Author: Tucker White

  • Weekend Schedule for Kansas

    Weekend Schedule for Kansas

    Here’s the weekend lineup for the NASCAR weekend at Kansas Speedway.

    The Sprint Cup Series hits the track first on Friday at 1:00 p.m. on NBCSN and NBC Sports Live Extra. The Sprint Cup practice sessions can also be heard on MRN. I’ve seen some conflicting reports on this with some outlets saying NBCSN and others saying CNBC. The XFINITY Series hits the track at 2:30 p.m. for their first practice session. That can be seen on NBCSN and NBC Sports Live Extra. They’ll be on track again for their final practice session at 4:30 p.m. on NBCSN and NBC Sports Live Extra. Sprint Cup Series qualifying begins at 6:00 p.m. on NBCSN and NBC Sports Live Extra. You can also hear the radio broadcast on MRN and Sirius XM NASCAR Radio (subscription required for the latter). Forty-four cars are entered for the race, so one will fail to make the field.

    The Sprint Cup cars hit the track on Saturday for their second practice session at 11:30 a.m. on CNBC and NBC Sports Live Extra. XFINITY Series qualifying starts at 12:30 p.m. on NBCSN and NBC Sports Live Extra. With 41 cars on the entry list, one will fail to make the show. Sprint Cup Series final practice starts at 2:30 p.m. on NBCSN and NBC Sports Live Extra. Countdown to Green for the XFINITY race starts at 3:30 p.m. on NBCSN. The green flag flies for the Kansas Lottery 300 at approximately 4:18 p.m. on NBCSN and NBC Sports Live Extra. You can also hear the radio broadcast on MRN and Sirius XM NASCAR Radio.

    NASCAR Raceday hits the air Sunday at 11:00 a.m. on Fox Sports 1 and Fox Sports Go. NASCAR America Sunday starts at 1:00 p.m. on NBCSN and NBC Sports Live Extra. Countdown to Green starts at 1:30 p.m. on NBC. Motor Racing Network hits the air at 1:30 p.m. Pre-race ceremonies begin at 2:00 p.m. The green flag for the Hollywood Casino 400 flies at approximately 2:31 p.m. on NBC and NBC Sports Live Extra. You can also hear the radio broadcast on MRN and Sirius XM NASCAR Radio. The post-race show starts shortly after the conclusion of the race on NBCSN. NASCAR Victory Lap starts at 6:30 p.m. on NBCSN. NASCAR Victory Lane starts at midnight on Fox Sports 1.

  • “The White-Zone” Get Over Your Hatred of the Chase

    “The White-Zone” Get Over Your Hatred of the Chase

    “The white-zone is for immediate loading and unloading…” and it’s time NASCAR fans load up their cars, find the nearest anti-Chase bridge and get over it.

    For some reason, even after 11 years, there’s still a notable section of the NASCAR populace that can’t accept the fact that the Chase is never going away. I understood the distaste for it back in 2004 when it was a whole new idea of determining the champion, but now it’s just gotten to the point of being on par with those who hate dubbed anime with a passion…It makes no sense!

    I’ve heard just about every excuse for being against it. “It’s not tradition.” “It’s artificial entertainment.” “It’s killing the sport.” “It cost the Red Sox Game 6 of the 1986 World Series.” Okay, I made up that last one, but you get my point.

    For those who say it’s “not tradition,” traditions change. Once upon a time, it was a tradition in NASCAR to race back to the caution. What started as the leaders running at a slightly reduced speed to allow any lapped car to get their lap back turned into a fustercluck of leaders speeding back to keep certain cars from getting back.

    On Sept. 14, 2003, Dale Jarrett got turned by Jimmy Spencer and hit the wall driver-side at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. His car came to a stop in the middle of the track. Meanwhile on the backstretch, race leader Bill Elliott, Ryan Newman and Michael Waltrip slowed down to a reduced rate while Bobby Labonte, Kurt Busch and Jimmy Spencer rocketed by trying to get back their lap. That gaggle of cars had taken up most of the track exiting Turn 4 with Jarrett’s No. 88 UPS Ford sitting lifeless in the middle of the track.

