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  • Richmond International Raceway – Did You Know?

    Richmond International Raceway – Did You Know?

    NASCAR travels to Richmond International Raceway this weekend for the XFINITY Series ToyotaCare 250 and the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Toyota Owners 400. But did you know the first Cup race at the track was held on April 19, 1953, and was won by Hall of Famer Lee Petty driving his No. 42 Dodge? Petty won five races in 1953 and finished second in the points standings. He won the championship the following year, the first of three during his career.

    Richmond started out as a half-mile dirt track but was changed from dirt to asphalt during the 1968 season. In 1970 it was re-measured to .542-miles and in 1988 was enlarged to the three-quarters-mile D-shaped oval that the Cup Series competes on today. The first race under permanent lights was Sept. 7, 1991, and was won by Harry Gant. But did you know that Gant is the oldest winner at Richmond, scoring the victory at the age of 51 years, 7 months and 28 days?

    Dale Earnhardt Jr. announced his impending retirement Tuesday so it seems only fitting that we take a few moments to reflect on his history at Richmond. While Earnhardt’s statistics at Richmond are noteworthy, his impact on NASCAR has been immeasurable. His humble and genuine demeanor has endeared him to a nation of fans who have watched him emerge from his father’s shadow to become an icon in his own right.

    Earnhardt has seven victories at the track, three Cup wins (2000, 2004, 2006) and four in the XFINITY Series (including last year’s spring race). He has 10 top fives, 14 top 10s and one pole to go along with his three Cup triumphs with the 10th-best driver rating of 87.4. But did you know that Earnhardt won at Richmond in only his second start there, the fewest among active drivers?

    Next, let’s take a look at Kyle Busch who is still searching for his first win this season. He enters the weekend competition with the series-best driver rating of 110.8 and the best average finish (6.957). He has 15 top fives, 17 top 10s and one pole at Richmond. While Richard Petty holds the record for the most wins with 13, did you know that Busch leads all active drivers with four checkered flags? This could be the weekend we see Busch in victory lane again.

    Kevin Harvick should also be a contender at Richmond with the series third-best driver rating (109.9) as well as three wins, 11 top fives, 20 top 10s and one pole. Even more impressive, he has the series-most quality passes (781) and the second-best average finish (8.292). But did you know that this is the first time since 2013 that Harvick hasn’t captured a win by the fourth race of the season? In 2013 he didn’t win until the ninth race of the year, which, by the way, was at Richmond.

    Qualifying well will be especially important this weekend. Of the 121 Cup races at Richmond, 24 drivers have won from the pole making it the most proficient starting position (19.8 percent). But it isn’t easy to do. Only five active drivers have done so, Kasey Kahne (2005), Jimmie Johnson (2007), Kyle Busch (2010), Brad Keselowski (2014) and Denny Hamlin (2016).

    The Toyota Owners 400 will be televised on FOX, Sunday, April 30, at 2 p.m. ET. In the meantime, check out this slideshow for a look back at all of Earnhardt’s NASCAR Cup Series victories, as we wish him continued success in his final Cup Series season.

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

     

  • Hot 20 – As Richmond arrives, Earnhardt announces his departure

    Hot 20 – As Richmond arrives, Earnhardt announces his departure

    One day they are going to make that movie. It will feature a young Dale Earnhardt Jr. growing up in the shadow of his legendary father. We will see his daddy’s pride as his namesake begins his racing career. That first Tier II win at Texas in 1998. The two Tier II titles that came that year, and the next.

    Two years later, Senior saw Junior take his first Cup victory on that same Texas track. Junior won, ole Dale was seventh in the GM Goodwrench Chevrolet. Four races later, at Richmond, Junior won his second. Dad was 10th. The Legend and his Legacy.

    Then came the improbable story line. Dale Earnhardt would leave us on the final lap of the Daytona 500 on February 18, 2001. It was a race won by Michael Waltrip, a winless veteran driver who the Terminator put in the seat of a Dale Earnhardt Inc. car. His son finished second. On a day that should have been devoted to celebration, the Man in Black was gone.

    No one would dare write a script like this one. A week later, another of his drivers, Steve Park, would win at Rockingham. His friend and rival, Jeff Gordon, claimed Las Vegas. His race team, now led by a 25-year old Kevin Harvick, returned to Victory Lane for Richard Childress in the next race at Atlanta. What could top this emotional ride? When they returned to Daytona in July, it was Dale Earnhardt Jr. winning, with Waltrip in second, and we rejoiced as they celebrated atop their cars in the infield as the crowd roared in approval.

    Junior would win at Dover later in the year, and in October he was victorious at Talladega, the scene of his father’s final victory just the year before. Senior won 10 times at that track, and the 2001 win for his son was the start of four consecutive conquests on the same superspeedway. The movie will take us to the twin Talladega triumphs of 2002, to Talladega and Phoenix the next season, and then to 2004. The Daytona 500, Atlanta, Richmond, Bristol, Talladega, and Phoenix.

    Then came the lean years. The break from his late father’s team. The man who lost a legendary father joined a man who lost a cherished son. The main story went behind the scenes, as the successes on the track became few and far in between. Just four wins over nine seasons. However, there was one more act in the play, a resurgence before the final curtain would drop.

    Four more wins in 2014, including his second Daytona 500. Three in 2015, including his sixth at Talladega, one more summertime victory to give him four at Daytona, and his third career decision at Phoenix. Before the credits roll, the movie will see the on-track heartbreak of 2016, the loss of half a season. Yet, while he wondered about his future out on the track, there was true joy as the year ended with his new bride Amy by his side. A new chapter was about to begin as the movie comes to a close.

    Peter Jackson, if you are not too busy, this is a movie I would really love to see.

    Here are our Hot 20 heading to Richmond this Sunday.

    1. BRAD KESELOWSKI – 2 WINS – 277 PTS
    Leads the pack, but his day at Bristol was one for the dumper. On to Richmond!

    2. JIMMIE JOHNSON – 2 WINS – 244 PTS
    With his 6.72 races per win ratio, his next victory should come by the time they leave Michigan.

    3. KYLE LARSON – 1 WIN – 360 PTS
    Great acceleration out of the pits on Monday. Just too great, as it turned out.

    4. MARTIN TRUEX JR. – 1 WIN – 323 PTS
    Had a rare good day at Bristol and now hopes for a rare good day at Richmond.

    5. RYAN NEWMAN – 1 WIN – 186 PTS
    One win means the difference between fifth and 14th. I hope Junior is listening.

    6. KURT BUSCH – 1 WIN – 163 PTS
    Went three laps down and still had a better day than his brother.

    7. CHASE ELLIOTT – 333 PTS
    He was not a factor last week, so explain to me that Top Ten result.

    8. JOEY LOGANO – 291 PTS
    Not a fan of the driver, but Cameron Curtis reminds us we all should be a fan of the man.

    9. JAMIE MCMURRAY – 244 PTS
    Granted, we are just eight races in, but 2017 has been a very sweet year for the 40-year old.

    10. KEVIN HARVICK – 239 PTS
    Before you panic, he has 24 wins over the past seven seasons, and a winless streak of just 13.

    11. CLINT BOWYER – 239 PTS
    From second tier a year ago to second place this past week to a place he’s won at twice before.

    12. RYAN BLANEY – 228 PTS
    No power steering, no quick fix, no points to speak of, but just check out those biceps.

    13. KYLE BUSCH – 214 PTS
    When the wheels on the car don’t keep round and round, one’s day can go to crap in a hurry.

    14. TREVOR BAYNE – 192 PTS
    Best performer for Jack Roush since Carl Edwards left to join Joe Gibbs.

    15. ERIK JONES – 192 PTS
    The 20-year-old has one Top Ten as he enters his 12th career Cup race.

    16. DENNY HAMLIN – 184 PTS
    Tenth on Monday and now heads to a track where he has won three, including the one last fall.

    17. RICKY STENHOUSE, JR. – 168 PTS
    Three Top Tens over the past five contests but just one in eight tries at Richmond.

