Richard Childress Racing (RCR) is an American professional stock car racing team that currently competes in the NASCAR Cup Series and the NASCAR O'Reilly Auto Parts Series. The team is based in Welcome, North Carolina, and is owned and operated by Richard Childress with a 40 percent ownership by Chartwell Investments.

In the Cup Series, the team currently fields three Chevrolet Camaro ZL1s: the No. 3 full-time for Austin Dillon, the No. 8 full-time for Kyle Busch, and the No. 33 part-time for Jesse Love and Austin Hill. In the O'Reilly Auto Parts Series, the team currently fields four Chevrolet Camaro teams: the No. 2 full-time for Jesse Love, the No. 3 part-time for Austin Dillon, the No. 21 full-time for Austin Hill, and the No. 33 part-time for Garrett Mitchell. RCR has had at least one car successfully qualify for every Cup race since 1972, the longest such active streak, and is known for the longstanding use of the number 3 on its primary race car.

In addition to its in-house Cup Series teams, RCR has several technical alliances and partnerships with other teams. In the Cup Series, it is allied with Rick Ware Racing. In the O'Reilly Auto Parts Series, Big Machine Racing, Jordan Anderson Racing and Viking Motorsports have a technical alliance with the team, with Big Machine Racing having shops on the RCR campus in Welcome, North Carolina. Beyond this, RCR also has collaborative agreements with Beard Motorsports, although these are not technical alliances.

RCR has won the NASCAR Cup Series championship six times, all with driver Dale Earnhardt, as well as the Daytona 500 three times; Earnhardt in 1998, Kevin Harvick in 2007, and Austin Dillon in 2018. The team has also fielded cars for notables such as Jeff Burton, Mike Skinner, Ricky Rudd, Neil Bonnett, Ryan Newman, and Clint Bowyer.

Cup Series

O'Reilly Auto Parts Series

Camping World Truck Series

Truck No. 03 history

In 1996, RCR fielded the No. 03 RealTree Camouflage Chevy for Jay Sauter at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. He finished 22nd.

Truck No. 03 results

YearDriverNo.Make123456789101112131415161718192021222324OwnersPts
1996Jay Sauter03ChevyHOMPHOPOREVGTUSCNSHPTBRINZHMLWLVLI70IRPFLMGLNNSVRCHNHAMARNWSSONMMRPHOLVS 22

Truck No. 2 history

Tim George Jr. in 2012.

Multiple Drivers (2012)

For 2012, RCR took over the No. 2 truck of KHI that won the Owners Championship in 2011. The truck was split by Tim George Jr. running twelve races with Applebee's sponsoring, with a best finish of ninth, Brendan Gaughan in seven races with a best finish of second, and Harvick at both Martinsville races and Dover, winning at the spring Martinsville race. George Jr. was set to run another partial season in 2013, but he decided to move to Wauters Motorsports instead.

Part Time (2014)

Austin Dillon ran the No. 2 truck at Eldora in 2014 with sponsorship from American Ethanol.

Truck No. 2 results

YearDriverNo.Make12345678910111213141516171819202122OwnersPts
2012Brendan Gaughan2ChevyDAY 20CLT 12TEX 4CHI 2*BRI 5LVS 4TEX 17PHO 23
Kevin HarvickMAR 1*DOV 3*MAR 12*
Tim George Jr.CAR 16KAN 17KEN 24IOW 15POC 15MCH 21ATL 28IOW 22KEN 18TAL 9HOM 18
2014Austin DillonDAYMARKANCLTDOVTEXGTWKENIOWELD 10POCMCHBRIMSPCHINHALVSTALMARTEXPHOHOM

Truck No. 3 history

Mike Skinner (1995–1996)

Jay Sauter in 1997, running the classic GM Goodwrench scheme.

In the infant years of the CWTS (then known as the SuperTruck Series), RCR fielded its own truck team, the No. 3 Goodwrench Chevy. 37-year-old driver Mike Skinner was signed to drive the truck for the 1995 season. Skinner won the series' inaugural race at Phoenix International Raceway, passing Winston Cup driver Terry Labonte on the final lap of the race. He went on to win eight races, and won the series first championship by a 126-point margin. Skinner won eight more races and finished third in points in 1996. Skinner scored a total of sixteen wins and fifteen poles over two seasons.

