Tag: Camping World Truck Series

  • NASCAR’s Future Dependent on a Successful 2017 Season

    NASCAR’s Future Dependent on a Successful 2017 Season

    As the 2017 NASCAR season approaches, fans can expect to see significant changes both on and off the track.  With Monster Energy leading the way as the new entitlement sponsor coupled with the recent exit of high-profile drivers such as Jeff Gordon, Tony Stewart and Carl Edwards, this year could prove to be a defining moment in the future of NASCAR. Add the recent race format changes into the mix and you have a recipe for either spectacular success or dismal failure.

    The partnership with Monster Energy is an effort by NASCAR to reach a younger demographic and expand its fan base.

    NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France described Monster Energy as “a dynamic brand that reaches different places and different audiences. They are going to do things that are going to be fun. They’re going to be impactful. They’re going to be exciting for our drivers and our teams.”

    It’s a sound theory but NASCAR’s enthusiasm may not be shared by their current fans whose average age is 48 and who are typically resistant to change.

    Steve Phelps, NASCAR executive vice president and chief global sales and marketing officer, however, is convinced that the fans will embrace Monster Energy.

    “We have the good fortune of finding a brand that we believe works for our sport,” Phelps said. “They’re going to bring their lifestyle to their activation. They’re going to bring their brand, their excitement, their energy to this partnership, and the fans are going to be the winners. It’s all about engaging the fans and having the fans have unique, fun experiences whether at the race track or through different mediums, through social, digital, content.”

    Another hurdle that NASCAR faces this year is the loss of Gordon, Stewart and Edwards. Will fans switch their allegiance to a different driver or will they follow these drivers into retirement?

    On the plus side, there is an outstanding rookie class joining the Cup Series this season, including Daniel Suarez, the defending XFINITY Series champion, who will be taking over for Edwards in the No. 19 Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing.

    Erik Jones, the 2015 Camping World Truck Series champion, is also moving up to the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series. He will drive the No. 77 Toyota for Furniture Row Racing. Jones had four wins in the XFINITY Series last year and finished fourth in the year-end standings.

    Ty Dillon will be another rookie to follow as he moves up to the Cup Series in the No. 13 Germain Racing Chevrolet. Dillon finished fifth last year in the XFINITY Series with nine top fives and 17 top 10s.

    One of the biggest obstacles to NASCAR’s success could be the revamped race format that was revealed on January 23 and will be implemented in all three of its national series.

    It was met by favorable responses from most of the drivers, including Dale Earnhardt Jr.

    “I love the fact that the bonus points or the playoff points will carry through the playoffs all the way to the last round,” he said. “So everything you do throughout the season is really going to help you throughout the playoffs. That’s a great change.”

    But the fan response has been mixed, at best. The format changes, which include running the races in three segments with playoff points awarded to the segment winners as well as the overall race winner, are the basis for a playoff structure that seems to get more convoluted each year.

    For many longtime fans, this may be the final straw.

     

  • Martin tabbed for NMPA Hall of Fame

    Martin tabbed for NMPA Hall of Fame

    DARLINGTON, S.C. (Nov. 23, 2016) – Mark Martin, winner of 40 NASCAR premier series races and a runner-up in the championship battle on five occasions, has been selected for induction into the National Motorsports Press Association Hall of Fame.

    Martin, 57, will be inducted Sunday, Jan. 22, 2017.

    He was named on 95 percent of the ballots cast by the NMPA membership.

    The Batesville, Ark., native competed in NASCAR for more than three decades. His 40 career victories currently rank 17th on the all-time list for the series while his 882 career starts rank fifth overall for the sanctioning body’s top series.

    In addition to his premier series efforts, Martin also enjoyed success in NASCAR’s lower national series, winning 49 times in what is now the XFINITY Series and seven times in the Camping World Truck Series.

    He is also a five-time winner of the IROC (International Race of Champions) title.

    Others receiving votes but falling short of the required 65 percent necessary for induction were veteran crew chiefs Kirk Shelmerdine (61 percent), Buddy Parrott (59 percent) and Larry McReynolds (51 percent); and long-time Martinsville Speedway public relations director Dick Thompson (59 percent).

    “Those guys are heroes of mine,” Martin said of his fellow nominees. “It is just such an incredible honor to be considered along with them. I feel very fortunate and blessed but most of all I’m thankful. Very thankful.”

