at the end of the year and has tasked Knaus with building another team around Byron the same way he did when he launched Johnson’s team in 2002. A new racing package for this season should benefit both Bowman and Byron because neither had much experience under the old rules.

 ??  ?? Team owner Rick Hendrick (top) has replaced some of his legendary drivers with Cup newcomers Alex Bowman (left), William Byron and Chase Elliott (right). Only Elliott won in 2018.
Team owner Rick Hendrick (top) has replaced some of his legendary drivers with Cup newcomers Alex Bowman (left), William Byron and Chase Elliott (right). Only Elliott won in 2018.
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