Tag: Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series

  • Smoke Steals the Show at Ford OEM Press Conference

    Smoke Steals the Show at Ford OEM Press Conference

    Each season, the manufacturer reps and original engine manufacturers (OEM’s) meet with the NASCAR media corp in the deadline room at Daytona International Speedway to discuss the expectations for the upcoming season. The biggest takeaway from the Ford availability, however, is that retiring as a NASCAR driver hasn’t changed the fact that Tony Stewart is still the same Tony Stewart that most people love.

    Right from the start, the owner of Stewart-Haas Racing demonstrated his vintage snarkiness. Jack Roush spoke about forgiving Stewart for an incident involving him, Clint Bowyer and Carl Edwards at Pocono Raceway in 2007 when he “got frustrated with both of them at Pocono and he went after Clint and he got Carl.”

    “Is that the only time I did anything? (laughter) If that’s it, I’m good with that,” Stewart said. “I appreciate it.”

    The grenades continued flying, such as when he was asked to give the shortened story of when he and the folks at Ford started talking about transitioning SHR to the Ford camp.

    “I can’t remember the date, but Raj (Nair) was sitting out front begging at the front door (laughter),” he said.

    To which Nair responded, “Whatever it took (laughing).”

    Stewart fired back with “That’s why they put us on opposite sides of the table, in case you were wondering about that.”

    He was asked how Clint Bowyer’s transition to SHR was going and he delivered this classic.

    “You guys know Clint. It’s like dropping a super ball off the top of a building and watching it bounce around non-stop,” he said. “The only thing we’re trying to figure out is what size shock collar we need to get to him to keep his attention and keep him focused (laughter).”

    But the line that showed Stewart at his finest was his response to what it’s like being at Daytona as just an owner and not as a driver.

    “I’ll be honest, it’s been kind of nice. If I’m late to practice, nobody yells at me. If I leave practice early, nobody yells at me. And if I don’t show up for practice at all, nobody yells at me (laughter),” he said. “That side has been kind of nice. Really, the only drama I’ve had so far is Roger (Penske) picking at me on the color of shirt I wear, and I guess Jack has kind of given me the pardon already, so it’s been a pretty good weekend so far. If all I’ve got to worry about is my shirt color, I’ve got it made right now.”

  • Corey LaJoie Races his way into the Daytona 500

    Corey LaJoie Races his way into the Daytona 500

    Corey LaJoie made the most of his Monster Energy NASCAR Sprint Cup Series debut at Daytona International Speedway, securing a spot in the Daytona 500 in his No. 83 BK Racing Toyota.

    The 25-year-old third generation racer finished 18th in the first CanAm Duel, ahead of Reed Sorenson and Brendan Gaughan, to capture the transfer position that was available for one of these non-charter teams. It was not, however, without controversy.

    On Lap 49, LaJoie made contact with the No. 55 car of Reed Sorenson which then spun into Paul Menard’s No. 27. Sorenson hit the inside retaining wall and was eliminated from the race.

    After the qualifying race, Sorenson was understandably upset.

    “I guess he felt like he did what he had to do to make the race,” he said. “I hope he’s proud of that part of it. There’s a lot of pressure going into making this race. It’s a very big deal for a small team like ours.”

    LaJoie maintains that he didn’t intentionally wreck Sorensen, saying, “I mean, obviously wrecking Reed wasn’t how I drew it up. It certainly wasn’t on purpose. I was just trying to fill a hole. He didn’t think I should be there.”

    But, he was also determined to do whatever it took to make the race,

    “I just had to beat him,” he explained. “I didn’t want to be sipping Margaritas on the beach on Sunday. I wanted to be out there racing. If that was my mom, I’d probably spin her out to make the Daytona 500, too. That’s just frank. I’m not going on Reed’s Christmas card list this year, but that’s all right.”

    To put it into perspective, LaJoie talked about how this opportunity came about and what it means to him.

    “You know, Ron (Devine, BK Racing owner) could have put lots of guys in it, Casey Mears, the list is long for guys he could have put in it,” he said. “Obviously he likes giving young drivers a shot with Matt (DiBenedetto), Alex Bowman, the list goes on.

    “I was politicking very hard. I don’t have a whole lot of starts in any division. I’ve been part-timing in everything.  Limited XFINITY starts, a couple Truck starts, a couple Cup starts.

    “I know I can do it in the right opportunity. I politicked very hard. I didn’t feel like I was making a whole lot of headway with it. I texted Jimmie Johnson.  I said, ‘Hey, I feel like if the seven-time champ comes two weeks removed from the seventh championship makes a text, it could carry some weight.’ He said, ‘Oh, yeah, no problem.’

