Tag: Richmond International Raceway

  • Harvick Fastest in First Sprint Cup Practice at Richmond

    Harvick Fastest in First Sprint Cup Practice at Richmond

    Kevin Harvick topped the chart in the abbreviated for rain first Sprint Cup Series practice at Richmond International Raceway.

    The driver of the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet was the fastest in the first practice session with a time of 20.919 and a speed of 129.069 mph. Joey Logano was second in his No. 22 Team Penske Ford with a time of 20.980 and a speed of 128.694 mph while Jimmie Johnson was third in his No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet with a time of 21.063 and a speed of 128.187 mph. Carl Edwards was fourth in his No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota with a time of 21.064 and a speed of 128.181 mph as Denny Hamlin rounded out the top-five in his No. 11 JGR Toyota with a time of 21.068 and a speed of 128.156 mph.

    Brad Keselowski was sixth in his No. 2 Penske Ford and Kurt Busch was seventh in his No. 41 SHR Chevrolet. Kasey Kahne was eighth in his No. 5 HMS Chevrolet followed by Kyle Busch who was ninth in his No. 18 JGR Toyota. AJ Allmendinger rounded out the top-10 in his No. 47 JTG Daugherty Racing Chevrolet.

    Tony Stewart, who was 18th in his No. 14 SHR Chevrolet, posted the fastest 10 consecutive lap average at a speed of 120.327 mph. Casey Mears, who was 25th in his No. 13 Germain Racing Chevrolet, posted the second best average at a speed of 120.298 mph.

    [pdf-embedder url=”http://www.speedwaymedia.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/C1609_PRAC1.pdf”]

  • Stewart To Return at Richmond

    Stewart To Return at Richmond

    KANNAPOLIS, N.C. – Tony Stewart has been cleared by his doctors and NASCAR to return to racing, effective immediately. He will drive the No. 14 Mobil 1 Advanced Fuel Economy Chevrolet SS fielded by Stewart-Haas Racing throughout this weekend’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series event at Richmond (Va.) International Raceway.

    Stewart missed the first eight races of the season after sustaining a burst fracture of the L1 vertebra in a Jan. 31 all-terrain vehicle accident. The prescribed rehabilitation regimen instituted by his doctors following a March 9 evaluation proved successful, allowing the three-time series champion to return for his final Sprint Cup season.

    “As soon as the doctors said they were happy with my scans, I wasn’t going to wait any longer to get back in my racecar,” said Stewart, who announced last year that he would retire after the 2016 season. “I want to make the most of my last season in Sprint Cup, and I’ve been on the sidelines long enough.”

    Following Richmond, Stewart will participate in a Goodyear tire test April 26-27 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. He will then practice and qualify his No. 14 Bass Pro Shops/Tracker Boats Chevrolet in the Sprint Cup Series’ next event at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway. However, Stewart will only start the race before yielding the car to Ty Dillon, who split substitute driving duties this year with Brian Vickers.

    “We’re taking a strategic approach to my return,” Stewart said. “Richmond is a track where I feel very comfortable and because it’s a short track, the speeds are substantially less. The Goodyear test in Indy is sort of a controlled environment, allowing me to get more acclimated with my car at higher speeds. We’ll start the Talladega race to get the points, but understanding the style of racing and the higher potential of getting involved in an incident, we thought it was best to minimize the amount of time I’m in the car. I’ll return full time at Kansas and enjoy every moment I can in my final year of Sprint Cup.

    “I appreciate everyone’s patience and all the support they’ve given me the last couple of months, but the best medicine will come this weekend at Richmond when I finally get to go racing.”

    Richmond will mark Stewart’s 591st career Sprint Cup start. Thirty-three of those starts have come at Richmond, where Stewart has three wins, four second-place finishes, 11 top-fives, 19 top-10s and has led a total of 950 laps. Richmond is home to Stewart’s his first career Sprint Cup win, earned on Sept. 11, 1999, when he led 333 of 400 laps.

    -SHR-

  • Surprising and Not Surprising:  Richmond Federated Auto Parts 400

    Surprising and Not Surprising: Richmond Federated Auto Parts 400

    In the last race of the regular season and the one to set the Chase contenders here is what was surprising and not surprising from the 48th annual Federated Auto Parts 500 at Richmond International Raceway.

    Surprising:  One would think that a team owner standing in Victory Lane and one whose four drivers had qualified for the Chase would be a most happy camper.

    Indeed, Coach Joe Gibbs was pretty happy, but he also alluded to the anxiety that he will feel in the three weeks ahead as the first elimination round plays out.

    “Now the problem is, I think for the next three weeks I’ll be ready to throw up at any minute,” Gibbs said after the race. “That’s the bottom line.”

    Not Surprising:  While two teams, Richard Petty Motorsports and Roush Fenway Racing, were shut out of NASCAR’s playoffs, the way their eliminations took place was not surprising.

    Having not shown much life all season, Roush Fenway drivers Greg Biffle, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., and Trevor Bayne not only finished well out of Chase contention but they also completed the regular season in disappointment.

    Biffle had the worst of the team’s days finishing 31st. Stenhouse and Bayne finished 16th and 23rd respectively.

    This was the first time in RFR’s history that one of their drivers failed to make the Chase since its inception.

    In contrast, Aric Almirola, who made the Chase last year with Richard Petty Motorsports, delivered one of the gutsiest performances, finishing fourth. And even with that, the driver of the famed No. 43 Smithfield Foods/Waffle House Ford still came up 17 points short, edged out of Chase contention by Clint Bowyer.

