Hendrick Motorsports
Between Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, Terry Labonte, Mark Martin, Darrell Waltrip, and plenty more, Hendrick Motorsports has rostered some of the biggest names in NASCAR's history.
The professional racing organization was founded by Rick Hendrick in 1984 and originally known as All Star Racing, and it's enjoyed more success than any other team with a record-setting number of victories in the Cup Series and 18 drivers' championships across the sport's leading circuits.
Hendrick Motorsports fields four full-time cars in the Cup Series: the No. 5 Chevrolet driven by Kyle Larson, the No. 9 Chevrolet driven by Chase Elliott, the No. 24 Chevrolet driven by William Byron, and the No. 48 Chevrolet driven by Alex Bowman. Bowman, Byron, and Kyle Larson also compete under the Hendrick Motorsports umbrella in the Xfinity Series.
Alex Bowman has missed a month of NASCAR action but will make his return in the Coca-Cola 600.
Losing his crew chief to Hendrick Motorsports was a big blow for Michael McDowell.
Kyle Larson left the field in shambles by dominating the All-Star Race following a last-place restart in the early minutes.
Justin Marks is reining in Ross Chastain after a Monday the Trackhouse Racing owner said was filled with ‘difficult conversations.'
Both Rick Hendrick and crew chief Cliff Daniels dropped mentions of Chevrolet into their comments Sunday as displeasure with Ross Chastain intensified.
Denny Hamlin and Kyle Larson engaged in a duel that lasted nearly 40 laps at Kansas Speedway.
It's quite possible the 16 drivers who will make the 2023 NASCAR Playoffs are already in position.
Alex Bowman picked the wrong time to get injured.
Alex Bowman missed Monday's race at Dover due to injury, but followed it closely and delivered live commentary on Twitter that kept fans laughing and entertained.
Kyle Larson was the driver everyone wanted to speak to after Alex Bowman was injured in a dirt race on Tuesday. Maybe folks should be asking NASCAR and team owners the tough questions.