    Former statistician Bob Latford and driver Dan Gurney were also named as write-in candidates on this year’s Hall of Fame ballot.

    Martin, who retired from competition following the 2013 season, earned 35 premier series wins with team owner Jack Roush. His final five victories came in 2009 after joining Hendrick Motorsports.

    Alan Gustafson served as crew chief for Kyle Busch, Jeff Gordon and Martin at Hendrick. He is currently the crew chief for 2016 Sunoco Rookie of the Year Chase Elliott.

    “Mark drove so much by just raw feel,” Gustafson said. “His ability just to flat out drive a car, no markers, no signs no nothing, he was really good at that, which produced some amazing lap times.

    “We’ve all seen it. Mark Martin, first lap on the track, is just insane. Because he doesn’t have to figure out where he’s at, he just drives by feel. He was open to working on things and doing things but he just did it a different way than drivers like Jeff and Kyle and Chase.”

    The National Motorsports Press Association was formed more than 50 years ago and its membership consists of motorsports writers, broadcasters and photographers from throughout the U.S. and abroad.

    The NMPA Hall of Fame, established in 1965, is located on the grounds of Darlington (S.C.) Raceway.

  • NASCAR Racing Schedule for Homestead

    NASCAR Racing Schedule for Homestead

    The NASCAR Sprint Cup, XFINITY and the Camping World Truck Series travel to Homestead-Miami Speedway this weekend for the season finale. Please check below for the complete schedule of events.

    All times are Eastern.

    Wednesday, Nov. 16:

    Live Stream: (Watch live)
    11 a.m. ET: Championship 4 Crew Chief Video Conference

    Thursday, Nov. 17:

    Live Stream:
    3:05 p.m. ET: Media Day (Watch live)
    4:10 p.m. ET: Miss Sprint Cup Championship 4 Chat (Watch live)

    Friday, Nov. 18:

    On Track:
    8:30-9:30 a.m.: Camping World Truck Series First Practice – FS1
    10:30-11:25 a.m.: Camping World Truck Series Final Practice – FS1
    12:30-1:55 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series First Practice – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    2-3:25 p.m.: XFINITY Series First Practice – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    3:45 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying – FS1
    5-5:55 p.m.: XFINITY Series Final Practice – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    6:15 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    8 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series Ford EcoBoost 200 (134 laps, 201 miles) – FS1

    Garage Cam: (Watch live)
    Noon: Sprint Cup Series
    1:30 p.m.: XFINITY Series

    Press Conferences: (Watch live)
    10:15 a.m.: Darrell Gwynn Foundation
    11:45 a.m.: Tony Stewart
    2 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Championship 4 owners – Joe Gibbs, Rick Hendrick and Roger Penske
    7:30 p.m.: Post-NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Qualifying (time approx.)
    10 p.m.: Post-Camping World Truck Series Race (time approx.)

    Saturday, Nov. 19:

    On Track:
    10-10:55 a.m.: Sprint Cup Series Second Practice – CNBC/NBC Sports App
    11:15 a.m.: XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying – CNBC/NBC Sports App
    1-1:50 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Final Practice – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    3:30 p.m.: XFINITY Series Ford EcoBoost 300 (200 laps, 300 miles) – NBCSN/NBC Sports App

    Press Conferences(Watch live)
    2 p.m.: Sprint Cup Championship 4 manufacturers – Jim Campbell, Ed Laukes and Dave Pericak
    6:30 p.m.: Post-XFINITY Series Race (time approx.)

    Sunday, Nov. 20:

    On Track:
    2:30 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Ford EcoBoost 400 (267 laps, 400.5 miles) – NBC/NBC Sports App

    Press Conferences: (Watch live)
    11 a.m.: NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France
    7 p.m.: Post-Sprint Cup Series Race (time approx.)


     

    Find NBCSN in your area | Watch live online at NBCSports.com

    Complete NASCAR TV Schedule

     

  • Sauter Now Biggest Threat For Truck Series Championship

    Sauter Now Biggest Threat For Truck Series Championship

    Throughout the course of the 2016 season, the biggest stories in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series were rookie driver William Byron’s series-leading six wins and the absolute dominance of the Toyota teams with 13 wins in 22 races. But with Byron eliminated from championship contention, it is looking like GMS Racing driver Johnny Sauter is now in prime position to hoist the championship trophy at Homestead.

