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Featured stories from SpeedwayMedia.com

  • Busch wins NNS race at Auto Club Speedway

    Busch wins NNS race at Auto Club Speedway

    Kyle Busch rallied back from a speeding penalty on Saturday in the NASCAR Nationwide Series CampingWorld.com 300 and won his fourth career race at Auto Club Speedway.

    Busch started from the pole and led four times for 38 of the 150 laps run and extended his series record setting 12th NNS victory of the season.

    His crew got him out front on the final pit stop of the day.

    “These guys did an awesome job for me today.  Pit road probably won this race, so I can’ t thank these guys enough.” Busch said.

    Kevin Harvick led a race-high 86 laps, but his pit crew set him back twice and in the final pit stop he lost four positions.  Harvick finished third.

    “Obviously, we’ve got to take that next step on pit road because they’re just doing a terrible job. That’s not what our operation is all about. If they can’t stand the pressure, they better find something else to do.” Harvick said.

    Brad Keselowski finished second and extended his lead in the series point standings to 384 points.

    Danica Patrick qualified 14th and was heading to a top-15 finish when she was spun out late in the race.  Clearly frustrated, Patrick finished in 30th place.

    “The frustrating part is that I feel like we had a really good car on those last two restarts.  I got into the car that spun on the lap before, but I didn’t mean to. Next time, I got pretty close, but I came off and gave him room. Looking at the replay, it looks like it could have been avoidable.” Patrick said.

    Next week the NASCAR Nationwide Series moves to Charlotte Motor Speedway on ESPN2 Friday, October 15.

    Unofficial Race Results

    Pos. St. No. Driver Make Pts. Bon. Laps Status
    1 1 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 190 5 150 Running
    2 3 22 Brad Keselowski Dodge 175 5 150 Running
    3 2 33 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 175 10 150 Running
    4 6 60 Carl Edwards Ford 165 5 150 Running
    5 5 20 Joey Logano Toyota 155 0 150 Running
    6 8 88 Aric Almirola Chevrolet 150 0 150 Running
    7 10 1 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 146 0 150 Running
    8 11 12 Justin Allgaier Dodge 142 0 150 Running
    9 16 40 Mike Bliss Chevrolet 138 0 150 Running
    10 12 32 Reed Sorenson Toyota 134 0 150 Running
    11 20 17 Trevor Bayne Ford 130 0 150 Running
    12 7 98 Paul Menard Ford 127 0 150 Running
    13 35 16 Colin Braun * Ford 124 0 150 Running
    14 30 87 Joe Nemechek Chevrolet 121 0 150 Running
    15 23 9 Brian Scott * Ford 118 0 150 Running
    16 25 35 Jason Keller Chevrolet 115 0 150 Running
    17 18 11 James Buescher * Toyota 112 0 150 Running
    18 27 81 Michael McDowell Dodge 109 0 150 Running
    19 37 34 Tony Raines Chevrolet 106 0 150 Running
    20 22 15 Michael Annett Toyota 103 0 150 Running
    21 15 1 Mike Wallace Chevrolet 100 0 150 Running
    22 21 5 Willie Allen Chevrolet 97 0 150 Running
    23 42 28 Kenny Wallace Chevrolet 94 0 150 Running
    24 28 183 John Borneman III Ford 91 0 150 Running
    25 4 99 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 93 5 150 Running
    26 39 23 Robert Richardson Jr. Chevrolet 85 0 148 Running
    27 41 70 Mark Green Chevrolet 82 0 148 Running
    28 38 21 Morgan Shepherd Chevrolet 79 0 148 Running
    29 17 6 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. * Ford 76 0 147 Running
    30 14 7 Danica Patrick Chevrolet 73 0 141 In Pit
    31 36 10 Ricky Carmichael Toyota 70 0 141 In Pit
    32 29 62 Brendan Gaughan Toyota 67 0 125 Running
    33 9 66 Steve Wallace Toyota 64 0 78 Running
    34 40 27 Brad Baker Ford 61 0 27 In Pit
    35 32 90 Danny O’Quinn Jr. Chevrolet 58 0 21 In Pit
    36 19 91 David Gilliland Chevrolet 55 0 16 Out
    37 13 38 Jason Leffler Toyota 52 0 15 Out
    38 43 52 Kevin Lepage Chevrolet 49 0 10 In Pit
    39 34 107 Danny Efland Chevrolet 46 0 6 In Pit
    40 31 26 Brian Keselowski Dodge 43 0 4 In Pit
    41 33 182 Chase Miller Dodge 40 0 3 Out
    42 26 92 Dennis Setzer Dodge 37 0 3 In Pit
    43 24 136 Jeff Green Chevrolet 34 0 2 In Pit
  • Stewart wins the Pepsi MAX 400 at Auto Club Speedway

    Stewart wins the Pepsi MAX 400 at Auto Club Speedway

    Tony Stewart held off Clint Bowyer and Jimmie Johnson in the final laps and won Sunday’s Pepsi Max 400 at Auto Club Speedway.

