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  • Hot 20 – At win at Homestead could move one of the boys closer to legendary status

    Hot 20 – At win at Homestead could move one of the boys closer to legendary status

    Legends are rare. Many get an honorary title, no doubt stars in their own right at one time long ago or a pioneer of some description. However, to be a true legend, an icon, it takes a lot to make the grade. In NASCAR, David Pearson was an undisputed legendary driver, one of the best all-time, a true giant of the sport.

    The Silver Fox passed away this week at the age of 83. His 105 career Cup victories have him placed only behind the 200 accumulated by the King, Richard Petty. Sixty-three times the pair finished one-two on the track, an amazing statistic showcasing what is unarguably the greatest rivalry in the sport. It stretched from the 1963 Sandlapper 200 in Columbia, South Carolina through to the 1977 World 600.

    Pearson’s career covered the years of 1960 through to his final start in 1986, yet he managed to race in more than half the schedule just a dozen times. Running 90 percent of the schedule? Just thrice. That does not even include his 1966 championship year, one of his three titles, when he won 15, competed in 42, skipped out on seven others. In 1973, he won 11 of the 18 he competed in. While Petty drove in everything, Pearson drove when he wanted. It appears that when he wanted, he wanted to win. Pearson’s first victory was the 1961 World 600. His last was Darlington’s Rebel 500 in 1980, one of the nine he competed in that season. In total, 574 starts, 105 wins.

    David Pearson is truly among NASCAR’s racing gods residing atop its Mount Olympus. Truth be told, he has had a reservation up there for a very long time.

    At Homestead, one of four hope to add to their own legacy, to maybe establish themselves as one of the sport’s future legends.

    1. KYLE BUSCH – 5000 POINTS (8 Wins – 1388 Season Points)
    Will the best on the season be the championship winner?

    2. KEVIN HARVICK – 5000 POINTS (8 Wins – 1333 Season Points)
    Back in the old days, this championship would have already been decided.

    3. MARTIN TRUEX JR. – 5000 POINTS (4 Wins – 1212 Season Points)
    One final race for the boys and girls from Colorado.

    4. JOEY LOGANO – 5000 POINTS (2 Wins – 1192 Season Points)
    Believes he is the favorite going in. All he has to do now is prove it.

    5. CHASE ELLIOTT – 2320 POINTS (3 Wins)
    With one shot, Denny managed to burst the bubble of not one, but two rivals.

    6. KURT BUSCH – 2318 POINTS (1 Win)
    Too much gas cost him the lead, too much Hamlin kept him from taking it back.

    7. ARIC ALMIROLA – 2316 POINTS (1 Win)
    For a moment he must have believed, but the hamster under the hood was not big enough.

    8. BRAD KESELOWSKI – 2309 POINTS (3 Wins)
    Penske teams are out…but they won’t let themselves be forgotten.

    9. RYAN BLANEY – 2278 POINTS (1 Win)
    In fact, no one would be terribly surprised if either Brad or Ryan wins this weekend.

    10. KYLE LARSON – 2256 POINTS
    Too late for this year, but he keeps reminding us that there is more than one Kyle out there.

    11. DENNY HAMLIN – 2252 POINTS
    His final shot to keep his yearly win streak alive, and he can not be counted out.

    12. CLINT BOWYER – 2242 POINTS (2 Wins)
    Went from rating among the top eight to hanging on as a member of the dirty dozen.

    13. AUSTIN DILLON – 2219 POINTS (1 Win)
    Might not win this one, but he has done well in the next one.

    14. JIMMIE JOHNSON – 2217 POINTS
    The beginning of the end or just a blip on the radar?

    15. ERIK JONES – 2207 POINTS (1 Win)
    NASCAR has two guys with the same name, kind of. Is there room for an Eric one day?

    16. ALEX BOWMAN – 2196 POINTS
    Though he has done well, he still hasn’t made us forgot the name of the guy he replaced.

    17. RYAN NEWMAN – 747 POINTS
    No playoff run this year, but he still is the Hot Dog Eating Champion in four states.

    18. RICKY STENHOUSE JR. – 680 POINTS
    If you thought he was fired up at Phoenix, you should have seen his car.

    19. PAUL MENARD – 680 POINTS
    Last week at Phoenix he reminded me of the Arizona Cardinals. 29th place.

    20. DANIEL SUAREZ – 667 POINTS
    McMurray is just three points back. Neither has a ride for next season.

  • David Pearson, NASCAR’s ‘Silver Fox,’ dies at 83

    David Pearson, NASCAR’s ‘Silver Fox,’ dies at 83

    Zack Albert | NASCAR.com

    David Pearson, a three-time champion in NASCAR’s premier series widely regarded as one of the sport’s finest drivers, died Monday. He was 83.

    Pearson was welcomed into the NASCAR Hall of Fame in 2011 as the top vote-getter in the shrine’s second induction class. His cause of death is unknown at this time. His family had reported that Pearson suffered a stroke in December 2014.

    Nicknamed “The Silver Fox” in a nod to both his late-race guile and prematurely gray hair, Pearson won 105 races in NASCAR’s top division, placing him second only to Richard Petty’s 200 victories on the all-time list. Perhaps more remarkably, Pearson never competed in a full season and his win total came in 574 starts — less than half of Petty’s 1,184.

    In a Sports Illustrated poll in 1999, a panel of 40 longtime experts in the sport voted Pearson as the magazine’s NASCAR Driver of the Century. The 1976 Daytona 500 winner was named one of the sport’s 50 Greatest Drivers during NASCAR’s 50th anniversary season in 1998.

    “David Pearson’s 105 NASCAR premier series victories and his classic rivalry in the 1960s and ’70s with Richard Petty helped set the stage for NASCAR’s transformation into a mainstream sport with national appeal,” NASCAR Chairman and CEO Jim France said in a statement. “When he retired, he had three championships — and millions of fans. Richard Petty called him the greatest driver he ever raced against. We were lucky to be able to call him one of our champions. The man they called the ‘Silver Fox’ was the gold standard for NASCAR excellence.

    “On behalf of the France Family and everyone at NASCAR, I want to offer sincere condolences to the family and friends of David Pearson, a true giant of our sport.”