    “Disappointed for sure,” Almirola said. “I drove my heart out tonight. All year long, really.”

    “I feel like we’ve certainly overachieved this year. Our cars just haven’t had the speed, and we’ve managed a way to get good results, and really proud of this race team.”

    “Everybody has done so much to support us, and to come up short, it hurts. We were in it last year and we got a taste of what it was like to be in the Chase. This race team is a great race team and we wanted another shot at it, and we just came up short. Just wasn’t meant to be.”

    Surprising:  Forget about making the Chase, Jeff Gordon was just excited about finally having a top-10 car. The driver of the No. 24 3M Chevrolet was also excited about being able to work with his team to finally make good enough adjustments to end up with a seventh place finish.

    “Excited we finally had a solid night on pit road, on the racetrack, in the race car, communication,” Gordon said. “Everything was just really solid. That certainly gives us something to be excited about these next ten races.”

    “It’s nice to be in the Chase and take that relief and take that breath and now go reset and see what we can do over the next 10.”

    Not Surprising:  Kasey Kahne got himself turned around and ended up the odd man out in the Hendrick Motorsports Chase contingent. His HMS teammates, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jeff Gordon and Jimmie Johnson, instead are all heading on to compete for the Cup without him.

    “I think the main thing for me is just figuring out how to get a car to turn again,” Kahne said. “I’ve struggled all year to have front turn, and if I don’t have that, I can’t race. That’s how I’ve been my whole life.”

    “We’ll just work on trying to get the cars the way I need them to, and if we can’t, we’ll keep running about 15th.”

    Surprising:  While two of his drivers, Kevin Harvick and Kurt Busch, head to Chase competition, Tony Stewart achieved a milestone that he would no doubt like to forget. The driver of the No. 14 Bass Pro Shops/Mobil 1 Chevrolet finished 29th, four laps down.

    Stewart’s 29th place finish was only his fifth outside of the top-25 in 33 career Cup starts at Richmond International Raceway.

    Not Surprising:  Although one’s injuries were much fresher than the other, two drivers with physical challenges managed to not only finish the Richmond race well but also find their spots in the Chase.

    Kyle Busch, driver of the No. 18 M&M’s Crispy/American Heritage Chocolate Toyota, continued his miraculous comeback with a runner-up position at Richmond. Busch is also seeded in the second place in the Chase, even after missing 11 races due to injuries sustained in the Daytona XFINITY Series race at the beginning of the season.

    Just after tearing another ACL, Denny Hamlin also struggled through his injury to get into the Chase, seeded in the 11th position. The driver of the No. 11 FedEx Express Toyota finished sixth in the Richmond race.

    “Well, I think it’ll be a lot better next week,” Hamlin said. “Just three days out, really, four nights out, from when it happened, and anybody that’s had it happen before knows that the first week is pretty tough.”

    “I think I’ll start to rehab and everything this week and try to get it stronger and make sure we’re ready to make a Chase run.”

    Surprising:  Paul Menard summed up the sentiments of several of the drivers who made the Chase but had a bad race at Richmond. The driver of the No. 27 Libman/Menards Chevrolet finished 26th in the race and is seeded 15th in the Chase.

    “We don’t know whether to be happy or sad, it was such a bad race for us,” Menard said. “Obviously very excited to be in the Chase. It was a goal that we set at the beginning of the year. Everybody at RCR and the 27 guys and ECR, they work hard.  We’ve had a lot of good runs this year. Tonight just wasn’t one of them, but we did what we had to do.”

    Kevin Harvick, another driver who made the Chase but struggled at Richmond, finished an uncharacteristic 14th. And Martin Truex Jr. finished 32nd after hitting oil from another driver’s car on Lap 39.

    Harvick is seeded fifth in the Chase, with Truex Jr. following in the 10th spot.

    Not Surprising:  With his usual enthusiasm, Clint Bowyer bounded into this year’s Chase, saving the day at least for now, for Michael Waltrip Racing, which will fold at the end of 2015.

    “Well, I mean, just to go through the year we’ve had, I mean, a lot of ups and downs here, a lot of downs,” Bowyer said. “We did this, now we’re in the Chase!  Pressure is off, go cat go! Let’s go out and have some fun.”

    Surprising:  Michael McDowell went from sharing the invocation before the start of the race to being called to the NASCAR hauler after hitting the safety vehicle during a caution on Lap 288.

    McDowell made heavy contact with the right rear of his No. 95 Leavine Family Racing Ford. McDowell was unhurt, as were the safety workers in the truck.

    “I’m not really sure what happened,” McDowell said. “I’m embarrassed for my team. My mistake. Luckily no one was hurt.”

    Not Surprising:  Kim Lopez, the first woman and Latina to flag races at the highest level, got a tip of the cap as she threw her final checkered flag. Lopez is headed for a new role and challenge in the NASCAR  R&D Center.

  • Kenseth Dominates for the Win at Richmond as Chase Field is Finalized

    Kenseth Dominates for the Win at Richmond as Chase Field is Finalized

    Matt Kenseth won the Federated Auto Parts 400 at Richmond International Raceway in a dominant fashion on Saturday night, capturing his fourth win of the season. Kenseth led 352 laps and skated to a clean victory ahead of Kyle Busch in second and pole-sitter Joey Logano.

