Tag: Martinsville Speedway

  • Logano Speeds to Virginia Lottery Pole Day Victory at Martinsville

    Logano Speeds to Virginia Lottery Pole Day Victory at Martinsville

    MARTINSVILLE, Va. (March 27, 2015) – Joey Logano turned in the fastest lap of the day Friday to win the Virginia Lottery Pole Day pole and claim the top starting spot for the STP 500 Sunday at Martinsville Speedway.

    Logano had a lap of 19.232 seconds (98.461 mph) around the .526-mile oval to claim his second pole of the year and the 10th pole victory of his career.

    “It feels great to finally get the pole here,” Logano said after winning his first Martinsville pole in 16 attempts. “We’ve been so close so many times and throughout my career I feel like we’ve always qualified well here, but was never able to get the pole.
    “You win anything at Martinsville, it’s a big deal. This is such a tough race track and it means a lot to say you’ve won something here even if it’s a pole.”

    Ryan Newman captured the second starting spot for the STP 500 with a time of 19.258 seconds (98.328 mph) followed by Martin Truex Jr., Jeff Gordon and Jimmie Johnson.

    There is a full day of action at Martinsville Speedway on Saturday with NASCAR Sprint Cup practice at 10 a.m., qualifying for the Kroger 250 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at 11:15 a.m. and the final Sprint Cup practice at 1 p.m.

    The Kroger 250 will begin at 2 p.m. Tickets are $35 for adults and $5 for children 12-and-under. Ticket may be purchase online at www.martinsvillespeedway.com or at the Martinsville Speedway ticket office Saturday.

    Great tickets are available for Sunday’s STP 500. Ticket prices start at $50 and can be purchased by calling 877.RACE.TIX, online at www.martinsvillespeedway.com or at the Martinsville Speedway ticket office.

    Fan gates open at 9 a.m. both Saturday and Sunday.

    Complete Starting Lineup for the STP 500:

    1) Joey Logano
    2) Ryan Newman
    3) Martin Truex Jr.
    4) Jeff Gordon
    5) Jimmie Johnson
    6) Tony Stewart
    7) Kyle Larson
    8) Matt Kenseth
    9) Kasey Kahne
    10) AJ Allmendinger
    11) Carl Edwards
    12) Brad Keselowski
    13) Paul Menard
    14) Dale Earnhardt Jr.
    15) Denny Hamlin
    16) Danica Patrick
    17) Kevin Harvick
    18) Aric Almirola
    19) Jamie McMurray
    20) David Ragan
    21 )Justin Allgaier
    22) Austin Dillon
    23) Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
    24) Casey Mears
    25) Greg Biffle
    26) Kurt Busch
    27) Chase Elliott
    28) Michael Annett
    29) David Gilliland
    30) Clint Bowyer
    31) Josh Wise
    32) Jeb Burton
    33) Brett Moffitt
    34) Landon Cassill
    35) Chris Buescher
    36) Trevor Bayne
    37) Cole Whitt
    38) Sam Hornish Jr.
    39) Alex Bowman
    40) Mike Bliss
    41) Alex Kennedy
    42) JJ Yeley
    43) Matt DiBenedetto

  • 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. The XFINITY Series is off and will return April 10 at Texas Motor Speedway.

    All times Eastern.

    Friday, March 27

    On Track:

    10-11:45 a.m.: Camping World Truck Series practice – FOX Sports 1-CANCELED
    2:05-2:50 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series practice – FOX Sports 1 – Time approximate
    3-5:30 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series final practice – FOX Sports 1
    6:10 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying – FOX Sports 1

    Press Conferences: (Watch live at NASCAR.com)

    9:15 a.m.: Tyler Reddick
    10:30 a.m.: Alan Gustafson and Chad Knaus
    11 a.m.: Martinsville Speedway sponsor announcement
    11:40 a.m.: Dale Earnhardt Jr.
    Noon: Jeff Gordon
    3:30 p.m.: Denny Hamlin
    7:10 p.m.: Post-NASCAR Sprint Cup Series qualifying (Time approximate)
    7:45 p.m.: Chase Elliott (Time approximate)