    RELATED: David Pearson through the years

    Born David Gene Pearson on Dec. 22, 1934, near his longtime hometown of Spartanburg, South Carolina, his first racing experience came in the Palmetto State’s thriving dirt-track circles. Pearson said he bought his first car at age 17. His progress on his home state’s bullrings soon caught the eyes of several car owners, moving him up the ranks to big-league stock-car racing.

    Pearson’s career in NASCAR’s premier series began in 1960. Though he ran just half of the 44 races, he netted the first of his 113 career pole positions and was named Rookie of the Year.

    Pearson’s career arc accelerated in 1961, when he teamed with master crew chief Ray Fox for three victories — two at Charlotte, one at Daytona — in his second season. His first victory came in spectacular fashion in just the second-ever World 600 — now the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Bearing down on the white flag, his John Masoni-owned No. 3 Pontiac blew a right-rear tire. Pearson limped home with sparks flying from the wheel rim for the final lap and a half to take the checkered flag and the lucrative $29,450 purse.

    From there, Pearson drove for a succession of powerhouse teams with Hall of Fame credentials — Cotton Owens, Holman-Moody and the Wood Brothers. He also raced for Hall of Famer Bud Moore in Mustangs prepared for the Trans Am Series in its glory years.

    “I’m just a plain ol’ country boy, what you want to call it,” Pearson said as he was introduced for his NASCAR Hall induction. “That’s the way I was raised and brought up to be. Racing has been good to me and I owe everything I got to racing.”

    Pearson won 15 of 42 premier series races in 1966 to score his first championship with Owens, a NASCAR Hall inductee in 2013. Another prolific stretch the next five seasons with Holman-Moody brought back-to-back series titles in 1968-69, cementing his legacy as a savvy race strategist as the sport moved toward longer races on bigger speedways.

    Lee Holman, the son of team co-founder John Holman, told NASCAR.com in 2014: “With Pearson, they used to say with about four laps to go, he’d throw his cigarette out the window and you’d better hold on, because the race was about to happen.”

    Hall of Famer Leonard Wood, his crew chief from 1972-79 in his family team’s famed No. 21, told USA Today in 2015: “He could sense what was going to happen and be ready for it. A lot of drivers drive no further than the end of the hood and don’t see the danger ahead of them. He could figure out a lap ahead where drivers were going to be and what kind of trouble they were about to get in.”

    Pearson, admittedly bashful with the media, was typically plain-spoken and simply focused on driving cars. But he also hid his cool and calm demeanor behind sunglasses, often conducting his short Victory Lane interviews in the car with a still-dangling cigarette — a habit he later kicked, but one that was in full swing during his racing days thanks to the dashboard lighter he kept handy.

    Pulitzer Prize-winning sportswriter Jim Murray captured Pearson as the picture of stock-car racing in the 1970s, writing in a column before the 1974 season finale: “David Gene Pearson is a good old country boy who’s been looking down that lonesome road in a stock Mercury ever since he escaped the cotton mills 20 years ago. He doesn’t eat cheese with holes in it or toast with fish eggs on it or birds under glass and he don’t drive none of those la-de-da cars that come with a monocle attached. There ain’t no marquises or counts in the races David drives in.”

    Pearson will forever be linked with Petty, a seven-time champion and one of his biggest rivals. Throughout the 1970s, their car numbers — 21 for Pearson and 43 for Petty — were often atop the scoring pylon. The two drivers finished 1-2 in the premier series 63 times, with Pearson winning 33.

    Petty told ESPN’s Ed Hinton in 2009: “Pearson could beat you on a short track, he could beat you on a superspeedway, he could beat you on a road course, he could beat you on a dirt track. It didn’t hurt as bad to lose to Pearson as it did to some of the others, because I knew how good he was.”

    They were never more closely intertwined than the 1976 Daytona 500, one of NASCAR’s most memorable finishes. After some feverish dicing in the final lap, Pearson and Petty crashed exiting the final turn within sight of the checkered flag. Both cars absorbed heavy damage against the outside retaining wall, but Pearson was able to keep his Mercury running as both slid to the tri-oval grass.

    “Seems like everywhere we go, when it comes down to the last lap, it’s me and Richard,” Pearson told the Associated Press after he crept across the start-finish line at low speed for his only victory in The Great American Race. “Of all those times, I’ll guarantee you this was the strangest.”

    Pearson’s victory tally with the Wood Brothers totaled 43. Their successful association ended abruptly in April 1979 at Darlington Raceway, his hometown track where he won 10 times — a record that still stands.

    Pearson prepared to leave pit road after the Wood Brothers changed right-side tires, not knowing that the well-choreographed pit crew had already loosened the left-side lug nuts in preparation for a four-tire stop. Leonard Wood said “Whoa! Whoa!” over the radio. Pearson heard, “Go! Go!” The No. 21 lurched and made it to the end of pit road before scraping to a halt on two tires. The two sides parted ways the following week.

    After leaving the Wood Brothers, Pearson won two more races — both at Darlington, one for car owner Rod Osterlund in 1979 and one for Hoss Ellington the following season. He continued in the series, running less than half the schedule until making his final start — a 10th-place effort at Michigan — in 1986.

    After a three-year hiatus, Pearson attempted a comeback with the Wood Brothers as a substitute driver for the injured Neil Bonnett. After a day of testing, the 54-year-old Pearson said he woke up the following morning with soreness and decided that he would end his racing career on Sept. 27, 1989.

    “I left the track Tuesday with every intention of running the race,” Pearson said in a conference call with reporters. “The car ran and drove great, and I really wanted to run. But my back and neck hurt so much when I woke up this morning that I knew I couldn’t run a 500-mile race and do justice to myself and the Wood Brothers. Knowing I couldn’t run the car as good as it was, I realized that I can’t run any time. So I guess this is my official retirement from driving.”

    Fittingly, Petty presented Pearson for induction in the NASCAR Hall, just a few days after they shared some playful banter about who shouldered the blame for their collision in the final lap of the 1976 Daytona 500. After sharing his own genuine appreciation, Pearson joked right back in his acceptance speech.

