Tag: Talladega Superspeedway

  • NASCAR Racing Schedule for Talladega

    NASCAR Racing Schedule for Talladega

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

    Friday, Oct. 21:

    On Track:
    1-1:55 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series First Practice – FS1
    2-2:55 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series First Practice – NBCSN/NBC Sports App
    3-3:55 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series Final Practice – FS1
    4:30-5:25 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Final Practice – NBCSN/NBC Sports App

    Garage Cam: (Watch live)
    12:30 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series
    1:30 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series

    Press Conferences: (Watch live)
    11:45 a.m.: Daniel Hemric, John Hunter Nemechek, Timothy Peters
    Noon: Major Talladega Superspeedway announcement/ISC announcement with Casey Mears
    12:30 p.m.: Chase Elliott
    12:45 p.m.: Joey Logano
    3:05 p.m.: Carl Edwards
    3:30 p.m.: Martin Truex Jr.

    Saturday, Oct. 22:

    On Track:
    10:30 a.m.: Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying – FS1
    1 p.m.: Camping World Truck Series fred’s 250 Powered by Coca-Cola (94 laps, 250.04 miles) – FOX
    4 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying – NBCSN/NBC Sports App

    Press Conferences: (Watch live)
    3 p.m..: Post-Camping World Truck Series Race (time approx.)
    5 p.m..: Post-Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying (time approx.)

    Sunday, Oct. 23:

    On Track:
    2 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series Hellmann’s 500 (188 laps, 500.08 miles) – NBCSN/NBC Sports App

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

     


     

  • Jimmie Johnson says there have been talks about changes to plate package

    Jimmie Johnson says there have been talks about changes to plate package

    Speaking before the media earlier today, Jimmie Johnson says the Driver’s Council has discussed changes desired for the upcoming trip to the “World Center of Racing” next week.

    During his media availability at Sonoma Raceway this afternoon, the driver of the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet was asked whether there have been any discussions on making changes to the restrictor plate aerodynamic package ahead of the Coke Zero 400 at Daytona International Speedway.

    “Yeah, I think we had one Driver Council meeting since,” he said. “I don’t remember spending a ton of time talking on it. I know following Talladega there were a lot of suggestions made.”

    He also added that he made some suggestions right after last month’s GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway, in which he was caught in a 21-car wreck in turn 1 with 26 laps to go.

    “I certainly had some opinions of why passing was as difficult as it was and the energy that it created in the pack and the need to kind of bump-draft and slam-draft and then crash, like that whole process that took place. I know that they don’t want to over-react and we’re going to a different track in Daytona that works a little bit differently than Talladega does. So, I feel comfortable with it. I think, ideally, we would love to have the side draft be less impactful. We’d love to have a push from another car be more beneficial. And with the gear and horsepower reduction, I think that took away some of that offensive opportunity that existed. But, we’ll see how Daytona races and take it from there. I know that there’s another Driver Council meeting down in Daytona. It will probably be top of mind for everybody then.”

    The current restrictor plate aero package has been in place with minor changes made to it since the 2013 Daytona 500. For the most part, the only real change to it is usually the size of the holes in the restrictor plates in order to add or reduce horsepower.

    NASCAR has announced that the package as it was used at Talladega in May and the Daytona 500 in February will be used next weekend. This is in spite of three cars getting airborne in the most recent race at Talladega.

    “The one car that got in the air on its own was the 20 car (Matt Kenseth) and we looked at that,” said NASCAR Executive Vice-President and Chief Racing Development Officer Steve O’Donnell earlier today at Sonoma. He added that NASCAR is “satisfied with the race package we have.”

    Despite the lack of major changes, Johnson says the drivers still notice the more minor ones.

    “They don’t change a ton. There’s some sensitivity change to the dynamics and how it works, but the package is still very similar. You just notice or feel like last time you could clear a car more easily, or I could get up and push somebody a little bit harder and give them a run around a car. So, it’s more subtle things that we notice. Certainly, when you’re in the car after 300 or 400 miles, you can’t complete a pass, the little bump turns into a nudge and into a slam and then we have chaos like we did at Talladega. So, I guess it if gets off to a slow start, you can probably bank on a wild finish.”