    Stewart also gained five spots in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship standings and  secured the 2010 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Manufacturers’ Cup for Chevrolet for the 34th time since the inception of the award in 1950.

    “We’re doing everything we can do.  We’re going to need some help, but we’re doing everything we can do.  I’m proud of these guys, and just so thankful.  Thank Hendrick Engines and Chassis, and everybody at Stewart Haas, they refuse to give up, they refuse to back down.” Stewart said.  

    Bowyer and Johnson both contended for the win but the No. 33 outdid the champion’s car on the final lap to finish second.   “I didn’t need that caution to come out there. That piece of debris was back there the whole run, but finally a mysterious caution came out. Tony just beat us there at the end. The Hartford Chevrolet was good. It was a good day for us. We will regroup and hopefully get us another win.” Bowyer said.  

    “I think if it had stayed green at the end, we had a shot to get the No. 14, But it didn’t turn out that way, there was a caution at the end with that wreck. Starting on the inside was kind of a problem for me. I just didn’t get going like I needed to. The No. 33 got there.” Johnson said.   “One race down, still in the points lead, but a lot of racing left.” Johnson added.  

    Jeff Gordon was running in second place until he pitted during a caution flag.  He was too fast on pit road and restarted the race in 24th place.  The final caution flag allowed Gordon to pit for tires with the rest of the cars in the mid pack which helped him pass a bunch of cars in a short period allowing him into the top-10 before the race ended.  Gordon finished in 9th place.  

    “It wasn’t the kind of day we were hoping for. Things are going pretty well for us and we’re hanging in there but honestly I think we were anywhere from a third to a fifth-place car, so to come home ninth, there’s no doubt, we need to get better. There’s no doubt. We’ve got to get better.” Gordon said.  

    Other chase drivers didn’t fair so well.  Kyle Busch, Greg Biffle and Carl Edwards all had engine trouble.  Matt Kenseth who was also having engine trouble, nursed his car to a disappointing 30th. Kurt Busch was involved in an accident with David Regan and finsihed a disappointing 21st.  

    “It’s unfortunate for us,” he said. “This was our opportunity to get back in the Chase and it doesn’t look like it’s going to happen. It’s disappointing, but what can you do? It broke. Everybody is giving this program 110 percent, so you can’t blame anybody. We were trying hard to win the title and it isn’t going to happen this year.”  

    After his engine blew, Busch said his championship chances were over.    “On to another year.  It’s over.” Busch said from the garage while the race was still underway.    

    Unofficial Race Results

    Pepsi Max 400 October 10, 2010 – Race 30 of 36

    Pos. St. No. Driver Make Pts. Bon. Laps Status
    1 22 14 Tony Stewart Chevrolet 190 5 200 Running
    2 13 33 Clint Bowyer Chevrolet 175 5 200 Running
    3 8 48 Jimmie Johnson Chevrolet 170 5 200 Running
    4 5 9 Kasey Kahne Ford 160 0 200 Running
    5 14 39 Ryan Newman Chevrolet 155 0 200 Running
    6 11 5 Mark Martin Chevrolet 160 10 200 Running
    7 21 29 Kevin Harvick Chevrolet 146 0 200 Running
    8 34 11 Denny Hamlin Toyota 142 0 200 Running
    9 17 24 Jeff Gordon Chevrolet 143 5 200 Running
    10 23 0 David Reutimann Toyota 134 0 200 Running
    11 10 20 Joey Logano Toyota 130 0 200 Running
    12 19 78 Regan Smith Chevrolet 132 5 200 Running
    13 2 19 Elliott Sadler Ford 124 0 200 Running
    14 4 42 Juan Montoya Chevrolet 126 5 200 Running
    15 37 77 Sam Hornish Jr. Dodge 118 0 200 Running
    16 9 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Chevrolet 120 5 200 Running
    17 1 1 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 117 5 200 Running
    18 6 56 Martin Truex Jr. Toyota 109 0 200 Running
    19 30 43 A.J. Allmendinger Ford 106 0 200 Running
    20 32 38 David Gilliland Ford 108 5 200 Running
    21 38 2 Kurt Busch Dodge 100 0 200 Running
    22 24 98 Paul Menard Ford 102 5 200 Running
    23 15 31 Jeff Burton Chevrolet 94 0 200 Running
    24 29 82 Scott Speed Toyota 91 0 200 Running
    25 12 13 Casey Mears Toyota 88 0 200 Running
    26 25 12 Brad Keselowski Dodge 85 0 200 Running
    27 27 83 Reed Sorenson Toyota 82 0 200 Running
    28 40 34 Travis Kvapil Ford 84 5 200 Running
    29 39 37 Dave Blaney Ford 76 0 200 Running
    30 3 17 Matt Kenseth Ford 78 5 200 Running
    31 41 7 Kevin Conway * Toyota 70 0 197 Running
    32 18 6 David Ragan Ford 67 0 193 Running
    33 26 47 Marcos Ambrose Toyota 64 0 193 Running
    34 20 99 Carl Edwards Ford 61 0 187 Running
    35 16 18 Kyle Busch Toyota 63 5 155 Out
    36 42 71 Andy Lally Chevrolet 55 0 76 Out
    37 35 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 52 0 69 In Pit
    38 43 9 Bobby Labonte Chevrolet 49 0 56 In Pit
    39 28 46 Michael McDowell Chevrolet 46 0 55 In Pit
    40 36 164 Landon Cassill Toyota 43 0 43 In Pit
    41 7 16 Greg Biffle Ford 40 0 40 Out
    42 31 36 J.J. Yeley Chevrolet 37 0 33 In Pit
    43 33 66 Jason Leffler Toyota 34 0 23 Out
  • NASCAR Needs Some Ole Time Religion