    Wally Dallenbach put it best. “Here’s the bad deal. You got a car sitting in the race track right now and these guys are racing back to the yellow. That’s just…ugh I hate that!”

    NASCAR had always maintained that the leader should be the first one back to the line and let him decide who should get his lap back. Now Labonte had made a deal with Elliott to let him back on the lead lap the next caution and Bill slowed down to let him pass. Then Jimmy Spencer, being Jimmy Spencer, decided to fly up to the leader and almost spun Waltrip out to get by.

    This incident, and a string of close calls in the 2003 season, finally made NASCAR realize someone is going to get killed if this keeps going and they banned the practice of racing back to the yellow the next week at Dover.

    With no social media at the time, I don’t know how well received it was with the NASCAR fans, but 12 years later, I don’t hear anyone clambering for the return of racing back to the caution.

    With the “it’s artificial entertainment” argument, someone will have to explain that to me. I don’t understand it. If you’re saying it’s not natural, no sport on Earth is natural entertainment. All sports on Earth are artificial entertainment. Someone didn’t just one day plant a seed into the ground and suddenly, Bristol Motor Speedway popped out of the ground. Until someone shows me a field of Sprint Cup cars growing out of the ground, it’s not natural. Even the traditional method of determining a champion is not natural. A human created an arbitrary points system, thereby making it artificial.

    For the “it’s killing the sport” argument, that holds no weight until you present an academic study proving that the sagging attendance and diminishing ratings correlates with the Chase.

    In conclusion, traditions change, all sports are artificial and there’s no evidence to support the hypothesis that the Chase is killing the sport.

    If you honestly think the old way of determining the champion is better than the Chase, that’s your right to think as such. But after 11 years, the Chase isn’t going away. It’s here to stay. The current incarnation of the Chase is the best and it’ll carry this sport for a number of years.

    My plane is ready to board, so I must wrap this up. Until next time, I’ll leave you with this fact. Heart attacks are more likely to happen on a Monday.

    Chase-2015-logo.jpg.main

     

  • 2016 NASCAR Rules Package Announced

    2016 NASCAR Rules Package Announced

    NASCAR has announced the rules for 2016 and the low-downforce package is coming back.

    In a 2:30 p.m. teleconference, NASCAR Executive Vice-President and Chief Racing Development Officer Steve O’Donnell announced that every race, sans the plate races, would use the low-downforce aerodynamic package that was used at Kentucky Speedway in July and Darlington Raceway on Labor Day Sunday.

    The changes are as follows: a 3.5 inch rear spoiler (down from six), quarter inch front splitter leading edge (down from two), a 33-inch wide radiator pan (down from 38), rear gear ratios adjusted to maintain nine-thousand RPM maximum engine speed and a 1.38 third gear ratio for tracks smaller than 1.25 miles (Martinsville Speedway, Bristol Motor Speedway, Richmond International Raceway, Dover International Speedway, Phoenix International Raceway and New Hampshire Motor Speedway).

    Some changes were also made to the superspeedway package (Daytona International Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway): Engine roller lifters will replace solid lifters (I don’t know what that is or does, but the bulletin NASCAR handed out says it’ll add 10 horsepower), restrictor plate size reduced from 29/32 to 57/64 inch and standardized radiator and oil cooler (effective Daytona in July).

    Regardless of track, all cars will have the digital dash.

    In regards to tires, the “base package provides opportunity for Goodyear to safely develop  track-specfic tires to complement aerodynamic effects for optimal racing.”

    Safety changes were also made: Fire suppression system activation cable routed to dash or right-hand  side leg board, right-hand side double NACA duct to cool drivers at track where side  window is used and seat belt restraint systems must meet SFI 16.6 specification.

    O’Donnell also noted that the changes just pertain to the Sprint Cup Series.

    You can click on the bulletin below to read the changes.

    Rules_2016_Overview

  • The White-Zone: Atlanta race fans must drop the excuses and go to the race

    The White-Zone: Atlanta race fans must drop the excuses and go to the race

    “The white-zone is for immediate loading and unloading…” and it’s time Atlanta race fans drop the excuses and start loading into the track.

