Category: XFINITY Series

NASCAR XFINITY Series news and information

  • The Only Thing Missing from the Daytona 500 was the Locusts

    The Only Thing Missing from the Daytona 500 was the Locusts

    [media-credit name=”Credit: Chris Graythen/Getty Images for NASCAR” align=”alignright” width=”286″][/media-credit]There was something in the air on Sunday that you just kind of knew that NASCAR had once again been beaten by its arch nemesis Mother Nature. The monsoons like rains were unrelenting and the track was being to resemble the Everglades more than NASCAR’s crown jewel Daytona International Speedway. But what was to come no one could have possibly predicted.

    History was made during this years Daytona 500. It was a foregone conclusion that history was going to be made regardless of who won when NASCAR vice president Mike Helton announced that the Daytona 500 would be run during prime time on Monday evening. Fox broadcasting was in. All of its affiliates and stations would broadcast the rain delayed season opener during its most expensive broadcast time frame. Starting at 7PM EST and running to its conclusion. It would be the wee hours of Tuesday morning before the sport would crown its Daytona champion for 2012. But it was all that happened in between the start and finish that would make it memorable.

    The anticipation on the starting grid was thick you could almost cut it with a knife. 43 of the best stock car drivers in the world had waited 36 hours to get the Daytona 500 underway. They were ready to race. They were under the lights. They were in prime time. The pressure of the 500 is normally pretty high but this made it more so.

    The classic under the lights phenomenon took place early on. The cool night temperatures and the lights take us back to our roots of Saturday night racing and always bring a more aggressive driver to the track. That aggression showed it’s head on the second lap of the race in the form of a multi-car pile up that took out 5 time Jimmie Johnson and involved the sports new star Danica Patrick.

    Patrick who was a victim of other people’s crashes in every race that she ran at Daytona sat patiently and dejectedly in her mangled car while crew chief Greg Zipadelli and team made the extensive repairs to get her back on the track. Many of her detractors pointed fingers and said see she can’t drive. However, the truth was light years from that. The truth was that she showed the guts and tenacity of her muse the honey badger. She refused to quit. Even when she had made up as many spots as possible and was given the option of parking the severely injured Go Daddy Chevrolet she persevered. At the end of the 6 hour race she exited her car pale and obviously exhausted with a smile and the patience to answer the mass of media’s questions. Her skill set is lacking yes. But so is the skill set of every other rookie who has ever driven a cup car at Daytona including names like Tony Stewart, Dale Earnhardt Jr, Rusty Wallace, Ken Schrader and yes even Richard Petty. She showed however, that she has the tenacity to acquire the skill set with help from her team and teammates.

    The racing calmed down for many laps with the Roush boys showing the way for most of the race. There were some blown engines due to anomalies that couldn’t be explained completely but were attributed to the rain delay and the moisture’s effect on the gauges, including 4 time champion Jeff Gordon whose Hendrick Motorsports AARP Chevy expired very early on.

    The next real excitement would come for the $200,000 half way bonus. The pack surged, positions were traded wholesale and from the middle of the pack a long shot emerged and with help from Greg Biffle’s Ford, Martin Truex Jr would claim the big half way pay day.

    But the biggest and strangest event of the night was triggered when the yellow flew with 40 laps to go. Juan Pablo Montoya knew he had a problem. The car was vibrating violently in every gear. But he had no warning when the car suddenly snapped to the right and into a truck drawn jet blower and then slide to the bottom of the track. The driver of the jet blower and Juan Pablo Montoya were not injured. But the grand jewel of NASCAR was not so lucky. 200 gallons of jet fuel and diesel ignited out of the third turn setting the track all the way to the grass and including the safer barrier on fire. The spectacular fire could be seen for miles in the night sky.

    The red flag found drivers racing for the porta johns and Brad Keselowski tweeting the activity to world on his phone. The 2 hour delay pushed the Daytona 500 into the wee hours of the morning Tuesday.

    The damage to the track was minimal and patched and the cars again fired to take the green. The race would see more cautions including the final which would collect current champion Tony Stewart. Stewart would restart the race on a Green White Checker deep in the pack with a car whose tow was out 2 to 3 inches according to radio communications with crew chief Steve Addington. Stewart would finish a disappointing 16th on the lead lap and moving through towards the front.

    The race win would go to Matt Kenseth in the Best Buy Ford. Kenseth would hold off the tandem of Greg Biffle and Dale Earnhardt Jr for the win. Earnhardt Jr would make a last turn pass and run to take second.

    One would think that all the strangeness that could possibly effect a race would be done, especially since the checkered flag had flown and the winner had been crowned. But not so in this case, within an hour of the finish of the race the track was enveloped in a thick dense fog that shut down the airport and prevented drivers and teams from leaving the track until Tuesday morning.

    Today, many are talking about the jet dryer crash and TV ratings are the highest for any race in Fox Broadcast history. They are talking about Brad Keselowski’s tweeting during the red flag. NASCAR says that he broke no rules and there will be no fines. They are talking about the fact that Greg Biffle could not advance on Matt Kenseth in the final two laps of the races even with a pusher. Some say he was protecting Kenseth’s win. Some say he found the new catch in the aero package two cars are no longer faster than one or the pack. Some are talking about Danica’s Daytona Fizzle. Frankly, those folks are just wrong. Danica’s misfortunes were not of her own making and she showed a great deal of skill and tenacity. The one thing that no one is talking about this year is a boring race, because this may very well have been the most memorable Daytona 500 in history.

    Congratulations to Matt Kenseth on his Daytona 500 victory. It was well deserved.

    Kudos to Dale Earnhardt Jr and his 88 team on an incredible run it is an incredible start to what promises to be an even better year.

    Kudos to Tony Stewart and his Office Depot team for pushing the envelope to the max with a car that would have been near impossible to drive for some.

    Kudos to Denny Hamlin for showing the strongest and most dedicated performance all night only to come up a little bit short at the very end.

    Congratulations to James Beuscher on his NNS win. And to John King on his NCWTS win.

    That said, to all the competitors in all the series thanks for giving us everything you have to give, you are our heroes. Most importantly, thanks to all the families who shared their loved ones with us so we could cheer our favorite driver and favorite teams. You are the true heroes of the sport and we are forever in your debt.

