sábado, 30 de abril de 2016

Matt Tifft takes pole, JGR grabs 3 of top 5 spots for today’s Xfinity race at Talladega

Joe Gibbs Racing once again dominated NASCAR Xfinity Series qualifying Saturday morning at Talladega Superspeedway.

But instead of the likes of Daniel Suarez, Erik Jones or Kyle Busch atop the speed chart, it was Matt Tifft (181.168 mph) who took the pole for this afternoon’s Sparks Energy 300.

It was Tifft’s first pole in his six-race Xfinity Series career.

But have no fear, JGR fans, your other favorites (with the exception of Busch, who is sitting this race out) all performed well: Suarez (180.846 mph) qualified second, while Jones (180.366) was fourth.

In-between were Austin Dillon (180.506), who qualified third, and younger brother Ty Dillon (180.217), who will start today’s race from the fifth position.

Sixth through 10th qualifiers were Brendan Gaughan (179.763), Ryan Reed (179.061), Joey Logano (178.817), Elliott Sadler (178.660) and JJ Yeley (178.394).

Three drivers failed to qualify: Josh Reaume, Derrike Cope and Mike Harmon.

Here’s the results of qualifying. The race will start this afternoon at 3 pm ET.

Drivers appreciate Brian France’s appearance at meeting

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Brad Keselowski both praised NASCAR Chairman Brian France for attending Friday night’s meeting with the Sprint Cup Drivers Council at Talladega Superspeedway.

France met with the nine-member drivers group for about an hour before leaving for a prior commitment. The meeting went an additional two hours with drivers talking with other NASCAR senior executives including Steve O’Donnell, executive vice president and chief racing development officer.

“There’s a tremendous amount of good faith that is earned when Brian comes to a meeting,’’ Keselowski said Saturday.

France previously had said he felt it would be best not to be at the meetings to avoid stifling any of the discussion. Tony Stewart suggested in January that France should be more visible in part by attending the meetings.

“It was great that Brian came,’’ Earnhardt said.

Keselowski called the meeting “productive” without revealing details of what was discussed.

“I think there were a lot of takeaways to make the sport better, so that was a really positive step in the right direction,’’ Keselowski said.

“I think three or four years ago, someone asked me, ‘How is this sport going to move forward?’ I pointed to the NFL model of councils and committees. That’s how you can collaborate key stakeholders to get them to the same agenda. That’s exactly where we are going. I think that’s an extremely positive step for everyone.’’

Earnhardt said “nothing groundbreaking” came from the meeting. “It was just a good, positive meeting. A lot of good things moving in a good direction.’’

Chase Elliott earns pole 30 years almost to day father Bill did it at Talladega

Chase Elliott continued his dominance as a top qualifier at restrictor plate racetracks, capturing the pole for Sunday’s Geico 500 at Talladega Superspeedway.

Elliott, who won the pole for this year’s season-opening Daytona 500, earned his second straight plate track pole position with a speed of 192.661 mph in Saturday’s Sprint Cup qualifying at NASCAR’s longest (2.66 miles) and biggest track.

It also came almost 30 years to the day — May 4, 1986 — that Chase’s father, NASCAR Hall of Famer Bill Elliott, sat on the pole for the then-Winston Cup race at Talladega (although the elder Elliott finished 24th in that race).

“That’s a really cool stat, Dad sat on the pole on this day 30 years ago,” Chase Elliott said. “This is definitely a special place for him and it’s cool to get that done today.”

As for the younger Elliott, he reveled in his 192.661 mph qualifying performance.

“As I said in Daytona, this has got nothing to do with me,” Chase Elliott said. “It’s the same car we had at Daytona and brought another fast one here.”

But Elliott also hopes for a much better finish Sunday than he had at Daytona (crashed and finished 38th).

The race last time at Daytona didn’t go so good,” Chase Elliott said. “Hopefully, I take what I learned and cut down on the mistakes I made in the Daytona 500.

“Our first goal is to get to the end of the race, and if we get there, to be smart.”

Ty Dillon qualified second (192.424 mph), followed by Dale Earnhardt Jr. (192.293), Matt Kenseth (192.181) and six-time champion Jimmie Johnson (192.116).

A total of 41 drivers attempted to qualify, with Josh Wise falling short.

sexta-feira, 29 de abril de 2016

NASCAR on NBC podcast, Episode XIII: Michael Waltrip

Michael Waltrip, who will interrupt his Fox Sports job to race this weekend at Talladega Superspeedway, was the guest of a bonus episode of the NASCAR on NBC podcast.

The two-time Daytona 500 winner will be driving a No. 55 for Premium Motorsports at the 2.66-mile oval, where his last of four Sprint Cup wins (all on restrictor-plate tracks) occurred in September 2003.

Waltrip, who turns 53 Saturday, finished 30th in the season-opening Daytona 500. He believes with the proper car, he still could win.

“Yes, I think I could,” he said. “I also know I don’t have the opportunity to get in a car that’s there.

“The car I raced at Daytona and Talladega was built in the middle of 2015 at (Michael Waltrip Racing). The research and development and engineering and processes that the top teams have gone through since then have made their cars way faster than my car. But I did win, and I had a good run for a while with a car that was capable of it. I relish those memories and am thankful for them.”

As an analyst on Sprint Cup pre- and postrace shows and the Camping World Truck Series for Fox, Waltrip says getting behind the wheel informs his work on TV.

“I know it does week in and week out, despite the fact the racing style is different” at Daytona and Talladega, Waltrip said. “You have to make pit stops, you have to read the digital dash, you have to work with your spotter, you have to hit your pit road speed perfectly. You have to do all the jobs they do every week.

“The product on the track is different, but you’re doing the same things to win Richmond or any event. I know it keeps me current and tuned in to what they’re doing on the track.”

Waltrip already has insight into this year’s dominant team, Joe Gibbs Racing, which seems to have benefited with the addition of Furniture Row Racing in the Toyota Racing Development fold. Michael Waltrip Racing was one of TRD’s original teams and worked with JGR to lesser success from 2008-15.

“Our team could have meshed in as an organization with Gibbs as Furniture Row has, but I think the philosophy of (co-owner) Rob (Kauffman) and our team didn’t quite match up with the way Joe looked at the racing,” Waltrip said. “(Joe Gibbs) and (Furniture Row owner) Barney (Visser), it’s perfect, because Barney is, ‘What do we have to spend to win?’ And that’s the way Joe looks at it. So instead of meshing them together and saving money, they’ve meshed it together, and now we spend more. That’s the way you have to be in NASCAR.”

Waltrip also discusses how much longer he wants to race part time in Sprint Cup, the importance of teammates and the rest of his professional life.

You can listen to the podcast by clicking below or download and subscribe to it on iTunes by clicking here. The free subscription will provide automatic downloads of new episodes to your smartphone. It also is available on Stitcher by clicking here.

Five drivers to watch at Talladega Superspeedway

Here are the drivers to keep an eye on this weekend at Talladega Superspeedway:

88-Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Over his last 10 plate races, Dale Jr. has notched three victories, including two in his past five plate races. In regards to Loop Data at Talladega, he’s tops in Average Running Position (13.6) and Laps in Top 15 (63.8 %) since the inception of Loop Data in 2005.

48-Jimmie Johnson

Johnson has been hit-or-miss recently in Talladega results with finishes of 13th, 23rd, 24th, 2nd, and 18th in his last five races there. However, during that span, he’s averaged 43 laps led per race – and that’s even with just two laps led in Spring 2014.

