The Oakland Press

Erik Jones will drive iconic No. 43 for Petty MS

- By Jenna Fryer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. » Erik Jones will drive NASCAR’s iconic No. 43 next season for Richard Petty Motorsport­s, a pairing of a driver and a team both in need of fresh starts.

Jones in August was dropped by megateam Joe Gibbs Racing after six seasons, while Bubba Wallace and RPMare splitting at the end of the year. Wallace’s social activismth­is year became the defining characteri­stic of the storied Petty organizati­on.

“They still have something to prove and I have something to prove,” Jones told The Associated Press. “We are both motivated to write a new chapter. It’s just a really clean slate, a chance to start from scratch and do something completely different.”

Wallace, NASCAR’s only fulltime Black driver, this season has been outspoken on racial inequality and injustice. He ran a Black LivesMatte­r paint scheme

on the No. 43 and RPM adopted Wallace’s “compassion, love, understand­ing” platform.

Wallace’s recent prominence helped the driver sign millions of dollars in new sponsorshi­p, but the funding will follow him next season when he moves to a new team formed by Michael Jordan and Denny Hamlin.

The loss of Wallace could have crippled RPM, the cash-strapped team coowned by NASCAR Hall of Famer Richard Petty. Instead, a volatile free-agent market helped RPM land Jones, a 24-year-old considered among the top young talent in NASCAR.

RPM chairman Brian Moffitt said there was “no fear at all” the organizati­on would not survive splitting with Wallace.

“We’ve been here since it started in 1948 and we plan to be involved for many, many years,” Moffitt told the AP. “It’s a passion of the family and we want to keep things headed in the right direction. I think Erik gives us an opportunit­y to get back to ourwinning ways.”

RPM will again field a Chevrolet next season in partnershi­p with Richard Childress Racing. Jerry Baxter will return as crew chief of the No. 43.

Wallace applauded hiring.

“Great choice to keep the needle moving! Awesome people to be around at track and away!” Wallace tweeted.

Jones begins a new journey outside of Toyota for the first time in his career. Hewas a longtime developmen­tal driver for the manufactur­er and his career was fast-tracked when as a 16-year-old he beat Kyle Busch in a late model race.

Toyota helped Jones land a full-time ride in the Truck Series with Kyle Busch Motorsport­s, then moved him throughNAS­CAR’s national ladder with Gibbs. Jones won rookie of the year in the Truck, Xfinity and Cup Series, as well as the Truck Series championsh­ip.

Jones’ 18 national series victories include a pair the of Cup Series wins at two of NASCAR’s most storied tracks. Hewonthe July race at Daytona Internatio­nal Speedway in 2018 and the Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway the next year. Both victories locked Jones into the playoffs.

Jones has not had the same overall Cup success of his Gibbs teammates, and he failed to make the playoffs this year. The team in August decided to replace Jones with Christophe­r Bell, another longtime Toyota developmen­t driver, a swap Jones said “blindsided” him because he believed he was working on a contract extension with Gibbs.

It made Jones a late add to the free-agent market, and despite his potential and young age, Jones was passed over for many of the open seats. He brings no sponsorshi­p with him, which made him a tough sell for teamowners inneed of funding.

RPM has long struggled to raise the cash needed to consistent­ly contend for wins, but Moffitt said some of its sponsors are staying with the organizati­on.

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