  • Stenhouse Jr Bashas’ Supermarkets 200 Advance

    Stenhouse Jr Bashas’ Supermarkets 200 Advance

    [media-credit name=”www.phoenixraceway.com” align=”alignright” width=”225″][/media-credit]Ricky Stenhouse Jr. – Bashas’ Supermarkets 200 Advance

    Team:           No. 6 Roush Fenway Racing 25th Anniversary Ford Mustang

    Crew Chief:  Mike Kelley

    Chassis:       RK-748 – primary – last raced at Phoenix 2011- finished fifth

    RK–708 – backup – new Nationwide chassis.

    Stenhouse, Jr – Phoenix International Raceway:

    Race Event St Fin Laps Money Status Led

    4/9/10 Bashas’ Supermarkets 200 14 9 200/200  $         21,975 running 0

    11/13/10 Wypall 200 22 9 200/200  $         27,603 running 0

    2/26/11 Bashas’ Supermarkets 200 15 7 200/200  $         24,728 running 0

    11/12/11 Wypall 200 11 5 200/200  $         31,718 running 73

    Races         Wins    Top-5s          Top-10s  Poles      Led         Money

    Cumulative        4                  0           1        4                 0             73          $106,024

    QUOTES

    Stenhouse, Jr. on racing at Phoenix International Raceway:

    “I love racing at Phoenix. It is a fun track to race at. We have not finished outside the top five in our four starts there.  We were so close in Daytona to being in victory lane so we are looking to rebound and get this No. 6 Ford Mustang in victory lane for the first time in 2012.“

    Crew chief Mike Kelley on racing at Phoenix International Raceway:

    “We are bringing the same chassis that we finished fifth with last November. Ricky has had a lot of success at Phoenix and we are looking to bring the same set-up that we brought there last fall. After racing on the new surface in the fall last year, we have a better understanding of how the car will handle. If we execute on pit-road, I am confident that we can get this No. 6 Mustang in Victory Lane.”

    FAST FACTS

    The 2011 NASCAR Nationwide Champion had two wins, 16 top-five, 26 top-ten, three poles. After Daytona, Stenhouse is currently ninth in the NASCAR Nationwide drivers’ championship with 25 points. Stenhouse’s average finish at PIR is 7.5; he has completed a 100% of the laps.

    About Roush Fenway Racing

    Roush Fenway Racing is the winningest team in NASCAR history, fielding multiple teams in the Sprint Cup and Nationwide Series with championship drivers Carl Edwards, Matt Kenseth, Greg Biffle, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Trevor Bayne. Celebrating 25 winning years in 2012, Roush Fenway is the leader in NASCAR marketing solutions, pioneering its exclusive Roush Fenway OnTrack sponsorship measurement services, motorsport’s first team-focused TV show and its award-winning social marketing channel RickyvsTrevor.com. Visit www.RoushFenway.com, circle on Google+ at +Roush Fenway Racing, become a fan on Facebook at www.facebook.com/roushfenway and follow on Twitter at @roushfenway. For sponsorship inquiries call John Bauersfeld at 704.720.4621

  • JASON BOWLES AND HIS AMERICAN MAJORITY RACING NO. 81 TEAM HEAD WEST TO PHOENIX THIS WEEKEND LOOKING TO BOUNCE BACK FROM TOUGH LUCK IN DAYTONA

    JASON BOWLES AND HIS AMERICAN MAJORITY RACING NO. 81 TEAM HEAD WEST TO PHOENIX THIS WEEKEND LOOKING TO BOUNCE BACK FROM TOUGH LUCK IN DAYTONA

    “Engine troubles after showing signs of speed ended the day early in Daytona for the MacDonald Motorsports No. 81 Dodge”

    (MOORESVILLE, NC) February 28, 2012 – After some bad luck in Daytona, Bowles and the American Majority Racing No. 81 team head west to Phoenix International Raceway this weekend looking to rebound.  Overheating ended the day early for Bowles after moving up to as high as 18th position in the early stages of the race, leaving him with a 41st place result.

    Daytona Wrap-Up…..The American Majority Racing No. 81 Dodge was very quick in drafting practice on Thursday, posting the 21st fastest time of the 50 cars in the garage area.  The 40th place starting position proved to be a non issue as Jason advanced into the top-25 in just two laps.  After running in the middle of the main pack for the first 25 laps and drafting with Reed Sorenson’s No. 52 car, the temperatures on the American Majority Racing No. 81 began to climb.  On lap 28, Bowles brought the car behind the wall and after 30 minutes of work, the team decided to retire the No. 81.

    Jason’s thoughts on Daytona…..“We had a really strong American Majority Racing Dodge in the draft and I really wish we could have run the whole race to see where we would have ended up at.  Some of the guys we ran with all weekend and during the early stages of the race came home with top-10’s, and I think we would have been there too.  Off the track, I really enjoyed the Betty Jane France Celebrity Poker Tournament on Wednesday night, meeting with all the fans at our vendor row booth each day and visiting with the children from the Speediatrics unit at Halifax Hospital.”

    Jason on Phoenix…..“I am really looking forward to the Phoenix race this weekend.  I’ve had a lot of laps around their in the past and even got a win there a couple years back.  I have been spending a lot of time at the shop with the guys and they are really working hard to make this west coast trip a successful one.”

    Last year @ Phoenix…..The February race at Phoenix last year marked Blake Koch’s first start for MacDonald Motorsports.  Blake ran a safe race and gained a lot of experience en route to a 27th place finish.  In the fall, MacDonald Motorsports brought three cars to PIR with Blake Koch, Reed Sorenson, and DJ Kennington.  DJ and Reed were both caught up in accidents while Koch brought home his best finish of the season with an impressive 14th place run.

    Previous success @ Phoenix…..Jason has made 7 combined starts at Phoenix International Raceway in the NASCAR Nationwide and K&N West Series.  During his 2009 Championship run in the K&N West Series, Jason actually came home with the victory at Phoenix in the Jimmie Johnson Foundation 150.  In 2010, Bowles followed up his victory from the previous year with a solid second place run at PIR.

