K E N T U C K Y S P E E D W A Y » S P A R T A , K E N T U C K Y26
By Len Glockner
B
y the time the calendar
turns to February,
NASCAR teams and fans already
are counting down the final days before
the start of another season.
For Adam Stevens, crew chief of the
No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) Toyota
driven by Kyle Busch in the Sprint Cup
Series, this season started a new chapter
in a racing journey that started in the small
river town of Portsmouth, Ohio.
Located about two hours southeast
of Cincinnati, it’s where local dirt racing
teams like the Stevens family gathered to
put on a show on the 3/8-mile clay track
at Portsmouth Raceway Park.
Greg Stevens owned a dirt Late Model
car and raced it. Adam, his son, got a
taste of racing at an early age. By the
time he was 3 years old, he and his father
would get done eating dinner at the
house and drive to the race shop to work
on cars.
“When I was old enough to race, we put
a car together that was the previous year’s
chassis,” Adam Stevens said.
When he was old enough to
race, he got behind the wheel of a
750-horsepower dirt Late Model car,
before he even had his driver’s license,
and would travel
throughout Ohio,
Kentucky and West
Virginia to race.
“It was my
passion - I lived
and breathed it,”
Stevens said. “At
one point, I
realized that this was all I ever wanted
to do. It was a matter of how I thought I
could make it happen.”
He drew up a plan in high school
where he would continue his education
and pursue a bachelor’s degree in
mechanical engineering.
While attending Ohio University in
Athens, Ohio, Stevens started making
trips to Charlotte, North Carolina to train
with buddies, visit with NASCAR teams
and just meet people in the industry.
“My senior year in college, I started
driving down to Charlotte and started
making cold calls to race shops and beat
on doors at all of the majors teams,” he
said. “I probably went to each shop at
least once during that time.”
In 2002, while on the path to earning his
college degree Stevens realized his goal
of becoming a professional driver wasn’t
part of the plan.
After graduating college in the spring
of 2002 with a bachelor’s degree in
mechanical engineering he landed a job
at Petty Enterprises and that started him
down the path that led him to where he
is today.
Stevens worked at Petty Enterprises
for three years. He started as a
designer then began traveling
to the racetrack on Sundays to
calculate fuel mileage. He
eventually moved into the
positon of working on data
systems and traveling to
where the team would test its car.
Stevens received a phone
call from the same person that
hired him at Petty Enterprises
in 2005 to inform him that JGR
was expanding from a two-car Sprint Cup
Series team to a three-car operation with
the No. 11 team.
Stevens worked with the No. 20 Sprint
Cup Series team and driver Tony Stewart
as a race engineer from 2005 to 2008.
During that tenure Adam and the team
raced to 18 wins and a Sprint Cup Series
championship in 2006.
At the end of the 2008 season, Stewart
decided to leave JGR to become a team
owner, and the change led Stevens to a
new opportunity.
The No. 20 NASCAR XFINITY Series
team owned by JGR had a rotation of
drivers that included Denny Hamlin, Drew
Herring, Ryan Truex and Joey Logano,
who was the primary driver for the car
during the 2009 and 2010 season.
“I had a good relationship with Joey
already,” Stevens said. “I went to his
very first test for JGR in an ARCA Racing
Series car at Kansas. He impressed me
the very first day. Joey and I had a good
relationship working together on the 20
car in his rookie and sophomore year at
the Cup Series level.”
When Logano decided to move on to
Penske Racing change was on the
horizon again.
In 2013, Stevens moved
to a crew chief position
when Busch decided to
move his Kyle Busch
Motorsports No. 54
car back to JGR.
W W W . K E N T U C K Y S P E E D W A Y . C O M 27
That led JGR to pair Adam and Busch
together in the XFINITY Series.
“The cool thing about him and I is
we look at race cars the same way, and
immediately when we started working
together, his feedback and what I’m
thinking and how I think race cars work
just seemed to mesh really well,” Adam
said in an interview with SIRUSXM
NASCAR Radio.
