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  • Full schedule for Daytona International Speedway

    Full schedule for Daytona International Speedway

    The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, the NASCAR Xfinity Series and the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series head to Daytona International Speedway this weekend to kick off the 2019 season.

    Please check below for the complete weekend schedule.

    All times are Eastern.

    Thursday, Feb. 14 

    2:35 p.m.: Truck Series first practice – FS2

    4:35 p.m.: Truck Series final practice – FS2

    7 p.m.: Cup Series Duel 1 (60 laps, 150 miles) – FS1

    9 p.m.: Cup Series Duel 2 (60 laps, 150 miles) – FS1

    Friday, Feb. 15

    12:05 p.m.: Xfinity Series first practice – FS1

     1:05 p.m.: Cup Series third practice – FS1

     2:05 p.m.: Xfinity Series final practice – FS1

     3:05 p.m.: Cup Series fourth practice – FS1

     4:40 p.m.: Truck Series qualifying – FS1

     7:30 p.m. Truck Series NextEra Energy 250 race (100 laps, 250 miles) – FS1

    Saturday, Feb. 16

    9:40 a.m.: Xfinity Series qualifying – FS1

    12:05 p.m.: Cup Series final practice – FS1

    2:30 p.m.: Xfinity Racing Experience 300 (120 laps, 300 miles)  – FS1

    Sunday, Feb. 17 

    2:30 p.m.: Cup Series Daytona 500 race (200 laps, 500 miles) – Fox

    Follow @angiecampbell_ for the latest NASCAR news and feature stories.

  • Full starting lineup for Gander RV Duel races at Daytona

    Full starting lineup for Gander RV Duel races at Daytona

    Staff Report |NASCAR.com 

    Sunday’s Daytona 500 single-car qualifying set only the front row for the “Great American Race” — Hendrick Motorsports teammates William Byron (Busch Pole Award) and Alex Bowman will lead the field when the green flag drops Feb. 17 (2:30 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

    The qualifying speeds, though, set the lineups for Thursday’s Gander RV Duel races at Daytona (7 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), the twin 60-lap races that determine the full starting lineup for the 61st running of the Daytona 500.

    Duel 1 is typically comprised from the odd-numbered drivers on the Daytona 500 qualifying speed chart — first, third, fifth, etc. Duel 2 is then the even-finishing drivers. NASCAR officials, though, ensure an even number of Open, non-Charter teams in each duel race.

    The results of those two races will determine the cars that qualify for the Daytona 500, and where they line up on the grid. The winner of Duel 1 will start the Daytona 500 in third place, second place starts fifth, and so on through the inside row. The winner of Duel 2 will start the Daytona 500 in fourth place, second place starts sixth and so on through the outside row.

    Additionally, Tyler Reddick and Casey Mears locked themselves into the Daytona 500 field by virtue of being the fastest two Open cars during qualifying.

    Below is the starting lineup for each Duel race.

    * denotes Open, non-Charter team

    DUEL 1 LINEUP

    STARTING POSITION DRIVER TEAM
    1. William Byron Hendrick Motorsports
    2. Jimmie Johnson Hendrick Motorsports
    3. Daniel Hemric Richard Childress Racing
    4. Martin Truex Jr. Joe Gibbs Racing
    5. Brad Keselowski Team Penske
    6. Paul Menard Wood Brothers Racing
    7. Kyle Busch Joe Gibbs Racing
    8. Kevin Harvick Stewart-Haas Racing
    9. Tyler Reddick* Richard Childress Racing
    10. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Roush Fenway Racing
    11. Daniel Suarez Stewart-Haas Racing
    12. Chris Buescher JTG Daugherty Racing
    13. Ryan Newman Roush Fenway Racing
    14. Ryan Truex* Tommy Baldwin Racing
    15. Ryan Preece JTG Daugherty Racing
    16. Matt DiBenedetto Leavine Family Racing
    17. Bubba Wallace Richard Petty Motorsports
    18. Matt Tifft Front Row Motorsports
    19. Parker Kligerman* Gaunt Brothers Racing
    20. Landon Cassill StarCom Racing
    21. Cody Ware Rick Ware Racing

    PROJECTED DUEL 2 LINEUP

    STARTING POSITION DRIVER TEAM
    1. Alex Bowman Hendrick Motorsports
    2. Chase Elliott Hendrick Motorsports
    3. Joey Logano Team Penske
    4. Clint Bowyer Stewart-Haas Racing
    5. Austin Dillon Richard Childress Racing
    6. Denny Hamlin Joe Gibbs Racing
    7. Erik Jones Joe Gibbs Racing
    8. Ryan Blaney Team Penske
    9. Aric Almirola Stewart-Haas Racing
    10. Kurt Busch Stewart-Haas Racing
    11. David Ragan Front Row Motorsports
    12. Michael McDowell Front Row Motorsports
    13. Casey Mears* Germain Racing
    14. Jamie McMurray Spire Motorsports
    15. Brendan Gaughan* Beard Motorsports
    16. Kyle Larson Chip Ganassi Racing
    17. Ty Dillon Germain Racing
    18. Ross Chastain Premium Motorsports
    19. Corey LaJoie GO FAS Racing
    20. BJ McLeod Petty Ware Racing
    21. Joey Gase* Motorsports Business Management
  • The Final Final Word – A new season brings new hope

    The Final Final Word – A new season brings new hope

    A new season. A new group of people and combinations. A new rules package. A new reason to hope for more entertaining action.

    We can only hope that this time they will succeed.

    Now, before we get all gooey talking about the good ole days when they raced door to door to the line every time, that is a false memory. Unless you were a fan of Ned Jarrett, his 14 lap win over Buck Baker in the 1965 Southern 500 had to have been as exciting as watching Tom Brady leading the Patriots against the Ardrossan High School Bisons. I hope it was a very nice day to sit in the sun to view something like that. The next best cars were a further five laps behind.