Jay Sauter (1997–1999)

After Skinner moved onto the Cup series, Jay Sauter hopped on board, winning four times and finishing in the top 10 in points all three years. He was the last driver to win for RCR in the NASCAR Truck Series, until July 11, 2010, when Childress's grandson, Austin Dillon, won the Lucas Oil 200 at Iowa Speedway. After 1999, Childress moved the program up to the NASCAR Busch Series.[citation needed]

Austin Dillon (2009–2011)

Third-generation driver Ty Dillon at Rockingham in 2012.

The truck team returned during the 2009 season as the No. 3 Chevrolet Silverado driven by Childress's grandson, Austin Dillon for the inaugural race at Iowa Speedway. Dillon would start ninth and finish twelfth despite an early spin.

In 2010, Dillon drove the No. 3 truck full-time sponsored by Bass Pro Shops. Austin won an impressive five poles, two wins (Iowa and Vegas), and had fifteen top-tens en route to a fifth place finish in the championship and the 2010 ROTY award.

In 2011, Dillon drove the No. 3 truck to two wins at Nashville and Chicago, winning the championship over Johnny Sauter.

Ty Dillon (2012–2013)

After winning the Truck Series championship, Austin moved up to the Nationwide Series, passing down the No. 3 truck to his brother Ty Dillon for 2012. Ty would take his first win at Atlanta and nearly won the championship at Homestead before crashing while battling Kyle Larson. Ty finished fourth in the standings.

In the 2013 WinStar World Casino 350K, Dillon won the 100th victory in NASCAR for a No. 3.

Part-time (2014)

Ty Dillon returned to the No. 3 truck with Bass Pro Shops for the dirt race at Eldora in 2014. After the Eldora race, Austin Dillon then won with the No. 3 at Pocono, with Yuengling as a sponsor.

Truck No. 3 results

YearDriverNo.Make123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627OwnersPts
1995Mike Skinner3ChevyPHO 1*TUS 27SGS 5*MMR 4POR 1*EVG 4I70 1*LVL 1*BRI 20MLW 1*CNS 2HPT 5IRP 1*FLM 3RCH 3MAR 2*NWS 10SON 3MMR 1PHO 1*1st3224
1996HOM 20*PHO 2POR 3EVG 5TUS 1CNS 1*HPT 1*BRI 4*NZH 14MLW 7LVL 2I70 2IRP 1*FLM 1*GLN 3NSV 16*RCH 1*NHA 27MAR 1NWS 9*SON 3MMR 1PHO 4LVS 73rd3771
1997Jay SauterWDW 4TUS 3HOM 19PHO 11POR 10EVG 30I70 31NHA 1TEX 11BRI 3NZH 9MLW 2LVL 31CNS 4HPT 16IRP 31FLM 6NSV 13GLN 12RCH 3MAR 7SON 3MMR 4CAL 25PHO 7LVS 46th3467
1998WDW 7HOM 3PHO 6POR 8EVG 16I70 16GLN 2TEX 16BRI 12MLW 14NZH 3CAL 24PPR 22IRP 10NHA 11FLM 13NSV 15HPT 7LVL 20RCH 17MEM 2GTY 3MAR 1SON 8MMR 8PHO 12LVS 44th3672
1999HOM 21PHO 8EVG 19MMR 11MAR 11MEM 3PPR 9I70 14BRI 7TEX 2PIR 8GLN 6MLW 9NSV 12NZH 4MCH 2NHA 11IRP 6GTY 18HPT 3RCH 36LVS 5LVL 1TEX 1CAL 105th3543
2009Austin DillonDAYCALATLMARKANCLTDOVTEXMCHMLWMEMKENIRPNSHBRICHIIOW 12GTWNHA 15LVSMARTAL DNQTEXPHOHOM
2010DAY 26ATL 10MAR 16NSH 14KAN 6DOV 21CLT 35TEX 3MCH 5IOW 1*GTW 7IRP 6POC 7NSH 2DAR 5BRI 17CHI 9KEN 9NHA 5LVS 1*MAR 16TAL 8TEX 25PHO 7HOM 31
2011DAY 20PHO 5DAR 15MAR 7NSH 11DOV 4CLT 7KAN 12TEX 26KEN 14IOW 2*NSH 1IRP 9POC 5MCH 22BRI 23ATL 6CHI 1NHA 2KEN 2LVS 17TAL 7MAR 3TEX 2HOM 10
2012Ty DillonDAY 9MAR 2CAR 8KAN 9CLT 10DOV 6TEX 7KEN 3IOW 7CHI 12POC 6MCH 6BRI 21ATL 1IOW 2KEN 3LVS 10TAL 4*MAR 28TEX 5PHO 15HOM 25
2013DAY 6*MAR 18CAR 12KAN 8CLT 5DOV 31TEX 2*KEN 1IOW 16*ELD 16POC 20MCH 3BRI 6MSP 17*IOW 3CHI 5LVS 4TAL 14*MAR 22TEX 1*PHO 4HOM 14
2014DAYMARKANCLTDOVTEXGTWKENIOWELD 5
Austin DillonPOC 1*MCHBRIMSPCHINHALVSTALMARTEXPHOHOM