    Saturday, March 28

    On Track:
     
    10 a.m.-10:55 a.m.: Sprint Cup Series practice – FOX Sports 1
    11:15 a.m.: Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying – FOX Sports 1
    1-1:50 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series final practice – FOX Sports 2
    2:30 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series Kroger 250 – FOX Sports 1 (250 laps, 131.5 miles)

    Press Conferences: (Watch live at NASCAR.com)

    8:30 a.m.: Aric Almirola
    9 a.m.: Paul Menard
    4:45 p.m.: Post-NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race (Time approximate)

    Sunday, March 29
    On Track:

    1 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series STP 500 – FOX Sports 1 (500 laps, 263 miles)

    Press Conferences: (Watch live at NASCAR.com)

    10:00 a.m.: Joe Gibbs
    10:30 a.m.: Carl Edwards
    4:45 p.m.: Post-NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race (Time approximate)

     

  • Finley Factor: Be Quick or Be Dead

    Finley Factor: Be Quick or Be Dead

    So if you haven’t heard, Kevin Harvick is on a pretty decent run.

    The defending Champion has finished first or second the last seven straight races. The only drivers able to keep up with him this season have been Jimmie Johnson and Joey Logano, and even then both have had problems, with Johnson having a miserable Las Vegas and Logano seemingly hitting a metaphoric wall and fading back in the last quarter of most races.

    At 39 Harvick still has around five more years before his decline as a driver (And who knows about that; Mark Martin and Harry Gant were still championship contending drivers in their fifties), and I doubt that Stewart-Haas Racing, with multiple solid sponsors and the best chassis/engine provider in the game with Hendrick Motorsports, will decline like Roush Fenway Racing has the last three seasons.

    Rodney Childers has also proven to be one of the best crew chiefs in the game, maybe even better right now than Chad Knaus, who is probably entering the twilight of his career (Modern crew chiefs generally have a shorter career than drivers, with a notable exception in Jimmy Fennig). Childers has proven to be an excellent team builder; Michael Waltrip Racing flat out sucked before Childers came over in 2009 and helped to develop the team into an elite team over the next four seasons before leaving after 2013. It speaks volumes that MWR once again became completely rudderless as an organization when Childers left, not even being able to lure Greg Biffle from Roush last season, which really speaks volumes. I promise that if MWR actually is able to develop Brett Mofitt into a great driver, he isn’t going to win a championship with MWR.

    Childers also, as noted by Darrell Waltrip last Sunday, basically built the No. 4 team from the ground up in the 2013-2014 off-season, then won a championship the first year in. Think about that for a second. Football isn’t like racing, but that is kind of like starting a new expansion team with Pete Carroll as the coach, like Childers, a relative new face who turned the Seahawks into a powerhouse, and installing Matt Ryan, like Harvick, a mid-career player who has played well but has never truly had the team to win it all, as the QB.

    And then, come February, you turn the television on and you see Ryan hoisting the Lombardi after winning the Super Bowl, after one year.

    History says that no, Harvick and the 4 team won’t continue this amazing run. Someday he’s going to lose an engine or get stuck on pit road or get caught up in a wreck. Then we get to see just how good this team really is. The best players, regardless of sport, will perform when it’s pouring, not just raining. Can he join the ranks of drivers and teams such as his boss Tony Stewart in 2011, where he went from saying “We shouldn’t be in the Chase” to hoisting the Cup in just three months’ time? We shall see.


    Fontana Preview

    Favorite (Outside of Kevin Harvick)

    I’ve gotta go with K. Busch……. Wait, you’re telling me Kyle is still out with his injuries? I already know that, I’m talking about the other K. Busch. Kurt showed he hasn’t lost a step last Sunday, and with Kyle on the shelf he is the best here in the Gen 6, with an average finish of fourth in the last two races here.

    One To Watch

    Kyle Larson opened a lot of eyes in this race last year. The 2014 Rookie Of The Year almost won, if it wasn’t for the other Kyle blocking we’d be talking about defending race winner Kyle Larson. Larson is hungry for a victory, and with a second in Cup last season and his first Xfinity series win the same weekend, expect him to be a factor on Sunday.

