Tag: Talladega

  • Jeb Burton takes the pole in the Fred’s 250 at Talladega

    Jeb Burton takes the pole in the Fred’s 250 at Talladega

    Turner-Scott Motorsports driver, Jeb Burton, scores his sixth pole of the season on Friday at Talladega Superspeedway. Burton turned in a lap of 176.182 mph in his Arrowhead/Kangaroo Express Chevrolet. Burton currently sits fourth in points, 73 points behind leader, Matt Crafton.

    Burton, when was asked about his success this season in qualifying responded, “Well I feel like – raw seed, out team has been the best from practice to qualifying, we have the speed, we just haven’t been able to finish it in the race. Even if we’re struggling, we’re fast, we’re at the top of the charts every week. I feel like this year we’re building a notebook for my team and next we will really be able to go get some wins.”

    Max Gresham earns his best starting position of the season starting from the outside pole. Gresham turned a lap of 176.020 mph in the Made in USA Chevrolet. Burton and Gresham edged out Sprint Cup Series regular, Kyle Busch. Busch will start third in the Toyota Care Toyota, turning a lap of 175.910 mph.

    Kyle was asked about his Kyle Busch Motorsports driver lineup for next year he replied, “Unfortunately, we don’t and a lot of that comes from the unknown of what’s going on in the world of sponsorship and for the truck series it’s very tough for Kyle Busch Motorsports it’s been very tough and obviously without the support of Toyota that we get, we probably wouldn’t be here.”

    Rounding out the top five were James Buescher in fourth and Ty Dillon starting fifth. Buescher’s lap of 175.900 mph was just .003 seconds slower than Busch. Buescher, the defending series champion, is trying to catch Matt Crafton in the standings. He is currently 41 points out of the lead with just five races to go.

    Dillon currently sits third in points, 53 behind leader Crafton. Dillon turned a lap of 175.861 mph in his Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet.

    Other notables: Ross Chastain and Ryan Blaney who led practice, qualified seventh and 13th respectively. KBM driver, Darrell Wallace Jr will start tenth with points leader, Matt Crafton taking the green in 23rd.

    The green falls on the Fred’s 250 at Talladega Superspeedway at 3:00pm local time.

  • Kenseth leads the pack, heading into Talladega

    Kenseth leads the pack, heading into Talladega

    When Matt Kenseth made the move from Roush-Fenway Racing to Joe Gibbs Racing, many thought it would there would be an adjustment period. After all, Kenseth had been driving for the same team and manufacturer for his entire Sprint Cup Series career with the exception of his very first start subbing for an injured Bill Elliott.

    It would not take long to quiet the critics. Kenseth found victory lane in just his third start for his new team. He would also follow that up with six more wins. Now the Wisconsin native, who is many credit for causing NASCAR to implement the Chase format, is leading the Chase standings halfway through the ten race playoff.

    Kenseth is definitely is the midst of the best season of his career. In addition to the six wins, he has accumulated nine top-5’s, and 17 top-10’s. In 2003, his championship season, he only scored one win, but had 25 top-10’s. The fact that he won the title with just one win, is the reason many think NASCAR created the Chase format.

    Kenseth currently has a slim four point lead over five time series champion, Jimmie Johnson. The two, however, have a solid 29 point lead over third place, Kevin Harvick. But there is still. . . . Talladega!

    The 2.66 mile superspeedway that is credited with giving several driver their one and only win. However, it is also known for ending the championship hopes of many drivers. The track does not discriminate – it doesn’t matter if you are a mid-pack racer or a popular one. Just Dale Earnhardt Jr. He sat out two races in 2012 due to a concussion received in a crash triggered by Tony Stewart.

    When asked about coming back Talladega, Kenseth replied, “Yeah, so Talladega – man, I don’t know. Yeah, I mean obviously the Chase has been pretty good up to this point, so I’m glad to be leading, glad we had a good run last week – got a pretty good finish out of it – and at Talladega, the driver will draft a little bit today, kind of look at the weather and see if we need to put up a lap time or what we need to do. So, that makes practice kind of interesting if there is a threat of rain with everybody trying to lay back and get fast times and do all that.”

