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Hendrick Motorsports Car No. 24

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Hendrick Motorsports No. 24 car
Owner(s)Rick Hendrick
Linda Hendrick
Jeff Gordon
Principal(s)Ray Evernham 1992-1999, Brian Whitesell 1999, Robbie Loomis 2000-2005, Steve Letarte 2005-2010, Alan Gustafson 2011-2017, Darian Grubb 2018, Chad Knaus 2019-2020, Rudy Fugle 2021-present
Base4400 Papa Joe Hendrick Blvd, Concord, North Carolina, 28262
SeriesNASCAR Cup Series
Race driversJeff Gordon (1992–2015)
Chase Elliott (2016–2017)
William Byron (2018–present)
SponsorsDuPont/Axalta (1992–2015, 2018–Present) Pepsi/Mountain Dew (2001–2017)
Nicorette (2006–2008)
National Guard (2009-2010)
AARP (2011–2015)
Panasonic (2014–2015)
3M (2015–2016)
NAPA (2016–2017)
Kelley Blue Book (2016–2017)
SunEnergy1 (2016–2017)
Little Caesars (2017)
Hooters (2017)
Liberty University (2018–Present)
Hertz (2018–2020)
UniFirst (2018–2019)
Hendrick Automotive Group (2018–2020)
Valvoline (2021–present)
Acronis (2022)
Relay Payments (2023–present)
HP (2023–present)
PODS (2023)
ManufacturerChevrolet
Opened1992
Career
Debut1992 Hooters 500 (Atlanta)
Latest race2024 NASCAR Cup Series Championship Race (Phoenix)
Drivers' Championships4
Race victories106
Pole positions97

The Hendrick Motorsports No. 24 car is a NASCAR Cup Series team that has been active since 1992. The team began with driver Jeff Gordon, who spent his entire full-time career behind the wheel of the No. 24. Gordon won 93 points-paying races, the most of any driver in NASCAR's modern era, and four series championships before retiring from full-time racing in 2015. The No. 24 was driven by Chase Elliott in 2016 and 2017. Elliott earned a spot in the NASCAR playoffs both seasons but failed to win a points-paying race. Since 2018, the No. 24 has been driven by William Byron. Gordon, Elliott, and Byron each earned Cup Series Rookie of the Year honors while using the No. 24.

History

[edit]
Jeff Gordon's No. 24 DuPont Chevrolet at Sonoma in 2005

Jeff Gordon (1992–2015)

[edit]

Gordon and his crew chief, Ray Evernham, were signed away from Bill Davis Racing after Rick Hendrick watched Gordon drive BDR's No.1 Ford to his first Busch Series victory at Atlanta Motor Speedway in March 1992.[1] The car number was originally intended to be No. 46, a Hendrick car driven by Greg Sacks for the filming of Days of Thunder in 1989 and 1990, but was changed after a licensing conflict with Paramount Pictures. No. 24 was selected due to its insignificance in NASCAR history prior to Gordon;[2] at the time no driver had ever won a Cup race in the No. 24.[3]

Gordon debuted in the 1992 Hooters 500, using his now-iconic DuPont rainbow paint scheme designed by Sam Bass,[2][4] qualifying 21st and finishing 31st after a crash. The team went full-time in 1993 with Ray Evernham serving as crew chief. Gordon won his Twin 125 qualifying race at Daytona and finished fifth in the Daytona 500. He finished 14th in points and won Cup Series Rookie of the Year.[4] In 1994, Gordon scored his first Winston Cup victory in the Coca-Cola 600, won the inaugural Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis, and finished the season eighth in points. Gordon won the 1995 Winston Cup championship, and finished second behind Hendrick teammate Terry Labonte in 1996.

Ray Evernham's "Rainbow Warriors" in 1997

Throughout the mid-90s, Gordon and Evernham's team became known as the "Rainbow Warriors," a nickname derived from the No. 24's colorful paint scheme and the similarly bright jumpsuits worn by the team's pit crew. Evernham became famous for his innovation improving the duration and efficiency of pit stops. Instead of using team mechanics as his pit crew, as was customary at the time, Evernham created a group of specialists (often former athletes) who trained using choreography, agility exercises, and weight lifting. The team studied film between races to identify spots for improvement. Evernham is largely credited with reducing the expected duration of a four-tire pit stop from around 20 seconds to under 15.[5]

Gordon won his second championship in 1997, winning three of NASCAR's crown jewel races (the Daytona 500, Coca-Cola 600, and Southern 500).[4] He won his second consecutive and third overall title in 1998, tying Richard Petty's modern-era record for wins in a season with 13. The following season, Gordon again won the Daytona 500, but the No. 24 team struggled with consistency and failed to win a third straight title. Crew chief Ray Evernham left the team to assist in Dodge's pending return to NASCAR, and was replaced by Brian Whitesell, who guided Gordon to wins in his first two races as crew chief. At the end of the season, Gordon signed a "lifetime" contract with Hendrick Motorsports, giving him partial ownership of the team.[6]

Robbie Loomis replaced Brian Whitesell (who was promoted to team manager) in 2000, a season which saw Gordon score his 50th career victory at Talladega and finish ninth in points. In 2001, the No. 24 car unveiled a new blue- and red-flamed paint scheme, also designed by Bass, as lead sponsor DuPont expanded its marketing beyond automotive finishes.[7] Gordon bounced back with six wins, six poles, and 24 top 10 finishes, winning his fourth championship.

