Tag: Iowa Speedway

  • Chase Briscoe claims first win of the season at Iowa

    Chase Briscoe claims first win of the season at Iowa

    Chase Briscoe out-dueled Christopher Bell to earn his first Xfinity Series win of the season at Iowa Speedway Saturday night.

    It was the second career win in the series for the 24-year-old Stewart-Haas Racing driver and his eighth top five this year. Briscoe only led the last seven laps of the U.S. Cellular 250 in his No. 98 Ford, but they were the ones that mattered.

    “It’s nice, for sure, to finally silence everybody,” Briscoe said. “We definitely still aren’t near where we need to be, but I feel like we’ve been way closer, these past couple of weeks especially.”

    “We’ve still got to get better if we’re going to beat the big three (Bell, Tyler Reddick and Cole Custer)But we’re slowly getting into the conversation to be that fourth guy,” he added.

    Christopher Bell dominated most of the race after starting on the pole and leading 234 of the 250 laps. But he had to settle for a second-place finish after losing the lead on the final restart with only 22 laps remaining.

    “To be able to hold him off as long as I did and not win the race stings,” Bell said, “It’s kind of damned if you do, damned if you don’t.”

    John Hunter Nemechek finished third and led six laps. Noah Gragson and Tyler Reddick rounded out the top five.

    Justin Allgaier, Shane Lee, Justin Haley, Zane Smith and Michael Annett finished sixth through 10th.

    Cole Custer started the race in sixth place, finishing second in Stage 1 and fourth in Stage 2. But his car suddenly hit the outside wall and crashed with 90 laps remaining, relegating him a 29th place finish. It was his fourth DNF of the season. Custer, however, with five wins this year, retains his third-place ranking in the points standings.

    When asked what happened, he told NBCSN, “I honestly couldn’t exactly tell you. I got really loose going into three and guess I over-corrected it into the fence. I’m really frustrated. I hate that we’re out (of the race).”

    Three are seven races remaining in the regular season. Next Saturday the Xfinity Series heads to Watkins Glen International for the Zippo 200 at The Glen.

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

  • Weekend schedule for Pocono-2 and Iowa-2

    Weekend schedule for Pocono-2 and Iowa-2

    The Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series and the Gander Outdoors Truck Series travel to Pocono Raceway this weekend while the Xfinity Series heads to Iowa Speedway.

    Kyle Busch is the defending Cup Series race winner and has won three of the last four races at the 2.5-mile triangular track, including this season’s June race. Another victory would put him in an elite group that includes Hall of Famer Bobby Allison (1982-83) and Tim Richmond (1986-87), the only drivers to win three consecutive races at Pocono.

    Christopher Bell returns to defend his Xfinity win. Busch also won the 2018 Truck Series event.

    All times are Eastern.

    Friday, July 26th

    Pocono:
    10:35 a.m.–11:25 a.m.: Truck Series First Practice – No TV
    12:35 p.m.–1:25 p.m.: Truck Series Final Practice – No TV
    6:05 p.m.: Truck Series Qualifying – Impound/Single Vehicle/One Lap All Positions – FS1

    Iowa:
    5:05 p.m.-5:55 p.m.: Xfinity Series First Practice – NBCSN
    7 p.m.-7:50 p.m.: Xfinity Series Final Practice – NBC Sports App

    Saturday, July 27th

    Pocono:
    9:05 a.m.–9:55 a.m.: Cup Series First Practice – NBCSN/MRN
    11:05 a.m.–11:55 a.m.: Cup Series Final Practice – NBCSN/MRN
    1 p.m.: Truck Series Gander RV 150 – Stages 15/30/60 Laps – FOX/MRN/SiriusXM NASCAR Radio
    4:05 p.m.: Cup Series Qualifying – Impound/Single Vehicle/One Lap All Positions -NBCSN/MRN

    Iowa:
    12:05 p.m.: Xfinity Qualifying – Impound/Single Vehicle/One Lap All Positions -NBCSN
    5 p.m.: Xfinity Series US Cellular 250 – Stages 60/120/250 – NBCSN/MRN/SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

    Sunday, July 28th

    Pocono:
    3 p.m.: Cup Series Gander RV 400 – Stages 50/100/160 Laps – NBCSN/MRN/SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

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

  • Newgarden leads most laps, wins Iowa 300

    Newgarden leads most laps, wins Iowa 300

    Josef Newgarden again led the most laps at Iowa for the fourth time in the last five years. Only this time, he was able to seal the deal and take the checkered flag after leading 245 of the race’s 300 laps after the race was delayed due to thunderstorms in the area for four-and-a-half hours, pushing the start of the race to 11:45 p.m. ET.

    The race was again delayed briefly on lap 55 for another shower, but the race was resumed shortly after, in which Newgarden was able to dominate and win at Iowa for the second time since 2016 when he led 282 laps in an Ed Carpenter Racing machine.