    “So he called him up, talked for about an hour. Two days later the call came to me.  Hey, this is the call you’ve been waiting for. Let’s go. It’s still only part-time. BK is working hard to try to sell sponsorship to fill more races, but right now all I care about is Sunday.”

    LaJoie might have limited experience by some standards but his talent behind the wheel is undeniable.

    He has six wins in the K&N Pro Series East Series where he finished second in the championship standings in 2012 and was selected as part of the 2012 NASCAR Next Class. LaJoie also has three wins in the ARCA Series and earned two top-10 finishes in 10 starts in the XFINITY Series in 2016.

    And, while some may question his aggressiveness on the track, for LaJoie, this could be the break he’s been waiting for his entire life and he’s not about to waste it.

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

     

  • Hot 20 – The preliminaries are over and it is now time to get racing for real at Daytona

    Hot 20 – The preliminaries are over and it is now time to get racing for real at Daytona

    Sorry, but this column is arriving a day later than my usual Thursday date. Of course, it has something to do with the race that gives me the data to mess around with did not take place until Thursday. It is not my fault.

    So, why do I feel so impelled to share my witticisms when I could have just taken the day off? Well, for the first time since 1982, I can discuss who the hottest drivers are leading into the Daytona 500. Prior to this, there were no points, no benchmarks as to who was hot and who was not, other than to discuss the Daytona weather. I can tell you, sometimes that is not hot at all. I froze my arse off watching Kevin Harvick win the damn thing 10 years ago.

    No, this year we have drivers who have earned points that reflect in the standings, thanks to the awarding, for the first time ever, points for the Duels. Winning one of them has meant that a pair of drivers will enter the Daytona 500 as the co-points leader with the chap who won the other Duel. Only was 10th? You have a big point already in the bank account, along with that 10th place driver over in the other Duel.

    Without any further adieu, here are our Hot 20 as determined yesterday on the track as they prepare for Sunday’s Daytona 500.

    1. Chase Elliott – 10 pts
    What was the name of that guy he replaced?

    1. Denny Hamlin – 10 pts 
    Obviously, does not mind hurting the feelings of Junior’s fans.

    3. Clint Bowyer – 9 pts
    Good things happen when you have a good car to do them in.

    3. Jamie McMurray – 9 pts
    Is this the year for Dimples to shine?

    5. Kurt Busch – 8 pts
    Newly married and being sued. Being Kurt is not boring.

    5. Kevin Harvick – 8 pts
    His backup driver won’t be five until July.

    7. AJ Allmendinger – 7 pts
    Like a magician, he appeared out of nowhere.

    7. Brad Keselowski – 7 pts
    First career Cup win was at Talladega, so of course, he did well here.

    9. Austin Dillon – 6 pts
    Driving under the right number to do great things.

    9. Matt Kenseth – 6 pts
    Only member of that old Roush gang still competing.

    11. Trevor Bayne – 5 pts
    It has been six years since his lone Cup win at…where was that again?

    11. Dale Earnhardt Jr. – 5 pts
    It has been awhile, but this guy seems rather familiar.

    13. Danica Patrick – 4 pts
    Between her and Ricky, 301 Cup starts, zero wins. The time is now.

    13. Martin Truex Jr. – 4 pts
    New season, new teammate, but 2016 results were not bad, either.

    15. Ryan Newman – 3 pts
    Good thing one wins by a fender, not by a neck.

    15. Aric Almirola – 3 pts
    Teammates…he don’t need no stinkin’ teammates.

    17, Joey Logano – 2 pts
    What is not to love about Joey…oh, let me count the ways.

    17. Kyle Larson – 2 pts
    If he keeps over the wall crew within acceptable numbers, he’ll be okay.

    19. Cole Whitt – 1 pt
    The lad is a ginger, and I’m not lion.

    20. Ty Dillon – 1pt
    First time ever on this chart. Take a bow, young man.

  • Daytona 500 – Did You Know?

    Daytona 500 – Did You Know?

    Sunday, Feb. 26 will mark the 59th running of the Daytona 500 but did you know that it has been the season-opener only since 1982? The first “Great American Race” was held in 1959 and won by Lee Petty in his first appearance at the event in his No. 42 Oldsmobile Super 88. He led 38 laps and won by two feet in a photo finish battle with Johnny Beauchamp and Joe Weatherly. Twenty-five years later, his son, Richard Petty, captured his 200th win at Daytona in the Firecracker 400 on July 4, 1984.