    18. KASEY KAHNE – 164 PTS
    Does Junior’s announcement ease the pressure on him or is the clock still ticking?

    19. ARIC ALMIROLA – 161 PTS
    You could say that Bristol (tire) rubbed him the wrong way.

    20. MATT KENSETH – 159 PTS
    It does not matter where you run all day, as long as you are in the picture at the end.

  • Chevy MENCS: Dale Earnhardt Jr. Retirement Announcement Press Conference Transcript

    Chevy MENCS: Dale Earnhardt Jr. Retirement Announcement Press Conference Transcript

    DALE EARNHARDT, JR, NO. 88 CHEVROLET SS AND TEAM OWNER RICK HENDRICK, met with the media at Hendrick Motorsports to discuss Dale, Jr.’s announcement that he would be retiring at the end of the 2017 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Season.  Full Transcript:

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  Good afternoon.  I want to thank everybody for being here today especially on such short notice.  It’s good to see a lot of familiar faces.  We’re here today to confirm the news you received this morning that I’ve decided to make this season my last as a NASCAR Cup driver.  The response just in the last six hours from teammates, colleagues and friends and fans has been incredibly overwhelming.

    So, before I go any further, I just want to thank everybody for making me feel pretty incredible today.  You’re wondering why I reached this decision, it’s really simple.  I just wanted the opportunity to go out on my own terms.  I wanted to honor my commitment to Rick, to my sponsors, to my team, and to the fans.  I’ll admit, that having influence over my exit only became meaningful when it started to seem most unlikely.

    As you know, I missed a few races last year and during that time I had to face the realization that my driving career may have already ended without me as so much getting a vote at the table.  Of course in life we’re not promised a vote, and that’s especially true in racing.

    But, during my rehab, I was given something else that I wasn’t accustomed to, and that was time.  Time to understand what’s important to me, time to realize the incredible support system I have in my wife, my team, and my doctors, and time to work like hell to wrestle back some semblance of say‑so in this whole matter.  So that became my motivation.  The opportunity to stand here at this podium to announce my choice rather than some fate that was decided for me.

    In that regard, the race car wasn’t my goal, it was merely the vehicle that got me here today.

    Now planning my exit this way gives me the chance to publicly thank those who made the last 18 years possible.  First and foremost, Rick Hendrick.

    Without a shadow of a doubt, I think the toughest thing about this decision was having to tell you.  I just didn’t want to disappoint you.  You mean so much to me.

    So, on March 29th, I drove over and had the conversation with him, and his response, he told me he loved me.  Becoming a bigger part of your life has changed mine forever.  You gave me guidance and direction that will reward me for as long as I live.

    My wife, Amy, most of you have been around long enough to know what I was like before I met Amy.  Not a day goes by that someone doesn’t remind me of the incredible positive impact she’s had on me.  Through thick and thin, Amy’s support and encouragement has been constant.  The rehab that I spoke of earlier, she went through it too.  The only difference is she didn’t have to, but she did.  There were no days off.  There were no hours off.  There were no minutes off.  It was just Amy and me.  Without her help in those days of recovery, I wouldn’t have been able to return to the track for this season.

    The most difficult thing, or the second most difficult thing about this decision was telling my brothers.  Greg Ives and the guys on my 88 Team.  It’s a privilege to race with this group.  Greg is one of the most talented yet humble guys in the garage.  We are very close, and I appreciate the sacrifices that he and his family have made for the good of our team.

    For my road crew to the pit crew to all the people in the 48/88 shop, I’m a better driver and a better person for my time with you guys.  You’ve helped me mature and grow well beyond the racetrack.  We loved to work together, and I look forward to every single trip we have left on the schedule this season.

    Kelley Earnhardt Miller, I think if I were to sum up Kelley’s life in one word, it would be sacrifice.  You all know the stories, and they’re all true.  She dropped out of one school to enroll in military school, where I was, because she was worried about me.  She came to work for me even though it meant that she’d have to take a massive pay cut, but she knew that I needed her.  She didn’t think twice about it.

    She made it her life mission to have my back.  I’m telling you today, Kelley, how much I appreciate that.

    Brenda Jackson, my mother, she loves me through my good races and my bad races.  But what makes her uniquely my own is she definitely is going to tell me when it was a bad race.  Everybody deserves to have someone in their life that you never have to wonder, and with my mother, I never have to wonder.

    To my father, Dale Earnhardt, I would not have been a race car driver if it not for him.  He believed in me.  It might have taken a little encouragement from Tony Eury Sr., but eventually dad came around.  I appreciate my father, everything he put into my career, and all the guys on the old 80 AC Delco team who gave me a shot.

    To all the team members and co‑workers that I’ve worked with:  I’ve only driven for two teams in my career, from DEI to Hendrick Motorsports, I was blessed to work with the most, body men, chassis builders, engine builders and so on.  As I matured personally, the bonds I formulated with my team became so very important to me.  They weren’t just co‑workers, they were friends.  We cared for each other.  We could fight like brothers, which me and Tony Jr. so often did.  But I needed them, and I so badly wanted them to need me.  I miss that camaraderie, and I’ll miss it for the rest of my life.  But the friendships I’ve made will live beyond the time we’ve spent in the garage together.

    To my fans:  One thing that’s made this career the incredible ride that it’s been is Junior Nation.  The fan support that I received straight out of the gate was in large part because of my famous last name.  But throughout the ups and downs it occurred to me that the fans that stuck it out and the new ones that joined us, they were there because of the person I was and not who they wanted me to be.

    By the end of my career, thanks in large part to social media, I’ve really gained a new appreciation for their dedication, their enthusiasm when we succeed, and their encouragement when we fall short of our goals.  I don’t think that anything in my professional career has meant more to me than the treatment that I’ve received from track to track by the fans that so dearly love our sport.

    To our sponsors ‑‑ this wouldn’t be an official NASCAR event unless we fired off some official sponsor appreciation.  In the beginning of my Cup career, there was Budweiser.  They sent me on a trajectory that was unprecedented.  Steve Uline, Tony Ponturo, and their team of people, wherever you are today, thank you so much for taking that big leap of faith with me.

    I want to recognize Pepsi‑Cola and National Guard for their role in my move to Hendrick Motorsports.  They were the ones that got the 88 program off the ground, and to this day, I continue to enjoy a partnership with Pepsi and Mountain Dew.

    Charlie Shaver, Jim Muse, and William Sturgill with Axalta, you guys have accepted me as your own.  You’re building an incredible legacy here at Hendrick Motorsports.  You’re fully invested into the 88 Team, and you’ve helped me take our Dirty Mo Media from a vision to reality.  So for all those things, I’m very appreciative.

    Steve Rasmussen, Terrance Williams and Jim McCoy all the folks at Nationwide, our partnership goes back a very long time.  Maybe you guys heard it, but the Earnhardt family has been with Nationwide for more than 30 years.

    But what I’m proud of more is we’ve accomplished a lot in the last ten.  I hope you guys are as proud as I am, and by the way, Jim, I know you’re here in the room.  I’m just going to say what everyone else here in the room is thinking, your brilliant use of the retired Peyton Manning is to be commended, if not replicated.

    To Jim Campbell and Terry Dolan, it’s an honor to carry that Chevrolet Bowtie on my cars.  I don’t just mean that on the racetrack, I’m Chevrolet for life.

    I’ve been fortunate enough to have many other partners invest in my career, and I look forward to talking to them over the next several months, and I hope you feel I did a great job for you.  I want you to know that my work’s not finished.

    I also want to thank NASCAR for giving me and a whole lot of other fortunate people a place to race.  I’ve never taken that for granted.  Thanks to the France family for your support, and thank you to Mike Helton who has given me tons of personal advice.  He’s always shot me straight, and he’s been a tremendous role model for me.

    The sport is in a great place with incredible, exciting, young talent emerging as we speak.  I look forward to seeing what the future and current stars in the sport can accomplish in the years to come.

    In closing, I am eager to explore new opportunities.  I don’t see myself really detaching from NASCAR.  My intention is still to be involved in the sport on some level.  In fact, I still have two XFINITY races to run for JR Motorsports in 2018, so even after this season is over, you’ve not seen the last of me on the racetrack.  But more than that, I want to be a part of the future of this sport for many, many years to come.  Thank you very much.