    “Let me thank the fans that stayed. I’m sorry it took so long but I’m glad we got it in tonight,” said Newgarden. “My guys were awesome on the Hitachi car. Team Penske. Team Chevy. I can’t thank them enough. We had three fast cars. I wanted to be the fastest. We succeeded tonight.

    “The car was great. You had to be good in traffic. And we were pumped for the guys. They worked really hard. It was nice to have it under the lights. I think if the weather didn’t come, we weren’t going to be under the lights.”

    Defending series champion Scott Dixon finished in second while defending event champion James Hinchcliffe finished third. Newgarden’s Penske teammate Simon Pagenaud finished fourth after starting on the pole. Spencer Pigot finished fifth, while Alexander Rossi, Zach Veach, Graham Rahal, Sebastien Bourdais, and Tony Kanaan rounded out the top-10.

    Will Power, driving the third Team Penske car, started second and led 49 laps before experiencing difficulties that left him one lap down in 15th.

    “I went a bit wide getting onto pit road and then you get into the marbles,” said Power. “Once you get your tires dirty it is impossible to drive and I really had no chance. It was an unfortunate end to a pretty strong day for the No. 12 Verizon Chevy team. We jumped out to the lead early before Josef got around us. He was pretty strong tonight but we definitely had a podium night tonight before the pit road penalty.”

    The race was slowed five times for 45 laps, including a yellow on lap one for a yellow start. The second yellow came out on lap 18 when the No. 31 of Sage Karam made contact in Turn 4. Rain slowed the race on lap 51 before the red flag flew on lap 55. The fourth caution flew on lap 187 for 12 laps when Karam and the No. 30 of Takuma Sato made contact in Turn 4. The fifth and final caution flew on lap 264 for 10 laps when the No. 20 of Ed Carpenter brought out the caution in Turn 2.

    There were seven lead changes among five drivers, while the race ran one hour and 56 minutes.

    The series next visits Mid-Ohio on July 28 for the Honda Indy 200, which will air on NBC and the Advance Auto Parts INDYCAR Radio Network at 3:30 p.m. ET. Rossi dominated last year’s event, but considering the race has seen six different winners in six races, it’s likely that there could be a different winner in 2019.

  • ARCA Menards Series Preivew- Iowa

    ARCA Menards Series Preivew- Iowa

    The ARCA Menards Series continues the summer stretch by staying in the Midwest, visiting Iowa Speedway this Friday night. The track is located in Newton, Iowa just a few minutes east of Des Moines.

    It will be the 14th race of the 2019 ARCA Menards Series season and with that, there are six races remaining until the season finale at Kansas Speedway in October.

    With hot temperatures around all week and expected for tomorrow night’s race, the on-track action has certainly been heating up as well. Last week, future NASCAR superstar Chandler Smith continued his winning ways at Elko Speedway taking the checkered flag once again. It was Smith’s fifth win of his career and the third of the season. Speaking of Smith, his teammates had a little brush up on the last lap when Michael Self and Christian Eckes got together in the final turn taking each other out.

    Shifting gears one week later, the young rookie Smith hopes to continue the on-track success at Iowa. He already has one start this season at Iowa by making his NASCAR national series debut last month for Kyle Busch Motorsports. Smith will try to take what he learned and apply it to Friday night’s race.

    “This is a short track but it’s a big short track,” Smith said. “The biggest thing I will take back is how much I moved around the racetrack and all of the grooves. It’s a fast track and aerodynamics are important. I learned some things in the Truck race and I will be able to play around with some aero as well.”

    His teammate Christian Eckes is having an inconsistent 2019 so far, but he is not giving up quite yet as he sits fourth in the points standings, 115 points behind teammate Michael Self. The Middletown, New York native has three starts at Iowa with a best finish of eighth in 2017.

    “It’s definitely been a rough run at it so far this year,” said Eckes. “Our No. 15 JBL Audio Camry has had so much speed, just things haven’t been going our way by any means. Morale is high heading into Iowa this weekend. We’re ready to turn it around. We’ve done it before and we can do it again; let’s do it.”

    After feeling dejected about taking out his teammate last week on the final lap, championship points leader Self looks forward to Friday night’s race at Iowa and hopes to come away with a clean racecar.

    “Iowa is always a track I look forward to racing at,” Self says. “I’ve got a ton of experience there between K&N, ARCA and Xfinity, and have been fortunate to win there a couple of times and have some strong runs, so it’s nice going to a track that I’m comfortable at and know better than anywhere else we go on the schedule. Unfortunately, I feel like I’ve shot myself in the foot two years in a row there in the ARCA races and cost myself a shot at a win both times, so I definitely want to go in and be smart this weekend and put a solid run together without any mistakes.”

    At Iowa, Self has two starts over the past two years, earning a fourth-place finish in his first outing there in 2017. Last year, he was taken out in a crash on Lap 92, which relegated him to an 18th place finish after leading 44 laps.