    “He’s probably the one that made me win as many as I did,” Pearson said. “I ran hard because he’d make me run hard. Sometimes he’d make a mistake and I’d pass him. Of course, I didn’t ever make no mistakes. I always accused him of having big engines when he passed me.

    “But he’s a good sport, and I’m telling you, I’ve had more fun running with him than anyone I’ve ever run with because I know if I ever went to a race track and he was there, if I could beat him, I’d win the race.”

  • The Final Word – The championship hopes of four were unable to rise from the ashes at Phoenix

    The Final Word – The championship hopes of four were unable to rise from the ashes at Phoenix

    LEADERSHIP…sucks. Usually, when you lead a race, when you are the guy kicking ass and taking names, it is a good thing. Not at Phoenix. It turned out to be steering the leading car was very similar to being the moral compass on the Walking Dead. You just wind up being some zombie’s souffle. Just when a boy became the golden child, the man out front, the driver all alone leading the parade, fate kicked him in the teeth.

    Kevin Harvick was the man to start. He had the pole, he took the lead, he beat back all challenges from Chase Elliott. Then, with a couple of laps to go in the opening stage, a tire went down, his lead went out the window, and he was forced to pit. Elliott grabbed the points. Harvick wound up with a bucket of something less tasteful than honey.

    Off to the second stage. Elliott lost the front to Kurt Busch. He dominated. He was the man. Joey Logano already had his pass to Homestead, so when his left rear let go and wrecked out, no big deal. However, with about 20 laps left, Clint Bowyer’s own left rear departed to end his day as well as his championship hopes.

    It was time to pit, to get some fresh rubber. Harvick stayed out after the caution had put him back on the lead lap. A win by Busch would have made that fact meaningless, but he decided to gas it coming to the pits and that pushed him past the pace car. A lap penalty was his reward. Once again, Harvick was back in the top four in the battle to advance, along with Logano, Martin Truex Jr. as well as Kyle Busch, who went on to win the stage.

    So, when it came down to the final push, Harvick was just three points ahead of Kurt in points banked, but sitting a lap and more than 20 positions ahead of him on the track. Of course, if Elliott could win it, it would not matter what either of those two boys did. As for Kyle and Truex, they just had to avoid disaster to run against Logano for the championship next week.

    It was all Kyle Busch. For a while. Then he gave up the lead to Elliott. Just in time, as it turned out. When Elliott pitted under green, he was a little too speedy. So much for the lead, but on an interesting track, both the action and the intrigue just went up a notch. Who was going to be in and who was going to be left on the outside? All the contenders were back on the lead lap, all had a shot coming down to the final 50 laps.

    Some of the mystery went away late in the run. Kurt Busch was not leading, but he was close. When Denny Hamlin got loose and went up the track, he got very close to Busch. Too close. They made contact, Busch caught the fence, then turned down to take out Elliott. Three on the outside were now done, with only one challenger remaining.

    Aric Almirola needed to win. He needed to catch Kyle Busch. He looked good for a short time. Too short. There were just not enough ponies under his hood. When they hit the line, Kyle won his 51st career Cup race, with Brad Keselowski and Kyle Larson between him and Almirola. Harvick finished fifth, Truex was 14th.

    Despite the storylines, the quartet for Homestead remained as expected. Logano and the Big Three go in, with the best of the four in Florida in that one race taking home the championship. Next week, leadership will mean everything.

  • NASCAR Top-10 Power Rankings

    NASCAR Top-10 Power Rankings

    Note: The quotes in this article are fictional.

    1. Kyle Busch: Busch started sixth at Phoenix and took the checkered flag in the Can-Am 500 to advance to Homestead with a chance to win his second Cup championship.

    “Kevin Harvick got in when Denny Hamlin knocked out Kurt Busch and Chase Elliott,” Busch said. “Either Kurt or Chase could have played the spoiler, and the last thing Harvick needed is another troublesome spoiler.”

    2. Kevin Harvick: Harvick started on the pole at Phoenix and finished fifth after an early flat tire scare.

    “Our goal was to start on the pole,” Harvick said, “build a big lead, and pray we didn’t ‘get caught.’ I guess two out of three ain’t bad.”

    3. Martin Truex Jr.: Truex finished 14th at Phoenix and advanced to Homestead on points.

    “I’ll have to go through three other drivers to remain Monster Energy Cup champion,” Truex said. “And if need be, I’ll literally ‘go through’ Joey Logano to get there.”

    4. Joey Logano: Logano blew a left rear tire early, leading to a spin. He finished 37th.

    “It’s me,” Logano said, “and Kevin Harvick, Kyle Busch, and Martin Truex Jr. at Homestead. I’m in trouble because now all three of those guys have vowed not to let me win.”

    5. Kurt Busch: Busch was running second late in the race before he was taken out by an overly aggressive move by Denny Hamlin. Busch finished 32nd.

    “I’m not sure what Denny was thinking,” Busch said. “But I’m pretty sure who Kevin Harvick was thanking.”

    6. Chase Elliott: Elliott started second at Phoenix but was collected in a crash when Denny Hamlin spun Kurt Busch late in the race. Elliott finished 23rd, three laps down.

    “It sucks that I don’t have a chance to become the Monster Energy Cup champions,” Elliott said. “But I’m looking forward to just being a spectator at Homestead. And Lord knows NASCAR needs as many of those as possible.”

    7. Aric Almirola: Almirola finished fourth at Phoenix.

    “I needed a win to get to Homestead with a chance to be NASCAR champion,” Almirola said. “I didn’t get the job done. I came up a little bit ‘short;’ ironically, my championship hopes said ‘so long.’”

    8. Brad Keselowski: Keselowski finished second at Phoenix.

    “I’m pulling for my Penske Racing teammate Joey Logano to win the championship,” Keselowski said. “Mostly because Roger Penske told me I had to. It’s the closest you’ll get to ‘team orders’ in NASCAR.”

    9. Kyle Larson: Larson finished third in the Can-Am 500, posting his 12th top five of the year.

    “It’s the ‘Big 3’ and ‘Sliced Bread’ in the finale,” Larson said. “Here’s a little-known fact: a young Tony Stewart was also known as ‘Sliced Bread.’ Then he got heavy and his nickname changed to ‘Doughy.’”