    NASCAR Needs Some Ole Time Religion

    There is no doubt that NASCAR has faced its share of struggles this season, from sagging attendance at the tracks to a significant drop in the television ratings, even during the Chase.

    While NASCAR has thrown just about everything they have in their arsenal at these problems, including ‘boys have at it,’ double file restarts, green-white-checkered finishes, all of which have led to some of the best racing in the sport’s history, NASCAR still seems to continue its struggling.

    So, what is the solution? Well, perhaps NASCAR should do what so many do in times of trouble and strife. NASCAR should just get some good ole time religion.

    Lest this article be construed as the ramblings of a zealot for a particular religion, please know that it is not. There are, however, some basic principles from that ole time religion that might not only apply but help NASCAR’s current predicament.

    One of those first ole time religious principles is the need for a revival in the land. Yes, NASCAR does indeed need a revival throughout its land, and even in its soul.

    Sure, times are tough but rather than focus so much on the business of NASCAR, the leadership of the sport needs to become more like evangelists on a mission rather than corporate suits. They need to stir the souls of NASCAR fans, reminding them of why they love this sport, instead of focusing on ways to pick their ever slim pockets.

    This revival across NASCAR-land should recapture how much fans love the sport and the lengths they go to participate and get to the races. The governing body needs to focus more energy on fanning the flames of fans’ passion, reminding them of why they have decided to worship at the house of NASCAR rather than the houses of baseball or other sports.

    Just like that ole time religion, NASCAR might even consider hosting some tent-like revival sessions with and for the fans, letting them share their stories of the sport with the NASCAR leadership. To encourage the fans to participate in these revival sessions, NASCAR could also work with the sport’s drivers and personalities to share their racing passions, as well as listening to the fans’ stories, allowing them to express what their driver, their team and their following of NASCAR has meant to them.

    This revival of the NASCAR spirit could even translate throughout the sport’s media, giving voice to fans’ passion for the sport rather than endless hours of complaints focusing on what is wrong with it. Perhaps a radio show hosted by a passionate fan with various drivers not only sharing their racing stories but again listening to how fans came to the sport and allowing them to tell their own stories might just be one avenue to start and continue the NASCAR revival.

    In addition to ole time revival, NASCAR might also utilize the principle of proselytizing from ole time religion. Anyone who has experienced that mountaintop religious experience cannot wait to share it and that is exactly what NASCAR needs to encourage more is the sharing of that racing experience that is so unique to the sport.

    This is an avenue where the race track leadership and promoters could assist NASCAR in the proselytizing process, by providing incentives and even more boldly, perhaps even free tickets for a new race fan accompanying a current race fan to the track. Everyone in the sport knows that if you can get someone to the race track, you have created a fan for life, so tracks must consider making that as easy and cost-effective as possible in order to continue to bring new fans to the sport.

    Once tracks get these newbie fans to their venues, they should also consider special perks to continue the proselytizing process, as well as perks for the current fans that brought them. Perhaps a NASCAR 101 course for these groups could be offered, including some basics about the sport, ways that they can plug in, such as using scanners or FanView, a pre-race demonstration of a pit stop so they understand the strategy of the sport, and even a surprise driver appearance that again cements that personal relationship on which NASCAR was built.

    Another proselytizing option similar to that used in ole time religion is to focus on an avenue that has attracted so many to the sport, the family. For most, racing is in the blood having grown up at the race track or having been brought, or in some cases even dragged, to a local short track or other venue.

    While NASCAR and its many race track partners throughout the country have done a good job in making tracks more fan and kid friendly, there are still many more opportunities for proselytizing the sport through children. Sure, this is an investment with perhaps not immediate return, but it most certainly ensures the long-term viability and survival of the sport in the future.

    In addition to creating family and kid zones in the grandstands, tracks need to get even more serious about how they treat them at the track. The bottom line is that what every kid really wants when they come to the race track, especially for the first time, is to meet that driver, team or personality that they so idolize.

    So, in addition to having drivers make appearances in the corporate boxes and the hospitality tents, NASCAR should think about innovative ways they can get those drivers in front of kids, especially those children who are coming to the race for the first time, as well as their families who have sacrificed to bring them.

    Another possibility might be for the drivers and their children to meet the fans and their children, again making that personal connection even stronger, hopefully cementing that relationship for the rest of their lives as race fans.

    Whether through focusing on new converts or creating opportunities for children and families, the bottom line in these challenging times is that NASCAR must again search for and find its soul. Then and only then, perhaps taking some lessons from that ole time religion, can the sport flourish and grow.