    With all three Venturini Motorsports drivers having experience at Iowa, Stadium Super Truck driver Gavin Harlien will be making his second career ARCA start. Harlien recently competed at Gateway, which some think is a similar track to Iowa.

    “I have been eager to get back in the car ever since the checkered flag waved at Gateway,” said the Phoenix, Arizona native. “Now that I have one ARCA race under my belt, I’m definitely feeling more confident heading into Iowa. I was able to get those first race nerves out of the way and run a clean race in the top 10. My goal was to get the car to the finish and learn as much as I can. Now that I’ve done that, I plan on being more aggressive in my last two races this season.

    One team looks to break the powerhouse team of Venturini Motorsports and that’s Chad Bryant’s team of the No. 77 and No. 22.

    Joe Graf Jr. sits fifth in the points standings, 225 points behind championship leader Michael Self. He earned a top-10 finish last weekend at Elko after a somewhat difficult couple of weeks.

    Like Smith, Graf Jr. also competed at Iowa not too long ago in the NASCAR Xfinity Series where he finished 19th for Richard Childress Racing. The New Jersey native also had a recent test at the 7/8-mile speedway.

    “Been looking forward to going back to Iowa for the last couple of weeks,” said Graf. “It’s a cool short track and without a doubt the more laps I circle around there, I feel like the better I get it.”

    Despite earning that top-10 finish last weekend, he still wants more for Friday night’s race.

    “We really need to have a strong run on Friday night,” Graf continued. “It hasn’t been the season we had been hoping for, but we still have a bunch of races stacked on the schedule and I’m hoping we can turn some heads this season.”

    Graf’s teammate Corey Heim, however, does not have any starts at Iowa. Heim will be leaning on his crew chief Paul Andrews to help him learn about the track in Newton, Iowa.

    “This weekend at Iowa Speedway is going to be a very new and exciting experience for me,” Heim said. “I’m really looking forward to a bigger track like Iowa because of my performance at Gateway a few weeks ago.”

    While Heim does not have any prior starts at Iowa, he did compete in a test a couple of weeks ago to help him adjust and prepare for the race.

    “We tested at Iowa a few weeks ago, and I feel good about it,” he added. “The track was very hot and slick, just like it’s going to be on race day.”

    With Iowa being a short track, the youngster does have some short track experience by competing at racetracks like Pensacola (finished fifth), Salem (finished fifth), Nashville (11th), Toledo and Madison (10th), a fourth at Gateway and he finished fifth at Elko last weekend.

    Eighteen-year-old Colby Howard will be returning to an ARCA car Friday night for Win-Tron Racing’s No. 32 machine. It will be his first start since finishing ninth at Madison last year for Mason Mitchell Motorsports.

    “I’m really excited to be back in the ARCA Menards Series and making my first start with Win-Tron this weekend,” said Howard. “With our pro late model success, I was really wanting to try my hand at a bigger car again. I feel like I’ve grown as a driver and my management team at PMG hooked me up with Kevin Cywinski and Win-Tron to give me the opportunity to showcase my talents at this level once more. I’ve always enjoyed tracks where there are multiple grooves, and that’s one reason I’m looking forward to Iowa this weekend. It’s the biggest and fastest track I’ve ever been on, too.”

    Another driver making his Iowa Speedway debut is KBR Development driver Carson Hocevar, in the No. 28.

    “I am so stoked for Iowa. It is one track that I have had circled since the beginning of the season. It’s a really cool race track and based off our performance at Gateway, I think we will be strong this weekend in our GMPartsNow Chevrolet.”

    While Howard and Holby do not have any starts at Iowa, Munford, the Alabama native has two starts to his name with a best finish of eighth in last year’s race.

    “I can’t wait to get to Iowa Speedway. I think it’ll be a perfect race for us to bounce back from last weekend at Elko Speedway and get a string of consistent top-five finishes back. We could set ourselves up for a good points day and even better, a win. It’s a racer’s track for sure, which makes it all that more fun to race. There’s not one preferred line, that makes it exciting to pass and race with the cars around you.”

    With Iowa Speedway being the 14th race of the season, it will mark the halfway mark for the Sioux Chief Short Track Challenge championship series. With just five races remaining for this challenge, Venturini Motorsports driver Chandler Smith leads the way with a 70-point lead over Joe Gibbs Racing driver Ty Gibbs. Michael Self follows in third, Bret Holmes and Carson Hocevar in a tie for fourth, and Corey Heim in sixth place.

    Over the span of the next five races, the Sioux Chief Short Track Challenge will visit dirt tracks like Springfield and DuQuoin. Then it will visit Salem in September and have its season finale at the famed Lucas Oil Raceway on October 5.

    Past champions include part-time JR Motorsports and full-time GMS Racing Gander Outdoors Truck Series driver, Sheldon Creed, who won in 2018. Austin Theriault won in 2017 driving for Ken Schrader Racing, current Xfinity Series Stewart-Haas Racing driver Chase Briscoe won in 2016 and Kyle Weatherman won in 2015 while driving for Cunningham Motorsports which is now owned by Chad Bryant.