    Since his first full season in the Camping World Truck Series in 2009, Sauter has been at or near the top of the standings each season, with a low of ninth in the final standings coming in 2012. In seven seasons racing for ThorSport Racing, the organization that fields the No. 88 of two-time NCWTS champion Matt Crafton, Sauter won 10 races and finished a career-best second in points in 2011 to champion Austin Dillon. However, despite the success and consistency, Sauter never held the championship trophy.

    In his first race behind the wheel of the No. 21 GMS Racing Chevrolet, Sauter took the win at Daytona and despite early season issues at Atlanta, Martinsville, and Kansas, he managed to fight his way back into the top-five in points, finishing outside of the top-10 only twice since finishing fourth at Dover in May. Now, following up back-to-back wins at Martinsville and Texas with a runner-up spot at Phoenix, his No. 21 Silverado is coming alive at the right time to clinch his first NCWTS championship.

    He holds a higher driver rating (120.3) than his four championship competitors heading into Homestead, and he has also posted more top-10s this season (18) than the other four drivers in the Final Four (Christopher Bell isn’t far off with 16 top-10s). As for the championship race at Homestead, despite Crafton having more top-10s, Sauter has posted several strong runs at Homestead including a win there in 2011. Sauter knows what it takes to win at Homestead and considering the stretch he’s been on coupled with the power that the GMS Racing trucks have been putting out this season (their six wins this season are an organization best), the No. 21 truck is definitely the team to beat.

    With this Chase format shaking things up in the standings, Sauter winning the championship isn’t a certainty. But considering he’s made it this far with a team that’s enjoying a breakout season, he’s on a hot streak. He has the best momentum heading into the finale and may be the odds-on favorite for the championship.

  • Daniel Suarez Wins First NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Race as Chase Final Is Set

    Daniel Suarez Wins First NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Race as Chase Final Is Set

    By Reid Spencer
    NASCAR Wire Service

    AVONDALE, Ariz. – William Byron’s bitter disappointment proved a boon for two of his Kyle Busch Motorsports teammates in Friday night’s Lucas Oil 150 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Phoenix International Raceway.

    When the engine in Byron’s No. 9 Toyota expired on Lap 141 of 150 – ending the championship run for the series’ most prolific winner this year – Kyle Busch Motorsports teammate Daniel Suarez took over the race lead and went on to score the first NCWTS victory of his career.

    Byron’s elimination from the inaugural Camping World Truck Series Chase also helped teammate Christopher Bell, who claimed the last berth in the Championship 4 with a seventh-place finish. Bell joins second-place finisher Johnny Sauter, third-place Matt Crafton and fifth-place Timothy Peters with a chance to win the title next Friday at Homestead-Miami Speedway (8 p.m. ET on FS1).

    Suarez pulled ahead of Sauter after a restart with four laps left and led by .510 seconds when he crossed the finish line for the final time.

    “He was running a perfect race and things like this happen,” Suarez said of the demise of his teammate, who had led 112 of the first 137 laps before his engine began to fail. “The first victory in any series is always the most difficult to get.

    “I’m just very proud of this team for their effort. They’ve done a really good job all year. I’m very happy that we were able to get the win for KBM and Toyota.”

    Byron’s engine issue was sudden and unexpected.

    “We had been running hot a little bit the last run – kind of all night,” Byron said. “It stayed within 10 (degree) range, but it started to vibrate, maybe the lap before… but it didn’t seem like a big deal, then it sputtered and flames came out from underneath the truck.”

    And now Bell will race for the championship instead of the 18-year-old Byron, who has posted a series-best six victories in his rookie season.

    Seeking a sweep of the Round of 6 after victories at Martinsville and Texas, Sauter couldn’t catch Suarez in the four-lap run to the finish.

    “We had a great truck, especially on the long runs,” said Sauter, whose No. 21 Silverado is the only Chevrolet in the Championship 4. “Unfortunately, I just could not get going in the short run. I was just extremely loose…

    “I knew at the end there I needed to get a really, really good restart, and I didn’t get the restart I needed. I’ve got nobody to blame but myself for that. But I’m just proud of everybody’s effort. We just needed to keep pushing. Even though everybody says there’s no pressure, there’s always pressure – this is racing.”