    The Dark Horse

    Paul Menard has finished eighth and ninth here the last two seasons. Don’t expect a win, but do expect another under the radar top-10.


    A brief correction from last week. For the rankings I posted, comparing all Cup drivers from 2013 and 2014’s first two full time seasons in the sport, I forgot to post, of all people, Kevin Harvick’s statline. Harvick, with three victories, 11 top-fives, and 24 top-10s, would be 10th in the ranking, with everybody below Kyle Busch being a rank below what they are in the article.

    Harvick’s first two seasons are well known for being a roller coaster of emotions, from the grief in replacing the late Dale Earnhardt Sr., to triumph in winning three races including an emotional and iconic Atlanta win three weeks following Earnhardt’s death, to anger when he was suspended for the spring Martinsville race in 2002 after running into Coy Gibbs the day before in the Truck race after Gibbs wrecked him. Harvick, already on probation following an incident earlier in the year with Greg Biffle at Bristol, was suspended and relived by Kenny Wallace in the Cup Race.

    Maybe, once he comes back from injury, there is hope for a Kyle Busch championship after all.


    Speaking of Martinsville, they’ve changed hotdog brands once again. I’d be amazed if Jesse Jones hotdogs aren’t back at Martinsville by the start of the Cup race there on March 29. They’ve tried to change the hotdogs before and it has never worked out.

    If they don’t, it really is a shame that a track like Martinsville, with two dates a year (And thus plenty of money from the new television deal), will screw with its long time partners (Jesse Jones had been at the Speedway before there even was a NASCAR, starting with a handshake deal in 1947) and race fans just to make more money. Money that I doubt any of the race teams will see, or if they do see it, it will most definitely be pennies on the dollar.

    It seems like the France family, who majority own Martinsville Speedway owner ISC, either delight in moving races around or off the schedule for no real good reason (Somehow Darlington on Labor Day went from being too hot after years of it not being hot in 2004 to suddenly not being hot again in 2015) or messing around with what has been around for years. Instead of buying and then fixing Rockingham and making sure it had the resources to stay on the Cup schedule, it was decided that ISC needed a track in Kansas and Chicagoland, even though the Rockingham makeover would have been cheaper and would have led to better races, continuing the track’s history.

    It isn’t just ISC, either. Atlanta looked horrible a couple of weeks ago, and Bruton Smith has been wanting that second Las Vegas date for years now. As far as I know, Bruton has three options to get that second Las Vegas date- replace the second Charlotte race, replace the second Loudon race, or replace Atlanta and move dates around to get Vegas later in the year. And because I know he won’t get rid of Loudon because, you know, that makes too much sense, it’s either the heart of NASCAR in Charlotte or the birthplace of stock car racing in Atlanta that will be hurt in this deal.

    Then again, Smith could always just buy a track and pull it off the calendar, like he did to North Wilkesboro, which narrows it down to Dover and Pocono (We’ll find Martians before Smith buys Indianapolis). I’d love for it to be Pocono. Can we get rid of Pocono? That would be nice.

  • Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s Victory at Martinsville – A Story  of Celebration and Loss

    Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s Victory at Martinsville – A Story of Celebration and Loss

    His smile is infectious and his exuberance contagious. Nowhere was that more evident than in victory lane after Dale Earnhardt Jr. finally won at Martinsville Speedway. He’s an unexpected combination of vulnerability and a hidden strength born of tragedy that endears him to not only his fans but his fellow competitors as well. When Earnhardt wins it’s difficult not to get caught up in his joy.

    He grew up at racetracks all over the country but Martinsville and the iconic grandfather clock given to its winners has always held a special place in his heart as it conjures memories of his Dad.

    “Been coming here so many years,” Earnhardt begins, painting a picture as he remembers. “I’ve been coming here since the early ’80s, watching races here. Dad won several races here, brought home several clocks. As I remember one in particular that set at the front door, in the hall by the stairs. Had this little round rug right in that hallway that I’d run my Matchbox cars on, listening to the race on the Racing Motor Network. That clock would ring on the hour.”