    Other drivers on the entry list include Tim Richmond, Jason Miles, Eric Caudell, Tommy Vigh Jr., Rick Clifton, Ty Gibbs, Travis Braden, Brad Smith and Scott Melton, which makes up 19 cars total for Friday night’s race, Fans With Benefits 150.

    Iowa Speedway has seen 12 ARCA races since its first year back in 2006. The list of winners includes Steve Wallace, Frank Kimmel, Matt Hawkins, Parker Kligerman, Tom Hessert III, Ty Dillon, Alex Bowman, Grant Enfinger, Mason Mitchel, Chase Briscoe, Dalton Sargeant and Sheldon Creed.

    If you want to win, you better have a good starting spot. The winners have come from inside the top five, nine times. Only once has the winner came outside the top-10 and that was Hawkins who did it in 2008. Drivers have won from the pole at least three times set by Creed in 2018, Dillon in 2011 and Wallace in its first race in 2006.

    The speedway has only seen two first time winners, Hawkins and Hessert.

    As in most cases, it will be a one day show for the ARCA Menards Series. The only practice session will take place from 11:45 a.m. – 1:15 p.m. Central time, live on arcaracing.com.

    The General Tire pole qualifying is slated for 3:45 p.m. Central time and will also be live on arcaracing.com.

    The Fans with Benefits 150 green flag is scheduled to fly a little after 8 p.m. Central, live on MAVTV and arcaracing.com.

  • Four Takeaways from the NASCAR Ganders Outdoors Truck Series race at Iowa

    Four Takeaways from the NASCAR Ganders Outdoors Truck Series race at Iowa

    The NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series returned to Iowa Speedway this weekend for their 10th race of the 2019 season.

    It was quite a newsworthy race with original winner Ross Chastain being disqualified and Brett Moffitt being declared the new winner, along with Johnny Sauter being parked by NASCAR officials for an incident with Austin Hill under caution. The Truck Series race was quite possibly one of the most talked about events in recent NASCAR memory this season.

    It was the first time in nearly 25 years that a race win has been taken away. What’s more amazing is that Moffitt became the first winner to not lead a single lap in 66 years.

    On the other hand, we had a young, up and coming phenomenon who is making a name for himself in the ARCA Menards Series and is considered a future NASCAR Cup Series star in the years to come.

    So what else happened in the event? Here’s a look at this week’s four takeaways.

    1. Chandler Smith Impressive In Rookie Debut – You’ve probably already heard a lot about Smith from this past weekend, but seriously, this kid is impressive and is the next real deal. Sure, qualifying was rained out which gave him the advantage of the pole position but he remained strong throughout the race. Smith led the first 55 laps of the event before a late stage caution forced him to come down pit road to fix his radio issues. Despite those radio issues, he continued to work his way back into the top-10 to finish fourth in Stage 2. However, another unfortunate circumstance took place at the end of the stage, as Smith was caught speeding on pit road which sent him to the back of the field. The highest position Smith was able to obtain after that was fifth, but he eventually had to settle for an eighth-place finish. Not bad for your first time out in a Truck Series start. Expect more big things to come from Smith in the future. He’s also setting the ARCA world on fire earning four career wins, 11 top fives and 14 top-10 finishes, along with seven poles over a span of 14 races. It’s quite impressive for a driver who is only 16-years-old.

    2. ThorSport Racing Continues Strong Championship Run – Despite Sauter being parked and finishing 28th, ThorSport Racing continued their run toward a championship this season. Both drivers Ben Rhodes and Matt Crafton each won a stage respectively. Crafton won the first stage and Rhodes the second. Grant Enfinger was up there as well finishing second in Stage 1 and third in Stage 2 after post-race inspection. Before Sauter was parked, he was up there as well, finishing third in Stage 1 and 10th in Stage 2. ThorSport has three of their four drivers in the top five point standings. Enfinger leads over Crafton by 47 points, with Rhodes in fifth. Sauter now sits on the cut off line in eighth, 103 points behind. He will be suspended for Gateway, but will still remain playoff eligible, despite the suspension. Now, Enfinger, Crafton and Rhodes all just need a win to help their chances even more.

    3. Johnny Sauter Suspended – Well, we’ve all been waiting for it and Sauter has been suspended for the upcoming race at Gateway this weekend but at what cost? I’ve always learned, while one is at fault for their actions, the other is too. I think it would have only been right for both drivers to be suspended this weekend to learn from their actions. Oh by the way, if you’re near Dells Raceway Park Saturday night, Sauter will be there as well, as he tweeted below.

    Change of plans…Dells Raceway Park Saturday night Dick Trickle 99! Ya know a Real Racer #DickTrickle #SupportYourLocalShortTrack pic.twitter.com/SIxEDeUIbv— Johnny Sauter (@JohnnySauter) June 18, 2019

    4. Stewart Friesen Gets Top Five Finish – Lost in all the controversy following Sunday’s race is Friesen and his No. 52 Halmar Racing team, who earned another top-five finish this season. Friesen and his team finished 10th, and sixth in both stages respectively. It was his six top-10 finish of the season and he currently sits third in the point standings, 49 points behind Grant Enfinger.