    Kenseth won this race last fall, but all-in-all, does not have a stellar record at Talladega. In 27 starts, he has just the one win with five top-5’s and nine top-10’s. Fortunately, for Kenseth, Johnson’s record at Talladega is not much better. In 23 starts, he has two wins, and only ten top-10’s.

    Both drivers have been extremely strong throughout the first half if the Chase. Kenseth opened the Chase two wins, Johnson followed suit with a win in race three. Kenseth did stumble just slightly at Kansas with an eleventh. Johnson’s worst finish is a sixth in the same race. Ironically enough, third place Kevin Harvick has almost identical stats as the two frontrunners. Harvick has scored one win and ten-10’s in 25 starts.

    As Kenseth points out, at Talladega you have more cars to worry about due to a more level playing field – “ the interesting thing about the races here is pretty much any of the 43 cars under the right circumstances could have a shot to win it. You really don’t know what’s going to happen and usually when you go race at Texas you probably can’t say that. So anyway, you just want to, I think, try to figure out how to be one of those cars and certainly I think your guard is up maybe a little bit more than normal.”

    It seems as if no driver near the top of the standings has a statistical advantage over the other. Given the nature of this track and the equality in stats. This weekend could lead to one driver having a large lead in the standings, or possibly creating a scenario where as many as five drivers are within striking distance. Either way it is sure to be an exciting race on Sunday in the Camping World RV Sales 500.

  • From mini-stocks to Supertrucks – Caleb Holman set to make Talladega debut

    From mini-stocks to Supertrucks – Caleb Holman set to make Talladega debut

    When race car drivers are growing up, they usually dream of racing in the “big-time” at the tracks they see on television with the stars of the sport. One such driver who had those dreams is Southwest Virginia native, Caleb Holman.

    While growing up and racing the short tracks around Virginia and Tennessee, Caleb had aspirations of racing in the upper levels of NASCAR. Working his way up through the ranks from mini-stocks at Wytheville Raceway to racing Late Models at places like Lonesome Pine Raceway and Kingsport. Caleb made his NASCAR national touring series debut in the Nationwide Series in 2003 at Richmond driving a car owned by his Father, Darrell Holman.

    After a while he partnered with Charlie Henderson, founder of Food Country USA, a regional grocery store chain. Caleb found success and eventually began competing on the UARA touring late model series and the X1R Pro Cup Series. Henderson loves racing and wants to succeed with Holman at the wheel. In 2006, he competed at Bristol for Henderson finishing 33rd, but only four laps behind the leader. He made a few more starts in the series over the next few years, but never found the right combination.

    In 2012, Holman and the Henderson team made their way to the Camping World Truck Series. Making his debut at Rockingham, he instantly seemed to be at home in the trucks finishing a respectable 21st. He followed that effort with another 21st at Charlotte Motor Speedway. He finished the season with eight starts and three top-20 finishes with his worst finish coming at Atlanta with a 27th. Holman has produced similar results in 2013 with five starts so far this season, with a best finish of 17th coming at Bristol.

    In attempt to take the next step, the team purchased a superspeedway truck from Richard Childress Racing. They will make their superspeedway debut at Talladega Superspeedway in the Fred’s 250 powered by Coca-Cola on Saturday, Oct 19.

    In preparation for the race, Caleb traveled to the RCR shop almost every day to finish getting the truck prepared. It is a rarity in the sport today when the driver works on the race car. That is the way Holman was raised, in race shops, around race cars, and knowing to get things and get them done right, you have to get your hands dirty. Working on the race cars that he drives is just second nature – it’s what you do. From the very beginning, his Father Darrell, taught him to work and prepare race cars and earn what you get, not expect it to be handed to you.