  • The View from my Recliner

    The View from my Recliner

    It’s Pocono week and I can tell you from experience, the infield at Pocono rivals Talladega for the things you can see and learn.

    One Pocono race, you saw porn on a big screen and a Chevy Vega and Ford Pinto chained axle to axle with a fire pit in the middle in the ultimate game of tug of war. I have witnessed a deer cross the track and a streaker on the track. Boy, there are some memories at Pocono.

    Since they dropped the racing from 500 miles to 400 miles at Pocono, it has drastically improved. I can’t explain why, but eliminating those extra 100 miles changed the way the drivers attack the track.

    It has been a little while since I wrote my column due to technical issues, but everything is ironed out and we’re all ready to set the world on fire with some predictions for the second half of the regular season.

    Prediction 1: This is from my heart probably not my head, but Tony Stewart will win a race and make the Chase. The best chance for Smoke to earn his win is at Daytona or the two road courses.

    Prediction 2: Keith Rodden will not finish the season as Kasey Kahne’s crew chief. Kasey Kahne has not run consistently well for the past three years. Rookie Chase Elliott is regularly running around the top-10 and Kahne is ranging from 15th to 20th. Hendrick Motorsports has a Cup-winning crew chief in the organization in Darian Grubb who could get right on the box and change the culture of the team.

    Prediction 3: NASCAR will make the right call with the rules package for Michigan and Kentucky and will change the rules and use that package for the rest of the season. The racing was fantastic for the All-Star race and NASCAR will try to re-create that racing.

    Prediction 4: Ty Dillon will be announced as the new driver of the No. 31 car. Kevin Harvick said before leaving RCR that those kids will get everything. It is a shame because Ryan Newman is a talented racer but you can see that he isn’t getting the best RCR equipment.

    Prediction 5: Joe Gibbs Racing will announce that Aarons will sponsor Matt Kenseth in 2017. Kenseth’s dry humor will be great for the Aarons commercials and hopefully, get Michael Waltrip off of my television.

    Kudos to Mike Joy who made sure during the Fox broadcast to seamlessly work in the names of the fallen on the windshields and the stories behind them throughout the race. It wasn’t forced and the way he told their stories was heartfelt.

    Enjoy the racing at Pocono and I’ll be back next week with the View from my Recliner.

  • Editorial: RESTRICTORCRAP brought to you by NASCAR

    Editorial: RESTRICTORCRAP brought to you by NASCAR

    Let’s start with some very simple basics. It takes approximately 1/64th of a second for what you see to hit your brain and your brain to go, ‘Oh shit, feet do this, hands do this!’

    In that length of time on a superspeedway, you have traveled half the length of a football field. By then you are not only in the wreck, you are careening out of control toward the bottom of the track or are about to hit the track, grass and/or run off on your lid. This is not new! This is scientific fact. When you run 43 cars a cigarette package width apart this is going to be the outcome. Drivers cannot physically react fast enough to avoid the crash.

    Everyone, no matter who they are, makes mistakes behind the wheel. Blocking, drafting, bumping, pushing and side drafting, all these things make up superspeedway racing and they all have the potential for being a mistake. Driver A has been bumping, drafting the car in front of him all day and it’s gotten them up through the field. Driver B goes to change pages on the new dash and Driver A bumps him in the ass, he goes sideways and there we go. The wreck has begun and it’s going to take more than just those two.

    Airborne cars and flips are not new at any superspeedway. They have happened there since the gates were opened for the very first time. There have been some serious and devastating injuries at these places, names like Earnhardt, Wallace, Pearson, Allison, Edwards, Martin, and Waltrip are the first that come to mind, and that’s without me digging out the history book or my race notes.

    For years, the fans have screamed about driver safety at these places and sworn they didn’t come for the wrecks but yet consistently those tracks are big ticket sale events. So the more they scream they hate wrecks, the more their wallets speak to the contrary. If you want change, the loudest voice is dirty green paper with dead men’s pictures on it. (The Harriet Tubman 20 is not yet available; when it becomes available I will change it to dead people’s pictures.)