In 2002, Gordon became car owner for rookie Jimmie Johnson's No. 48 Lowe's Chevrolet, a team that has since tied a NASCAR record with seven Cup Series championships. After a pair of top-five points finishes in 2003 and 2004, Gordon won three of the first nine races in 2005, including his third Daytona 500 win. However, Gordon ultimately missed the Chase for the Nextel Cup and finished 11th in points, the first time since his rookie year he finished outside the top 10. The following season was more productive for Gordon and new crew chief Steve Letarte, returning to the Chase and finishing sixth in points. In 2007, despite winning six races and scoring a modern-era record 30 top-10 finishes, Gordon finished second in points to teammate Johnson. Gordon returned to the Chase in 2008, but failed to win a race for the first time since his rookie year. Following the 2008 season, Gordon appeared on The Today Show to unveil his new "Firestorm" paint scheme for 2009 and beyond, which expanded the car's red flames and replaced the blue trim with black. Gordon broke a 47-race winless drought on April 4, 2009 at Texas, his first win at the track.

Jeff Gordon's No. 24 DuPont Chevrolet at Las Vegas in 2012, the No. 24's 20th and final season of DuPont sponsorship

At the start of the 2011 season, a HMS organizational shuffle saw Gordon, the No. 24 and his sponsors move to the 5/88 shop, with Mark Martin's former crew chief Alan Gustafson becoming crew chief of the No. 24 team. The same year, AARP became the team's primary sponsor, partnering with Gordon to form the "Drive to End Hunger" initiative. Pepsi continued its associate sponsor deal, and DuPont scaled back to 14 races as primary sponsor.[8] Gordon won three races and finished eighth in points. An inconsistent 2012 season meant Gordon needed a late-season win at Pocono to sneak into the Chase. Weeks later, Gordon, upset about an earlier altercation, intentionally wrecked championship contender Clint Bowyer during the final laps of the AdvoCare 500 and was fined $100,000. Gordon ended the season with Hendrick Motorsports' first Cup Series win at Homestead-Miami Speedway. This was also the final race of a 20-year relationship between the No. 24 team and DuPont; Axalta Coating Systems replaced DuPont's 14-race sponsorship.[9]

Jeff Gordon's No. 24 AARP Drive to End Hunger Chevrolet SS in 2013

Gordon was added to the 2013 Chase following "Spingate" at Richmond,[10][11] but failed to win his fifth Cup title. The following season, Gordon was in position to reach the championship round until late-race shuffling at Phoenix left him just short.

On January 22, 2015, Gordon announced the upcoming season would be his final as a full-time Cup Series driver. 3M signed on to sponsor the No. 24 for 11 races over three seasons, joining AARP and Axalta as primary sponsors.[12][13] Gordon raced his famous rainbow paint scheme for the final time in the 2015 Irwin Tools Night Race; a loose wheel resulted in a 26th-place finish.[4] Gordon secured a spot in the championship round by winning at Martinsville, breaking a 39-race winless streak in what would be his final Cup Series victory.[14] Axalta unveiled a special silver paint scheme to commemorate Gordon's career at Homestead, and Hendrick's other three cars raced with yellow number decals to honor Gordon.[15][16] Gordon finished sixth in the race and third in the final points standings.[17] Gordon returned as a part-time Cup Series driver in 2016, filling in for an injured Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the No. 88 car.

Chase Elliott (2016–2017)

[edit]
Chase Elliott at Daytona International Speedway in 2016

In 2016, Hendrick development driver Chase Elliott became the second driver to race the No. 24 car for Hendrick Motorsports.[18] The team's primary sponsor became NAPA Auto Parts, which had previously sponsored Elliott in the Xfinity Series (3M scaled back its sponsorship and Axalta moved to the No. 88 team).[18][19] Elliott won the pole in his first Daytona 500 start, but finished 37th after an early crash. Despite a winless season, Elliott made the Chase and won Cup Series Rookie of the Year.

After a fifth-place finish in 2017, Hendrick Motorsports announced the No. 24 would be renumbered to No. 9, allowing Elliott to drive the same car number his father Bill raced for 20 years. Instead of retiring the No. 24, Hendrick renumbered Kasey Kahne's No. 5 to No. 24, with rookie William Byron replacing Kahne as the team's driver.[20]

William Byron (2018–present)

[edit]
William Byron's No. 24 Chevrolet Camaro at Richmond in 2018

Byron and crew chief Darian Grubb struggled through the 2018 season, finishing in the top 10 only four times and ending the season 23rd in the standings. After just one season, Hendrick Motorsports replaced Grubb with Chad Knaus, who was crew chief for seven Cup Series championships for Hendrick's No. 48 team.[21]

The pairing of Byron and Knaus immediately led to improved results, as Byron won the pole for the 2019 Daytona 500. The team won four more poles over the course of the 2019 season, making the Playoffs and finishing 11th. Despite not winning a race in 2019, on August 29, 2020, Byron won at Daytona, making it 94 wins overall.