    Let me just start off by acknowledging Atlanta Motor Speedway is not alone in attendance issues. In fact, it’s almost across the board. Percentage-wise, Atlanta probably fills more seats than Indianapolis. However, the issues surrounding attendance at most tracks are the on-track product. Atlanta is unique in its attendance issues.

    Atlanta has a reputation for being a lousy sports town. Basically, the only sport people in the Atlanta area care about is college football. The Atlanta Falcons are consistently one of the top teams in the NFC South and could very well make a deep playoff run this season. However, the Georgia Dome is rarely sold out. The Atlanta Braves won 14 straight division titles from 1991 to 2005, five National League pennants and the World Series in 1995, but they couldn’t sell out playoff games during that run. The only series this season that packed Turner Field was when the Braves played the Yankees, and there were far more Yankee fans. The Atlanta Hawks finished with the best record in the Eastern Conference and made it to the Eastern Conference Finals, but Philips Arena was toward the bottom of NBA attendance. I should also mention that Atlanta has been host to two failed NHL franchises, the Flames (now the Calgary Flames) and the Thrashers (now the Winnipeg Jets) because of attendance issues.

    Atlanta sports fans are also notorious for coming up with all sorts of excuses for not going to an event. I’ve heard because it’s “too cold,” it’s “too hot,” “I had a party to attend” and my personal favorite, “I’ve still not forgiven William The Conquerer for The Invasion of 1066.” Okay, the last one I made up, but I’ve heard the rest of these on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio channel 90 over the years.

    Lambeau Field in Green Bay, Wis. has played host to four of the 10 coldest games in NFL history. The Packers fans not only don’t use the cold as an excuse to stay home, they’ll even get painted up and pack the stands when the temperature is penguin house. The “it’s too cold” excuse is laughable to those who grew up in places like New England where it only warms up two days out of 365 (a slight hyperbole).

    I also don’t think you can use the “it’s too hot” excuse when you live in a temperate place like Atlanta. Now I live in Knoxville, Tenn., but the weather patterns between Knoxville and Atlanta are very similar.

    I know it seems like I’m nitpicking and picking on Atlanta. Nitpicking perhaps, but I’m not saying all this to be mean. I’ve said everything I’ve said because I really believe Atlanta Motor Speedway is close to being axed off the schedule. If the Atlanta sports fans continue to drag their feet and use these excuses to not attend the races, you eventually won’t have a home track to see the Sprint Cup Series. Knowing Bruton Smith has wanted to put a second Sprint Cup race in Las Vegas, the lack of support from the Atlanta populace will tell him that you don’t mind not having a Sprint Cup race in your area.

    Do your part and go to the track in February if you want Atlanta Motor Speedway to continue existing. If y’all start packing the track, NASCAR will begin to seriously consider moving your race to an ideal date. But if you’d rather stay home and complain about the race weekend being too cold or too hot, don’t be shocked to wake up one day and read online that Atlanta has lost its Sprint Cup race.

    I don’t want to see Atlanta Motor Speedway disappear. I consider it my second home track and it’s been home to some of the best finishes in NASCAR history. But you must understand that the Southeastern United States is the most saturated race market in the world. From Knoxville, there are eight tracks within a few hours driving distance. As such, it’s important for each track in the South to have a solid local base to fill the seats. With Atlanta being the third largest metropolitan area in the Southeastern United States, that shouldn’t be hard to accomplish.

    My plane is about to take off, so I must wrap this up. Until next time, I’ll leave you with this fact. May 29 is officially designated as “International Put a Pillow on Your Fridge Day.”

  • Atlanta Motor Speedway introduces “Perfect Race Weather Guarantee”

    Atlanta Motor Speedway introduces “Perfect Race Weather Guarantee”

    The 2016 schedule still hasn’t been released, but one track has both announced it’s date and a full “credit” for inclement weather.

    Tuesday morning, Atlanta Motor Speedway announced that the NASCAR traveling circus of the Camping World Truck, XFINITY and Sprint Cup Series will return on the weekend of Feb. 26-28, 2016 following the 58th Daytona 500. The track has reduced the price of tickets by 15 percent, the cheapest being $39 and most expensive being $99.

