NASCAR News

Gragson enters 2024 looking for balance in NASCAR and life

Noah Gragson, Stewart Haas Racing, Rush Truck Centers Ford Mustang

Gragson, 25, had an abbreviated and difficult rookie Cup season in 2023 at Legacy Motor Club – he was suspended and then later reinstated by NASCAR following a violation of its code of conduct.

In December, Stewart-Haas Racing announced it had hired the Las Vegas native to compete full-time in the Cup Series and drive its No. 10 Fords beginning with the 2024 season.

Gragson returns this year with a new team, new crew, new crew chief in Drew Blickensderfer and perhaps a new opportunity to kick start his Cup career.

“That’s one of the things that I’ve been working on is just balancing life, and how I balance work from time to relax. Everything is about balance no matter what it is,” Gragson said Wednesday at Daytona 500 Media Day.

“One thing that I’m learning is balance and being a leader for a race team and how not only do my words influence others, but my body language and just everything (and) being more self-aware has been a big part of finding myself and my process.

“It’s not always going to be perfect and I’m not perfect by any means, but I continue to try and learn and grow each and every day and become better than I was yesterday.”

Noah Gragson, Stewart Haas Racing, Rush Truck Centers Ford Mustang

Photo by: Gavin Baker / NKP / Motorsport Images

Gragson has certainly shown he has the talent to have a successful NASCAR career.

He owns a pair of wins in the Truck Series and finished second in the 2018 series standings. In 135 Xfinity Series starts, Gragson amassed 13 wins behind 62 top-five and 96 top-10 finishes. He never finished worse than eighth in the standings in his four full-time seasons.

Gragson’s bumpy experience in the Cup series has helped him appreciate how much effort goes into a driver’s performance on Sunday – whether those contributions come at the track or back at the shop.

“No matter what the driver is there are hundreds of people behind those drivers that allow us to do this and everybody in those race shops, everybody that supports them from a close relationship standpoint, management, logistics, there’s a lot that goes into it,” he said.

“Yeah, the drivers get all the credit, but I put a lot of pressure on myself at the end of the day to be successful for those that work hard. It’s a privilege to be able to go out here and race, and I’ve regained my love for this sport, where I might have lost appreciation over the past handful of years than what I had…

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