Before the start of the 2021 season then Kyle Busch Motorsports crew chief Rudy Fugle would replace Knaus as the No. 24 with Knaus leaving his crew chief role to become to become the Vice President of Competition for Hendrick Motorsports.[22] Fugle had previously been the crew chief for Byron when he competed in the Truck series for Kyle Busch Motorsports in 2016 during which he won 7 races and finished 5th in the championship before moving to Xfinity the following season.

The 2021 season opened with two finishes outside of the top 20, but in the third race of the year at Homestead-Miami, he took his second career win (the 95th for the 24) after dominating the second half of the race. Since winning at Homestead-Miami, Byron has finished in the Top 10 in twelve of the next fourteen races. During the playoffs, Byron made it to the Round of 12, but struggled with poor finishes at Las Vegas and Talladega. Following the Charlotte Roval race, he was eliminated from the Round of 8.[23] Byron finished 10th in the points standings.

During the 2022 season, Byron started with two DNFs at the 2022 Daytona 500 and Fontana, but rebounded with wins at Atlanta and Martinsville.[24][25] On July 28, three days prior to the Indianapolis road race, the generator of the No. 24's hauler caught fire. The car was not damaged by the blaze.[26] At the Texas playoff race, Byron spun Denny Hamlin towards the infield grass during a late-caution period; he was subsequently fined US$50,000 and the No. 24 was docked 25 driver and owner points.[27] On October 6, the National Motorsports Appeals Panel rescinded the points penalty and instead amended the fine to US$100,000, placing Byron back to seventh in the playoff standings.[28] Byron was eliminated following the Round of 8 after finishing eighth at Martinsville (Byron would be credited a 7th-place finish after 4th-place finisher Brad Keselowski was disqualified when his car failed to meet minimum-weight requirements).[29]

William Byron doing a burnout in his No. 24 Chevrolet Camaro at Las Vegas in 2023

Byron started the 2023 season with a 34th place DNF at the 2023 Daytona 500. He later scored back-to-back wins at Las Vegas and Phoenix.[30][31] On March 15, the No. 24 was served an L2 penalty after unapproved hood louvers were found installed on the car during pre-race inspection at Phoenix; as a result, the team was docked 100 driver and owner points and 10 playoff points. In addition, Fugle was suspended for four races and fined US$100,000.[32] On March 29, the National Motorsports Appeals Panel amended the penalty, upholding the fine and Fugle's suspension but restoring the owner, driver, and playoff points.[33] On April 6, the No. 24 was served an L1 penalty after alterations to the car's greenhouse were discovered during post-race inspection following the Richmond race; as a result, the team was docked 60 driver and owner points and five playoff points. In addition, interim crew chief Brian Campe was suspended for two races and fined US$75,000.[34] At Darlington, Byron scored his seventh career win and the overall 100th win for the No. 24.[35] He scored his fourth win of the season at Atlanta after the race was shortened by rain.[36] Byron claimed his fifth victory at Watkins Glen.[37] Byron's sixth win of the season came in the Round of 12 opener at Texas. The win also marked Hendrick Motorsports' 300th victory in the Cup Series.[38] Following the season finale at Phoenix, Byron finished the 2023 season third in the points standings.[39]

Byron started the 2024 season by winning the 2024 Daytona 500.[40] A month later, he scored his second win of the season at the Circuit of the Americas.[41] On April 7, Byron won his third race of the season, as he and his teammates Kyle Larson and Chase Elliott took the top three spots at Martinsville on Hendrick Motorsports' 40th anniversary.[42] Despite not winning a race during the playoffs, Byron made the Championship 4 following Martinsville after Christopher Bell was penalized for using the "Hail Melon" maneuver, which was banned by NASCAR after 2022.[43]