11-Denny Hamlin

Hamlin led 95 laps on the way to his Daytona 500 win in February. It makes up a good chunk of the 148 laps he’s led over his last 10 restrictor-plate races. Nonetheless, he’s posted seven Top-10 finishes during that stretch (which includes not just his Daytona win but also a Talladega win in Spring 2014).

19-Carl Edwards

Edwards comes off back-to-back wins but has never won a restrictor-plate race in his Cup career. However, he may finally be up for it after producing fifth-place finishes in his last two plate races (Talladega – Fall 2015 and 2016 Daytona 500). Edwards also is looking to pull off his first three-race win streak ever.

20-Matt Kenseth

Will Talladega bring the big result that Kenseth’s been missing this season? Kenseth has led the most laps (314) over the last 10 Talladega races (which includes a 2012 win). However, he’s led a combined five laps over his last four ‘Dega starts, which have seen him finish 37th, 2nd, 25th, and 26th.

Darrell Wallace Jr. tops first Xfinity Series practice at Talladega

Roush Fenway Racing swept the top two spots in the Xfinity Series’ first practice for Saturday’s race at Talladega Superspeedway.

Darrell Wallace Jr. led the session with an average speed of 192.413 mph. He was followed by teammate Ryan Reed at 192.355 mph.

Filling out the top five were Ty Dillon (191.827), Matt Tifft (191.670) and Austin Dillon (190.061).

There were no accidents during the session. The second Xfinity Series practice is set for 1:30 p.m. ET.

Speed chart

Ty Dillon focused on final ride in Tony Stewart’s No. 14 car

That Ty Dillon will race in Sunday’s Sprint Cup race at Talladega Superspeedway is what he was hoping for a year ago.

He just didn’t think it would be in a relief role.

“I was hoping to maybe be full-time this year in the Sprint Cup Series by this time last year,’’ the 24-year-old said Friday. “That’s where I had my goals set. The opportunity didn’t come along.’’

Unable to secure sponsorship, Dillon instead is racing full-time in the Xfinity Series for Richard Childress Racing. He entered the weekend third in the standings behind series leader Daniel Suarez and Elliott Sadler.

Dillon will appear in his sixth Cup race Sunday when he relieves Stewart after the first caution, if not sooner. It will mark Dillon’s final appearance in the No. 14 car for Stewart-Haas Racing with Stewart scheduled to return to full-time duty next weekend at Kansas Speedway.

Dillon has driven three races for Stewart-Haas and two races for Circle Sport – Leavine Family Racing this Cup season. His best finish is 15th at Phoenix, driving Stewart’s car.

“I can’t thank Stewart-Haas and their organization enough for giving me the opportunity to fill in this year with Tony being out,’’ Dillon said. “Not only has it helped me with my career and getting better as race car driver but it’s helped me show people that I can get the job done.’’

Dillon is scheduled to drive the first Cup practice today in Stewart’s car and qualify the car Saturday before taking over from Stewart during Sunday’s race.

“I feel like I’m ready to be in the (Cup) series full-time as a driver, mentally and physically, but this year I’m focused on winning the Xfinity championship to make my prospects a little bit better,’’ he said.

Should Dillon win as a relief driver Sunday, it would provide the victory Stewart would need to qualify for the Chase — upon climbing into the top 30 in points. Dillon was asked what that would mean.

“First of all, it would mean I won a Sprint Cup race, and I would be pretty excited to begin with,’’ Dillon said. “On top of that, to be able to get Tony a step closer to be locked into the Chase would be really cool. I haven’t started a race without the goal of winning in my entire career. That’s where my focus is.

“If it all comes together and we do win the race, I’m sure it will be a heck of a party and everybody is going to be happy.’’

Celebration of Dale Earnhardt’s birthday takes place today

On what would have been Dale Earnhardt’s 65th birthday, fans are being invited to Dale Earnhardt Inc. today in Mooresville, North Carolina, to celebrate the annual Dale Earnhardt Day.
Items from Earnhardt’s past and that of DEI will be on display, and the Grand Showroom also will be open to the public in honor of the seven-time NASCAR champion who died on the last lap of the 2001 Daytona 500. This year’s celebration includes the first public viewing of a life-sized statute of Dale Earnhardt by artist Jason Fizer of Roanoke, Virginia.
The Dale Earnhardt Foundation will be accepting good used or new books to benefit the Salvation Army’s Center of Hope in Charlotte, North Carolina.
On Earnhardt’s birthday, here are some memorable moments to recall in Hall of Famer’s driving career:
Earnhardt’s 76th and final Cup win came in the 2000 fall race at Talladega Superspeedway. He went from 18th to first in the last five laps to win:


Here is Earnhardt’s interview after winning the 1998 Daytona 500:


Earnhardt collected his record-tying seventh series championship by winning the title at North Carolina Speedway in Rockingham, North Carolina, in 1994.


Here is the dramatic finish in the 1999 Bristol night race where Earnhardt made contact with Terry Labonte on the final lap, meaning only to “rattle his cage.”

NASCAR America: David Ragan: ‘Talladgea is a great equalizer’




David Ragan‘s Talladega win in 2013 opens up a possibility for another upset this weekend with BK Racing. Ragan discusses the need for consistency and the new lug nut rule and how the teams will have to adapt.

NASCAR America: Bobby Labonte, Parker Kligerman, Dale Jarrett recall Talladega wins




Parker Kligerman, Dale Jarrett and Bobby Labonte reemember their wins at Talladega Superspeedway ahead of the Sprint Cup weekend. Labonte also breaks down the difference between winning at the speedway in the 90s and today.

NASCAR America: Joey Logano looking for his first win of season at Talladega




Joey Logano was a favorite heading into the season and just because he hasn’t won yet doesn’t mean the team’s panicking. Logano has won two of the last five restrictor plate races and has confidence going into Talladega.

NASCAR’s weekend schedule at Talladega

It’s time for the first visit of the year to the longest track in NASCAR at Talladega Superspeedway. But the Sprint Cup Series and Xfinity Series will be in action.

The Sprint Cup will hold the GEICO 500 and Xfinity Series teams take part in the Sparks Energy 300.

Here is the weekend schedule for the two series, including TV and radio info.

All times are Eastern.

Friday, April 29

9 a.m. – 8 p.m. – Sprint Cup garage open

9:30 a.m. – 7:30 p.m. – Xfinity Series Garage open

11:30 a.m. – 12:25 p.m. – Xfinity Series practice (Fox Sports 1)

1:30 – 2:25 p.m. – Final Xfinity Series practice (FS1)

2:30 – 3:25 p.m. – Sprint Cup practice (FS1, Motor Racing Network)

4:30 – 5:25 p.m. – Final Sprint Cup practice (FS1, MRN)

Saturday, April 30

7 a.m. – 3 p.m. – Sprint Cup and Xfinity garages open

10:30 a.m. – Xfinity Series qualifying; single car/two rounds (FS1)

12:15 p.m. – Xfinity Series driver-crew chief meeting

12:30 p.m. – Sprint Cup qualifying; single car/two rounds (Fox, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

2:30 p.m. – Xfinity Series driver introductions

3 p.m. – Sparks Energy 300, 113 laps, 300.58 miles (Fox, MRN, SiriusXm NASCAR Radio)

Sunday, May 1

8:30 a.m. – Sprint Cup garage opens

11 a.m. – Driver-Crew chief meeting

12:25 p.m. – Driver introductions

1 p.m. – GEICO 500, 188 laps, 500.08 miles (Fox, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

quinta-feira, 28 de abril de 2016

#ThrowbackThursday: Talladega, Kurt Busch racing in L.A. and more

Let’s start this week’s edition of #ThrowbackThursday with the most recent winner at Talladega Superspeedway, Joey Logano.