    10. Denny Hamlin: Hamlin finished 13th at Phoenix.

    “If not for me and my reckless driving,” Hamlin said, “Kevin Harvick wouldn’t be among the Final 4 at Homestead. I drive a Toyota Camry; Harvick now says I drive a Dodge ‘Bullet.’”

  • Kyle Busch claims victory at ISM Raceway after wild race in the desert

    Kyle Busch claims victory at ISM Raceway after wild race in the desert

    Kyle Busch won the Can-Am 500 at ISM Raceway in Phoenix clinching his spot in the Championship 4 at Homestead next week. Busch led 117 laps in route to his eighth win of the 2018 season.

    Brad Keselowski finished second, Kyle Larson third, Aric Almirola fourth and Kevin Harvick finished fifth.

    Harvick captured the pole on Friday and led the field to the green flag. Even though Harvick led the majority of the laps in Stage 1, it wasn’t really a dominating performance. Joey Logano who had already clinched a spot in the Championship 4 struggled during the stage. Logano complained about the car not turning and lost many spots.

    While leading, Harvick had the right-front tire go flat and that forced him to pit in the closing laps of Stage 1. Harvick finished the stage in the 30th position.

    Chase Elliott benefited from Harvick’s troubles and won Stage 1 followed by Ryan Blaney, Denny Hamlin, Kurt Busch and Keselowski.

    Elliott was able to keep the lead after pit stops but Kurt Busch took the lead on the restart of Stage 2.  Harvick, who was one lap down after the flat tire, began working his way back to the front.  Within 10 laps, Harvick was able to get himself in the free-pass position if a caution came out.

    Things went Harvick’s way when Joey Logano crashed on Lap 95, ending Logano’s day and Harvick received the free pass in the 22nd position.

    The green flag came out again on lap 104 with Kurt Busch in the lead.

    Bowyer’s championship hopes came to an end when he hit the wall hard in Turns 3-4, bringing out a caution flag.  During the caution, Kurt Busch was hit with a costly penalty for passing the pace car on his entry to pit road and was held back one lap.

    Truex led the field for the restart with 10 laps left in Stage 2 but Kyle Busch was able to take his lead away. This resulted in Busch winning Stage 2 followed by Keselowski, Truex, Harvick and Larson.

    The final stage began with Kyle Busch leading with key Playoff drivers trying to take away important positions. Harvick made his way back up to the top 10 after the flat tire positioning him in seventh. Almirola and Truex also remained around the top 10.

    Elliott took the lead from Kyle Busch on Lap 225. A caution came out on Lap 228 after the No. 97 car spun. Elliott sped on pit road which was a huge setback in his hopes of making it into the Championship 4. This made him give up the lead and restart in the back.

    With less than 100 laps to go the aggression started to build within the Playoff drivers. Elliott was trying to overcome his pit road penalty while Harvick and Kurt Busch were battling as they were separated by just one point for the final spot in the Playoffs.

    A caution came out with 50 laps left when Ricky Stenhouse Jr. slammed into the wall bringing out a red flag. Different strategies came into effect with the Playoff drivers. Kurt Busch stayed on the track while almost everyone else elected to pit.

    Eric Jones and Kurt Busch led the field to the restart with 44 laps to left. It only took one lap after the restart for a wreck to happen. Hamlin went into the side of Kurt Busch’s car and they both wrecked each other and collected Elliott as well. This ended both Kurt Busch’s and Elliott’s championship hopes.

    Nearing the end of the race a caution came out within the last 25 laps when Bowman’s car caught on fire. This set up Almirola in the fourth position putting him in contention to steal a win and a spot at the championship next week.  Restarting second with less than 15 laps to go was his best opportunity but he was never able to make it to the front in the final laps of the race and finished fourth.

    Now we turn to the season finale next week at Homestead-Miami Speedway where a new champion will be crowned.

    Championship 4

    1. Joey Logano
    2. Kyle Busch
    3. Martin Truex Jr.
    4. Kevin Harvick

    Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Race
    Unofficial Race Results for the 31St Annual Can-Am 500 – Sunday, November 11, 2018
    ISM Raceway – Avondale, AZ – 1 Mile Paved

    Pos St Car Driver Team Make
    1 6 18 Kyle Busch (P) M&M’s Toyota
    2 12 2 Brad Keselowski Miller Lite Holiday Knitwear Ford
    3 8 42 Kyle Larson DC Solar Chevrolet
    4 18 10 Aric Almirola (P) Smithfield Ford
    5 1 4 Kevin Harvick (P) Busch Light Ford
    6 21 1 Jamie McMurray Cessna Chevrolet
    7 17 6 Matt Kenseth Wyndham Rewards Ford
    8 15 3 Austin Dillon American Ethanol e15 Chevrolet
    9 19 24 William Byron # Hertz Chevrolet
    10 30 43 Bubba Wallace # U.S. Air Force Chevrolet
    11 22 31 Ryan Newman Cat Global Mining Chevrolet
    12 24 47 AJ Allmendinger Kroger ClickList Chevrolet
    13 10 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Ground Toyota
    14 13 78 Martin Truex Jr. (P) Auto-Owners Insurance Toyota
    15 20 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s Power of Pride Chevrolet
    16 23 34 Michael McDowell Love’s/Luber Finer Ford
    17 7 20 Erik Jones Sirius XM Toyota
    18 25 37 Chris Buescher Gain Chevrolet
    19 28 13 Ty Dillon GEICO Military Chevrolet
    20 31 38 David Ragan Trident Seafoods Wild Alaska Pollock Ford
    21 27 32 Matt DiBenedetto Can-Am/Wholey Ford
    22 29 95 Regan Smith Procore Chevrolet
    23 2 9 Chase Elliott (P) NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet
    24 33 15 Ross Chastain(i) Ternio Chevrolet
    25 34 72 Cole Whitt Standard Plumbing Supply Chevrolet
    26 32 00 Landon Cassill(i) StarCom Fiber Chevrolet
    27 38 7 * DJ Kennington(i) APC/Northern Provincial Pipelines Chevrolet
    28 39 51 Cody Ware JacobCo/BanyanCayGolfClub&Resort Chevrolet
    29 11 21 Paul Menard Menards/Cardell Ford
    30 5 88 Alex Bowman Axalta Chevrolet
    31 36 97 * Tanner Berryhill Toyota
    32 14 41 Kurt Busch (P) Haas Automation/Monster Energy Ford
    33 3 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Ford Ford
    34 4 12 Ryan Blaney PPG Ford
    35 16 14 Clint Bowyer (P) ITsavvy Ford
    36 26 19 Daniel Suarez STANLEY Toyota
    37 9 22 Joey Logano (P) Shell Pennzoil Ford
    38 35 23 JJ Yeley(i) She Beverage Company Toyota
    39 37 66 * Timmy Hill(i) Rewards.com Toyota