    There are dozens of folks that are complaining about the cost of keeping smaller teams from being competitive. Well, as long as we have four races at Daytona and Talladega the price of competition is not going to go down. When each superspeedway car costs approximately $1 million in materials, technology and man hours, you figure out what a 21 car wreck costs.

    Cost containment doesn’t stop there. A pit box costs a little over $600,000, a hauler around $1 million. I freaking remember when they set up lawn chairs on the top of a Craftsman tool box and the car showed up on the back of an open hauler. The racing was more competitive and there were a lot fewer whiners.

    There were however, a lot fewer dollars in purse money, sponsor assistance, and contingency awards. Maybe that was not a bad thing considering where we sit now. A twist tie is a twist tie whether it came out of a box of Hefty bags or it is an approved NASCAR piece that looks like it came out of a box of Hefty bags. The real difference is you can buy the box of Hefty bags for five bucks and get the twist ties as a bonus or you can pay NASCAR selected distributors 50 bucks for them. You do the math.

    The bottom line of superspeedway racing is that it is the most dangerous form of racing that we have. But racing, whether on superspeedways or short tracks, intermediate tracks or road courses is dangerous. Period. Do not let NASCAR’s boasting of having the safest car in motorsports fool you. It is still extremely dangerous. We have lost drivers and heroes on every type of track that racing takes place on.

    Before we point the finger at NASCAR let us be perfectly blunt here. I was doing a piece on fire safety in dirt racing recently and was told flat out, “No one makes the drivers get in the car and race. They have the option regardless of series to park the car and not race if they feel the car isn’t safe, the track isn’t safe, or they just have a bad vibe. They choose to get in the car and race.”

    That’s it in a nutshell. The drivers choose to race at these places. Take it a step further, the owners choose to spend millions on cars for them to race at these places. Both parties know damn good and well that the odds are not in their favor of bringing back a car in one piece and they are greatly weighted toward the fact that the car will come back in a cardboard box. Drivers know they could be hurt seriously or killed if the situation plays out right. They get in the cars and they race anyway.

    The situation is made more dramatic for us by the broadcast media who sit like vultures in the booth high above the track and prophesize the coming of the big one. When it happens they practically gleefully celebrate its arrival and as an afterthought say, “Gee I hope so and so is alright.” We allow ourselves to be spoon-fed this kind of gloom, doom and drama as though it is a foregone conclusion that it will happen. When it doesn’t, we walk away feeling cheated and disappointed.

    Three-time NASCAR champion, Tony Stewart once was quoted as saying, “If you don’t like what it says, don’t read it. If you don’t like what you see, don’t watch it. If you don’t like what is said, don’t listen to it.”

    That is the key folks. If you don’t like this kind of racing, don’t watch it. Don’t buy a ticket to see it. If you are really concerned with the safety risk to your favorite driver speak with your eyes, ears, and wallet. Because Brian France and NASCAR speak one language, you may think that it’s English but the truth is, it’s currency.

  • Many Problems With Racing at Talladega, But No Solutions

    Many Problems With Racing at Talladega, But No Solutions

    It has been a few days since the GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway and listening to all the criticisms about the race reminds me of, well, me. I’ve never liked plate racing and still don’t. All that rage and anger over the result of the carnage has either fallen on deaf ears or the cheers from the assembled crowd have drowned out all of that. The most recent race at Talladega was a demolition derby. Of the cars that finished the race, the number of cars not involved in a wreck was in the single digits. Many drivers wanted to be on the couch at home and others didn’t think they needed to be there because of their position of being winners and qualified for the almighty Chase or ahead enough in the points to not have to be there.

    The racing can get really exciting for the fans, but it might have created the renewal of a familiar feud. In a race where everyone is aggressive, mainly to the threat of weather, Joey Logano made a move that pushed Matt Kenseth low, or “off the track” as Kenseth said. It didn’t result in damage to either car, but it opened up a wound that goes back to last year. Kenseth seems very touchy when it comes to any racing with Logano. I saw the same move many times in the race, but no one seemed to get upset. That is, except Kenseth. He made his point clear in finger-pointing at Logano on national television in what many would consider bullying, which everyone will be on the lookout for payback at Kansas, the scene of the great spin at the same track that started the whole thing in the beginning, but that’s not my point.