  • Sauter-Hill Dustup at Iowa Should Lead To Suspension for Sauter

    Sauter-Hill Dustup at Iowa Should Lead To Suspension for Sauter

    NASCAR is once again in another rock-and-a-hard-place scenario where they could possibly be suspending a driver for a reckless retaliatory move during a caution. NASCAR’s punishments have been wildly inconsistent when it comes to situations like these, although one may argue that they handle it on a case-by-case basis. 

    That said, regardless of case-by-case or situational inconsistencies, Johnny Sauter’s temper could lead to him having to sit out a race or two, not unlike Matt Kenseth following his Martinsville punt of Joey Logano in 2015. Sauter’s retaliation on Austin Hill didn’t knock Hill’s No. 16 out of the race, but it was still at speed under caution, which in itself is a no-no.

    One could say Sauter brought this on himself. He was frustrated with slower traffic in Hill and bumped him out of the way, as one does on a smaller track. Hill returned the favor a bit too hard, sending Sauter into the wall. Was the ball in Hill’s court at this point? Yes. Could Sauter have held off until after the race to let Hill have it? If only. 

    Instead, Sauter made a point to chase Hill down, ram him, put him in the wall, ram him again, and push his truck a distance on the track, under the caution. In this case, Sauter is now the one who made a mistake, and now it is Sauter who must face repercussions. Every action has a consequence, and as unfair as he may think it is, the sanctioning body must act.

    For that matter, what he did was wrong and not thought out at all. He acted on impulse, which isn’t something that should be done in a race car. Chasing another driver down just to ram them and try to wreck their vehicle out of anger is an extremely careless action, and is a slap in the face to the team back at the shop, who already have to take care of otherwise unintentional damage. That’s added work that didn’t need to be in the first place, and isn’t it the driver’s job to take care of their equipment?

    Sauter is an extremely capable driver who knows how to achieve success behind the wheel. He’s a champion with an amazing record in the sport as is. But that said, he’s also a temperamental driver, and that’s a vulnerability. In that regard, a suspension could be the apt approach the sport could take. 

    It wasn’t a matter of Kenseth knocking the fire out of Logano, or Carl Edwards putting Brad Keselowski upside down at Atlanta in 2010. But it wasn’t Cole Custer/Austin Dillon at ISM Speedway in 2017, or Clint Bowyer/Ryan Newman at this year’s All-Star race at Charlotte. Sauter chased down Hill on the track during slowed racing conditions and tried to end Hill’s day. That’s something that the Kenseth/Logano precedent should cover with a suspension. 

    In a perfect world with a perfect approach, Sauter would have waited until the race was over to square up with Hill. Talk a little trash, shove a little bit, etc. Instead Sauter let his pride get the best of him and as a result shot himself and his ThorSport team in the proverbial foot; this is after Sauter snubbed Hill when the latter tried to approach him to discuss their contact from the previous week at Texas.

    Regardless, it’s isn’t an enviable position that NASCAR is in. Sauter is one of the biggest names in the truck series, and he brings in his share of the fans. A race without Sauter in the trucks isn’t where NASCAR wants to be, but if it drives home the valid point that issues shouldn’t be settled with a bumper. Hopefully they’ll all learn their lesson when all is said and done.

  • NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series Power Rankings-Iowa

    NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series Power Rankings-Iowa

    The NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series continued their Midwest swing this past weekend at Iowa Speedway located in Newton, Iowa and it was one of the most newsworthy weekends in quite a while for the Truck Series.

    First, Chandler Smith who is a future NASCAR Cup Series star was already making headlines and turning more heads after completely dominating the ARCA Race at Madison leading well over half the race, taking home his second win of the season. Smith was making his Truck Series debut for Kyle Busch Motorsports driving the famed No. 51 Toyota.

    The weekend only got better for Smith and his No. 51 crew, as qualifying was rained out, which saw the lineup being set by owner points. Smith was on the pole due to the 51 leading the owner standings over Grant Enfinger’s No. 98 Thorsport team.

    Secondly, the M&M’s 200 was originally scheduled for Saturday night, however, a late afternoon thunderstorm came over the track and washed everything out, forcing NASCAR officials to postpone the race to Sunday afternoon at Noon ET.

    Thirdly, Smith and his team faced radio issues in the first stage and surprisingly did not receive a black flag for the issue. He was able to stay out until a late caution occurred in Stage 1 which allowed his crew to fix the radio problems. Smith went on to finish eighth in the race, where he more than likely should have had a top five or top three finish overall.