  • Chase Races and Chase Drivers Shouldn’t Receive Special Treatment Says Jeff Burton

    Chase Races and Chase Drivers Shouldn’t Receive Special Treatment Says Jeff Burton

    When David Reutimann executed a not so perfect retaliation sideswipe of Kyle Busch last weekend in Kansas it brought forth a new conversation about etiquette, specifically racing in the Chase etiquette.

    Busch is a Chase contender who was in great position to say in the top three in points, if not take over the point lead after the Price Chopper 400. Reutimann is a non-Chase driver, who sits 18th and had reached his boiling point with Rowdy the two had another run in.

    According to Reutimann the two have had more than a few problems in the past. At Bristol in August it came to the forefront when Busch claimed had Reutimann known how to drive the track he wouldn’t have gotten beat. The driver of the Aaron’s Dream Machine didn’t take kindly to the words and filed them away. Then early at Kansas when Reutimann got loose in turn one and had to slow Busch spun him out and that became the straw that broke the camel’s back.

    Afterwards Busch said that if Reutimann felt he needed to retaliate it shouldn’t have come at Kansas when he’s racing for a championship, the beginning of 2011 would have been more appropriate. The response stuck with NASCAR nation who broke down the confrontation during the week, who was right, who was wrong and should it have happened at all.

    Before the Chase began in New Hampshire last month four-time champion Jeff Gordon admitted he didn’t know what to expect during the final 10 races because of his actions earlier this season. Gordon had angered a few different drivers who vowed payback on the No. 24, including Martin Truex Jr., but they had yet to take action.

    Said Gordon at the time, they could have been waiting for the Chase when he had much more on the line then they did. So far Gordon hasn’t had a run in and neither had any Chase driver until last weekend.

    Jeff Burton, known as the NASCAR garage’s Mayor because of his responses on the sports issues, proved so again on Friday at California. It comes down to the simple fact that Chase races are no different than any other races during the Sprint Cup season he said.

    “The race this weekend is as important to the team that’s 20th in points as it is to the team that’s first in points,” said Burton. “Now I understand that in reality that’s not how it is, but if the team that’s 20th in points doesn’t come here with the same intensity and their sponsor doesn’t feel they’re getting the same opportunity to be successful, then that’s a major problem.”

    The Kansas incident could be looked at from many angles but the fact that it occurred during the Chase have been struck in limbo. Respect, is not something that Burton believes you can turn on and off.

    “You have to drive people with respect, all the time. You can’t pick and choose when you want someone to respect you and you can’t pick and choose when you’re going to respect them.”

    Burton continued by saying that as Chase driver he wouldn’t want anyone coming after him, that includes drivers in and out of the Chase. If a driver’s worried about payback during the Chase some say they should have been more careful during the first 26 races with how and whom they raced.

    Unfortunately, Busch found that out the hard way last weekend, regardless of the fact that he didn’t intentionally take out Reutimann earlier in the race, their past history came into effect.

    Burton also knew of that saying, “That whole deal that went down last week wasn’t just about what happened last week, it was what happened throughout the year. When you feel like somebody doesn’t respect you and doesn’t show you respect and then they get into you, whether they meant to or not, there’s a different level of thought process.”

    Even Burton noted that Busch didn’t wreck the double zero on purpose, however the contact was unavoidable. Reutimann thought differently and he and Busch have been in a war of words ever since. Idle words and no action says Burton, is worse than saying nothing at all.

    Reutimann finally acted and Busch now has to get refocused on the Chase. The rivalry shouldn’t be overlooked and the two drivers getting together is a story that is worth covering, but time shouldn’t be spent on talking about Chase drivers being held to a higher standard than those who aren’t in the Chase.

    If there’s one important lesson from Burton it’s that every driver should remember that a non-Chaser should race a Chase driver “The same way he races him them every week.”

  • NASCAR Chase For The Sprint Cup: Busch Brothers Have Their Sights Set on Title

    NASCAR Chase For The Sprint Cup: Busch Brothers Have Their Sights Set on Title

    Like most racing families, the Busch brothers grew up living and breathing the racing lifestyle. With the guidance of their father Tom, a winner of several NASCAR sanctioned events, Kurt and Kyle spent a majority of their time in the family garage being taught how to repair and build race cars.

    Both brothers got their first driving lessons at the age of six, driving a go-kart in the cul-de-sac of their Las Vegas neighborhood. At one point early on in their careers, Kyle at the age of ten, served as a crew chief for brother Kurt and his dwarf car team.

    Although growing up in the same house and cutting their teeth on the same local race track, the Busch brothers as we know them today, are very separate and different people.

    Kurt, seven years older than his brother Kyle, had his first racing experience at Pahrump Valley Speedway in a dwarf car. After winning the Auto Zone Elite Division Southwest rookie of the year honors in 1998, he went on to win the series championship the very next year. The championship led to Kurt’s tryout for Roush Racing’s Gong Show, which he won and earned a spot in a NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series ride.