    “These guys gave me a great car – thanks to Jason (Ratcliff, crew chief) and all these guys standing behind me. They had the pit stops we needed, they kept us out front so we were really superb in the long run and we had to work for it pretty hard in the short run.” Kenseth said.

    The evening started off with major weather concerns as it was storming on and off throughout the day. However, the rain dissipated around 90 minutes before the race started and was never a factor afterwards.

    Between Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) teammates, Kenseth, Busch, and Denny Hamlin, Toyota led all but 25 laps. Joey Logano was the lone non-Gibbs driver to lead laps.

    “[Richmond] used to be one of [our] better tracks and it hasn’t been the last couple of years. Tonight all our cars ran really well,” said Kenseth following the race.

    After just three victories in the previous season and a half, JGR has won nine of the last 12 Sprint Cup Series races, being stopped only by Logano at Watkins Glen and Bristol and Dale Earnhardt Jr. at Daytona.

    There was trouble for the 95 of Michael McDowell on lap 293. McDowell accidentally hit a caution truck and practically destroyed the rear of his Leavine Family Racing Ford. McDowell would later tell MRN that the No. 38 Ford of David Gilliland in front of him swerved at the last second, and his spotter didn’t see the truck. McDowell and the safety crew were unharmed in the incident.

    There was some late race drama with the No. 43 Ford. Aric Almirola, on the outside looking into the Chase, gained a spot under the final caution and restarted third with 17 laps to go. Kenseth arguably jumped the restart, and Almirola never got close to the lead.

    “It is tough. This is what we race for. We race to win races. We race to run for a championship.” Almirola said.

    There were six cautions for 47 laps. Four were for debris on the race track, while Martin Truex Jr. slammed into the wall on lap 39. There was a multi-car incident on lap 113 between McDowell, Michael Annett, and Jeb Burton where Burton turned Annett around on the backstretch.

    There were no changes to the Chase grid following the race, outside of Kenseth’s victory changing his seeding from tied for third to tied for first. On stopping Joe Gibbs Racing in the Chase, defending champion Kevin Harvick said, “Hopefully they’ll be peaky like they normally are and we can capitalize on the solid momentum we’ve had throughout the last two years and do what we have to do.”

    Federated Auto Parts 400 Full Results:

    1st. Matt Kenseth

    2nd. Kyle Busch

    3rd. Joey Logano

    4th. Aric Almirola

    5th. Dale Earnhardt Jr.

    6th. Denny Hamlin

    7th. Jeff Gordon

    8th. Brad Keselowski

    9th. Jimmie Johnson

    10th. Clint Bowyer

    11th. Carl Edwards

    12th. Kyle Larson

    13th. Jamie McMurray

    14th. Kevin Harvick

    15th. Kurt Busch

    16th. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

    17th. David Ragan

    18th. Kasey Kahne

    19th. Danica Patrick

    20th. Ryan Newman

    21st. Casey Mears

    22nd. Brian Scott

    23rd. Trevor Bayne

    24th. AJ Allmendinger

    25th. Justin Allgaier

    26th. Paul Menard

    27th. Austin Dillon

    28th. Sam Hornish Jr.

    29th. Tony Stewart

    30th. Landon Cassill

    31st. Greg Biffle

    32nd. Martin Truex Jr.

    33rd. David Gilliland

    34th. JJ Yeley

    35th. Brett Moffitt

    36th. Matt DiBenedetto

    37th. Alex Bowman

    38th. Cole Whitt

    39th. Jeb Burton

    40th. Jeffrey Earnhardt

    41st. Reed Sorenson

    42nd. Michael McDowell

    43rd. Michael Annett

    The 16 Nations battling in the 10 race Chase:

    1st seed Jimmie Johnson (Winner of Atlanta, Texas, Kansas, and Dover) 2012 points

    1st seed Kyle Busch (Winner of Sonoma, Kentucky, Loudon, and Indianapolis) 2012

    1st seed Matt Kenseth (Winner of Bristol, Pocono, Michigan, and Richmond) 2012

    2nd seed Joey Logano (Winner of Daytona, Watkins Glen, Bristol) 2009

    3rd seed Kevin Harvick (Winner of Las Vegas and Phoenix) 2006

    3rd seed Dale Earnhardt Jr. (Winner of Talladega and Daytona) 2006

    3rd seed Kurt Busch (Winner of Richmond and Michigan) 2006

    3rd seed Carl Edwards (Winner of Charlotte and Darlington) 2006

    4th seed Brad Keselowski (Winner of Auto Club) 2003

    4th seed Martin Truex Jr. (Winner of Pocono) 2003

    4th seed Denny Hamlin (Winner of Martinsville) 2003

    5th seed Jamie McMurray (10th in points) 2000

    5th seed Ryan Newman (12th in points) 2000

    5th seed Jeff Gordon (13th in points) 2000

    5th seed Clint Bowyer (14th in points) 2000

    5th seed Paul Menard (15th in points) 2000

    The Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup championship begins next week at Chicagoland.

  • Chase Elliott Captures First XFINITY Win of 2015 at Richmond

    Chase Elliott Captures First XFINITY Win of 2015 at Richmond

    Chase Elliott won the 2015 Virginia 529 College Savings 250 after holding off pole sitter Kyle Busch in the final 20 laps. Elliott finally broke both a 22 race Cup driver winning streak at Richmond and a personal 39 race winless streak, gaining momentum on both a repeat championship and his ascension to Jeff Gordon’s 24 car next season.