    Fourthly, one of the most talked about items from the M&M’s 200 was the incident between Johnny Sauter and Austin Hill, who had a little scuffle under caution. Sauter was sent wrecking off Turn 4 to bring out the caution, however, replays showed it was Austin Hill who gave payback to Sauter after having a little dust-up a few laps prior to the incident. After Sauter was wrecked, he went back to chase Hill down and wrecked him on purpose. Once that happened, Sauter was parked for the rest of the day and it was one of the most talked about topics for the rest of the weekend. It left many wondering if he should be suspended for the upcoming race at Gateway on Saturday.

    Finally, in what would have been a big win and a continued march toward the top-20 in points, Ross Chastain had his win taken away by NASCAR after Chastain failed post-race inspection due the ride heights being too low. As a result, Brett Moffitt who previously finished second was declared the new winner and is given the playoff spot.

    Niece Motorsports is appealing the penalty following the race but NASCAR had not yet made a ruling. However, if they do not win the appeal, Chastain will still finish 32nd and only receive five points. It is also not yet determined what the outcome will be for Sauter’s action.

    So with all that said, here’s a look at this weeks power rankings.

    1. Ben Rhodes – After falling out of the power rankings last week due to a transmission failure, Rhodes rebounded to what originally was a third-place finish to a second place finish after the alternate results. It was a quiet race for the most part for the Carolina Nut Company team, as they finished fourth in Stage 1 and won Stage 2. He stayed in the top-10 throughout the race and earned his fifth top-five finish of the year. Rhodes and the No. 99 team currently sit fifth in the driver points, 54 points behind his teammate Grant Enfinger.

      Previous Week Ranking – Not Ranked


    2. Harrison Burton – A much needed top-five finish for Burton and the No. 18 Kyle Busch Motorsports team, who has continued to face criticism from his team owner. From the week before, he finished fifth at Texas and followed that up with a third place finish at Iowa. Burton had stage finishes of eighth and fifth, respectively. He currently sits sixth in the standings, 93 points behind first, but Burton will have to start winning soon if he wants to have another year at Kyle Busch Motorsports. He also competed in the NASCAR Xfinity Series race later in the day for Joe Gibbs Racing and finished fourth there as well.

      Previous Week Ranking – Not Ranked

    3. Grant Enfinger – Another week, another top-five finish for Enfinger and the No. 98 Protect The Harvest Ford F-150 team. After qualifying was rained out, Enfinger started second and was a factor throughout the race. He finished second in Stage 1 and third in Stage 2. Enfinger more than likely should have won the first stage after being three wide out but will have to wait for another race to earn himself a stage win. Still, he earned a fourth place finish and continues to lead the points standings over his teammate Matt Crafton by 47 points.

      Previous Week Ranking – 2nd

    4. Sheldon Creed – Creed continued his top-10 finishes this past weekend again by placing in the sixth position. It was a quiet race for the 2018 ARCA Series champion. Creed finished fifth in Stage 1 and ninth in Stage 2. By the end of the day and after inspection, Creed and the No. 2 GMS Racing team found themselves in the sixth position. It was his third top-10 finish of the season. Creed currently sits 10th in the points standings, just two spots outside the top eight.

      Previous Week Ranking – 5th

    5. Brett Moffitt – After Ross Chastain and his No. 44 Niece Motorsports team failed post-race inspection, Brett Moffitt and the No. 24 GMS Racing team found themselves as the new surprise winner. However, Moffitt was in contention late following Stage 2 as he followed Chastain closely behind in second for the rest of the race. Moffitt finished sixth in Stage 1 and second in Stage 2. When the original race concluded, he wound up second with a top-five finish. However, about an hour after the race, Moffitt was declared the new winner. It was a low key celebration, but he will get the playoff point should he continue to stay in the top 20.

      Previous Week Ranking – Not Ranked

      Fell Out

      1. Ross Chastain – It seems as though Chastain cannot catch a break here in the past year. His NASCAR career has been up and down for the Florida native. After scoring a big win last September in the Xfinity Series race driving for Chip Ganassi, he had earned himself a shot to drive Ganassi’s powerhouse No. 42 machine in the 2019 season. Many thought this would give Chastain a great shot to win his first championship. However, during the offseason, the sponsors had some legal trouble with the FBI and had to pull out of NASCAR due to the circumstances, which left Chastain out of a competitive ride. Thankfully, he still had his JD Motorsports guys who have stuck with him since day 1 when he drove for them. This year, Chastain found new success in the Truck Series driving for the Niece Motorsports team. Since Daytona, Chastain and company finished inside the top-10 in every race, even though not earning points due to Chastain selecting Xfinity points. However, a couple of weeks ago, it was announced he was allowed to chase after the Truck Series title due to his recent success in the series. In what looked liked it would have been a huge win on Sunday afternoon for Chastain and his team, leading 141 of 200 laps, sweeping both stages and continuing his fight toward the top 20 in points for a shot at the playoffs, NASCAR disqualified him due to the truck being too low. This resulted in a 32nd place finish, last place, and only receiving five points. It was a heartbreaker for sure, as Chastain wasn’t going to use the 50k for personal gain, rather it was to be used for new trucks and funding for the rest of the year. They are appealing the penalty, but usually, NASCAR’s word normally stays final. Chastain continues to remain upbeat about his team’s performance this past weekend at Iowa and wants badly to win at Gateway this weekend. It will be an interesting story to follow throughout the 2019 season.