    Darrell Holman talked about the team owner, Charlie Henderson, “He (Henderson) loves it and he wants to see his truck running, he don’t to see us out back loafing.” When asked about their stats he continued, “For a team our size and no more races than we’re doing, we’re really overachieving probably, because most of the time we finish 17th to 20th, and for what we’re up against, that’s a really good day for us.”

    Holman, asked about being at Talladega, said “It sounds almost to me – conceited and arrogant to be saying, when you talk to somebody at home and you say – yeah we’re going to Talladega. You say it like it’s Talladega, big deal, but when you stop and think about it you’re like man that’s big. Not just big like big racetrack, big like never thought I’d be here, never thought that would happen and you have to catch yourself when you’re talking to people at home that you have known forever, what that sounds like. When you say Talladega to them, they see pictures of Dale Earnhardt and Richard Petty, so it’s a big deal. It really is and like I say when you get to building a truck, and all the stuff you got to do, it’s easy to forget that man this is really cool.”

    This team has the feel of local hometown team. A sense of teamwork and pride fills their garage stall. Throw in a dash of family values and good old fashion dose of “do the best you can with what you have” and you have a recipe for making the dreams of a former mini-stock racer from Southwest Virginia come true on the fast, high-banks of Talladega Superspeedway.

  • Talladega: The wildcard – the equalizer

    Talladega: The wildcard – the equalizer

    Front Row Motorsports announced this week that David Ragan would drive the No. 34 Ford again next season. Fitting that the announcement would come heading to the track where Ragan found his way to victory lane earlier this season.

    Any time teams come to Talladega the excitement level is at an all-time high. The fear of the unknown is more prominent here than at any other track on the circuit. The 2.66 mile superspeedway is commonly referred to as the “wildcard” race because anything can and seems to happen.

    This moniker fits David Ragan and his Front Row Motorsports team. They are much smaller than the huge mega teams that dominate the spotlight in the Sprint Cup Series. The team is largely underfunded and piece together sponsorships in small packages in an attempt to fill the schedule.

    The “wildcard”, however, is also the equalizer. It gives underfunded, smaller teams a chance. In the Aaron’s 499 this spring, Ragan found his way to the front in the closing laps with teammate, David Gilliland, in tow. Ragan talked about racing at Talladega on Friday saying, “The Talladega race is always special, I’m a NASCAR fan and at heart, I enjoy this style of racing, I enjoy coming here being part of the show.”

    That is the beauty of this place – the unknown. Talladega is the only track on the schedule where literally almost every car in the field could win. Couple that fact with the two and three wide racing, ten to fifteen rows deep, and a person could not ask for more.

    Additionally, there is the constant expectation of having the “big one”, that huge crash that takes out multiple cars. It provides a source of excitement that is equaled by no other track. With the large packs of cars racing so close together, one small bobble or misjudgment can have massive ramifications on, not only the race, but the championship picture.

    Coming into the Camping World RV Sales 500, two drivers seemingly have a stranglehold on the points standings. Matt Kenseth leads Jimmie Johnson by four points. It is then 29 points back to third place, Kevin Harvick. Jeff Gordon and Kyle Busch are 36 and 37 points back respectively. Talladega presents the perfect opportunity to allow them to catch up and turn a two man race into a five man race for the championship.

  • Ron Hornaday Looks to Tame Talladega Superspeedway for his First-Career Win on the Historical 2.66-Mile Alabama Track

    Ron Hornaday Looks to Tame Talladega Superspeedway for his First-Career Win on the Historical 2.66-Mile Alabama Track

    Quick Facts:

    Series: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series
    Race: 18 of 22 – October 19, 2013
    Driver: Ron Hornaday
    Truck: No. 9 Smokey Mountain Herbal Snuff Chevrolet Silverado
    Driver’s Point Standings: 11th
    Owner’s Point Standings: 10th
    Track: Talladega Superspeedway
    Race: fred’s 250 Presented by Coca-Cola
    Distance: 94 Laps/250.04 Miles

    For the second superspeedway race of the 2013 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (NCWTS) season, Ron Hornaday and the No. 9 Smokey Mountain Herbal Snuff team will unload at Talladega Superspeedway looking to capitalize on the momentum from a strong run at Las Vegas Motor Speedway to earn the four-time NCWTS champion his first-career win on the famed 2.66-mile Alabama track. In his previous seven starts at Talladega, Hornaday has earned two top-five finishes, both second-place finishes (2008 and 2011), four top-10 finishes, one pole starting position, has led 50 laps and completed 98.5 percent of attempted laps (653 of 663 laps).  His average start is 9.6 with an average finish of 12.4.