    We’ve had this argument forever. The day Bobby Allison sailed into the catch fence at Talladega, it’s been plates and will be in my lifetime. There doesn’t seem to be a solution and how could there be with 40 cars running at those speeds inches apart? The fans love it and come out in numbers to see the close racing and, unfortunately, the wrecks. I once wrote a piece here to say these races are not racing, but it wasn’t popular. And like Brad Keselowski said in the winner’s interview, in a day when folks just don’t like the product except at Daytona and Talladega, capitalism wins. I give up.

    NASCAR is apparently looking at how to keep the cars on the ground during these races, but no scientist seems to have a solution, as it has been forever, it seems. No one got hurt (badly) or killed on Sunday at the race, but it becomes obvious that a solution is not forthcoming. That being said, we go to Daytona in July. Expect more of the same.

    The drivers, once upon a time, felt racing at Talladega was not safe and a group of drivers banded together and left the track and didn’t race, including the stars of the sport. Big Bill France pointed his finger and everyone was back at the next race. With the driver’s council taking a stand over Tony Stewart’s fine last week, will they try to make a move on this issue, and boycott Daytona? What would Brian France do if that happens? I don’t think we will find out. For now, it will be status quo.

  • The White Zone: Plate Racing Isn’t Going Away

    The White Zone: Plate Racing Isn’t Going Away

    TALLADEGA, Ala.– “The white zone is for immediate loading and unloading…” and I need to make it clear that restrictor plate racing isn’t going away.

    As usual, yesterday’s GEICO 500 was quite the show of excitement and carnage. We saw cars upside down and a whole gaggle of cars caught up in one wreck, 37 lead changes among 17 different drivers and mayhem coming to the finish line. It was hands down the most competitive race of the season and arguably one of the best races at Talladega. That, however, hasn’t stopped the critics of restrictor plate racing from pointing to the carnage as the argument against it.

    Now plate racing has always come with its detractors. The late David Poole was probably the most hardened critic of restrictor plate racing. Every Monday after a race at Daytona International Speedway or Talladega Superspeedway, he would pen a column in The Charlotte Observer and say on The Morning Drive on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio that we should knock down the banking at Daytona and Talladega. The wreck with Carl Edwards at Talladega in 2009 sent him over the edge and led to him suffering a fatal heart attack.

    As of late, I’ve started to notice some more people I work with in the media center, I won’t name any of them, who are starting to turn against plate racing.

    Here’s my take on restrictor plate racing: I love it and I’m not ashamed to say it! Whether you like it or not, Daytona and Talladega are the most competitive races of the season and the numbers back that up. The number of passes is higher than at any other track and the lead changes are higher than at any other track. More than anything, it’s unpredictable and anyone who so much as qualifies can realistically win.

    The carnage is always there, but that’s part of the game. If you go into a race weekend at Daytona or Talladega thinking to yourself that you won’t see big crashes, you’re setting yourself up for failure.

    Racing is a dangerous sport. It’s been a dangerous sport since auto racing was born in France in the early 1900s and remains the most dangerous sport in the world. To quote Brad Keselowski, “racing has always been that balance of daredevils and chess players.”

    We’ve seen other forms of racing continue to race at tracks that don’t fit any current safety standards. One of Formula 1’s crown jewel races is held every Memorial Day Sunday on the streets of Monte Carlo and it doesn’t come close to meeting the safety standards of modern F1. Speaking of Memorial Day, IndyCar continues to race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway despite the fact that these cars are racing at speeds that couldn’t have been imagined in the early days of the Brickyard. Just last year, we saw heart-stopping wrecks in the days leading up to the Indianapolis 500 because of the emphasis on higher speeds.

    Despite all the dangers of Monaco and Indianapolis, these racing series still race at these historic venues for one reason; they’re the cathedrals that embody the greatness of their respective sports.