    Thirty-seven different drivers have won the Daytona 500 led by Richard Petty with seven victories. He’s followed by Cale Yarborough with four wins. Bobby Allison, Dale Jarrett and Jeff Gordon have won three 500s while Bill Elliott, Sterling Marlin, Michael Waltrip, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jimmie Johnson and Matt Kenseth have won the season-opener two times.

    But did you know that only three drivers have back-to-back wins in this iconic race? Richard Petty did it (1973-74) and so did Yarborough (1983-84). However, Marlin was the last competitor to accomplish this feat (1994 and 1995).

    Thirty years separate the oldest and youngest drivers who have won the 500. Trevor Bayne became the youngest driver (20 years, 0 months, 1 day) on Feb. 20, 2011, when he scored the checkered flag in his first start in the Daytona 500. It was also his first career Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series victory. Bobby Allison won his third Daytona 500 on Feb. 14, 1988, making him the oldest Daytona 500 winner (50 years, 2 months, 11 days).

    It’s often said that it’s not important where you start but rather where you finish. However, when it comes to the Daytona 500, qualifying well is a key factor. Did you know that the pole position has produced more winners (nine) than any other position? In fact, 28 of the 58 Daytona 500s (48.3 percent) have been won from a top-five starting position with a whopping 72.4 percent being won from a top 10 starting position.

    The Daytona 500 is one of the most sought after wins in NASCAR’s premier series, and for good reason. Five drivers who won the 500 went on to become the Cup Series Champion the same year, for a total of 8 championships between them. The list includes Richard Petty (1964,1971,1974), Johnson (2006,2013), Lee Petty (1959), Yarborough (1977) and Jeff Gordon (1997).

    The 59th Daytona 500 will kick off the 2017 season Sunday with television coverage on FOX at 2 p.m. It will also be broadcast on MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR radio. The on-track activity begins Thursday, Feb. 23 with  Cup practice at noon on FS1.

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

     

  • Journeyman Michael Waltrip Making Final Ride on Sunday

    Journeyman Michael Waltrip Making Final Ride on Sunday

    When the checkered flag flies on Sunday, that’s the conclusion of the journey for arguably NASCAR’s ultimate journeyman.

    In sports, the journeyman is defined as “an athlete who is technically competent but unable to excel” and Michael Waltrip is arguably the textbook case in NASCAR. Statistically, his numbers aren’t impressive, especially when compared to those of his brother and NASCAR Hall of Fame member, Darrell Waltrip.

    But out of all the drivers who’ve started a NASCAR race, Michael is one of 186 individuals who’ve actually won a race in the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series. He has two Daytona 500 victories on his résumé, one more than his brother and two more than drivers such as Tony Stewart and NASCAR Hall of Fame members Mark Martin and Rusty Wallace.

    Waltrip started 462 times in the Cup Series without recording a victory, minus a victory in the exhibition All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway in 1996. But on February 18, 2001, in his first race for new team owner Dale Earnhardt and Dale Earnhardt Inc., he broke through for his first career victory in the sport’s biggest race.

    Alas, what started as the greatest moment in his life quickly turned into the darkest day in NASCAR history. On the final lap of the 2001 Daytona 500, Earnhardt perished when his car slammed the Turn 4 wall head-on.

    Waltrip says the circumstances of his first win is something he lives with, but wouldn’t call it “haunting.”

    “I accepted it and I think I said it very well the days after that race. I think we have a number of days when we’re born that we’re going to live. Everybody has that number and that was Dale’s day, and me winning was the perfect person to win because I just wanted to give him the credit,” Waltrip said. “I still honor him by giving him the credit and I will say also as I get older, as you think about your day coming up, it’s a pretty good day when you’re watching your two cars drive off to win the Daytona 500 and then you’re in heaven right after that. Obviously, I wish I could have got a hug from him and everything had have turned out different, but that’s just not the way it was meant to be.”

    His next victory came at Daytona International Speedway on Independence Day weekend in 2002. Thanks to a late spin by Ryan Newman, Waltrip coasted to victory under caution and his demeanor in victory lane was “business as usual,” as opposed to the “fun, friendly, nice to old people and kids – even nice to the media” guy, as he described himself.

    His third came a few months later in the rain-shortened 2003 Daytona 500. Asked if the race being shortened by rain mattered to him, he responded he “got the trophy and the check and they didn’t shorten either one of those.” He added that he’d rather have won in a manner similar to Denny Hamlin last year, but “that’s just not the way it is.”

    Waltrip’s final victory came in the 2003 EA Sports 500 at Talladega Superspeedway. Restarting in the lead with five laps to go, he held off a final charge by Jeff Gordon to score his fourth and final Cup win.

    The next two years, success was nowhere to find and he left DEI at the conclusion of the 2005 season.