    Busch dominated early in the first 81 laps before losing the lead for good from Brian Scott. The rest of the race was led entirely by XFINITY series drivers, beginning with Brian Scott leading almost all of the middle portion. Scott led 62 straight laps before fading after lap 143. Elliott would ultimately take the lead on lap 167, and held it for the rest of the way.

    Scott frustratingly finished third after leading 63 laps, while Joey Logano uncharacteristically quietly finished fourth. Erik Jones rounded out the top five.

    One of the biggest stories of the night was Josh Berry. The JR Motorsports driver, in just his third start in the XFINITY series, constantly ran ahead of Cup drivers. A bad pit stop before the final restart doomed him to a seventh place finish. Berry has no more XFINITY starts planned but wants to compete full-time next season.

    There were six cautions for 48 laps, one of which was a multi-car wreck on the very first lap between John Wes Townley, David Starr, Jimmy Weller, Joey Gase, Benny Gordon and Carl Long.

    In championship points news, Chris Buescher, who finished 10th, continues to lead Elliott by 21 points, followed by Ty Dillon (-27 points) and Reagan Smith (-49 points). The all important Owner’s Championship features the Penske 22 (Logano this week) leading the JGR 54 (Busch this week) by 82 points.

    Complete Results for XFINITY Series Virginia 529 College Savings 250:

    1. Chase Elliott
    2. Kyle Busch
    3. Brian Scott
    4. Joey Logano
    5. Erik Jones
    6. Regan Smith
    7. Josh Berry
    8. Ty Dillon
    9. Austin Dillon
    10. Chris Buescher
    11. Brennan Poole
    12. Daniel Suarez
    13. Ryan Reed
    14. Darrell Wallace Jr.
    15. Ross Chastain
    16. Brendan Gaughan
    17. Ryan Sieg
    18. Landon Cassill
    19. Blake Koch
    20. JJ Yeley
    21. Dakoda Armstrong
    22. Cale Conley
    23. Harrison Rhodes
    24. Elliott Sadler
    25. Dylan Kwasniewski
    26. Eric McClure
    27. Joey Gase
    28. Josh Reaume
    29. Mike Harmon
    30. John Wes Townley
    31. Ryan Truex
    32. Hermie Sadler
    33. Matt Waltz
    34. Jeremy Clements
    35. Ryan Ellis
    36. Carl Long
    37. David Starr
    38. Benny Gordon
    39. Jimmy Weller III
    40. Jeff Green

  • Joey Logano Scores Sprint Cup Pole at Richmond

    Joey Logano Scores Sprint Cup Pole at Richmond

    Joey Logano took the pole for the Federated Auto Parts 400 at Richmond International Raceway with a time of 21.349 seconds and a speed of 126.470 mph. Matt Kenseth was fastest in the first two rounds of qualifying but ultimately could only manage an outside front row start.

    Only four non-winning drivers; David Ragan, Tony Stewart, Kyle Larson and Austin Dillon made it to the final round of qualifying. Of the top seven starting positions Saturday night, only Ragan (fifth) and Kevin Harvick (sixth) are not JGR/Penske cars.

    The day started off with the first session of Cup practice of the day. Larson and Casey Mears, another driver who can only make the Chase by winning this weekend, clocked in the first and second times. Following them were Brad Keselowski, Harvick and Kyle Busch. The best 10 consecutive lap average in the two-hour session belonged to Justin Allgaier.

    The final practice session of the day had Harvick speeding to a 21.526 in qualifying trim. He led Kyle Busch, Jimmie Johnson, Kasey Kahne and Kurt Busch in the 80-minute session.

    Notably, Denny Hamlin, coming off a torn ACL on Tuesday, struggled with the 42nd best time. However, after the session, Hamlin said in a media Q & A that the ACL was not an issue when in the car. “In the car I’m as comfortable as any place that I am,” said Hamlin, also saying that the main problem with the injury is swelling, limiting mobility out of the car.

    Full starting lineup for the Federated Auto Parts 400 on Saturday Night:

    Row 1

    1st Joey Logano, No. 22 Shell Pennzoil Ford

    2nd Matt Kenseth, No. 20 Dollar General Toyota

    Row 2

    3rd Brad Keselowski, No. 2 Miller Lite Ford

    4th Kyle Busch, No. 18 M&M’s Crispy/American Heritage Chocolate Toyota

    Row 3

    5th David Ragan, No. 55 Aaron’s Dream Machine

    6th Kevin Harvick, No. 4 Budweiser/Jimmy John’s Chevrolet

    Row 4

    7th Carl Edwards, No. 19 ARRIS Toyota

    8th Kurt Busch, No. 41 Haas Automation Chevrolet

    Row 5

    9th Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Lowe’s Chevrolet

    10th Tony Stewart, No. 14 Bass Pro Shops/Mobil 1 Chevrolet

    Row 6

    11th Kyle Larson, No. 42 Target Chevrolet

    12th Austin Dillon, No. 3 DOW Chevrolet

    Row 7

    13th Ryan Newman, No. 31 Caterpillar Chevrolet

    14th Danica Patrick, No. 10 GoDaddy Chevrolet

    Row 8

    15th Casey Mears, No. 13 GEICO Chevrolet

    16th Martin Truex Jr., No. 78 Furniture Row/Visser Precision Chevrolet

    Row 9

    17th Brian Scott, No. 33 Shore Lodge Chevrolet

    18th Justin Allgaier, No. 51 Brandt Chevrolet

    Row 10

    19th Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 17 Cargill Chevrolet

    20th Kasey Kahne, No. 5 HendrickRideAlong.com Chevrolet

    Row 11

    21st AJ Allmendinger, No. 47 Kroger/Bush’s Beans Toyota

    22nd Paul Menard, No. 27 Libman/Menard’s Chevrolet

    Row 12

    23rd Jeff Gordon, No. 24 3M Chevrolet

    24th Aric Almirola, No. 43 Smithfield Foods/Waffle House Ford

    Row 13

    25th Denny Hamlin, No. 11 FedEx Express Toyota

    26th Clint Bowyer, No. 15 5-Hour Energy Toyota

    Row 14

    27th Michael Annett, No. 46 Switch Hitch Toyota

    28th Trevor Bayne, No. 6 AdvoCare Ford

    Row 15

    29th Dale Earnhardt Jr., No. 88 Nationwide Chevrolet

    30th David Gililand, No. 38 The Pete Store Ford

    Row 16

    31st Jamie McMurray, No. 1 Cessna Chevrolet

    32nd Sam Hornish Jr., No. 9 Go Bowling/Draft Kings Ford

    Row 17

    33rd Matt Dibenedetto, No. 83 James Madison University Toyota

    34th Cole Whitt, No. 35 MDS Ford

    Row 18

    35th Landon Cassill, No. 40 Precon Marine/Interstate Moving Services Chevrolet

    36th Alex Bowman, No. 7 Tommy Baldwin Racing Chevrolet

    Row 19

    37th Brett Moffit, No. 34 Dockside Ford

    38th Greg Biffle, No. 16 Cheez-It Ford

    Row 20

    39th Michael McDowell, No. 95 Thrivent Financial Ford

    40th Reed Sorenson, No. 98 Premium Motorsports Ford

    Row 21

    41st Brian Scott, No. 33 Shore Lodge Chevrolet

    42nd Jeffrey Earnhardt, No. 32 BeerFrost.com/CorvetteParts.net Ford

    Row 22

    43rd JJ Yeley, No. 26 Maxim Toyota

  • NASCAR Racing Schedule for Richmond

    NASCAR Racing Schedule for Richmond

    The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and the XFINITY Series head to Richmond International Raceway this weekend. All on-track action can be seen on NBCSN and NBC Sports Live Extra. The Camping World Truck Series is off. Please see the full schedule below.

    All times are Eastern.

    Thursday, Sept. 10:

    On Track:

    2:30-3:55 p.m.: XFINITY Series Practice – NBCSN/Live Extra
    5-5:55 p.m.: XFINITY Series final Practice – NBCSN/Live Extra (Canceled due to weather)

    GarageCam: (Watch live)

    2 p.m.: XFINITY Series

    Press Conferences (Watch live at NASCAR.com)

    2:45 p.m.: Patrick Starpoli 
    3 p.m.: William Byron
    3:15 p.m.: Noah Gragson
    4:15 p.m.: Brian Scott

    Friday, Sept. 11:

    On Track:

    10-11:55 a.m.: Sprint Cup Series Practice – NBCSN/Live Extra
    1-2:25 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Final Practice – NBCSN/Live Extra
    3:45 p.m.: XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying – NBCSN/Live Extra
    5:45 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying – NBCSN/Live Extra
    7:30 p.m.: XFINITY Series Virginia529 College Savings 250 (250 laps, 187.5 miles) – NBCSN/Live Extra

    GarageCam: (Watch live)

    12:30 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series

    Press Conferences (Watch live at NASCAR.com)

    9 a.m.: Ryan Newman
    9:15 a.m.: Clint Bowyer
    Noon: Carl Edwards
    2:55 p.m.: Denny Hamlin
    3:15 p.m.: Jeff Gordon
    6:45 p.m.: Post-Sprint Cup Series Qualifying
    9:30 p.m.: Post-XFINITY Series Race

    Saturday, Sept. 12:

    On Track:

    7:30 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Federated Auto Parts 400 (400 laps, 300 miles) – NBCSN/Live Extra

    Press Conferences (Watch live at NASCAR.com)

    10:30 p.m.: Post Sprint Cup Series Race

  • Logging Laps: Whose fault is it anyway?

    Logging Laps: Whose fault is it anyway?

    There were two major stories to come out of Richmond this week. First, we have the victory of Kurt Busch, once again returning to his job, as the amazing wheelman Gene Haas hired him to be for the first time in 35 races. This is also earmarked by the fight of Tony Gibson, a fan and crew favorite in the garage, to overcome his battle with kidney stones to guide the often volatile past champion to the bright lights of the winner’s circle. That, in and of itself, should have been the biggest and most well-seen headline of the week, “Kurt Busch Fights Back to Victory.”

    He showed the class of a champion and his crew chief showed the guts of a fighter that wouldn’t give up no matter how much pain he was in. Those two have been a force to be reckoned with since Busch returned and on so many occasions, they have been oh so close to victory. The trials and tribulations of this team overcoming all odds to finally taste sweet champagne.

    However, the biggest headline this week once again didn’t involve the winner or the race as a whole. No, it involved the sport’s most popular driver and the sport’s most polarizing one, “Tony Stewart and Dale Earnhardt Jr. Collide in Richmond.” It was followed by endless media outlets picking up the “story,” a term I use lightly here, and running away to the circus with it; placing blame and making assumptions here and there to satisfy their weekly quota for views and clicks.