    Follow Jason Bowles on Social Media…..Keep up with everything that Jason is doing by following him on twitter @bowlesjason.

    www.americanmajorityracing.com www.americanmajority.org www.pledgetovote.com www.mms81.com

    About American Majority Racing American Majority Racing is a national program of American Majority, the nation’s leading conservative grassroots training organization.  The program is designed to target millions of NASCAR fans from all political backgrounds in an unprecedented effort to engage them in the electoral process.  Having teamed up with NASCAR driver Jason Bowles and car #81 MacDonald Motorsports for the 2012 NASCAR Nationwide Series racing season, the American Majority Racing program is designed to educate Americans about how smaller government and less spending will “Keep America Free.”  Through www.PledgetoVote.com, American Majority Racing encourages all Americans to register and vote in the 2012 elections.

    About American Majority American Majority is the leading developer of the nation’s new 21st century conservative grassroots political infrastructure.  The organization uses its cutting edge curriculum to empower individuals and organizations with the most effective tools to promote liberty through limited government.  American Majority trains thousands of activists and candidates each year in communities across the country to be catalysts for authentic change in government.  The non-profit, non-partisan organization is dedicated to developing a new generation of American elected and opinion leadership that will reject the self-destructive policies associated with government expansion and promote those that will lead to growth and success.

    About MacDonald Motorsports MacDonald Motorsports Owner Randy MacDonald has been around the NASCAR circles since 1985, when he began his own racing career with the loving support of his father “Doc” and his mother Pat MacDonald.  As a NASCAR driver, Randy was successful in making it all the way to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.  The MacDonald family became NASCAR team owners in 1986 and have fielded cars in all three of NASCAR’s elite series following faith based principles. MacDonald Motorsports focuses on assisting our sponsors with strategically increasing the overall awareness of corporate messaging or brand recognition by consistently articulating the message to be delivered through motorsports. MacDonald Motorsports offers drivers opportunities to gain experience from grass roots all the way through the elite series of NASCAR.

  • Elliott Sadler’s season off to a good start after surviving Daytona carnage

    Elliott Sadler’s season off to a good start after surviving Daytona carnage

    [media-credit name=”David Yeazell” align=”alignright” width=”300″][/media-credit]One moment Elliott Sadler thought he was going to win the race and the next he was wondering how he made it to the finish line.

    Sadler has unofficially been credited with a third place finish in Saturday’s NASCAR Nationwide Series (NNS) DRIVE4COPD 300 at Daytona. He came out of the mess in turn four to finish behind surprise winner James Buescher and Brad Keselowski. He had been pushing Tony Stewart toward the lead when cars started spinning and swept them into it.

    “Well, it’s normal Daytona. You never know till you see the checkered flag what’s really going to happen,” Sadler said.

    “Tony and I came apart on the last restart a little bit. The 6 [Ricky Stenhouse] wasn’t really pushing us that hard. I came apart from Tony, so I lost a little momentum. We had a ton of steam coming in backstretch. We definitely were going to win that race. We were coming on the outside.

    “I don’t know if Kurt [Busch] came up, Joey [Logano] came with him, all I know is the 20 came up in front of us, pinched us all in the wall. I kept looking in my side mirror waiting for everybody to go by. I just hung a left off the wall, got lucky, found my way back to the start/finish line.”

    Kurt Busch was leading with younger brother Kyle pushing him. As they entered turn three the tandem of Joey Logano and Trevor Bayne jumped to the outside as Sadler pushed Stewart to the outside as well. The three wide didn’t last long as Kurt Busch started to move up the track and soon everyone was in the turn four wall.

    Somehow Sadler was able to swing to the left and avoid the carnage. NASCAR was left trying to figure out what cars were where when the caution came out as drivers climbed from their mangled machines that were scattered all over the racetrack. One single wreck had just taken out nearly the entire field and the man running 11th came out the winner.

    “My spotter told me we’re going all the way to the top,” said Sadler. “I didn’t know how many tandems were in front of us when I got to turn three. He kept telling me what move we were going to make. Went to the top, okay, a pack and a half. One tandem, two cars are split. At that time I saw the 20 car [Logano] come across Tony’s nose and wreck us all.

    “I’m not saying he turned right. I guess he went to the right to miss Kurt. Everybody is trying to win the race. Of course they’re going to try to do everything they can to win the race. Sometimes you’re in the middle of it. Sometimes you miss it. It’s Daytona guys. This is Daytona. I think everybody gets a free pass to take free chances when you’re here for Speedweeks.”

    It wasn’t the ending Sadler had hoped or thought it would be but he’ll take it. As the dust has settled he finds himself the point leader by four over Timmy Hill. Coming off a letdown of a season in 2011 in terms of the championship, Sadler’s glad to be off to a better start.

    Last year he didn’t win a race and spent much of the season attempting to come from behind to catch Ricky Stenhouse Jr. He never did and finished second, not quite living up the expectations that had been set forth in what was supposed to be his resurgence back onto the NASCAR map.

    For 2012 Sadler and his newly formed Richard Childress Racing team are going for broke. RCR has won five NNS championships and has graduated 2011 Camping World Truck Series champion Austin Dillon to the NNS as Sadler’s teammate. There’s no better time or place for the Virginia native to shine and so far so good after opening day.

    “Great effort by my team,” said Sadler.

    “Last year we finished 38th and felt like we had to dig ourselves out of a hole for the first four or five races. Today we felt like we had a chance to win the race, led some laps. We’re very happy for that result. Kudos to my team. We got two top-five finishes. I think if we would have left the shop last week, we’d have two top-five finishes and two cars in one piece, we would be very happy. That’s the results we have.”

  • Mike Wallace has great run at Daytona cut short by multi-car wreck

    Mike Wallace has great run at Daytona cut short by multi-car wreck

    DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (February 25, 2012) – Mike Wallace and the No. 01 G&K Services Chevrolet team of JD Motorsports was saddled with an undeserved 28th-place run in the NASCAR Nationwide Series opener at Daytona International Speedway.

    After posting the 33rd and 17th fastest times in the two practice sessions, Wallace qualified 28th for the 120-lap race. Once the green flag waved, jostling for position took place early on the high-banked, 2.5-mile speedway.

    The native of St. Louis, who has won at Daytona in three different series, didn’t waste any time showing how strong his red Chevrolet was going to race. Within three laps, he was running ninth in the top-10 and looking for more.

    Drafting with several different drivers, he would run between the top-five and top-10 until the first caution waved on lap 30. Radioing into Newt Moore, crew chief, the car was “great, don’t touch a thing” the decision was made to add right side tires and fuel on the ensuing pit stop.