    After an unremarkable stint at Bill Davis Racing, which included four DNQ’s, he started his own race team that led to Toyota’s foray into the Cup Series.

    “I think Darrell and I took it as partly our responsibility to tell the world that this was a good thing for NASCAR, that Toyota, they have a plant in Georgetown, Kentucky, and they employ a lot of hard working Kentuckians and Americans all over our country to build their cars, and they just wanted to come race in NASCAR, and the money they spent marketing and on the cars and the teams and all those things feel like we’re something that would help the sport, and I’m thankful that they asked us to be a part of it,” he said.

    Unfortunately, the legacy of the organization that bore his name was of cheating with illegal fuel additives and manipulating the outcome of the 2013 Federated Auto Parts 400 at Richmond International Raceway.

    Since 2012, Waltrip transitioned to the role of studio analyst and color commentator for FOX Sports, while still maintaining an ownership stake of MWR (prior to its shutting down at the conclusion of the 2015 season), although not running the day-to-day operations. It was here that his offbeat, goofy personality shined through, especially during his polarizing “Grid Walk” segments in FOX’s pre-race shows.

    This hasn’t stopped him from jumping back in the car to race now and again.

    This Sunday, however, will be the last for the 32-year journeyman. He thought 30 Daytona 500’s “was a cool number and the last one was coming some day and Aaron’s wanted to help me celebrate it and Toyota, so that’s why.”

    When asked what advice he’d give to up and coming drivers, he said just to have fun and remember this is an entertainment business.

    “We’re here for people to sit down and watch and smile and enjoy it,” he said. “And you don’t have to be cool. You can be cool, but you need to be fun, and you need to be outgoing and energetic, and you need to be able to tell your story with some flair.”

     

  • NASCAR Racing Schedule for Daytona 500

    NASCAR Racing Schedule for Daytona 500

    The 2017 season officially begins this weekend as the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, XFINITY Series and Camping World Truck Series compete at Daytona International Speedway for the 59th running of the Daytona 500. Please check below for the complete schedule of events.

    Chase Elliott won the pole position this past Sunday during qualifying. He will be joined on the front row by Hendrick Motorsports teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr. in second place. The remainder of the field will be set Friday, Feb. 23 in the Can-Am Duels. These twin 60-lap races will determine the field as well as the full lineup for the Daytona 500.

    There are 36 Charter teams that are locked into the race, leaving four open spots and six contenders hoping to secure one of those four positions.

    Thursday, Feb. 23:

    On Track:
    Noon-12:55 p.m.: Cup Series Practice – FS1
    2-2:55 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series First Practice – FS1
    4-4:55 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series Final Practice – FS1
    7 p.m.: First Can-Am Duel race (60 laps, 150 miles) – FS1
    9 p.m. (approx.): Second Can-Am Duel race (60 laps, 150 miles) – FS1

    Garage Cam: (Watch live)
    1:30 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series

    Press Conferences: (Watch live)
    1:30 p.m.: NASCAR Drive for Diversity
    3 p.m.: Denny Hamlin
    10 p.m. (approximately): Post-Can-Am Duels Races

    Friday, Feb. 24:

    On Track:
    Noon-12:55 p.m.: XFINITY Series First Practice – FS1
    1-1:55 p.m.: Cup Series Daytona 500 Practice – FS1
    2-2:55 p.m.: XFINITY Series Final Practice – FS1
    3-3:55 p.m.: Cup Series Daytona 500 Practice – FS1
    4:30 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series Qualifying (single vehicle/two rounds) – FS1
    7:30 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series NextEra Energy Resources 250 (100 laps, 250 miles) – FS1

    Garage Cam: (Watch live)
    11:30 a.m.: XFINITY Series
    12:30 p.m.: Cup Series

    Press Conferences: (Watch live)
    11 a.m.: Team Penske
    11:30 a.m.: Team Chevrolet and owners (Jim Campbell, of Chevrolet, U.S. VP, Performance Vehicles and Motorsports; Richard Childress of Richard Childress Racing; Chip Ganassi of Chip Ganassi Racing; and Rick Hendrick of Hendrick Motorsports)
    10 p.m. (approximately): Post-Camping World Truck Series Race

    Saturday, Feb. 25:

    On Track:
    10:30 a.m.: XFINITY Series Qualifying (single vehicle/two rounds) – FS1
    12:30-1:55 p.m.: Cup Series Daytona 500 Final Practice – FS1
    3:30 p.m.: XFINITY Series Powershares QQQ 300 (120 laps, 300 miles) – FS1