    More than a decade has passed since everyone and their celebrity pet hound had it bad for NASCAR. To be honest, that might have been a very lovely blip on the sport radar. It was a time when those in the south, and a few elsewhere, those who had followed the action for thirty years met up with the celebrities who had been hooked for all of 30 minutes. Big television contracts, big sponsors, big hype and exposure, and even big expenditures were to follow. For a while. The huge television deals still have five years to run, but the sponsors are dwindling along with the fans, the ratings and the exposure. Now, they have to be concerned with those expenditures. What they need to do is capture white lightening in a bottle once more. Can it be done?

    Reduced engine horsepower and aero ducts to promote tighter racing is one plan. That is the aim on most of the tracks over a mile long, with the Daytona 500 an exception. Expect a taller spoiler, a larger front splitter with a bit of an overhang as they seek added downforce and more stable handling. The guy who celebrates on Victory Lane might not be the same name as the guy in the history books. With the top two cars, and a random third, taken for inspection at the track post-race, a major transgression will mean disqualification. That means instead of a win a team could be relegated to 40th place, and it might take up to two hours before the final positions are made official. That won’t delay the post-race celebrations, but how will fans react to seeing the shaking bubbly and the tearful interview, only to discover the son-of-a-gun had no business celebrating? If that happens too many times, a lot of people won’t be very happy. While some would love for it to happen, when Tom Brady got the Super Bowl Trophy no one was going to take it away.

    Teams come and go. Drivers come and go. Crew chiefs come and go, or simply move on. The big story, though, are the fans. They also come and go but will some who left come back? Will new fans be enticed to check it out so the tracks will finally stop tearing down grandstands? Will the racing be such that you wish to capture each and every moment of the experience, with no desire to fast forward to the end?

    Some of those answers could start coming our way this Sunday at the Daytona 500. Here is hoping all our hopes come true.

  • Jimmie Johnson evades late-race incident to win Advance Auto Parts Clash

    Jimmie Johnson evades late-race incident to win Advance Auto Parts Clash

    William Byron Gives Hendrick Motorsports 5th Consecutive DAYTONA 500 Pole

    ·       Hendrick Motorsports Locks In Front Row for DAYTONA 500 with Byron, Alex Bowman Qualifying 1-2

    ·       Jimmie Johnson, Chase Elliott Complete Top-4 HMS Qualifying Effort

    DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Feb. 10, 2019) – Jimmie Johnson. Remember him? Just in case you’d forgotten about the capabilities of the two-time DAYTONA 500 champion – and seven-time Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series champion – he served up a reminder Sunday by making a trip to Gatorade Victory Lane at Daytona International Speedway.

    “I’m here to win races,” Johnson said.

    In the morning, Johnson won his age division (Men’s 40-44) in the Daytona Beach Half Marathon. In the afternoon, after triggering a multi-car incident, Johnson was declared the winner of the 41st annual Advance Auto Parts Clash at Daytona International Speedway.

    The 75-lap Advance Auto Parts Clash (with scheduled segments of 25 and 50 laps) is a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series non-points/all-star event. The 20-driver field featured pole winners from the 2018 season, past Clash champions, past DAYTONA 500 champions who competed full-time in 2018 and drivers who qualified for the 2018 Monster Energy Series Playoffs.

    Johnson, also the Advance Auto Parts Clash champion in 2005, was battling front-running Paul Menard for the lead following a Lap 48 restart that came after an eight-minute red-flag period due to rain. On Lap 57, Johnson attempted an inside pass with his No. 48 Ally Chevrolet and side drafted the left rear of Menard’s No. 21 Motorcraft/Quick Lane Tire & Auto Center Ford. Menard appeared to slightly block the move. The move caused Menard – who had the dominant car, leading 51 laps – to spin. That led to an incident involving a total of 17 cars.

    Johnson scooted away from the trouble that brought out the caution. Minutes later the red flag came out because of rain. Soon afterward, NASCAR halted the event after 59 laps to give Johnson his first victory since June 2017. Former DAYTONA 500 champion Kurt Busch finished second followed by Brad Keselowski.

    “Knowing the rain was coming – we could see it coming – I knew that was probably my lap to make the move,” Johnson said. “I had a great ride down the back. I got below him before he blocked it. And then I think he came down a little to defend and block.

    “Certainly hate to see all these cars torn up. I’m here and making my move. I think it was more of a racing thing than anything. I didn’t drive through a car and cause a wreck.”

    For the second-straight year, DAYTONA 500 Qualifying Presented By Kroger and the Advance Auto Parts Clash combined for an afternoon doubleheader. Prior to the Clash, William Byron, driving the No. 24 Axalta Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports (HMS), won the pole for the 61st annual DAYTONA 500 set for Sunday, Feb. 17, with a lap of 194.305 mph on the historic DIS 2.5-mile tri-oval.

    Byron’s teammate and last year’s pole winner Alex Bowman (No. 88 Nationwide Chevrolet) qualified second at 194.154. Bowman led the first round of single-car qualifying which pared the field to 12 drivers for the final round.

    And if that wasn’t enough for the storied Hendrick organization, Johnson and two-time DAYTONA 500 polesitter Chase Elliott (No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet) completed a top-four qualifying sweep for HMS.

    The two-round qualifying session “locked in” Byron and Bowman for front-row starts in the DAYTONA 500 and also established the grids for Thursday night’s Gander RV Duel, a pair of 150-mile races that determine the DAYTONA 500 grid after the front row. Byron and Bowman will start on the respective Duel race poles.

    Byron’s first Monster Energy Series pole gave Hendrick Motorsports its 13th DAYTONA 500 pole – and a record fifth consecutive in “The Great American Race.” For Chevrolet, it marked their 700th pole position in the Monster Energy Series.

    “I think we were realistic; we probably thought we were going to be somewhere in the hunt,” said Byron, 21 and starting his second season in the Monster Energy Series in Jeff Gordon’s iconic No. 24 ride.

