Category: Race Central

Race Central Stories

  • Kyle Busch Scores 100th Career Nationwide Series Victory for Joe Gibbs Racing at Texas

    Kyle Busch Scores 100th Career Nationwide Series Victory for Joe Gibbs Racing at Texas

    After swapping the lead back and forth with Joey Logano throughout the day, Kyle Busch would lead the final 13 laps en route to scoring the victory in the O’Reilly Auto Parts Challenge at Texas Motor Speedway. It marks the 70th victory of Busch’s career and his seventh victory of the season. More importantly, though, it marks the 100th career victory for Joe Gibbs Racing in the Nationwide Series.

    “It’s obviously a special moment for all the guys at Joe Gibbs Racing. They have worked hard to get this many wins and get these wins,” Busch commented in victory lane. “I’m just glad to be a small part of the effort. It’s a blast to drive these cars.”

    For Gibbs, Busch’s victory gives him his ninth victory of the 2014 season as Elliott Sadler and Sam Hornish Jr. also scored a win apiece this season.

    “Just proud of Kyle, all these guys and their pit stops,” Coach Joe Gibbs said. “We love this series and love being in it. We took us five years to get one, so we really appreciate this. The Lord has blessed us with a great group of guys to do this.”

    Joey Logano would finish second to extend the gap between the No. 22 Penske Ford and the No. 54 Gibbs Toyota in the Nationwide Series Owner’s Standings despite sliding through his pit stall mid-race. It marks his ninth top-10 finish of the 2014 season.

    “I was going for pit stall one, but Nationwide pit stall one is actually pit stall two so I just missed it there,” Logano commented. “At least I redeemed myself there. We were fast on the long run, good enough to pass him – but then I got loose and along he came. He was able to gap us a little bit, and made that green flag pit stop able to keep the advantage.”

    Ryan Blaney would finish third as he looks toward the full schedule in 2014, followed by Chase Elliott and Matt Kenseth. Elliott now holds a 48-point lead over Regan Smith in the driver’s championship standings with two races remaining. If the 18-year-old can finish in front of Smith at Phoenix International Speedway, he will clinch the championship in his rookie season.

    “Just got to keep doing what we’ve been doing over the past couple of weeks,” Elliott said. “When we started out today, we really, really struggled. From the start to the finish, this is probably the best performance that we have had together working as a race team. So big thanks to NAPA, the Nationwide Series and Chevrolet; everyone that makes this possible. We want to get another win before the end of the year so hopefully we can do that at Phoenix.”

    Brian Scott finished sixth, followed by Austin Dillon, Kevin Harvick, Elliott Sadler and Dakoda Armstrong. Sadler was credited with a ninth place finish, but did not run the full event as he got out of the car under the first caution at lap eight when J.J. Yeley got in the wall due to feeling nauseous and feeling stomach pains. Bowyer qualified the No. 11 car, and would climb behind the wheel under the first caution.

    “You never want to get in, especially for someone like Elliott; hate to see him sick like this,” Bowyer said. “The OneMain Financial Toyota was really fast out there. Just got loose out there late in the race.”

    Smith would bounce back to finish 11th despite having to make an unscheduled pit stop mid-race due to a loose wheel. Kyle Larson finished 12th despite having to start at the rear of the field due to missing qualifying as a result of failing to get through technical inspection due to rear camber issues. Chris Buescher finished 13th, followed by Dylan Kwasniewski and Ty Dillon.

    Championship contender Trevor Bayne did not have the day that he was looking for as he finished 36th after blowing a right front tire and hitting the wall, causing the car to catch fire.

    “I’m guessing a tire went down,” Bayne said afterwards. “I haven’t seen anything to know. I don’t know what to do as this was the best Nationwide Series car that we had. it was hauling the mail today, had a lot of speed. We definitely had the car to win but it wasn’t our day today, unfortunately.

    “There was no warning. I just wonder why it caught fire, whether due to contact with the wall or blown oil line before. It felt like a tire the whole time. It never happens when you’re running 20th and struggling along; it always happens when you’re running well. I can’t thank my guys for working hard and giving me a good car.”

    Team owner Jack Roush said that based on looking over the tire after the wreck, it looked as though the tire “lost its air due to something being run over on the track.” Roush also added that they were “still inconclusive” though as they “haven’t figured out what damage on the tire is from the wreck versus the tire blowing out.”

     

  • Kyle Busch Powers to Camping World Truck Series Win at Texas

    Kyle Busch Powers to Camping World Truck Series Win at Texas

    October 31, 2014

    FORT WORTH, Tex.—After an astounding run toward the front after a late restart in Friday night’s Winstar World Casino and Resort 350 at Texas Motor Speedway, Kyle Busch took the checkered flag under caution at the end of a green-white-checkered-flag run to the finish of the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race.
    In a wild final two laps that left ThorSport Racing teammates Jeb Burton and Johnny Sauter at odds on pit road, Burton finished second, followed by Timothy Peters, polesitter Tyler Reddick and series leader Matt Crafton.