    In the No. 99 Exide Batteries truck, Kurt won four races and finished second in the points to teammate Greg Biffle. Kurt made his debut in the now Sprint Cup Series in 2000, after taking over for Chad Little in Dover.

    He started off his rookie season in 2001 at Daytona, where after making contact with Dale Earnhardt, he was given the one-finger salute by the intimidator just hours before the tragic events on the last lap of the race that took Earnhardt’s life.

    The rest is history for the quiet Kurt, who has gone on to win 22 times in the Cup series and capture the 2004 championship- the first year of the Chase format.

    The younger Kyle began his driving career in 1998, just after his 13th birthday, and from then until 2001, earned 65 wins in legends cars and two track championships at the legendary Las Vegas Bullring.

    Kyle competed in the Craftsman Truck Series in 1996 at the age of 16, but after events at Auto Club Speedway during a companion event for CART and their world championship, he was ejected from the track by CART officials who didn’t allow drivers under the age of 18 to compete. Kyle in fact, was the reason NASCAR mandated that all drivers be over the age of 18, which went in to effect just weeks after the events at California.

    After graduating early with honors from Durango High School to focus on his racing career, Kyle signed a driver development contract with Hendrick Motorsports in 2003—driving in seven ARCA races in their No. 87 Ditech entry and winning his first two races at Nashville Superspeedway and Kentucky Speedway.

    During the following two years, Kyle competed in the Nationwide Series and won five times, claiming the series record for most wins by a rookie, and finishing second in points behind Martin Truex Jr.

    The 2005 season marked Kyle’s move to the Sprint Cup Series and his first opportunity to race again his older brother, where he replaced NASCAR legend Terry Labonte in the #5 car and won two times on the way to capturing Rookie of the Year honors. Since then, the fiery and sometimes controversial driver has captured 19 wins and set new records along the way.

    After taking different avenues to get to where they are today, the two very different Busch brothers have found themselves in the midst of competing for the very same title in 2010. Due to their age difference, Kurt and Kyle had never competed in the same series until 2005, where both began driving against each other in the Sprint Cup Series.

    With a seemingly wide-open Chase this season, this may arguably the first time that both brothers have an equal chance to capture the season ending championship, but don’t expect the brothers to necessarily play nice when the heat of the title chase is at it’s hottest.

    Rewind back to 2007, where Kurt and Kyle were amidst a battle between each other during the All-Star Race, where Kurt didn’t give his brother any room—which sent both drivers into the wall and their cars being towed away by a wrecker. After the incident, the brothers didn’t talk for nearly seven months, and it wasn’t until a Christmas wish from their Grandmother for them to get along, did the two finally settle their differences.

    With six races left in the Chase for the Sprint Cup, and competitors finding themselves out of contention for the title after each race, it will be interesting to see if the two brothers play nice around each other, or if there may be another tense Christmas dinner for the Busch family.

    For the latest NASCAR talk and information, follow Kyle on Twitter: @TheKyleBrandt

  • Carl Edwards and Jimmie Johnson Bring Courage and Hope to Fontana

    Carl Edwards and Jimmie Johnson Bring Courage and Hope to Fontana

    NASCAR, like almost all sports, is based on competition. It’s all about the team with the fastest car, the best setup, the most points and wins. As human beings we love competition. This is exactly why we pick a favorite driver, a favorite car. It gives us a reason to watch on Sunday – to see our driver beat the other 42 guys on the track.

    While there may be that one guy that you would just love to see lose more than the others, there is no denying that just being out there takes a great deal of courage.

    At this Sunday’s Pepsi 400 televised on ESPN from Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, Calif., Edwards and Johnson will bring a different kind of courage to the racetrack – Beads of Courage.

    Developed in 2005, the Arizona-based nonprofit, international program provides innovative, arts-in-medicine supportive care programs for children coping with serious illness.

    Inspired by her clinical practice and time spent as a camp nurse at a Paul Newman Hole in the Gang Camp, Jean Baruch started Beads of Courage, Inc.

    She says that the joy children received through making things with beads and by wearing them and sharing them with their friends intrigued her. Baruch then translated this into a meaningful intervention that would help kids acknowledge their courage and with the financial support of family and friends, she piloted the program at Phoenix Children’s Hospital in 2004 and it has been a huge success ever since.

    The program provides children with a strand on which to place their beads, a bead color guide and a membership card.

    The “beads of courage” serve as symbols of courage that mark a milestone in the child’s particular path of treatment. The child is given a bead for each milestone, such as a first hospital visit or radiation treatment.

    The beads provide the children with a tangible way of recording and telling their stories of survival.

    Beads of Courage has partnered with hospitals across the United States, New Zealand and Japan and has lent their support to over 10,000 children in need.

    The program’s success will be all the more evident on Sunday as the program’s logo will be featured on the “TV panel,” or rear panel of the No. 99 Aflac Ford Fusion driven by Edwards.

    As part of the Jimmie Johnson Foundation and Samsung’s Helmet of Hope, the logo will also be seen on the helmet of Johnson, driver of the No. 48 Lowe’s Chevrolet.