    “Our guys have done a lot of work … it’s kind of been a hard‑working off‑season for them and there have been a lot of things in the works, so I was excited to get down here and see what we had. We’re looking forward to kind of checking this off and going on to [next] Sunday.”

    Byron’s new crew chief is Johnson’s former one – Chad Knaus, who guided Johnson to seven Monster Energy Series championships.

    “I couldn’t be prouder of the 24 team and of Hendrick Motorsports,” Knaus said. “This is such a huge accomplishment.”

    “I’m so happy for William – and for all our guys,” added team owner Rick Hendrick. “We’re just pumped. This is a great way to start the year … this is ‘the deal’ to start on the pole at Daytona.”

    Tickets for the 61st annual DAYTONA 500 and all other Daytona International Speedway events can be purchased online at www.daytonainternationalspeedway.com or by calling 1-800-PITSHOP. Fans can stay connected with Daytona International Speedway on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram,PinterestYouTube and Snapchat, and by downloading Daytona International Speedway’s mobile app, for the latest Speedway news throughout the season.

  • Ford Performance NASCAR: Brad Keselowski Teleconference Transcript

    Ford Performance NASCAR: Brad Keselowski Teleconference Transcript

    Ford Notes and Quotes

    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series (MENCS)

    Daytona Speedweeks Advance (Daytona International Speedway, Daytona Beach, FL)

    Thursday, February 7, 2019

    Brad Keselowski, driver of the No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang, is still looking for his first victory in the Daytona 500. He was a guest on this week’s NASCAR teleconference and talked about why that race is so hard to win, along with his thoughts on the debut of Mustang to the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series.

    BRAD KESELOWSKI, No. 2 Discount Tire Ford Mustang

    Q. What would a Daytona 500 win mean for you?

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: It’s something I thought a lot about. There’s a couple thoughts on my mind. Before last season I had never really won a major NASCAR race. I won the championship, done a lot of those things, which is certainly great. I hadn’t won a major. Last year after winning Darlington and Indianapolis, gosh, the thrill from that. I’m still kind of on a high from that. That was almost six months ago.

    But Daytona is, of course, the 500, one major I don’t have. I feel like it’s a race we’ve been competitive at. We had opportunities to win it. For a number of reasons, it hasn’t come together, which is sometimes unsettling. People ask me all the time, What race is the one that got away? It’s the 500, has been so far. I want to change that.

    We have a great opportunity to do that this year. We have a rules package we’re pretty familiar with. The Ford Mustang has now come out. We had our pre‑season testing in Las Vegas. It looks like it’s going to be a killer car. We’re really excited about that.

    Opportunities are in front of us. I feel like if I could win the Daytona 500, it would be the biggest win of my career. I’m ready to do it. I still have a good understanding of what it’s going to take to do it. It’s just a matter of kind of putting the whole race together from my perspective, from the team’s perspective as well, then not having any bad luck.

    I feel like the car is there, the team is there, I’m there. We’re all ready to win this race. Hopefully the time is now this year in 2019.

    Q. It’s so hard to define to people how difficult, luck aside, it is to win the Daytona 500. Can you describe how difficult it is to pull off a win in that race. Obviously you have to have a lot of talent, but put in perspective how hard it is not only to survive but to win that one.

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: Well, you hit the right word, the survival part. That’s been the hardest part for me. I feel we’ve been good enough to win it multiple times. We get caught up in somebody else’s wreck or problem. I think you see that a lot.
    Besides the luck factor, first things first, you got to be running at the end of that race. For whatever reason, I think maybe because it’s the first race of the year, maybe because it’s one of the biggest races of the year, I’m not entirely sure, but the Daytona 500 has traditionally been a race of very high attrition. Getting to the end has been very difficult for us.

    It’s probably kept us from winning it at least once or twice because, like I said earlier, I think we’ve had the car to do it. I think that’s a big part of why it’s so hard to win, the attrition factor, just surviving it to begin with.

    Again, of course, it is a difficult racetrack. This time of year, Florida is a lot hotter than most parts of North America, but this time of year it seems to be one of those racetracks that you practice and you qualify, then the race day, for whatever reason, the track temp goes way up, the cars slide around a lot more, chaos ensues. Trying to survive to the end for me is the biggest part.

    The races we have survived till the end, we have ran really well and been in a position to win. Hopefully that’s the case for us this year. I feel confident if I can be there at the end, we can win the race.

    Q. Is it smarts, courage, too? Is that the element, or mostly luck because you’re all good?

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: Well, not entirely sure which one it is. It takes a little bit of both. There’s definitely some courage in the moves you need to make. There’s some smarts, as well.

    I feel like the Daytona 500 is one of those races, a lot of restrictor plate races are this way in my mind, one of those races where one year it takes smarts and great execution, and one year it takes a lot of luck. It seems to rotate back and forth.

    I went back and watched a lot of film. Joey Logano won the race two or three years ago, 2015, and same thing with Denny Hamlin. They made smart and courageous moves to win the race. They really, really earned it.

    Then I’ve seen other races, not to pick on anybody, where I would say that’s not the case. Someone was lucky enough to be running at the end of the day. The 500 kind of fell into their laps. That can be really frustrating when you feel like you’ve done everything right, the luck side is not in your favor.

    You got to get back up on the horse and ride. I feel like a number of the opportunities we’ve had to win fell through our hands and there’s nothing we could have done differently. We go back there, we keep our hope, we do all the right things and control all the things we can control, know that will give us our best chance of winning.

    Q. Knowing that it’s taken so long for some really big names to win this race, Tony Stewart never won it, Dale Earnhardt, took him 20 dries, you haven’t won it, Kyle Busch, any reason for that that you can name, why it takes especially guys who are really talented plate drivers that long to win this race? Does it give you any solace to know you’re not alone?

