NASCAR Silly Season: Which drivers are changing teams and who’s still looking for rides
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NASCAR’s biggest Silly Season moves were known by mid-summer, but with the offseason here, those changes have finally been set in motion.
Trackhouse Racing, for example, opened its newly rebranded shop in Concord on Monday. Drivers Daniel Suárez and Ross Chastain were present for the official unveiling.
A surprise announcement in late June revealed the sale of Chip Ganassi Racing’s assets and Cup Series charter to the Justin Marks-owned Trackhouse team. Chastain, a former Ganassi driver, signed a multi-year contract to race the No. 1 Chevrolet for the expanding operation.
Cup Series veteran and former No. 1 driver Kurt Busch is transitioning with a multi-year deal to 23XI Racing, joining the Michael Jordan and Denny Hamlin-owned team and competing alongside Bubba Wallace. Busch tested the Next Gen car with 23XI at Charlotte Motor Speedway last week.
Brad Keselowski is another veteran driver transitioning teams. The former Penske racer announced in July that he would step into a partial ownership role at Roush Fenway Racing, recently rebranded to RFK Racing, short for “Roush Fenway Keselowski.” Keselowski will also drive the No. 6 Ford for RFK, meaning Ryan Newman will not return to Roush.
Newman told reporters at Phoenix that he wasn’t sure whether he would return to the Cup Series on a full-time basis in 2022, but that he still wanted to compete in NASCAR’s top series. He expressed that results were also a priority for him.
“In the end, I can’t be happy running 25th or qualifying 30th or racing for a lucky dog,” Newman said. “That just doesn’t do it for me.”
Full-time opportunities at the top teams have filled up. Austin Cindric, a 2021 Xfinity Final 4 driver, will move to Team Penske to drive the No. 2 vacated by Keselowski, while Xfinity driver Harrison Burton is similarly moving from the lower-lever series into Cup next year. He’s set to drive the No. 21 Ford for Wood Brothers Racing.
Like Newman, a few other full-time Cup drivers haven’t yet stated their 2022 plans. Former No. 21 driver Matt DiBenedetto said at Phoenix that he was working to put sponsorship together and that he was still searching for his next ride. Ryan Preece, a JTG Daugherty driver in 2021, also shared during the Championship weekend that his plans for next season were not finalized. (His former JTG team is moving to field a single car driven by Ricky Stenhouse Jr. next season.)
Anthony Alfredo, who finished his rookie season with Front Row Motorsports, is not returning to the team in 2022, either. Earlier this month, it was announced that Alfredo would “explore other opportunities” in a team release that thanked Alfredo for being an FRM ambassador. FRM has not yet shared who will take Alfredo’s place in the No. 38.
Based on the latest Silly Season news, here are the expected full-time driver lineups for 2022:
Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolets
No. 5 Kyle Larson
No. 9 Chase Elliott
No. 24 William Byron
No. 48 Alex Bowman
Joe Gibbs Racing Toyotas
No. 11 Denny Hamlin
No. 18 Kyle Busch
No. 19 Martin Truex Jr.
No. 20 Christopher Bell
Team Penske Fords
No. 2 Austin Cindric
No. 12 Ryan Blaney
No. 22 Joey Logano
Stewart-Haas Racing Fords
No. 4 Kevin Harvick
No. 10 Aric Almirola
No. 14 Chase Briscoe
No. 41 Cole Custer
Richard Childress Racing Chevrolets
No. 3 Austin Dillon
No. 8 Tyler Reddick
RFK Racing Fords
No. 6 Brad Keselowski
No. 17 Chris Buescher
Trackhouse Racing Chevrolets
No. 1 Ross Chastain
No. 99 Daniel Suárez
23XI Racing Toyotas
No. 23 Bubba Wallace
No. 45 Kurt Busch
Spire Motorsports Chevrolets
No. 7 Corey LaJoie
Front Row Motorsports Fords
No. 34 Michael McDowell (expected, but not confirmed)
No. 38 TBA
Kaulig Racing Chevrolets
No. 16 Justin Haley
TBA for second team (A.J. Allmendinger said at Phoenix that he would likely enter 12-15 Cup races for Kaulig)
Richard Petty Motorsports Chevrolet
No. 43 Erik Jones
JTG Daugherty Racing Chevrolet
No. 47 Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
Wood Brothers Racing Ford
No. 21 Harrison Burton
Live Fast Motorsports Ford
No. 78 B.J. McLeod (was 2021 driver and tested Next Gen car for Live Fast at Charlotte)
GMS Racing Chevrolet
No. 94 Ty Dillon
Note: Rick Ware Racing is expected to field at least two full-time Cup entries.