    Launched in 2008, Johnson’s Helmet of Hope was started to provide fans and media members with the chance to nominate a charity of their choice to be featured on Johnson’s helmet during the Pepsi 400 race at Auto Club Speedway.

    This year’s program focuses on children in need in the U.S. and provides ten selected charities with a $10,000 grant and a spot on the “helmet of hope.”

    Beads of Courage was nominated by Becca Gladden, of Insider Racing News, and was chosen by the program to be featured during Sunday’s race.

    Edwards first discovered the Beads of Courage program while visiting the Aflac Cancer Center in Georgia, a hospital that utilizes the Beads of Courage program.

    Just like Baruch, the colorful beads and the joy they brought to the children intrigued the Sprint Cup driver.

    During his visit to the hospital, Edwards was given a strand of beads from a child named Dalton to wear for luck. At that Sunday’s race, Edwards wore his “beads of courage” and went on to win the race.

    In showing their support for the Aflac Children’s Cancer Center of Atlanta and Beads of Courage, the No. 99 Aflac Racing car will have a new paint scheme for Sunday’s race, featuring the logos of both organizations.

    Also, in honor of their commitment to the cause and in celebration of the Aflac Duck’s 10th birthday, Aflac has announced that they will support Beads of Courage with the creation of the Wingman Bead.

    According to the Aflac Racing website, the Aflac Duck has come to symbolize Aflac’s focus on pediatric cancer treatment and research.

    “Who doesn’t love the Aflac Duck?,” said Baruch, “He is fun, and a highly visible iconic symbol. I personally think he looks great wearing Beads of Courage.”

    The hope behind the Wingman Bead is that it will serve as a reminder to kids that they are never alone in their fight for life.

    On Sunday, Edwards and the entire Aflac Racing Team will wear the Wingman Bead as a symbol of their support and a reminder to the children that they are never flying solo.

    By visiting www.beadsofcourage.org, for just a $5 donation anyone can sponsor a Wingman Bead for a child coping with a serious illness. For $25 donors will provide five children with a Wingman Bead and will also receive their own bead as a reminder of their generous donation.

    Each bead is packaged with an Encouragement Book that explains the meaning behind the Wingman Bead and provides the children with fun activities for those long hospital stays.

    “Our hope is to get a Wingman Bead to every child in the Beads of Courage program” says Baruch.

    Hopefully with the help of Aflac Racing, the Jimmie Johnson Foundation and Samsung’s Helmet of Hope and the thousands of race fans at Sunday’s Pepsi 400 at Auto Club Speedway, every child in the program will have a Wingman.

    “We are delighted to have the opportunity to bring the Beads of Courage program to NASCAR once again in honor of all the kids we support, many who are also motorsports fans,” explains Baruch.

    She further explains that having Beads of Courage recognized by NASCAR sends a strong message of support to the children – a message that they have an entire audience supporting them in their journey of life and treatment, a flock of wingmen so to speak.

  • SpeedwayMedia News and Bits NASCAR Sprint Cup Series

    SpeedwayMedia News and Bits NASCAR Sprint Cup Series

    Here is NASCAR News and Bits: For the Pepsi Max 400 from Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, CA

    ** The Pepsi Max 400 will be televised on Sunday October 10 at 2:00p.m. on ESPN, with the drop of the green flag scheduled for 3:00p.m. The race will also be aired on MRN radio and Sirius NASCAR Radio Channel 128. This weeks race schedule prior to Sunday: Friday- Practice 12:00-1:30 p.m. with Qualifying at 3:40 p.m., Saturday- Practice 10:30-11:15a .m. and 11:50-12:50 p.m.. (all times local)

    ** Three drivers are looking at setting some milestones at Auto Club Speedway. Jeff Gordon driver of the No.24 Dupont Chevrolet, Bobby Labonte driver of the No.09 Phoenix Construction/Graceway Chevrolet, and Dale Earnhardt Jr. driver of the No.88 Amp Energy/National Guard Chevrolet are in pursuit of notable top-10 finishes. Gordon No. 275, Labonte No. 200, and Earnhardt Jr. No. 150. Sunday will also mark Earnhardt’s 36th birthday.

    ** Two-time Grammy winner Kenny Logins will perform a pre-race concert at Auto ClubSpeedway on Sunday, then sing the National Anthem. Fans attending the Pepsi MAX 400 also can enjoy Viva La Fiesta, part of Hispanic Heritage Month.The group will perform at the track’s DiscoverIE FanZone. Quintanilla also will be an honoraryrace official.

    ** A NASCAR hauler parade is scheduled tostart at 6 p.m. PT from Citizens Bank Arena andvisit Fontana, Ontario and Rancho Cucamonga before ending at the Auto Club Speedway garages.** Local schools will be in session Friday when hundreds of local middle school students will spend a day at the speedway to learn about the applications of math and science in racing. Speakers will include Gillian Zucker, president of Auto Club Speedway, Dr. Gary Thomas, San Bernido County Superintendent of schools and Diandra Leslie-Pelecky, Ph.D., author of the “Physics of NASCAR: How to make Steel + Gas + Rubber= Speed.”