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: I think it’s an acute observation, one that’s not lost on me. I think the moves that should work and normally would work on plate tracks don’t work on the 500 because of kind of the chaos of that race. It’s almost like you need a different playbook for the 500 than you do a normal plate race. I know that’s kind of hard to explain.

    Kind of reminds me, I love the military, things of that nature, I was reading this handbook, military handbook, on how to handle different things. All kinds of different game plans, strategies for attacks. One of the things in the back of the book is, Remember, everything here is for normally trained soldiers going up against another normally trained soldier. There’s no way to prepare for a kamikaze, no way to train for somebody that does crazy stuff.

    I read that book and I laughed because that’s a lot how the 500 is. Moves that should work don’t work because for whatever reason that race gets people amped up, crazy, and they do weird things. Your normal playbook, a lot of times it doesn’t work for the 500. It’s part of the randomness of the race.

    The way racing is, especially plate racing, a lot of your success is dictated by others specific to getting crashed out. It makes it very difficult, especially for me and probably drivers like Kyle would probably say the same thing. It makes it very difficult for us because we’ve built a playbook of things we feel good about and we know are the right moves, they’ve worked for us on the other plate tracks, and they don’t work at the 500 because of the randomness of that race. It’s frustrating. But, yeah, I do take some solace in that. I’m hopeful we can just break through that.

    Q. Even though it’s the biggest race of the year, do you almost have to not overthink it, not prepare less but not overprepare?

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: Yeah, I mean, you just don’t know what kind of race it’s going to be. If it’s a race like 2015 and 2016, you want to be as prepared as possible. You better make the right move at the exact right moment with the right amount of smarts, courageousness.

    If it’s a race like we saw in ’17 and ’18, probably the worst thing you can do is be prepared for it because then you have preconceptions of moves that should work and they don’t because the race is so random, it actually gets you in more trouble. It’s a very, very difficult race to prepare for.

    Q. I saw you were tweeting the other day about your tweet during the 2012 race. What are your memories of that night? Some people say it’s the most famous tweet in NASCAR history. Can you claim that?

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: If you’re going by the amount of retweets and favorites, it’s probably not. I think Dale Earnhardt Jr. has that one easily, whether winning the 500 or making a mayo sandwich.
    It certainly was a special night. I didn’t win the race that night which would have made it even cooler. A lot went down. I think that was really my first taste of realizing how powerful social media could be. I’m thrilled to death that it brought a lot of the social media following to the sport. That wasn’t my intent. My intent was just to kill some time, have a little bit of fun. I sure am glad that other people thought it was as much fun and as cool as I did.
    It’s part of the passion that I think a lot of people share for the sport and still do share for the sport.

    Q. When you go into the Daytona 500, as somebody that is widely considered the best, if not, restrictor plate racer, does not winning make you more frustrated or do you feel like it’s going to come because you have to have that confidence in yourself?

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: I’m definitely very frustrated. There’s no doubt about it. But on the other side I’m confident if we keep doing the right things, not to sound too cliché, but trust the process, it will come together. That means you put the work in, you follow the playbook the best you know how, that we developed, try to make it count.

    It’s easy to get discouraged, and of course, frustrated. I do get discouraged and frustrated by that particular race because we haven’t had the outcome that I feel like we’re capable of or even sometimes that we’ve deserved.

    With that in mind, that’s the past. Just like if we had won the race before, it wouldn’t mean nothing for this race. Because we lost the race before doesn’t mean anything to me for this race. We have to move past that, embrace the opportunity in front of us, and that’s where my head is at.

    Q. What are your thoughts, kind of your approach, to pole qualifying? It’s still a very special part of the sport in terms of it being a separate weekend in setting the front row. What is your approach and the team’s approach? Chevrolet has done that a lot in recent times.

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: It’s a big deal to me, it’s a really big deal to me for a number of reasons. One, it goes back to the legacy, the history of the sport. They used to do qualifying in NASCAR over multiple days, all that good stuff. My dad and uncle who were part of those big races would tell the stories, I’d listen to them, about how big a deal it was to qualify on Pole Day at some of these events. It wasn’t just Daytona, it was a lot of tracks that would do multiple days, qualifying races, whatnot. It’s a big deal for a lot of reasons.

    It’s something that any time we can honor the tradition of the sport, that’s becoming more and more important to me as I get older. I guess it’s one of the things you learn when you get older. I think it’s great.

    Probably one of the things that stands out to me, it’s one of the few accomplishments in all of motorsports that Roger Penske doesn’t have, being on the front row for the Daytona 500, at least the pole. Boy, would we like to change it. I know it’s high up on his list as something he wants to cross off. We put a lot of thought into it. I’ve tried to put a lot of emphasis on it.

    I told all of our guys that I would give them all the money if we won the pole. They’re pretty excited about that. That’s been kind of neat to see their faces light up. But hopefully we can get it done.

    Q. With Daytona being really the (indiscernible) restrictor plate race for the NASCAR schedule, how much effort has the team put effort into Daytona? Have they put more effort into Talladega and the summer race in July?

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: It’s on a case‑by‑case basis. Some days you’re going to put more effort in for others just by the way the season flows, your development, your cycle flows for your team.
    I would say this year, as much as any, we’re putting a lot of effort into Daytona because we have a new car with the Ford Mustang. We want to get it right. It needs all the development time it can have. It’s part of where we’re at in the cycle.

    It’s certainly the race I would think of as being the most prepared for just by the nature of it being the first race of the season. It reminds me a little bit like when I was in school, the first day of school. The night before I would kind of lay out all my clothes, have my backpack packed, pencils, notebooks, whatever it might be. Of course, you get a little bit later in the school year, you’re getting dressed the morning of, you’re barely finding your clothes, your backpack is a mess, all that kind of stuff.

    That’s probably the best way I know how to explain the Daytona 500, it has a lot of that first‑day‑of‑school feel, everybody is super prepared, sometimes a little too anxious as well.

