Aric Almirola won the pole for the Ally 400 at Nashville Superspeedway. (HHP/Jim Fluharty Photo)
Aric Almirola (HHP/Jim Fluharty Photo)

Blickensderfer Joins SHR, Bugarewicz Promoted

KANNAPOLIS, N.C. – Stewart-Haas racing has added Drew Blickensderfer to its crew chief lineup while promoting Mike Bugarewicz to the newly formed role of performance director, the team announced Tuesday.

Bugarewicz is an eight-year SHR veteran who has spent the past six seasons as a NASCAR Cup Series crew chief, most recently with driver Aric Almirola and the No. 10 team. Blickensderfer will take over crew chief responsibilities on the No. 10 machine driven by Almirola.

Bugarewicz has won with every driver he’s worked with, including SHR co-owner Tony Stewart. His promotion to performance director merges Bugarewicz’s hands-on experience as a crew chief with his engineering mindset, as the 39-year-old from Lehighton, Pa., holds a master’s degree in mechanical engineering from Penn State University.

“With the NextGen car being brand new, there will be continuous development on it every time it turns a wheel,” said Greg Zipadelli, SHR vice president of competition. “Going into it, we knew we needed to shore up our resources and really bolster our competitive approach. Buga is the right guy to tackle all the newness that’s coming at us pretty fast.

“He’s an engineer and he’s also a racer. He will be that glue between simulation, at-track reality, engineering and our race teams, and his laser-like focus in this new role of performance director will be a huge asset to our team.”

Blickensderfer, meanwhile, is a NASCAR veteran who has a history with Almirola.

He served as his crew chief at Richard Petty Motorsports for all of 2017 before Almirola departed RPM for SHR in ’18. Blickensderfer comes to SHR from Front Row Motorsports where the 45-year-old from Decatur, Illi., won last year’s Daytona 500 with driver Michael McDowell.

It was Blickensderfer’s fourth NASCAR Cup Series victory as a crew chief. He previously guided David Ragan to a win and Matt Kenseth to two victories.

“Drew has been in the sport a long time and knows how to get the best out of the people around him, and that’s really what the job of crew chief has become,” Zipadelli said. “We have the same parts and pieces, but what we do with those parts and pieces will make the difference. Drew has worked with a lot of drivers and managed a lot of people. He already has a rapport with Aric, and that will make the learning curve in a season full of learning a little less steep.”

The rest of SHR’s crew chief lineup remains intact across both its NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR Xfinity Series teams.

Rodney Childers, crew chief for the No. 4 team, will begin his ninth year atop the pit box for driver Kevin Harvick. The Harvick-Childers duo is the longest-tenured active driver-crew chief pairing in the NASCAR Cup Series garage, a partnership that has netted 35 point-awarding wins and the 2014 championship.

John Klausmeier remains the crew chief for the No. 14 team and driver Chase Briscoe. Klausmeier helped Briscoe secure the NASCAR Cup Series Rookie of the Year award. The new season will mark Klausmeier’s fifth season as a crew chief.

Similarly, Mike Shiplett remains the crew chief for the No. 41 team and driver Cole Custer.

This season will be the fourth -straight year Custer and Shiplett have been paired together. The duo first joined in the Xfinity Series in 2019 where Shiplett oversaw a seven-win season and a runner-up finish in the championship standings. Custer and Shiplett moved to Cup together in 2020, with Custer handily securing the Rookie of the Year award via his win at Kentucky Speedway.

Richard Boswell has been the main steward of SHR’s Xfinity Series program since its inception in 2017 and he will continue in that capacity this year.

He will again serve as crew chief for driver Riley Herbst and the No. 98 team. Boswell has been the crew chief for nine of SHR’s 21 Xfinity Series wins.