    Sauter went spinning through the infield grass after what appeared to be incidental contact from Burton on Lap 145 of a scheduled 147 to cause the caution that set up the green-white-checkered finish and sent the race five laps beyond its posted distance.

    The victory was Busch’s seventh of the season, his third at Texas and the 42nd of his career. What made the win possible was Busch’s dramatic surge from ninth to third on the penultimate restart on Lap 143, after five drivers stayed out on old tires and three others took two tires or no tires on their final pit stops under the fifth caution.

    Busch wasn’t worried about the outcome until he realized he had miscounted the number of trucks that would restart ahead of him on Lap 143.

    “I thought when I saw four trucks out there (that had stayed out)… I only counted four, and then all of a sudden the 15 (Mason Mingus) popped up, and that made it five,” Busch said. “But when I counted four, that was going to put us eighth on the outside, but then the 15 was there, and so it was ninth on the inside.

    “I thought the 17 (Peters) was in the catbird seat there. I figured he had the perfect strategy—two tires, and he was going to be on the outside (restarting sixth), get through those guys and get out front.”

    As it turned out, Busch drove up the middle after the restart and passed Peters for second right before caution flew on Lap 145 for Sauter’s trip through the grass. As Busch would say later, his dramatic run to the front was essentially a case of “close your eyes and hold on.”

    “Driving up through the middle there, the seas sort of parted ways a little bit, and they were already three-wide, and I’m like, ‘There’s a gap there—I’m taking it.’ And that put us four-wide. But in those situations, with that many laps to go, you’ve just got to do it.”

    Crafton’s two closest pursuers in the series standings, Ryan Blaney and Darrell Wallace Jr., both had issues on Friday night, but Wallace got by far the worse of the exchange, as both his engine and his championship hopes expired in the same instant.

    As Wallace was chasing Busch, his car owner, from the second position on Lap 106, his engine erupted in a plume of smoke and dropped a stream of oil on the race track. Wallace took his No. 54 Toyota to the garage and finished 26th, falling 43 points behind Crafton with two races left in the season.

    Blaney was forced to change batteries under caution on Lap 77 and fell to 16th for a restart on Lap 82 but rallied to finish ninth and minimized the damage to his position in the standings. Blaney remained second, 23 points behind Crafton.

    Note: With Busch’s victory, Toyota clinched its seventh manufacturer’s championship in the Camping World Truck Series… Busch has now led laps in 21 consecutive NCWTS starts.

    Top 10 in Points:

    1. M. Crafton: 756
    2. R. Blaney: 733
    3. D. Wallace Jr.: 713
    4. J. Sauter: 704
    5. T. Peters: 680
    6. J. Coulter: 645
    7. G. Quiroga: 636
    8. J. Burton: 629
    9. B. Kennedy: 619
    10. R. Hornaday Jr.: 526

    Finishing Order:

    1. Kyle Busch
    2. Jeb Burton
    3. Timothy Peters
    4. Tyler Reddick
    5. Matt Crafton
    6. Joey Coulter
    7. Max Gresham
    8. Joe Nemechek
    9. Ryan Blaney
    10. Cameron Hayley
    11. Brennan Newberry
    12. Ron Hornaday Jr.
    13. Mason Mingus
    14. Tyler Young
    15. Ben Kennedy
    16. Johnny Sauter
    17. German Quiroga
    18. Ray Black Jr.
    19. Bryan Silas
    20. John Wes Townley
    21. Tayler Malsam
    22. Ryan Lynch
    23. Justin Jennings
    24. Jennifer Jo Cobb
    25. TJ Bell, Chevrolet
    26. Darrell Wallace Jr.
    27. Mike Harmon
    28. Norm Benning
    29. Adam Edwards
    30. Caleb Roark
    31. Ryan Ellis
    32. Blake Koch

  • Reddick Wins WinStar World Casino and Resort 350 Truck Pole

    Reddick Wins WinStar World Casino and Resort 350 Truck Pole

    By: TMS Media Relations | Oct 31, 2014

    FORT WORTH, TEXAS (Oct. 31, 2014) – Rookie Tyler Reddick of BK Racing earned his second NASCAR Camping World Truck Series pole of the season during Friday’s Pinnacle Propane Qualifying Days for the WinStar World Casino & Resort 350 at Texas Motor Speedway.

    Reddick (No. 19 Drawtite Ford) posted a lap of 181.959 miles per hour in the final 12 of the knock-out qualifying for his second pole in his last three starts, the other coming at Talladega. The pole easily bested his only other start at Texas Motor Speedway, where he qualified 12th in June’s WinStar World Casino & Resort 400.

    NASCAR Sprint Cup Series veteran Kyle Busch (No. 51 ToyotaCare Toyota) will start outside of Reddick, qualifying second with his lap of 181.800 mph. Defending series champion and current points leader Matt Crafton (No. 88 Goof off/Menards Toyota) will start third after his lap of 181.635 mph.