    Crafton and Peters were one point apart entering the race and battled in close quarters for most of the race. Until Byron’s engine blew, they were contesting the final position at Homestead until Bell fell back on a late restart.

    “There wasn’t a lap that wasn’t tense,” Crafton said. “We just raced hard from the beginning to the end.”

    Note: Toyota clinched its ninth manufacturer’s championship in 13 seasons since entering the Truck Series in 2004.

    NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Race – Lucas Oil 150
    Phoenix International Raceway
    Avondale, Arizona
    Friday, November 11, 2016

     

                   1. (2) Daniel Suarez(i), Toyota, 150.

                   2. (4) Johnny Sauter (C), Chevrolet, 150.

                   3. (10) Matt Crafton (C), Toyota, 150.

                   4. (7) Cameron Hayley, Toyota, 150.

                   5. (8) Timothy Peters (C), Toyota, 150.

                   6. (6) John H Nemechek, Chevrolet, 150.

                   7. (5) Christopher Bell (C) #, Toyota, 150.

                   8. (17) Matt Tifft #, Toyota, 150.

                   9. (18) Ben Kennedy (C), Chevrolet, 150.

                   10. (12) Cole Custer #, Chevrolet, 150.

                   11. (3) Rico Abreu #, Toyota, 150.

                   12. (13) Tyler Reddick, Ford, 150.

                  13. (15) Daniel Hemric, Ford, 150.

                   14. (9) Ben Rhodes #, Toyota, 150.

                   15. (21) Austin Cindric, Ford, 150.

                   16. (14) Noah Gragson, Toyota, 150.

                   17. (19) Myatt Snider, Toyota, 150.

                   18. (20) Stewart Friesen, Chevrolet, 150.

                   19. (23) Dylan Lupton(i), Chevrolet, 150.

                   20. (26) Kevin Donahue, Chevrolet, 149.

                   21. (27) Matt Mills, Chevrolet, 148.

                   22. (29) Austin Wayne Self #, Toyota, 147.

                   23. (28) Travis Kvapil, Chevrolet, 147.

                   24. (32) Jennifer Jo Cobb, Chevrolet, 146.

                   25. (30) Bryce Napier, Chevrolet, 146.

                   26. (31) Norm Benning, Chevrolet, 145.

                   27. (1) William Byron (C) #, Toyota, Engine, 141.

                   28. (11) Kaz Grala, Chevrolet, Accident, 76.

                   29. (25) Jordan Anderson, Chevrolet, Engine, 62.

                   30. (22) Tommy Joe Martins, Chevrolet, Accident, 36.

                   31. (24) Dominique Van Wieringen, Ford, Accident, 26.

                   32. (16) Spencer Gallagher, Chevrolet, Accident, 11.

     

    Average Speed of Race Winner:  84.441 mph.

    Time of Race:  1 Hrs, 46 Mins, 35 Secs. Margin of Victory:  0.510 Seconds.

    Caution Flags:  9 for 49 laps.

    Lead Changes:  5 among 3 drivers.

    Lap Leaders:   W. Byron (C) # 1-25; D. Suarez(i) 26-47; W. Byron (C) # 48-68; T. Reddick 69-72; W. Byron (C) # 73-138; D. Suarez(i) 139-150.

    Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led):  W. Byron (C) # 3 times for 112 laps; D. Suarez(i) 2 times for 34 laps; T. Reddick 1 time for 4 laps.

    Top 10 in Points: J. Sauter (C) – 3,103; M. Crafton (C) – 3,078; C. Bell (C) # – 3,077; T. Peters (C) – 3,075; W. Byron (C) # – 3,060; B. Kennedy (C) – 3,059; D. Hemric – 2,135; J. Nemechek – 2,111; T. Reddick – 479; C. Custer # – 479.

  • NASCAR Racing Schedule for Phoenix

    NASCAR Racing Schedule for Phoenix

    The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, XFINITY Series and the Camping World Truck Series all head to Phoenix International Raceway for a full weekend of competition. Please check below for the full schedule of events.

    All times are Eastern.