Truck No. 8 history

Part-time (1999)

In 1999, RCR fielded the No. 8 truck for Mike Dillon at Watkins Glen and Milwaukee. He finished 30th at the Glen and 32nd at Milwaukee. Jim Sauter run the No. 8 at Michigan. He finished tenth.

Truck No. 8 results

YearDriverNo.Make12345678910111213141516171819202122232425OwnersPts
1999Mike Dillon8ChevyHOMPHOEVGMMRMARMEMPPRI70BRITEXPIRGLN 30MLW 32NSVNZH
Jim SauterMCH 10NHAIRPGTYHPTRCHLVSLVLTEXCAL

Truck No. 22 history

Tim George Jr. (2009–2010)

Childress' second truck entry debuted in 2009 with Tim George Jr. behind the wheel of the No. 22 truck part-time.

Joey Coulter (2011–2012)

In 2011 with Joey Coulter was tabbed as the driver behind the wheel of the No. 22 truck. Coulter stayed consistent throughout the year, having the least DNF's among all other rookies. Coulter would eventually prevail over Nelson Piquet Jr. and Parker Kligerman to win Rookie of the Year. Coulter would get his first win in the Pocono Mountains 125 at Pocono Raceway, his first win in 36 attempts in the Camping World Truck Series.

Truck No. 22 results

YearDriverNo.Make12345678910111213141516171819202122232425OwnersPts
2009Tim George Jr.22ChevyDAYCALATLMARKANCLTDOVTEXMCHMLWMEMKENIRPNSHBRICHIIOWGTWNHALVSMARTALTEXPHO 29HOM
2010DAYATLMARNSHKANDOVCLTTEXMCHIOWGTYIRPPOCNSHDARBRICHIKENNHALVSMARTALTEXPHO 23HOM
2011Joey CoulterDAY 34PHO 9DAR 28MAR 17NSH 24DOV 6CLT 16KAN 5TEX 5KEN 7IOW 5NSH 10IRP 7POC 6MCH 18BRI 6ATL 13CHI 12NHA 11KEN 13LVS 22TAL 20MAR 5TEX 6HOM 5
2012DAY 18MAR 30CAR 6KAN 14CLT 7DOV 11TEX 3KEN 7IOW 8CHI 15POC 1MCH 7BRI 4ATL 7IOW 13KEN 4LVS 3*TAL 14MAR 3TEX 7PHO 3HOM 3

Truck No. 31 history

Part Time (1995)

In 1995, RCR fielded the No. 31 truck part-time for Bill Cooper at Sonoma. He finished 25th. Dave Marcis drove the No. 31 at season finale at Phoenix. He finished seventh.

Truck No. 31 results

YearDriverNo.Make1234567891011121314151617181920OwnersPts
1995Bill Cooper31ChevyPHOTUSSGSMMRPOREVGI70LVLBRIMLWCNSHPTIRPFLMRCHMARNWSSON 25MMR
Dave MarcisPHO 7

Truck No. 33 history

Part Time (1997)

In 1997, RCR fielded the No. 33 truck part-time for Mike Dillon at Phoenix. He started 29th and finished 26th.

Truck No. 33 results

YearDriverNo.Make1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526OwnersPts
1997Mike Dillon33ChevyWDWTUSHOMPHOPOREVGI70NHATEXBRINZHMLWLVLCNSHPTIRPFLMNSVGLNRCHMARSONMMRCALPHO 16LVS

Truck No. 39 history

Part Time (2013)

In 2013 RCR purchased the No. 39 owners points from RSS Racing to field the truck for Austin Dillon in the inaugural Mudsummer Classic at Eldora Speedway, with sponsorship from American Ethanol. Dillon led a race-high 63 laps, and won after a green-white-checker finish. The truck, the trophy and the famed piece of dirt track are on display at the NASCAR Hall of Fame. The No. 39 owners points were then sold back to RSS Racing.