    Restarting 13th on lap 35, he would then race in the top-20 and top-15 and moved back into the top-five by lap 47. One lap later, another caution flew allowing Wallace to hit pit road on lap 50 for fuel only.

    During this caution, Chris Cagle, a country artist who had his upcoming album on the decklid of the No. 01 Chevrolet and sung the National Anthem before the race, came on the radio with some words of encouragement for his racing friend.

    “Man, you are doing an awesome job out there!” Cagle said. “This is incredibly awesome and my heart is in my throat watching you out there. This is impressive.”

    Lined up eighth for the restart on lap 54, Mike had brother Kenny Wallace lined up to help draft. Using some “Brotherly Shove” the two would rocket to the top-five together and stayed there for a few laps.

    Another caution allowed Wallace to pit for four tires and fuel on lap 61. This was the last time they would get tires, needing only fuel stops to get to the checkered flag.

    Restarting 26th on lap 64, he rocketed his way back in to the top-10 two laps later. Running in and near the top-10 throughout the next 40 laps pitting for fuel only twice, laps 75 and 94, the scene was set for Wallace to race to the finish with no more stops.

    After running in the top-five on laps 101 and 102, he was shuffled back to 21st when cars in front of him started to jostle for position while racing three wide on lap 103. And, as is customary at Daytona, cars got together and started spinning.

    With no place to go, the G&K Services Chevrolet was turned and suffering heavy damage to the left front corner. Then, it went up the track and struck the outside wall damaging the right side.

    Wallace limped the car to pit road where repairs began. However, they were forced to the garage where the crew went into an all-out thrash to get their car back out for some more laps.

    Returning to the track on lap 113, Wallace went the distance to finish 28th. The only time he actually ran in that position was when the race started; the rest was in the top-five, top-10 and top-20 during the action-packed race.

    Mike Wallace Quotes: “I had a feeling this was going to happen because everybody was being too patient and things were going too good. Your confidence starts to grow as the race goes on, unfortunately someone just ran out of talent too soon. These cars just don’t drive themselves.

    “We had a great run going in this G&K Services Chevrolet; we ran strong during the whole race and we had a great chance for a top-five, if not better. We had a fast car and the crew did a heck of a job getting this car ready for Daytona. I don’t why we keep having bad luck here.”

    Next weekend, the NNS heads to the one-mile oval of Phoenix International Raceway for a Saturday event.

  • RCR Post Race Report — Drive4COPD 300

    RCR Post Race Report — Drive4COPD 300

    RCR Post Race Report — Daytona International Speedway

    NASCAR Nationwide Series

    Drive4COPD 300

    February 25, 2011

    Race Highlights:

    Richard Childress Racing teammates finished third (Elliott Sadler), fifth (Austin Dillon) and eighth (Tony Stewart). Sadler leads the Nationwide Series championship point standings by two points over Cole Whitt, with RCR teammate Dillon sitting third in the standings. Sadler’s second-place finish serves as his second Nationwide Series top 10 finish at Daytona International Speedway in six starts. Dillon made 239 green-flag passes, ranking him ninth according to NASCAR’s Loop Data statistics. Dillon ranked second in NASCAR’s Loop Data category for closers by advancing 16 positions in the last 10 percent of the race. Stewart recorded the second-best Driver Rating of 115.6 and the third-best average running finish in the 120-lap race with 8.208. Stewart led the second-most laps of the 300 miler with 22. Combined, the RCR entries posted 16.7 percent of the fastest laps of the race, with Dillon and Stewart posting six fastest laps each and Sadler posting three. James Buesher earned his first career Nationwide Series victory and was followed to the finish line by Brad Keselowski, Sadler, Whitt and Dillon. The next Nationwide Series race is the Bashas’ Supermarkets 200 at Phoenix International Raceway on Saturday, March 3. The second race of the 2012 season is scheduled to be televised live on ESPN2 beginning at 4 p.m. Eastern Standard Time and broadcast live on the Motor Racing Network and Sirius XM Satellite Radio.

    Elliott Sadler Battles to Third-Place Finish at Daytona International Speedway

    Elliott Sadler and the No. 2 OneMain Financial team earned their first top-five finish of the 2012 season after a wild last lap at the NASCAR Nationwide Series season opener at Daytona International Speedway. Sadler started the DRIVE4COPD 300 in the third position and worked with Trevor Bayne to charge to the front by lap three, with Sadler pacing the field for eight laps. The Richard Childress Racing driver soon found teammate Austin Dillon as they worked together to push to the front of the field. As Dillon and Sadler were separated in the field, Sadler then turned to his other RCR teammate Tony Stewart. The duo wasted little time working their way to the front of the pack by lap 83. As the white flag dropped, Stewart and Sadler raced around the final turns of the famed 2.5-mile superspeedway, looking for the win. A multi-car accident broke out in the final turn, but Sadler was able to avoid trouble as he dove low on the track, crossing the finish line in the third position.

    Start – 3           Finish – 3         Laps Led – 8               Points – 1

    ELLIOTT SADLER QUOTE:

    “What a race. Daytona is always a wild card, and you never know what’s going to happen until you see that checkered flag. Tony Stewart and I came apart on the last restart a little bit, so I lost a little momentum. We had a ton of steam coming down the backstretch. We definitely were going to win that race, driving the high line. That’s Daytona. It was a great effort by the No.2 OneMain Financial team to put together a really great car for this weekend. Last year, I finished 38th and felt like we had to dig ourselves out of a hole for the first four or five races. Today, we felt like we had a chance to win the race. We are happy for that result, so kudos to my team.”