    This was the reason that Daytona and Talladega were built in the first place. They were built to be the cathedrals that embody what is so damn great about NASCAR.

    The bottom line is that unless fans can settle for Daytona and Talladega becoming drawn out and uncompetitive like Indianapolis, which is exactly what would happen without the plates, plate racing isn’t going away.

    My plane is about to take off, so I must get going. Until next time, I’ll leave you with this fact. It takes about 142.18 licks to reach the center of a Tootsie pop.

     

  • Dillon Gives Stewart a Top-10

    Dillon Gives Stewart a Top-10

    TALLADEGA, Ala.– While Tony Stewart was the driver of record for starting the race, relief driver Ty Dillon drove the car to a top-10 finish at Talladega.

    After switching out with Stewart under the first caution of the race, the relief driver of the No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing survived carnage to finish sixth in the GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway. It gave Stewart his first top-10 since the Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 at Martinsville Speedway in October of 2014.

    In what was unofficially his first Sprint Cup Series race at Talladega, Dillon described it as “just wild and crazy.”

    “We had a really strong car,” Dillon said. “Fighting from behind, it’s hard to get it up front. I felt like if we could lead a pack at any point, we would have put ourselves up front. Early one, once I first got in the car, we drove right up to into the Top 10 really quick and we had some air on the nose and was able to go. The team built an awesome race car. I just kind of got mired back. I made some mistakes being my first time here racing. But we were able to dodge crashes and survive here, which is the big thing. We made some good moves at the end to get us into to the top six or seven.”

    The decision for Stewart to get out of his car after starting the race at Talladega was done at the request of his doctors. Even still, the ever competitive “Smoke” wasn’t too thrilled with the prospect.

    “It sucks, to be honest,” Stewart said. “I know why we got to do it, but it sucks. It still sucks that you have to do it but if I hadn’t broke my back at the end of January, we wouldn’t be in this situation.”

    Stewart suffered a burst fracture of his L1 vertebrae in a dune buggy crash in the desert on January 31. The injury forced him to miss the first eight races of his retirement season. He returned last week to an 18th-place finish at Richmond International Raceway.

    He added that this would be the “last time we have to do it and I am back in next week.”

    Stewart leaves Talladega 38th in points 71 back of current 30th-place driver Matt DiBenedetto.

  • Brad Keselowski Endures Carnage to Win at Talladega

    Brad Keselowski Endures Carnage to Win at Talladega

    TALLADEGA, Ala.– As the field wrecked behind, Brad Keselowski was up front when it mattered and scored the victory at the Alabama roulette wheel.

    The driver of the No. 2 Team Penske Ford led 46 laps, the most of anyone, and survived a host of wrecks on his way to winning the GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway.

    “I didn’t have a great frame to see what happened to everyone else,” Keselowski said. “The guys at Team Penske gave me a great Miller Lite Ford and this Fusion was hauling it. One of the best tickets to stay out of the wrecks at Talladega is if you can stay up front, and you’ve got a great shot of not getting wrecked. But this No. 2. Daytona didn’t go the way we wanted it to go. We thought we were gonna be better than that, but we just didn’t show the speed in the 500 and the guys went to work and they brought me a really strong car here for Talladega. I’m so proud of everybody at Team Penske. To be back in Victory Lane with two wins this year, and we feel like we can get a lot more. We’re growing as a team. We made a lot of changes at Team Penske and this feels really good, really good.”

    The victory was the 19th of his Sprint Cup Series career, second of 2016 and fourth at Talladega.

    Kyle Busch led 12 laps on his way home second in his No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota. He described what others were doing at the end of the race as “some moves that you made that were just lucky and just trying to get through some of the holes that were there and that were forming and guys bumping and banging each other, pushing all around and everything and trying to get the most out of what we had with our Skittles Camry,” Busch said. “You know, second’s not bad. I think the quota of three cars on their lids today is a little high, but it’s racing.”

    Austin Dillon rounded out the podium in his No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet.