Car No. 24 results

[edit]
Year Driver No. Make 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 Owners Pts
1992 Jeff Gordon 24 Chevy DAY CAR RCH ATL DAR BRI NWS MAR TAL CLT DOV SON POC MCH DAY POC TAL GLN MCH BRI DAR RCH DOV MAR NWS CLT CAR PHO ATL
31
79th 70
1993 DAY
5
CAR
34
RCH
6
ATL
4
DAR
24
BRI
17
NWS
34
MAR
8
TAL
11
SON
11
CLT
2
DOV
18
POC
28
MCH
2
DAY
5
NHA
7
POC
37
TAL
31
GLN
31
MCH
3
BRI
20
DAR
22
RCH
10
DOV
24
MAR
11
NWS
34
CLT
5
CAR
21
PHO
35
ATL
31
15th 3447
1994 DAY
4
CAR
32
RCH
3
ATL
8
DAR
31
BRI
22
NWS
15
MAR
33
TAL
24
SON
37
CLT
1
DOV
5
POC
6
MCH
12
DAY
8
NHA
39
POC
8
TAL
31
IND
1*
GLN
9
MCH
15
BRI
32
DAR
6
RCH
2
DOV
11
MAR
11
NWS
8
CLT
28
CAR
29
PHO
4
ATL
15
9th 3776
1995 DAY
22
CAR
1*
RCH
36
ATL
1*
DAR
32*
BRI
1*
NWS
2
MAR
3
TAL
2
SON
3
CLT
33
DOV
6
POC
16*
MCH
2*
DAY
1*
NHA
1*
POC
2
TAL
8*
IND
6
GLN
3
MCH
3*
BRI
6
DAR
1
RCH
6
DOV
1*
MAR
7
NWS
3
CLT
30
CAR
20
PHO
5
ATL
32
1st 4614
1996 DAY
42
CAR
40
RCH
1
ATL
3
DAR
1*
BRI
1*
NWS
2
MAR
3*
TAL
33
SON
6
CLT
4
DOV
1*
POC
1*
MCH
6
DAY
3
NHA
34*
POC
7
TAL
1
IND
37
GLN
4
MCH
5
BRI
2
DAR
1
RCH
2*
DOV
1*
MAR
1
NWS
1*
CLT
31
CAR
12
PHO
5
ATL
3
2nd 4620
1997 DAY
1
CAR
1
RCH
4
ATL
42
DAR
3
TEX
30
BRI
1
MAR
1*
SON
2
TAL
5
CLT
1
DOV
26
POC
1
MCH
5
CAL
1*
DAY
21
NHA
23
POC
2
IND
4
GLN
1*
MCH
2
BRI
35
DAR
1
RCH
3
NHA
1*
DOV
7
MAR
4
CLT
5
TAL
35
CAR
4
PHO
17
ATL
17
1st 4710
1998 DAY
16
CAR
1
LVS
17
ATL
19
DAR
2
BRI
1
TEX
31
MAR
8
TAL
5
CAL
4
CLT
1
DOV
3*
RCH
37
MCH
3*
POC
2
SON
1*
NHA
3
POC
1*
IND
1*
GLN
1*
MCH
1
BRI
5
NHA
1
DAR
1
RCH
2
DOV
2
MAR
2
CLT
5
TAL
2
DAY
1*
PHO
7
CAR
1
ATL
1*
1st 5328
1999 DAY
1
CAR
39
LVS
3
ATL
1*
DAR
3
TEX
43
BRI
6
MAR
3
TAL
38
CAL
1*
RCH
31
CLT
39
DOV
2
MCH
2
POC
2
SON
1*
DAY
21
NHA
3
POC
32
IND
3
GLN
1*
MCH
2*
BRI
4
DAR
13
RCH
40
NHA
5
DOV
17
MAR
1
CLT
1
TAL
12*
CAR
11
PHO
10
HOM
10
ATL
38
6th 4620
2000 DAY
34
CAR
10
LVS
28
ATL
9
DAR
8
BRI
8*
TEX
25
MAR
4
TAL
1
CAL
11
RCH
14
CLT
10
DOV
32
MCH
14
POC
8
SON
1*
DAY
10
NHA
5
POC
3
IND
33
GLN
23
MCH
36
BRI
23
DAR
4
RCH
1
NHA
6
DOV
9
MAR
5
CLT
39
TAL
4
CAR
2
PHO
7
HOM
7
ATL
4
9th 4361
2001 DAY
30
CAR
3*
LVS
1
ATL
2*
DAR
40
BRI
4
TEX
5
MAR
12
TAL
27
CAL
2
RCH
2
CLT
29
DOV
1*
MCH
1*
POC
2*
SON
3*
DAY
37
CHI
17
NHA
2*
POC
8*
IND
1
GLN
1
MCH
7
BRI
3*
DAR
2*
RCH
36
DOV
4
KAN
1
CLT
16
MAR
9
TAL
7
PHO
6
CAR
25
HOM
28
ATL
6
NHA
15*
1st 5112
2002 DAY
9
CAR
7
LVS
17
ATL
16
DAR
9*
BRI
31
TEX
2
MAR
23
TAL
4
CAL
16
RCH
7
CLT
5
DOV
6
POC
5
MCH
5
SON
37*
DAY
22
CHI
2
NHA
29
POC
12
IND
6
GLN
22
MCH
19
BRI
1*
DAR
1*
RCH
40
NHA
14
DOV
37
KAN
1*
TAL
42
CLT
4
MAR
36
ATL
6
CAR
5
PHO
3
HOM
5
4th 4607
2003 DAY
12
CAR
15
LVS
37
ATL
2
DAR
33
BRI
9*
TEX
3
TAL
8
MAR
1
CAL
11
RCH
16
CLT
8
DOV
2
POC
13
MCH
3
SON
2
DAY
14
CHI
4
NHA
24*
POC
36
IND
4
GLN
33
MCH
30
BRI
28*
DAR
32
RCH
10*
NHA
19
DOV
5
TAL