    Dillon begins 2012 Nationwide Series Campaign with Top-Five Finish at Daytona

    Austin Dillon and the No. 3 AdvoCare Chevrolet team survived numerous multi-car incidents at Daytona International Speedway to earn a fifth-place finish in the Drive4COPD 300. The Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender started the race in the fifth position and ran anywhere from the second to the 31st positions during the 120-lap race, gaining valuable experience drafting within large packs of cars. During the middle portion of the event, Dillon drove in a two car “tandem draft” to move toward the front of the field, notably pushing RCR teammate Elliott Sadler to the top of the leader board on lap 65 and later pushing Dale Earnhardt, Jr. to the race’s lead on lap 91, a move that sparked a wave of cheers from the estimated 82,000 fans in attendance. Dillon was shuffled out of line and running in the 31st position on lap 104 when several cars were collected in a multi-car incident. The 2011 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series champion masterfully drove around the incident and escaped with just minor damage to the right-front fender of the No. 3 Chevrolet. Crew chief Danny Stockman called Dillon down pit road during the ensuing caution and the RCR team changed tires and repaired the front of the car during a lengthy pit stop. The team managed to stay on the lead lap in the process, which allowed to 21-year-old racer to restart the race in the 24th position with eight laps remaining. Dillon advanced to the 12th position in the closing laps and was charging forward in the running order when another multi-car incident broke out as the field took the checkered flag. Dodging low on the track helped Dillon avoid making contact with the cars spinning in front of him and he was credited with a fifth-place finish. He is now third in the Nationwide Series championship point standings.

    Start – 5                  Finish – 5                 Laps Led – 0                      Points Position – 3

    AUSTIN DILLON QUOTE:  “I think I learned a ton today. I think it was tough because if you get a run and you use the bottom, you just get sucked to the back. You have to use the middle or upper lane. I learned that. These cars push a lot of air, so I was learning how to draft in a Nationwide Series car. In the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, the trucks single out, get in a line and get one lane working. I’m used to running third or fourth and working that bottom lane. I had a blast out there. I tell you what, it was really fun. It was three wide for a long time. The first 30 laps, I thought they were going to wreck a lot quicker. We got up through there a few times, got to toss it around and ended up fifth so I’m happy.”

    Stewart, No. 33 Team Claim Top-10 Finish at Daytona Despite Last-Lap Melee

    Tony Stewart was poised to notch his fifth straight win in the season-opening NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Daytona International Speedway, but a last-lap crash while vying for the lead jettisoned those plans. Nonetheless, Stewart was able to nurse his No. 33 Oreo 100th Birthday/Ritz Crackers Chevrolet Impala across the finish line in eighth place while unheralded James Buescher scored a surprise win in the DRIVE4COPD 300. Stewart started seventh in the 120-lap race at the 2.5-mile oval and quickly asserted his familiar position at the front of the field. He took the lead on lap five and went on to lead four more times for a total of 22 laps. As the field took the white flag for the final lap, Stewart hooked up with his Richard Childress Racing teammate Elliott Sadler and rode the high line around turns three and four in a bid for the win. Eleven cars were collected in the last-lap melee, with Stewart and his No. 33 Chevrolet getting pinned against the outside wall. Smoke and debris filled the tri-oval, but Stewart kept his foot in the gas and willed his smoldering, smoking and sparking remnant of a racecar across the finish line in eighth.

    Start – 7          Finish – 8             Laps Led – 22 Owner Points – 8

    TONY STEWART QUOTE:

    “Elliott (Sadler) did a great job. Once we got going, we got a big, big, big run down the backstretch. We got on the outside – we had that lane – and then all of a sudden someone turned right, right in front of us. I don’t know how they got there or why they got there, but it was a pretty abrupt right-hand turn in front of us. Just all of a sudden the door got slammed on us. I don’t know why whoever it was turned right, but it wasn’t a very good time to either try blocking or moving. Richard Childress brought us an awesome Oreo 100th Birthday/Ritz Crackers Chevrolet today. Their whole crew just did a great job. It’s always so much fun to come here because I just sit in the car, I go run about a dozen laps and then they get it ready for qualifying. We ran around by ourselves most of the day when guys were in a two-car tandem and we could run with them. It showed how good a car we had.”

  • Late Race Incident Ends Promising Debut for Ryan Truex and Tommy Baldwin Racing

    Late Race Incident Ends Promising Debut for Ryan Truex and Tommy Baldwin Racing

    Late-Race Incident Ends Promising Debut for Ryan Truex and Tommy Baldwin Racing The No. 36 Grime Boss Chevrolet finished 31st at Daytona

    DAYTONA BEACH, FLA. (February 26, 2012) – Ryan Truex started 18th in his superspeedway debut at Daytona International Speedway. As a rookie, he struggled finding a partner in the DRIVE4COPD 300 and prepared to make a final run at a top-10 finish when a 19-car incident ended Tommy Baldwin Racing’s (TBR) NASCAR Nationwide Series (NNS) debut early. The No. 36 Grime Boss Chevrolet finished in the 31st position.

    Having to qualify on time, the No. 36 Grime Boss team focused solely on qualifying runs in both practice sessions on Thursday. The team worked on the car and significantly improved the lap times throughout the sessions.

    During qualifying on Friday, Truex was the 14th car to post a lap and went straight to the top of the leaderboard. His quick lap qualified the TBR team into the NNS event and gave the No. 36 Grime Boss Chevrolet the 18th starting spot for the Saturday’s 120-lap event.

    Truex started 18th and quickly began to learn the draft. By lap 18, he was in the 20th position and radioed that it was hard to run fast on the low line and seemed that the middle line was faster. The yellow flag flew for fluid on the track on lap 31 with the No. 36 in the 24th position. Truex radioed that he was not getting any drafting help.

    Crew Chief Brad Parrott called for a four-tire pit stop during the caution period. On lap 35, Truex restarted 23rd. Stuck in the inside lane, the No. 36 Grime Boss Chevrolet fell back to the 32nd position the next lap. The 19-year-old racer found a drafting partner and worked his way up to the 19th position by lap 46. He drove into the ninth position by lap 48 when a caution was called on lap 50 for a two-car incident in turn three.

    The TBR team made a fuel-only pit stop on lap 49. Green flag racing resumed on lap 53 with Truex in the 17th position. He worked his way back to ninth place while partnered with Joe Nemechek but lost his partner and fell back to 25th when the next yellow flag waved on lap 61. The team made another gas-only pit stop during the caution period.

    The No. 36 Grime Boss Chevrolet restarted in the 15th position on lap 64. Restarting on the bottom once again, Truex fell to 32nd by lap 67 and continued to look for allies on the track. He worked his way back up to the 11th position when the yellow flag flew for a three-car incident on the frontstretch on lap 75.