Truck No. 39 results

YearDriverNo.Make12345678910111213141516171819202122OwnersPts
2013Austin Dillon39ChevyDAYMARCARKANCLTDOVTEXKENIOWELD 1*POCMCHBRIMSPIOWCHILVSTALMARTEXPHOHOM

Truck No. 62 history

Brendan Gaughan in the No. 62 at Rockingham Speedway in 2013

Brendan Gaughan (2013)

For 2013, Truck Series veteran Brendan Gaughan drove the truck, now numbered 62, for the full season. Gaughan would come close to finding victory lane on multiple occasions, scoring ten top-fives and thirteen top-tens to finish seventh in points. Gaughan and the No. 62 team moved up to the Nationwide series in 2014.

Truck No. 62 results

YearDriverNo.Make12345678910111213141516171819202122OwnersPts
2013Brendan Gaughan62ChevyDAY 29MAR 12CAR 3KAN 4CLT 2DOV 5TEX 5KEN 25IOW 31ELD 5POC 9MCH 8BRI 16MSP 18IOW 24CHI 25LVS 8TAL 11MAR 2TEX 4PHO 3HOM 4

Driver development

RCR has featured a strong development program since the 1990s that has groomed several NASCAR regulars, most notably 2014 Cup Series Champion Kevin Harvick and Richard Childress' own grandsons Austin and Ty Dillon. Other notable former development drivers include Johnny Sauter, Mike Skinner, Clint Bowyer, Timothy Peters, John Wes Townley, Joey Coulter, and Ryan Gifford.

K&N Pro Series and ARCA Racing Series

Ty Dillon in the No. 41 at Pocono Raceway in 2011

RCR fielded a 31 car in the ARCA Racing Series in 2006, with Kevin Harvick Incorporated driver Burney Lamar running three races and RCR development driver Timothy Peters running one. The car returned in 2007 in six races, with Peters, Alex Yontz, and Tim McCreadie, scoring three top-ten finishes.

In 2008, Austin Dillon ran the full Camping World East Series schedule in the No. 3 Garage Equipment Supply Chevrolet. Initially driving for Andy Santerre Motorsports, Dillon moved under the RCR umbrella after four races. Dillon scored a win in his series debut at Greenville-Pickens Speedway (after Peyton Sellers winning car was disqualified) and finished second in points. Dillon also ran a single ARCA Racing Series event at Rockingham Speedway, finishing seventh in the No. 31 Chevrolet.

The 3 car ran five East Series races in 2009 sponsored by longtime RCR partner Mom N' Pops, with Austin Dillon running two races and brother Ty Dillon running three. Ryan Gifford ran four races in the East Series in the 29 Shell/Pennzoil Chevrolet with three top-tens, and made one start in the West Series. Austin also ran three ARCA races in the No. 31, with two second-place finishes. Kyle Grissom, son of Steve Grissom, drove the car at Rockingham to a 16th-place finish.

Ty Dillon ran eight of the ten K&N East Series races in 2010, scoring a win at Gresham Motorsports Park. Dillon also ran three ARCA races, scoring two victories in the No. 41 Chevrolet. The team also fielded the No. 31 Chevy full-time in ARCA for Tim George Jr., finishing 9th in points with five top 10 finishes. Dillon moved full-time in the ARCA Series in 2011 along with George Jr. Dillon won the ARCA championship with an impressive seven wins and seven poles. George improved to 7th in points and scored a weather-shortened win at Pocono.

Sponsorships

RCR has had numerous sponsor relationships over the years. From 1988 to 2007, Goodwrench GM Certified Service was a primary sponsor, finally ending its sponsorship in 2007. Starting in 2001, Cingular Wireless began a four-year sponsorship with RCR, which led to a sponsorship controversy after Cingular was merged with AT&T. Starting in 2001, The Hershey Company became an RCR sponsor with its candy brands such as Reese's Fast Break, Hershey's Kissables, Ice Breakers candy and Reese's Peanut Butter Cups Big Cup.

Partnerships and affiliations

Richard Childress Racing shop in October 2022

ECR Engines

ECR Engines, also known as ECR Technologies and formerly Earnhardt-Childress Racing Technologies, is the engine department for Richard Childress Racing, located on the RCR campus in Welcome, North Carolina. The company builds Chevrolet engines for RCR and several teams in the NASCAR Cup Series, Xfinity Series, Truck Series, and ARCA Racing Series. It also produced engines for all Cadillac DPi-V.Rs in the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship series from years 2017-2022. Current ECR clients include Beard Motorsports, Trackhouse Racing, Our Motorsports, Jordan Anderson Racing and Big Machine Racing Team. Former clients included Furniture Row Racing, Wayne Taylor Racing, JTG Daugherty Racing, Tommy Baldwin Racing, Leavine Family Racing, StarCom Racing, Germain Racing, Richard Petty Motorsports, Legacy Motor Club, Action Express Racing, Chip Ganassi Racing, JDC–Miller MotorSports, Juncos Racing, and Kaulig Racing.