    Alright, I’ll bite. So, whose fault is it anyway? Which one of these two top-tier drivers is the one that ruined the other’s day? Who takes blame and who quells the uproar from the rabid fan base that is out for blood? Well, brace yourselves ladies and gentlemen; I have the answer you seek. After carefully studying the video from all available angles, it’s very clear to anyone to see that, wait for it… it is no one’s fault.

    Surprised? Well, you shouldn’t be. There is a reason we call an accident an accident. However, in this day and age of the internet with Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and more, everyone has a platform to voice their personal opinions and viewpoints on any given number of topics. This drastic shift in the way fans participate in the sport has given rise to both amazing opportunities and unprecedented access to the sport we love, but it is also a double-edged sword. All too often the freedom the internet gives fans is abused.

    In the aftermath of the incident that happened on track, while I was providing live twitter updates of the race, I saw my timeline explode with tweets. Before my eyes, I saw the first, unfiltered, raw reactions from the fans of both drivers. Before the video replay was shown, before the professionals in the booth even had time to speak and give their informed insight into the incident, there were people ready to tar and feather either driver for what they perceived as a race ruining fault.

    Now, I’ve taken the time this week to let the hostility settle down a bit. At least, I thought I had until the stories began to appear on every news outlet that has anything to do with NASCAR. Heck, even the front page of NASCAR.com had a massive post about this accident, complete with a hastily put together set of quotes from both drivers that seemed to scream, “Look here, race fans, we have drama!”

    Everyone wants to blame everyone else for what has happened without a shred of common sense and without anything being placed into context as to what actually happened. All we know is this; two drivers, racing side-by-side late in the race, made contact. One driver spun and had to retire from the race and the other driver continued on to finish.

    Yes, yes, I can hear you now saying, “But Tony cussed Jr. on the radio and threw his helmet in his hauler, and he must be blaming Jr!” Okay, so, I’ll give you that. Stewart did, in fact, say, “F—ing Dale Jr.,” on his radio after the incident. Most drivers would identify the car they hit or hit them. It is very possible that Stewart’s response was simply because he knew that the contact or wrecking Earnhardt will make your life miserable. Don’t believe me? Just ask Kyle Busch.

    So yes, he said that, three little words. Does that place blame on Earnhardt for the accident? I don’t think so. You know why? It’s simple; because it was an accident. What seems to be lost on the fans right now and as of late is that sometimes, there isn’t direct fault. Sometimes, there is just a set of unfortunate circumstances that create an incident. I firmly believe this was one of them. Here’s why.

    When reviewing the tape, from the turn two camera angle, it’s unclear as to what caused the contact between the two cars. The reason is forced perspective. You’re viewing from a vantage point that is nearly 500 feet away, the same theory that applies if you hold up your thumb to the sun. Your thumb can now block out the sun. That’s forced perspective. Luckily, we have multiple camera angles from which to view the race. The most interesting of which was the on-board camera from the No. 11 car of Denny Hamlin. Hamlin’s car was directly behind the 14 of Stewart and the 88 of Earnhardt. What Hamlin’s camera shows is that Earnhardt made an aggressive move to clear the slower No. 51 car on the track and was put three-wide by Stewart on the bottom. Now, I want to remind everyone that Earnhardt said in his post race interview that, “I was trying to clear the No. 51 on the outside of me, so I was as high as I could go. So, you’ll just have to ask him.” Watch the videos below and judge for yourself.

    https://youtu.be/d0Ryec7snKg


    https://youtu.be/Q4t68fRkpbs?t=53s

    That is key here, fans. Earnhardt was trying to clear the car on his outside. I want everyone to remember that races are played out in hundredths of a second. Driver’s and spotters have to make split second decisions all the time. This is where it get’s interesting. It’s late in the race and everyone is fighting for every spot they can get, every inch of ground on a late race restart, to get every position available. Earnhardt was three wide in turn four, trying to clear the car above him.

    On the camera of the 11 car, it shows that Earnhardt cleared the 51 before he exited turn 4 onto the straightaway, but still stayed about half a groove down on the track. However, Earnhardt seemed to believe he was still on his outside at the time of the contact; those are his words. So, was Earnhardt still giving the 51 room on the outside? Most likely, he was. Why would he risk pinching another car on the outside of him and getting turned into the wall? Split second choices here, people.

    Meanwhile, you have Stewart below Earnhardt. The 14 car was hanging on the left rear quarter panel of the 88. Why? Well, that’s twofold in racing. Even with Richmond being a short track, those cars are travelling well over 120 mph at times. That doesn’t seem like a lot when you compare it to Michigan or California where cars routinely reach 200 plus mph, but it’s still significant, significant enough that aero comes into play at this track. So it stands to reason that if you can get any advantage you can, you’ll take it. Hang on the left rear quarter panel and get a minor draft in this case.

    There is also a second reason you would place your car in that spot and that’s so you can hold position on the other car. At Richmond this weekend, it was hard to pass. We saw it all day. Cars and drivers struggled to pass each other because the outside of the track just didn’t have the grip and speed that the drivers needed. Therefore, the 14 car hung on the 88 to hold his position on the inside for the next corner. No harm, no foul here. Two guys, racing hard, late in the race for every spot they can get. Right? Well, then the accident happened. The 88 car and the 14 car made contact and the entire twitterverse and internet world instantly took up arms in a virtual fight over who is right, who is wrong and who was at fault.

