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There will be a new face in the No. 32 car in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series in 2017.

Jeffrey Earnhardt will not be back in the Ford ride next year, according to team owner Archie St. Hilaire. The grandson of seven-time Cup Series champion Dale Earnhardt made 17 starts with the team but ran three events with BK Racing during the latter part of the season at Talladega Superspeedway, Texas Motor Speedway and Homestead-Miami Speedway.

“Jeffrey won’t be back,” St. Hilaire told Frontstretch. “We really want to focus on one driver for the year. We’re talking to several parties, but that’s our goal. We’ve been doing this for four years with multiple drivers.

“Our goal is to find one driver. If we have to, we’ll find two, but not four or five. It’s time to move the program up.”

Primary sponsor Can-Am has announced they have extended their deal with Go Fas Racing for the next two seasons, with 13 races as a primary sponsor.

“A couple of goals we have for next year is to run better, have an affiliation with another Ford team that we’re talking to and hoping the whole team can step it up,” St. Hilaire said. “We’re talking to both of them (Team Penske and Roush Fenway Racing), but we’ll be affiliated with a team next year.”

An alliance would be a major step for Go Fas Racing, which receives minimal help from Ford Performance and the other major Ford teams in NASCAR’s premier division.

The No. 32 team finished 38th in owner points, the lowest of teams with a charter. NASCAR has the option to revoke a team’s charter if it is one of the bottom three teams with a charter for three straight seasons.

Bobby Labonte will not return to the No. 32 car for the team after longtime Go Fas Racing sponsor C&J Energy Services owner Josh Comstock died in early March, which meant the company would no longer sponsor his efforts during the four plate races.

Besides Earnhardt and Labonte, Joey Gase competed in six races, Patrick Carpentier and Jeb Burton for two, with Dylan Lupton, Boris Said and Eddie MacDonald in the No. 32 car for one event each.

St. Hilaire became a NASCAR owner in 2009, creating a part-time XFINITY Series effort called Go Green Racing. Come 2012, his entry was competing full-time. Later that year, he started fielding a start-and-park effort in the Sprint Cup Series, qualifying for six races with Kelly Bires, Mike Skinner and Scott Speed. The team ran one Cup race in 2013 with Paulie Harraka.

Since 2014, the team has competed full-time in NASCAR’s Cup Series, splitting the No. 32 ride with several different drivers after merging its efforts with Frank Stoddard’s FAS Lane Racing.