    “I still really can’t believe it,” he continued. “The clock seems so hard to get. This is so special. I try not to get too caught up in the emotion of it because it’s a team deal, but this is very personal and very special to me to be able to win here.”

    The victory comes one week after Earnhardt was eliminated from NASCAR Sprint Cup championship contention after failing to advance to the Eliminator Round. In a year that began with a second Daytona 500 trophy, it was a surprising twist in a season that held such promise. Although he’s disappointed, the win at Martinsville, his fourth this year, serves as affirmation that the future is bright for this team.

    “I don’t believe in fairytales, Earnhardt said. “It’s only destiny in hindsight, you know. This wasn’t our year.  It’s only magical after the fact when you see it happen. But it just wasn’t our year, man. It feels good not to sit there and watch everybody else just finish the year off. I’m glad we were able to get a win, remind ourselves that if we keep working hard, keep trying, maybe we will win the championship like we want to.”

    The victory was even more poignant as it was ten years ago that a Hendrick Motorsports plane crashed, killing all ten passengers aboard while en route to Martinsville Speedway, including team owner Rick Hendrick’s son, brother and two nieces.

    As the two men hugged in victory lane, it was impossible to miss the heartfelt bond that they share.

    “I could feel how important it was to him and his embrace, when he would hug me. You just know there’s a genuine hug and there’s a hug. His was the real deal,” Earnhardt observed. He went on to say, “There’s a part of you that loves to celebrate those people’s lives. But there’s the other half of you that can’t forget the loss.”

    Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s life has been shaped by both triumph and tragedy. But on this day, he chooses to savor the good times with a passion that is irresistible. He may have fallen short of his goal to become a NASCAR Sprint Cup Champion this season but there’s always next year. And, if that dream becomes a reality, it’s going to be one hell of a party.

     

     

     

  • Surprising and Not Surprising: Martinsville Goody’s 500

    Surprising and Not Surprising: Martinsville Goody’s 500

    Hosting the first Eliminator race in the Chase, here is what was surprising and not surprising in the 66th annual Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 at Martinsville Speedway.

    Surprising: While some tributes were expected, especially with the remembrance of the Hendrick Motorsports plane crash at Martinsville ten years ago, other tributes also abounded, from the race winner’s tribute to his crew chief to the tribute of Front Row Motorsports to Hall of Fame inductee Wendell Scott.

    “He turned my career around,” Dale Earnhardt Jr. said, paying tribute to his crew chief Steve Letarte after winning his first ever race at Martinsville. “He put a great team together. What he’s accomplished is impressive as hell. I’m overwhelmed with what he’s been able to do.”

    “He put me in Victory Lane,” the driver of the No. 88 National Guard Chevrolet continued about his crew chief. “Like I say, the team he’s assembled, incredible group. That’s all Steve. He seems to have evolved into one of the best crew chiefs in the garage.”

    The other major tribute at Sunday’s Martinsville race was to Wendell Scott, the first African American to win in NASCAR competition. Darrell Wallace Jr. carried the tribute paint scheme to Victory Lane in the Truck Series race and David Ragan piloted his Scott tribute No. 34 Front Row Motorsports car to a tenth place finish in the Cup race.

    “Last Sunday was a good day for us,” Ragan said. “To get a top-10 finish was a real shot in the arm for this team and for Front Row Motorsports, and to do it in the Wendell Scott tribute car made it even more special.”

    Not Surprising: It’s not often that the race runner up is embarrassed, but four-time champion driving for five Jeff Gordon was just that, taking his lumps for his mistake speeding on pit road.

    “I’m embarrassed to say this,” the driver of the No. 24 Drive to End Hunger Chevrolet said. “Completely my fault.”

    “We do two settings, one in first gear, one in second gear. A late sequence for each one. I ran second gear under my light sequence for first gear,” Gordon continued. “I was supposed to run one green light in second gear and one red light in first gear. I ran one red light in second gear. That’s way too fast.”