    Friday, Nov. 11:

    On Track:
    11:30 a.m.-12:25 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series First Practice – FS2
    12:30-1:25 p.m.: XFINITY Series First Practice – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    1:30-2:55 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series First Practice – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    3-3:50 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series Final Practice – FS2
    4:30-5:55 p.m.: XFINITY Series Final Practice – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    6:45 p.m.: Sprint Cup Coors Light Pole Qualifying – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    8:30 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying – FS2
    10 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series Lucas Oil 150 (150 laps, 150 miles) – FS1

    Garage Cam: (Watch live)
    1 p.m.:  Sprint Cup Series
    4 p.m.: XFINITY Series

    Press Conferences: (Watch live)
    11:45 a.m.: Alex Bowman
    Noon: Joey Logano
    12:15 p.m.: Kurt Busch
    12:30 p.m.: Matt Kenseth
    3:15 p.m.: Elliott Sadler, Erik Jones and Ryan Reed
    3:30 p.m.: Denny Hamlin
    3:45 p.m.: Kyle Busch
    6 p.m.: Austin Dillon and Richard Childress
    7:30 p.m.: Post-Sprint Cup Qualifying (time approx.)
    11:45 p.m.: Post-Camping World Truck Race (time approx.)

    Saturday, Nov. 12:

    On Track:
    3-3:55 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Second Practice – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    4:15 p.m.: XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    6-6:50 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Final Practice – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    7:30 p.m.: XFINITY Series Ticket Galaxy 200 (200 laps, 200 miles) – NBCSN/NBC Sports App

    Press Conference: (Watch live)
    10 p.m.: Post-XFINITY Series Race (time approx.)

    Sunday, Nov. 13:

    On Track:
    2:30 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Can-Am 500 (312 laps, 312 miles) – NBC/NBC Sports App

    Press Conference: (Watch live)
    6 p.m. approx.: Post-Sprint Cup Series Race (time approx.)


     

    Find NBCSN in your area | Watch live online at NBCSports.com

    Complete NASCAR TV Schedule

     

  • Late Pass Gives Johnny Sauter Victory in Texas Truck Race

    Late Pass Gives Johnny Sauter Victory in Texas Truck Race

    By Reid Spencer
    NASCAR Wire Service

    FORT WORTH, Tex. –You might say Johnny Sauter is on a roll.

    Then again, that might be an understatement.

    Passing Matt Crafton near the start/finish line with two laps left in Friday night’s Striping Technology 350 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Texas Motor Speedway, Sauter pulled away to win his second straight race in the inaugural NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Chase.

    In the process, he deprived Crafton of a chance to clinch a spot in the Championship 4 finale, set for Nov. 18 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Crafton won a drag race to the stripe against Daniel Hemric to secure the runner-up spot, .836 seconds behind Sauter.

    “This is amazing,” said Sauter, who started 16th in his No. 21 Chevrolet and won for the third time this season, the third time at Texas (having swept the 2012 races) and the 13th time in his career. “Matt was content to keep running the bottom, and I made a couple of runs on that restart (on Lap 130 of 147, after the third and final caution).

    “They got me great track position on the pit stop, and I just kept bottoming the splitter out on the short run, and I could just not fire off. … Matt just kept running the bottom, and I was like, ‘I’m going to the top.’ And I was pretty successful on the top down in (Turns) 3 and 4 all night long—just big momentum.”

    About the only low point of Sauter’s night was his post-race burnout—but that was by design.

    “I’ve got to apologize to the fans for the burnout,” Sauter said. “I know it was lame, but I’ve got to have this truck for Homestead.”

    Crafton, a two-time series champion, overcame a scrape against the outside wall and a suspect battery to run second.

    “We were just off all night,” Crafton said. “I got drove into the fence off Turn 2, and the right-rear tail is moved over quite a bit and we got really free up off the corner. I was trying to manage, and with about four (laps) to go I just got really free and I was like, ‘Oh, boy.’

    “I was hoping that Johnny and the 19 (Hemric) raced each other a lot longer than they did.”

    Polesitter Spencer Gallagher, Sauter’s teammate at GMS Racing, led a race-high 88 laps but lost six positions on pit road before the final restart, thanks to a slow tire change on the right rear of his No. 23 Chevrolet.

    Chase drivers Ben Kennedy and Timothy Peters finished 13th and 14th, respectively, and are currently below the Chase cut line. Peters is fifth in the standings, one point behind Crafton in fourth. Kennedy is sixth, 13 points behind Crafton heading to Phoenix, where the Chase field will be cut from six drivers to the final four next Friday.