    Press Conferences: (Watch live)
    10 a.m.: Ford Performance and team owners (Raj Nair of Ford Performance Executive VP, Product Development and Chief Technical Officer; Roger Penske of Team Penske; Jack Roush of Roush Fenway Racing and Tony Stewart of Stewart-Haas Racing)
    12:30 p.m.: Toyota Racing and team owners (Ed Laukes, the VP of marketing, performance and guest experience, Toyota Motor Sales U.S.A.; Joe Gibbs of Joe Gibbs Racing; and Barney Visser of Furniture Row Racing
    6 p.m. (approximately): Post-XFINITY Series Race

    Sunday, Feb. 26:

    On Track:
    2 p.m.: Daytona 500 (200 laps, 500 miles) – FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

    Press Conferences: (Watch live)
    10:20 a.m.: Honorary Race Official Mario Andretti
    10:40 a.m.: USAF Thunderbirds
    10:55 a.m.: Daytona 500 Grand Marshal Owen Wilson
    11:05 a.m.: Daytona 500 National Anthem Singer Jordin Sparks and Honorary Starter LaDainian Tomlinson
    11:30 a.m.: Daytona 500 Pre-Race Performers Lady Antebellum
    6:00 p.m. (approximately): Post-Cup Series Race

     

    DUEL 1 LINEUP
    STARTING POSITION DRIVER TEAM
    1. Chase Elliott Hendrick Motorsports
    2. Brad Keselowski Team Penske
    3. Martin Truex Jr. Furniture Row Racing
    4. Kevin Harvick Stewart-Haas Racing
    5. Matt Kenseth Joe Gibbs Racing
    6. Kyle Busch Joe Gibbs Racing
    7. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Roush Fenway Racing
    8. Daniel Suarez Joe Gibbs Racing
    9. Joey Logano Team Penske
    10. Trevor Bayne Roush Fenway Racing
    11. Paul Menard Richard Childress Racing
    12. Jamie McMurray Chip Ganassi Racing
    13. Aric Almirola Richard Petty Motorsports
    14. Landon Cassill Front Row Motorsports
    15. Matt DiBenedetto Go Fas Racing
    16. Chris Buescher JTG Daugherty Racing
    17. Brendan Gaughan* Beard Motorsports
    18. Cole Whitt TriStar Motorsports
    19. Reed Sorenson* Premium Motorsports
    20. Joey Gase BK Racing
    21. Corey LaJoie* BK Racing

     

    DUEL 2 LINEUP
    STARTING POSITION DRIVER TEAM
    1. Dale Earnhardt Jr. Hendrick Motorsports
    2. Clint Bowyer Stewart-Haas Racing
    3. Denny Hamlin Joe Gibbs Racing
    4. Kasey Kahne Hendrick Motorsports
    5. Ryan Newman Richard Childress Racing
    6. Ty Dillon Germain Racing
    7. Jimmie Johnson Hendrick Motorsports
    8. Kyle Larson Chip Ganassi Racing
    9. Ryan Blaney Wood Brothers Racing
    10. Erik Jones Furniture Row Racing
    11. Kurt Busch Stewart-Haas Racing
    12. Danica Patrick Stewart-Haas Racing
    13. Austin Dillon Richard Childress Racing
    14. AJ Allmendinger JTG Daugherty Racing
    15. Michael McDowell Leavine Family Racing
    16. David Ragan Front Row Motorsports
    17. Michael Waltrip Premium Motorsports
    18. Elliott Sadler* Tommy Baldwin Racing
    19. D.J. Kennington* Gaunt Brothers Racing
    20. Jeffrey Earnhardt Circle Sport – The Motorsports Group
    21. Timmy Hill* Rick Ware Racing

     

  • Lack of Attendance at Clash Not the Fault of Dale Earnhardt Jr.

    Lack of Attendance at Clash Not the Fault of Dale Earnhardt Jr.

    That’s it! I’ve had enough! I cannot count the times I have heard how NASCAR or the people involved with the sport have placed blame on the lack of attendance, ratings and overall disinterest in NASCAR on drivers retiring or not racing. This week a well-respected publication stated that since Dale Earnhardt Jr. decided to sit out the Advanced Auto Parts Clash on Sunday, that led to a decrease in attendance.

    Really? Dale Earnhardt Jr. is to blame for that?

    The fact that Dale Earnhardt Jr. decided to sit the race out, may have altered the attendance a hair but there is much more to the fact that only an estimated 15,000 people showed up to what was once a premier event. Look at Sunday’s race. It was a great finish but the majority of the 75 laps ran were lackluster. Teams ran single-file for a good chunk of the event and the only thing that made the race interesting in the middle stages was that defending Cup champion Jimmie Johnson spun coming off Turn 4, twice.