    “I knew right then I was speeding.”

    Surprising: After no Talladega ‘big one’ the previous race, it was surprising to see a huge, hard wreck at one of the sport’s shortest tracks. The Martinsville ‘big one’ included Kasey Kahne and Casey Mears taking big hits, as well as Danica Patrick, Brad Keselowski, Carl Edwards, Martin Truex and Brian Vickers involved in the melee.

    “I just didn’t really see him (No. 2, Brad Keselowski) slowing down,” Kahne said. “I think my spotter was spotting me and I think he saw it last second. As soon as he said it I hit the brakes, but it was way too late.”

    “It was a pretty good hit.”

    “I was behind the No. 43 (Aric Almirola) and I guess the No. 2 (Brad Keselowski) was just backing up on the outside, I don’t know what happened,” Casey Mears said. “I saw the No. 43 go a little bit low and I was just using up all the track and right when I hit the No. 2 my spotter said the No. 2 is backing up. I just plowed him.”

    “I ran into him hard.”

    Not Surprising: Smoke did rise again at Martinsville, albeit with a bit of a gamble staying out on old tires to finish 4th place in his No. 14 Bass Pro Shops/Mobil 1 Chevrolet.

    “I don’t even think it was a gutsy call,” Tony Stewart said. “To me it was a no-brainer and if we were in that spot 100 times, that is the choice I want to make. I want to give ourselves a chance to fight for it like that.”

    “This car was pretty good all weekend,” Smoke continued. “I just can’t thank Johnny Morris (Bass Pro Shops) and Rusty Rush and everybody at Mobil 1 and Eric (Bagdikian) from Code 3 Associates and his staff; and most of all, our fans.”

    “They have been plowing a tough road for the last 18 months and this top 5 is for the fans more than anybody.”

    Surprising: Austin Dillon again outscored Kyle Larson in the Rookie of the Race battle, for the second week in a row. RCR driver Dillon finished 12th after starting 19th and Larson, in his No. 42 Target Chevrolet, finished 30th after a crash on Lap 487.

    “I’m really proud of everyone at RCR today,” Dillon said. “I was hoping to pass the No. 34 at the very end there to gain one more position and finish 11th, but a 12th-place finish – hey we’ll take it.”

    “It was a true team effort.”

    “I was terrible all day,” Larson, the other rookie contender said of his Martinsville adventure. “I’m just not very good at this track.”

    “I kept running into the back of people when cars five or six in front of me would check up, then it would get to me and I’d hit them,” Larson continued. “It was a really bad race for me.”

    Not Surprising: Brian Vickers and Kasey Kahne proved that three times was a charm in bringing out the yellow flag together. The two drivers mixed it up royally and potentially could have caused four or more cautions had they not been warned by NASCAR to cool it down.

    “He definitely wrecked us on purpose the first time, I mean look at the video,” Vickers said of his incidents with Kahne. “He just hooked us in the bumper and just wrecked us, I don’t know why.”

    “I was actually passing him off of (Turn) 2 and he didn’t give me room and I was going to hit the wall so I lifted a little,” Kahne said in response. “And then he kind of went high into (Turn) 3, and that’s where I was entering so he blocked. So I went low to pass him and then he chopped low across and spun himself out.”

    “He was using up the whole race track so I was going high, then he went high,” Kahne continued. “Then I decided to go low, and he went low and spun himself out on my front end. I was confused as to why he would want to do that. Then later on he crashed me. I don’t know what his deal was he was using up the whole track. You get one lane you don’t get all of them.”

    Surprising: In addition to the wrecking and tempers flaring, there were also actual flames on the track, from Timmy Hill, who went ablaze early, to Kurt Busch, who had a conflagration in his car on Lap 424.

    “I think we ruptured an oil line,” Busch said. “Whether it was the fitting or the line itself, I don’t know.”

    “But we had a really good run. We were in the mix. We were running up front with the Haas Automation Chevy and we were in that spot where we won that race this spring,” the driver of the No. 41 Haas Automation Chevrolet continued. “I was hoping to get off the broom, but instead we’ve got our broom cleaning up our kitty litter.”