The duo combined for 19 wins, 46 top-
five finishes and 47 top-10 finishes in a
total of 52 XFINITY Series starts together
in 2013 and 2014.
For Stevens, the 2014 XFINITY season
brought him seven series victories for a
total of 31 wins.
Thirty-one is a significant number to his
family.
Both Stevens and his father raced a No.
31 dirt Late Model car. Greg Stevens died
in 2009 as his son was making his way
through the sport as a race engineer. The
elder Stevens didn’t have the opportunity
to see him crew chief for a few of
NASCAR’s finest drivers.
“In four years to win 31 races is pretty
neat,” he said. “It was cool because it kind
of felt like he was looking down on me.”
It was odd that the season ended on
that number not only because of history
behind the number but because of how
the year went for the team.
“We had so many (wins) that got away
from us and probably a couple we won
that we probably shouldn’t of,” he said. “It
was kind of neat to reach that when you’re
in the middle of it, working and doing what
you’re doing every day. You don’t pay too
much attention to it.”
Though it’s difficult to truly evaluate
Stevens XFINITY Series success as a
stepping stone to move up to NASCAR’s
top series, he knew that one day he would
make it to the Cup series.
“From the very first meeting, Kyle hasn’t
wavered from what we talked about at
lunch at a restaurant in Cornelius (North
Carolina), Stevens said. “We’re going to
make it better in the race, we’re going
to make it worse at times, but we have
to commit right now that it’s you and me
against the car. In my experience he has
never wavered from that. It gives me a
lot of optimism that we already have that
understanding as we learn together now
on the Sprint Cup level.”
He entered the 2015 season knowing
there was a lot of work to be done
because JGR was coming off of what
the team called “kind of a down year,”
because the team did not win as many
races as the previous year. Neither
Stevens nor the team expected what was
dealt to them February 21.
“I was eating dinner with my guys,”
he said. “We immediately knew when he
(Busch) started spinning he didn’t have
any control of the car. That area of the
racetrack he got to so soon and as soon
as you hit the grass there is nothing you
can do.”
Busch suffered a compound break
in his right leg in addition to a broken
left foot with nine laps remaining in the
Daytona XFINITY Series race.
“I’d never really seen anyone wreck in
that particular location and that wall was
just at a horrible angle,” Stevens said.
“Once we saw him hit the wall we knew it
was big trouble.”
Following the injury, Busch was
sidelined from competition for nearly three
months as he focused on the rehab and
recovery process.
“He was all about all the rehab
and the hard work that goes into it,”
Stevens said. “There were multiple
times texting back and forth when I’m
at the racetrack while he’s at the house.
It could be 11:30 a.m., or 12 p.m., and
he’s doing rehab. Complete dedication.
He immersed himself in everything he
had to do to get better.”
Busch officially returned to Sprint
Cup competition at Charlotte Motor
Speedway for the May 24 race, his
first points race after the injury, and
grabbed an 11th
-place finish.
A month later, Busch entered the
Michigan International Speedway XFINITY
Series race, the first time back in the
series since the accident. He went on
to lead 27 of the 125 race laps driving
his way to Victory Lane and proving
something to the racing community.
“It shows that Kyle is back, he is ready
and it’s up to us (the team) to give him
a good car so we can make it happen,”
Stevens said after the race.
Stevens and the No. 18 JGR team
enters the Quaker State 400 presented
by Advance Auto Parts weekend looking
to give Busch his second Sprint Cup
victory and sixth Kentucky win on one of
NASCAR’s most challenging tracks.
“The track itself is such a challenge,”
Stevens said. “It’s so bumpy and really
hard to make a driver comfortable there.
It’s more of a compromise than any other
place we go. It’s fun and will test your
patience for sure.”
Patience may be tested even more this
year as NASCAR announced June 16
that Sprint Cup teams will run a new rules
package for the Quaker State 400.
