sexta-feira, 20 de maio de 2016

Friday’s on-track schedule at Charlotte Motor Speedway




It’ll be a busy day for drivers in both the Sprint Cup Series and Camping World Truck Series Friday at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
First, more than 20 drivers are entered in Friday’s Sprint Showdown, which will give the two highest-finishing drivers — as well as the winner of the fan vote — will advance into Saturday’s Sprint All-Star Race and its $1 million check to the winners. Both the Showdown and All-Star Race are non-points paying exhibition races that do not count in the regular Sprint Cup season standings.
However, the Truck Series will engage in a regular points-paying, regular season contest in the North Carolina Education Lottery 200 race, which is due to take the green flag at 8:30 p.m. ET.
Here’s the schedule for a busy Friday (all times listed are Eastern):
Friday, May 20
9:30 a.m. – 9 p.m. – Sprint Cup garage open
10:30 a.m. – Truck garage opens
1:30 – 2:55 p.m. Sprint Showdown practice (Fox Sports 1)
3 – 4:40 p.m. – Sprint All-Star practice (FS1, Motor Racing Network)
4:45 – 4:55 p.m. – Sprint Cup All-Star pit road speed practice
5:15 p.m. – Sprint Showdown driver/crew chief meeting
5:30 p.m. – Truck qualifying — single vehicle/two rounds (FS1)
6:45 p.m. – Truck driver/crew chief meeting
7 p.m. – Sprint Showdown driver introductions
7:15 p.m. – Sprint Showdown race (20 laps/20 laps/10 laps) (FS1/MRN/Sirius XM NASCAR Radio)
8 p.m. – Truck driver introductions
8:30 p.m. – North Carolina Education Lottery 200 race (134 laps, 201 miles) (FS1/MRN/SiriusXM NASCAR Radio)

Joe Gibbs Racing is NASCAR’s top team, but how long can it stay No. 1?




Joe Gibbs Racing couldn’t have started without help from Hendrick Motorsports. Twenty-five years after receiving a starter kit of cars and equipment, Gibbs has supplanted Hendrick as NASCAR’s top organization.
They’ll duel the next two weekends at Charlotte Motor Speedway, a track Hendrick cars have won a record 18 points races and eight All-Star races, while Gibbs cars have won five points races and one All-Star Race.
Yet, in the what-have-you-done-for-me-lately category, Gibbs dominates.
Joe Gibbs Racing enters Saturday’s Sprint All-Star Race having won each of the sport’s six most prominent races within the last year: 2015 All-Star Race (Denny Hamlin), 2015 Coca-Cola 600 (Carl Edwards), 2015 Brickyard 400 (Kyle Busch), 2015 Southern 500 (Edwards), 2015 championship race at Homestead-Miami Speedway (Busch) and the 2016 Daytona 500 (Hamlin).
No team has owned all those trophies at one time since Hendrick Motorsports did it in 2012-13 but Hendrick didn’t win the ’12 title as Gibbs won last year’s crown.
“I’m very aware the advantage we have right now at JGR,’’ Edwards said. “Even though it’s slim, it is an advantage, but they’re fleeting. We’ve got to keep pushing. We know these other teams are targeting us.’’
Joe Gibbs Racing’s advantage — seven wins in the season’s first 12 points races — and his own team’s recent struggles are wearing on Hendrick driver Dale Earnhardt Jr. He voiced his frustration on his weekly podcast.
“I know our fans are really disappointed, and they see the Gibbs guys doing well,’’ Earnhardt said on the Dale Jr. Download. “It’s obvious to us whose doing good and who’s not. We understand that we have lost a little bit of something. These last four or five weeks have bene miserable.’’
It’s been longer for many. Gibbs cars have won six of the last seven races. The only race a JGR car didn’t win in that span was at Talladega and Kyle Busch finished second.
"I don’t want to hear about people complaining because we’re on top and we’re dominating and we’re bad for the sport, because I remember years that Hendrick won 12, 13, 14 races and (six) of eight championships or something like that. So it’s our turn now. Let’s hope we can have it stay for a while.’’
But Busch also knows that the seeds of this success were sown two years ago when Gibbs was struggling. JGR cars won two races in 2014 (Hendrick cars won 13 races that year). Even until Hamlin’s win in last year’s All-Star race, Gibbs cars were not particularly feared.
“I just think when we were behind on the engine side, we worked on our cars, our setups, on driver-crew chief communications, all that stuff to get our cars better,’’ Busch said. “When the engines came, it was all there. We had the total package.
“I feel like we’ve been able to take advantage of that the last couple of years of having all the right pieces in the right places, and Hendrick have had that. They’ve had great engines, they’ve had great cars, and now it’s time for them to go to work in one of those areas in order to get better.’’
Another reason for the success is the team’s partnership with Furniture Row Racing. Busch had said previously that he didn’t feel there was a close enough working relationship with fellow Toyota team Michael Waltrip Racing.
That doesn’t seem to be an issue with Furniture Row Racing, which joined the Toyota lineup before the start of this season. Martin Truex Jr. nearly won the Daytona 500 and has had cars capable of winning the past two races. A part failure on pit road and getting collected in a crash kept him from winning those races. Still, what he and his team have added has proved valuable to JGR.
“They have brought some things to the table that have helped our game,’’ said Jimmy Makar, senior vice president of racing operations at JGR on Furniture Row. “I feel the same thing from us to them. I think both of our teams will become stronger as the year goes on.
“We share setup books. The drivers share driving comments. We brought them in just like a fifth team to Joe Gibbs Racing. That’s why I think it works.’’
That’s not a good sign for other teams. Since last year’s Coca-Cola 600, Joe Gibbs Racing has won 19 of the last 37 Sprint Cup points races.
“What you’re seeing is with that many cars with that much speed on a weekly basis, you can have one or two cars have a bad race because your other two or three are going to be there to pick up the pieces and race for a win,’’ Hamlin said.
“It’s hard to get all the cars running well at the same time. But obviously JGR has done a great job of that.’’
The question is how much longer will Joe Gibbs Racing dominate?