Last October, Logano completed a sweep of the second round of the Chase for the Sprint Cup when his front bumper narrowly edged Dale Earnhardt Jr.‘s when a late caution waved on a restart. Logano and Earnhardt split the season’s restrictor-plate races.

A year before he first raced in the Sprint Cup Series in 2000, Kurt Busch competed in the NASCAR Southwest Series. That circuit took Busch and his competitors to stops that included Irwindale Speedway, Sonoma Raceway, Rocky Mountain Raceways in Utah and the streets of Los Angeles.

Kurt Busch won six races that season, including four in a row, to claim the series’ title. In the picture below, shared by Busch, the Stewart-Haas Racing driver pilots his No. 70 Chevrolet in the Ford Los Angeles Street Race 200. The race was one of three run in the streets of the City of Angels.

Roush Yates Engines brings us this next picture, taken at the start of the 1986 Talladega 500. Bill Elliott started from the pole next to Dale Earnhardt. At this point, Earnhardt only had two of his record 10 Talladega wins. The third wouldn’t come until 1990.

Elliott swept the poles at Talladega that season in addition to his pole for the Daytona 500.

Only 14 cars would finish this race, with Earnhardt and Elliott not among them. The race would be won by Bobby Hillin, Jr. The only win of his Sprint Cup career, Hillin is one of 10 drivers to earn their first Sprint Cup win at Talladega.

And here’s a few more pictures to reminisce over.

Brad Keselowski Racing taps Austin Cindric, Theriault for pair of Truck races

Brad Keselowski Racing has announced two different three-driver lineups for upcoming races in the Camping World Truck Series.

In addition to regular drivers Daniel Hemric (No. 19) and Tyler Reddick (No. 29), BKR will field a third truck, the No. 2, at Dover International Speedway on May 13 and Charlotte Motor Speedway on May 20.

At Dover, the truck will be piloted by Austin Cindric and at Charlotte by Austin Theriault. Both have a history with BKR.

Cindric, 17, drove two races for the team in 2015, at Martinsville Speedway and Phoenix International Raceway. Theriault, 22, has competed in 10 races, the most recent being the season opener at Daytona where he finished 27th following a crash.

In 2015, Theriault drove in eight of the first 18 races before a back injury in a hard crash at Las Vegas Motor Speedway sidelined him until the finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

The May 13 race will be Cindric’s first time to visit Dover in any series.

“A track called the ‘Monster Mile’ shouldn’t be taken lightly,” Cindric said in a press release. “They tell me that the two truck races that I was able to do last year at Martinsville and Phoenix were difficult tracks to figure out, and I believe Dover will be the same. As I haven’t been able to test, I’ve been watching as much video as possible while reaching out to as many people as I can to pick their brain about what it takes to be fast at Dover. I’m just going in with no expectations, trying to absorb as much information as possible and have fun with it.”

Theriault, who has two top fives in his career, will go into Charlotte with a completely different mindset.

“I was really proud of the effort at Daytona and how strong our performance was, and I feel like Charlotte won’t be any different,” Theriault said in the press release. “I’m going there with the expectation to win. I know we will have a strong Ford F-150 race truck at Charlotte and we plan to perform well, just like we did earlier this year at Daytona. At the end of the day, we want to win, and we have all the resources here at BKR to do just that at Charlotte.”

The Camping World Truck Series returns to action next weekend at Kansas Speedway.

Brendan Gaughan honors father’s racing career with Darlington paint scheme

The new use of throwback paint schemes at Darlington Raceway isn’t exclusive to the Sprint Cup Series. Last year, a handful of Xfinity Series teams also paid tribute to the history of NASCAR or their sponsor.Among them was Brendan Gaughan, who will once again have a retro paint scheme for this year’s VFW Sport Clips Help A Hero 200.MORE: Brendan Gaughan and the “Vegas Rules” that made him who he isGaughan revealed on social media how his No. 62 Chevrolet will look for the Sept. 3 race. The car will pay tribute to the off-road racing career of his father, Michael Gaughan.

NASCAR America: Communication between Kasey Kahne, crew best it’s ever been

Kasey Kahne‘s crew chief Keith Rodden talks about Kahne’s season best finish at Richmond and the momentum he feels the team has going into Talladega.

quarta-feira, 27 de abril de 2016

NASCAR on NBC podcast, Episode XII: Trevor Bayne and Danica Patrick

Trevor Bayne’s undulating career path and Danica Patrick’s connection with kids are among the highlights of the latest NASCAR on NBC podcast.

Bayne joined the podcast before his Tuesday appearance on NASCAR America, discussing his wild ride after winning the 2011 Daytona 500. After winning NASCAR’s biggest race in one of the major upsets in history, Bayne suffered through health problems (eventually leading to a diagnosis of MS) and a lack of funding kept him from racing full time in 2012.

“I’ve got a very strange career so far,” he said. “Even just my first year, going from a victory to the hospital, I said, ‘We just went through 10 seasons worth of a drama in one year.’ ”

Bayne persevered and moved full time into NASCAR’s premier series last season with Advocare, a sponsorship that materialized after his chance meeting with the company’s president.

“It’s crazy how it worked out,” the No. 6 Ford driver. “Five months before, I didn’t know what Advocare was.

"I tell young drivers all the time how important relationships are, You never know who you’re talking to, and some of my biggest breaks in racing have come from talking to people who most of the time I didn’t know who they were and what they did.”

Bayne also discussed his renewed commitment to triathlon training, his throwback paint scheme tribute to Mark Martin for the Southern 500 and his improvement in the 2016 season. Some of his results can be credited to a working relationship with crew chief Matt Puccia, who has bonded with Bayne as the father of a newborn.

The second guest on the podcast is Danica Patrick, who joined by phone from Chicago where she was promoting a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles sponsorship. The Nickelodeon promotion, which is in conjunction with the Chase for the Sprint Cup opener at Chicagoland Speedway, is the latest chance for Patrick to connect with younger fans, who seem to be drawn to racing’s most successful female driver.

“I think it’s because I’m their size,” the 5-2 Patrick said with a laugh. “I actually do think it’s because I’m small, it helps.

“But I’m probably someone their parents have pointed out to tell them a good story that you can do whatever you want. Just because you’re a girl doesn’t mean you can’t do something that boys do.”

Patrick also discusses how it felt to have Tony Stewart back at the track, her 2016 season with new crew chief Billy Scott and the new NASCAR news on lug nuts (“I plead the fifth.”).

Finally, NASCAR Talk editor Dustin Long will join us after covering the past two races at Bristol Motor Speedway and Richmond International Raceway. Dustin provides insight on the repercussions of Carl Edwards’ winning bump on Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Kyle Busch and how Tony Stewart seemed in his return to racing after missing two months.

