Los Angeles Times

NASCAR ready for an anniversar­y party with parity

Tributes, new races on tap for a 75th season with wide-open fields among its story lines.

- By John Cherwa

NASCAR continues its unique position in the sports landscape Sunday when it holds its biggest event at the beginning, rather than the end, of its season with the running of the 65th Daytona 500. Wait, you say, isn’t this the 75th anniversar­y of NASCAR? Indeed, it is, but more on that later.

Daytona isn’t even the first 500-mile stock-car race because the Southern 500 at Darlington preceded it. But it was on the sands of Daytona Beach, Fla., that Bill France Sr. started an auto racing circuit where drivers were in cars that looked and acted like the ones people drove to work, except faster. Some even drove their race cars to the track in the beginning.

There is little stock in stock car racing now. The cars are precision crafted and tested and cost a quarter-million to more than a half-million dollars. Since the cars can wreck, the big teams have plenty of extra motors and bodies.

Speaking of teams, the little single-car guy is at a disadvanta­ge because there are 17 teams on the circuit, including Hendrick Motorsport­s, Joe Gibbs Racing and Stewart-Haas Racing, which have four cars each, the maximum allowed by NASCAR. In addition to the research and developmen­t pluses, drivers often help their teammates in drafting, pushing and blocking situations.

So, what makes this season different? Here are a few expected story lines in this year’s version of NASCAR.

Greatest drivers, new races unveiled

It won’t take long before the constant mention of the 75th season will start to sound like an old LP with a scratch in it. NASCAR has a few tricks, including the unveiling of its 75 greatest drivers, a 25-person addition from the list it did 25 years ago.

Even something as fanfriendl­y as this can rile up its passionate fan base. At the Rose Parade, NASCAR caught blowback from fans when its float had depictions of Dale Earnhardt Sr., Richard Petty and Jeff Gordon but left Jimmie Johnson off the float.

NASCAR also has an inaugural street race in Chicago over Fourth of July weekend that includes the iconic Grant Park and Lake Shore Drive. NASCAR is returning to North Wilkesboro (N.C.) Speedway for its AllStar Race on May 21. The short track had been mostly shuttered since 1996 until Dale Earnhardt Jr. and civic

leaders made it a project to reopen the track.

Parity on the track

A sport rarely knows which is better, to have a dominant performer whom everyone can root for or against week after week, or an anyone-can-win sense of equality that brings the excitement of unpredicta­bility. NASCAR seems to be traversing the path of parity. Last year, it had a record-tying 19 winners over 36 races. Five were first-time winners. A lot of the credit for this newfound sense of equality comes from the Next Gen cars that were introduced last year. The goal was to make it more about the skill of the driver instead of the money behind the R&D of the teams.

Steve Phelps, NASCAR president, offered evidence to NBC Sports, which broadcasts the second half of the schedule after NFL Sundays. Fox has the rights to the first half.

“We had a meeting with one of our race teams, who some people consider to be back of the [starting] grid,” Phelps said. “And this principal said to me ‘When I go to a racetrack, every single time, I believe we can win. I’ve never felt that before this Next Gen car, which is terrific. The underdog can come in here and win.’ ”

What’s going on at Joe Gibbs Racing?

First answer, yes, it’s that Joe Gibbs, who won the Super Bowl three times as coach of Washington. That’s two times fewer than he’s won the NASCAR Cup series as an owner. A lot has changed since last year. Most importantl­y, two-time NASCAR champion Kyle Busch has left the team to join Richard Childress Racing. That leaves veterans Denny Hamlin, Martin Truex Jr. and up-and-comer Christophe­r Bell.

Busch is being replaced by Ty Gibbs, the grandson of the owner. It does not appear as if the move is swaddled in nepotism as Gibbs is incredibly talented despite

the fact he has the baby face of a 20-year-old who is just learning to shave. Last year he won the Xfinity Series, the triple A for NASCAR.

He has some growing up to do. At Martinsvil­le’s Xfinity playoff race last year he made contact with Brandon Jones’ car on the final overtime lap, eliminatin­g his teammate, even though Gibbs already had qualified for the final. After the race he compared himself to Jesus in a radio interview.

At the spring Martinsvil­le race, he was eliminated from competitio­n on the last lap by Sam Mayer. During the cool-down lap, Gibbs ran into Mayer’s car, resulting in a fistfight on pit road.

Is Kyle Busch in trouble?

In short, not as far as NASCAR is concerned. The two-time NASCAR Cup champion was sentenced to 31⁄2 years in a Mexican prison and fined $1,100 this month for “carrying a firearm without a license and possession of cartridges for the exclusive use of the armed forces” while boarding a private plane in Cancun to return to the United States.

The gun had six hollowpoin­t bullets in the chamber.

Busch said he has a concealed carry permit in the U.S. and forgot the handgun was in his bag when he went through a routine security check. There is no explanatio­n as to how he was able to leave and how or if he will have to serve his prison sentence. Busch said the situation has been resolved.

A NASCAR spokesman told Autoweek: “We do have a member conduct policy. With the informatio­n we received, we did not feel it warranted any disciplina­ry action.” Busch apologized and took responsibi­lity for the incident.

Busch has 60 Cup wins, tying him with Kevin Harvick for the most victories by an active full-time driver.

Comings and goings

Retirement­s in NASCAR tend to have the same feel as those of profession­al boxers. It’s tough to give it up. With that caveat always hovering, Kevin Harvick, 47, has announced that this season will be his last as a full-time racer. The key word here is “full-time.” Harvick issued this statement: “It’s definitely been hard to understand when that right moment is because we’ve been so fortunate to run well. But sometimes there are just other things going on that become more important and, for me, that time has come.”

After a poor 2022 season in which Truex, 42, didn’t finish a single race in the top three, breaking a seven-year winning streak, there was speculatio­n that if things didn’t improve this could be it for him. But Truex won the Clash at the Coliseum recently. More success like that could keep retirement discussion on the back burner.

And speaking of retirement, Johnson, 47, has come out of his on a part-time basis after leaving NASCAR two years ago. He plans to run a limited schedule, including the Daytona 500. He’s also become a partner in the rebranded Legacy Motor Club, formerly Petty GMS Motorsport­s. Maury Gallagher and Petty are also part of the ownership group.

“Working through the 2022 season, I knew I wanted to come back in NASCAR and still moonlight in Indy cars,” Johnson told The Times.

His schedule hasn’t been announced but Johnson says Auto Club Speedway in Fontana is on his “short list” if things can be worked out. The El Cajon native once called Fontana his home track.

 ?? RICK SCUTERI ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? TY GIBBS won the Xfinity Series last season and replaces Kyle Busch for Joe Gibbs Racing. But the 20-year-old has some maturing to do on and off the track.
RICK SCUTERI ASSOCIATED PRESS TY GIBBS won the Xfinity Series last season and replaces Kyle Busch for Joe Gibbs Racing. But the 20-year-old has some maturing to do on and off the track.

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