    Q. With the test last week in Las Vegas, are teams giving it their all or playing cat and mouse, I don’t want to show my hand?

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: Shoot, hard to speak for everyone. I could speak for myself. I know I gave it my all. We learned a bunch of stuff. I know it’s hard to learn when you don’t give it your all. When you’re playing half‑assed, you’re going to get half‑assed results come game time. You have to practice. I know we did.

    I guess I can’t speak for everyone else. I thought we had a really fantastic test. I’m feeling pretty confident that we’re going to be able to head to Vegas, Atlanta here in a few weeks after the 500, be pretty strong.

    Q. A lot of people don’t know about this, you have started a manufacturing company down in South Carolina. Can you explain as a racecar driver how this is going to benefit you in some ways.

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: I’m looking at different machines and things. I think it’s a great way for me to relate to motorsports in a lot of different ways. They don’t let me touch the cars at Team Penske, which is probably a good thing.

    I think a lot of my experiences in motorsports has been that as a racecar driver I’m kind of at the top of the feedback loop. I give the team the feedback they need to make the racecars the best they possibly can be, then they go back and they reengineer them, rebuild them, remanufacture them, et cetera, et cetera, then we go race again. That’s kind of the weekly cycle of motorsports.

    At the end of the year or sometimes the middle of the year, NASCAR makes a bunch of rules changes, you go back through the cycle again.

    With that in mind, understanding the technology I think is good for me, both engineering and the manufacturing side. Helps me provide critical data and feedback to the team in how they can be the best possible.

    That’s something I really enjoy being a part of. It makes me feel even more ingrained in the teamwork or the fiber of the team that’s required to be successful at the highest level of motorsports.

    Q. Because you have this company now, it will explode in front of your face to do a greater thing, don’t think about retirement because your name is too important to NASCAR to retire.

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: Thank you. I’m not. I certainly have a really big goal in front of us, and I can tell you I’m a long ways from thinking about retirement. I want to win more championships and of course the immediate goal in front of us, the Daytona 500.

    Q. What are your thoughts overall on NASCAR’s new rules package?

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: I had a test in Las Vegas last Friday, and it went really well. I think I made a concerted effort to not think so much about the rules package and be more selfish in 2019. With that in mind, we were really, really fast at the test. I think we’re going to be really, really good this season. I got both thumbs up and head down ready to go race.

    Q. Do you see conflicting feelings among different drivers, though?

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: I mean, yeah, there’s a lot of opinions. Like anything else in racing, you’re going to have, of 40 some drivers, you’re going to have 25, 30 different opinions on any topic, some more aligned than others. This one seems to be as polarizing as any topic I can recall. The rules are set for 2019. It’s up to myself and my team to make the most of them.

    Q. How do you explain to a fan what the difference is with the things they have changed?

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: The cars are definitely a little bit faster in the middle of the corner. You’re pulling a little bit more g‑forces, which is kind of fun. I kind of like that. Then they’re quite a bit slower down the straightaway. The top speed is less but the average speed is not quite as less. It’s definitely a shift. You’re on the gas pedal a lot more than you were before, and not using hardly any brakes at a lot of these bigger tracks. That’s just part of it. We’ll have to adjust to it.

    Q. Do you think it’s going to take a long adjustment period to adapt and feel out what’s going to work and what’s not?

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: I expect the industry to be caught up by the time we get to Kansas, late April, early May. We’ll see it settle in what’s it’s going to be about that time period.

    Q. How important is the car’s number to a driver?

    BRAD KESELOWSKI: I know it’s important to a lot of my fans who got tattoos of it. To me specifically, it’s not super important to me. I like the number 2, it’s a good number. If I had my pick, it would be 19 or 29 because of my family’s name and legacy, always been those two numbers. There was a time period where it was 88, real cool when I had the opportunity to run that. For me, I’m glad to hold the heritage and legacy of the 2 car for Roger Penske. I think it means a lot to the team, for sure.

  • 2019 NASCAR Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony Honors Five NASCAR Legends

    2019 NASCAR Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony Honors Five NASCAR Legends

    Allison, Gordon, Kulwicki, Penske and Roush Officially Enshrined

    DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Feb. 1, 2019) – Five of NASCAR’s legendary competitors – three drivers and two owners – were enshrined into the NASCAR Hall of Fame in Charlotte, North Carolina, tonight during the Induction Ceremony held in the Crown Ball Room at the Charlotte Convention Center.

    Davey Allison, Jeff Gordon, Alan Kulwicki, Roger Penske and Jack Roush comprise the 10th Class of the NASCAR Hall of Fame – now home to 50 inductees.

    A phenom from Northern California, Gordon is credited for taking NASCAR from a southern pastime to the mainstream. He became the youngest driver in the modern era to win a premier series title as a 24-year-old in 1995. The leader of the Rainbow Warriors – named for his colorful Chevrolet – went on to win three more championships (1997, ’98, 2001). In 1998 Gordon won a modern era-record 13 races. He finished his career third on the all-time wins list with 93 victories. The youthful, flashy Gordon served as the perfect rival to the rugged Dale Earnhardt Sr. and was the first NASCAR driver to host “Saturday Night Live.” He retired from full-time NASCAR racing as the sport’s iron man, boasting a record 797 consecutive starts.

    “What a special evening. I’m so honored to be here surrounded by friends, family, fans and many people that have worked very hard behind the scenes for me over the years,” Gordon said. “Thank you to the fans who make racing the great sport that it is. You make being a race car driver a dream come true.”

    Allison is regarded as one of the top pure talents to ever take the wheel of a race car. He won 19 races and 14 poles before his tragic death in a helicopter accident in 1993 at 33 years old. The son of 2011 NASCAR Hall of Fame Inductee Bobby Allison, he finished second to his father in the 1988 Daytona 500 as the pair became the only father-son duo to finish first and second in NASCAR’s biggest event. Allison would later win ‘The Great American Race’ in 1992.