    The most notable announcement was the “Perfect Race Weather Guarantee.” It doesn’t mean that track General Manager Ed Clark acquired Destro’s Weather Dominator and will crank the temperature up to 100 (that’s for you G.I. Joe fanatics), but it will give fans options if they can’t make the race. Here’s an excerpt from the press release.

    “The all-new policy offers fans options in the event that inclement weather prevents them from attending the race. If the daytime high temperature in Hampton, Georgia on Saturday or Sunday of race weekend fails to reach at least 50 degrees as observed by the National Weather Service, or if weather issues postpone the day’s activities to a different day and fans are unable to attend on the rescheduled date, fans who do not enter the admission gates on the day the event is held will receive an account credit for the full price of their tickets. Credits can be applied to any future AMS event or events in 2016 or the 2017 NASCAR Weekend.”

    In other words, if the weather doesn’t go higher than penguin house or if mother nature decides to rain on us and you can’t make the race, you can use that credit for a free ticket to the 2017 NASCAR race weekend at Atlanta.

    In addition, Atlanta Motor Speedway is offering three different ticket packages for the 2016 race weekend. Their “Good” ticket package, starting at $79, includes general admission seating for Sprint Cup Series qualifying on Friday, tickets to the XFINITY and Truck doubleheader on Saturday and Sunday’s Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 for the Sprint Cup Series. Next is the “Better” package at $139. This package is comprised of everything included in the “Good” package plus a weekend FanVision rental and a pre-race pit pass for Sunday’s Cup race. The “Best” package at $179 includes everything in the “Good” and “Better” packages and $25 off any purchase greater than $50 at the AMS souvenir shop.

    For tickets to the February NASCAR weekend of events at Atlanta Motor Speedway next season, call (877) 9-AMS-TIX or visit www.atlantamotorspeedway.com.

  • Charlotte In the Rear-View

    Charlotte In the Rear-View

    It’s time to put a nice little bow on everything that happened in NASCAR’s backyard.

    This weekend, the NASCAR traveling carnival made its annual October stop at Charlotte Motor Speedway for the Bank of America 500. It was the 30th race of the season, fourth race of the Chase and first of the Contender Round.

    It was supposed to go green just past 7:00 p.m. on Saturday night but unyielding rain showers forced NASCAR to push the race to the following day at 12:30 p.m.

    Under clear blue Carolina skies, Matt Kenseth led the field to the green flag at 12:32 p.m. Eastern time. The field didn’t make it halfway down the backstretch before the first caution of the race flew for debris on the front. It came from the No. 23 BK Racing Toyota of Jeb Burton when the field accordioned back and he rammed the back of the No. 35 Front Row Motorsports Ford of Cole Whitt.

    The race restarted on lap five and it remained under green until the competition caution on lap 26. J.J. Yeley was tagged for his crew being over the wall too soon and restarted the race from the rear of the field. The race restarted on lap 31. Yeley was posted for an unapproved adjustment on his car during his pit stop. He was forced to hit pit road and fix the problem.

    Kasey Kahne made contact with the wall on lap 41, pitted from 12th and rejoined the race in 41st two laps down. It went from bad to worse when he suffered a right-front tire blowout and slammed the wall on lap 61. This brought out the third caution of the race.

    Kahne said that he didn’t “know why either one of those tires went down. Obviously, we were doing something wrong to have two tire failures like that. It’s discouraging, but that’s the way it goes.”

    Greg Biffle was busted for speeding on pit road and restarted the race from the rear of the field.

    The race restarted on lap 66. Four laps later, Carl Edwards tapped the back of Dale Earnhardt Jr. and sent him into the wall. Earnhardt eventually cut down his right-front tire and slammed the wall a few laps later. This brought out the fourth caution of the race.

    He said that Edwards “got a great run on us and drove down into one and got in the back of us a little bit. I don’t know if I cut him off or not. But he drove in there pretty hard and ran over the left rear quarter panel of the car and got in the fence.”

    Joey Logano opted to stay out under the caution and assumed the lead.