You can listen to the podcast by clicking below or download and subscribe to it on iTunes by clicking here. The free subscription will provide automatic downloads of new episodes to your smartphone. It also is available on Stitcher

Felix Sabates: NASCAR ‘should have’ penalized Tony Stewart

Felix Sabates, a co-owner of Chip Ganassi Racing, said he agreed with comments Tony Stewart made last week about lug nut safety, but he believes NASCAR “should have” fined Stewart $35,000.

“The reason for that is, we all have to have a united front,” Sabates told reporters over the weekend at Richmond International Raceway, according to AutoWeek’s Matt Weaver. “You can’t have somebody shooting their mouth about this sport because it hurts with the sponsors.”

NASCAR fined Stewart the day he announced he would return to driving the No. 14 Chevrolet after missing the first eight races of the season because of a fractured back he sustained in an all-terrain vehicle accident in January. Soon after, the Drivers Council announced it would pay the fine for Stewart.

Sabates, 70, is a minority owner in Ganassi’s team. A native of Cuba, Sabates initially fielded an entry in NASCAR with Kyle Petty in the No. 42 beginning in 1989. He is also a confidant of NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France, even buying a yacht from France in recent years.

According to Autoweek, Sabates was in attendance at just his second race this season after a “health scare” when he made his comments, which included predicting how Stewart would fare in his shortened, final season.

“You have one of the premier drivers, well he used to be anyway and now he’s an old guy,” Sabates said. “He’s a nice guy, and I love him to death, but Tony is not going to win anything. He’s old. And I’m old. I can’t do what I used to be able to do, so it got nothing to do with anything other than age. He’s been hurt.”

Stewart hasn’t won since June 2013 at Dover. A Ganassi-owned car hasn’t won a points race since the October 2013 race at Talladega.

“Anyway, he should have come back and not said anything,” Sabates said. “He should have gone to NASCAR and said to NASCAR, ‘Hey, I disagree,’ and by the way, I agree with him on that, too.

“I agree with him that we shouldn’t have some teams taking a risk only putting three or four lug nuts on. I think it should be five lug nuts, and if they’re not tight, you bring the car back in. So Tony is right. I agree with him. It’s a safety issue. He should have handled it a different way. So he got penalized $35,000, and he’s lucky he got the (Drivers Council) to pay it for him.”

Drivers Council donating money raised for Tony Stewart fine to charity

Tony Stewart will pay his $35,000 fine to NASCAR for comments on lug nut and wheel safety last week himself.

Meanwhile, after the Drivers Council announced it would pay Stewart’s fine, it will now donate the money to charity. In a press release, Stewart announced the $35,000 will go to Autism Delaware.

“I appreciated the Drivers Council support, but I didn’t want them to pay the fine,” Stewart said. “We decided as a group to donate the money to charity.”

Autism Delaware was founded in 1998 by Artie Kempner, coordinating director for NASCAR on FOX, and his wife, Marcy. In the last 18 years, the charity has raised $5 million and helped more than 1,000 children and adults living with autism.

“Artie is such a good friend to all of us and his foundation does a lot of great work,” Stewart said.

The money raised by the council will be presented by Denny Hamlin on May 12 in Wilmington, Delaware, at the Drive for Autism golf tournament, which is hosted by Kempner.

The Drivers Council, in its second season of existence, is made up of Kyle Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kevin Harvick, Jimmie Johnson, Brad Keselowski, Kyle Larson, Joey Logano, Hamlin and Stewart.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. crew chief suspended; NASCAR warns Jimmie Johnson, Tony Stewart teams

Nick Sandler, crew chief for Ricky Stenhouse Jr., was suspended Wednesday by NASCAR for this weekend at Talladega Superspeedway for an inspection violation at Richmond International Raceway.

Sandler was fined $20,000, suspended through May 4 and placed on probation through Dec. 31 for an improper steering wheel coupler that was discovered by officials in the opening garage inspection.

Asked if the team would appeal, a Roush Fenway Racing spokesman said the team is “reviewing the matter.” An appeal likely would defer Sandler’s suspension until after Talladega.

NASCAR also gave warnings to the teams of Tony Stewart (failing laser inspection system twice in prerace) and Jimmie Johnson (failed template inspection twice).

It’s the first warning for each team.

NASCAR America: Adam Stevens discusses relationship of Kyle Busch, Carl Edwards

Adam Stevens, the crew chief for Kyle Busch, discusses how he intends to save the relationship between Busch and Carl Edwards, what needs to get done before going to Talladega Superspeedway this weekend and the new lug nut policy.

NASCAR America: Trevor Bayne reveals throwback car for Darlington Raceway

Trevor Bayne will be using a paint scheme that Mark Martin made famous with Roush Fenway Racing in 1996 and 1997, recording four wins during in that time. Furthermore, that’s also when Trevor Bayne started his racing career.
Mark Martin was honored with two different paint schemes in the Southern 500 last year. Bayne drove the paint scheme Martins used in 1998 and Sam Hornish Jr.‘s was inspired by Martin’s iconic Winn-Dixie paint scheme in the Xfinity Series.

NASCAR America: Scan All: Richmond International Raceway



Go behind scenes with driver and team communication during the Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond International Raceway to see which driver wanted a beer and ice cream sandwich during last weekend’s race.

Watch LIVE: NASCAR America at 5 pm ET: Trevor Bayne, Scan All and crew chiefs

Today’s episode of NASCAR America airs from 5 – 6:10 p.m. ET on NBCSN and continues to look at stories from last weekend at Richmond.

Carolyn Manno hosts with Brian Vickers from Stamford, Connecticut. They are joined by Jeff Burton at Burton’s Garage. and Steve Letarte from NBC Charlotte with Trevor Bayne.

Included in today’s show:

Unveiling of Trevor Bayne’s Southern 500 car.
Reactions to the new rules/penalties for lug nuts from Sprint Cup crew chiefs Adam Stevens, Keith Rodden and Tony Gibson.
This week’s edition of “Scan All” from the Toyota Owners 400.

If you’re not near a TV, you can watch online at the NASCAR stream on NBC Sports.

If you plan to stream the show on your laptop or portable device, be sure to have your username and password from your cable/satellite/telco provider handy so your subscription can be verified.

Once you enter that information, you’ll have access to the stream.

Click here at 5 p.m. ET to watch live via the stream.

terça-feira, 26 de abril de 2016

NASCAR Chairman Brian France explains why Tony Stewart was fined

Tony Stewart said Sunday that he wasn’t sure why he was fined $35,000 last week by NASCAR after comments he made about officials not requiring teams to tighten all five lug nuts on each wheel.

NASCAR Chairman Brian France told SiriusXM NASCAR Radio on Monday that Stewart’s fine was based on what he said and how he said it.

“Tony has been very aware of how we approach from a criticism standpoint of the sport and the product of the racing itself and safety is paramount,’’ France told host Dave Moody. “Tony is very aware of how we look at that.’’

After a spate of loose wheels earlier this month, Stewart told reporters last week that “for all the work and everything, all the bulletins and all the new stuff we have to do to superspeedway cars and all these other things they want us to do for safety, we can’t even make sure we put five lug nuts on the wheel.

“It’s not even mandatory anymore. I mean, you don’t have to have but one on there if you don’t want. It’s however many you think you can get away with. So we’re putting the drivers in jeopardy to get track position. …  With all the crap we’re going through with all the safety stuff, and for them to sit there and sit on their hands on this one.”

France explained on “SiriusXM Speedway” how Stewart crossed the line.

