MWR could be headed for Team Chevy at the end of the season (Google Images) |
Furniture Row Racing has been enjoying their best season in the ten years they've been a part of the NASCAR circuit. They won the June race at Pocono with Martin Truex Jr, they have rarely finished outside the top ten and even led the point standings for a good portion of the season. FRR has also been under the General Motors/Chevrolet banner since they debuted in 2005 and formed a technical alliance with Chevy powerhouse Richard Childress Racing a few years ago. This alliance has helped lead to a few bright spots for the Denver, Colorado-based race team. They won the 2011 Southern 500 with driver Regan Smith and making the 2013 Chase for the Cup with Kurt Busch. But Truex and rookie crew chief Cole Pearn have taken this team to another level this year.
So why mess with a good thing?
Well while FRR has an alliance with RCR that allows them to receive engines and chassis, the team receives minimal factory support from Chevy. This is the main reason team owner Barney Visser is looking at changing manufacturers next year. The lead candidate is Toyota, who since last season has been offering all kinds of incentives to the single car team to switch nameplates. And with the success Truex and his No. 78 team have already had in the first part of this season, it stands to reason that the pot will only get sweeter for Visser and his team to switch over from the Bowtie Brigade.
Toyota has stated that it's all about quality, not quantity and that they need to add more quality teams to the fold in addition to Joe Gibbs Racing. With only two mediocre Michael Waltrip Racing cars and the three field filler BK Racing cars running under the Toyota banner full-time in Cup, the addition of Furniture Row would bring a serious championship contender to the team.
Martin Truex Jr scored his third career win and his first win for Furniture Row Racing back at Pocono (Google Images) |
Unlike Furniture Row, Michael Waltrip Racing has been on a downslide the past few years. Clint Bowyer has seven top tens this season, but he sits fifteenth in points and barely qualified for a Chase berth. The road for the No. 55 car in 2015 has been much rougher. Brian Vickers was slated to run the car full-time, but has been sidelined blood clots after only two starts at Las Vegas and Phoenix. These clots have been a constant issue for Vickers since 2010 and have caused some serious concerns about his health and his career. David Ragan has been filling in for Vickers since Kansas and he will finish out the year in the Aaron's Dream Machine. This season has been especially tumultuous for MWR, but they haven't won a race since Clint Bowyer won at Richmond in 2013. After a year and a half of failing to reach victory lane, you can't really blame Toyota for shopping around for a second competitive team.
Should MWR move to Chevy, it would be a homecoming of sorts for Waltrip. He has been Mr. Toyota since the brand allowed him to start his own team eight years ago, but he ran Chevrolet Monte Carlos for Mattei Motorsports in 1999 and 2000 and more famously for Dale Earnhardt Inc. from 2001 until 2005. He also ran an XFINITY Series team out of a shop behind his house and that car too was a Monte Carlo from 2000 until he switched to Dodge Chargers in 2006.
Switching brands would not only be surprising because of Waltrip's affinity for Camrys, but also because they have a shop that allows them to build their own chassis and bodies in-house. The speculation around any potential move would involve a "partnership" with a current Chevrolet team. According to Motorsport, should Kauffman make move his team to GM, he would either align himself with Chip Ganassi Racing or Richard Childress Racing and sources have told the racing site that Ganassi is the leading candidate should a switch take place. It is unclear if this would be a merger or if the teams would simply share information and resources.
Any and all moves by MWR are contingent on Aaron's re-signing at the end of the year. Their two-year contract runs out at the end of the season and they are the only backer of the No. 55 car. Kauffman has shown before he has the money to run cars out of his own pocket, but the question is if Aaron's were to leave would he want to fund a car for, potentially, the entire 2016 season. Aaron's has been with Michael Waltrip since 2000. But they have recently come under new management and given MWR's nosedive in the performance department and the lack of stability when it comes to finding a full-time driver, it would be hard to blame them if they left for a more competitive team.