    Parrott called for a two-tire pit stop, and Truex returned to the track in the seventh position. Still struggling with drafting help, the No. 36 Grime Boss Chevrolet fell back to the 24th spot by lap 81. The Mayetta, N.J., native continued to work to find a drafting partner and get back to the front of the field. A lap 95 caution for fluid on the track allowed Truex to pit for four tires and fuel. The No. 36 Grime Boss Chevrolet restarted 27th on lap 99 and drove into the 20th position by lap 100.

    Primed for a late-race charge, Truex strategized with spotter Tommy Baldwin on how to get to the front in the final laps. A melee near the front of the field left Truex with nowhere to go. He made contact with a car on the outside, leaving the No. 36 Grime Boss Chevrolet with significant damage on the right front of the car. The TBR team tried to fix the damage but after going two laps down decided to pull the car into the garage since the team is not competing for points. The incident relegated the team to a 31st-place finish.

    “I had a lot of fun out there in the draft,” said Truex. “It was hard to stay up front without help, but I feel like we were good enough to be up there. Drafting is definitely more difficult than it looks on TV, but I really enjoyed it.”

    TBR is scheduled to run the team’s next NNS race at Richmond International Raceway April 27 with Ryan Blaney making his series debut.

    About Nice-Pak:

    Nice-Pak, founded in 1955 and headquartered in Orangeburg, NY is the largest global producer of pre-moistened wipes, including brands such as the original Wet-Nap® Moist Towelletes, Sani-Hands® Instant Hand Sanitizing Wipes, and Sani-Cloth® Germicidal Disposable Wipes. The company pioneered the development of pre-moistened wipes as the optimum dispensing system for cleaning, sanitization and disinfecting in healthcare, household, cosmetic and personal hygiene applications. Nice-Pak/PDI leverages state-of-the-art product development and manufacturing capabilities to supply superior, leading-edge products to every class of trade. For more information, visit www.nicepakwipes.com or www.pdipdi.com. Look for Grime Boss at www.grimeboss.com or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/GrimeBoss.

    About Tommy Baldwin Racing:

    NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) Crew Chief Tommy Baldwin formed Tommy Baldwin Racing (TBR) in 2009. Baldwin utilized a declining economy to open a NSCS team with a stringent budget. The team worked to build to full-time competition, and by the 2011 season, the team’s third season, TBR competed in every race and locked the No. 36 Chevrolet in the top-35 in NSCS Owner Points. Dave Blaney drove the No. 36 Chevrolet to TBR’s highest finish of third in the October 2011 event at Talladega Superspeedway. TBR also fielded a second car for select races in the past two seasons with multiple drivers.

    Based in Mooresville, N.C., TBR will compete in the NSCS in 2012 with NASCAR veterans David Reutimann and Dave Blaney. The team will also compete in the NASCAR Nationwide Series with Ryan Blaney, Bobby Santos and Ryan Truex.

    For more information on Tommy Baldwin Racing, visit tommybaldwinracing.com or follow us on Facebook and Twitter.

  • RCR Post Race Report — NextEra Energy Resources 250

    RCR Post Race Report — NextEra Energy Resources 250

    RCR Post Race Report — Daytona International Speedway

    NASCAR Camping World Truck Series

    RACE: NextEra Energy Resources 250

    TRACK: Daytona International Speedway

    Race Highlights:

    Richard Childress Racing teammates finished ninth (Ty Dillon), 18th (Joey Coulter) and 20th (Brendan Gaughan) in the 250-mile race. Dillon increased his position by seven spots in the final 10 laps of the race. Dillon was the fourth fastest driver in a late run. Dillon made a total of 154 green-flag passes during the race that ranked him ninth amongst his competitors. Coulter boasted the fourth best average running position of 8.679. Coulter spent 91.7 percent of the contested laps running inside the top 15, the fifth best percentage. Gaughan posted a ninth-place average running position that ranked him sixth amongst the 36-truck field and was the third fastest driver in a late run. Gaughan ran inside the top 15 for 85.3 percent of the race and made the eighth best green-flag passes with 164.

    Gaughan, No. 2 Team Collected in Late-Race Incident at Daytona, Finishes 20th

    Brendan Gaughan and the No. 2 South Point Hotel & Casino team collectively kept themselves out of trouble during Friday night’s 100-lap affair at Daytona International Speedway until a late-race, multi-car incident, not of their doing, ended their night early and relegated them to a 20th-place result. The new Richard Childress Racing driver started the 250 miler 11th and maintained a top-10 position for the opening 20 laps. A pit stop under caution for two tires and fuel occurred on lap 20 but the Las Vegas native was blocked in his pit stall by another competitor that resulted in a 15th-place restart position three laps later. Gaughan wasted no time making his way through the field, running inside the top eight by lap 40. Four caution periods transpired in the next 50 laps that saw crew chief Marcus Richmond either summon his driver to pit road for fuel only or keep him on the race track for position. During that time, Gaughan held his own inside the top 15 and found himself in the seventh position with seven laps remaining, setting himself up for a run at the checkered flag. An incident on lap 95 brought out the caution flag and set the tone for the first attempt at a green-white-checkered finish. He hooked up with fellow Chevrolet driver Ron Hornaday in the outer lane and gained momentum on those running in the inside lane before another multi-car incident slowed the field again. This time, Gaughan restarted sixth and as he and the field were coming to take the white flag, he slowed the black and gold Chevy to avoid the frontrunners making contact with each other. As a result, was he was tagged from behind and sent spinning, receiving damage that ended the team’s night early with an undesirable 20th-place result.

    Start – 11          Finish – 20         Laps Led – 0          Owner Points – 20

    BRENDAN GAUGHAN QUOTE:

    “The No. 2 South Point Hotel & Casino Chevrolet ran great all night. When Hornaday and I hooked up at the end of the race, we hammered down and were headed towards the front. The Earnhardt Childress Racing engine was phenomenal. After the last restart, Matt Crafton was behind me pushing and as we were coming into the tri oval, I could see a couple of trucks in front of me making contact. Matt, obviously, couldn’t see so when I slowed to avoid them, he bumped me and before we knew it, we were both in the wreck. It’s unfortunate but I’m proud to be with RCR and racing in their top-notch equipment.”