    Guess what? The only people that know are Stewart and Earnhardt. End of discussion. We can sit here and analyze what happened and we can toss insults, make accusations and defame drivers. Heck, some of the communities of fans were so asinine that they brought up a tragedy from last year in some pathetic attempt at justification for their anger. That’s disgusting. It’s wrong. You’re free to have an opinion and you’re free to support your favorite driver through thick and thin. However, sometimes, it’s best to just call a spade a spade and leave it at that.

    What happened at Richmond this weekend between Earnhardt and Stewart was simply hard racing and an accident. Stewart declined comment for a reason and Earnhardt said his piece on TV. That’s the end of it. So many times in the last 25 years, I’ve heard people say, “NASCAR fans are the greatest fans in all of sports.”

    Maybe it’s time we started acting like it.

     

  • Chase Elliott Meets Expectations in Second Sprint Cup Start but is Looking for More

    Chase Elliott Meets Expectations in Second Sprint Cup Start but is Looking for More

    If never being satisfied is the key to success, Chase Elliott is well on his way to becoming a competitive driver in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series when he replaces Jeff Gordon at Hendrick Motorsports next year.

    The reigning XFINITY Series champion made his second cup start at Richmond International Raceway in the rain-delayed Toyota Owners 400 Sunday, earning an encouraging 16th place finish in his No. 25 NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet. It was especially satisfying after a 38th place result at Martinsville Speedway in his first Cup start a month ago.

    Elliott raced his way up to 11th twice during the race, but his car struggled on short runs. He acknowledged that he could have done a better job of relaying information to his team.

    “Guys made good adjustments for qualifying to get us in the show,” he said “and our car today had great long-run speed. Unfortunately, these races never ran to the long run. It’s always going to be a short run to the finish, and I didn’t tell them to do the right things for that last stop to run a short run. Lesson learned, and we’ll try to get better for the next one.”

    While Elliott said he was uncertain why the end results of the two races were so dramatically different, he assumed some of the blame for the disappointing finish at Martinsville, saying, “I wish I had an answer for you. I don’t really know. You know, like I said, I felt like at Martinsville, too, we had a good car. I didn’t do my job like I needed to there, and got us in a wreck 60 laps into the race, and that’s not the thing to do.”

    He was able to stay out of harm’s way at Richmond and felt like the team “put together a solid race,” explaining, “Fortunately we were able to run laps today, able to stay on the lead lap and battle really hard, especially towards the end of those long runs, and to race with some good cars.  I think that’s something our team should be proud of.”

    But like all racers, Elliott is searching for more.

    “You always get greedy and want more,” he admitted, “and we certainly had a great car really today, and I thought we were battling right there on the edge of that top 10 there at points, and we had great speed, as I said, on the longer runs.”

    Elliott’s third Sprint Cup Race is scheduled for Charlotte Motor Speedway next month where he hopes to turn lessons learned into even better finishes.

     

     

  • Surprising and Not Surprising: Richmond Toyota Owners 400

    Surprising and Not Surprising: Richmond Toyota Owners 400

    After the rainy Saturday night race turned into a Sunday day race and with remembrances of Steve Byrnes abounding, here is what was surprising and not surprising in the 61st annual Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond International Raceway.

    Surprising: As enthusiastically as Kurt Busch threw his arms around crew chief Tony Gibson to celebrate in Victory Lane, Stewart-Haas teammate Tony Stewart threw his helmet and Hans device into his trailer after wrecking into Dale Earnhardt Jr. and wrecking out of the race to finish 41st.

    Stewart declined to comment after exiting the care center while Dale Earnhardt Jr. had some interesting words to share.

    “Well, it’s never his fault,” Junior said. “I was doing everything I needed to do. I didn’t drive under, I didn’t drive into him, I didn’t move my line at all. He’s gotta take a little ownership in what happened there.”

    Busch, on the other hand, had much to say after his first win of the season, one that was especially sweet after sitting out for three races at the beginning of the season due to domestic violence allegations.

    “It’s all about team, people, and chemistry within the organization,” Busch said. “So here we are. We’re winners in April. It feels good.

    “Plenty of time to do fun things to build the team up, get stronger, learn from all these races coming up and continue to go forward and like Gene Haas (team owner) said, one win is great; I want four or five more.”

    Not Surprising: Both Kevin Harvick and Martin Truex Jr. got back to their top-10 winning ways, finishing second and 10th respectively. And both drivers collectively gave total credit to their team and the efforts they put forth in producing the good finishes.

    “Well, just really fortunate to have a team that consists of a bunch of guys that do their jobs week in and week out,” Harvick, driver of the No. 4 Jimmy John’s/Budweiser Chevrolet, said. “I think we’re a better team than we were last year, just for the fact that those guys are just such a tight knit group of people.

    “I tell people all the time it’s very special to be a part of a team that knows what to do with each other without even having to say anything and that’s really what makes it go around.”

    Just as Harvick did, Martin Truex Jr. also credited his team, the No. 78 Furniture Row/Visser Precision Chevrolet for his top-10 comeback.

    “It was a struggle out there, but we made the car better and picked up enough spots to get another top 10,” Truex said. “We’ve made some late-race charges a few times this season and it’s a good feeling to know that we have the ability to overcome these issues.”

    “Once again I am proud of this team for bringing fast cars to the track.”