    An accomplished short-track racer from Wisconsin, Kulwicki moved to Charlotte in 1984 with only a pickup truck and self-built race car with the hope of competing in NASCAR’s premier series. He quickly made his dream into a reality earning Rookie of the Year with his self-owned team in 1986 and picking up his first win at Phoenix in 1988. Despite lucrative offers, Kulwicki never raced for anyone but himself. In 1992, he overcame a 278-point deficit with six races left to capture the NASCAR premier series championship on the strength of two wins, 11 top fives and 17 top 10s. Unfortunately, Kulwicki never got the chance to defend his title after dying in a plane crash on the way to Bristol Motor Speedway in 1993. He’ll forever be known for his trademark “Polish Victory Lap,” a celebratory cool-down lap with the driver’s window facing the fans.

    One of America’s renowned entrepreneurs, Roger Penske has built a motorsports empire involved with racing for more than 50 years. Penske has won 114 NASCAR premier series races, two Daytona 500s (Ryan Newman, 2008; Joey Logano, 2015), four Xfinity Series owner titles, and two premier series owner championships (Brad Keselowski, 2012; Joey Logano, 2018). Outside of competition, he built Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California, in 1996 and previously owned Michigan International Speedway. NASCAR Hall of Famers Rusty Wallace (36 wins) and Bobby Allison (four wins) have raced for Penske.

    “This Hall of Fame honor and this moment is very special to me, and I am so glad to share it with my family and friends,” Penske said. “Racing has been a part of my life almost as long as I can remember. It is a common thread that is woven throughout all of our Penske business. Racing is simply who we are.”

    A graduate-level mathematician and engineering entrepreneur from Michigan, Roush was a drag racing owner and enthusiast before he decided to try his hand at NASCAR in 1988. Since entering the sport, he’s won a record 324 races across NASCAR’s three national series and boasts five owner championships, including two premier series titles (Matt Kenseth, 2003; Kurt Busch, 2004). Roush initially built his powerhouse team by pairing with 2017 NASCAR Hall of Fame Inductee Mark Martin, who won 83 national series races for Roush from 1988-2005.

    “‘When I announced my plan to start a NASCAR Cup team in January 1988, few if any knowledgeable fans and even fewer Cup team personnel would have given me favorable odds of surviving for more than three decades as I stand before you tonight,” Roush said.

    In addition to the five inductees enshrined today, Jim Hunter was honored as the fifth recipient of the Landmark Award for Outstanding Contributions to NASCAR.

    Hunter’s career in the NASCAR industry spanned more than 50 years as a NASCAR executive, track president, public relations professional and journalist. He worked for a decade as an award-winning journalist before transitioning to public relations for Dodge, then Darlington Raceway and Talladega Superspeedway. In 1983, Hunter was named NASCAR vice president of administration. Ten years later, he became president of Darlington Raceway and corporate vice president of the International Speedway Corporation. Hunter was a close confidant of Bill France Jr. who lured him back to NASCAR in 2001 to lead an expanded public relations effort aimed at responding to the needs of burgeoning media coverage. Many drivers and industry executives credit Hunter’s mentorship as the key to their NASCAR success.

    Prior to tonight’s Induction Ceremony, journalist Steve Waid was presented the seventh Squier-Hall Award for NASCAR Media Excellence.

    About NASCAR

    The National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing, Inc. (NASCAR) is the sanctioning body for the No. 1 form of motorsports in the United States. NASCAR consists of three national series (Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series™, NASCAR Xfinity Series™, and NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series™), three regional series, one local grassroots series, three international series and the Automobile Racing Club of America (ARCA). The International Motor Sports Association™ (IMSA®) governs the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship™, the premier U.S. sports car series. Based in Daytona Beach, Fla., with offices in eight cities across North America, NASCAR sanctions more than 1,200 races in more than 30 U.S. states, Canada, Mexico and Europe. For more information visit www.NASCAR.com and www.IMSA.com, and follow NASCAR on FacebookTwitterInstagram, and Snapchat (‘NASCAR’).

  • Keeping the faith with Trevor Bayne

    Keeping the faith with Trevor Bayne

    After covering NASCAR for 10 years I have come to the realization that there are some drivers that you feel an almost instant connection with, despite your best efforts to remain impartial. For me, that driver is Trevor Bayne – my first NASCAR interview.

    Since team owner Jack Roush announced on September 12 that Bayne would not return to drive the No. 6 car in 2019, my memories of that interview in 2009 have been foremost in my mind. And while I’m certain that he probably has no recollection of that day, it was a pivotal moment for me as I began my foray into the world of NASCAR.

    I remember this particular interview as if it was yesterday. Even though I had spent hours researching and taking notes, I wasn’t prepared for the awkwardness I would feel as I walked into his hauler. And, I didn’t anticipate the various crew members who were also there, especially the ones sprawled on the floor that I had to step across, or the accompanying noise level that I feared would be distracting.

    Bayne, however, was anything but awkward.

    He quickly put me at ease with his thoughtful and articulate answers and I soon forgot my surroundings. I was impressed with this 18-year-old although, at the time, I didn’t realize that he had set such a high bar. I would soon learn that not all interviews would go as smoothly and that some drivers would not be as well-spoken or as open. But Bayne’s interview instilled in me a confidence that I would carry with me moving forward.

    During his career, Bayne has experienced the highs and lows of a sport that can be rewarding one moment and devastating the next. He went from being part of the Dale Earnhardt Inc. driver development program in 2008 to find himself out of a ride due to lack of funding the following year.

    “It’s devastating to see what can actually happen,” he told me. “You know, I was kind of put in a bubble growing up my whole life because everything went so smooth. We were always running good in races, and that just created more opportunity. And then, the economy, when that happened, it didn’t matter the amount of talent that you had, or the ability, because nobody could fund it at that point.”