    After the race restarted on lap 81, not much really happened. The lead only changed during the lap 120 pit cycle. Debris on the backstretch brought out the fifth caution on lap 167.

    The race restarted on lap 174. Kenseth drifted up in front of Ryan Newman and was hooked into the wall exiting Turn 4.

    Kenseth said that his situation “just kind of snowballed, you know. We were real fast out front. We were kind of tight in traffic and got behind pitting, and then I missed the pit stall trying to come around the 21 and had to back up in the pit, and that put us back there, so just kind of snowballed. But with Ryan, I honestly don’t know. I’ve got to look at it. He went up like I thought he was broke, so I went up through the middle, and I thought I left him plenty of room and then next thing I know, I was pointed at the fence.”

    Justin Allgaier laid oil on the track when his engine expired on lap 182, bringing out the race’s seventh caution. On the ensuing restart, Dale Earnhardt Jr., riding the high line, drove through the uncleaned oil and made contact with the wall. Earnhardt spoke on the incident after the race.

    “We all hit the wall. I hit the wall, Brad hit the wall. Then we went another lap and I pitted and a bunch of other guys hit the wall. There was oil down there. It wasn’t Speedi Dri,” he explained. “I’ve raced this for 20 years. I know what oil and Speedi Dri is. We hit fluid and flew into the freaking wall hard. That’s not Speedi Dri. It was oil up there. There were some shadows cast by them billboards across the track and that may have made it difficult for them to see. Justin blew a hose. He didn’t knock a hole in the bottom of the engine that would just leave a track of oil. He blew a hose or something that is going to spray oil and throw oil all about the race track and up the race track. Maybe it was two-and-a-half car lengths wide how much oil was on the track. You can put it where the car went. You got to get out there maybe and feel around, get your hands on the track.”

    After the race, Managing Director for the Sprint Cup Series Richard Buck said that they (NASCAR) “looked everywhere, including putting people on the ground and walking the area where they said the oil was and there was no oil. I don’t know that you say that anybody misread anything. We all did our jobs. We actually had a human being, protected by the trucks, walking that area to make sure. We do everything we can to bring the surface back to a raceable condition. I think we’ve got an excellent record with that. Sometimes with these lubricants and things that they use, there is some staining to the track, and we’ll go back and do a double-check on that … to make sure that we have got all the fluids. We did that today and we feel absolutely confident that there was no oil on that very top groove or down below or anywhere else.’’

    Now I’m not going to sit here, play armchair-spotter and say there was oil. Depending on what brand these teams use, it can be any color. Some brands of motor oil are black and some are a bit clearer. I have no reason to doubt “June Bug”. He’s been racing in the Sprint Cup Series since 2000. I also have no reason to doubt Richard Buck. But I will say that given some teams – especially teams one or more laps down – have a propensity to “call out” debris to get a timely caution, it wouldn’t shock me if NASCAR views those drivers as the boy who cried ‘wolf.’

    But I digress.

    Another thing that happened under this caution period was the two Kyle’s (Busch and Larson) making contact and Larson getting spun out on pit road. It looked like to me that Larson made the last second decision to hit pit road and Busch made the last second decision to stay out. Both were tagged for commitment line violations as both ran into the orange commitment cone and restarted the race from the rear of the field.

    After the lap 201 restart, the race proceeded more orderly until the next cycle of green flag stops on lap 231. During these stops, Sam Hornish Jr. took the lead for the first time this season. The ninth and final caution of the race flew with 95 laps to go when Kenseth suffered a right-front tire blowout and slammed the wall in Turn 3. Hornish pitted under the caution and the lead cycled back to Joey Logano.

    The race restarted with 88 laps to go. Jimmie Johnson was running third when his engine blew up on the backstretch. He would go on to finish 39th.

    Martin Truex Jr. kicked off the final round of stops with 52 laps to go. Sam Hornish Jr. took the lead with 50 to go and led until he pitted with 34 to go. He finished the race in 19th and his 22 laps led were the most laps he’s ever led in a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race.

    Logano regained the lead and drove away from Kevin Harvick to score his 12th career victory.

