Who are the co-owners of RFK Racing alongside Brad Keselowski? Everything you need to know
Brad Keselowski is the co-owner of RFK Racing (Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing) and drives the #6 Ford Mustang for the same team in NASCAR Cup Series. He became the co-owner in 2022, and since then RFK Racing’s performance graph has grown upwards, with Keselowski and his teammate Chris Buescher performing well.
However, the questions arise: who are the co-owners of RFK Racing alongside Keselowski? In their 37th season of competition, the ownership lineup alongside the 2012 NASCAR champion includes NASCAR Hall of Fame team owner Jack Roush and Fenway Sports Group owner John Henry.
Jack Roush is the founder, CEO, and co-owner of Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing. He established the team in 1988 and built it one of the most successful teams in NASCAR history, making him the first NASCAR owner to secure 300 wins and eight championships, including back-to-back NASCAR Cup Series in 2003 and 2004.
The Brad Keselowski-owned team was originally known as Roush Racing and was renamed Roush Fenway Racing when Fenway Sports Group and John Henry became the co-owners in 2007. When Keselowski became a co-owner in 2022, the team again rebranded its’ name to Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing (RFK Racing).
Brad Keselowski, Jack Roush and John Henry's owned team had previously ran teams in the NASCAR Xfinity Series, Truck Series, ARCA Series, Trans-Am Series, and IMSA Camel GT.
They won five Xfinity championships from 2002 to 2015 and clinched the maiden Truck Series title in 2000. The Concord, North Carolina, outfit was one of NASCAR's largest racing teams in the 2000s and early 2010s.
A look into Brad Keselowski's co-owner’s background
Jack Roush, one of NASCAR’s most iconic names, is the founder of RFK Racing. With his technical expertise and business acumen, he helped the team grow into a major powerhouse in the Cup Series. Under his leadership, the team has won multiple championships across NASCAR’s top-three tier series, with drivers like Matt Kenseth and Kurt Busch.
Before entering the NASCAR world as an owner, the 82-year-old Roush had competed and won championships in various drag racing and sports car racing series since the mid-1960s, including the NHRA, SCCA Trans-Am Series, IMSA GT Championship and the 24 Hours of Daytona.
Sports investor John W. Henry, owner of the Fenway Sports Group, also has the sports ownership group behind popular franchises like Major League Baseball’s Boston Red Sox and English Premier League’s Liverpool F.C. He also became the co-owner of the NASCAR team in 2007, expanding their influence into NASCAR.