Stevens will be on top of the pit box
as crew chief for his seventh Kentucky
race. He will have family and friends
in attendance as he looks to grab
what would be a memorable victory at
NASCAR's roughest track - his first at
Kentucky - not too far from where his
racing journey started in the first place.
Aerial of Portsmouth Raceway Park in Portsmouth, Ohio.
Adam Stevens in the No. 31A racing side-by-side with his father Greg Stevens in the No. 31S.

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AdamStevensFeature

  • 1. K E N T U C K Y S P E E D W A Y » S P A R T A , K E N T U C K Y26 By Len Glockner B y the time the calendar turns to February, NASCAR teams and fans already are counting down the final days before the start of another season. For Adam Stevens, crew chief of the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) Toyota driven by Kyle Busch in the Sprint Cup Series, this season started a new chapter in a racing journey that started in the small river town of Portsmouth, Ohio. Located about two hours southeast of Cincinnati, it’s where local dirt racing teams like the Stevens family gathered to put on a show on the 3/8-mile clay track at Portsmouth Raceway Park. Greg Stevens owned a dirt Late Model car and raced it. Adam, his son, got a taste of racing at an early age. By the time he was 3 years old, he and his father would get done eating dinner at the house and drive to the race shop to work on cars. “When I was old enough to race, we put a car together that was the previous year’s chassis,” Adam Stevens said. When he was old enough to race, he got behind the wheel of a 750-horsepower dirt Late Model car, before he even had his driver’s license, and would travel throughout Ohio, Kentucky and West Virginia to race. “It was my passion - I lived and breathed it,” Stevens said. “At one point, I realized that this was all I ever wanted to do. It was a matter of how I thought I could make it happen.” He drew up a plan in high school where he would continue his education and pursue a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering. While attending Ohio University in Athens, Ohio, Stevens started making trips to Charlotte, North Carolina to train with buddies, visit with NASCAR teams and just meet people in the industry. “My senior year in college, I started driving down to Charlotte and started making cold calls to race shops and beat on doors at all of the majors teams,” he said. “I probably went to each shop at least once during that time.” In 2002, while on the path to earning his college degree Stevens realized his goal of becoming a professional driver wasn’t part of the plan. After graduating college in the spring of 2002 with a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering he landed a job at Petty Enterprises and that started him down the path that led him to where he is today. Stevens worked at Petty Enterprises for three years. He started as a designer then began traveling to the racetrack on Sundays to calculate fuel mileage. He eventually moved into the positon of working on data systems and traveling to where the team would test its car. Stevens received a phone call from the same person that hired him at Petty Enterprises in 2005 to inform him that JGR was expanding from a two-car Sprint Cup Series team to a three-car operation with the No. 11 team. Stevens worked with the No. 20 Sprint Cup Series team and driver Tony Stewart as a race engineer from 2005 to 2008. During that tenure Adam and the team raced to 18 wins and a Sprint Cup Series championship in 2006. At the end of the 2008 season, Stewart decided to leave JGR to become a team owner, and the change led Stevens to a new opportunity. The No. 20 NASCAR XFINITY Series team owned by JGR had a rotation of drivers that included Denny Hamlin, Drew Herring, Ryan Truex and Joey Logano, who was the primary driver for the car during the 2009 and 2010 season. “I had a good relationship with Joey already,” Stevens said. “I went to his very first test for JGR in an ARCA Racing Series car at Kansas. He impressed me the very first day. Joey and I had a good relationship working together on the 20 car in his rookie and sophomore year at the Cup Series level.” When Logano decided to move on to Penske Racing change was on the horizon again. In 2013, Stevens moved to a crew chief position when Busch decided to move his Kyle Busch Motorsports No. 54 car back to JGR.