“I think we have to make judgment calls and how we look at the tone of what someone says, how they’re saying it,’’ France said. “They have ample opportunities, particularly with safety, to deal with us directly on that. But to insinuate that we’re taking the sport down a road that doesn’t care about safety or we’re trying to hurt people, those kind of comments, that goes to the integrity of the sport and we’ll have to deal with that. We go way beyond what any other league would allow in terms of how far people can go in voicing their view.

“There’s just a little line out there that is a bright line and everybody is aware of. Every once in a while we’ll have a driver or somebody else that gets over that line and we’ll just have to deal with it. It’s not a big thing. We deal with it. They understand it and we move on. That’s how it goes.’’

NASCAR announced Monday it was updating its rules on lug nuts immediately.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles sponsoring race, Danica Patrick at Chicagoland

The Sprint Cup Series race at Chicagoland Speedway this season found its sponsor somewhere in the Chicago sewer, probably eating pizza.

The race that opens the Chase for the Sprint Cup will be sponsored by turtles. But not just any turtles. The race will be sponsored by the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.

At an event in Chicago, the track announced with Danica Patrick that the Sept. 18 race will be called the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 400.

Not to be confused with the movie being released in June, the race is sponsored by the cartoon series that airs on Nickelodeon. The series will also sponsor the No. 10 Chevrolet of Patrick, who is a native of Roscoe, Illinois.

NASCAR America: Tony Stewart pumped up after first race of season



Even though he finished 19th, Tony Stewart was excited to be back in his race car Sunday at Richmond.

NASCAR America: Kasey Kahne posts best finish of the season at Richmond



Kasey Kahne had good reason to smile after Sunday’s race at Richmond. It was his best finish of the season and best showing since Kansas last fall during the Chase for the Sprint Cup.

segunda-feira, 25 de abril de 2016

Truck Series drivers Abreu, Crafton, Rhodes, Hayley wowed by NHRA race

With the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series off until next week at Kansas, ThorSport drivers Rico Abreu, Matt Crafton, Ben Rhodes and Cameron Hayley took in the NHRA 4-Wide Nationals this past weekend at zMAX Dragway in Concord, North Carolina.

They were guests of Kalitta Motorsports and Top Fuel driver J.R. Todd.

All four seemed to weather both the incredible noise generated from Todd’s 10,000-horsepower Top Fuel dragster, as well as the burning acrid smell from the nitromethane fuel that powers the earth shakers at up to 330 mph.

“It was great to be out with the SealMaster Team Kalitta team today,” Rhodes said in a media release. “I had a blast. I talked with J.R. and kind of learned about what makes these guys go down the track and where the speed secrets are.

“He showed us his Christmas Tree in his hauler and what he practices with, so it has been pretty cool. We did the SealMaster Track Walk with J.R. too, and it certainly gives you a new respect for this side of racing. This is my first NHRA race, and I could not think of a better place to do it than the 4-Wide Nationals.”

Todd qualified second in Top Fuel competition and advanced to the semifinal round before he fell short. Still, Todd is sixth in the NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series Top Fuel standings.

Check out some of the social media posts from Sunday:

And here’s Rico Abreu with Jesse James, husband of Kalitta Motorsports Funny Car driver Alexis DeJoria.

Upon Further Review: Richmond

RICHMOND, Va. — Just days after being knocked out of the lead on the last lap by a teammate, Kyle Busch likely will have to play the role of a good teammate at Talladega Superspeedway.

It will be car owner Joe Gibbs’ role to ensure the ripples of Sunday’s move by Carl Edwards are limited.

“I think when something like this happens, I don’t think there’s a game plan for it,’’ Gibbs said after Edwards’ contact moved Busch up the track and allowed Edwards to win his second Sprint Cup race of the year Sunday at Richmond International Raceway.

“You have no real organized way of handling it. What you do is you start out and work your way through it. That’s what we’ll do.’’

If Joe Gibbs Racing hopes to duplicate the dominance it had at Daytona, peace will need to reign. Recall how all four Gibbs cars and fellow Toyota team Furniture Row Racing worked together to control the front of the field, especially late in the race.

They occupied the front five spots heading to the final lap. Denny Hamlin went on to win, nipping Furniture Row’s Martin Truex Jr. with Busch third.

While it will be more difficult to have such control this weekend with Talladega’s wider lanes, that will be the goal again for Joe Gibbs Racing and Toyota. That could mean that Busch and Edwards will have to work together at times.

“We’ll talk about it,’’ Edwards said Sunday about his bump of Busch. “I can say this, my teammates have been spectacular. They truly have been.

“Yeah, we’re going to have times like this when you’re running like this. We’re racing each other for wins, which is really, really good. So hopefully, it all works out fine.’’

Sunday marked the fifth time since 2007 Busch has lost a race on the last lap. Teammate Matt Kenseth passed Logano on the last lap at Pocono in August when Busch ran out of fuel while leading on the final lap.

Busch’s other last-lap defeats since 2007 include:

Aug. 2012 at Watkins Glen when Brad Keselowski and Busch made contact while Busch led. Busch spun and Marcos Ambrose got by Keselowski to win.
July 2009 at Daytona when Busch tried to block Tony Stewart coming to the finish line and they made contact, sending Busch into the wall and Stewart to the win.
July 2007 at Daytona when Jamie McMurray nipped Busch at the line after a side-by-side duel.

Busch kept his feelings to himself after Sunday’s race at Richmond, but should he get revenge against Edwards in the future, Edwards’ crew chief, Dave Rogers, says they’ll understand.

“There’s going to be plenty of days that (Busch) is faster than us and they’ll probably get to our back bumper and move us,’’ Rogers said. “We’ll go down to Victory Lane, shake their hands, tell them, ‘Good job.’ That’s just a testament to Joe Gibbs Racing, allowing us to put ourselves in that position.’’

— After contending for the win in Saturday’s Xfinity race at Richmond, Justin Allgaier’s race ended after contact with Brennan Poole in the final laps. Allgaier finished 35th.

Allgaier, who is seventh in the points, is in his first year at JR Motorsports. Team owner Dale Earnhardt Jr. likes what Allgaier has done this season after moving over from HScott Motorsports in the Cup series.

“Man, I’m going to tell you, he’s been a real surprise,’’ Earnhardt said of Allgaier. “Let’s be honest, it’s hard to get a measure of what he had running on the Cup side over the last couple of years, where that program is, where the car is, where the communication is, where he is. So it was a bit of a gamble.

“We have been pleasantly surprised with his speed, his personality with that team, what he’s done to sort of bring that group together. He’s got a real level, good personality, always positive. That does wonders for that team.

“(Allgaier and crew chief Jason Burdett) get along good, and they run great. Their cars are always one of the fastest cars we have at the track each week. I challenged the other teams to compete with Jason and his group.’’

Allgaier finished 30th in the Cup points last year at HScott Motorsports with one top-10 finish in 36 starts. He was replaced this season by Clint Bowyer, who is 29th in the points this season with one top-10 finish.

— In the first two weekends of heat races in the Xfinity Series, dominance has been the theme. Each of the four heat races has had one driver lead all the laps. Will NASCAR need to make changes to the heat races? Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR executive vice president and chief racing development officer, addressed that question Monday on “The Morning Drive.”

"I think it’s important to know what that format is about, and it’s the emphasis on the Xfinity Series drivers and certainly the leader going flag-to-flag, we’d like to see more passing, but if you look at those who are eligible to compete for the Dash 4 Cash have really been mixing it up on the race track,’’ he told SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

“This was something that we put together at four races that we wanted to see how we could improve on it each and every race. We’ll get through the four this year and look at what improvements we can make.’’