    For the only other superspeedway race of the 2013 season, Hornaday started from the fourth position in the season opener at Daytona International Speedway and finished under the lights in the third spot.

    Hornaday continues to sit 11th in the NCWTS Driver Point Standings with three top-five finishes, eight top-10 finishes and has completed 98.2 percent of laps attempted (2,604 of 2,652 laps) and led 44 laps. Only one point separates Hornaday and 10th place.

    Prior to two weekends off before starting the final-five stretch of the 2013 NCWTS season, Hornaday and the No. 9 NTS Motorsports team looked poised to hit the jackpot in “Sin City” for their first win of the season. Hornaday qualified in the eighth position for the Sam’s 350 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway and led a total of 23 laps before a late-race caution bunched the field up for the final restart and after slipping several spots, Hornaday finished the race sixth.

    This week Hornaday will be behind the wheel of the No. 9 Smokey Mountain Herbal Snuff Chevrolet Silverado for the fred’s 250 Presented by Coca-Cola at Talladega Superspeedway.

    Catch the fred’s 250 Presented by Coca-Cola from Talladega Superspeedway on MRN, Sirius Satellite Radio Channel 90 and Fox Sports 1 on Saturday, October 19, beginning at 3:30 p.m. ET with the race scheduled to start at 4:00 p.m. ET.

    Thoughts from Driver Ron Hornaday:

    “I really enjoy racing at Talladega Superspeedway. Our Smokey Mountain Herbal Snuff Chevrolet ran so well at Daytona, that I have been looking forward to this race all season long. Drafting at Talladega is a lot of fun and I look forward to pushing and being pushed to the front of the field.”

    Words of Wisdom from Crew Chief Bruce Cook:

    “I love racing at Talladega Superspeedway. This type of racing is my favorite because it truly tests driver and equipment on the fastest and biggest tracks on the circuit. I have won at Talladega in the truck series before and I hope to repeat that with Ron Hornaday and the Smokey Mountain Herbal Snuff truck.”

    For more information about NTS Motorsports, visit ntsmotorsports.com.

    Follow us on Twitter @TeamNTS, @SmokeySnuff, @TeamNTS9Truck, @RonHornaday

  • The Final Word – Thank God we have Talladega coming up on Sunday

    The Final Word – Thank God we have Talladega coming up on Sunday

    Charlotte has come and gone for another season, so what can one say about the race that was. Well, “thank God that is behind us” comes to mind. I can not remember if it was sponsored by Nyquil or was simply the To Hell With A Cure for Insomnia 500, for me it turned out to be NASCAR’s version of English Premier League soccer. That is, best watched with PVR in hand.

    Lap after lap of whatever and who cares. It was like watching a NBA game in the end, with the final few minutes about as exciting as it gets. Brad Keselowski wins, Kasey Kahne runs second, and Matt Kenseth extended his lead over Jimmie Johnson to four big points in the Chase standings. Did anything else much matter? I expected more from Charlotte, I expect nothing from ABC/ESPN, and not a single new fan was captured from what was presented in the television version of the contest. Thank God we have Talladega coming up this Sunday.

    Talladega is coming up, Martin Truex Jr. is off seeking a new ride after Michael Waltrip Racing officially announced its contraction due to NAPA fleeing the scene. Brian Vickers is gone for the rest of the year as he deals with a re-occurrence of blood clots in his leg, but should be good to go in the seat of the MWR #55 for 2014.