    THE MODERATOR:  Genuine, the one word I always think about when I think of Dale Jr., and I think we saw it there.  We’re going to take questions from folks here in the audience.

    Before we do that, Mr. H, wanted to first give you an opportunity to reflect on over the past not quite a month since that conversation, your thoughts today?

    RICK HENDRICK:  Well, first of all, I want to make it clear that I wasn’t the one that said we had to wear a suit, because the first time we went somewhere I had to get you to put your shirt tail in, today you made me wear the suit.

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  That’s right.  A lot of things have changed.

    RICK HENDRICK:  First of all, Dale, Kelley and his family, they’re more to me than just a race car driver.  He’s like a son, and we’ve had, I don’t know, for many, many years a tremendous relationship.  I really appreciate what we’ve been able to do together.  And I appreciate the kind of guy you are and what you’ve done for this sport, for NASCAR, for me personally, our company, the sponsors and everyone.  And to the person that I’ve talked to in the last few days, sponsors and all of our partners, the first thing they’ve said, we want what Dale wants.  We want what’s best for Dale.

    You have delivered and given more than anybody I know.  I’m fortunate today because you and I have got a lot left to do.  Dale wants to help me here at Motorsports, and at JRM bringing the young drivers along.  We’re in the automobile business together, so I feel like I’m excited about the next chapter.

    You deserve everything, all the awards, and all of the accolades.  There will never be another Dale Earnhardt Jr.  You’re the one.  But I’m just super excited and very appreciative of what you’ve done and what you’ve meant to me personally, and what you’ve done for our company.  But most of all, what you mean in my life.

    Q.  Dale, retirement decisions often come down to help, passion or ability.  Do you feel any of those are the primary reasons for this decision?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  You know, I don’t think that one of them stands out above the other.  I had a lot to think about over the last several months, and I was not sure that I would have the opportunity to compete.  This season has been a blessing to me.  It’s been a gift to be at the racetrack, to run every lap.  I don’t remember myself ever being so excited for practice on Friday and Saturday, getting up at 8:30 in the morning.

    Not 18 months ago I was on Twitter complaining about 8:30 practices, and I can’t wait to get to them now.

    I just want to have ‑‑ I wanted to be able to make that decision myself on retiring and not really have it made for me.  But I feel healthy.  I’m having a really good time driving the cars and enjoying that with my team.  We spoke this morning, and that was the real message, really, was that we feel competitive.  We feel like we can go out there and do well.  We’ve had some odd luck, but when the luck has been there, the results have been there, and the speed has been there in the car.

    So I’m excited about the races that I have left.  Again, it’s like the practices and the mornings that I get so excited for.  Used to complain about the season how long it is, and this one here can drag on along for a while if it’s all right.

    Q.  Dale, when you sat down with a few of us back at speed weeks, you said that you had not ‑‑ that you were going to take the first couple months of the season before you decided whether you’d sign a contract extension.  You said earlier that you first spoke to Rick about it on March 29th.  So that’s probably about a month’s worth of time.  Were you relatively quick in deciding that you were going to make this decision into the new year?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  I made it just shortly before I talked to Rick and let him know my decision.  So obviously I think every driver thinks about retirement and how they want that ‑‑ what they think that looks like for them as they get to a certain age.  But I wasn’t really thinking about that too much until the last couple years.  Once I started to realize how delicate things are and how quickly that can be made for you, it’s something I had to start thinking about quite seriously.

    But, yeah, as soon as I got my mind made up, I got in touch with Rick and told him that I had made my decision, and that we should sit down and discuss.

    Q.  Dale, you’re sitting beside one of the most successful car owners in the history of Motorsports.  Should we be shocked somewhere down the line if you and Kelley decide to evolve JR Motorsports into a Cup level team?  Is that part of your scenario?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  Kelley’s shaking her head no over here, so I’m going to have to go with that.  I’d be honest with you, I’ve often admired the work that it takes and the commitment that it takes having been close to my family’s business, and obviously very close to Rick.  I get to see just how much effort it takes that goes into it.  Not only does Rick have to manage all of his automotive industry and empire, but this is a full‑time job in itself.

    I tell him all the time that he’s old enough to start relaxing a little bit, but he won’t listen.  So he loves to win.  He’d rather be in Victory Lane than fishing off the back of his boat.  Just barely, but that’s how he is.

    I really enjoy being in the XFINITY.  There is a reward that I get of helping people achieve their goals and get to the next level.  Luckily with our relationship with Rick, we’ve been able to accelerate that and make some great things happen for a lot of people, whether it be drivers, crew chiefs, and aspiring crew chiefs.  That’s really so rewarding to me.  That’s even greater than the wins to see somebody get a job somewhere on a Cup level, get an opportunity to step up.

    I feel like we’re doing it right if we’re giving people that platform, that springboard.  I don’t know if you can replicate that anywhere else.  I really enjoy that.

    Q.  I wonder if part of this takes pressure off you if you knew this decision was coming and a lot of people are debating publicly, is this really hard on him.  Was he doing it because he felt a pressure to stay or to leave.  Is any part of it that lets the future open up for you that you feel like the pressure’s off?  And you sitting there in a suit, you are a businessman.  You own Whisky River, you own JR Motorsports, would you like to be on the business side of things more, and do you see that for your future?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  Well, I definitely ‑‑ my heart loves being in the car.  I love driving, and I enjoy it as much as I ever have.  There’s a lot about it that I really love, and I love to do.  And I think you guys see that when you’re at the track.  We all know there is no fooling.  But it’s not ‑‑ I don’t know that it’s been ‑‑ it’s really emotional.  I just don’t like letting people down and worry about disappointing my boss and my friend, and my crew.

    These guys, we all depend on each other to be there every day and to come in and say I’m not going to be here one day is very difficult.  We all kind of wish we could stay together forever.  But I’m still going to be here and want to be an influence and a part of their success, however that may be.  I do have ambition to work.  I’m not going to quit working.  There’s a feeling of being an asset to something.

    I don’t have to be the guy holding the trophy.  But being part of that success, I really enjoy.  I really enjoy making people happy and doing stuff as a team.  I think I can replicate that in the next chapter of my life.

    I’m certainly excited about all the things we’ve had going on with the dealerships and Whisky River.  We’re growing the Whisky River in the airport locations, and the dealership is, I think, one of the best dealerships that Rick’s ever opened, to be honest.

    RICK HENDRICK:  Probably is.

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  First class place.

    RICK HENDRICK:  Did you tell them, if they need a car call you?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  It’s in Jacksonville, if you want to go down there.  It’s the only Chevy store in town, single port market.

    RICK HENDRICK:  It’s in Tallahassee.

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  I’m sorry, Tallahassee (laughing).  I’m a little spun out up here, sorry.  But, anyways, I’m really excited about all those opportunities and being a bigger part of that.  If they’re going to succeed, I’m definitely going to have to be involved and be a part of that.

    I’ve made two or three trips a year down to the dealership, and we’ve certainly been a big part of the Whisky River brand since we opened it.  Yeah, I can be more involved in that stuff.  But it’s not going to succeed without my involvement, I know that, so I’ve got to be dedicated to it.

    Q.  This season hasn’t started probably like you’d like it to have started.  If you had a win or two by now, would that have delayed this decision, do you think?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  That’s pretty hypothetical.  I don’t know.  I think that ‑‑ I do love winning races, but it’s not the priority as far as ‑‑ it’s not the one thing that I enjoy the most.  The one thing that I enjoy the most about racing is my relationships with my team, my friendships with those guys and working with them now.  When it goes right, we win races, we celebrate together, and that’s awesome.

    But the friendships are much more important to me.  Winning races is not that much fun when you don’t enjoy who you’re doing it with.  Nothing, no success is really as sweet when the people you’re doing it with isn’t someone you connect to or have a relationship with.  I think I got much better at that at the end of my career.

    When I was young, I was really good at running everybody out of the shop with my mouth, and now I think I’m getting everybody together and rallying everybody and getting everybody excited about each thing we’re doing.  So certainly learned a lot and matured.  It’s been through those relationships and working with my team, my crew chiefs that I’ve grown.  The wins were really important, and still are in a selfish way.  But the friendships and the relationships that you make are things that will last forever.