Vickers celebrating his most recent win at Loudon in 2012 (Google Images) |
"The most important thing right now is his health. I haven't really had a conversation with him regarding coming back to racing and the like. It's a big medical issue that I haven't been involved with up until now.," Kauffman told Motorsport. "He loves racing, so I'm sure he does (want to return), but I think it would be a challenge to try and figure something out--but I would never say never." This sounds an awful lot like when a kid begs their parents for something they want and all they get is, "we'll see." There might be a glimmer of hope, but you know deep down they pretty much just told you "no."
Like Aaron's, Vickers' contract is also up at the end of the season, so MWR could make a clean break without too many hurt feelings. It would be nice if the team who was so high on Vickers' talent just three years ago offered the three-time winner a part-time ride, should he prove able to return to competition. But after Waltrip kicked David Reutimann to the curb after 2011 after he helped build MWR into what it is today, seeing the team drop Vickers like a hot potato is no real surprise either.
There might not be a lot of drivers switching teams this silly season, but it will be interesting to see what happens with this recent Furniture Row and Michael Waltrip Racing news. The landscape of the Sprint Cup Series could look very different in 2016 if these moves become reality.
UPDATE (7/30): It appears that the Kauffman/MWR/Chevy picture just got a lot clearer. Sports Business Daily is reporting that Kauffman (MWR's majority owner and founder of Fortress Investment Group) is very close to purchasing Felix Sabates' stake in Chip Ganassi Racing. This would give the Indy 500 and Daytona 500 winning car owner an invaluable financial partner, as well as bring his stable back up to three cars (Ganassi ran the No. 40, No. 41 and No. 42 Dodges until 2008). In addition to fielding the No. 1 McDonald's/ Cessna Chevy for Jamie McMurray and the No. 42 Target Chevy for Kyle Larson, Kauffman is expected to bring current MWR driver Clint Bowyer and team with him to CGR. This move is because MWR's No. 55 car is in limbo due to Aaron's not announcing whether or not they will return next season. Bowyer's sponsors, 5 Hour Energy, AAA and Maxwell House, have yet to announce their next moves as well, but it wouldn't be shocking for 5 Hour to follow Bower to Ganassi after they enabled him to move from RCR to MWR in 2012.
Rob Kaufmann (R) appears ready to take his business, and Clint Bowyer (C) to Chip Ganassi Racing (Google Images) |
Kauffman is the only reason MWR made it past its 2007 debut. The team was in financial ruin until Waltrip's now ex-wife Buffy brought her friend Kauffman in to help keep the sinking ship afloat. Since then they have established themselves as a competitive organization, but have failed to reach the next level and still cannot compete with Hendrick and Gibbs for championships. It also hasn't helped business that the team has been plagued by scandal.
MWR debuted at Speedweeks '07 with a cheating scandal that resulted in the largest fine in NASCAR history to date and a rash of suspensions after a fuel additive was found in the intake manifold of Waltrip's car. The team managed to survive and thrive with Kauffman's help. Last season saw the team cheating again. Bowyer spun his car late in the Richmond race that would set the Chase field in order to help then-teammate Martin Truex Jr make the Chase. After NASCAR dropped the proverbial hammer on MWR and the team lost their biggest sponsor, NAPA Auto Parts, Kauffman suddenly began taking a larger role in how the team operates and Waltrip became nothing more than a talking head for the TV cameras who is more famous for appearing on Dancing with the Stars than being a winning race car owner.
The writing appeared to be on the wall after the Richmond incident, but many have since forgotten "Spingate" and forgiven those involved. But clearly losing NAPA's money and the current downslide in team performance has taken a toll. Now, with the impending loss of Kauffman's support, it appears that that same writing is back in big, bold letters. It will be very interesting to watch this all play out and see if Michael Waltrip, a driver who has a reputation for being a survivor, can help his team survive their biggest challenge yet. If not, it could well be their last.
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