     

    Follow on Twitter for updates: @BryanR_305

  • John Hunter Nemechek Earns First Career Pole in NASCAR Xfinity Series

    John Hunter Nemechek Earns First Career Pole in NASCAR Xfinity Series

    John Hunter Nemechek claims his first career pole in the NASCAR Xfinity Series at ISM Raceway, setting a time of 26.970 seconds at 133.482 mph.

    Nemechek edged Cole Custer by 17-thousandths of a second, as both drivers were the only two to run in the 26-second bracket. Austin Cindric, Justin Allgaier and Ryan Preece completed the top-five.

    “It feels good,” Nemechek told NBCSN. “We came here with the mindset to try and qualify on the pole. We unloaded not really good yesterday so we only got to do one mock (qualifying) run and it wasn’t that great.”

    Most of the other Playoff drivers will start in the top-10. Elliott Sadler qualified in sixth, Daniel Hemric in eighth and Matt Tifft in 10th. Tyler Reddick had a slip in the second round, preventing him from putting down a fast enough lap to get into the final round. He will start 14th. The biggest news with those in the championship hunt was Christopher Bell failing inspection three times. He will start 38th.

    Round one had about half of the Playoff contenders waiting until the last few minutes before turning a lap. Austin Cindric was fastest and most Playoff contenders held top-15 lap times. All but one made it through to the second round. Christopher Bell and Ty Majeski failed inspection three times, so they will start at the rear of the field. Neither was able to turn a lap, along with Josh Bilicki.

    “Well the good thing is (Miami) doesn’t decide on where we start, it decides on where we finish,” Bell told NBCSN. “We got 200 laps, which is an eternity, especially from what I grew up doing in sprint car racing. Got a bunch of pit stops in there and a fast car to make it up. We’ll be fine.”

    Bell also shared that this was the same car that won both times at Richmond Raceway.

    “This is probably the fastest car we’ve brought to the race track all year-long compared to the field,” Bell said.

    In round two, one more Playoff contender was eliminated. Tyler Reddick car got loose in Turn 4, which hurt his first and second attempts at improving his qualifying time. He will start 14th in the afternoon’s event. John Hunter Nemechek was fastest over Cole Custer, as the two were the only drivers to run just one lap in qualifying.

    For the final round, the remaining Playoff drivers hold top-10 starts, and despite some last second laps by Cindric, Nemecheck was the one holding the top starting position, ahead of Custer, Cindric, Allgaier and Preece. Coverage for the NASCAR Xfinity Series race at ISM Raceway will begin at 3:30 p.m. ET Saturday afternoon on NBC.

    Starting Line Up
    ISM Raceway
    20th Annual Whelen Trusted To Perform 200

    Pos Car Driver Team Make
    1 42 John Hunter Nemechek Fire Alarm Services Inc. Chevrolet
    2 00 Cole Custer (P) Haas Automation Ford
    3 22 Austin Cindric # (P) Discount Tire Ford
    4 7 Justin Allgaier (P) BRANDT Professional Agriculture Chevrolet
    5 18 Ryan Preece Rheem/Smurfit Kappa Toyota
    6 1 Elliott Sadler (P) Hunt Brothers Pizza Chevrolet
    7 19 Brandon Jones Toyota Service Centers/Mobil 1 Toyota
    8 21 Daniel Hemric (P) South Point Hotel & Casino Chevrolet
    9 3 Shane Lee CIPT/Race to Give Chevrolet
    10 2 Matt Tifft (P) Go Green Chevrolet
    11 23 Spencer Gallagher ISM Connect Chevrolet
    12 16 Ryan Reed Drive Down A1C Lilly Diabetes Ford
    13 5 Michael Annett Pilot Flying J Chevrolet
    14 9 Tyler Reddick # (P) BurgerFi Chevrolet
    15 11 Ryan Truex LeafFilter Gutter Protection Chevrolet
    16 39 Ryan Sieg Lombard Brothers Chevrolet
    17 36 Alex Labbe # Can-Am/Wholey/Cyclops Gear Chevrolet
    18 51 Jeremy Clements RepairableVehicles.com Chevrolet
    19 38 JJ Yeley Iron Mountain Data Centers Chevrolet
    20 8 Tommy Joe Martins Chevrolet
    21 35 Joey Gase Donate Life Arizona/Sparks Chevrolet
    22 40 Chad Finchum # Smithbilt Homes Toyota
    23 4 Ross Chastain Flex Seal Chevrolet
    24 52 David Starr Whataburger Chevrolet
    25 93 Jeff Green RSS Racing Chevrolet
    26 90 Donald Theetge MercedesBenzStNicolas/CircuitAcura FALSE
    27 0 Garrett Smithley Flex Tape Chevrolet
    28 01 BJ McLeod Flex Glue Chevrolet
    29 15 Quin Houff teamjdmotorsports.com Chevrolet
    30 99 Stephen Leicht Chevrolet
    31 13 Tyler Hill OCR Gaz Bar Toyota
    32 76 Spencer Boyd # Grunt Style Chevrolet
    33 66 Akinori Ogata Toyota
    34 55 Bayley Currey(i) RollinSmokeBBQ/TouchedbyPros Toyota
    35 89 Morgan Shepherd Visone RV Chevrolet
    36 74 Mike Harmon Veterans 4 Child Rescue Chevrolet
    37 78 Vinnie Miller # CorvetteParts.net/JWTransport FALSE
    38 20 Christopher Bell # (P) GameStop Just Cause 4 Toyota
    39 60 Ty Majeski Ford Ford
    40 45 Josh Bilicki # Prevagen Toyota
  • NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Preview-ISM Raceway

    NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Preview-ISM Raceway

    The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series heads west to the desert this weekend in Phoenix Arizona to ISM Raceway, formally known as Phoenix International Raceway. Two drivers are locked into the Playoffs, while four drivers are fighting for two spots.