    Ty Dillon Finishes Ninth in the Season Opener at Daytona International Speedway

    Ty Dillon survived close calls and bumper-to-bumper traffic driving the No. 3 Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet to a ninth-place finish in his career-first NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Daytona International Speedway. Dillon climbed into the famed No. 3 Chevrolet for the first time Friday night in front of an estimated crowd of 57,000 fans. The Lewisville, N.C., native started the scheduled 100-lap event from the fourth position but slipped to 17th-place as the inside line draft showed to be the dominating line in the opening laps of the event. Dillon settled into the 13th position when the first caution flag of the night was displayed on lap 19. Scott Naset, the 2011 Cometic Crew Chief of the Year called the No. 3 Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet to the attention of the pit crew for right-side tires and one can of fuel. Restarting 16th on lap 23, Dillon quickly found his Richard Childress Racing teammate Joey Coulter as the two tried to build momentum, utilizing the bottom line draft. Unfortunately, in the process, the 19-year-old driver fell to the 19th position. Dillon rode in the top 20 for the next 15 laps until debris in turn three slowed the field on lap 51. Naset led his driver to pit road for four fresh Goodyear tires and fuel leaving the No. 3 Chevrolet in the 23rd position for the lap-54 restart. The 2011 ARCA Racing Series presented by Menards champion worked the two lines looking for the most suitable drafting partner. Dillon moved into the 15th position with 10 laps remaining before maneuvering his way through two spinning trucks directly in his racing path. Due to extensive clean-up time, the field was set for a green-white-checkered finish. As the green flag waved on lap 99, another multi-car incident occurred, collecting a piece of Dillon’s right-front fender. Naset called the young driver to pit road to ensure all fenders were pulled away from the tires allowing Dillon to participate in the mad dash to the finish. Dillon survived two more green-white-checkered restarts to earn his first top-10 finish of his 2012 rookie season in the NextEra Energy Resources 250.

    Start – 4          Finish – 9         Laps Led – 0             Points – 8

    TY DILLON QUOTE:

    “Wow, what a race. The No. 3 Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet was fast but we were caught in a lot of traffic during the race. That’s just how pack racing is. We made it through some wrecks tonight that could have ended our day early but we made it through and brought home a top-10 finish.”

    Joey Coulter Takes Wild Ride on Final Lap, Finishes 18th at Daytona

    After running in the top 15 for a majority of the 109-lap event, Joey Coulter and the No. 22 Mama Lucia Meatballs Chevrolet team finished 18th after a frightening accident ended their night coming to the white flag on a third attempt for a green-white-checkered finish. The 21-year-old driver, in his second fulltime season with Richard Childress Racing, started the race ninth. He entered the top five by lap five and stayed there until the first caution flag waved on lap 19. Restarting second after crew chief Harold Holly called for fuel only on the first trip to pit road under caution, the Miami Springs, Fla., native faded back through the field while trying to get back to the preferred bottom line of the 2.5-mile superspeedway. Once he was settled back in, Coulter moved around inside the top 15 until a caution-flag period on lap 63 prompted Holly to call his sophomore driver to pit road for left-side Goodyear tires and Sunoco fuel. While exiting pit road, Coulter made contact with the No. 23 truck, but the damage was minimal and he continued without any issues. The reigning Sunoco Rookie of the Year ran the next 30 laps in the top 10 while developing a strategy with his RCR teammates- Ty Dillon and Brendan Gaughan- for a last-lap dash to the checkered flag. After a late-race accident created the first of three green-white-checkered finishes, Gaughan and Dillon were both collected in a multi-truck accident on the ensuing restart, forcing the fourth-place running Coulter to work with Todd Bodine for the final two-lap shootout. On the restart while pushing Bodine to the white flag, Coulter’s Chevrolet Silverado was clipped in the rear by another competitor, sending the No. 22 end-over-end and airborne into the DIS catchfence. The battered truck came to rest at the entrance to turn one and Coulter was scored in the 18th position after final review by NASCAR officials. Coulter was all smiles and uninjured after the spectacular crash.

    Start – 9          Finish – 18         Laps Led – 0             Points – 17

    JOEY COULTER QUOTE:

    “I’m fine, just really amazed that I’m not hurt. Thanks to everyone that provides safety equipment for me, including Sparco suits, Shock belts, Butler seats and Simpson. It was unbelievable. When I felt the back of the truck get airborne, I thought to myself, ‘this is going to be big.’ I had my eyes closed for most of it so I’m not sure how big it was. I’m just extremely grateful and surprised that I didn’t get hurt. Thanks to everyone on the No. 22 Chevrolet for an awesome night. Thank you to Mama Lucia Meatballs for coming on board. I hope they enjoyed watching it. I thought we had something for them at the end, but I knew it was going to be wild.”

  • Richard Petty Motorsports Nationwide Race Report — Daytona

    Richard Petty Motorsports Nationwide Race Report — Daytona

    DRIVE4COPD 300 RACE REPORT

    Michael Annett

    No. 43 Pilot Flying J Ford Mustang

    Michael Annett started the 120-lap NASCAR Nationwide Series event at Daytona International Speedway from the 16th position. Annett finished the season opening event as follows:

    27th—Michael Annett, No.43 Pilot Flying J Ford Mustang

    Saturday marked Annett’s first race with Richard Petty Motorsports

    Annett ran in the top-15 for the majority of the 300-mile event and was scored as high as third place before getting caught up in a late race accident

    James Buescher claimed the victory Saturday afternoon after a race filled with eight cautions

    Timmy Hill was the highest finishing (seventh)Ford Mustang at Daytona

    Two NASCAR Nationwide Series records for Daytona International Speedway were set Saturday, the most lead changes (38) and the most leaders (16). The previous record was 35 lead changes among 12 leaders

    Unofficially, Annett sits in 16th place in the NASCAR Nationwide Series driver point standings heading into Phoenix next weekend

    Annett’s Thoughts After the Race: *“My Pilot Flying J Ford Mustang was really fast today, but we just got caught up in some unfortunate circumstances at the end of the race and it ruined our chances for a good finish. I can’t say enough about my Richard Petty Motorsports crew, they did a phenomenal job today. We had a few bumps and bruises out there, but they never gave up. I think today was a good learning experience for us all. It was a total team effort and I appreciate all of their hard work.