    There’s been a constant problem at Daytona the last few years and the powers at be need to wake up to the real problem. Here’s some reality for you – Dale Earnhardt Jr. will not race forever. Heck, there’s a chance he may not race past 2017.

    Yet NASCAR continues to place the blame on falling attendance and lack of ratings on drivers retiring. A January report in the Sports Business Journal reported that ISC, the parent company of Daytona International Speedway, stated that the election and the lack of star power contributed to decreased admissions.

    Here’s another dose of reality – Jeff Gordon, Tony Stewart and Carl Edwards have all called it quits in recent years and soon others will follow. Dale Earnhardt Jr., who is in his final year of a three-year contract at Hendrick Motorsports, has yet to discuss a contract extension.

    “I told (team owner) Rick (Hendrick) I’d like to get a couple of months under my belt to get confidence in my health,” he said. “When I got hurt last year and what I saw it put the company through, how I saw it frustrate certain aspects of the company, it put a strain on our relationships. Our (sponsors) were worried about my future.

    “Rick and everybody was worried. I don’t want to do that again. So I want to get some races under my belt and get confidence in my health before I can commit to him. I don’t want to make any promises I can’t deliver on, and so once I feel like I think I’m good.”

    Seven-time Cup champion Jimmie Johnson has more years behind him than he has in front of him. That problem will only get worse.

    The Advanced Auto Parts Clash’s problem wasn’t just Dale Earnhardt Jr being in the broadcast booth. It’s a microcosm of a combination of silly things NASCAR has done over the last five years that has made the Busch Clash/Bud Shootout/Sprint Unlimited- whatever you want to call it, an absolute joke of a race.

    This year was the first year since Anheuser-Busch stopped sponsoring the race where winning a pole in the previous season actually mattered, sort of. If you won a pole you were guaranteed a spot in the field but you didn’t have to win a pole to make the race. Just ask Danica Patrick, who, somehow, got into the “All-Star type” event because of a pole she won in the Daytona 500 four years ago. Oh, and there were countless fans confused as to why Mexico’s Daniel Suarez was eligible for the race while Clint Bowyer wasn’t. Suarez was eligible by one of the worst excuses I have ever heard – because Joe Gibbs Racing had already begun preparing the car for the Clash prior to Carl Edwards’ sudden retirement. Are we serious? And yet they can’t figure out why fans don’t take the race seriously.

    Also over the last few seasons, everyone can see the product at the restrictor plate tracks is getting worse and worse as the races go on. It’s nearly impossible to pass the leader. The leader blocks attacks from both the high and the low lanes by seeing which lane gets momentum and cutting it off as soon as it starts. It’s not entertaining.

    Yet, for reasons still unknown, the restrictor plate package has not changed much over the last three of four seasons and fans have responded, obviously, by not showing up to a race that was once revered by fans. There was a time when the package would change frequently and while it cost the teams money the fans got to see great racing the entire time.

    The lack of attendance Sunday can also be placed on the Daytona Beach, Florida area itself and the insane hotel and lodging prices. A recent report by the Sports Business Journal stated that Daytona has the highest hotel prices of any sporting event, including the Super Bowl. Prices for hotels can reach upwards of $1,500 at night. That is insanity, no matter which way you slice it. It’s out of the speedway’s and NASCAR’s hands but having the race on a separate weekend with three days of no on-track activity prior to the next event doesn’t entice the fans to come to the racetrack four days early. The majority of the crowd comes to Daytona for the Thursday races and can’t or won’t take a full week off of work for a lackluster race and single-car qualifying runs. They’d be better off condensing the weekend.

    In the end, I feel like a broken record. The product has to be the most important thing. I think that’s the biggest but most fair criticism of the people who currently run NASCAR. They believe that fans care about the other stuff more than they do about the racing. Your customers are race fans. When I go to Daytona I don’t see signs that say, “Welcome fans of popularity and diversity,” it’s always, “Welcome Race Fans.” NASCAR needs to take a hard look at that sign and realize there’s more to it than just words on a poster. It should be a motto and it should be how they operate.

  • Logano Wins ‘The Clash’ Thanks to Final Lap Crash

    Logano Wins ‘The Clash’ Thanks to Final Lap Crash

    Joey Logano capitalized on Denny Hamlin making contact with teammate Brad Keselowski on the final lap to win The Clash.

    With 11 laps to go, the Joe Gibbs Racing Toyotas were in control and the rest of the field struggled to form a strong outside line. The field was almost single-file with five to go.

    With four to go, however, Keselowski, Logano and Kevin Harvick made their way up the outside. Kyle Busch, who was fourth in the Gibbs line, succeeded in splitting Harvick from the Penske duo but found himself split from the Gibbs breakaway.

