CONCORD, N.C. - At the NASCAR Sprint Cup race two weeks ago at Darlington Raceway, Joe Gibbs found himself in a familiar spot - in a huddle.
Some lug nuts on the wheels of Kyle Busch's No. 18 Gibbs
Gibbs, 67, doesn't normally get involved in the inner workings of the cars driven by Busch, Denny Hamlin, and Tony Stewart. J.D. Gibbs, his son and team president, runs the operation day to day.
But after retiring for the second time as coach of the Washington Redskins, Joe Gibbs is spending more time at speedways and at the NASCAR team's headquarters in Huntersville, N.C., adding a boost of confidence to his drivers and the other 450 Gibbs employees.
"It's totally great to have him here at the racetrack with us," Busch said ahead of today's
Gibbs's three cars, in turn, have given his team a strong start in NASCAR this season, a start that's especially gratifying to Gibbs because the team switched to Toyota from Chevrolet. "For us to get off to this fast of a start, nobody would have guessed that," Gibbs said. But he added, "We need to stay humble and stay hungry."
Busch leads NASCAR's Cup point standings, and Hamlin, who won at Martinsville, Va., this year, is fourth, and Stewart is eighth.
Gibbs's team already has won the Cup title three times - with Stewart in 2002 and 2005, and with Bobby Labonte in 2000. "Coach," as Gibbs is commonly called, led the Redskins to Super Bowl victories in 1983, '88, and '92.
He retired from football after the 1992 season, then returned to the Redskins in 2004. But he retired again after an emotionally trying 2007 season, in which Gibbs had to keep his team focused after the murder of safety Sean Taylor.
With the Redskins, Gibbs was immersed in play-calling, game strategy, and technical aspects. Not so in NASCAR. His main role in racing, he said, is "to help pick the people and help keep the resources coming . . . and pay the bills. I get involved with people and sponsors, that's most of my job."
So is managing his drivers' strong personalities. Busch is aggressive and cocky. Hamlin and Stewart also can be temperamental and outspoken, and when the two had a brief feud last year, Gibbs mediated a truce. But Gibbs isn't reluctant to remind them that their jobs involve much more than driving.
"They want to win in everything they do," Gibbs said. But unlike NFL players, "they're corporate representatives" for the cars' sponsors, he said.
"Kyle has to know he's a figurehead for that corporation, as am I," Gibbs said.
Joe Gibbs Racing's hold on the Nationwide Series was finally snapped - by one of its drivers.
JGR star Kyle Busch drove a Toyota fielded by Braun Racing to victory last night at Lowe's Motor Speedway, snapping a six-race winning streak Gibbs's cars have had in the series. It was Busch's fourth Nationwide victory this season and ninth overall spanning NASCAR's top three series.![]()