    Brett Moffitt and Noah Gragson sit comfortably in right now, but two drivers sit below the cut line,  Grant Enfinger and Matt Crafton, and are more than likely in a must-win situation. Anything can happen, but Enfinger and Crafton will need a lot of help from the other two if they both want to make it in. Something catastrophic will have to happen to Gragson and Moffitt in order to make it in. Moving the start-finish line to the backstretch will make it a little more interesting as well. That could see one driver make a desperation move.

    Currently, there are 32 trucks on the preliminary entry list. Here’s a look at who might wind up in victory lane at ISM Raceway. Some drivers will be back in their seats, while others will be making a debut.

    John Hunter Nemechek is back in the No. 8 Stefan, Parsons returns to the No. 15 and Tyler Akrum will be in the No. 17. Derek Kraus will be making his debut in the No. 19 Bill Macanally entry, Jason White in the No. 33, Landon Huffman in the No. 38, D.J. Kennington in the No. 49, Riley Herbst in the No. 54, Jesse Iwuji in the No. 63, and Chase Purdy in the No. 99.

    1. Johnny Sauter – It’s no surprise that the 2016 champion makes the top of the list once again. It’s hard to beat a man who is on a tear this year with six wins. There are tons of young drivers this weekend, but experience beats inexperience and his stats show that. He has nine starts and is the defending winner at this track. Sauter does have one DNF that occurred in 2015, along with five top fives and seven top 10 finishes with 16 laps led. He has an average start of 9.0 and an average finish of 9.1. Sauter sat on the pole in his first at track start in 2009.

    2. John Hunter Nemechek – Nemechek is back piloting the No. 8 truck. He has five starts with a best finish of second, twice in 2015 and 2017. Nemechek also has two top fives and four top 10 finishes. He has an average start of 10.0 and an average finish of 7.6. During the 2017 race, Nemechek finished fifth and seventh in both stages.

    3. Todd Gilliland – Gilliland will be looking for redemption this weekend after his truck fell short of winning. This week could be the week where he might just get it done. Gilliland only has one start in 2017, where he started fifth and finished seventh. The No. 4 truck previously driven by Christopher Bell won both stages last year. Gilliland won the 2015 K&N Pro Series West race. The Kyle Busch Motorsports team is using a chassis that finished 10th at Dover, crashed at Iowa (29th), and Las Vegas in September (27th). He’ll be a man on a mission this weekend at Phoenix.

    4. Matt Crafton – Crafton is still searching for a victory this season and is in a must-win situation. He could just do it on Friday night and lock himself into the Championship 4 at Homestead. In 17 starts, he has zero wins, but 15 laps led, six top fives and 11 top 10 finishes. Crafton has an average start of 8.0 and an average finish of 9.9. He has a best finish of second in 2014. In 2017, Crafton finished third in both stages.

    5. Justin Haley – Haley is coming off a win last weekend at Texas and he could just do it again this weekend. In two starts in 2015 and 2017, his best finish was seventh in 2015 and he finished 14th in last year’s race due to a crash. Haley has an average start of 9.5 and an average finish of 10.5.

    Playoff drivers –

    Brett Moffitt – Making track debut
    Noah Gragson – Two starts (16th and 15th), did not finish last year after starting second and led 55 laps.
    Grant Enfinger – One start (2017), finished 24th due to a crash.

    There have been 27 races since 1995 with a list of who’s who for winners  –

    Jack Sprague won three in a row from 1996-1997. Kevin Harvick won four times (2002, 2003, 2008, 2009).
    Mike Skinner, Joe Ruttman, Ron Hornaday, Kyle Busch and Erik Jones have all won twice.

    The lowest a race winner has ever come from to win was 16th, set by Skinner in 1995. The race winner has come from the pole six times. The track went to fall races only since 2012. There have been four different winners in the past five races.

    The on-track action starts with the first practice at 10:30 a.m. ET on FOX Sports 2. Final practice takes place at 12:05 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 2. Qualifying will begin at 5:35 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1.

    Race coverage begins at 8:30 p.m. ET with the approximate green flag at 8:40 p.m. ET live on FOX Sports 1 and MRN Radio.

  • Weekend schedule for Phoenix

    Weekend schedule for Phoenix

    Staff Report | NASCAR.com

    The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, NASCAR Xfinity Series and Camping World Truck Series will be in action at ISM Raceway in Phoenix. All three series enter their final elimination races that will set up the Championship 4. Check out the full schedule below, which is subject to change.

    Note: All times are ET

    Friday, November 9
    10:30-11:20 a.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series first practice, FS2 (Results)
    12:05-12:55 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series final practice, FS2 (Results)
    1:35-2:25 p.m.: Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series first practice, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Results)
    2:35-3:25 p.m.: NASCAR Xfinity Series first practice, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Results)
    4:35-5:25 p.m.: NASCAR Xfinity Series final practice, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Results)
    5:35 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series qualifying, FS1  (Results)
    7 p.m.: Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Busch Pole Qualifying, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Follow live)
    8:30 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Lucas Oil 150 (150 laps, 150 miles), FS1 (Follow live)

    PRESS PASS (Watch live)
    12:15 p.m.: Chip Ganassi Racing
    12:45 p.m.: Kurt Busch
    1 p.m.: Justin Allgaier, Christopher Bell and Matt Tifft
    3 p.m.: Chase Elliott
    3:15 p.m.: Martin Truex Jr.
    3:30 p.m.: Kyle Busch
    4 p.m.: Jimmie Johnson and Fernando Alonso (via Skype)
    4:30 p.m.: USAA Hats Off to Heroes Program
    7:45 p.m.: Post-Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series qualifying
    10:15 p.m.: Post-NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race