    Working together the next two laps, Keselowski and Logano split Matt Kenseth and Daniel Suarez from Hamlin. He was all by himself and set up for the Penske teammates to draft right by him.

    Going into Turn 1 on the final lap, Keselowski, charging with a full head of steam, dove under Hamlin for the position. Hamlin came down to block, but came across the nose, got loose and turned himself sideways.

    Hamlin, who finished 13th, was asked afterward what he’d do differently if given the chance.

    “There’s really not much I can do differently at the end. Perhaps staying in the middle lane there through one and two and trying to side draft,” Hamlin said. “He (Brad Keselowski) had help from the 22 (Joey Logano). I was in a bad spot there. He was just coming so much faster than what I was. There’s not much that I could have done to defend. We lined up so well as Toyota teammates throughout the race that once those guys started breaking that up and leap frogging, he (Keselowski) had commitment from the 22 and the 4 (Kevin Harvick) and when they were able to back up there that really put us at a speed differential.”

    Logano drove to the high-side of Hamlin and Keselowski and then drove on to score the victory.

    “It’s cool to win the Clash,” Logano said in victory lane. “We came close last year and it’s really neat to be in Victory Lane and a good start to our day.

    “The Toyotas are so selfless, I guess is the way to look at it. They are able to work together and think of one car of winning, and they’re really good at that. We had to think the same way as Ford and with Stewart-Haas and the Penske cars and we were able to get a good enough run to work together enough to break them up and make the passes and then there at the end was kind of a mess,” he said on what he saw at the end. “Everything was going really fast. Everything was going on and I was just in the right place at the right time.”

    Coming to the line behind him, Busch and Alex Bowman made contact exiting Turn 4. Busch edged him out to the line to finish runner-up.

    After the race, Busch and Bowman had a heated conversation on pit road.

    “When the 22 (Joey Logano) got so far out in front that he was a lone duck…I feel like if we both could have worked together then we could have tracked them back down and then the three of us could have gone for the win instead of just automatically giving it to the 22,” Busch said on what he said to Bowman. “Just trying to see what his mindset was with it all and figure out what got him to that decision. Overall, good day and I need to eliminate some mistakes here for myself on this M&M’s team – the guys did a great job, the guys executed really well. I have a really fast car so I can’t say enough about my guys at Joe Gibbs Racing and Toyota – everybody’s done a really good job and we have some good stuff. It’s cool to be able to have the opportunity to race for a win like that, but it kind of snuck away from us there at the end. All in all, real pumped for the opportunity to qualify later and we’ll see where we stack up and get after it next week.”

    “It was frustrating,” Bowman said. “We kind of struggled all day, a little bit. We couldn’t get the track position we needed. To come home third is solid, and not bad by any means. We will learn from it and hopefully give Greg (Ives, crew chief) and Dale (Earnhardt Jr.) some information for the Daytona 500. It is a day race. I am just happy to be a part of the Clash.

    “It wasn’t a bad day by any means. It was all we could hope for. To come home third is really gold. Just thankful for the opportunity to drive this thing. Had a lot of fast Chevrolet’s out there for Hendrick these 12 races. Just very thankful for the opportunity.”

    Danica Patrick came from 10th on the final lap to fourth.

    Harvick rounded out the top-five.

    On the 17th circuit of the race, Jimmie Johnson’s car broke loose exiting Turn 4, turned down and clipped the right-rear corner of Kurt Busch’s car, sending him head-on into the outside wall.

    On lap 50, Johnson’s car broke loose again exiting Turn 4. This time there wasn’t a car below him as he slid down the track and collected the wall head-on.

    “It’s bizarre because it drove really good everywhere else, then off of (Turn) 4 the first time I had a handling problem was when it broke free and I got into the No. 41 (Kurt Busch) and then after that, it was really loose. After that caution and the last long stretch before I crashed again, just off of Turn 4, the Sun certainly sits on that edge of the track a little bit harder than anywhere else,” Johnson said of the two wrecks in which he was involved. “We will take some notes and learn from those mistakes and apply that to the (Daytona) 500 car.”

    With 17 laps to go, Martin Truex Jr. was drafting with Harvick going into Turn 3 when he came across the nose of Kyle Larson and got turned. He spun out a few times before making contact with the wall. This brought out the race’s fourth caution and set up the 11-lap run to the finish.

    Truex clipped Chris Buescher’s car when Buescher drove to the high side to avoid him.

    The race lasted an hour, 18 minutes and 13 seconds at an average speed of 143.831 mph. There were six lead changes among four different drivers and four cautions for 16 laps.