    Sauter is the only driver guaranteed to race for the championship at Homestead. William Byron, who leads the series with six victories, finished sixth on Friday and held second place in the Chase standings.

    Christopher Bell came home 11th after late contact with the Toyota of Cameron Hayley and is third in points, but the gap between the second- and fifth-place Chase drivers is a mere five points.

    The only three cautions of the night resulted from the expiration of the caution clock, which runs in 20-minute increments from the drop of a green flag. The previous high number for caution clocks in a single race was two.

    NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Race – Striping Technology 350
    Texas Motor Speedway
    Fort Worth, Texas
    Friday, November 04, 2016

    1. (16) Johnny Sauter (C), Chevrolet, 147.
    2. (7) Matt Crafton (C), Toyota, 147.
    3. (2) Daniel Hemric, Ford, 147.
    4. (5) Tyler Reddick, Ford, 147.
    5. (10) Daniel Suarez(i), Toyota, 147.
    6. (3) William Byron # (C), Toyota, 147.
    7. (1) Spencer Gallagher, Chevrolet, 147.
    8. (22) Austin Dillon(i), Chevrolet, 147.
    9. (12) Cole Custer #, Chevrolet, 147.
    10. (17) Cameron Hayley, Toyota, 147.
    11. (9) Christopher Bell # (C), Toyota, 147.
    12. (15) Rico Abreu #, Toyota, 147.
    13. (14) Ben Kennedy (C), Chevrolet, 147.
    14. (6) Timothy Peters (C), Toyota, 147.
    15. (8) Ben Rhodes #, Toyota, 147.
    16. (21) Shane Lee, Chevrolet, 147.
    17. (4) Matt Tifft #, Toyota, 147.
    18. (19) John H Nemechek, Chevrolet, 146.
    19. (20) Austin Hill, Ford, 145.
    20. (13) Jesse Little, Toyota, 145.
    21. (18) Ryan Truex, Toyota, 144.
    22. (30) Austin Wayne Self #, Toyota, 144.
    23. (24) Casey Smith, Chevrolet, 144.
    24. (25) Reed Sorenson(i), Chevrolet, Vibration, 143.
    25. (27) Jordan Anderson, Chevrolet, 143.
    26. (23) Tyler Young, Chevrolet, 143.
    27. (29) Travis Kvapil, Chevrolet, 142.
    28. (11) Cody Coughlin #, Chevrolet, 141.
    29. (28) Matt Mills, Chevrolet, 140.
    30. (32) Jennifer Jo Cobb, Chevrolet, 138.
    31. (26) Tommy Joe Martins, Chevrolet, Accident, 61.
    32. (31) Norm Benning, Chevrolet, Engine, 22.

    Average Speed of Race Winner:  148.291 mph.
    Time of Race:  1 Hrs, 29 Mins, 13 Secs. Margin of Victory:  0.836 Seconds.
    Caution Flags:  3 for 12 laps.

    Lead Changes:  7 among 4 drivers.
    Lap Leaders:   S. Gallagher 1-40; D. Hemric 41-75; S. Gallagher 76-83; D. Hemric 84-86; S. Gallagher 87-126; J. Sauter (C) 127-129; M. Crafton (C) 130-144; J. Sauter (C) 145-147.
    Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led):  S. Gallagher 3 times for 88 laps; D. Hemric 2 times for 38 laps; M. Crafton (C) 1 time for 15 laps; J. Sauter (C) 2 times for 6 laps.

    Top 10 in Points: J. Sauter (C) – 3,072; W. Byron # (C) – 3,052; C. Bell # (C) – 3,051; M. Crafton (C) – 3,048; T. Peters (C) – 3,047; B. Kennedy (C) – 3,035; D. Hemric – 2,115; J. Nemechek – 2,084; T. Reddick – 457; C. Custer # – 456.

  • NASCAR Racing Schedule for Texas

    NASCAR Racing Schedule for Texas

    The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, XFINITY Series and the Camping World Truck Series all head to Texas Motor Speedway for a full weekend of competition. Please check below for the complete schedule of events.

    All times are Eastern.