    SATURDAY, November 10
    11:30-12:20 p.m.: Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series second practice, CNBC/NBC Sports App (Follow live)
    12:35 p.m.: NASCAR Xfinity Series qualifying, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Follow live)
    2-2:50 p.m.: Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series final practice, NBCSN/NBC Sports App (Follow live)
    3:30 p.m.: NASCAR Xfinity Series Whelen Trusted To Perform 200 (200 laps, 200 miles), NBC/NBC Sports App (Follow live)

    PRESS PASS (Watch live)
    5:30 p.m.: Post-NASCAR Xfinity Series race

    SUNDAY, November 11
    2:30 p.m.: Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Can-Am 500 (312 laps, 312 miles), NBC/NBC Sports App (Follow live)

    PRESS PASS (Watch live)
    5:30 p.m.: Post-Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race

  • Hot 20 – Smokey just tagged the Bandit to make Phoenix a lot more interesting

    Hot 20 – Smokey just tagged the Bandit to make Phoenix a lot more interesting

    If NASCAR was a certain 1977 hit movie, you could say that Sheriff Buford T. Justice finally got his hands on the Bandit. It might not have derailed the adventure, but there is a danger the Snowman might not be able to deliver that truckload of suds to their destination on time.

    That quest could be spoiled by spoilers. Specifically, NASCAR tagged the team of Kevin Harvick with a top drawer penalty violating the rules that explicitly points out that spoilers must be used exactly as supplied from the manufacturer and not altered. Instead of getting that free pass to contend at Homestead, the boys are just three points in.

    Gone are all the benefits of the win at Texas. No free pass, though Harvick does keep the guns and the hat. Gone are 40 of the sixty points he picked up in that race. Gone is crew chief Rodney Childers for the rest of the season. Gone is $75,000 from Childers’ pocket. Gone is car chief Robert Smith until the campaign is over. Stewart-Haas Racing will not appeal the penalties, as production manager Tony Gibson returns to the box he last sat atop a year ago, when he directed Kurt Busch to the 2017 Daytona 500 victory. With the decision, Busch now finds himself just three points out of the Homestead final four.

    Post-race tear downs at the NASCAR Research and Development Center can be a real bitch. Ryan Blaney lost 20 points from Texas, along with crew chief Jeremy Bullins, who was fined $50,000, and car chief Kirk Almquist for the rest of the season. Same goes for Erik Jones, as crew chief Chris Gayle coughs up the same amount of cash and he joins car chief Jason Overstreet on the sidelines until the smoke clears in Florida.

    Of course, neither of those rulings have anywhere close to the same impact as the hit taken by the No. 4 crew. It could all still end the same way most expect, with Logano joined by the Big Three at the big dance. Now, however, it will take a little more action before this movie runs the final credits.

    In the words of Sheriff Justice, “What we’re dealing with here is a complete lack of respect for the law.” Well, message delivered.

    Now it is time for the Bandit to keep his foot hard on the peddle, son, never mind them brakes. Let it all hang out ’cause you’ve got a run to make. Phoenix just got a lot more interesting.

    1. JOEY LOGANO – ROUND VICTORY – 4119 Pts (7 Wins)
    Shell Pennzoil is his Phoenix sponsor. At Homestead, maybe it should be Target.

    2. KYLE BUSCH – 4128 POINTS (7 Wins)
    Nothing has changed for him, other than there are now three opens spots instead of just two.

    3. MARTIN TRUEX JR. – 4125 POINTS (4 Wins)
    Do not expect him to go down this week without having vengeance in his heart for the next.

    4. KEVIN HARVICK – 4103 Pts (8 Wins)
    A nine-time Phoenix winner suddenly could sure use a 10th about now.

    5. KURT BUSCH – 4100 POINTS (1 Win)
    Would hate to break his brother’s heart but as for those other two…

    6. CHASE ELLIOTT – 4086 POINTS (3 Wins)
    Phoenix has been kind to him in the past. She needs to be downright romantic on Sunday.

    7. ARIC ALMIROLA – 4068 POINTS (1 Win)
    His schedule reads, “Win this week or destroy Logano next week.” Not sure about the word “or.”

    8. CLINT BOWYER – 4052 POINTS (2 Wins)
    If anyone needed a tinkered spoiler last week, it was him.

    9. RYAN BLANEY – 2263 POINTS (1 Win)
    I am not sure if being in danger of dropping to 10th in the standings is that big a deal.

    10. BRAD KESELOWSKI – 2259 POINTS (3 Wins)
    The Miller Lite Ford will look a lot like a giant pysanka this weekend.

    11. DENNY HAMLIN – 2220 POINTS
    Well, Texas sure sucked.

    12. KYLE LARSON – 2211 POINTS
    Tires. If Fred Flintstone ran Goodyear things might have gone differently.

    13. JIMMIE JOHNSON – 2195 POINTS
    Sometimes Jimmie screws up. Sometimes it is Chad. In Texas, it was all NASCAR.

    14. ALEX BOWMAN – 2187 POINTS
    A Tucson boy returns to Arizona.

    15. ERIK JONES – 2184 POINTS (1 Win)
    He probably would prefer to lose those 20 points rather than $50,000.

    16. AUSTIN DILLON – 2184 POINTS (1 Win)
    The winless streak has now reached 34.

    17. RYAN NEWMAN – 721 POINTS
    Are we done yet?

    18. RICKY STENHOUSE JR. – 676 POINTS
    You could say that Stenhouse was in the eighth fastest unpenalized car at Texas.