5*
KAN
5
CLT
5
MAR
1*
ATL
1
PHO
7
CAR
22
HOM
5
4th 4785
2004 DAY
8
CAR
10
LVS
15
ATL
10
DAR
41
BRI
9
TEX
3
MAR
6*
TAL
1
CAL
1*
RCH
6
CLT
30
DOV
36
POC
4
MCH
38*
SON
1*
DAY
1*
CHI
4
NHA
2
POC
5
IND
1*
GLN
21
MCH
7
BRI
14
CAL
37
RCH
3
NHA
7
DOV
3
TAL
19
KAN
13
CLT
2
MAR
9
ATL
34
PHO
3
DAR
3*
HOM
3
3rd 6490
2005 DAY
1
CAL
30
LVS
4
ATL
39
BRI
15
MAR
1
TEX
15
PHO
12
TAL
1*
DAR
2
RCH
39
CLT
30
DOV
39
POC
9
MCH
32
SON
33
DAY
7
CHI
33
NHA
25
POC
13
IND
8
GLN
14
MCH
15
BRI
6
CAL
21
RCH
30
NHA
14
DOV
37
TAL
37
KAN
10
CLT
38
MAR
1
ATL
2
TEX
14
PHO
3
HOM
9
11th 4174
2006 DAY
26
CAL
13
LVS
5
ATL
4
BRI
21
MAR
2
TEX
22
PHO
10
TAL
15*
RCH
40
DAR
2
CLT
36
DOV
12
POC
34
MCH
8*
SON
1*
DAY
40
CHI
1
NHA
15
POC
3
IND
16
GLN
13
MCH
2
BRI
5
CAL
5
RCH
31
NHA
3
DOV
3
KAN
39
TAL
36
CLT
24
MAR
5
ATL
6
TEX
9
PHO
4
HOM
24
6th 6256
2007 DAY
10
CAL
2
LVS
2*
ATL
12
BRI
3
MAR
2
TEX
4*
PHO
1
TAL
1*
RCH
4*
DAR
1
CLT
41
DOV
9
POC
1
MCH
9
SON
7
NHA
2
DAY
5
CHI
9
IND
3
POC
4
GLN
9*
MCH
27
BRI
19
CAL
22
RCH
4*
NHA
2
DOV
11
KAN
5
TAL
1
CLT
1
MAR
3*
ATL
7
TEX
7
PHO
10
HOM
4
2nd 6646
2008 DAY
39
CAL
3
LVS
35
ATL
5
BRI
11
MAR
2
TEX
43
PHO
13
TAL
19
RCH
9
DAR
3
CLT
4
DOV
5
POC
14
MCH
18
SON
3
NHA
11
DAY
30
CHI
11
IND
5
POC
10
GLN
29
MCH
42
BRI
5
CAL
15
RCH
8
NHA
14
DOV
7
KAN
4
TAL
38
CLT
8
MAR
4
ATL
9
TEX
2
PHO
41
HOM
4
7th 6316
2009 DAY
13
CAL
2
LVS
6
ATL
2
BRI
4
MAR
4
TEX
1*
PHO
25
TAL
37
RCH
8
DAR
5
CLT
14
DOV
26
POC
4
MCH
2
SON
9
NHA
2
DAY
28
CHI
2
IND
9
POC
8
GLN
37
MCH
2
BRI
23
ATL
8
RCH
3
NHA
15
DOV
6
KAN
2
CAL
2
CLT
4
MAR
5
TAL
20
TEX
13
PHO
9
HOM
6
3rd 6473
2010 DAY
26
CAL
20
LVS
3*
ATL
18
BRI
14
MAR
3
PHO
2
TEX
31
TAL
22
RCH
2
DAR
4*
DOV
11
CLT
6
POC
32
MCH
4
SON
5
NHA
4
DAY
3
CHI
3
IND
23
POC
6
GLN
10
MCH
27
BRI
11
ATL
13
RCH
12
NHA
6
DOV
11
KAN
5
CAL
9
CLT
23
MAR
20
TAL
8
TEX
37
PHO
11
HOM
37
9th 6176
2011 DAY
28
PHO
1*
LVS
36
BRI
14
CAL
18
MAR
5
TEX
23
TAL
3
RCH
39
DAR
12
DOV
17
CLT
20
KAN
4
POC
1
MCH
17
SON
2
DAY
6
KEN
10
NHA
11
IND
2
POC
6
GLN
13
MCH
6
BRI
3*
ATL
1*
RCH
3
CHI
24
NHA
4*
DOV
12
KAN
34
CLT
21
TAL
27
MAR
3
TEX
6
PHO
32
HOM
5
8th 2287
2012 DAY
40
PHO
8
LVS
12
BRI
35
CAL
26
MAR
14*
TEX
4
KAN
21
RCH
23
TAL
33
DAR
35
CLT
7
DOV
13
POC
19
MCH
6
SON
6
KEN
5
DAY
12
NHA
6
IND
5
POC
1
GLN
21
MCH
28
BRI
3
ATL
2
RCH
2
CHI
35
NHA
3
DOV
2
TAL
2
CLT
18
KAN
10
MAR
7
TEX
14
PHO
30
HOM
1
10th 2303
2013 DAY
20
PHO
9
LVS
25
BRI
34
CAL
11
MAR
3
TEX
38
KAN
13
RCH
11
TAL
11
DAR
3
CLT
35
DOV
3
POC
12
MCH
39
SON
2
KEN
8
DAY
34
NHA
10
IND
7
POC
2
GLN
36
MCH
17
BRI
7
ATL
6
RCH
8
CHI
6
NHA
15
DOV
4
KAN
3
CLT
7
TAL
14
MAR
1
TEX
38
PHO
14
HOM
11
6th 2337
2014 DAY
4
PHO
5
LVS
9
BRI
7
CAL
13
MAR
12
TEX
2
DAR
7
RCH
2*
TAL
39
KAN
1
CLT
7
DOV
15
POC
8
MCH
6
SON
2
KEN
6
DAY
12
NHA
26
IND
1
POC
6*
GLN
34*
MCH
1
BRI
16
ATL
17
RCH
2
CHI
2
NHA
26
DOV
1
KAN
14