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  • ‘The Clash’ Postponed to Sunday

    ‘The Clash’ Postponed to Sunday

    Rain has pushed the unofficial kickoff to the NASCAR season from a Saturday night shootout to a Sunday afternoon event.

    The Advanced Auto Parts Clash at Daytona will now run at 11:35 a.m. on FS1 after a storm cell moved in over the Daytona Beach, Florida area prior to the scheduled start time of around 8:00 p.m. Showers were forecast around 40 percent with a chance of dissipating but to no avail.

    The weather forecast for tomorrow calls for 75-degreee weather and a 10 percent chance of rain.

    Brad Keselowski will lead the field to green after winning the pole which was determined randomly by lot. The defending winner, Denny Hamlin will join him on the front row, starting second. Jamie McMurray, Austin Dillon and Martin Truex Jr. will round out the top five.

    The 17-driver field includes drivers who won the Coors Light Pole Award in 2016 or made the playoffs last season as well as former Daytona 500 pole winners who competed full-time last year and former winners of The Clash.

    Rookie Daniel Suarez will drive the No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota as the successor to Carl Edwards who retired suddenly in January. NASCAR allowed him to participate because the preparation of the JGR car was at an advanced stage.

     

    Starting Line Up by Row
    Daytona International Speedway
    The 39th Annual Advance Auto Parts Clash
    Provided by NASCAR Statistics – Fri, February 17, 2017 @ 02:48 PM Central
    Track Race Record: Bill Elliott 02/08/87 12:15:10 197.802

    Pos Car Driver Team Reason
    1 2 Brad Keselowski SKF Ford
    2 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Express Toyota
    3 1 Jamie McMurray McDonald’s Big Mac Chevrolet
    4 3 Austin Dillon DOW Chevrolet
    5 78 Martin Truex Jr. 5-hour Energy Extra Strength Toyota
    6 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s Chevrolet
    7 4 Kevin Harvick Busch Beer Ford
    8 88 Alex Bowman Nationwide Chevrolet
    9 22 Joey Logano Shell Pennzoil Ford
    10 41 Kurt Busch Monster Energy/Haas Automation Ford
    11 42 Kyle Larson Credit One Bank Chevrolet
    12 10 Danica Patrick TaxAct Ford
    13 18 Kyle Busch M&M’s Toyota
    14 24 Chase Elliott NAPA Chevrolet
    15 20 Matt Kenseth Interstate Batteries Toyota
    16 19 Daniel Suarez ARRIS Toyota
    17 37 Chris Buescher Kroger Click List Chevrolet

     

     

  • Alex Bowman Approaching Final Race as Substitute Driver

    Alex Bowman Approaching Final Race as Substitute Driver

    As Saturday night’s Advance Auto Parts Clash approaches, for many drivers, it’s the beginning of a new season. However,  the opposite is true for Alex Bowman who has one more shot to show that he belongs in a ride in one of NASCAR’s  top three series.

    Bowman, who is 23-years-old, scored his first ever pole in NASCAR’s top series last fall at Phoenix International Raceway. He also led over half of the race but, unfortunately, was involved in a late-race incident with Matt Kenseth in the closing laps.

    He spoke to the media at Daytona International Speedway Friday about his future.

    “I was kind of surprised that a winning XFINITY car or something like that didn’t open up,” Bowman said. “I feel like I want to be part of a winning organization whether I am driving, just working for the team, doing testing or doing the simulation stuff.”

    He has nine starts in the XFINITY series for JR Motorsports, along with five top-fives with 50 starts in his career. Former Cup driver Michael Annett will run for JRM in the No. 5 car full-time this season.

    Bowman filled in for 10 races during the 2016 season as Dale Earnhardt recuperated from concussion-like symptoms and won the pole for the Can-Am 500 at Phoenix International Raceway in November, making him eligible for The Clash.

    As a result, Earnhardt wanted to give him the chance to compete in the event by allowing Bowman to drive the No. 88 car.

    “Alex did such a great job in the car this year, and I felt like he deserved another opportunity,” Earnhardt said. “When I spoke with Rick and the team about him driving The Clash, everyone agreed that he more than earned it, and Nationwide was 100 percent on board.

    Earnhardt will sit out the race but will be a part of the television coverage of The Clash Saturday night, live on FOX Sports 1 at 8:30 p.m. ET.

    Bowman is ready for the challenge that Saturday night will bring.

    “I feel like we can be up front all night,” he said confidently. ”But it definitely adds some pressure to have probably the best speedway racer of our time in the booth calling the race.”

    Bowman will start eighth in The Clash. The exhibition race will consist of 75 laps which will be split into two segments with a competition caution on Lap 25.