  • 2. W W W . K E N T U C K Y S P E E D W A Y . C O M 27 That led JGR to pair Adam and Busch together in the XFINITY Series. “The cool thing about him and I is we look at race cars the same way, and immediately when we started working together, his feedback and what I’m thinking and how I think race cars work just seemed to mesh really well,” Adam said in an interview with SIRUSXM NASCAR Radio. The duo combined for 19 wins, 46 top- five finishes and 47 top-10 finishes in a total of 52 XFINITY Series starts together in 2013 and 2014. For Stevens, the 2014 XFINITY season brought him seven series victories for a total of 31 wins. Thirty-one is a significant number to his family. Both Stevens and his father raced a No. 31 dirt Late Model car. Greg Stevens died in 2009 as his son was making his way through the sport as a race engineer. The elder Stevens didn’t have the opportunity to see him crew chief for a few of NASCAR’s finest drivers. “In four years to win 31 races is pretty neat,” he said. “It was cool because it kind of felt like he was looking down on me.” It was odd that the season ended on that number not only because of history behind the number but because of how the year went for the team. “We had so many (wins) that got away from us and probably a couple we won that we probably shouldn’t of,” he said. “It was kind of neat to reach that when you’re in the middle of it, working and doing what you’re doing every day. You don’t pay too much attention to it.” Though it’s difficult to truly evaluate Stevens XFINITY Series success as a stepping stone to move up to NASCAR’s top series, he knew that one day he would make it to the Cup series. “From the very first meeting, Kyle hasn’t wavered from what we talked about at lunch at a restaurant in Cornelius (North Carolina), Stevens said. “We’re going to make it better in the race, we’re going to make it worse at times, but we have to commit right now that it’s you and me against the car. In my experience he has never wavered from that. It gives me a lot of optimism that we already have that understanding as we learn together now on the Sprint Cup level.” He entered the 2015 season knowing there was a lot of work to be done because JGR was coming off of what the team called “kind of a down year,” because the team did not win as many races as the previous year. Neither Stevens nor the team expected what was dealt to them February 21. “I was eating dinner with my guys,” he said. “We immediately knew when he (Busch) started spinning he didn’t have any control of the car. That area of the racetrack he got to so soon and as soon as you hit the grass there is nothing you can do.” Busch suffered a compound break in his right leg in addition to a broken left foot with nine laps remaining in the Daytona XFINITY Series race. “I’d never really seen anyone wreck in that particular location and that wall was just at a horrible angle,” Stevens said. “Once we saw him hit the wall we knew it was big trouble.” Following the injury, Busch was sidelined from competition for nearly three months as he focused on the rehab and recovery process. “He was all about all the rehab and the hard work that goes into it,” Stevens said. “There were multiple times texting back and forth when I’m at the racetrack while he’s at the house. It could be 11:30 a.m., or 12 p.m., and he’s doing rehab. Complete dedication. He immersed himself in everything he had to do to get better.” Busch officially returned to Sprint Cup competition at Charlotte Motor Speedway for the May 24 race, his first points race after the injury, and grabbed an 11th -place finish. A month later, Busch entered the Michigan International Speedway XFINITY Series race, the first time back in the series since the accident. He went on to lead 27 of the 125 race laps driving his way to Victory Lane and proving something to the racing community. “It shows that Kyle is back, he is ready and it’s up to us (the team) to give him a good car so we can make it happen,” Stevens said after the race. Stevens and the No. 18 JGR team enters the Quaker State 400 presented by Advance Auto Parts weekend looking to give Busch his second Sprint Cup victory and sixth Kentucky win on one of NASCAR’s most challenging tracks. “The track itself is such a challenge,” Stevens said. “It’s so bumpy and really hard to make a driver comfortable there. It’s more of a compromise than any other place we go. It’s fun and will test your patience for sure.” Patience may be tested even more this year as NASCAR announced June 16 that Sprint Cup teams will run a new rules package for the Quaker State 400. Stevens will be on top of the pit box as crew chief for his seventh Kentucky race. He will have family and friends in attendance as he looks to grab what would be a memorable victory at NASCAR's roughest track - his first at Kentucky - not too far from where his racing journey started in the first place. Aerial of Portsmouth Raceway Park in Portsmouth, Ohio. Adam Stevens in the No. 31A racing side-by-side with his father Greg Stevens in the No. 31S.