    ** Auto Club Speedway’s Stater Bros.Racefest will take place from 5–9 p.m. PT Thursday in the track’s FanZone with an even dozen NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers slated to attend. The event also includes a freestyle motocross stuntshow with Rockstar Metal Mulisha, live music, rides and games.

    ** More than 40 couples will marry or renew vows prior to the Pepsi MAX 400. Gillian Zucker will officiate with Michael Waltrip serving as groomsman and Miss Sprint Cup as maid of honor.

  • Hot 20 over the past 10 – It’s been three months since Carl has had a bad finish

    Hot 20 over the past 10 – It’s been three months since Carl has had a bad finish

    June 27th. It was the first race in New Hampshire and Carl Edwards finished 25th. It would be the last time he ran outside the top dozen before the boys headed to California for this Sunday’s fourth race of the ten event Chase. Over that span Edwards has not yet won, but has ten Top Tens to his credit. If only he could finish on top once or twice, the title could wind up his. Then again, maybe he won’t even need it.

    Officially, Edwards is 53 points behind Jimmie Johnson in the Chase, but Carl has been hot for more than three months. The big question is if he can continue to be so to the end, or is the big chill about to begin?

    Here is how things stand for our hot 20 after the past ten events…

    *Chasers in bold

    1 (1) – Carl Edwards – 1532 pts
    Hasn’t had a bad finish in over three months.

    5 (3) – Jamie McMurray – 1374 pts
    If not for those six times 30th or worse this season.

    2 (7) – Kevin Harvick – 1421 pts
    On pace to have the best season of his career

    3 (2) – Kyle Busch – 1400 pts
    A dream machine turned Kansas into a nightmare

    4 (4) – Tony Stewart – 1394 pts
    Has left over a hundred Chase points on the table

    6 (5) – Jeff Burton – 1327 pts
    Too bad about those last 130 miles.

    7 (9) – Ryan Newman – 1314 pts
    Not bad for only leading 31 laps all season.

    8 (10) – Jimmie Johnson – 1313 pts
    Thinks California is the place they ought to be.

    11 (6) – Juan Pablo Montoya – 1285 pts
    Must be thrilled that he is not in Kansas anymore.

    9 (8) – Jeff Gordon – 1296 pts
    Whenever he feels down he just thinks of Mark and Junior.

    10 (17) – Greg Biffle – 1293 pts
    Keeping within the top 15 each week would sure help.

    12 (13) – Matt Kenseth – 1254 pts
    Jack must be a happy man with three in the top ten at Kansas

       �
    16 (16) – A.J. Allmendinger – 1173 pts
    Has ran well since the Chase; too bad he is not in it.

    13 (11) – Denny Hamlin – 1235 pts
    Not good, not bad, just was what it was.

    14 (15) – Kurt Busch – 1226 pts
    Sure glad he didn’t tick off Reutimann.

    15 (12) – Clint Bowyer – 1186 pts
    Forget the title, he is fighting just to have dinner.

    17 (20) – Joey Logano – 1115 pts
    Tired of Ambrose and his baby kangaroo jokes.

    18 (21) – Mark Martin – 1097 pts
    After six straight outside top 15, has been inside the last two.

    19 (18) – Martin Truex Jr – 1096 pts
    Four straight 20th or worse.

    20 (22) – Marcos Ambrose – 1063 pts
    Loves singing Six White Boomers to Logano.

  • NASCAR Top-10 Power Rankings: Kansas

    NASCAR Top-10 Power Rankings: Kansas

    Note: The quotes in this article are fictional.

    1. Jimmie Johnson: Johnson followed his win at Dover with a runner-up at Kansas, second only to race winner Greg Biffle. Johnson also took the lead in the Sprint Cup point standing, and leads Denny Hamlin by eight.

    “Our last two results have erased the disappointment of our race at New Hampshire,” Johnson said. “With a win and a runner-up, as well as the points lead, you could say we put that first Chase race, as well as the Chase field, ‘behind us.’”

    2. Denny Hamlin: Hamlin struggled with handling in the Price Chopper 400, finishing 12th and tumbling from the lead in the point standings. Hamlin, who led Jimmie Johnson by 35 entering the race, now trails the four-time defending champion by eight.

    “I guess it’s fitting,” Hamlin said, “that one week after the bottom fell out for Clint Bowyer, the ‘top’ fell out for me.

    Now, Kevin Harvick and I have supposedly made up from our incident at Dover. And people want to know what’s wrong with NASCAR. I’ll tell you what’s wrong—feuds that last only a week. A quick solution? Put Brad Keselowski in the Chase field.”

    3. Kevin Harvick: Harvick led 16 laps and finished third in the Price Chopper 400, as Chase drivers occupied to top seven spots. Harvick improved two places in the point standings to third, and trails Jimmie Johnson by 30.

    “Believe me,” Harvick said. “Of all people, I know what ‘striking distance’ is, and we’re well within striking distance. Although I wouldn’t dare do the things to Jimmie Johnson that I’ve done to Denny Hamlin.