    NASCAR continues to seek the answers needed to make the racing more exciting. They returned to Charlotte a couple of days after the Saturday night race to see if the advent of more rear down force or more turbulent air might help shake things up. If the announce team can not make things more exciting, then the product itself has to improve.

    Rating Charlotte – 5.5/10 – Something has to change, or those not true fanatics are going to continue wandering off to other stimulants or reducing their NASCAR experience to Daytona, Talladega, and Bristol.

    If you do not like NASCAR, I understand. If you do not like Talladega, you really are a soccer fan. 40 plus cars sweeping by in aircraft formation three wide with just inches separating any of them in any direction at 200 miles per hour. One sneeze away from disaster. We will be watching this Sunday to see if such a sneeze might hamper the runaway bid of Kenseth and Johnson. Call your friends, call all those who usually do not watch, tell them this is what NASCAR produces each and every week. If we are lucky, Martinsville might actually keep them watching.

    You can’t blame a guy for dreaming. Enjoy the week.

  • My Chase Predictions With Five Races Remaining

    My Chase Predictions With Five Races Remaining

    The cross flags are out for the 2013 Chase and this battle is far from over. We have two very volatile races coming up on the schedule in the form of the monstrous Talladega Superspeedway and the half mile paperclip better known as Martinsville. Two champions lead the way with three formidable opponents within striking distance of them. Everyone from 6th on back has lost touch with the top group as the clock winds down on the 2013 season. A plate race, a short track, a high banked mile and a half, a flat track in the middle of the desert and of course Homestead make up the final five week sprint for the Cup.

    If you look at the championship standings, it’s a five man breakaway at the front with Kenseth and Johnson showing that they are going to be the ones everyone is hunting in the upcoming races. They are champions who rarely make mistakes and both display a fastidious demeanor even in the face of great adversity. Kevin Harvick trails by 29pts and not only can he handle controversy well but he sometimes seeks it out for the heck of it. Kevin’s Achilles Heel in this title bout may only be his equipment. RCR is fully capable of winning multiple races and finishing well but they are not capable of matching or exceeding the level of performance that has allowed the top two some breathing room.

    Then there is Jeff Gordon. He has the tenacity to win, the equipment to win and certainly the talent so why isn’t he, well, winning? That’s a very good question and it’s difficult to ascertain a definitive answer. He’s been solid the last eight races with only one finish worse than 8th; a 15th at New Hampshire after a pit road mishap cost him the lead, all his track position and potentially even a victory. There’s something missing in the No.24 camp that’s not allowing them to bust through that glass ceiling and perform at the level of his teammate and prodigy, Jimmie Johnson. Jeff’s also been plagued by a problem this year that can’t simply be fixed by an adjustment…it is an annoying and intangible force called bad luck. The next race on the calendar happens to be Talladega; a place where luck is the most crucial element of the whole race.

    In 5th sits Kyle Busch. At 28 years old, this naturally gifted racer is seeking his first Sprint Cup but there is a major obstacle standing in his way. The four drivers in front of him have something he seems to lack; the ability to cope with adversity and persevere through it. Case and point…Kansas. That track absolutely hates Kyle and he went into that race with that mindset. He destroyed his primary car in practice and on the first lap of the race; he spun out but can’t blame him for that one. Later in the race, Montoya helped him around and once again, not his fault. Busch was getting very aggravated though and understandably so but he allowed his emotions to get the best of him on a restart twelve laps later. He made a very imprudent decision about of frustration and cut down on Carl Edwards in a three wide situation and just like that, any chance of salvaging his day was over. He’s gotten better over the years but he still has a little way to go before he has the attitude and personality that makes someone championship capable. I don’t mean to pick on Rowdy but it’s incontrovertible that the way he handles all on-track misfortunes is going to make or break his title hopes…who knows, maybe he’ll surprise me in the final five races.