      Previous Week Ranking – 4th

      2. Matt Crafton – Started fourth and finished seventh for his ninth top-10 finish of the year. Crafton won Stage 1 and finished seventh in Stage 2. However, he really wasn’t seen following both stages and kind of just rode around in the back half of the top-10. With his seventh-place finish, Crafton and the No. 88 team continue to remain winless dating back to his Eldora win from July 2017.

      Previous Week Ranking – 1st
  • Bell wins the CircuitCity.com 250 at Iowa

    Bell wins the CircuitCity.com 250 at Iowa

    Christopher Bell led 186 of 250 laps on Sunday to win the NASCAR Xfinity series Circuitcity.com at Iowa Speedway. This was his fourth victory of the season and his second straight win at Iowa.

    It was his 12th victory in 55 Xfinity Series races.

    “Man, I got to win at Dover on Mother’s Day weekend, or, I guess it was the week before with my mom there,” Bell said. “Now I just won on Father’s Day with my dad here, so it was pretty special.”

    Bell dominated the race in his No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, sweeping all the stages.

    Pole-sitter Cole Custer led the first 51 laps before Bell was able to pass him for the lead during the first stage and Custer ultimately finished second.

    When asked about the contact with Bell which led to him losing the lead, Custer said, “I think it was racing. I think every driver will agree that this place puts on the best racing that we go to, so it was fun. Christopher (Bell) and them had the best car all day. I feel like we caught up to them a good amount. We just need a little more time to work on it.”

    Justin Allgaier earned third place in his No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet followed by Joe Gibbs Racing’s Harrison Burton in fourth while Zane Smith finished fifth in the JRM No. 8. Noah Gragson finished sixth and was the highest finishing rookie.

    Tyler Reddick had a flat tire right before the finish of Stage 1, putting him two laps down. He finished 15th and holds the series points lead by 51 points over Bell.

    Xfinity Series Race Number 14
    Race Results for the 9th Annual CircuitCity.com 250 presented by Tamron – Sunday, June 16, 2019
    Iowa Speedway – Newton, IA – 0.875 – Mile Paved
    Total Race Length – 250 Laps – 218.75 Miles

    Fin Str No Driver Team Laps S1Pos S2Pos Pts Status
    1 2 20 Christopher Bell Ruud Toyota 250 1 1 60 Running
    2 1 0 Cole Custer FIELDS Ford 250 2 2 53 Running
    3 14 7 Justin Allgaier BRANDT Professional Agriculture Chevrolet 250 3 5 48 Running
    4 10 18 Harrison Burton(i) Dex Imaging Toyota 250 5 3 0 Running
    5 3 8 Zane Smith LaPaz Margarita Mix Chevrolet 250 6 6 42 Running
    6 4 9 Noah Gragson # Switch Chevrolet 250 4 0 38 Running
    7 9 98 Chase Briscoe # Nutri Chomps/Bomgaars Ford 250 0 0 30 Running
    8 6 23 John Hunter Nemechek # Allegiant Chevrolet 250 8 9 34 Running
    9 12 1 Michael Annett TMC Transportation Chevrolet 250 10 7 33 Running
    10 7 22 Austin Cindric Menards/Richmond Ford 250 9 4 36 Running
    11 11 19 Brandon Jones 1st Foundation Toyota 250 0 8 29 Running
    12 13 51 Jeremy Clements RepairableVehicles.com Chevrolet 250 0 0 25 Running
    13 8 11 Justin Haley # LeafFilter Gutter Protection Chevrolet 250 7 10 29 Running
    14 18 8 Gray Gaulding Chevrolet 250 0 0 23 Running
    15 5 2 Tyler Reddick TAME the BEAST Chevrolet 249 0 0 22 Running
    16 19 7 Ray Black II ISOKERN Fireplaces & Chimneys Scuba Life Chevrolet 249 0 0 21 Running
    17 23 36 Josh Williams Starbrite Star Tron/Simcraft Chevrolet 249 0 0 20 Running
    18 17 28 Shane Lee Circuit City Toyota 248 0 0 19 Running
    19 21 21 Joe Graf Jr. Eat Sleep Race Chevrolet 247 0 0 18 Running
    20 33 15 Tyler Matthews Line Tec Services Chevrolet 247 0 0 17 Running
    21 20 42 Chad Finchum MBM Motorsports Toyota 246 0 0 16 Running
    22 32 1 Ryan Repko The McLain Group Chevrolet 245 0 0 15 Running
    23 28 99 Ryan Ellis The Wes Cook Band Toyota 244 0 0 14 Running
    24 27 90 Ronnie Bassett Jr. Bassett Gutters and More Chevrolet 244 0 0 13 Running
    25 22 4 Stephen Leicht SEM Chevrolet 204 0 0 12 Brakes
    26 26 5 Matt Mills J.F. Electric Chevrolet 123 0 0 11 Electrical
    27 34 74 Mike Harmon The Journey Home Project/Charlie Daniels Chevrolet 120 0 0 10 Brakes
    28 37 66 Stan Mullis LasVegas.net Toyota 109 0 0 9 Power Steering
    29 25 0 Garrett Smithley teamjdmotorsports.com Chevrolet 106 0 0 8 Hub
    30 16 39 Ryan Sieg C2 Freight Resources Chevrolet 78 0 0 7 Fuel Pressure
    31 15 86 Brandon Brown # Vero True Social Chevrolet 76 0 0 6 Engine
    32 31 78 Vinnie Miller Pit Viper/Koolbox Chevrolet 48 0 0 5 Accident
    33 30 35 Joey Gase Iowa Donor Network Toyota 46 0 0 4 Accident
    34 24 52 David Starr Franklin Signs & Graphics Chevrolet 30 0 0 3 Engine
    35 29 89 Morgan Shepherd Visone RV Chevrolet 23 0 0 2 Brakes
    36 38 13 Timmy Hill CrashClaimsR.US Toyota 21 0 0 1 Electrical
    37 35 38 Jeff Green RSS Racing Chevrolet 16 0 0 1 Electrical
    38 36 93 Josh Bilicki Ziegler Auto Group Chevrolet 10 0 0 1 Electrical
  • NASCAR Truck Series M&M’s 200 at Iowa postponed to Sunday