— Joe Gibbs Racing seeks its fifth consecutive Sprint Cup victory this weekend at Talladega after Kyle Busch’s wins at Texas and Martinsville and Carl Edwards’ wins at Bristol and Richmond. The last time a Cup organization won five points races in a row was 2014 when Hendrick Motorsports did it with Jeff Gordon (Kansas), Dale Earnhardt Jr. (Pocono) and Jimmie Johnson (Coca-Cola 600, Dover and Michigan).

— Kasey Kahne’s fourth-place finish Sunday was his first top-five result since Kansas last fall and just his fourth top-five finish in his last 45 races, dating back to the start of last season.

— Chase Elliott finished 12th at Richmond. He’s placed 12th or better in five of his last six races.

— Carl Edwards is the only driver to place in the top 10 in each of the three short-track races (Martinsville, Bristol and Richmond).

Dale Jr. ready to take ‘Amelia’ to victory lane again at Talladega

Dale Earnhardt Jr. is getting back together with one of his favorite ladies – but fiancée Amy Reimann has nothing to worry about.

Just in time for Sunday’s Geico 500 at Talladega Superspeedway, Earnhardt is bringing back “Amelia,” the near-legendary car that has been his No. 1 choice on superspeedway tracks over the last five years.

Crew chief Greg Ives tweeted Monday morning that Amelia – a.k.a. Chassis No. 88-872 – is back together after being damaged in a wreck in the season-opening Daytona 500.

And if past results are any indication, Amelia and her new facelift once again will carry Junior to yet another win at Talladega, where he already has six career triumphs on NASCAR’s longest (2.66 miles) racetrack.

Amelia really shined last year when Junior drove her to wins at Daytona in July and ‘Dega in May, as well as a third in the Daytona 500 and a runner-up in October at Talladega.

Junior was hoping to take Amelia to Victory Lane in this year’s Daytona 500, but he wrecked 31 laps from the finish and placed 36th.

MORE: The secret to Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s restrictor plate resurgence: it’s simple

In case you’re not fully up on your Dale Jr. history, he named the car Amelia in honor of famed female aviator Amelia Earhart.

“A car gets named when you drive it long enough to see a personality, typically,” Earnhardt told NASCAR.com earlier this year in explaining how Amelia’s name came about. “The fact that we’re going to keep running it, I said, ‘We gotta name it’ and we were thinking of a woman who has accomplished something that was an awesome person that was something we could be proud of.

“Amelia Earhart was the first thing that came to my mind.”

Race Recap: Johnson, Kahne lead teammates to Richmond checkered flag

RICHMOND, Va. – After a hard-fought race at Richmond International Raceway, Jimmie Johnson and Kasey Kahne took the checkered flag back-to-back.

And they did so inside the top five.

Johnson took home third place and Kahne finished fourth Sunday afternoon.

"It was fun -- cars were slipping and sliding," Johnson said. "Thankfully we got our Lowe's ProServices Chevrolet tuned up at the end. We kind of lost our way in the middle part of the race but good pit stops and some great adjustments at the end got us into the top three."

It marked Kahne's first top-five finish of the season and the driver credited his team.

"The Mountain Dew Chevrolet was great the whole race, the pit stops were awesome and just the communication with (No. 5 team crew chief) Keith (Rodden) and the team all weekend long was solid," Kahne said. "We're headed in the right direction."

The other two Hendrick Motorsports teammates also finished back-to-back just outside of the top 10.

Chase Elliott finished 12th while Dale Earnhardt Jr. took the checkered flag in 13th.

“We got tight at the end," Earnhardt said. "We couldn’t keep our track position."

Below is a detailed look at how all four teammates fared Sunday at Richmond.

KASEY KAHNE, NO. 5 MOUNTAIN DEW PITCH BLACK CHEVROLET SS

FINISHED: 4th
STANDINGS: 14th
RECAP: Rolling off the grid inside the top 10, Kahne stayed there during the early goings of Sunday’s race, settling into eighth place 25 laps into the event. Even after making slight contact with the wall, he kept pushing toward the top five, finding fifth on Lap 79. After the first caution of the day, Kahne restarted in fifth on Lap 165 – and again on the next restart following a caution just before the midway point of the race. The solid run for the No. 5 Mountain Dew Pitch Black Chevrolet SS continued as Kahne teetered on the edge of the top five for the next portion of the race, finding fifth once again for a restart on Lap 258, and that’s where he remained through lap 300, though he was passed by teammate Earnhardt to fall to sixth with 90 laps to go. He continued to race hard down the stretch, and after falling back to seventh, he worked his way back up to fourth with 33 laps remaining. He held that position for the remainder of the race, taking home a fourth-place result – his first top-five finish of the season.

CHASE ELLIOTT, NO. 24 MOUNTAIN DEW BAJA BLAST CHEVROLET SS
FINISHED: 12th
STANDINGS: 11th

RECAP: Starting 23rd, Elliott moved into the top 20 after 20 laps on Sunday. He worked to try to stay there during a long green-flag run to begin the race, falling back to 24th after 100 laps. By the time the first caution of the race was called for debris on Lap 157, Elliott found himself a lap down to the leaders and restarted 22nd. He made a big move to the outside on the restart, however, and found himself in 20th as the second car a lap down when the next caution was called. Once again he made a big move on the ensuing restart to settle into 21st as the first car a lap down at the midway point of the race. When a competitor ahead of him was lapped, Elliott raced to pass him and move back into the free-pass position just in time for a caution on Lap 251 that saw him move back onto the lead lap. He continued his momentum from there, moving up to 13th within 30 laps and jumping inside the top 10 all the way to ninth with 64 laps remaining. After a caution flag waved with 42 laps remaining, Elliott restarted 13th, and he gained one position before the checkered flag.

JIMMIE JOHNSON, NO. 48 LOWE’S PROSERVICES CHEVROLET SS
FINISHED: 3rd
STANDINGS: 3rd

RECAP: Starting third, it didn’t take a full lap for Johnson to jump to the runner-up position, and just 21 laps in he found the race lead. A little more than 40 laps later, he lost the lead but remained in the top three, finding the lead one more time as competitors began to pit before making his own green-flag stop on Lap 91. When Johnson returned to the track he was in sixth but battled back into the top five. When the first caution of the race was called on Lap 157, Johnson gained a position on pit road thanks to a speedy stop by the No. 48 crew. He gained a spot on pit road once again during the next caution on Lap 195, and at the midway point of the race he was in third. After a caution at Lap 251, Johnson fell from fourth to eighth for the ensuing restart and began pushing back toward the top five from there. He found it again with 64 laps remaining, passing teammate Earnhardt for fifth. After a caution flag with 42 laps remaining, Johnson restarted third thanks to another speedy pit stop. He held onto that position for the remainder of the race, finishing third.

DALE EARNHARDT JR., NO. 88 MOUNTAIN DEW DEWCISION CHEVROLET SS
FINISHED: 13th
STANDINGS: 7th

RECAP: Rolling off the grid 17th, Earnhardt moved into the top 15 just four laps into Sunday’s race. He kept battling toward the top 10 during a long green-flag run that lasted all the way to Lap 157, when a caution was called for debris on the track. He restarted in 10th – his first trip inside the top 10 – on Lap 165. From there, he kept moving forward, finding seventh by the midway point of the race. He gained a position on pit road during a caution on Lap 251, running sixth for the ensuing restart. With 90 laps remaining, he passed teammate Kahne for the fifth position, continuing to battle as all four Hendrick Motorsports teammates entered the top 10. He fell back to eighth before a caution flag waved with 42 laps remaining, and on the ensuing restart he fell outside of the top 10. He ultimately finished 13th.