    The next two races are intriguing for multiple reasons. One of which is the obvious fact that they are characteristically unpredictable and chaotic event. Secondly, these two wild card events will most likely shake up the standings quite a bit. Matt Kenseth has been amazing on the plate tracks recently while The Paperclip has caused him many problems. The four drivers stalking him have good to spectacular records at Marty and all have won in the past at Talladega. These next two events are going to be incredibly important and will undeniably build the foundation for the 2013 championship fight. Once these 750 miles are complete, I think we will have ourselves a three-man race with three titans of the sport leading the pack in the form of former champions Matt Kenseth, Jimmie Johnson and the guy that some will argue isn’t even supposed to be here, Jeff Gordon. Who will come away victorious when it’s all said and done? Let’s just say I think we might be calling a certain someone “6-time” on November 17th.

     

  • FOR NO. 24 TEAM, NO NEED TO LEAVE ‘DEGA WITH A GREAT ‘FINISH’

    FOR NO. 24 TEAM, NO NEED TO LEAVE ‘DEGA WITH A GREAT ‘FINISH’

    TALLADEGA, Ala. (October 14, 2013) – On Sunday, it will start with a great finish. According to six-time Talladega Superspeedway winner Jeff Gordon, the No. 24 Chevrolet SS does not need to end with it, though.

    When the Camping World RV Sales 500 takes the green flag Sunday, Gordon’s Chevy will sport the familiar finish provided by Axalta Coating Systems. But Gordon is okay with that beautiful finish being replaced by a decent one once the checkered flag waves.

    “You have to go into this race with a positive attitude,” said Gordon, who also has three poles, 15 top-fives and 19 top-10’s in 41 starts at the Alabama track. “With the big-pack racing, there is always the chance of the ‘big one.’ But you have to approach this race with a positive attitude, fight to avoid whatever may occur and hope that you come out of it with a race car.

    “It doesn’t even need to be in one piece. It just needs to get across the (finish) line with a decent finish.”

    In May at the 2.66-mile track, Gordon was involved in a multi-car accident on lap 42 of the 188-lap race. He stopped six times during the caution period so the team could repair the damage to the nose of the No. 24 Chevy, but the cosmetic damage hurt the aerodynamics too much and he lost the draft. Just past the 100-lap mark, he was passed by the field and scored a lap down.

    But Gordon was the recipient of the “free pass” onto the lead lap with 15 laps to go. He restarted 25th with 10 laps to go, but the nose of his Chevrolet suffered more damage as it dug into the wet grass when Gordon attempted to avoid another multi-car wreck on lap 183. After stopping for more repairs, Gordon returned to the track with a heavily-damaged Chevrolet and ‘drafted’ his way to an 11th-place finish.

    “That was a crazy race for us and I couldn’t believe we almost got a top-10 with a car that damaged,” said Gordon, who is fourth in the NASCAR Sprint Cup point standings and 36 markers out of the lead. “But that just shows you anything can happen here and you have to battle all the way to the checkered flag.

    “A lot can and will happen during the race this Sunday and it could very well shake up the standings.”

    A good finish on Sunday and Gordon could move up the standings.a

  • David Ragan Discusses Driving For Front Row Motorsports

    David Ragan Discusses Driving For Front Row Motorsports

    At New Hampshire Motor Speedway, I got the chance to talk to Talladega race winner, David Ragan.  In the interview, we talked about the progression of Front Row Motorsports, his sponsors, his future and even a little about fans that claimed to be related to him but weren’t! Here’s the complete interview; enjoy!

    First off, I want to talk to you real quick about that incredible win at Talladega. Was that one bigger than your first one with Roush just because of the circumstances surrounding it?

    Every win in the Sprint Cup Series is big but the win for Front Row probably meant more than the other. Every win is very special in any of the top three series of NASCAR. To get the first win for the organization is big and to overcome all the challenges we faced (to get there). A 1-2 finish makes it even more special; that was definitely a team effort and it was a big day for myself as well as our car owner Bob Jenkins and the whole team.

    You’ve had the rare opportunity to both race and win for a top level organization as well as one of the smaller teams; one most would call underfunded so what’s the major differences from a driver’s standpoint?