CLT
2
TAL
26
MAR
2*
TEX
29
PHO
2
HOM
10*
6th 2348
2015 DAY
33*
ATL
41
LVS
18
PHO
9
CAL
10
MAR
9
TEX
7
BRI
3
RCH
8
TAL
31
KAN
4
CLT
15
DOV
10
POC
14
MCH
21
SON
16
DAY
6
KEN
7
NHA
9
IND
42
POC
3
GLN
41
MCH
17
BRI
20
DAR
16
RCH
7
CHI
14
NHA
7
DOV
12
CLT
8
KAN
10
TAL
3
MAR
1
TEX
9
PHO
6
HOM
6
3rd 5038
2016 Chase Elliott DAY
37
ATL
8
LVS
38
PHO
8
CAL
6
MAR
20
TEX
5
BRI
4
RCH
12
TAL
5
KAN
9
DOV
3
CLT
8
POC
4*
MCH
2
SON
21
DAY
32
KEN
31
NHA
34
IND
15
POC
33
GLN
13
BRI
15
MCH
2
DAR
10
RCH
19
CHI
3
NHA
13
DOV
3
CLT
33
KAN
31
TAL
12
MAR
12
TEX
4
PHO
9
HOM
11
10th 2285
2017 DAY
14
ATL
5
LVS
3
PHO
12
CAL
10
MAR
3
TEX
9
BRI
7
RCH
24
TAL
30
KAN
29
CLT
38
DOV
5
POC
8
MCH
2
SON
8
DAY
22
KEN
3
NHA
11
IND
39
POC
10
GLN
13
MCH
8
BRI
18
DAR
11
RCH
10
CHI
2
NHA
11
DOV
2*
CLT
2
TAL
16
KAN
4
MAR
27
TEX
8
PHO
2
HOM
5
5th 2377
2018 William Byron DAY
23
ATL
18
LVS
27
PHO
12
CAL
15
MAR
20
TEX
10
BRI
18
RCH
12
TAL
29
DOV
14
KAN
33
CLT
39
POC
18
MCH
13
SON
25
CHI
20
DAY
32
KEN
20
NHA
14
POC
6
GLN
8
MCH
36
BRI
23
DAR
35
IND
19
LVS
37
RCH
20
ROV
34
DOV
19
TAL
20
KAN
38
MAR
39
TEX
16
PHO
9
HOM
24
23rd 587
2019 DAY
21
ATL
17
LVS
16
PHO
24
CAL
15
MAR
22
TEX
6
BRI
16
RCH
13
TAL
21
DOV
8
KAN
20
CLT
9
POC
9
MCH
18
SON
19
CHI
8
DAY
2
KEN
18
NHA
12
POC
4
GLN
21
MCH
8
BRI
21
DAR
21
IND
4
LVS
7
RCH
24
ROV
6
DOV
13
TAL
33
KAN
5
MAR
2
TEX
17
PHO
17
HOM
39
11th 2274
2020 DAY
40
LVS
22
CAL
15
PHO
10
DAR
35
DAR
12
CLT
20
CLT
12
BRI
8
ATL
33
MAR
8
HOM
9
TAL
11
POC
14
POC
7
IND
27
KEN
11
TEX
37
KAN
10
NHA
11
MCH
14
MCH
12
DRC
8
DOV
28
DOV
4
DAY
1
DAR
5
RCH
21
BRI
38
LVS
25
TAL
4
ROV
6*
KAN
8
TEX
13
MAR
35
PHO
9
14th 2247
2021 DAY
26
DRC
33
HOM
1*
LVS
8
PHO
8
ATL
8
BRD
6
MAR
4
RCH
7
TAL
2
KAN
9
DAR
4
DOV
4
COA
11
CLT
4
SON
35
NSH
3
POC
3
POC
12
ROA
33
ATL
20
NHA
21
GLN
6
IRC
33
MCH
2
DAY
37
DAR
34
RCH
19
BRI
3
LVS
18
TAL
36
ROV
11*
TEX
2
KAN
6
MAR
5
PHO
17
10th 2306
2022 DAY
38
CAL
34
LVS
5
PHO
18
ATL
1*
COA
12
RCH
3
MAR
1*
BRD
18
TAL
15
DOV
22
DAR
13
KAN
16
CLT
32
GTW
19
SON
9
NSH
35
ROA
16
ATL
30
NHA
11
POC
12
IRC
31
MCH
12
RCH
11
GLN
22
DAY
34
DAR
8
KAN
6
BRI
3
TEX
7
TAL
12
ROV
16
LVS
13
HOM
13
MAR
7
PHO
6
6th 2378
2023 DAY
34
CAL
25
LVS
1*
PHO
1
ATL
32
COA
5
RCH
24*
BRD
13
MAR
23
TAL
7
DOV
4*
KAN
3
DAR
1
CLT
2
GTW
8
SON
14
NSH
6
CSC
13
ATL
1
NHA
24
POC
14*
RCH
21
MCH
35
IRC
14
GLN
1*
DAY
8
DAR
4
KAN
15
BRI
9
TEX
1
TAL
2
ROV
2
LVS
6
HOM
4
MAR
13
PHO
4
3rd 5033
2024 DAY
1
ATL
17
LVS
10
PHO
18
BRI
35
COA
1*
RCH
7
MAR
1*
TEX
3
TAL
7
DOV
33
KAN
23
DAR
6
CLT
3
GTW
15
SON
30
IOW
2
NHA
26
NSH
19
CSC
8
POC
4
IND
38
RCH
13
MCH
2
DAY
27
DAR
30
ATL
9
GLN
34
BRI
17
KAN
2
TAL
3
ROV
3
LVS
4
HOM
6
MAR
6
PHO
3
3rd 5034
2025 DAY ATL COA PHO LVS HOM MAR DAR BRI TAL TEX KAN CLT NSH MCH MXC POC ATL CSC SON DOV IND IOW GLN RCH DAY DAR GTW BRI NHA KAN ROV LVS TAL MAR PHO