    If the NASCAR community were playing a drinking game where we took a shot every time someone said Talladega in the last seven days, we’d all be dead from alcohol poisoning. Logano said after the race that this makes Talladega easier.

    Logano left Charlotte with a six-point lead over Kevin Harvick in the points standings.

    Chevrolet left with a 47-point lead over Toyota in the manufacturer standings. With 23 cars in the field representing the bow ties, Chevrolet really has a race and a half lead over Toyota. If it had been a Toyota car that won and scored max points (48), the lowest the highest finishing Chevy could’ve possibly finished would’ve been 23rd and gained 21-points. To put this in simpler terms: If Toyota doesn’t close the gap to within 22-points by Phoenix, Chevrolet will clinch their 13th consecutive manufacturers title simply when the green flag flies.

    So that should just about wrap up everything that happened in Charlotte.

    Next up, NASCAR heads to America’s heartland to race at Kansas Speedway. Coverage of the Hollywood Casino 400 begins at 2:00 p.m. on NBC. The Motor Racing Network will be on the air at 1:00 p.m.

    Until then, I’ll leave you with this fact. There is a persistent storm at Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela. Lightning storms occur for about 10 hours a night, 140 to 160 nights a year, for a total of about 1.2 million lightning discharges per year.

  • The White-Zone: Don’t Do Single-File Restarts at Talladega

    The White-Zone: Don’t Do Single-File Restarts at Talladega

    “The white-zone is for immediate loading and unloading…” and I need to unload about some possible rule adjustments for Talladega Superspeedway.

    In case you haven’t heard, NASCAR has been talking to teams the last few weeks about possible changes being made to the upcoming race at the Alabama roulette-wheel of Talladega Superspeedway. Some of these changes include doing nothing at all and limiting the number of green-white-checker attempts down to one or two. Personally, limiting the GWC attempts wouldn’t bother me. I’d personally reduce it to two, but I could live with one.

    There’s one possible change, however, that would really bother me. That would be the possibility of going to single-file restarts for Talladega.

    This bothers me because I envision the possibility of teams just racing single-file all race long. I know that’s possible even with double-file restarts. Hell, it happened back in May. However, that was the last 30 laps and the race as a whole had been mostly three-wide racing. With the Contender Round ending at Talladega and 10 drivers needing to survive or win to advance, they would have little incentive to race up front all race long. If you can’t get these top drivers, especially at the top plate races, heading the lines on the bottom, middle or top, everyone might be content to race single-file.

    We’ve been building this race up to a monumental race for the ages. Drivers have been talking for weeks that everything will hinge on Talladega. Grant Lynch, Chairman of Talladega Superspeedway, is probably loving all the free publicity the track is receiving. If we go single-file on the restarts, we’re running the risk of this Talladega race falling flat on its face.

    Now I understand why NASCAR is doing all this. I’m certain the horrific last-lap wreck at Daytona in July was the catalyst for this discussion. I understand that nobody wants to see drivers or fans get injured or killed. The catch fence did its job and kept Austin Dillon’s car from going into the stands. I completely understand that we have to protect the drivers and fans from unnecessary danger. But at the same time, let’s not neuter Talladega, take the one race that would be next to impossible to botch and manage to botch it.

    In conclusion, if NASCAR is going to make changes in order to protect the drivers and fans, let’s not knee-jerk it and ruin the hallmark style of racing that practically sells itself. You don’t have to do much to sell people on Daytona and Talladega. I’m not going to sit here and tell you that every race at Daytona and Talladega is going to be the “race of the century,” but eight times out of 10, the restrictor plate races are among the best races of the season. If NASCAR wants to reduce the number of GWC attempts, I’ll be fine with it, but leave the single-file restart idea at the door.

    My plane* is ready to load and I’ll wrap this up. Until next time, I’ll leave you with this fact. The probability of two whole fingerprints matching is around one in 64-billion.

    *I use the word plane as a metaphor for getting off my soapbox and ending the piece. It’s not an actual plane and I’m not actually about to fly out to “parts unknown” (that’s for those of you who follow pro wrestling).