    Bayne, however, used that disappointment to fuel his desire and propel him to the next level. A meeting with Gary Bechtel (former owner of Diamond Ridge Motorsports) led to a racing deal in the Xfinity Series with Michael Waltrip Racing on a part-time schedule in 2009 that continued through September 2010.

    “We were able to prove ourselves in that amount of time,” Bayne said. “It’s drawn a lot of opportunity and I’m really appreciative for that chance to show what we can do. I would say that’s been the biggest turning point, just being able to get back in a race car and show what we can do and help create that interest.”

    Bayne also relied on his faith during the difficult times.

    “God’s got a plan for my life and he’s shown that. Every time that I’ve been in a tough spot, he’s always prevailed and pulled me through. I know that he has a plan for everything. And at the time it seemed like the worst thing in the world that could possibly happen, losing the deal at DEI. But now, the opportunities that have been created, it’s been amazing to me. To see the plan going into action that God has laid out for my life, it’s pretty awesome.”

    The next stage of his journey came in October 2010 after forming an alliance to compete for Roush Fenway Racing in the Xfinity Series and his debut Cup Series race with Wood Brothers Racing at Texas Motor Speedway on Nov. 7, 2010. Bayne remained with Wood Brothers Racing on a limited schedule through 2014.

    And who could forget his astonishing Daytona 500 win in 2011? He scored the victory in only his second Cup Series start and became the youngest driver to win NASCAR’s premier event. It was the highlight of his career.

    This memory is as vivid for me as that first interview, but not for the reasons you might think.

    A few weeks earlier I had lost my brother in a tragic accident and I was struggling to find my way out of the fog of grief that had enveloped me. NASCAR was the last thing on my mind. But old habits die hard and I found myself in front of the television watching the race.

    As I watched the final laps of the race unfold, I couldn’t believe this 20-year-old kid might actually win. When he crossed the finish line and I heard him scream, “Are you kidding me?” I remember laughing out loud. It was exhilarating to see how far he had come since that 2009 interview.

    Bayne’s Daytona 500 win came one day after his 20th birthday on February 19, ironically a birth date he shared with my brother.

    For the first time in weeks, I had completely forgotten everything else and was lost in that moment. And even though the excitement soon faded, for those few minutes, I had forgotten my sorrow and had taken the first small step in beginning to heal.

    As Bayne celebrated that day, little did he know that he would face his own challenges as unexpected health issues took center stage.

    Bayne began experiencing various symptoms including fatigue, nausea and blurred vision. Although he underwent extensive tests, doctors were unable to determine the cause of his illness. As a result, he competed in only a partial schedule that year. Although he didn’t experience any more symptoms, Bayne continued to search for an explanation and finally, in June 2013, his doctors confirmed a diagnosis of multiple sclerosis.

    In 2015 he began competing for Roush Fenway Racing full-time in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series with a partial schedule split with Matt Kenseth in 2018. In 187 Cup Series starts, he has one win, five top fives and 16 top 10s.

    His last race for RFR was at Texas Motor Speedway where his Cup career had begun in 2010. Bayne described the experience on Instagram.

    “Surreal feeling this weekend. Not sure to be sad about it potentially being the last one, or excited about what God will have next for us. I’m feeling a lot of both to be honest.”

    Shortly after his release from Roush Fenway Racing, Bayne expressed his determination to continue his racing career, saying, “First of all, my health is 100 percent. I am as fit physically, mentally, spiritually as I have ever been to do my job well. The second part is that my desire is still as it has always been since I was five-years-old, to come to the race track every weekend and contend for wins, championships and be a driver at the top level in the Cup Series. Nothing in that has changed.”

    Whatever the future holds, Bayne will undoubtedly embrace it with the same conviction and heart that has exemplified his life and career. And, hopefully, destiny will intervene and our paths will cross once again.

    Follow @angiecampbell_ for the latest NASCAR news and feature stories.

     

  • NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Power Rankings-Championship Edition

    NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Power Rankings-Championship Edition

    The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series went to South Florida this past weekend for the final race of the year. It was the site where a new champion was crowned and for the first time ever, the champion won the last race of the year and the championship at the same time.

    So for the final time this year, let’s take a look at this week’s power rankings from Homestead Miami.

    1. Brett Moffitt – It should be to no surprise that Moffitt topped the power rankings once again for the last time in 2018. He continued his dominant season by winning back to back races and ultimately, the championship. It was the first championship of any kind for the Grimes, Iowa native. Moffitt started fifth and finished third in Stage and won Stage 2. He didn’t take the lead until Lap 40 and led for 27 laps for the first run. He fell back a bit late in the going, but not much as he battled with Noah Gragson until Gragson had a tire issue before his regular scheduled pit stop, which would cost him the championship. Moffitt was back in the lead on Lap 106 to lead the final 29 laps to win for the sixth time of the year. It speaks volumes as to how strong the No. 16 Hattori Racing team was this season. It’ll be interesting to see if Moffitt returns to the 16 in 2019 or if they’ll find a new driver. It will be a shame if Moffitt doesn’t return to the team next year, but sponsorships and funding determine that. Winning everything keeps Moffitt at the number one spot.

    Previous Week Ranking: 1st

    2. Noah Gragson – Despite the tire issue, it seemed as though Gragson could have been champion. He started third and finished third after finishing second in both stages. Gragson shone early and traded battles with eventual champion Moffitt. One has to wonder, if it weren’t for the tire issue, how the battle for the championship would have turned out. But if wishes were fishes, the whole world would be an ocean. Nonetheless, Gragson tried all he could to rebound and catch Moffitt, but it wasn’t enough or meant to be.

    Previous Week Ranking: 2nd

    3. Grant Enfinger – One week removed from just barely missing out on the championship race, Enfinger didn’t let that deter him from having a strong finish. He dominated Stage 1 by leading all the laps and wound up third in Stage 2. Enfinger was in contention to win the race but came up two seconds short to finish second after starting on the pole.