    Not Surprising: The winless wonders continued their quiet and calculated consistency at Martinsville, with Ryan Newman finishing third and Matt Kenseth taking the checkered flag in the sixth position.

    “The strategy of two tires there at the end worked out good for us,” Newman said. “Right number of laps with the guys that stayed out, kept the guys behind us that had four tires.”

    “Just a great team effort for the Quicken Loans Chevrolet, everybody at RCR,” Newman continued. “It was fun to have at least our highest running position be the last lap of the race.”

    “We didn’t run the way we wanted to run,” Kenseth said. “We still finished respectably with all the stuff that happened. Like I said, we didn’t run great today, but they made some good calls and did the right things at the end and finished strong.”

    Surprising: AJ Allmendinger continued to surprise with his “little engine that could’ team finishing ninth in his No. 47 Clorox Products Chevrolet for JTG Daugherty Racing.

    “Good day, honestly maybe one of the best days we have had all year just in the sense of not great early on, fighting hard,” ‘Dinger said. “The guys had good pit stops and then a couple of adjustments there.”

    “In a way ninth is a little bit disappointing,” Allmendinger continued. “But overall just really proud of the team that was probably one of the best efforts we have had all year.”

    Not Surprising: Revenge is mine said one Kevin Harvick after the race of his struggles with competitor Matt Kenseth, with whom he tussled on track.

    “The good thing about this format is you have two more weeks and two race tracks that we can win on,” Harvick said after being involved in an early accident and finishing 33rd. “Everybody was so worried about us starting in the back and we wrecked at the front. Unfortunate.”

    And of his Kenseth issues, Harvick had a rather cryptic remark about his competitor to end the race weekend.

    “Yeah, he won’t win this championship. If we don’t, he won’t.”

  • Martinsville – The “Other” Wildcard

    Martinsville – The “Other” Wildcard

    Stats are often used to determine which driver is a favorite heading into race weekend. Entering the Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500, eight drivers remain in contention for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship. Among those eight drivers, no one has a record as impressive as Jeff Gordon at the half-mile paperclip shaped track nestled in the southern Virginia. At Martinsville, however, stats are only one factor.

    Gordon’s record at Martinsville is stellar. In 43 starts, Gordon has eight wins, 27 top-fives and 34 top-10s. He has an average finish of seventh and has led a whopping 3593 laps. Stats like these would be envied by any driver.

    In addition to the great stats, Gordon seems to have the all of the elements he needs to win a championship; a great crew chief, solid and consistent crew, an obvious desire to prove he can win number five, and most importantly, confidence in his ability. These factors coupled with his impressive record, definitely make him a favorite this weekend.

    The only driver who has a comparable record at Martinsville is Gordon’s teammate, Jimmie Johnson. Johnson, however, who also has eight wins in just 25 starts, was eliminated from Chase contention last week at Talladega.

    Based on stats, Virginia native, Denny Hamlin, is Gordon’s closest competitor among Chase contenders. In 17 starts, Hamlin has four wins, 13 top-10s, and an average finish of 8.7. Hamlin, however, has been somewhat inconsistent this season. He has an average finish position of 15.1 and has only led 218 laps compared to Gordon’s 743.

    Even with the fact that his season has been weaker than Gordon’s, he is still the most dangerous threat to Gordon this weekend. Hamlin loves Martinsville and the love of a track, often times, means more than stats. Additionally, this weekend is probably Hamlin’s best opportunity to win and advance, so expect him to be tough.

    Keselowski and Logano may not have stats as strong as Gordon, but they have had the strongest overall season among the Chase drivers. Keselowski has the most wins with six, followed by Logano with five. Logano leads the top-10 category with 20, tied with Gordon. Logano also led in top-fives with 15, one better than Keselowski.

    Keselowski seems to have a fire in his eye this season and his team seem to share that desire to win. The cohesiveness of the No. 2 team is evident every week.