    Q.  When you look at the big picture, the Daytona wins, Cup wins, the XFINITY wins, one day though people are going to remember that involuntarily you raised awareness of concussion treatment, and voluntarily you’re doing some major things.  A lot of people are going to be very healthy and families are going to be together.  How does that make you feel?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  You know, I don’t really ‑‑ it makes you feel great.  Anytime you get a letter in the mail or you run into somebody at the racetrack or wherever you’re at, and I’ve even had guys within our own organization come up to me and tell me how that’s effected them or helped them understand part of it or what to do or gotten them their own help.

    One of the greatest things about that whole experience ‑‑ one of the greatest things about it is when I went up there to Pittsburgh and got the help from Mickey and those guys, I had some people come out of the woods wondering where do I get this help.  Then to hear their success stories and hear them go up there, get the help they’ve been looking for for all these years, it’s been a tremendous experience for me.

    So I enjoy helping people get in front of the right people.  And I think this man here has made a big impact on my life and set that example for me.  One of the first things I learned about Rick when I came to drive here is some of the employees’ family members were ill.  Him having gone through his illness that he went through, he knows the value of being in front of the right people at the right time and how critical that is.  And he would put people on airplanes and fly them wherever they needed to be to be in front of the right people.

    You would hear these stories way under the radar.  Nobody was preaching it.  He wasn’t talking about it.  So the person that I’m proud of, that I am today, has a lot to do with being here, being around Rick, and being with his organization.

    So I love to help people, and I think that that just ‑‑ all of that has rubbed off on me.  Just being in this environment has made me better.  But it’s awesome to have that opportunity to be able to get people in front of the right doctors and get them the right help.

    Q.  You typically wear your heart on your sleeve, but I’m having a hard time putting my finger on exactly how you’re feeling today.  You seem solemn, but you said you’re spun out up there.  Is this a sad day for you?  Are you relieved?  What are your emotions today?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  Yeah, there are a lot.  Very, very bittersweet.  You know, it seems like I’ve told you guys this so many times, so I hate to rehash it over and over.  But when my dad was doing so well, and there were a couple guys coming into the sport that were sons, it was difficult for them to replicate their dad’s success.  I just saw even at an early age before I was a driver, that growing up in that man’s shadow was going to be a really hard challenge, but I wanted to race, but I knew racing would put me in that shadow.

    So I kind of just ‑‑ I knew the odds of me really having any talent at all and being able to do it were thin.  They are for anyone.  So at a very young age all I wanted to do was be able to make a living driving cars.  I didn’t set goals.  I didn’t dream of winning championships or Daytona 500s or working with one of the best owners in the business driving for one of the best organizations.  I just wanted to do it.  I just wanted to be able to do it.  I was afraid of not being able to do it.  So I guess what I’m saying is have I accomplished way more than I’ve ever dreamed.  Way more than I ever thought I’d accomplish.

    So I’m good, you know?  I’m good on that front.  I’m so blessed and fortunate as far as what I was able to achieve.  But I’m very sad because I know that I let a lot of ‑‑ it’s definitely disappointing for a lot of people to wake up to that news this morning.  I know we’ve got a lot of fans that are very sad for lack of a better way to describe it.

    So I feel that emotion as well that what I’ve announced today has had that effect on a lot of people.  But with that said, I never assume what kind of reaction I’m going to get from anything.  But it’s been really positive, and that’s meant a lot to me.

    So, yeah, there’s been some tears.  The hardest part was telling Rick.  I mean, me and him sit in the office and let it all hang out.  We’ve said a lot of things to each other that I think we’ve both been wanting to say for a long time.  You just never sit down and give yourself time to do it.  Everybody’s so busy.  So it’s been a lot of emotion.

    At the same time, this isn’t the end of the road.  I mean, we’ve got the rest of the year.  I’m going to be in Richmond this weekend with my foot on the floor, going down the front straightaway, and this press conference will be a distant memory.  So there is a lot of racing left that I’m excited about.

    So I’m going to be on a little bit of a roller coaster this week, but I’m expecting it to be business as usual within a few days.

    Q.  You’ve almost made this sound like this was a simple decision.  You said you wanted to go out on your terms.  But can you explain what you went through in the process of coming to this point?  How you determined it?  You just talked about tears.  How often did you cry?  Was it in Rick’s office?  Was it with Amy?  How did it come to this point for you?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  Well, it’s hard to really spell that out.  Going through what we went through last year was a challenge.  I was pretty sick at one point.  Didn’t think that I was going to get to race, and none of us were very confident that we were going to get to race again.  I could tell that that was a very difficult thing for Rick, and I knew it was not a very good situation for my team to be in.  Even though they did a great job with their substitutes and finished out the season really, really strong, it was just really hard to watch all that happen knowing that I had an effect on all of that and felt a little bit responsible for it.

    But they picked up and got through it.  They’ve done it before.  This isn’t uncharted territory for Rick at all.  But I don’t think I ‑‑ you know, going through that process, there were a lot of ups and downs.  I knew when I got healthy that I’d want to get back in the car.

    Once I started feeling like I’ve got to race again, I was talking to my docs, what do you think?  I really kind of want to do this, it became about going to Rick and saying I really want to honor my contract, and I want to come back.  For me, to know that I did it and I got healthy again, I wanted to make this decision on my own and not have it made for me.

    It was really just a lot of time and a lot of emotion in that period.  You think you’re out of the car, there’s crying at that point.  You get healthy, I’m excited.  I’m excited to be back in the car now and happy.  But it’s a bit of sadness to make that decision to retire, but just a lot of stuff has happened over the last 10 months.  We’d have to sit here for a few days to go over it to spell it all out.

    But for me personally, it was a ‑‑ I’m at peace with the decision.  I’m very comfortable with it.  More concerned with the fallout of it, hoping that the transition for the team, the company and everything is a good one.  They’ve got a lot of things to get excited about in their future.  I just want the best for Rick, so I want to be a part of helping that process as we move along.

    Q.  The TV interview you did yesterday pretty much captured the essence of who you are as a racer, and there were a lot of jokes on the internet if that was loud‑talking Dale or if that was broken oil system Dale.  It really captured who you are and why fans love you.  I thought to myself in that moment, oh, NASCAR is so screwed when Dale retires.  I literally looked and said that.  So for both you and Rick, Tony’s gone, Jeff’s gone, and now Dale’s gone.  What, and who is there to be excited about?  What does this sport need?  Because this is three huge names 3 years in a row.

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  Kyle Larson, Chase Elliott, just to name two of probably a dozen guys that I’m excited about.  I think that’s all I read about on Twitter yesterday was how awesome the race was and how much fun it is to watch Larson, and it’s true.  He’s a real talent.

    And all those guys have great attitudes, great personalities.  I know them well enough to be excited about how fans are going to know them in the future.  I feel like that these are the guys that they’re the cream of the crop, and maybe I’m the only one that sees it in this room, but I really have a lot of confidence in the personalities that we have.

    In my history of being around the sport, there’s kind of always been these little gaps in between everything that cycles, whether it’s fashion or drivers or cars or whatever.  It never really is a seamless transition from one to the next.  I think that these guys that are coming in, they’re really sharp and smart about how to utilize social media, how to engage with fans.

    You see the stuff that Blaney and Bubba do, and they’re not afraid to really show their personalities.  That’s completely different than any of us older guys.  We’ve never been like that.  So this is a new batch of guys that are going to do things in a new way.  They’re going to bring a lot of color and excitement and energy to the sport.  We’ve just got to get them in front of the fans, let the fans get to know them, and I think the rest will take care of itself.  But I’m thrilled.  We definitely have tons of talent.  There is no question.  But I love the people they are.

    Larson is cool as a cucumber.  Easy to talk to, marketable.  I mean, and Chase is the same way.  Chase is so easy and approachable.  That’s what you’ve got to be.  These guys are effortless at it.  So once they start to pick it up and understand the power of what they have at their fingertips, the sky’s the limit for NASCAR.  I’m super excited about the future.