Danica Patrick looks for this weekend to be a sign of things to come


CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Danica Patrick grabbed a hold on the climbing wall and launched. She moved one leg up to another hold and the next, moving at a steady pace until she reached the top.
She did it as part of a promotional event for sponsor Nature’s Bakery at the U.S. National Whitewater Center with contest winners who had chosen to scale the rock climbing wall with Patrick.
Her climb toward the front in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series has not been as swift, but she feels that tonight’s Sprint Showdown could be a sign of things to come. At least she hopes.
Patrick is in the Sprint Showdown at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Three drivers will race their way into Saturday’s Sprint All-Star Race by winning any of the three segments. The final two drivers in the 20-car Sprint All-Star Race will be selected by a fan vote.
Patrick has competed in the Sprint All-Star Race twice, earning entry via the fan vote. She finished 20th in both races. She enters this weekend coming off a season-best 13th-place finish at Dover.
“I hope we can race our way in,’’ Patrick said. “That’s for sure what every driver wants to do if they’re not in the (all-star race). It’s the most honorable way to get in, but it’s not as though there is not honor in getting through the fan vote because it just means you’re resonating with the fans and they’re showing that they like you and appreciate you and want to see you race.
“I hope that we’re good because, to be honest, if we race our way in, that means really good things moving forward in the season, too. It’s not going to be easy to qualify our way in because there are lots of great drivers that aren’t necessarily already in the race. So, I think that probably overall more than anything racing my way in will mean that I think we’re going to be a lot better moving forward in the season.’’
Among those entered in the Sprint Showdown looking to advance to the Sprint All-Star Race are Kyle Larson, Austin Dillon, Greg Biffle, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and rookies Chase Elliott and Ryan Blaney.

quinta-feira, 19 de maio de 2016

Rockingham Speedway is sold at auction, future plans uncertain



The Rock is off the block.
Rockingham Speedway, located in Rockingham, North Carolina, has been sold at auction to a Florida-based holding company, according to the Richmond County Daily Journal.
A credit bid of $3 million submitted at a May 5 public auction by BK Rock Holdings, a limited liability company managed by Billy Silas, was accepted when no additional “upset” bids were received by Monday, according to the Daily Journal.
Proceeds from the winning bid will be credited to pay off outstanding debt that the Speedway had incurred over the years.
According to the Daily Journal, former driver Andy Hillenburg purchased the Speedway in 2008 for $4.2 million. The loan Hillenburg took out was to be paid in full by Oct. 16, 2013.
When that did not happen, Farmers and Merchants Bank began foreclosure proceedings in 2014, according to the Daily Journal. With principal and accrued interest still outstanding, nearly $5 million was still owed on the property, not including attorney’s fees and costs, according to the newspaper.
The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series ran 78 races at Rockingham from 1965 until 2004, while the Xfinity Series ran from 1982 through 2004. The Camping World Truck Series ran two races at the revived Rockingham in 2012 and 2013.
There’s been no word from Silas or his attorney on future plans for the track – which opened in 1965 – to resume racing or if the venerable facility has indeed hosted its last race ever.

quarta-feira, 18 de maio de 2016

Social Roundup: Xfinity drivers invade Philadelphia to promote Pocono




Believe it or not, the Xfinity Series has never raced at the “Tricky Triangle” of Pocono Raceway.
This year, the series debuts at the Pennsylvania track on June 4. To help promote the race, NASCAR sent four drivers – Darrell Wallace Jr., Ryan Reed, Brennan Poole, Brandon Jones and Ty Dillon – to Philadelphia for a day to promote the Pocono 250.
The day included Ty Dillon doing a burnout in the streets of Philadelphia and ended with Wallace throwing out the first pitch of a Philadelphia Phillies baseball game.
Here’s a look at how the day unfolded in the City of Brotherly Love.

NASCAR America: Radioactive from Dover




It was a wild Sunday at Dover International Speedway filled with great racing and a mammoth wreck. Go inside team and driver communications during the AAA 400 Drive for Autism.

terça-feira, 17 de maio de 2016

Myatt Snider gets hot sponsor for ARCA debut this weekend in Toledo

Myatt Snider is guaranteed to have a hot car when he makes his ARCA Racing Series debut this Sunday.

The 21-year-old son of NASCAR announcer Marty Snider, the younger Snider will be sponsored by The Original Louisiana Hot Sauce when he makes his first ARCA start in the Menards 200 at Toledo (Ohio) Speedway.

Snider will pilot the No. 22 Cunningham Motorsports entry in the first of nine ARCA races Snider he’ll compete in this season. The other races include both season races at Pocono Raceway, as well as Michigan International Speedway, Iowa Speedway, Lucas Oil Raceway (Brownsburg, Indiana), Chicagoland Speedway, Kentucky Speedway and Kansas Speedway.

Snider finished third in the CARS Tour Late Model Series in 2015, ending his season in a big way with a win in the UNOH Battle at the Beach at Myrtle Beach (S.C.) Speedway.

“We want to make them proud of their decision to join forces with us and hope to be very competitive right out of the box,” Snider said of his new sponsor.

Snider is looking forward to taking the next step in his racing career.

“I hope to win a race for sure,” Snider said. “I want to learn all I possibly can about racing the bigger and heavier cars on the bigger tracks.

“It’ll be a huge learning experience getting adapted to the radial tires. I plan on being like a big sponge in soaking up all the knowledge and experience that I possibly can.”