    Thursday, Nov. 3:

    On Track:
    3:30-4:25 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series First Practice
    5:30-6:25 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series Final Practice

    Press Conferences: (Watch live)
    2:30 p.m.: Christopher Bell and Ben Kennedy

    Friday, Nov. 4:

    On Track:
    12:30-1:55 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series First Practice – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    2:30-3:25 p.m.: XFINITY Series First Practice – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    3:45 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying – FS1
    5-6:25 p.m.: XFINITY Series Final Practice – NBC Sports App (will air tape delayed at 12 a.m. ET on NBCSN)
    6:45 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying – NBC Sports App (will air tape delayed at 10:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN)
    8:30 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series Longhorn 350 (147 laps, 220.5 miles) – FS1

    Garage Cam: (Watch live)
    Noon: Sprint Cup Series
    2 p.m.: XFINITY Series

    Press Conferences: (Watch live)
    11:30 a.m.: Kyle Larson
    11:45 a.m.: Matt Kenseth
    Noon: Matt Tifft
    12:15 p.m.: Brendan Gaughan, Blake Koch and Daniel Suarez
    2:05 p.m.: Carl Edwards
    2:30 p.m.: Trevor Bayne
    3 p.m.: Kyle Busch
    3:30 p.m.: Michael McDowell
    7:45 p.m.: Post-Sprint Cup Series Qualifying (time approx.)
    10:15 p.m.: Post-Camping World Truck Series Race (time approx.)

    Saturday, Nov. 5:

    On Track:
    10:30-11:25 a.m.: Sprint Cup Series Second Practice – CNBC/NBC Sports App
    11:45 a.m.: XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying – CNBC/NBC Sports App
    1:30-2:20 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Final Practice – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    3 p.m.: XFINITY Series O’Reilly Auto Parts Challenge (200 laps, 300 miles) – NBC/NBC Sports App

    Press Conference: (Watch live)
    5:15 p.m.: Post-XFINITY Series Race (time approx.)

    Sunday, Nov. 6:

    On Track:
    2 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series AAA Texas 500 (334 laps, 501 miles) – NBC/NBC Sports App

    Press Conference: (Watch live)
    6 p.m.: Post-Sprint Cup Series Race (time approx.)

     


     

    Find NBCSN in your area | Watch live online at NBCSports.com

    Complete NASCAR TV Schedule

     

  • NASCAR Racing Schedule for Martinsville Speedway

    NASCAR Racing Schedule for Martinsville Speedway

    The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and the Camping World Truck Series head to Martinsville Speedway this weekend while the XFINITY Series is off. Please check below for the complete schedule of events.

    All times are Eastern.

    Friday, Oct. 28:

    On Track:
    11 a.m.-12:25 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series First Practice – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    12:30-1:25 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series First Practice – FS1
    2:30-3:50 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series Final Practice – FS1
    4:40 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying – NBCSN/NBC Sports App

    Garage Cam: (Watch live)
    10:30 a.m.: Sprint Cup Series
    Noon: Camping World Truck Series

    Press Conferences: (Watch live)
    9:30 a.m.: Brian Scott
    9:45 a.m.: Joey Logano
    10 a.m.: William Byron, Matt Crafton and Timothy Peters
    10:15 a.m.: Jimmie Johnson
    1 p.m.: Denny Hamlin
    1:30 p.m.: Jeff Gordon
    6 p.m.: Post-Sprint Cup Series Qualifying (time approx.)

    Saturday, Oct. 29:

    On Track:
    9-9:55 a.m.: Sprint Cup Series Practice – CNBC
    10:15 a.m.: Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying – FS1
    Noon-12:50 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Final Practice – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    1:30 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series Texas Roadhouse 200 presented by Alpha Energy Solutions (200 laps, 105.2 miles) – FS1

    Press Conference: (Watch live)
    2:30 p.m. approx: Post-Camping World Truck Series Race

    Sunday, Oct. 30:

    On Track:
    1 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Goody’s Fast Relief 500 (500 laps, 263 miles) – NBCSN/NBC Sports App

    Press Conference: (Watch live)
    5 p.m.: Post-Sprint Cup Series Race (time approx.)

     


     

    Find NBCSN in your area | Watch live online at NBCSports.com

     

    Complete NASCAR TV Schedule

     

  • Hot 20 – NASCAR’s Cup Drivers Runneth over to Swamp the XFINITY and Camping World Series

    Hot 20 – NASCAR’s Cup Drivers Runneth over to Swamp the XFINITY and Camping World Series

    Bless NASCAR’s pea-pickin’ hearts. You have to admit that they keep on trying. With both the junior and truck circuits pretty much irrelevant these days due to the inclusion and the total domination of Cup drivers, NASCAR once again is trying to do the right thing.