    Q.  Your perspective on that?  You’ve had a bit of an eye for talent over the years?

    RICK HENDRICK:  Yeah, I agree 100% with what Dale said.  I don’t know what I can add, really.  I think he’s exactly right.  I’ve never seen so much young talent.  I can remember when the question was all of our drivers are in their 40s or they’re going to be, what are we going to do when they retire?  I think we’ve got the answer.  They’re here, they’re young, they’re aggressive, they’re fun.

    The Bristol race was one of the best races I’ve seen.  It was close, nobody got into each other, or I didn’t see any of it.  And I just give Dale a tremendous amount of credit for the eye for talent.  He’s been a huge ‑‑ when I really want to know the facts, I’ll sit down with Dale, and he’ll give me the unfiltered no bias, hey, this guy’s good for this.  This guy’s great at that.

    And I think the difference is going to be Tony’s in the pits, Jeff’s on TV, Dale’s got a huge commitment with four teams.  He’s going to help the team he just got out of the car with.  So he’s going to be visible.  He’s not walking away.  I think the sport has got a lot to be excited about, and I think the fans ‑‑ let’s face it, Dale is unique.  You can’t replace Dale.  I mean he’s got so many just wonderful traits of his personality the way he cares about people, cares about everything he does, and that’s why so many people are attached to him.

    But his commitment is to see the sport grow, and mine and every other owner and every other driver.  I think we’re in a great position right now.  The competition is equal.  All the talent.

    So, again, I’m excited about this second chapter in his life, because we’re going to do a lot of it together.  But he also is still going to be in and around and visible in the sport, and help tap these young guys on the shoulder and really tutor them.  Tell them what they’re doing wrong, what they could do better, and how to ‑‑ because he’s been through all those cycles of life, no one in the garage could be any better than Dale Earnhardt to mentor these guys because he’s been through all the different stages, and every one of them look up to him.

    So I think we’re in a good place.  I’m excited about the future and looking forward to, again, him helping me in a lot of different areas working together.  So it’s going to be neat.

    Q.  Dale, if the Cup season was shorter by 6 to 10 races, would you still be sitting here today?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  I don’t know.  That’s another hypothetical question, and I don’t think that’s ever going to be a reality.  I think the train’s running down the track and it’s just getting up steam and there is no way to slow it down.  Some of the drivers might want to cut a few races off the schedule, but I don’t ever see that happening.

    Like I said, I kind of want this season to drag just a little just so we make sure we get everything we can out of it.  I don’t know.  I don’t know any different than what I’ve been doing.  We get out of the car for a couple months, the month of December and January, and we talk about, man, that was a long season.

    But by the time we’re done with Vegas, all of us are ready to drive something.  Any of those drivers, even though they’re glad to be off, would love to strap in one and just go race somewhere.  It don’t last long before that feeling that you need some time off, it doesn’t last very long.  You’re ready to get back at it.  I think it’s a part of the competition and the competitor inside you, but it’s also because we’re all a family.

    Everybody, not just the teams, but you see all the same people in the garage, the media folks, and it’s just this big traveling circus, and we’re all part of it.  You get used to that every week.  And man, when it’s gone for four to eight weeks, you don’t know what to do with yourself.

    I don’t know.  Yeah, I look at the XFINITY schedule and get a little jealous sometimes.  But I don’t think that has anything to do with my decision.

    Q.  Mr. H has alluded to the second chapter a couple times saying there is a lot left for you do together.  I gather a lot of that is going to be focused around driver development.  So with all the factors that go into that with handling the media, the grueling schedules to getting behind the wheel and actually winning, what about who you are will make you effective at bringing those guys along?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  You know, I’ve worked with all the guys that we’ve had over at JR Motorsports, and you just kind of step in there whenever you think that ‑‑ you know, there is a time and a place.  A lot of guys learn from their own mistakes, and if you can watch them from a short distance, especially when you’re the owner of the car, you keep a short distance.

    But you kind of watch them make these mistakes, and you see them learn from them.  And if they don’t quite learn, you step in and say this is what happened there and this is why that happened.  If you don’t understand what went wrong there, you’re doomed to make that mistake again.  That might be how he communicates or what he does on the racetrack.  It could be something he’s doing off the racetrack, his interaction with sponsors.  You handle that on a case‑by‑case basis, and every guy handles that criticism differently.  So the delivery is really important.

    Some guys want you to come marching in banging your fist on the table.  Other guys want you to put your arm around them and play some basketball and talk it out.  But I enjoy the race team that we have at JR Motorsports and the fact that we have graduated so many people.  That’s something that I look forward to over the next several years is to continue to be a breeding ground for talented men and women that are mechanics and crew chiefs and drivers.

    Our connection to HMS is critical to us having success to be able to do that.  But we’ve worked really hard to where we’re both assets for each other.  The relationships got to work both ways, and we work very hard to make it to where it benefits Hendrick Motorsports as well and makes them better on Sunday, and we intend to keep that going.

    Q.  You made this decision nearly a month ago.  Have you waffled back and forth?  Has there been an internal struggle for you?  Mr. Hendrick, have you tried to get him to change his mind?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  No, I’ve never woke up since I talked to Rick and had a change of heart.  I think ‑‑ I wouldn’t do that to Rick, for one.  I wasn’t going to him until I was 100% certain this was what I wanted to do, and he knows me well enough.  So when I made my decision, it was easy to stick to it.

    Q.  We’ve seen a lot of drivers retire and maybe go try something that I’ve wanted to do.  I saw Brian Vickers run Le Mans, we’ve seen Sports Car Racing, Sprint Cars, you have a lot of passion for late‑model stocks.  You have the two XFINITY races next year.  Do you see yourself doing anything else?  Maybe going to Martinsville trying to win a clock in the late model or something like that?  Or are you done with those two or wherever that may lead you?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  I’m definitely ‑‑ I think I’m open to being a driver over at JR Motorsports when it works and benefits the company.  Certainly that’s why I’ve done that over the last several years.  It’s a critical piece of our partnerships in many instances over there.  So we’re definitely going to leave the book open to continue to do that, and open to do that, depending upon the packages that come across the table other.

    Otherwise, I told Amy I might slip off and run a 40 lapper at Hickory one night.  So if I’m missing on a Saturday night, she might know where I’m at.  But other than that, I don’t have any plans.

    Q.  Dale, when you reflect back on your career from the race wins to the time with your guys and your team, what have you enjoyed the most?  We still have quite a bit of racing to go in the season, so what would be a satisfying successful final season for you?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  I can say right now, winning races.  We feel very confident that that’s not out of the question.  Me and Greg have had more communication this year than ever.  We started this off‑season sort of admitting to each other that we both could put more into this relationship.  And for us to be successful or more successful, we’ve both kind of got to dig in.  We’ve been communicating weekly about what we saw that we liked and didn’t like.

    We’re utilizing that communication to keep motivating our guys when the chips are down and if we have results like we did this past weekend.  But as positive as me and Greg are, that kind of trickles down to the rest of the team, and those guys are fired up.  Especially after today and just talking to them this morning, we definitely have had a lot of urgency to go out there and try to make some things happen this year, which makes me feel good.  So, yeah, to get some wins.

    Obviously, if we win a few races, we make the Chase and get a chance to run for the championship.  So all that stuff leads ‑‑ you know, one thing leads to another.

    What do I look back and I’m mostly proud of?  You know, coming out of the gate and winning two XFINITY Championships blew me away.  I had ran 159 late model races and only won four.  I didn’t think I was going to get a job.  I thought, actually in ’97 dad came up to me and Kelley and said, Your late model funds have dried up.

    And I ran about seven late model races that year and didn’t have anything else to do going on.  I was struggling to figure out what my next step was.  I called up James Finch and begged him to let me drive his car and he turned me down.  I still give him crap about that today.  But believe it or not, I know you guys, a lot of you weren’t around or some of you were, but there was a point around ’96, ’97 where it just about didn’t happen.

    So going in there and winning those two championships and winning those a little more than a dozen races in a couple years was incredible.  I was just shocked at everything we did every week.  And to be doing it with Tony Junior, Tony Senior, my family, Uncle Danny, to be doing it with my dad’s family team was just so fun.