    19. PAUL MENARD – 672 POINTS
    Does not exactly have the biggest social media footprint.

    20. DANIEL SUAREZ – 666 POINTS
    Still nothing set for 2019.

  • Custer edges Reddick in third closest NASCAR XFINITY Series race in Texas Motor Speedway history

    Custer edges Reddick in third closest NASCAR XFINITY Series race in Texas Motor Speedway history

    • Twenty-Year-Old Passes Reddick On Final Lap To Win Second Xfinity Series Race Of His Career To Punch Ticket To Championship 4
    • Regular-Season Champion Allgaier, Six-Win Bell In Danger Of Missing Championship Race At Homestead-Miami Speedway On Nov. 17

    FORT WORTH, Texas (Nov. 3, 2018) — Cole Custer pulled off a dramatic, last-lap pass under Tyler Reddick to win Saturday’s 14th annual O’Reilly Auto Parts 300 by .162 of a second in the third-closest NASCAR Xfinity Series race in Texas Motor Speedway history.

    Custer became the first Round of 8 Playoff contender to punch his ticket into the Championship 4 at Homestead-Miami Speedway in two weeks. Custer took the lead on Lap 199 of 200 around the 1.5-mile TMS oval, moving under Reddick while barreling into Turn 1, maintaining as much focus as someone would need for online gaming. The two title contenders bounced off each other briefly down the backstretch but each kept their cars straight before entering Turns 3 and 4.

    “I knew I had to make it happen in Turns 1 and 2 because it was harder to pass in Turns 3 and 4,” said Custer, driver of the No. 00 Autodesk Ford Mustang fielded by Stewart-Haas Racing. “I drove it maybe five car-lengths deeper than I did all day. We side-drafted down the backstretch and got together but it worked out.

    “I can’t believe it. Going to Homestead – it’s awesome. We haven’t won all year but have been so close. This is the perfect time to do it. We had this fairly long winless streak and you begin to question everything you’re doing. Today, I was put in a situation to make something happen and it worked out. But you’ve got to put yourself in that situation in the first place.”

    Custer, 20, scored his second Xfinity Series victory in 69 career starts but first of 2018. It also was his first win and fourth top-five finish in four starts at “The Great American Speedway.”

    “He drove his butt off that last restart,” crew chief Jeff Meendering said of Custer. “He knew he had to be aggressive … stepped it up and that’s what we can do the rest of the year now. I got a lot of confidence going into Homestead.”

    The final shootout was set up following a restart on Lap 198 after the race’s record 13th caution for a seven-car melee in Turn 4. The former series record for cautions of 10 was set on March 29, 2003. Starting on the inside lane, Reddick jumped out to an early lead, followed by Custer and fellow-Playoff contender Austin Cindric. Moments after completing Lap 199, Custer pointed the front end of his Ford under Reddick’s No. 9 BurgerFi Chevrolet Camaro SS through the track’s reconfigured/wider Turn 1-2 section and cleanly took the lead.

    “It’s very treacherous,” Reddick, a series rookie, said of the Turn 2 exit. “You got to get all you can off that corner … but at the same time, it can put you in a bad spot and tear up some stuff.” Reddick’s 18th top-10 result of 2018 moved him into the point lead by seven over previous leader/JR Motorsports teammate Elliott Sadler, who finished eighth in the No. 1 OneMain Financial Camaro.

    The record 13 caution periods consumed 54 laps, starting with a nine-car mishap on Lap 2 triggered by the spinning car of pole-sitter/Playoff contender Christopher Bell. Ironically, Bell crashed out of the previous Playoff race at the 1.5-mile Kansas Speedway two weeks ago. At TMS, he rallied from his opening spin but ultimately was forced to retire after contact with Cindric put Bell into the Turn 4 wall on Lap 134. Bell’s No. 20 GameStop NBA 2K19 Toyota Camry suffered extensive suspension damage en route to a 32nd-place finish.

    Bell said he was “caught off-guard” by the Turn 1 spin. “You saw the same thing from the No. 7 (Justin Allgaier) at Kansas,” said Bell, of Joe Gibbs Racing. “I didn’t feel like I was up to speed at all. The next thing I knew, I spun out. I don’t know, it has to be the tire combination. It’s tricky. There wasn’t much room for error.”

    Despite his poor finish, Bell was upbeat about his chances at the 1-mile ISM Raceway in Avondale, Ariz., near Phoenix next week. “I won six races this year,” said Bell, the Norman, Okla., native who considers TMS his home track. “I’ve had a great season.  We had a solid GameStop Camry today. We got a chance to win two more.”

    Reddick led a race-high four times for 54 laps, while Custer also led four times but for only 16 laps. Hemric, who led three times for 42 laps in the No. 21 South Point Hotel & Casino Camaro, is third in the point standings following his 10th-place finish. Hemric, of Richard Childress Racing, is eight points behind Reddick but only one behind Sadler.

    Playoff contender Allgaier led twice for 37 laps before finishing fifth in the No. 7 Suave MEN Chevrolet fielded by JR Motorsports. Allgaier occupies the fourth and final cutoff spot for Homestead, 20 points behind Reddick and 12 behind Hemric. Allgaier is only two points ahead of fifth-place Matt Tifft, who finished seventh Saturday in his No. 2 Andersons’s Maple Syrup Chevy, also fielded by RCR.

    Custer is sixth in points but doesn’t have to count now that he is set for HMS. Bell, meanwhile, faces a must-win situation at ISM Raceway next week. He is 42 points behind the leader and 18 behind Custer.

    Cindric, the final Playoff contender, is eighth in points after his third-place finish in the No. 22 Discount Tire Ford fielded by Team Penske. Cindric also faces a must-win scenario next week as he is 69 points behind Reddick and 27 behind Bell.

    “After everything that happened today, this is great,” Cindric said after his second top-10 finish in two races at TMS. “I would have just been happy to finish the thing not in the fence. Every opportunity to be in the middle of something it seemed we were there. It is just perseverance by everyone. The guys over the wall did an amazing job getting the right front fender fixed (after opening-lap contact). We almost had a tire go down because of it.

    “I’m really thankful to still be in the Playoffs and still have a shot to win a race. We were a few bumps and bangs away from really benefiting from that one. I was yelling all the way down the backstretch for something to happen (on the final lap). I’m thankful to everyone at Team Penske for really pushing hard this weekend. Obviously, it’s no doubt that these guys are the best in the business. To be able to unload a backup car and have a top three finish is unheard of.

    “I’m really pumped. I’m ready to go to Phoenix and go put on a show and have a little fun.”