    Logano is in the midst of his best career season. He has something to prove after a lackluster series debut with Joe Gibbs Racing. The Penske racing duos are definitely threats to win this weekend.

    Of course anything can happen at Martinsville. Stats and recent history only go so far. It is a rough and tumble track where drivers can beat and bang, suffer severe damage, and still compete for the win. It is also a track where paybacks often happens. We are only two weeks away from the Keselowski, Kenseth, Hamlin feud. Could this be the weekend when they take their revenge?

    At a track like Martinsville, factors that are hard to quantify, determination, anger, desire and confidence, can play a very important part in deciding the winner.

    Talladega is often referred to as the “wildcard” track in the Sprint Cup Series. Martinsville, however, is just as volatile. Tight, flat corners and the ease at which tempers can flare, are ingredients for a fantastic race day. Martinsville is the perfect place to kickoff the eliminator round.

    The green will fall on the Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 at 1:30 local time.

  • 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.

  • NASCAR Racing Schedule for Martinsville Speedway

    NASCAR Racing Schedule for Martinsville Speedway

    This weekend the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series travels to Martinsville Speedway for the Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 and the first race of the Eliminator Round. The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series is also on track for the Kroger 200.

    All times are ET.

    FRIDAY – OCTOBER 24:

    Noon – 1:20 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series practice – FOX Sports 1

    1:40 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series practice – FOX Sports 1
    3:00 p.m. – 4:25 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series final practice – FOX Sports 1
    4:40 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying – FOX Sports 1

    SATURDAY – OCTOBER 25:

    9:00 a.m. – 9:50 a.m.: Sprint Cup Series practice – FOX Sports 1
    10:15 a.m.: Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying – FOX Sports 1
    Noon – 12:50 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series final practice – FOX Sports 1
    1:30 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series Kroger 200 – (200 laps-105.2 miles) – FOX Sports 1

    SUNDAY – OCTOBER 26:

    1:30 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 – (500 laps-263 miles) – ESPN


    Press Conference Schedule: (Watch live) at Nascar.com (Post race times approx.)

    Friday – October 24:

    10:15 a.m.: Cole Custer
    10:30 a.m.: Timothy Peters
    11:00 a.m.: Jimmie Johnson
    11:15 a.m.: Matt Kenseth
    1:30  p.m.: Carl Edwards
    1:50  p.m.: Denny Hamlin
    2:15  p.m.: Danica Patrick
    2:45  p.m.: Jeff Gordon
    5:30  p.m.: Post NSCS qualifying

    Saturday – October 25:

    11:15 a.m.: David Ragan and Darrell Wallace Jr.
    3:15 p.m.: Post NCWTS race

    Sunday – October 26:

    5:20 p.m. : Post NSCS race

  • John Hunter Nemechek ‘Feeling Good’ With Top-15 Finish in Martinsville Truck Race

    John Hunter Nemechek ‘Feeling Good’ With Top-15 Finish in Martinsville Truck Race

    John Hunter Nemechek, son of Joe Nemechek, was ‘feeling good’ after making his debut in the 2014 Camping World Truck Series at Martinsville Speedway this past weekend.

    In fact the sixteen year old was feeling especially good after finishing eleventh behind the wheel of his No. 8 pelletgrillusa.com/SWM-NEMCO Motorsports Toyota in the Kroger 250

    “It feels good to finish top-15 and run really, really close to the top-10,” the young up and coming driver said. “We ran top-12 most of the day.”

    “There towards the end, I thought we were going to be good restarting on the inside that first green-white-checkered,” Nemechek continued. “The second green-white-checkered, the final one, we ended up starting on the outside and that was not the place to be because you couldn’t get down and you couldn’t pass anybody. The inside line would freight train you.”

    “We battled hard for two laps and didn’t fall back too many positions and finished 11th,” Nemechek said. “Our pit crew was great all day. The guys made very good calls and adjustments. It was a great team effort.”

    Although Nemechek was indeed feeling good, he also had an expectation that he wanted to meet and just came shy of achieving that goal.