    Then one of the other things was coming back from our injury in 2012 and winning the Daytona 500 with Rick.  We won ‑‑ we swept the Pocono races which was really cool.  But winning the Daytona 500, I always kind of wanted to leave some kind of mark here.

    Jimmie Johnson’s got them all over the place.  He’s marking up this joint left and right.  Great teammate.  But, yeah, I wanted to leave some kind of Mark that somebody would know I was here.  When we won that Daytona 500, that made me feel good about my impression on the company.  It’s always fun to win with Rick, because like I said, that’s what he loves the most.

    Q.  Whether it’s fair or not, a lot of people do associate the health of the sport with Dale Jr. and what he’s doing, and how he’s doing.  Did any of that weigh on you in making this decision?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  No.  I just had to make the decision that I’m happy with.  We certainly want to ‑‑ it’s a tough thing to have to tell people and certainly was challenging expressing to my family and very close friends what my decision was, with you I have to make the one that I want to make and the one I’m comfortable with living with.  So that’s what I did.

    Q.  Rick, you’ve known for a month now about Dale’s decision, have any plans been set in motion about what will be done with the No. 88 come next speed weeks in Daytona?

    RICK HENDRICK:  No, we’ve got a lot of people to consider, meaning partners, like our sponsors, and we’ve just been talking to them.  Priority one is to get everything prepared, get the day over with, and then we’ll take time to decide what we do there.

    Q.  Dale, can you talk about your relationship with Kelley and knowing you’ve got her by your side?  How important knowing that you working with her side‑by‑side made this decision easier looking towards the future?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  I’ve got to give not just Kelley a lot of credit, but my whole team, everybody at JR Motorsports Rick, and Jesse, and his whole group for helping make this decision a lot easier.  Obviously my wife Amy has been ‑‑ she’s present every minute of the whole deal.  So there’s been a lot of folks that have been part of this discussion over the last month.

    Kelley certainly, as I said, she’s sacrificed so much to help me keep my business affairs in order.  Not only being my general manager, but handling JR Motorsports, our licensing arm, and marketing arm and so many things.  She’s been super supportive.

    Mom was great.  I thought mom would be so upset, but she was a real trooper.  My uncle Danny, he was probably the one in the family that was most upset with me.  He just loves watching us race so much.  But anyways, it’s been a big group of guys.  Mike Davis was a big, big part of it.  So Tyler Overstreet and everybody involved, it’s been a group effort to organize this and letting the right people know, having the right conversations, plan it properly, and also to move forward and to be productive moving forward.

    We’ve got a lot of work to do, and it’s going to be a lot of fun.

    Q.  Dale mentioned the toughest part was that meeting with you and not wanting to disappoint you.  What was it like when he finally came to you and said for sure this was it?  What was that meeting like for you?

    RICK HENDRICK:  Normally when we just extend it I get a call from Kelley saying get the paperwork ready, so when he said he wanted to talk to me, I had this inkling it might be pretty serious.  But, again, I felt like a member of my family came and sat down with me and said this is what I’ve decided to do, and immediately ‑‑ I mean, I’d love to have him drive as long as I own a race team.  But as the conversation went on, I felt like we’re going to do things together, and this was going to come at some point.

    Everybody gets to a point in their career that they retire.  I think we immediately ‑‑ we spent a lot of time talking about how much we’ve done together, care about each other, and then immediately went to the next chapter.  But it was a tough conversation, very emotional conversation, but just because of our relationship and how we care about each other.

    He knows there are just a lot of people involved.  But I feel like when we came out of that deal we were excited about what’s next.  So I’ve been trying to focus on what’s next.

    But on one hand it was tough, but the other hand it was a great feeling that you can share with people that you don’t really have many of those opportunities in life.

    Q.  You have quite the farewell tour coming your way for the rest of the season.  Jeff Gordon was a fan of it, Tony Stewart maybe not so much.  Is that something you’re going to embrace for the rest of the season?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  Yeah, I really don’t know what to expect to be honest with you.  It might not even do me much good to ask them two because they both had different opinions about it possibly.  But I’ve been treated so well by the industry and by the fans everywhere we go.

    It’s business as usual for me at the racetrack want to go in there, race, do well.  But I’m sure it will be quite a bit different.  So we’ll just take it as it comes.  You know, we only have to go to Texas once instead of twice, so I know Eddie won’t have too many opportunities to pull any crazy stuff on me.  He’s the only one I’m probably worried about to be honest with you.

    Q.  You’ve talked about your family support and the folks that were okay with the decision.  Your uncle was a little disappointed, and you’ve dealt with some hypotheticals.  One last one for you.  What would your father say to you today?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  You know, I’ll always let other people tell me what they think dad would think in a certain situation.  I’ve always ‑‑ I never would have assumed that he was proud of me when he was alive.  Certainly wouldn’t make that mistake after he passed.

    I just never felt like I was worthy of assuming that of him.  I always was open to hearing from people that know him really well what they think he would think.  And I’ve talked to some people in the past 24 hours that know him pretty well, and they’re pretty confident that he would be very proud.  I think there are a lot of things I’ve done over the last several years that he’d be super surprised.  He’d probably be somewhere already surprised.

    So I think he would have ‑‑ he wouldn’t tell me to my face, but he would probably tell Rick or anyone else that would listen here today that he was very proud of me, and then I’d have to go hear it from Rick.

    RICK HENDRICK:  I knew your daddy pretty well.  I knew him real well.  He would be proud of the man that you are and what you’ve done for so many, and all the charities and all the good will that you’ve done.  He would be very, very, and is, is very proud of you.

    THE MODERATOR:  Rick, I was going to give you a chance for last comments, but that’s probably a great one for you to end on.

    Dale Jr., closing thoughts?

    DALE EARNHARDT JR.:  Yeah, I want to thank all the media for coming on such short notice.  Things kind of got scrambled on our timing due to the weather yesterday in Bristol, so it was short notice for you guys and I appreciate that.  Our relationship has always been really important to me, and I think I’ve got a great relationship with a lot of you guys and look forward to seeing you all throughout the rest of the season.  Hopefully I’ll be in that media center for some podiums and possibly a few victories before the season is over with.  So thank you very much for coming out today.

    THE MODERATOR:  Dale, you said you wanted people to know that you were here, take my word for it, they knew you were here, and throughout NASCAR Nation.

    Thank you on behalf of all of us.  Thank you on behalf of Dale Earnhardt Jr., Hendrick Motorsports for joining us today, and have a great afternoon.

    FastScripts by ASAP Sports

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  • Kyle Busch Fastest in Final Cup Practice at Bristol

    Kyle Busch Fastest in Final Cup Practice at Bristol

    BRISTOL, Tenn. — Kyle Busch topped the chart in final Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series practice at Bristol Motor Speedway.

    The driver of the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota was the fastest with a time of 14.925 and a speed of 128.563 mph. Daniel Suarez was second in his No. 19 Gibbs Toyota with a time of 14.960 and a speed of 128.262 mph. Kasey Kahne was third in his No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet with a time of 14.961 and a speed of 128.253 mph. Chase Elliott was fourth in his No. 24 Hendrick Chevrolet with a time of 14.969 and a speed of 128.185 mph. Jimmie Johnson rounded out the top-five in his No. 48 HMS Chevrolet with a time of 14.971 and a speed of 128.168 mph.

    Kahne posted the fastest 10 consecutive lap average at a speed of 127.482 mph.

    Halfway through the session, Chris Buescher got loose exiting Turn 4 and damaged the right-rear corner of his car. His team opted to roll out the backup.

    [pdf-embedder url=”http://www.speedwaymedia.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/C1708_PRACFINAL.pdf”]

  • Allgaier Fastest in Final Bristol XFINITY Practice

    Allgaier Fastest in Final Bristol XFINITY Practice

    BRISTOL, Tenn. — Justin Allgaier topped the chart in final NASCAR XFINITY Series practice at Bristol Motor Speedway.

    The driver of the No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet was the fastest with a time of 15.422 and a speed of 124.420 mph. Erik Jones was second in his No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota with a time of 15.509 and a speed of 123.722 mph. Kyle Larson was third in his No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet with a time of 15.525 and a speed of 123.594 mph. Ryan Blaney was fourth in his No. 22 Team Penske Ford with a time of 15.535 and a speed of 123.515 mph. Austin Dillon rounded out the top-five in his No. 2 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet with a time of 15.552 and a speed of 123.380 mph.