Ives makes it official: 'Amelia' is back

CONCORD, N.C. -- It's official: one of Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s favorite cars will make its return this weekend.

"Amelia" is back.

In 2015, Amelia earned three wins -- a Duel at Daytona International Speedway, the May race at Talladega Superspeedway and the July race at Daytona – in addition to a third-place finish in the Daytona 500 and a second-place result in the second Talladega race.

Earnhardt’s average finish of 1.75 while driving Amelia in the four superspeedway points races last season led all competitors.

So it was no surprise that the chassis would make its return this season for the Daytona 500 this season. It looked like another successful run was in the works, but as Earnhardt looked to jump back into the top five with 30 laps remaining, the No. 88 Chevy SS was caught up in an incident that sent him to a 36th-place finish.

Last month, Earnhardt hinted that it was posible Amelia could make a comeback for Talladega Superspeedway, but it was up to No. 88 crew chief Greg Ives and the team whether the car would be the backup or the primary.

Ives answered that question Monday morning.

"It's a special, special race car," Earnhardt said.

With adversity he went through, 8th place finish at Richmond almost like win for Logano

A year ago at this time, Joey Logano had won the Daytona 500 and was ranked second in the Sprint Cup point standings after the first nine races of the 2015 season.

One year later, and nine races into the 2016 campaign, Logano is still searching for his first win of the 2016 season.

Yet with the way he battled back from near the back of the field to finish eighth — the highest-placing Ford driver — in Sunday’s Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond International Raceway, it was almost like a win for Logano.

To say it was one heck of a roller coaster day for Logano is an understatement.

He started on the outside of the front row before fading, dropping to 29th by Lap 100.

But methodically, and with the help of a few cautions, Logano was able to climb back up the field.

“I needed to find a different lane,” Logano said after Sunday’s race. “Every lane I found didn’t work. At the end it started to (work) and I felt like maybe a couple of more restarts and good pit-stops we could have track positioned ourselves to be closer to the front and maybe squeak out a top-5 at the end.

“Taking a car from being the 35th place car to a top-5 car throughout a race is quite impressive for what my team was able to do today.”

Other teams may have just called it a day and took what they could from the race, but not Logano’s No. 22 squad. They kept working at improving his car, particularly in the final quarter of the race, going from 20th place on Lap 300 to ninth place on Lap 360.

“It was great teamwork,” he said. “Everyone kept working hard. Those are great opportunities to implode internally as a race team and completely throw away a whole race and start yelling and screaming at each other but there was not one moment of that today from my team.

“Everyone was very methodical about the changes and we tried things that didn’t work, so we went the other way and it started to work for us. I am proud of the effort from my team today. We need to make the cars a little faster, but I am proud of the effort.”

And even though Logano dropped from fourth to fifth in the Sprint Cup point standings, the damage was minimal: he’s only 32 points behind new points leader Carl Edwards.

Carl Edwards gives Kyle Busch ‘a little nudge’ on last lap to win at Richmond


Carl Edward “nudged” Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Kyle Busch out of the lead on the final turn of the last lap to capture Sunday’s Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond International Raceway.

It was Edwards’ second consecutive win, having also reached Victory Lane last week at Bristol Motor Speedway.
When asked if there was any question he’d do what he did by pushing Busch out of the way, Edwards quipped, “Well, yeah, it was a huge question.”

“Kyle’s an amazing teammate, and he just got real slow at the end, something happened on that last lap,” Edwards told Fox Sports. “I was doing everything I could. … If Dave (crew chief Dave Rogers) hadn’t screamed on the radio to just go get him on the last lap, I don’t know if I would have dove in there that hard. It was a real team effort and was a big win for us.”


It was the first last-lap pass to win a Sprint Cup race in Richmond history (120 races).
“It’s racing. I guess,” Busch told Fox Sports afterward. “We had a really great car. It was really good today. We were fast, maybe not as good as Carl was on the long runs, but we did everything right and did what we were supposed to do and put ourselves in the right position.
Edwards led 151 laps in the 400-lap event, while Busch led 78 laps.
Busch took the lead on Lap 364, 36 laps from the finish and did a masterful job of holding off Edwards until the last lap.
Jimmie Johnson finished third, followed by Hendrick Motorsports teammateKasey Kahne and pole-sitter Kevin Harvick.
Tony Stewart, making his first start of the season, finished 19th.
When asked what is going to stand out most about Sunday’s race, Stewart replied, “How much fun I had in it. This place is so cool anyway. It’s always been my favorite racetrack. … The drivers got to dictate it today. You weren’t stuck in one line and had the ability to move around and change lines.”
Joe Gibbs Racing continued its dominance this season, placing all four of is drivers in the top seven with Edwards, Busch, Denny Hamlin (sixth) and Matt Kenseth (seventh).
HOW EDWARDS WON: It was a classic bump-and-run outcome as Edwards stayed glued to Busch’s bumper on the final lap and gave it one final shot heading into Turn 4. Edwards was able to push his teammate out of the way and motored on to victory.

WHO ELSE HAD A GOOD RACE: Even though he wasn’t happy with the runner-up finish (the fifth time he had lost the lead on the last lap of a Cup race), Busch ran a strong race. He might not have had as strong of a car as Edwards, but he paced himself, grabbed the lead on the final restart and if the race had ended one turn shorter, he likely would be standing in victory lane.

WHO HAD A BAD RACE: Sprint Cup rookie Chris Buescher continues to struggle in his first season in NASCAR’s top level, finishing 34th. Also continuing to struggle this season is Clint Bowyer (33rd), who is slated to replace Tony Stewart in 2017 in the No. 14 Chevy. … Ryan Blaney, who has been one of the top rookies this season along with Chase Elliott, was a disappointing 28th, one lap behind the leaders.


NOTABLE: This was only the fourth race in the last 23 1/2 years at Richmond that there wasn’t a caution in the first 100 laps. As it turned out, there wound up being eight cautions for 49 laps in the race. … Kasey Kahne’s fourth-place finish was his first top-5 of the season.
QUOTE OF THE DAY: “I gave him a little nudge. Man, I didn’t think we had anything for him.” — Race winner Carl Edwards on pushing Kyle Busch out of the way on the final lap.
WHAT’S NEXT: May 1, Geico 500 at Talladega Superspeedway, 1 p.m. ET.

domingo, 24 de abril de 2016

Tony Stewart’s fellow drivers glad to see him back racing

While he may be one of their toughest rivals on a race track, several NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers are happy to see Tony Stewart back in a car this weekend at Richmond International Raceway.

The three-time Sprint Cup champion will make his first start of the season in Sunday’s Toyota Owners 400. He missed the season’s first eight races while recovering from a Jan. 31 ATV accident.

Kevin Harvick:

“I came to Stewart-Haas Racing to race with Tony. To see where he was from a personal standpoint over the time from when he got hurt and everything that happened, and see his interaction from the owner’s standpoint over the last several weeks has been very interesting to me, just to see how engaged he was and how excited he was and how relaxed and into what was going on.