    The biggest thing from the larger, more established teams vs. a smaller, growing team is just resources. The larger teams have been in the sport for 25+ years and got a lot more money, a lot more sponsors and a lot more employees so that’s something we fight on a daily basis. We fight to create more revenue and get more partners for Front Row and it’s a slow process but we’ve been very successful  in making it happen.

    Do you have aspirations to return to a top level team or are you happy here trying to help Front Row grow and build?

    Well my aspirations are to win more races and compete for championships and I’m only 27 years old. I feel like I got a long time left in this sport and if that’s going to be growing Front Row Motorsports and getting them to a be able to be competitive consistently and win multiple races; that would be great. But if a opportunity comes up with a larger team that puts me back immediately into a more competitive program, then that’s something I have to look at too but I am very happy at Front Row and helping them grow and get better…that would be a great story to tell.

    Do you feel more pressure racing for a team like Front Row because being competitive means everything to them; it’s about survival but with a bigger team, you are just expected to do well?

    There’s pressure in every situation whether you’re trying to make the race and you’re going to finish 43rd or if you’re trying to win a race and go for the championship. There’s a lot of pressure in every situation; it just comes from different directions.

    This team is definitely making progress…I don’t know if you knew this but Front Row Motorsports was listed as No.800 on Inc. Magazine’s 5,000 fastest growing companies last year. What are you guys doing that other small teams that seem to be stuck in a rut aren’t?

    Well I think that we got a good attitude and we work hard and we got Bob Jenkins who is an entrepreneur, a smart business man. We all got a good attitude when we come to work each day and we’ve leveraged ourselves to some really good partners with CSX, Love’s Travel Stops, Peanut Patch Boiled Peanuts, and Farm Rich. You got three or four companies there that that are solid companies. The more we can develop those relationships, the better off we’ll be.

    That kind of leads me to my next question…where do all these sponsors come from? It seems like every week, you or Gilliland have a new or different sponsor on the car. Where are you getting all these sponsors?

    I don’t know; that’s a good question there. They come from all around. We got ourselves a marketing team that works hard and we can provide a good package for a company that has been burnt out by spending too much money with larger teams or companies that are fairly new to the sport and want to grow and get involved. I think we got a unique situation and that makes us fortunate enough to have some of the partners that we do have and the ones we’re able to get.

    Front Row has been noticeably faster in 2013. You’ve been awesome in qualifying recently and both you and David Gilliland seem to be running in the top 20 a lot more often; where’s the speed coming from?

    It’s a combination of the things we’ve talked about. Just working harder, trying to build better racecars and getting more confidence with our team and having a better notebook with this Gen-6 car and beeing able to test a few more times this year so it hasn’t been one particular thing. It’s been an awry of five or six small things that’s helped us get to this next point and that’s where we need to focus to get even better. Just need to keep working on a lot of small things; I don’t think we’re going to have one grand-slam that jumps us to the top 10 but a lot of little, small items will eventually get us there.

    How soon before you think Front Row is capable of winning races at places other than plate tracks?

    In the right situation, we could have a shot to do it this year in the final ten races. Hopefully, there’s not a lot of rule changes for 2014 and we can build some better racecars and we can learn from our 2013 experiences. It’s coming and hopefully, sooner rather than later.

    When you’re not at the track racing and when you’re not with your family; what is it you like to do?

    Well, you just about explained every day of my life. I do the NASCAR racing about 40 weeks a year and I go do some short track racing with my Late Models a couple weekends a year…the other five or six weekends a year, I’m with my family and spending some time at our Ford dealership down in Perry, Georgia. It keeps us busy.

    Nick & DavidWhat’s the strangest fan encounter you’ve ever had?

    Well, we have a lot of crazy fan encounters. I’ve met guys that have their name, David Ragan spelled the same way and people who claim they’re your cousin but they’re really not and people that want you to sign “unique” stuff. There’s a lot of crazy/passionate NASCAR fans out there and it’s hard to just pick one because they’res a lot of them.