The partnership was formed in May 2007 as a cooperation between Dale Earnhardt, Inc. and Richard Childress Racing to develop and build common engines for the Chevrolet NASCAR Cup Series and Xfinity Series teams campaigned by the two companies. The partnership was inherited in 2008 by Earnhardt Ganassi Racing, following the merger between DEI and Chip Ganassi Racing. At the time, the Nationwide Series (now Xfinity Series) and Truck Series engine departments were located at the DEI facility in Mooresville. The company is now known as ECR Engines, no longer connected with DEI or CGR. In 2016, the company became a wholly owned subsidiary of RCR.

ECR Engines has secured 8 straight IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Engine Manufacturers Championships from 2012 - 2018 with 5 overall wins at the Rolex 24 At Daytona in years 2014, 2017–2020.

Technical alliances

RCR also holds technical alliances with several teams, including Our Motorsports, Jordan Anderson Racing, Alpha Prime Racing, Big Machine Racing Team, Viking Motorsports in the O'Reilly Auto Parts Series. Under these relationships, RCR provides engines, equipment, and technical support. RCR's first alliance model was started in 1997 as RAD (Richard, Andy, and Dale) Racing engines, an aerodynamics program shared with DEI and Andy Petree Racing. The Alliance concluded midway into 2004, when Petree shut down his team.

RCR previously held a successful alliance with Furniture Row Racing, JTG Daugherty Racing, Leavine Family Racing, GMS Racing, Germain Racing, Richard Petty Motorsports, StarCom Racing, and Kaulig Racing.

In 2021, RCR and Hendrick Motorsports will formalize a joint venture focused on engine R&D and the establishment of a common Chevrolet engine specification. The effort will be led by Jeff Andrews of Hendrick Motorsports and Richie Gilmore of RCR and be referred to as HCD (Hendrick Childress Development).

Sponsorship controversies

2007

Following the 2007 Daytona 500, the paint scheme of Kevin Harvick's winning No. 29 car infuriated NASCAR fuel supplier Sunoco, particularly the large Shell Oil logos on the car and team uniforms. Harvick had also worn his Shell firesuit during the Busch Series race he won the day before. Sunoco believed its exclusive rights to provide fuel to the sport also gave them exclusive marketing rights to gasoline, with other companies' limited to marketing secondary products such as motor oil. The 29 team altered its paint scheme the following week with smaller Shell decals, and larger emphasis of co-sponsor Pennzoil. It is to note that Sunoco sponsored Billy Hagan's race team from 1989 to 1992 with Sterling Marlin and Terry Labonte while Unocal 76 was the fuel supplier. Shell/Pennzoil remains in the sport with Team Penske's No. 22.

The 31 car with AT&T logos at Daytona in 2008

Meanwhile, AT&T had repeatedly requested that NASCAR allow them to advertise the AT&T Mobility brand on the No. 31 car following their merger with Cingular Wireless, but NASCAR refused to allow it, citing the Sprint Nextel contract. Cingular and Alltel (the sponsor of Team Penske's No. 12) had been grandfathered in when Nextel entered the sport in 2004, with the drivers wearing white Nextel Cup Series logos on their fire suits, but the change in ownership of the former led Sprint to contest the sponsorship. After trying and failing to get NASCAR to approve the addition of the globe logo to the rear of the car, AT&T filed a lawsuit against NASCAR on March 16, 2007. On May 18, a federal judge ruled that AT&T should be allowed to replace the Cingular logos with AT&T logos, and said that AT&T was likely to win the lawsuit. The AT&T logo ran on the No. 31 at the NASCAR Nextel Cup All-Star Challenge on May 19 and every race afterwards until NASCAR ordered the sponsorship off before the 2007 Sharpie 500. RCR and Jeff Burton went a step further, with Burton showing up in a logo-less firesuit, and the black and orange car ran without Cingular or AT&T logos. A settlement before the Chevy Rock and Roll 400 was made where AT&T Mobility could sponsor the car until the end of 2008.

See also

External links

  • owner statistics at Racing-Reference