    NASCAR Truck Series M&M’s 200 at Iowa postponed to Sunday

    After persistent rain showers and a thunderstorm earlier in the day Saturday, NASCAR officials postponed the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series M&M’s 200 at Iowa Speedway. The race has been rescheduled for Sunday, June 16, at noon ET.

    This will set up a doubleheader with the NASCAR Xfinity Series CircuitCity.com 250 which will follow the Truck Series race at 5:30 p.m. Xfinity Series qualifying is scheduled for 2:35 p.m. on FS2. Both races will be broadcast live on FS1 with radio coverage by MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.

    Sunday’s race is the second event in the Triple Truck Challenge where the winner will receive a $50,000 bonus. Kyle Busch Motorsports driver Chandler Smith will lead the field to green after qualifying was canceled due to rain and the lineup was set by owner points.

    Starting Lineup for M&M’s 200:

    1. Chandler Smith
    2. Grant Enfinger
    3. Stewart Friesen
    4. Matt Crafton
    5. Kyle Benjamin
    6. Brett Moffitt
    7. Ben Rhodes
    8. Johnny Sauter
    9. Austin Hill
    10. Harrison Burton
    11. Todd Gilliland
    12. Sheldon Creed
    13. Raphael Lessard
    14. Tyler Dippel
    15. Brennan Poole
    16. Austin Wayne Self
    17. Jordan Anderson
    18. Spencer Boyd
    19. Ross Chastain
    20. Trey Hutchens III
    21. CJ McLaughlin
    22. Gus Dean
    23. Natalie Decker
    24. Mason Massey
    25. Jesse Little
    26. Riley Herbst
    27. Chad Finley
    28. Juan Ma Gonzalez
    29. Norm Benning
    30. Tyler Hill
    31. Tyler Ankrum
    32. Jennifer Jo Cobb
  • Weekend schedule for Iowa

    Weekend schedule for Iowa

    This weekend the NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series and the Xfinity Series travel to Iowa Speedway while the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series has a week off from competition.

    The Truck Series race will feature the second round of the Triple Truck Challenge where the race winner will earn a $50,000 bonus.

    Brett Moffitt (Truck Series) and Justin Allagaier (Xfinity Series) return as the defending race winners.

    All times are Eastern.

    Saturday, June 15

    9:30 a.m. – 11 a.m.: Truck Series Practice – No TV

    11:30 a.m. – 12:55 p.m.: – Final Truck Series Practice – No TV

    3:05 p.m. – 3:55 p.m.: – Xfinity Series Practice – FS1

    5:35 p.m.: Truck Series Qualifying – Single Truck/Two laps – FS2 CANCELED

    7 p.m. – 7:50 p.m.: Final Xfinity Series Practice – FS1 – CANCELED

    8:30 p.m.: Truck Series M&M’s 200 – 200 laps/175 miles – FS1, Motor Racing Network, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) POSTPONED

    Sunday, June 16

    12 noon.: Truck Series M&M’s 200 – FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

    2:35 p.m. ET Xfinity Series Qualifying – FS2

    5:30 p.m.: Xfinity Series CircuitCity.com 250 – 250 laps/218.75 miles – FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

    The next race for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series is scheduled for Sunday, June 23, at Sonoma Raceway.

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