    Harvick and Truex Jr. also had one other commonality, with both holding serve on their first and third place in the point standings.

    Surprising: Joey Logano took the ‘quote of the day’ honors, with his remarks after taking it four-wide with Jeff Gordon late in the race.

    “I just got in there and closed my eyes and hoped for the best.”

    Logano ended up finishing fifth in his No. 22 Shell Pennzoil Ford and was by far the highest finishing Ford. In fact, the next finishing Ford was his Penske teammate Brad Keselowski, who finished 17th after being down a cylinder.

    Not Surprising: Jamie McMurray, who has been running strong all season, broke into the top 10 in the point standings with his fourth-place finish at Richmond.

    “When I look back at our race today, you go home and lay down tonight and you think about everything, I really — there’s nothing that I could have done any better,” the driver of the No. 1 Energizer Chevrolet said. “I just didn’t have a car that was quick on the short run. I had one that would go at the end.”

    “When I look back at those restarts, if I could have gotten ahead of him, I still don’t know I could have held him up.”

    “I thought as a team, driver, crew chief, we did a really good job today.”

    Surprising: While Brett Moffitt in the No. 55 Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota was the official ‘Rookie of the Race’ finishing 29th, Chase Elliott, in just his second Cup start, finished 16th in his No. 25 NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet.

    “Yeah, overall I felt like we had a really solid day,” Elliott said. “Really the whole weekend for us here on the Sprint Cup side was solid. I thought we had a good car throughout practice, was able to run well in race trim, and our real struggle was trying to go fast for qualifying. Guys made good adjustments for qualifying to get us in the show, and our car today had great long-run speed.”

    “Unfortunately these races never ran to the long run. It’s always going to be a short run to the finish, and I didn’t tell them to do the right things for that last stop to run a short run.”

    “Lesson learned, and we’ll try to get better for the next one.”

    Not Surprising: While a top-10 finish for Kevin Harvick means Bloomin’ Onions for all at Outback Steakhouse, Jeff Gordon’s top-10 finish meant even more.

    The Jeff Gordon Children’s Foundation tweeted after the race “Way to go @JeffGordonWeb another top 10 finish and $1,000 for childhood cancer research.”

    Gordon also achieved another career milestone in his final season. He officially tied former driver Mark Martin for the most lead lap finishes, 558, in fact, in NASCAR Cup Series history.

    Surprising: Danica Patrick took so many licks but kept on ticking, holding on to finish 25th. Early on in the race, in fact on Lap 5, she and Casey Mears tangled. And although she went sliding, she controlled the car well enough that the yellow flag was not displayed.

    She also battled with Trevor Bayne, as well as Aric Almirola the latter of whom knocked Joey Gase around and almost right into Patrick’s No. 10 GoDaddy Chevrolet.

    Finally, Patrick also had a bit of a run in off the track, tangling with Clint Bowyer on pit road. As she was entering her stall, Bowyer hit her left rear quarter panel, sending her sideways and almost into her pit crew.

    Not Surprising: All four drivers in the Hendrick Motorsports stable finished strong, with Jimmie Johnson in third, Kasey Kahne in sixth, Jeff Gordon in eighth and Dale Earnhardt Jr. bringing up the Hendrick rear in the fourteenth position.

    But it was Johnson and Kahne who had to start from the back of the field, 36th and 40th respectively to earn their top-10 finishes.

    “We had a great race car and I really felt like that was the case on Friday, except for our qualifying lap,” Johnson said. “With all the long runs that we had, I was able to get through the field and get this Lowe’s Pro Service Chevy up front. Those last few restarts I was able to hang on and duke it out with those guys and get a nice top three finish.”

    “It was pretty inconsistent and there were good runs and bad runs,” Kahne said. “For whatever reason on that last run was really good. I was happy with the way the day ended up.”

    “I would say our best race of the year there, at least it felt like one of our better ones. I’m glad we finished strong today because the second to last run was a really bad run. I’m glad the final run we got the right set of tires on.”

    Surprising: Matt Kenseth, and not Denny Hamlin who had won the Xfinity race in a dominating fashion, represented Team Toyota as the highest finisher for that manufacturer in the seventh spot.

    “For us overall, it was pretty good,” Kenseth, driver of the No. 20 Dollar General Toyota said. “We had some runs that were really, really good, some runs were off. Didn’t have the best restart positioning there at the end and got what we could out of it.”

    “We were pretty happy with our FedEx Toyota Camry two days ago — not so much today. Just we missed it,” said Dave Rogers, crew chief for Denny Hamlin, said. “Made a few adjustments and obviously went the wrong way.

    “We had a good car a couple days ago, but not so good today.”

    Not Surprising: In spite of tangling with Danica Patrick on pit road and suffering some right front damage, as well as trading paint with Martin Truex Jr. late in the race, Clint Bowyer still managed to pull off a top-10 finish at one of his favorite tracks.

    “It was kind of tit for tat really,” Bowyer said of his contact with Truex. “We were racing hard there with 20 to go and he comes from the outside and crosses over and he kind of dive bombed me last minute. It really kind of scared me, so I gave him the spot and then fast forward one lap, exactly the same move back and he turned back down and I was already there and I got into him a little bit. It is what it is.”

    “We clearly need to be better,” the driver of the No. 15 AAA Insurance Toyota said. “Hell, after the start of the season we’ve had, it’s starting to feel like a little bit of momentum and we’ve just got to keep digging.”