    And speaking of Hamlin, we’ve mended our differences. At least that’s what we’re telling everyone. The truth is, our truce involves one simple agreement….to disagree.”

    4. Jeff Gordon: Gordon posted his first top-5 finish since Chicagoland with a fifth at Kansas, his 11th top 5 of the year. Still winless in his last 58 races, Gordon jumped three places in the Sprint Cup point standings to fifth, and trails Jimmie Johnson by 58.

    “I firmly believe someone could win the Cup without winning a race,” Gordon said. “Of course, there are several other things one can do without winning a race. I know, because everything I’ve done in the last two years has been done without winning a race.”

    5. Greg Biffle: Biffle raced to a dominating win in the Price Chopper 500, leading 60 laps on the way to his second win of the year. Back in the title hunt, Biffle is now in eighth, 85 points back.

    “The No. 16 Sherwin-Williams Ford was perfect late in the race,” Biffle said. “We may not have been fastest at the start, but we were fastest when it counted. Just call my car the ‘High Plains Swifter.”

    6. Carl Edwards: Edwards started 31st and hit the top 10 midway through the race at Kansas, leading two laps on his way to a sixth-place finish, his 16th top-10 result of the year. He is now fourth in the point standings, 53 out of first.

    “Although I’m from Columbia, Missouri,” Edwards said, “I consider Kansas my home track. But, as my winless streak can attest, even at home I can’t be a visitor to Victory Lane.”

    7. Kyle Busch: Busch made contact with David Reutimann early at Kansas, causing Reutimann to spin. Later in the race, with Busch running in the top 10, Reutimann struck back, sending the No. 18 M&M’s Toyota into the wall. Busch dropped to 22nd after the accident, and eventually finished 21st, one lap down. He fell four places to seventh in the point standings, and trails Jimmie Johnson by 80.

    “If my name wasn’t ‘Busch,’” Busch said, “Reutimann would have never retaliated. It’s difficult to swallow being wrecked by a driver who’s not even in the Chase. Reutimann stuck his nose in where it didn’t belong. You’d think I would deserve a break. I guess some free passes don’t come as easily as others.”

    8. Kurt Busch: Busch, in the No. 2 Miller Lite Dodge, finished a disappointing 13th at Kansas, undone by handling conditions at a track where he’s traditionally struggled. Busch dropped two spots to sixth in the point standings, 70 behind Jimmie Johnson.

    “The No. 2 Miller Lite Dodge just wasn’t fast enough to challenge for the win,” Busch said. “Unlike my brother Kyle, I didn’t need another car to hinder my Chase chances. The one I was driving handled that fine on its own.

    But I‘m surprised David Reutimann wrecked Kyle. Will I seek revenge on behalf of Kyle. Will I take the ‘2’ to tango? Unlikely. I’ve been called many things by many people, but never a ‘nepotist.’”

    9. Tony Stewart: Stewart led four times for a race-high 76 laps in the Price Chopper 400, but trouble on late restarts cost him a shot at the win. He finished fourth, and now trails new points leader Jimmie Johnson by 127 points.

    “127 points is not an impossible deficit to make up,” Stewart said. “With a rash of failed inspections and a outbreak of practice session feuds, I could be back in business. In actuality, though, the deck is ‘Smoke-stacked’ against me.”

    10. Jeff Burton: Late-race handling problems prevented Burton from scoring in the top 5, and he instead settled for a disappointing 18th-place run at Kansas. Burton fell two places in the points to ninth, and trails Jimmie Johnson by 101 points.

    “We’re 101 off the lead,” said Burton, “which doesn’t seem so bad considering there are seven races remaining. But, upon further inspection, that large of a deficit doesn’t really appeal to me.”

  • Daytona International Speedway Repaving: Jostens to Offer Official Track Collection

    Daytona International Speedway Repaving: Jostens to Offer Official Track Collection

    Jostens announced today, in conjunction with Daytona International Speedway, the starting grid of limited edition memorabilia containing actual track pieces from Daytona International Speedway. Race fans and collectors will now have the rare opportunity to own a piece of American racing history following the historic 2010 repaving of Daytona International Speedway.

    From the first race in 1959 to the last race of 2010  before the repave, Daytona International Speedway holds more than 50 years of unforgettable racing memories. Now fans will be able to hold on to every legendary Daytona story with a piece of genuine track where racing history happened. The Commemorative Track Collection includes unique one-of-a-kind genuine track pieces. Quantities of these commemorative pieces are limited and available only while supplies last.

    Jostens is offering sixteen unique items. These items are being offered on Jostens official website. Such items included are a: Daytona Track Medallion,Piece of Turn 3, Framed Collage, and Front Stretch Track Surface, Jostens will be adding more items, in the coming weeks.

    This will be only the second time that this historic track has been repaved, the first came in 1978. The repaving project has a target finish date of January 1,2011. Which would have the track ready for Speedweeks 2011, which will kick off the 49th annual Rolex 24 At Daytona and conclude with the 53rd annual running of the Daytona 500 on Sunday Febuary the 20th, the prestigious season-opening event to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.