    “Our goal was to finish top-10 and we came really close to that,” Nemechek said. “You can’t really be disappointed in missing it by a spot.”

    “To run up in the front with all of the guys that are veterans and have been in the Truck Series forever, it felt really good to run up there and be competitive.”

    “I was overall happy with the day.”

    Nemechek did not feel good, however, about having to wait out the rain delay, which postponed the race from Saturday to Sunday, immediately following the conclusion of the Sprint Cup race.

    “The rain out was boring to tell you the truth,” Nemechek said. “There was nothing going on but just sitting around in the rain.”

    “I got quite a few naps in and got well rested for the race,” Nemechek continued. “That’s always a plus.”

    The rain delay did, however, allow the youngster some good learning opportunities as he watched the big league drivers race, particularly as to how they managed to pass on the short track.

    “We had to come from 20th at the start of the race so watching how the Cup guys were passing and getting to the front was important,” Nemechek said. “It was all interesting just trying to learn.”

    The young driver also observed changes in the track due to the Cup drivers laying down rubber throughout their 500 mile race.

    “Normally we’re the first race on the track and we’re the ones putting rubber down so the track is freer,” Nemechek said. “With the Cup drivers running the track, it really didn’t take that much rubber so their being out there before us made the track a little bit tighter.”

    “The rain made it really loose for them because it was a green race track,” Nemechek continued. “So, as they put rubber down, the race track kept getting tighter and slicker as well.”

    Not only did the sixteen year old have to battle the track but he also had to battle other drivers. And at one point, the Martinsville Truck Series rookie actually became the meat in the middle of a sandwich until one of the other drivers lifted to drift up the track and out of the way.

    “It was tight quarters for sure,” Nemechek said. “I didn’t know that we could run three-wide at Martinsville but we proved that we did.”

    “That was definitely pretty cool to run like that,” Nemechek continued. “I just had to remain calm and do the best I could to stay in there and even gain positions being in that three-way battle.”

    One of the biggest lessons that the young driver took away from the short track, however, was to understand with whom he was racing and to carefully balance respect and aggressiveness.

    “We were around a couple different groups of trucks all day and then we sort of got in a rhythm. We got out on our own and was passing trucks in front of us,” Nemechek said. “We had a really good long run truck.”

    “I didn’t really know who we were around most of the day,” Nemechek continued. “They’re all good to race with but there are a couple guys that you don’t like to race with because they’ll wreck you at any point. So, you just have to watch out for them.”

    “I’m staying out of naming any names on that though.”

    “I learned not to take anybody’s stuff,” Nemechek said. “So, like if they mess with you, you mess with them right back. You have to earn respect with all these veterans in the Series and you do that by running them clean and running them hard.”

    “At the same time, if they rough you up, you rough them back up,” Nemechek continued. “So, it’s all about earning respect and that’s what we take on to the next race.”

    The youngster also admitted that he did get a little bit of advice from Dad, especially when things got challenging during the green-white-checkered battles.

    “Dad kept telling me ‘Good job and keep the tires on it and keep your nose clean so you can be there at the end’, Nemechek said. “That’s what we did and we were there at the end and we got in a good battle for the finish.”

    “The green-white-checkered finish was a new deal for me this year in the Truck Series,” Nemechek said. “We’ve done it plenty of times in other Series so when we did it, my crew chief and dad came on to tell me to drive it like my late model, where we had quite a few green –white-checkers.”

    “So, we did that and didn’t worry about anything else.”

    Because of his age, John Hunter Nemechek’s next race will not be until the Monster Mile in Dover, Delaware and his father instead will be behind the wheel. The young driver will, however, keep himself busy by racing Super Late Models at Asheville and Pensacola until he gets back into the Truck in a few more weeks.

    Most of all, the second generation racer is feeling good about simply having the chance to go and not only follow in his father’s footsteps but also pursue his own dreams of being a successful race car driver.

    “I’m so grateful for this opportunity,” John Hunter Nemechek said. “I’ll be running ten Truck races this year and Dad will be running the other twelve that I can’t run because of my age.”

    “It’s a father-son deal, which is the best.”