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Bruce, Kenny (May 25, 2013). "GORDON'S STORIED CAREER COULD'VE BEEN DIFFERENT". NASCAR.com. NASCAR. Retrieved January 8, 2015.
  2. ^ a b Long, Dustin (January 7, 2015). "How Jeff Gordon's Car Number Nearly Became No. 46". mrn.com. Motor Racing Network. Archived from the original on January 8, 2015. Retrieved January 8, 2015.
  3. ^ Albert, Zach (February 2, 2015). "RETIRING THE NO. 24? WHY IT WON'T HAPPEN". nascar.com. Charlotte, North Carolina. Retrieved 12 June 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d Caldwell, Gray (June 30, 2015). "Rainbow returns for Jeff Gordon". hendrickmotorsports.com. New York City, New York: Hendrick Motorsports. Retrieved July 1, 2015.
  5. ^ "Pit Crew Revolution". YouTube. YouTube, UPS, NASCAR. September 5, 2012. Retrieved 2 November 2014.
  6. ^ NASCAR Online (October 6, 1999). "Jeff Gordon Signs Lifetime Agreement with Hendrick Motorsports". motorsport.com. Harrisburg, North Carolina. Archived from the original on March 31, 2014. Retrieved May 8, 2015.
  7. ^ "New look, new beginning for No. 24". motorsport.com. Harrisburg, North Carolina. December 12, 2000. Archived from the original on May 18, 2015. Retrieved May 8, 2015.
  8. ^ Sporting News Wire Service. "Hendrick swapping crew chiefs for three teams". Nascar.com. Retrieved November 26, 2010.
  9. ^ Rebranded Axalta Coating Systems remains committed to Hendrick Motorsports and Jeff Gordon.
  10. ^ "Gordon added to postseason picture". NASCAR.com. September 13, 2013. Retrieved January 24, 2014.
  11. ^ Oreovicz, John (September 14, 2003). "NASCAR adds Jeff Gordon to Chase". ESPN.com. Joliet, Illinois. Retrieved January 16, 2016.
  12. ^ Staff Report (August 12, 2014). "3M SWITCHING SPONSORSHIP TO JEFF GORDON". NASCAR.com. NASCAR. Retrieved July 1, 2015.
  13. ^ Staff Reports (January 23, 2015). "LAST 3M SCHEME OUT, GORDON FINALLY PLEASED". NASCAR.com. NASCAR. Retrieved July 1, 2015.
  14. ^ Spencer, Lee (November 1, 2015). "Gordon wins Martinsville, will fight for fifth title in season finale: Jeff Gordon has won his way into the Championship 4 at Homestead-Miami Speedway in his final year before hanging up the helmet". motorsport.com. Retrieved November 26, 2015.
  15. ^ DeGroot, Nick (September 23, 2015). "Jeff Gordon unveils paint scheme for final race: Jeff Gordon will have a special look for his final NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Homestead-Miami Speedway". motorsport.com. Retrieved November 26, 2015.
  16. ^ DeGroot, Nick (November 18, 2015). "All Hendrick drivers to run 'Jeff Gordon yellow' numbers at Homestead: Jeff Gordon's three Hendrick Motorsports teammates will honor him in his 797th and final start in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series". motorsport.com. Retrieved November 26, 2015.
  17. ^ Utter, Jim (November 23, 2015). "Jeff Gordon's final ride ends with celebration but no championship: Jeff Gordon got out of his No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet for the last time surrounded by teammates, friends, family and fans – just as Sunday's Ford 400 Sprint Cup Series finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway had started hours earlier". motorsport.com. Retrieved November 26, 2015.
  18. ^ a b "Elliott, Hendrick unveil 2016 No. 24 NAPA AUTO PARTS Chevy". Hendrick Motorsports. Retrieved November 21, 2015.
  19. ^ Utter, Jim (November 6, 2015). "Gordon's sponsor Axalta moves to Dale Jr for 2016". motorsport.com. Retrieved November 26, 2015.