    The opinions expressed in this piece are solely those of the author and may not reflect the beliefs of SpeedwayMedia.com

  • ‘Sliced Bread’ Tames the Beast of the Southeast

    ‘Sliced Bread’ Tames the Beast of the Southeast

    In two weeks, Joey Logano will go into Talladega breathing a sigh of relief after taking the checkered flag at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

    The driver of the No. 22 Team Penske Ford led 227 of the 334 laps on his way to victory in the Bank of America 500. It was his 12th career win, fourth of the season, first at Charlotte and third at the track for Team Penske.

    Logano said that the team “had a great car.” He continued, saying, “Todd Gordon and this Shell/Pennzoil team, all of Team Penske, you always want to win it. Charlotte is everybody’s home turf and you want to make it happen here.” Logano also added that the win “makes Talladega way easier. I know that’s on everyone’s mind when this round starts and last year we won Kansas when it was the first race of this round and now we were able to get it this time at Charlotte. We’ll get lots of sleep here the next couple of weeks.”

    Kevin Harvick brought his Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR) Chevrolet to his 11th runner-up finish this season (an average of 36.7 percent). Martin Truex Jr. of Furniture Row Racing, Joe Gibbs Racing’s Denny Hamlin and SHR’s Kurt Busch rounded out the top-five.

    Carl Edwards, Austin Dillon, Jeff Gordon, Brad Keselowski and Aric Almirola rounded out the top-10.

    Ryan Newman lumbered his Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet to a 15th-place finish.

    Following contact on pit road under the eighth caution of the race, Kyle Busch finished 20th one lap down.

    Dale Earnhardt Jr. made contact with the wall on lap 70, fell back through the race and finished 28th, four laps down.

    “I lost count of how many time we hit it (the wall) today,” Earnhardt said. “I don’t know. We had a pretty decent car. Carl (Edwards) got a great run on me down the front straightaway and just drove in there and the left rear quarter-panel, I have to look at that to see whether that was a racing deal or whatever.”

    Pole-sitter Matt Kenseth led 72 laps before falling back in the field and slamming the wall multiple times which relegated him to a 42nd-place finish. He was the lowest-finishing Chase driver.

    Notable finishes include Greg Biffle, who started fourth, finishing 24th, Jimmie Johnson finishing 39th after blowing an engine with 77 laps remaining and Kasey Kahne who slammed the wall early in the race and finished dead last.

    Logano leaves NASCAR’s backyard with a six-point lead over Harvick. Truex Jr. follows seven back. Kurt Busch and Carl Edwards leave tied for fifth at nine points back. Jeff Gordon leaves in seventh place, 11-points back. Brad Keselowski leaves 13-points back.

    Ryan Newman is six points behind the eighth-place cutoff. Kyle Busch is 10-points back. Earnhardt Jr. is 19 back and Kenseth is 32 back.

    Next week, the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series rolls into America’s heartland for the Hollywood Casino 400 at Kansas Speedway.

  • Lewis Hamilton Takes the Gold in Sochi

    Lewis Hamilton Takes the Gold in Sochi

    The world championship all but belongs to Lewis Hamilton after scoring the victory in Russia.

    The driver of the No. 44 Mercedes AMG Petronas car capitalized on the mechanical failure of teammate and pole sitter Nico Rosberg to score his 42nd career win in Formula 1. It moves him past his hero Ayrton Senna and ties him for third on the all-time wins list with Sebastian Vettel. Speaking of which, the driver of the No. 5 Scuderia Ferrari car finished runner-up. Last-lap mayhem allowed Sergio Pérez to take his Sahara Force India-Mercedes to his fifth career podium finish.

    Williams-Mercedes Felipe Massa and Red Bull-Renault’s Daniil Kvyat rounded out the top-five.

    Felipe Nasr, Pastor Maldonado, Kimi Räikkönen, Jenson Button and Max Verstappen rounded out the top-10. Fernando Alonso, who originally finished 10th, was handed a five-second time penalty for exceeding track limits and was demoted to 11th. It cost McLaren-Honda their second double points finish of the season.

    This was one of the more bizarre races I’ve seen this season. It started on the first lap with a collision in Turn 2 involving the other Sahara Force India of Nico Hülkenburg and Sauber’s Marcus Ericsson. It forced the deployment of the safety car.

