Since founding Roush Racing in 1988, the man known as “The Cat in the Hat” turned his vision into a full-blown dynasty. With more than 300 NASCAR victories and eight championships across the Cup, Xfinity, and Truck Series, Jack Roush made a career out of blending engineering smarts with a sharp eye for talent. Drivers like Mark Martin, Matt Kenseth, and Carl Edwards all owe huge chunks of their success to his program. But behind all the trophies and milestones lies a pivotal moment where Roush’s influence stretched beyond his own team and quietly changed the entire Cup Series forever.

Watch What’s Trending Now!

Today, NASCAR teams are capped at four full-time Cup Series entries, a rule that seems so standard now that most fans barely think about it. But this wasn’t always the case. In fact, the four-car limit traces directly back to the mid-2000s. That’s when Jack Roush’s powerhouse operation forced NASCAR to rethink what fairness in the sport really looked like.

As Dale Earnhardt Jr. recalled, “Roush Fenway had five cars. They had half of the Chase field in the playoffs in the postseason.” That’s not an exaggeration. In 2005, all five of Roush’s drivers, Mark Martin, Matt Kenseth, Kurt Busch, Carl Edwards, and Greg Biffle, qualified for the Chase, a staggering display of dominance that rattled the competitive balance.

ADVERTISEMENT

Brad Keselowski: NASCAR’s horsepower era is about to shift

Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing co-owner and Cup Series veteran Brad Keselowski is convinced that NASCAR is gearing up for one of its biggest technical shakeups yet. On Corey LaJoie’s Stacking Pennies podcast, Keselowski revealed that the sanctioning body plans to bump up the horsepower package starting in 2026.

The current Next-Gen car, introduced in 2022, runs at a baseline of 670 horsepower, though in practice, it’s closer to 685–690. According to Keselowski, that number could soon jump to around 740–750. “NASCAR is going to change,” he stated, noting that a bigger spacer may be part of the adjustment to help transition the engines to the new power levels.

ADVERTISEMENT

The change has many drivers buzzing. Team Penske’s Joey Logano has already voiced excitement, pointing out that the drivetrain will need strengthening to withstand the added punch. Keselowski himself framed the move as a push toward more thrilling racing. “It’s all about making the product better for the fans,” he emphasized.

Still, Keselowski admitted the NextGen era hasn’t come easy for him personally. With the old cars, throttle control was the art – how a driver feathered the gas pedal often made the difference. With the NextGen setup, it’s more about raw pedal pressure, a style that has forced him to rethink his approach. “It’s been a struggle,” he admitted, candid about the adjustment curve.

ADVERTISEMENT

Despite not being in the 2025 playoffs and still hunting for his first win of the year, Keselowski remains hopeful. He believes the upcoming horsepower boost won’t just make the cars faster but the racing itself more competitive and entertaining. For a driver who’s been reshaped by NASCAR’s new era, the 2026 rules could be the reset button he (and the sport) have been waiting for.

ADVERTISEMENT