  20. ^ "NASCAR Charters". Jayski's Silly Season Site. NASCAR Digital Media, LLC. Retrieved October 24, 2020.
  21. ^ Albert, Zack (October 10, 2018). "Chad Knaus to serve as crew chief for Byron, No. 24 team in 2019". NASCAR. Retrieved October 11, 2018.
  22. ^ https://www.nascar.com/news-media/2020/10/26/hendrick-motorsports-rudy-fugle-crew-chief-cup-series-2021/ [bare URL]
  23. ^ Sturniolo, Zack (October 10, 2021). "Playoff Pulse: Round of 8 set after Charlotte". NASCAR.com. NASCAR Digital Media, LLC. Retrieved October 11, 2021.
  24. ^ "William Byron wins wild NASCAR Cup race on transformed Atlanta track". Jayski's Silly Season Site. NASCAR Digital Media, LLC. March 20, 2022. Retrieved April 10, 2022.
  25. ^ Spencer, Reid (April 9, 2022). "Recap: William Byron holds strong run through overtime restart to win Martinsville spring race". NASCAR.com. NASCAR Digital Media, LLC. Retrieved April 10, 2022.
  26. ^ "William Byron's Hauler Catches Fire at IMS". Jayski's Silly Season Site. NASCAR Digital Media, LLC. July 28, 2022. Retrieved July 28, 2022.
  27. ^ "NASCAR penalizes William Byron, Ty Gibbs after Texas incidents". NASCAR.com. NASCAR Digital Media, LLC. September 27, 2022. Retrieved September 28, 2022.
  28. ^ "William Byron and Ty Gibbs Penalized after Texas Incidents: UPDATE: No points penalty for Byron". Jayski's Silly Season Site. NASCAR Digital Media, LLC. October 6, 2022. Retrieved October 9, 2022.
  29. ^ Spencer, Reid (October 30, 2022). "Christopher Bell wins his way into Championship 4; title field set". NASCAR.com. NASCAR Digital Media, LLC. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
  30. ^ Spencer, Reid (March 5, 2023). "William Byron banks big win in Las Vegas". NASCAR. Retrieved March 6, 2023.
  31. ^ Spencer, Reid (March 12, 2023). "William Byron makes it two wins in a row with late effort at Phoenix". NASCAR. Retrieved March 13, 2023.
  32. ^ "NASCAR gives Hendrick Motorsports, Kaulig Racing L2-level penalties". NASCAR. March 15, 2023. Retrieved March 16, 2023.
  33. ^ "Appeals panel amends penalties against Hendrick Motorsports". NASCAR. March 29, 2023. Retrieved March 30, 2023.
  34. ^ "NASCAR levies L1-level penalties against Nos. 24, 48 Cup Series teams". NASCAR. April 6, 2023. Retrieved April 7, 2023.
  35. ^ Spencer, Reid (May 14, 2023). "William Byron wins Cup Series race at Darlington". NASCAR. Retrieved May 15, 2023.
  36. ^ "William Byron wins rain-shortened race at Atlanta". NASCAR. July 9, 2023. Retrieved July 10, 2023.
  37. ^ Cain, Holly (August 20, 2023). "William Byron wins Cup Series race at Watkins Glen". NASCAR. Retrieved August 21, 2023.
  38. ^ Cain, Holly (September 24, 2023). "William Byron surges late at Texas, seals Round of 8 spot, Hendrick Motorsports' 300th win". NASCAR. Retrieved September 25, 2023.
  39. ^ Albino, Dustin (November 5, 2023). "Ryan Blaney gets hot at right time to win 2023 NASCAR Cup Series championship". NASCAR. Retrieved November 6, 2023.
  40. ^ Spencer, Reid (February 19, 2024). "William Byron outlasts late-race action to win 2024 Daytona 500". NASCAR. Retrieved February 20, 2024.
  41. ^ Cain, Holly (March 24, 2024). "William Byron bulls his way to dominant Cup Series victory at COTA". NASCAR. Retrieved March 25, 2024.
  42. ^ Spencer, Reid (April 7, 2024). "William Byron caps emotional, memorable day for Hendrick Motorsports with Martinsville victory". NASCAR. Retrieved April 8, 2024.
  43. ^ "Christopher Bell ousted from Champ 4 after NASCAR issues safety penalty". NASCAR. November 3, 2024. Retrieved November 4, 2024.
[edit]