The Arizona Republic

Knaus thriving as a manager

- Jenna Fryer

BRASELTON, Ga. – Back on top of the pit stand in his natural habitat, Chad Knaus rattled off a list of instructio­ns to his crew ahead of qualifying for the Petit Le Mans at Road Atlanta.

“Make sure we don’t have upside down windshield wipers,” he radioed. “One thing I don’t like is to look like a fool.”

Yup, same old CK.

But also, maybe a little different? It has been a full year since Knaus was promoted from crew chief at Hendrick Motorsport­s to vice president of competitio­n, and his intensity and attention to detail have not waned.

Only he seemed looser at Road Atlanta, over a three-day weekend that culminated with a 10-hour endurance race. He partnered with Jimmie Johnson for a NASCAR record-tying seven Cup championsh­ips, but this version of Knaus isn’t so rigid.

He makes jokes – a lot of ‘dad jokes,’ but Knaus is now a 50-year-old father of two toddlers – and generally seems more easygoing.

Knaus once dumped his pit crew in the middle of a playoff race with Johnson. When they won the 2008 championsh­ip, his celebratio­n was delayed because he first had to gather the sheets of his meticulous notes that had been swept away in the wind.

But at Road Atlanta, this version of Knaus allowed The Associated Press to sit atop the pit stand and access nearly everything.

Including a nearly unobstruct­ed view of his notes.

Meet IMSA Chad.

“That’s not Chad Knaus down there, no way. That’s a whole new Chad, racing sports cars and having fun Chad. Different guy altogether,” said Steve Letarte, a former crew chief for Jeff Gordon and thus Knaus’ closest partner at Hendrick Motorsport­s.

But they were rivals, too, and the Johnson vs. Gordon 2007 championsh­ip battle is considered one of the greatest in NASCAR history.

Letarte walked away from the grind after the 2014 season – he never led Gordon

past Johnson for a title – for a lessstress­ful job as an NBC Sports analyst. Knaus never slowed.

He remained atop the No. 48, the team he built from scratch around Johnson in 2002, for another four years. And when his and Johnson’s up-and-down working relationsh­ip finally fractured beyond repair, Knaus left the No. 48 after the 2018 season for a two-year stint as crew chief for William Byron.

Then he went into management, less weekends away from home, not so much pressure to keep everything running at the high level he demands. This time in IMSA?

It’s four endurance races in the No. 48 with Johnson in a collaborat­ion between Hendrick and Action Express Racing. The stress level has been kicked down several notches.

“I probably look more relaxed, I’m a little older. But I don’t have my hands in everything,” Knaus told the AP. “I’m here to help support and work with Jimmie and the guys, but the Action Express guys, they do the meat of the work and

they ask me to do the strategy. Which is cool, you know?”

Don’t be mistaken, though, Knaus is still very serious about work and winning.

In a new behind-the-scenes role at Hendrick, Knaus led the competitio­n department for an organizati­on that combined to win 17 of 36 races and put two drivers in the championsh­ip four.

He was in North Carolina in the Hendrick “war room” helping with strategy when Kyle Larson won the Cup season finale at Phoenix Raceway to clinch Rick Hendrick’s 15th championsh­ip. It was Larson’s 10th points-paying victory of the season – equaling the mark Johnson and Knaus set in 2007.

He alternates NASCAR weekends at the track with Hendrick general manager Jeff Andrews, so the four IMSA endurance races were Knaus’ only chance this year to dip back into the thick of competitio­n.

Hendrick gave him the job as he was still settling into his other job.

“It came together really quick, we were having a meeting in early January with Mr. Hendrick, and I went up and gave him a hug and in Mr. Hendrick fashion, he pulled me in tight and said, ‘Hey, I need you to go down to Daytona with Jimmie and run the 24-hour race,’” Knaus said.

“I didn’t know it was going to turn into this. None of us did.”

The No. 48 finished second in its debut at the 24 Hours of Daytona. It would have scored another podium in the Twelve Hours of Sebring but Knaus admittedly “didn’t know all the rules” and Kamui Kobayashi had exceeded his maximum drive time by the time he crossed the finish line in third. The penalty dropped the team to seventh, last in class.

“I blew Sebring,” Knaus shrugged. That’s fine.

IMSA is where Knaus is seeing other forms of motorsport­s up-close for the first time in his career, and the exposure is valuable for a Hendrick organizati­on tied heavily to Cup. NASCAR will debut a new spec race car next season, and its design has similariti­es to the GTD class cars in IMSA. No current NASCAR teams compete in that sports car class, but enough dabble in either Xfinity, Trucks, IndyCar or sports cars that Hendrick could use some flexibilit­y.

“It’s really been eye-opening. We have a very narrow focus for Hendrick Motorsport­s, we don’t mess with Xfinity. We don’t mess with trucks,” Knaus told AP, “and it’s served us well. But it has left us, in my mind, a little vulnerable going into the 2022 season with the (Next Gen) car because everybody else that we are racing against has some type of a tie to other racing. We don’t have that at HMS.”

There is no clear end game. Nobody has said if the No. 48 will run sports cars in 2022, and Knaus said it’s premature to think about a full-time IMSA entry. He’s all for expanding into another series but said “it’s really hard to deviate from the model that we’ve got, right? It’s just done well for us.”

He spends most of his time at a desk these days, but Knaus insisted his internal flame burns as hot as ever.

“I love it. I enjoy the heck out of it, my drive is not in question,” he said.

 ?? JOHN DAVID MERCER/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Chad Knaus, right, was promoted from crew chief at Hendrick Motorsport­s to vice president of competitio­n.
JOHN DAVID MERCER/USA TODAY SPORTS Chad Knaus, right, was promoted from crew chief at Hendrick Motorsport­s to vice president of competitio­n.

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