A Glimpse Into The Future: 'NASCAR Next' drivers take center stage
July 17, 2014
By Joe Menzer
NASCAR Wire Service
What do
Kyle Larson, Chase Elliott and Dylan Kwasniewski have in common with
the likes of Kenzie Ruston, Brandon McReynolds and Ryan Gifford?
They’ve
all been members of the NASCAR Next program that helps promote young
drivers in NASCAR’s national and touring series. Larson, Elliott and
Kwasniewski used it as a springboard
to bigger and better endeavors in stock cars, while the likes of
Ruston, McReynolds and Gifford are part of a talented 2014 NASCAR Next
class that hopes to do the same.
The
2014 class gathered Wednesday at the GoPro Motorplex in Mooresville,
North Carolina, for a day of fellowship, meeting and talking with the
media – and racing go-karts against
each other and the media in a friendly, yet competitive environment.
This
year’s Next class includes not only Ruston, McReynolds and Gifford, but
also rising stars such as recent NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
winner Erik Jones, Cole Custer,
Ruben Garcia Jr., Gray Gaulding, Austin Hill, Jesse Little, Dylan
Lupton, Ryan Preece and Ben Rhodes, who has won five K&N Pro Series
East races this season overall, including four in a row.
“It’s
very humbling that they even picked me to be in the program, to tell you
the truth,” said Ruston, 22, the only woman in the group. “When you
look at how much success
Kyle Larson and Chase Elliott and Dylan Kwasniewski have had, and how
many other people have been in this program and gone on to be very
successful, I just think it’s very cool to be able to be a part of it. I
just hope that one day I can be a respected alumni
of this program like they all are. This program has definitely helped
my career a lot over the last two years.”
Ruston
finished sixth in last year’s K&N Pro Series East standings and has
scored top-five finishes this season at Five Flags and Langley. The
native of Reno, Okla., has the
highest finish – both in a race and in the championship standings – for
a female driver in K&N Pro Series East history.
McReynolds,
the son of former championship crew chief Larry McReynolds who is now a
respected NASCAR television analyst, said that the Next program helps
young drivers develop
in a number of ways.
“The
Next program, with Chase Elliott and Kyle Larson and Dylan Kwasniewski
and Corey Lajoie having gone through it and gone on to become so
successful at whatever they’re
doing, I think NASCAR likes to point that out. ... To be part of that
Next group is humbling,” said McReynolds, who has starts in four
different NASCAR series and presently is third in the K&N Pro Series
West standings. “I think this group we’ve got now, they’re
all good race-car drivers and they’re good at speaking with the media
and representing sponsors – and those are the tools that NASCAR Next
lets you try to build on, so you’ll be successful at the next level.”
Now in
its third year, the program features 12 drivers actively competing in a
NASCAR touring or weekly series selected through an evaluation process
that included input from
industry executives and veteran racers. Its goal is to spotlight a
group of young competitors who will resemble the “face” of NASCAR into
the next decade. They represent diverse backgrounds and each has a
unique story to tell – as well as the talent worthy
of a being a NASCAR Next selection.
The
2014 participants range in age from 16 (Custer and Gaulding) to 25,
making Gifford the “old guy” of the bunch. Gaulding joked that he
recently had to go through a driver’s
education class to get his regular driver’s license.
“Yeah,
it was kind of weird,” said Gaulding, who is the youngest pole winner in
both the K&N Pro Series East and the K&N Pro Series West, and
is competing in select Camping
World Truck Series races this season. “Here I am going 180 (miles per
hour) on weekends, and then during the week I had to sit through a
driver’s ed class. It was OK, though. I read through the book – and I
had a pretty girl sit beside me, too, while I was
doing it.”
If you
get the idea that the members of the 2014 NASCAR Next class enjoy being
around each other, that would be correct. Gifford, also a member of the
NASCAR Drive for Diversity
program who is in his second year as part of the NASCAR Next program,
said it has been a great experience that he believes will help him in
many ways as he attempts to forge a career in the sport going forward.
“It’s
been fun. I’ve had a lot of opportunity to meet great people and make
great friendships,” said Gifford, who has won at Richmond in the K&N
Pro Series East and also driven
in the Nationwide Series. “A lot of times when we’re at the race track,
we don’t get to talk. We’re so busy focused on what we’re trying to do
and trying to win races that we don’t really have time to talk or hang
out.
“This
gives us an opportunity to hang out and be friends outside the race
track. Then we go race hard against each other when we get there. To
work as hard as you have to in
this sport to even get to this level, it’s nice to be recognized like
this. It’s nice to be recognized in a group that has included guys like
Kyle (Larson) and Darrell (Wallace Jr.). That’s really cool.”
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