Joe Gibbs Racing
Founded by former NFL head coach Joe Gibbs, the only person who has won both a Super Bowl and a NASCAR Cup Series Championship, as well as the only person inducted into both the Pro Football and the NASCAR Halls of Fame, Joe Gibbs Racing is a professional racing organization that first started operating in 1991.
The team made its Cup Series debut at the 1992 Daytona 500 and now competes in all major circuits under the NASCAR banner.
Within the Cup Series, Joe Gibbs Racing fields four full-time cars: the No. 11 Toyota driven by Denny Hamlin, the No. 18 Camry driven by Kyle Busch, the No. 19 Camry driven by Martin Truex Jr., and the No. 20 Camry driven by Christopher Bell. It also fields three full-time entries in the Xfinity Series, currently helmed by a stable of drivers that includes Brandon Jones and Ty Gibbs, the grandson of Joe Gibbs.
JGR has won nine total drivers' championships, including five in the Cup Series, and has won over 400 races between the circuits.
Noah Gragson and Ty Gibbs are the two-driver field for the 2023 Rookie of the Year Award in the NASCAR Cup Series.
Sammy Smith is following closely in the footsteps of Ty Gibbs, who is coming off an Xfinity Series season championship.
Trevor Bayne drove nine times for the JGR Xfinity Series team in 2022, but he's still hunting for rides for the upcoming season.
Joe Gibbs Racing has filled out its 2023 rosters and left two distractions behind, setting the table for a potentially big year.
What are the chances of Christopher Bell and Chase Elliott reaching the Championship 4 again in 2023?
Richard Childress Racing announced that most of Tyler Reddick's old sponsors are sticking with the No. 8 Chevy and Kyle Busch.
Denny Hamlin's contract negotiations with Joe Gibbs Racing could prove to be difficult.
Joe Gibbs Racing warned fans about the graphic nature of a new video it shared on Twitter that shows the finger of Christopher Bell's jackman getting crushed during a late pit stop in Phoenix.
The Joe Gibbs Racing driver lineup will look drastically different in a few years, which is why the owner needs to keep Christopher Bell.
Martin Truex Jr. missed the NASCAR Playoffs for the first time since 2014.