    On lap six, Rosberg retired from the race with a broken throttle. With Hamilton winning the race, it all but ends the title hopes for the German driver.

    A few laps later, Romain Grosjean got loose in Turn 3, overcorrected and slammed the wall. It forced the safety car to come out a second time.

    Another unusual note is that the super-soft Pirelli tires, which are supposed to wear out at a significant rate, lasted more than half the race for some of the lead cars. To put it another way, as NBC’s Will Buxton did, “this’ll send the OCD fans into a tizzy.”

    In the closing laps of the race, Martinsville broke loose. Carlos Sainz Jr., who was running in the top-10, had a brake failure and spun out in the same part of the track where he had a heavy wreck the day before. A piece of his wing fell on the track and required a marshall to retrieve it. Someone wasn’t paying attention to the location of oncoming cars because he about got hit by Sebastian Vettel. Daniel Ricciardo was running fifth when he had engine issues in the closing laps and retired from the race.

    It was the battle for the final podium step on the final lap that will stand out the most. Rounding turn 4, Kimi Räikkönen made contact with Valtteri Bottas and sent him into the wall. This allowed Sergio Pérez to take the final podium step. After the race, Räikkönen was handed a 30 second time penalty, moving him down to eighth. This gave Mercedes the Constructors’ Championship.

    After all was said and done. Lewis Hamilton left as the points leader. Sebastian Vettel moved past Nico Rosberg for second in the points.

    There is a chance Hamilton can clinch the drivers championship in two weeks at Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas. That race will be Sunday, Oct. 25 at 2:30 p.m. on NBC.

  • Rosberg takes the pole in Russia

    Rosberg takes the pole in Russia

    Nico Rosberg scored the pole for tomorrow’s race in Russia.

    This is the 18th career pole for the driver of the No. 6 Mercedes AMG Petronas Formula One Team and third of the 2015 season. He’ll be joined on the front row by teammate, points leader and defending race winner Lewis Hamilton.

    This pole is critical for Rosberg to get back into title contention as he trails Hamilton by 48-points. What was a 28-point gap heading into Monza ballooned into a 53-point canyon after Nico’s retirement from the race due to engine gremlins. He was given a golden opportunity to significantly shrink that gap under the lights of Singapore after Lewis retired from the race with engine issues, but could only muster a fourth-place finish – only the second non-podium finish for the Mercedes organization this season. While he won the pole two weeks ago in the land of the rising sun, it was Hamilton who got the advantage on the initial start and won the Japanese Grand Prix.

    Valtteri Bottas will start his Williams Mercedes in third. The Ferrari duo of Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Räikkönen will start fourth and fifth.

    The rest of the top-10 consisted of the Sahara Force India duo of Nico Hülkenburg and Sergio Pérez, Romain Grosjean of Lotus-Mercedes, Max Verstappen of Scuderia Toro Rosso and Red Bull-Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo.

    The rest of the field consists of Daniil Kvyat, Felipe Nasr, Jenson Button, Pastor Maldonado, Felipe Massa, Fernando Alonso, Marcus Ericsson, Will Stevens and Roberto Merhi.

    Alonso will take a 35 grid penalty for his McLaren-Honda team going past the five-engine change maximum. The same goes for Merhi of Manor-Marussia.

    Carlos Sainz Jr. didn’t take part in qualifying after a heavy crash in FP3 which forced him to be airlifted to a nearby hospital. He expects to race tomorrow, but will remain in the hospital overnight. He’ll also need approval from the race stewards because he technically didn’t take part. Typically, teams that are unable to put the car on track in qualifying will go to the stewards and show that they ran more than one lap in practice within 107% of the fastest lap set in the first round of qualifying. The fastest lap Sainz ran in FP3 was 1:42.683 and the fastest lap in Q1 was 1:38.343 by Nico Rosberg.

    With practice and qualifying in the books, all that remains is to run the race.

    Coverage of the Russian Grand Prix begins tomorrow at 6:30 a.m. on NBCSN and NBC Sports Live Extra.