    Cup drivers are already banned from the season finales in both minor leagues. Now those with five years Cup experience, not registered to drive for points, can not race in any of those other versions of the Chase, their regular season finales, or the XFINITY “Dash 4 Cash” events. Still, that leaves Cup drivers eligible to race in 10 of the remaining 21 junior races, along with seven of the remaining 15 truck races.

    That means that instead of racing 16 junior contests and winning nine, defending Cup champion Kyle Busch gets to start only 10 times next year. Then he could turn the seat over to, say, Matt Kenseth and Denny Hamlin to fill in for the other 11 rides available. Cup drivers could still dominate for much of the season, though next year they would have to share those opportunities. It is a step forward, but we will have to see if it will be enough to return the spotlight on those who should be showcased in those divisions.

    In 29 events, regular XFINITY drivers claimed 11 of them. Erik Jones took four, Elliott Sadler three, Daniel Suarez a couple, with the others going to Justin Marks and Sam Hornish Jr. Eighteen went to Cup drivers, with half of that total taken by Busch, including their Chase race at Kansas. Chase Elliott and Kyle Larson have also won and, with less than five years Cup experience, the restrictions would not apply to either of them. Still, it beats doing nothing but will it be enough to stop the major leaguers from moonlighting to kick some minor league butt most weeks?

    This Sunday, the contenders and pretenders of the Cup circuit head to Martinsville, Virginia. A win earns a free pass to race for the title in Homestead next month. A wreck, and then Texas and Phoenix get a lot more stressful. Eight contenders, but only four will be in the running when it counts.

    Among our Hot 20, Kevin Harvick has been best over the course of the season. That means nothing come Sunday.

    1. KEVIN HARVICK – 4000 PTS
    Would have a 37 point lead if season-long points were still the determining factor…over Keselowski.

    2. DENNY HAMLIN – 4000 PTS
    If you see him in a photo with good friend Michael Jordan, Denny is the short one.

    3. JOEY LOGANO – 4000 PTS
    Last year, he was the guy to beat coming out of Talladega…and so they did.

    4. KYLE BUSCH – 4000 PTS
    Four Cup wins, nine XFINITY triumphs, and a pair of truck flags…he will beat up on anybody.

    5. KURT BUSCH – 4000 PTS
    Harvick was just trying to help me with my contact lenses in pit road. What a pal!

    6. CARL EDWARDS – 4000 PTS
    Some days you race, and some days you ride. Guess what kind of day he had at Talladega.

    7. JIMMIE JOHNSON – 4000 PTS
    Eight-time Martinsville winner will duel one more time with 9-time…Jeff Gordon.

    8. MATT KENSETH – 4000 PTS
    Spent a lovely Sunday with Kyle and Carl, but he probably will need to race at Martinsville.

    9. MARTIN TRUEX JR. – 2191
    Driving a magic dragon last week. Its name was Puff.

    10. BRAD KESELOWSKI – 2168 PTS
    Next year, Kansas replaces Talladega as the elimination race. Good for him, but boring for us.

    11. AUSTIN DILLON – 2163 PTS
    His last win was back in August in Bristol’s Xfinity race.

    12. CHASE ELLIOTT – 2156 PTS
    His last win was back in February in Daytona’s Xfinity race.

    13. KYLE LARSON – 2155 PTS
    Sure, he won back in June in Pocono’s Xfinity race, but don’t forget that Cup win at Michigan.

    14. TONY STEWART – 2141 PTS
    Down to his final four.

    15. JAMIE MCMURRAY – 2110 PTS
    23rd in the spring, but second last fall. Time to turn that frown upside down?

    16. CHRIS BUESCHER – 2109 PTS
    A single win leaves Blaney, Bayne, Patrick, Menard, Biffle, Almirola, and Bowyer far behind him.

    17. KASEY KAHNE – 803 PTS
    Hendrick drivers have won the past four Martinsville Chase races. Why not another?

    18. RYAN NEWMAN – 794 PTS
    #noneckguysmatter

    19. RICKY STENHOUSE JR. – 717 PTS
    Back among the cool kids after a good run at Talladega.

    20. A.J. ALLMENDINGER – 717 PTS
    Second at Martinsville this spring gives hope for this fall run.