HUNTERSVILLE, N.C. — There's a sign that hangs on a wall in Airspeed, the headquarters of 23XI Racing, that clearly states the vision of the NASCAR team owned by Michael Jordan and Denny Hamlin.
''To be the world's most recognizable motorsports team, winning on and off the track, moving forward together, and setting the standard for excellence,'' it reads.
Any questions about how 23XI would emerge from December's federal antitrust lawsuit against NASCAR have been immediately silenced at the start of the new year.
Tyler Reddick won the season-opening Daytona 500 and last weekend's race at Atlanta to open 2 for 2, while teammate Bubba Wallace led a combined 86 laps in the two events and easily could have been the winner.
Reddick and Wallace head to Circuit of the Americas road course in Texas for this Sunday's race ranked 1-2 in the Cup Series points standings.
It's made for a festive atmosphere at Airspeed, a 114,000-square-foot headquarters where personal touches like the 45 pairs of Air Jordan sneakers arranged to form a No. 23 wall display make it one of the coolest teams to work for in motorsports.
''All we've been doing since the season started is eating, drinking and celebrating,'' 23XI President Steve Lauletta told the 100-plus employees this week during a luncheon to celebrate Reddick's Daytona 500 win.
The 23XI culture