“You add all that enthusiasm and engagement that he’s had with us at the race track and now you put him back in the car and you can see that excitement to another level.

“It’s big to have him back in the car. We’re all excited as a sport and as his teammates to have him back in the car is always a good thing; and have that consistency moving forward with just one driver.

“Mike (Bugarewicz, crew chief) has done a great job and the team has done a great job and the organization has done a great job in supporting him, but to have that consistency is going to be big for everybody.”

Kurt Busch:

“It’s great to have our team owner and our lead driver back in the car. It’s great to see him recover as quickly as he did, to push through the rehab side of it to get back to the car. This is his retirement year. He is supposed to enjoy it. He wants to go out there and do well.

“I think Richmond is a perfect track for the body to come back to a race, because of the lower demands physically on the body because there is not a lot of banking here. There is not a lot of G-Force and you have to get up on the wheel and turn the wheel, but he will be able to settle in.

“He has had good history here at Richmond. He has had multiple wins and it’s just nice to see him jump back in the car so soon. We just want him back in the car to work the bugs out of it to be as competitive as soon as possible.”

Joey Logano:

"We are glad to have him back. The 14 number has been out there every week but Tony hasn’t been in it so it is nice to have Tony back out in his final year. I can imagine he wants to go out on a good note and it is nice to have him back in the car and be in that position where he loves to be and try to end his career on a high note.”

Brad Keselowski:

“Any time you welcome back a three-time champion, regardless of what his name is, is a big deal for our sport. I am glad to have him back, and I think it is a big deal for our fans as well.”

Denny Hamlin:

“It’s good. This is a retirement season for him and it was a little bit delayed, but he’s now going to be going to some of these race tracks for the final time, and I know just in general Tony has been around and traveling each week to the race tracks and been very hands-on with his race team.

“I know it’s all special memories for us to be able to go out there and compete with him. I know me coming into the Cup Series and being a teammate of his in my rookie season was awesome, but our relationship has grown so much further now that we’re not teammates. It’s a great season — would love to see him make a Chase push if he can and end on a good note.”

Carl Edwards:

“From a competitor’s standpoint Tony is one of the fiercest competitors in the sport, so to have him there and have someone to battle against is fun. I’ve really enjoyed racing Tony and it’s good to see him back in a car. I think he adds a lot and definitely makes it fun out on the race track.”

Brad Keselowski unplugged on sport’s direction

RICHMOND, Va. — It started off as a question about lug nuts and what Brad Keselowski’s take was on the hot topic in the sport, but, as happens from time to time, Keselowski took a look at the bigger issue in NASCAR that the lug nut debate is only a part of.

He noted “that as a sport we have some major decisions to make as to how we want to be identified.”

He discussed what the lug nut debate meant and how pit road impacts races. He also mentioned as the sport looked at what direction it needs to take who truly needs to be making those decisions and how fan input should be taken.

Here’s what he said to reporters at Richmond International Raceway:

WHERE ARE YOU ON THE LUGNUT ISSUE? SHOULD NASCAR GO BACK TO REQUIRING FIVE?

BRAD KESELOWSKI: “It hasn’t been an issue that I have put a lot of thought into. I think the only real example we’ve had since the new rule was implemented being a difference maker or potential safety hazard was at Texas with Carl (Edwards).

“My line on it is that as a sport we have some major decisions to make as to how we want to be identified. How do we want to compete? What are those aspects? Whether that is NASCAR themselves, the drivers, RTA (Race Team Alliance), the fans, we have to make a decision of what tools do we want to determine who is a winner and who is great. Who is not? The history of the sport has been a balanced approach. That is why we don’t have spec cars. The cars are all different. Even though they might not look it, they are all different. You can put an elite driver in a 40th-place race car and he might run 35th. That is where the sport is right now.

“That has changed in the six or seven years I have been in Sprint Cup where the car and driver have always been significant. but we have seen this emergence of the pit crew to be more and more important over the years. We are seeing that become part of the race format, the race on pit road, more so than ever before. It kind of harkens back to the older days of our sport where if you had a bad pit stop, more times than not if you had a fast car you could overcome it. Now the increased level of parity with the cars has put us to a spot to where it is much harder as a team or driver to have a car or a driver that has enough talent to overcome something that might happen on pit road.

“So this specific change has been a direction that has again increased the significance of pit road. As it is, my stance in the sport is that we have to be very careful to make a decision collectively of how we want to race, how we want to compete and how we want to determine who is great. Do we want to determine who is great off of pit road? Then we should just have a pit road competition every weekend if we come to that conclusion and every race would be a pit stop competition. I don’t think we want that.

“I don’t think we want pit road to mean nothing either. I have seen that side too. I have seen the Truck Series when they had pit road as lock-down and retain your position and halftime breaks. I think that took a little something away from the sport. As a whole, the percentages that dictate the outcome of greatness, of a winner, have shifted and continue to shift more and more toward the pit crew and in some ways I like that because I have a great pit crew.

“In other ways, I am not sure I like it. I would like to see the team and the cars and the drivers not lose the ability to affect their days. In a nutshell, when I read between the lines of any driver on their comments of that I think that is really what they are trying to get at. Certainly there are some safety implications, which I brought up with Carl and that thing, but in the grand scheme of things those are not minor or major, maybe somewhere in-between in my opinion. I think more or less we all wear the glasses as drivers, teams, owners, sanctioning body, of trying to determine the other pieces of the puzzle which is so critical to determining who we are as a sport.”

HOW DO YOU GET TO THE PLACE OF DECIDING WHAT THE SPORT WANTS TO BE?

KESELOWSKI: “I think collaboration. I think if we can herd all the cats into the same room and get into an active dialogue, which I think we have made major steps on over the last year or so, certainly not all the steps we want to make but still major steps, and understand that there is going to be a lot of self-interest. Of course I have a great pit crew, so I have self-interest and I am not afraid to admit that.

“I am sure there are a handful of other guys who say they have a great pit crew or new widget that makes their team great on pit road and you don’t want to lose that advantage. Sometimes you wear those glasses where our own interests supersede the interests of the sport. That is tough to get through but in time will work themselves out if everybody collaborates.”

IS THAT ULTIMATELY THE FAN’S DECISION? DON’T THEY ULTIMATELY DECIDE WHAT THE DIRECTION OF THE SPORT IS?

KESELOWSKI: “I would answer that with first off Ryan McGee pretty much answered that this week and gave the answer I want to give. I like quotes. I like to read about things. I always remember when I am asked that question, the Henry Ford answer when he was asked about painting his cars a different color than black.

“He basically said there were a lot of customers out there that thought there should be different color options on the Model T and he answered back that, ‘If I would have asked the people what they wanted they would have said faster horses.’ Our fans are our consumer and our customers and are very, very important to us and they always should be and will be.

“In a global sense we know what is best for the sport when we are honest and open with each other, more so than anyone else. Dale (Earnhardt) Jr. said this once to me being a Redskins fan and I am a Detroit Lions fan, ‘I can general manage a football team from 1,000 miles away and make all kinds of decisions that I think are great, but I don’t live it every day and at the end would probably just make it worse.’ That doesn’t mean I am not important as a fan to my football team, but I don’t live it every day and know all the nuances and key players and stakeholders, etc.

“We can get there, we just need to focus on our own. Our fans are important but listening to every fan sentiment or answer is not the ticket.”