    [pdf-embedder url=”http://www.speedwaymedia.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/N1707_PRACFINAL.pdf”]

  • Should Non-Variable Banking Return to Bristol?

    Should Non-Variable Banking Return to Bristol?

    BRISTOL, Tenn. — Applying VHT to the bottom groove at Bristol has made it the preferred way around once more. It begs the question, however, if digging up what remains of the progressive banking and restoring the steep 36 degree incline would be more effective.

    Following the 2007 Food City 500, the banking was reconfigured with progressive banking to eliminate the one-groove racing. It was successful in that regard, but it came at the cost of cars beating and banging, tempers flaring and declining attendance.

    Last August, Bristol Motor Speedway announced it was treating the bottom lane of the turns with VHT TrackBite, which is a custom formulated resin used to increase traction in racing. The result was largely successful and the preferred groove around the circuit was the bottom, with slight diminishing returns deeper into the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race.

    So it was little surprise that late last month, Bristol announced that the VHT would be used again.

    “We applied the treatment to the lower groove in the four turns and coming out of the straightaways,” Jerry Caldwell, executive vice-president and general manager of Bristol Motor Speedway said. “The substance really just helps rubber stick to the track. And then we brought in a tire machine that we used to drag the track for a while to get rubber down and give drivers some grip so they can get down there and hang with that upper groove.”

    But is it more effective than the old steep banking? And since the point of the VHT was to bring the racing groove back to the bottom, why not bring back the steep banking?

    Kurt Busch, who’s no stranger to success at Thunder Valley, said, in short, “you have to adjust….”

    “We’re not just gonna go dig up Augusta, Georgia because the golfers don’t like the new tee boxes. You have to adjust to the millions of dollars that Bristol Motor Speedway invested into the track’s new surface and we’re trying to find that right combination,” he said.

  • Bristol Motor Speedway – Did You Know?

    Bristol Motor Speedway – Did You Know?

    NASCAR travels to Bristol Motor Speedway this weekend for the Monster Energy Cup Series Food City 500. The first Food City 500 was held on April 5, 1992, 25 years ago. But did you know that it was won by Alan Kulwicki who started from the pole and led 252 laps to claim his second consecutive victory at Bristol? It was the final race on the asphalt surface (it was changed to an all-concrete surface later that year) and it was also the last one to be run on bias-ply tires.

    The inaugural NASCAR Cup Series race, the Volunteer 500, was held on July 30, 1961 and country music icon Brenda Lee, who was only 17 at the time, sang the national anthem. Tiny Lund was first on the track for practice and Fred Lorenzen won the pole with a speed of 79.225 mph. But did you know that of the 42 competitors who started the race, 11 of those drivers (more than 25 percent) would later be included on NASCAR’s 1998 list of its 50 greatest drivers?

    Jack Smith won the Volunteer 500 but he only drove the first 290 laps. The intense heat in the car blistered his feet and he had to turn to a relief driver, Johnny Allen, to complete the race for him. Allen finished two seconds ahead of Fireball Roberts. Ned Jarrett, Richard Petty and Buddy Baker finished third through fifth, respectively.

    There have been 112 Cup races since then, two each season. Forty-two different drivers have won at Bristol led by Darrell Waltrip with 12 victories. Kurt Busch and Kyle Busch lead active drivers with five wins each.

    Qualifying will be especially important this weekend at Bristol as 89 of the 112 (79.4 percent) Cup races have been won from a top 10 starting position. But did you know that 24 of the races have been won from the pole (21.6 percent) making it the most productive starting position? Carl Edwards, the defending spring race winner, was the last driver to win from the pole.

    Heading to Bristol, Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Matt Kenseth and Kyle Busch have the top two driver ratings at the .533-mile track. Kenseth has the series-best driver rating (100.9), four wins, 13 top fives, 20 top 10s and two poles. Busch’s stats are equally impressive with the second-best driver rating (100.5), five wins, eight top fives, 13 top 10s and one pole. But did you know that Busch is also the youngest Bristol winner (03/25/2007) at 21 years, 10 months and 23 days?

    Stewart-Haas Racing driver Kevin Harvick has the series third-best driver rating (95.7) at Bristol to go along with his two wins, 11 top fives, 15 top 10s and one pole. Harvick has led the most laps this year, 419, and is looking for his first win this season.

    Bristol Motor Speedway has provided some of the most intense short track racing in the series. It has long been a fan and driver favorite as it brings out the best and sometimes worst in the competitors. The key to success, according to Richard Childress Racing driver Paul Menard, is rhythm and precision.

    “Bristol is a rhythm racetrack, you get in the race and just hit your marks, and get into a groove. To make a pass you have to break that rhythm and then quickly get back into it. The key is doing that and not making a mistake. You’ve got to stay in your groove.”

    Recalling his first time at the track while testing a car, he said, “I ran about 20 laps and was totally out of breath. I was convinced that you couldn’t fit 43 cars on the racetrack. But, as we all know, you definitely can.”

    The Food City 500 will be televised on FOX Sunday, April 23 at 2 p.m. with radio coverage on PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR radio.

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

  • Hamilton wants to try his hand at Daytona

    Hamilton wants to try his hand at Daytona

    Fernando Alonso took the motorsports world by storm yesterday when he announced that he was bypassing the Grand Prix of Monaco to enter the 101st Indianapolis 500 on the same day. So naturally, other Formula 1 drivers were asked if they would do so as well down the road.

    Among them was three-time world champion Lewis Hamilton, who’s no stranger to the NASCAR world. He was a guest of Jeff Gordon’s at Homestead-Miami Speedway for the season-ending Ford EcoBoost 400 in 2015.

    He was asked, based on Alonso’s decision, would he run an “iconic race” such as Indy or Le Mans if given the chance.

    “Probably a NASCAR race, like the Daytona 500 maybe,” he said.

    Hamilton would be only the second Formula 1 world champion to compete in the Daytona 500 and first after winning a title (Mario Andretti won the Daytona 500 prior to his 1978 title).

    For Hamilton to run the Daytona 500, if he ever does attempt it, he’d likely run an ARCA race at Daytona International Speedway or Talladega Superspeedway as other drivers with no prior restrictor plate racing experience have done. But NASCAR has the discretion to allow a driver with no prior experience racing at Daytona or Talladega to race at Daytona and/or Talladega regardless. Their résumé committee looks over all drivers based on different factors, such as experience, speed of tracks, etc.*

    He also said he’d like to do MotoGP.

    “I’d like to ride a MotoGP,” he said.

    But Hamilton added that unlike Alonso, he wasn’t going to “miss out any of the races in Formula 1.” He also didn’t answer whether or not he would run the Indianapolis 500 or the 24 Hours of Le Mans, as was asked in the original question.

    The two other drivers part of the media availability, Stoffel Vandoorne and Sergio Perez chimed in on the question.

    “Yeah, I think I’ve decided to do the Spa 24 Hours instead of Hungary this year,” Vandoorne exclaimed.

    “I certainly wouldn’t miss Monaco because for me Monaco is my favorite weekend in the whole calendar. So I wouldn’t miss Monaco and normally you have that clash,” Perez said. “But I’d like to do some other racing. I certainly have some interest in IndyCar. The Indy 500 is certainly one of the best races in the world, so I’d definitely to do some.”

    *This article has been corrected to show that a driver with no prior restrictor plate racing experience may compete at Daytona and/or Talladega at NASCAR’s discretion. It incorrectly stated previously that NASCAR requires prior experience for restrictor plate races.

  • A Silver Anniversary Gold Rush: Monster Energy All-Star Race Format Announced

    A Silver Anniversary Gold Rush: Monster Energy All-Star Race Format Announced

    $1 Million At Stake as NASCAR, Charlotte Celebrate 25th Anniversary of ‘One Hot Night’ 

    DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (April 11, 2017) – As the engines fired, the lightbulbs buzzed – a first for the annual non-points extravaganza. Never before had an all-star race been run under the lights. Dubbed “One Hot Night,” the 1992 race signaled a new era, one that became tradition for the fan-favorite event.