    “My car was actually probably dragging; the No. 1 (Jamie McMurray) could stick to my back bumper and he gave me a heck of a push all the way through (Turns) 3 and 4 and when he did that, I knew we were going to have a shot at it,” Dillon said. “But as soon as I pulled out, it was kind of a parachute but I had to make a shot at it. I wanted to have a shot at the win. If I would have pushed the No. 18 (Kyle Busch), he might have beaten the No. 2, I don’t know. But hat’s off to these guys. They fought so hard. We pitted 15 times, they said. That’s amazing. The car was killed, and to come home with a third place finish we’ve got to thank the good Lord above.”

    Jamie McMurray finished fourth in his No. 1 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet.

    “I was really fortunate,” McMurray said. “I was only caught up in one of the wrecks. And I don’t know exactly what happened in the other two. Honestly, I don’t even know what happened in mine. I was so lucky that I got hit in the back and I spun to the bottom, but it didn’t tear-up the front-end. It didn’t tear the splitter up. And I don’t know that my car was faster afterwards, but it didn’t seem to hurt it any.”

    Chase Elliott led 27 laps and was the highest finishing rookie as he rounded out the top-five in his No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet. When asked about what stood out to him in his Cup debut at Talladega, he said, “trying to finish. You can’t have a good day unless you finish. Just trying to focus in on that. Obviously, it got a little wild. For us, we just tried to keep that in mind and make it to the end.”

    Ty Dillon, subbing for Tony Stewart, finished sixth in his No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet. Clint Bowyer earned his second top-10 of the season with a seventh-place finish in his No. 15 HScott Motorsports Chevrolet. Kurt Busch was leading with two laps to go before getting shuffled back and finishing eighth in his No. 41 SHR Chevrolet. Ryan Blaney finished ninth in his No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford. Trevor Bayne led 22 laps on his way to rounding out the top-10 in his No. 6 Roush Fenway Racing Ford.

    The race lasted three hours, 34 minutes and 15 seconds at an average speed of 140.046 mph. There were 37 lead changes among 17 different drivers and 10 cautions for 41 laps.

    Kevin Harvick leaves Talladega with a nine-point lead over Kyle Busch in the points standings.

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  • Jeremy Clements Captures Career-Best Finish at Talladega

    Jeremy Clements Captures Career-Best Finish at Talladega

    Jeremy Clements survived a tumultuous finish at Talladega Superspeedway to snare a career-best finish of fourth place in the Sparks Energy 300 NASCAR XFINITY Series race and win the Mobil 1 Driver of the Race award.

    The driver of the No. 51 Kevin Whitaker Chevrolet/BRTExtrusions Chevrolet with new sponsor Signs and Displays Direct (SDD) drove from a 34th starting position to lead seven laps and contend for the win. The race ended under caution in overtime when Joey Logano made contact with leader Elliott Sadler, sending Logano into the outside wall.

    Clements’ fourth place result moved him up three positions to 13th place in the championship standings. In 209 XFINITY starts, his previous best finish was sixth at Road America in 2014.

    The top five is a career defining moment for this small family-owned team. Jeremy Clements Racing (JCR) only has two full-time and three part-time employees but what they lack in numbers, they make up for with dedication.

    They have a rich history entrenched in NASCAR. Clements is the grandson of Crawford Clements, acclaimed engine builder, and the nephew of crew chief Louis Clements who won a championship with NASCAR Hall of Famer Rex White in 1960. Their engine development program continues today under the leadership of his father and uncle at Clements Automotive Racing. They play a vital role in the team’s success by supplying the engines for the No. 51 Chevy.

    Jeremy Clements receives a hug from his Dad after a series career-best fourth place finish at Talladega, April 30, 2016 - Photo Credit: Jason Watson
    Jeremy Clements receives a hug from his Dad after a career-best fourth place finish at Talladega, April 30, 2016. Photo Credit: Jason Watson

    Clements has an affinity for Talladega and heading into the race, he commented on the unpredictable nature of the track.

    “There’s nothing like Talladega,” he said. “We always seem to run well there. In 2013, we scored a Top 10. In 2014, we led but with six laps to go, got clipped in the right rear and sent into the wall. I think we were running seventh or eighth at that point and moving forward.  The car got pretty well wrecked, but at least we got our sponsors some face time on TV that day. They’re back with us for this weekend, so hopefully, we can get them some more exposure, but for the right reasons this time.”