    The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series returns to the track at 7:30 p.m. CT for the running of the WinStar World Casino & Resort 350. The 147-lap, 220.5-mile race will be televised live on FOX Sports 1. The event also will be available on radio – MRN nationally and KRLD-FM 105.3 FM The Fan locally.

    Tickets for tonight’s WinStar World Casino & Resort 350 are available at the Gate 4 box office.

  • NASCAR Racing Schedule for Texas Motor Speedway

    NASCAR Racing Schedule for Texas Motor Speedway

    This week NASCAR travels to Texas Motor Speedway for a tripleheader action packed weekend.

    All times ET.

    Thursday – October 30:

    2:00 – 3:00 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice
    3:30 – 5:00 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series final practice

    Friday – October 31:

    Noon-12:50 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series practice – FOX Sports 1
    1-2:30 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice – FOX Sports 1
    3:15 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying – FOX Sports 1
    4:30-6 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series final practice – ESPN2
    6:45 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying – ESPN2
    8:30 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series WinStar World Casino and Resort 350 (147 laps – 220.5 miles) – FOX Sports 1

    Saturday – November 1:

    11-11:50 a.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice – FOX Sports 1
    12:15 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying – FOX Sports 2
    2-2:50 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice – FOX Sports 2
    3:30 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series O’Reilly Auto Parts Challenge (200 laps – 300 miles) – ESPN2

    Sunday – November 2:

     3 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series AAA Texas 500 (334 laps – 501 miles) – ESPN


    PRESS CONFERENCE Schedule:  (Watch live) on Nascar.com (Post race times approx.)

    Friday – October 31

    11:00 a.m.: Joey Logano
    11:30 a.m.: Elliott Sadler
    Noon: Ryan Newman
    12:15 p.m.: Jimmie Johnson
    2:45 p.m.: Chase Elliott
    3:00 p.m.: Denny Hamlin
    7:45 p.m.: NSCS Post Qualifying
    10:45 p.m.: NCWTS Post Race

    Saturday – November 1

    10:30 a.m.: James Buescher
    5:45 p.m.: NNS Post Race

    Sunday – November 2

    1:45 p.m.: Harlem Globetrotters (Grand Marshals) and Texas Rangers pitcher Derek Holland (Honorary Pace Car Driver)
    6:45 p.m.: NSCS Post Race

     

  • Wallace Delivers Memorable Kroger 200 Victory in Special Tribute Truck

    Wallace Delivers Memorable Kroger 200 Victory in Special Tribute Truck

    MARTINSVILLE, Va. (Oct. 25, 2014) – On a day when his team honored 2015 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee Wendell Scott, Darrell Wallace Jr. delivered the ultimate tribute.

    Wallace bounced back from a late-race incident to win the Kroger 200 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Martinsville Speedway, his second straight victory in the race. When he won at the half-mile oval a year ago he became the first African American to win a NASCAR touring series race since Scott in 1963.

    “This is a touch sweeter (than my first win), having the No. 34 tribute truck,” said Wallace. “I couldn’t ask for a better day … having the Wendell Scott family here, my family, my girlfriend. It’s a big moment.

    “Today was special for us. The whole weekend is special for us.”

    Wallace’s Kyle Busch Motorsports Toyota was adorned with a throwback paint scheme that replicated Scott’s car from the 1963 victory. Wallace normally runs the No. 54, but for this race he switched to No. 34, the number Scott carried his entire career.

    It was Wallace’s third win of the season and his 12th top 10 of the year.

    The 11th and final caution of the day came out when Johnny Sauter, German Quiroga and Wendell Chavous got together entering the third turn and Quiroga spun out. Wallace was right in the middle of the spin, but managed to avoid contact. He jumped out to a quick lead on the restart and eased away to a .495 second victory.

    “That was exciting … we always try to add excitement to the races that we’re in,” Wallace said of the late action. “That was cool. I like that we came out on top on that.”

    Timothy Peters finished second, followed by points leader Matt Crafton, Erik Jones and Ryan Blaney.

    Peters shoved his way past Sauter exiting the fourth turn with three laps to go to take over the second spot, which resulted in some pit-road fireworks between the two after the race.

    “It’s Martinsville, its short-track racing,” said Peters, a former Martinsville winner. “He (Sauter) doesn’t cut anyone any breaks. He races hard and I can appreciate that. But if you dish it, you had better be willing to take it. Did I mean to hit him? Yes. Did I mean to hit him that hard? Maybe not that hard.”

    Good seats are available for Sunday’s Goody’s® Headache Relief Shot® 500 NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Martinsville. Ticket prices start at just $45. Martinsville Speedway’s ticket office opens at 7 a.m. Sunday. Tickets may also be purchased by calling 1.877.RACE.TIX or online online at www.martinsvillespeedway.com.