    “I’m really excited to go to Phoenix next weekend and see what kind of a Pilot Flying J car we’ve got. Daytona is so unpredictable and the best car doesn’t always win. This was the first time I have ever raced in a Ford Mustang and I was really impressed with the power underneath the hood. I’m expecting a fast car next weekend and I think we’ve got a good chance to finish up front at Phoenix. I can’t wait to get to the west coast and get my second race with RPM in the books.”

    Next up in NASCAR Nationwide Series action is the Bashas Supermarkets 200 at Phoenix International Raceway, March 3, at 4 p.m. ET. The event will be broadcast on ESPN2.

    Be sure to follow Richard Petty Motorsports on Twitter @RPMotorsports for behind the scenes updates, driver appearance information and qualifying and race updates. You can also check us out on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/pages/.

  • James Buescher wins DRIVE4COPD 300 after Last Lap Crash

    James Buescher wins DRIVE4COPD 300 after Last Lap Crash

    [media-credit name=”David Yeazell” align=”alignright” width=”231″][/media-credit]Going into the final corner, it looked as if Kurt Busch, Tony Stewart, or Joey Logano would find themselves in victory lane. However, coming out of turn four, Kurt Busch would slide up, getting into Logano, who would get into Stewart, wrecking the entire front of the field. As the mess sorted out, James Buescher would find himself as the first driver crossing the finish line to win the DRIVE4COPD 300.

    “Nobody wanted to work with us at the end,” Buescher said in victory lane. “We just got the best draft we could after everybody. I saw everybody wrecking there, I just went to the bottom and tried to get by all of it. We didn’t have a lot of track position there, but we stuck with it and we won.”

    The victory marked the first victory for Buescher in the NASCAR Nationwide Series.

    “Anytime you win a race, it means a lot,” car owner Steve Turner said. “But with our goal of working with young drivers, gives us a good shot and makes me feel comfortable that we’ve put the right guys in the right place. We’ve really changed our organization over the off-season to cater to the young drivers.”

    Buescher hadn’t escaped trouble all day long as he was involved in the caution on lap 75. Michael Annett got into Brian Scott, turning him into the side of Buescher before Scott hit the wall. The team worked on fixing the damage and were trying to work their way up at the end.

    Brad Keselowski, who had fallen back in the pack with Buescher, would be credited with finishing second.

    “I don’t know how we brought the Discount Tire Dodge home; lots of squirming around there,” Keselowski said. “If we could’ve got through without that minor damage, we could’ve won.”

    Sadler, who was pushing Stewart at the time of the incident, would escape being wrecked to finish third and be the highest driver in the finishing order that’s running the full Nationwide Series schedule.

    “It felt like the leader came up and tried to block, and blocked too late, and pinched the 20 into the wall in front of us,” Sadler said. “We had a run there and a good shot to win the race. It’s so fun running with Tony Stewart as he always knows how to use the right lane.”

    Rookie Cole Whitt would find his way around the incident to finish in the fourth place position. Whitt had a rough day himself. On lap 49, he got into the back of Danica Patrick to push her at the wrong time in the middle of the corner, turning her into the wall.

    “I don’t think it’s ever great when teammates come together,” Patrick, who finished 38th, said. “We’ll have to figure out what happened and move forward.”

    “We’re teammates,” Whitt said. “We want our team to win. I mean, that’s why we were pushing each other anyways – we want to get our team up front together.”

    Patrick quickly displayed her displeasure with Whitt, which Whitt said, “I wouldn’t expect her to be happy about it. I wouldn’t be happy about it either. I don’t know why anyone would expect her to be like, ‘Oh yeah, that’s great.’ ”

    Then once on pit road after the incident, Whitt would get turned around backwards on pit road as he was coming into his pit while Kyle Busch was leaving his.

    Rookie Austin Dillon would survive the last lap scramble to come home in the fifth position.

    “We didn’t get to stick to our game plan like we wanted to at the beginning of the race,” Dillon said. “Changed up, got dropped to the back.  Had to work our way back to the front.  Got hooked up with Elliott at one point in time.  Got back up to a decent stop.  Got some track position. Then we got faded back again.  Hooked up with Jr.  Drove to the front.  That one run felt really good pushing with him and Elliott, too.  It was fun.  It was difficult to tandem through the pack.  You had to fish your way through the pack.  When you had a gap to push, you could push.

    “My car was really good at pushing today.  The Advocare Chevrolet was fast enough to get to the front.  Ended up in the front.  Doesn’t matter how you get there, as long as you finish up there, so it was fun.”

    Tayler Malsam and Timmy Hill sneak by the wreck to finish sixth and seventh, while Tony Stewart would finish eighth, going for his fifth consecutive Daytona victory.

    “I don’t know that we even made it to turn four,” Stewart said. “We got a big run on the outside and all of a sudden the door got slammed on us. I don’t know why whoever it was turned right, but it wasn’t a very good time to either try blocking or moving. It was definitely not the finish we wanted for sure. We had an awesome (car) today.”

    Kasey Kahne would finish ninth with Kurt Busch rounding out the top 10.

    “We were up front, leading laps and doing exactly what James Finch would have wanted,” he said. “We took the white leading and had the lead halfway down the back. Everybody was side drafting and we got separated.

    “I went to crowd the outside lane, didn’t know that there were two cars up there. I thought it was just a single lane. I was trying to side draft to get the best finish I could at the end. Everybody was racing to the end. Man, a lot of tore up cars. That’s just everybody full throttle at the end.”

    This wouldn’t be the only incident of the afternoon that Busch would receive the blame for as with 17 to go, he would try to squeeze through a hole three-wide that wasn’t there. The result would be a 20-car wreck that included Robert Richardson Jr., Denny Hamlin, Justin Allgaier, Kenny Wallace, Casey Roderick, Reed Sorenson, Johanna Long, Ryan Truex, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Dillon, Mike Wallace and TJ Bell.

    “I quickly reminded myself why I don’t run these races,” Hamlin said. “It’s hard to control your fate in these races….had been running up front, was up front there, and just a chain reaction. Looked like Kyle and Kurt got a run up through the middle there and scared some people.”

    The middle part of the wreck saw Sorenson drive partly under Allgaier’s car.

    “I saw guys spinning in front of me and tried to get around them, but got caught up with another guys,” he said. “With having the two-car tandems and pack racing, guys are getting runs there that shouldn’t be.”

    The next race for the Nationwide Series is next weekend at Phoenix Raceway.