    And now, 25 years later, past meets present … as another new era begins with the first all-star race under the Monster Energy banner.

    NASCAR and Charlotte Motor Speedway today announced the format for the 2017 Monster Energy All-Star Race, one that rewards winning, and incorporates a fascinating strategy component.

    The race format is as follows:

    –       The race will feature four stages (20 laps / 20 laps / 20 laps / 10 laps), totaling 70 laps, an ode to the 1992 edition of the same distance.

    –       The goal for all competitors: Earn a spot in the final 10-lap, 10-car stage.

    –       The winner of each of the first three stages will lock up a spot in the final stage, as long as they remain on the lead lap after the third stage.

    –       The cars with the best average finish in the first three stages will make up the remaining spots needed to fill the 10-car final stage.

    –       The remaining 10 cars will be lined up by average finish of the first three stages and given the option to pit. Exit off pit road determines starting order for final stage.

    –       The winner will be awarded $1,000,000.

    Crew chief strategy has been at a premium throughout this season, and that won’t change in the all-star race thanks to a unique opportunity granted each team: a coveted set of softer tires. Each team will have one set of these tires available to use at their discretion. A softer tire provides the car with more grip and, thus, speed. In other words, it’s a game-changer. But there’s a catch: Teams that choose to put on their softer tires to start the final stage must start behind those that choose regular tires.

    “The Monster Energy All-Star Race is designed to be fun for fans, showcasing the best drivers and race teams in NASCAR,” said Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR executive vice president and chief racing development officer. “With the effort that Goodyear has put into this race with multiple tire compounds, I am excited to see how the stages play out, especially the final 10-car, 10-lap sprint to the checkered flag.”

    “The Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race is etched in the history of our sport for the most memorable moments, trend-setting innovation and big-money payouts,” said Marcus Smith, president and general manager of Charlotte Motor Speedway. “This new 70-lap format pays tribute to the 25th anniversary of ‘One Hot Night’ while pushing the drivers to the brink of insanity with the chances they’ll take to win $1 million.  I’m as ready as our fans for a May 20 Saturdaynight shootout where only a daredevil behind the wheel truly has a shot at Victory Lane.”

    Qualifying for the main event, which returns to Friday night, will again include the wildly popular ‘no speed limit’ four-tire pit stop. Each team will have three timed laps, one of which will include a mandatory four-tire pit stop with no pit-road speed limits enforced. The five quickest teams will advance to the final round of qualifying to determine starting positions one through five. The team that completes the fastest stop will earn the Pit Crew Competition Award.

    The Monster Energy Open will occur Saturday evening prior to the Monster Energy All-Star Race and will include three stages (20 laps / 20 Laps / 10 laps). The winner of each stage will earn a spot in the all-star race. The Monster Energy Open field will be set by two rounds of traditional knock-out qualifying.

    Those eligible for the Monster Energy All-Star Race include: drivers who won a points event in either 2016 or 2017; drivers who won a Monster Energy All-Star Race and compete full-time; and drivers who won a Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series championship and compete fulltime. Those who have not already earned a spot via the above criteria can still lock-in by winning a stage in the Monster Energy Open or by winning the Fan Vote.

    Drivers who have already clinched an all-star spot: Chris Buescher, Kurt Busch, Kyle Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Denny Hamlin, Kevin Harvick, Jimmie Johnson, Kasey Kahne, Matt Kenseth, Brad Keselowski, Kyle Larson, Joey Logano, Jamie McMurray, Ryan Newman and Martin Truex Jr.

    Weekend passes for the Monster Energy All-Star Race start at just $79 and include admission to the May 19 N.C. Education Lottery 200 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race, May 20 Justin Moore All-Star pre-race concert presented by Rayovac and Kwikset and the Monster Energy Open.  Individual adult tickets for the May 20 Monster Energy All-Star Race start at just $39 and tickets for children 13 and under are just $10. To obtain tickets, camping or race-day upgrades, fans should call 1-800-455-FANS (3267) or shop online at www.CharlotteMotorSpeedway.com.

    The Monster Energy All-Star Race and Monster Energy Open will air live on FS1 starting at 6 p.m. ET. The races can also be heard on MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

     

     

    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 Camping World Truck Series™), three regional series, one local grassroots series and three international series. 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 http://www.NASCAR.com and http://www.IMSA.com, and follow NASCAR on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Snapchat (‘NASCAR’).

    About Charlotte Motor Speedway

    For more than 50 years, Charlotte Motor Speedway has set the standard for motorsports entertainment for fans of all ages. Charlotte Motor Speedway is the only race vacation destination where fans can immerse themselves in the heart of NASCAR country. Visitors can attend one-of-a-kind race spectacles such as the Monster Energy NASCAR All-Star Race, the Coca-Cola 600 and the Bank of America 500; take behind-the-scenes speedway and race shop tours; explore the NASCAR Hall of Fame; and drive an 800-horsepower stock car. Through every event and every decade, Charlotte Motor Speedway puts FANS FIRST with a never-ending commitment to enhance the fan experience. That tradition continues with unmatched value through affordable season tickets, unparalleled prerace entertainment and more opportunities for fans to see their favorite drivers. For all the latest news and information from The Greatest Place to See the Race, visit www.charlottemotorspeedway.com, follow on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, or download the Charlotte Motor Speedway mobile app.

  • Blaney Takes Second at Texas in XFINITY, ‘Learns a lot’ for Sunday’s Cup Race  

    Blaney Takes Second at Texas in XFINITY, ‘Learns a lot’ for Sunday’s Cup Race  

    Ryan Blaney drove his No. 22 Ford to a second-place finish at Texas Motor Speedway in Saturday’s My Bariatric Solutions 300 NASCAR XFINITY Series race. It was his second race in the series this year and his second top-two result.

    Erik Jones won the event scoring his second win at Texas and his seventh career victory. He led 112 of the 200 laps and beat Blaney to the checkered flag by .512 seconds. Blaney, who led 43 laps, was pleased with his team’s overall performance but said that Jones got such a lengthy lead on the last run that he “couldn’t run him down.”

    “I thought our car was pretty good all day,” Blaney said after the race. “The 20 seemed to be a little better than us for 35 or 40 laps. Then I feel like we could start running him down. We passed him before the last pit stop and I thought our car was pretty decent right there. I needed to turn a little better early in a run. I knew it wasn’t going to be that long for the next stint. We didn’t come out with the lead and that hurt us. I think if we would have come out with the lead I don’t know if I could have held him off.

    “He was pretty good right away but we kind of over adjusted and got too free that last run. I felt like we were kind of even with them 10 laps into a run but then he got so far out ahead that we couldn’t run him down. Just couldn’t get there. I thought it was a solid weekend overall for the 22 group. I felt the way the car has been running on that side is promising. It has been second a lot this year and that team deserves a win. They have been working hard the past six months to get competitive again and be in position to win races. We just need to have one go our way.”

    As Blaney was winding down after the XFINITY Series race, his focus soon shifted to Sunday’s Cup Series race and how he could transfer what he had learned to the O’Reilly Auto Parts 500.

    He is currently seventh in the points standings with three top 10s this season and one top five at Daytona where he finished second. Blaney is looking to rebound at Texas after getting caught up in a wreck last week at Martinsville Speedway that resulted in a 25th place finish. With the newly repaved surface at Texas, the extra track time he gained during the XFINITY Series race will be invaluable.

    Blaney described what he learned, adding that he would “have some comments” for the team during the post-race debrief.

    “The track changed a lot in the second half of the race. The beginning of the race was treacherous at the top. I think me and Erik fell back to eighth and ninth from 2nd and 4th just trying not to go anywhere and wreck. I feel like that came in a little to where it wasn’t as deadly up there from passing lap cars. You get stuck behind a lap car and you can’t pass them for a lap or so and that part was tough. They don’t want to leave the line and get in the dust either so you have to kind of wait and just time it right. Personally, I learned a lot for tomorrow’s race. I think it will be very helpful. I was really thankful to run this race to get some laps. That part was good.”

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