    Previous Week Ranking: 4th

    4. Matt Crafton – After a dismal season without a win, Crafton showed signs of running up front from a disappointing qualifying effort of 22nd. He already was in the top 10 when Stage 1 ended, where Crafton finished fifth and then finished fourth in Stage 2. He led twice for four laps and won the race off pit road, following one of the stages. Ultimately, the No. 88 team finished sixth to end 2018 and they are already looking forward to a better 2019.

    Previous Week Ranking: Not Ranked

    5. Stewart Friesen – Friesen started second and finished fourth after a quiet night. Friesen finished seventh and sixth, respectively in both stages. A strong season for the No. 52 team who made the Playoffs, won stages and ran up front to challenge for wins, but just couldn’t quite pull it off. However, this team looks to come back next year and contend for wins once more, and perhaps wind up in victory lane.

    Previous Week Ranking: 3rd

    Fell Out

    1. Harrison Burton – Burton finished 11th, but did not finish in the top 1o in either stage and was just off all night. Either they missed the setup or something happened, but it was an odd way to finish the season.

    Previous Week Ranking: 5th

  • Camping World Truck Series 2018 Season Just What Division Needed

    Camping World Truck Series 2018 Season Just What Division Needed

    The 2018 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series season is now four days over, and observers all agree that it was an ideal year for the sport’s number three division. No incessant talks of Cup drivers ruining the show, no extra nonsense with behind the scenes matters, and a series regular earned the title with an underdog team as Brett Moffitt used six season wins to score a championship.

    The 2018 season was by the regulars, for the regulars, and not an ounce of hubris was in sight. Not only was there a strong storyline in Moffitt’s championship run, other drivers had their time in the sun. Justin Haley surprised many when he went from winner at Gateway and MoSport to championship threat with his Texas win in November. Johnny Sauter continued to be the best in the division with six wins. Noah Gragson was always at the front in his Kyle Busch Motorsports Tundra while teammate Todd Gilliland contended for wins throughout the season. Even ThorSport driver Grant Enfinger put up some strong numbers, even scoring a win at Las Vegas in the Playoffs.

    The 2018 Truck Series season was host to some of the best racing in NASCAR during the year, which lives up to the division’s reputation as a haven for good racing. That had been a difficult claim to boast in previous seasons as part-time dominance wrecked winning hopes for series regulars. Instead, in 2018 non-series regulars won five races, as Kyle Busch won two and John Hunter Nemechek, Chase Briscoe, and Timothy Peters all won once. That left the season to be decided by who mattered the most–division regulars.

    2018 was the season the Truck Series earned it’s identity back after years of just being viewed as a lesser division, a feeder/development series. Quite the opposite is true; any racing division should be recognized not as a feeder series but as it’s very own product. The Truck Series has been in this position before, producing some of the best product in NASCAR and standing on the strength of its own quality product.

    The division isn’t out of the woods yet as several teams face the very real issue of finances. Season champion Moffitt and his Hattori Racing Enterprises are unsure they’ll be paired up next season despite this season’s successes. This is an ongoing problem across the board with successful drivers still going without rides as they’re not bringing in enough funding.

    But if the Truck Series can have another season like 2018, and if drivers like Moffitt can secure funding for another championship run, the division might not become an equal to the Cup series, but it can come close.

     

     

  • The Final Word – Logano wins at Homestead as my television suddenly went black

    The Final Word – Logano wins at Homestead as my television suddenly went black

    As a journalist, I can say this. Joey Logano is a very talented driver, an aggressive driver who knows what he has to do and has the desire and the ability to pull it off. He is a very deserving Cup champion. I say that as a journalist.

    However, in these days of “fake news”, I should mention that I write this as a columnist. A true journalist, of whom there are very few these days, observe and chronicle events impartially and objectively, without bias or partisanship, giving you information based on only what they see and not on how they feel.

    I am a fan who writes a column, complete with my observations, my opinions and even my emotions on the subject. So, as a journalist, I applaud and recognize the talents of our new champion. As a fan, I must say I am just a bit disappointed. I mean, Joey Logano? You got to be freaking’ kidding me. Him?

    I did not see the post-race interviews or celebration. They did not interest me. I did not feel satisfied with the outcome of the race. Martin Truex Jr.? I only wish. Kevin Harvick? He is my man. Kyle Busch? The man is a top-drawer talent, a sure Hall of Famer one day. Logano? One day I may come to embrace him, to love him as a fan, to celebrate his deeds. Sadly, that day has not yet arrived.

    Every one of our four championship contenders was right there in the mix until the last half dozen laps or so. Busch started on the front row, but it was Harvick the top dog after the opening stage. In the second, Harvick was again the man, even though Kyle Larson managed to beat him at the line to claim the stage. When they came back on the track after pit stops, Logano was up front, followed by Harvick, Busch, and Truex in that order. The best was going up against the best. They survived, they thrived, as the four contenders led the way ahead of the 35 pretenders.

    With 48 laps to declare a champion, Truex had gotten by Logano. Green flag stops saw Harvick the best of those who stopped, but Busch had not and led his closest rival by 22 seconds, with Logano right behind Harvick running fifth. Daniel Suarez got sent for a skid and after more pit action it was Busch still ahead. With 17 laps to run, Busch had the lead exiting the pits but Truex took off as the action returned to green. He looked gone, but looks can be deceiving. Just four laps later, with the Jaws-theme playing in our heads, Logano tracked the defending champion down. He made the pass, and it was he who disappeared into the sunset to claim the 2018 Cup championship. He had the talent and the horses to seal the deal.

    Truex was second. Harvick finished third. Busch concluded his season in fourth. However, it was the 28-year-old from Middletown, Connecticut making up for his 2016 runner-up season. It was his third win of the year and the 21st of his Cup career. It was freaking Joey Logano.

    Like it or not, it was a well-deserved victory. It matters not that I did not like it. An objective observer would wish to celebrate. However, few fans are that objective. Me included.