    Clements’ hopes were realized Saturday and he was ecstatic after the race. I spoke with him about the significance of the top five finish, both personally and for his team.

    “I’m pretty excited for sure with our career-best finish,” he said. “It was a lotta fun and I am glad we survived typical plate racing, push the guy that is in front of you for all it’s worth. Great race for us, needed (it) a lot, ‘cause we have been struggling with bump stops, so it gives a great boost to our three-man team.”

    Clements is hopeful that it will be the catalyst needed to bring more sponsorship to the underfunded JCR organization, saying, “Definitely, this could help getting our foot in the door with new sponsors.”

    He is also confident that his fourth place finish at Talladega will give his team “momentum going into Dover in a couple of weeks.” It’s a track where they have put together good runs in the past, including a top 10 last year.

    The series returns to the track May 14 at Dover International Speedway as Clements and the No. 51 team continue to pursue their goal of making it into the top 12 to compete in the first elimination-style Chase for the XFINITY Series.

  • Elliott Sadler Survives to Win at Talladega

    Elliott Sadler Survives to Win at Talladega

    TALLADEGA, Ala.– Elliott Sadler’s 41st birthday will be one to remember as he scored the victory at the Alabama roulette wheel.

    The driver of the No. 1 JR Motorsports Chevrolet survived a wreck in the tri-oval coming to the checkered flag and had to wait for the official results to take said checkered flag in the Sparks Energy 300 at Talladega Superspeedway. It’s his 11th win in the XFINITY Series, second at Talladega and first since 2014.

    “People don’t know how hard it is to win these races. It’s very emotional,” said Sadler choking up in victory lane. “It’s a great birthday gift to me. Man, we needed this win.”

    Coming to the line, he was trying to find his way around Joey Logano when Logano got loosened up, came down on Sadler, turned back up the track and slammed the wall head-on. As his lifeless car came back down, it was t-boned by JJ Yeley in his No. 44 Tri-Star Motorsports Toyota. Both drivers were unharmed. Yeley took his car back to the garage and Logano got out of his car under his own power.

    Justin Allgaier, who was sitting in his car on pit road after the race had concluded while the finishing order was still being determined, finished second in his No. 7 JRM Chevrolet. Brennan Poole, who had crossed the line first after the field was frozen, came home third in his No. 48 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet. Jeremy Clements finished fourth in his No. 51 Jeremy Clements Racing Chevrolet. Brendan Gaughan overcame an early pass-through penalty to round out the top-five in his No. 62 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet.

    Austin Dillon finished sixth in his No. 2 RCR Chevrolet. Daniel Suárez finished seventh in his No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

    “I feel like we had a really fast car by ourselves, but for some reason in the draft and pushing and trying to push people it wasn’t great,” Suárez said. “Pushing was okay and when I was getting pushed it was horrible and then we made it better, but it wasn’t great. I don’t know. I feel like we have to keep working and improving our superspeedway program.”

    Matt Tifft led 21 laps on his way to an eighth-place finish in his No. 18 JGR Toyota.

    “It wasn’t too bad for typical Talladega until the end there,” Tifft said. “We had a really fast car all day. Just kind of got shuffled out – got shuffled back a little bit further than we might have wanted to. Then the last couple laps, just craziness here, so just tried to stay on the bottom. Just tried to kind of shove our way through there and stay out of trouble, so proud of everybody at Joe Gibbs Racing and our whole NOS Energy Drink Camry.”

    Chase Elliott led seven laps on his way to a ninth-place finish in his No. 88 JRM Chevrolet. Aric Almirola overcame an early pass-through penalty to round out the top-10 in his No. 98 Richard Petty Motorsports Ford.

    The race lasted two hours, 19 minutes and 45 seconds at an average speed of 132.477 mph. There were 20 lead changes among 13 different drivers and six cautions for 29 laps.

    Sadler leaves Talladega tied for the points lead with Suárez.

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