  • The Front Row Motorsports Story: Giving Up Wasn’t An Option

    The Front Row Motorsports Story: Giving Up Wasn’t An Option

    Front Row Motorsports (FRM) has competed in 511 NASCAR sanctioned events over the last eight years and on Sunday night with the sun setting in the background; they did what many found inconceivable winning a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) race in an FRM 1-2 finish! It’s an amazing example of David versus Goliath (In this case, two David’s) and NASCAR hasn’t seen an upset like this in quite some time. We all know what happened late Sunday night at Talladega Superspeedway but do you know the rest of the story? Do you know about all the adversity and the failures this team faced and had to persevere through to get to this moment of triumph? Well, you’re about to.

    Bob Jenkins is the owner of Front Row Motorsports and funds his cars mostly through the money he makes from his many restaurant franchises that he owns such as Taco Bell, Long John Silver’s and A&W. He teamed up with Jimmy Means to form Means-Jenkins Racing in 2004 before Bob took full ownership the following year. With Stanton Barrett as his driver, Jenkins made his NSCS debut as the sole owner of a team at Bristol in 2005. Stanton started the race 23rd but did not finish bringing home a 41st place result. The team came from very humble beginnings and looked to be one of those little teams that would just fade away over time. Let me tell you this, Bob Jenkins had no intentions of going anywhere except for victory lane. The team battled through some unimaginable odds and kept fighting no matter how bleak the outcome looked.

    Getty Images
    Getty Images

    They pushed through every 40th place finish and kept their heads held high knowing that if they wanted it bad enough and if they worked hard enough, that one day they would succeed. In their first four years of competition, they posted 15 finishes of 40th or worse, 16 DNF’s and a best result of 20th in 34 races. The team also tried out Nationwide in 2008 finding no success. FRM ran their first full-time NSCS season in 2009 with John Andretti behind the wheel. Their best result was a 16th at Loudon in route to a 36th place points finish. In 2010, they expanded their operation running two full-time cars and a 3rd for 21 races. They also made the switch to Ford’s in preparation for the Daytona 500. Kevin Conway, Travis Kvapil and David Gilliland piloted their cars and all three drivers led laps during the year. The cars finished 33rd, 34th and 36th in the owners standing which may not sound great but with the top 35 rule (and a couple cars ahead of them disappearing before 2011), all three cars were automatically locked into the first five races of 2011 which was a huge accomplishment for FRM.

    Without having to worry about qualifying, Front Row was able to focus on strengthening the team as a whole instead of searching for a way to go fast for two laps. The 2011 Daytona 500 didn’t start off well for them with 2 of their three cars getting swept up in an early wreck. The No.38 of David Gilliland was the only FRM driver left and he made his small team proud as he came roaring down the backstretch on the final lap running down the leaders at a high rate of speed. Bobby Labonte pushed leader Trevor Bayne into turn three but Gilliland and Edwards closed in fast overtaking Labonte and making it a Ford 1-2-3. David finished 3rd marking the first ever top 5 finish for FRM. Their best result prior to that race was a 14th back in 2010. Later on that same year at Talladega, Gilliland scored another top 10 finish ending up 9th. He capped off the year with a respectable 30th place finish in the standings which was FRM’s best at the time.

    2011 was a big year for the team scoring their first top 5 and top 10 finishes and putting two cars out on the track almost every single week. At the July race in Daytona, Gilliland finished a solid 16th while Roush-Fenway Racing’s (RFR) David Ragan won his first ever race at the Cup level. Ragan and Jenkins had no idea at the time that their fates would intertwine just a few months later. Ragan was released from RFR at the end of 2011 and was rideless until the opportunity to drive the No.34 for Jenkins came about. In 2012, they had two cars run every race on the schedule and a 3rd ran all but six. Ragan had two impressive runs of 4th and 7th both coming at Talladega….perhaps an omen of what was to come less than a year later? In the off season, Inc. Magazine named Front Row Motorsports as No.800 on their list of the 5,000 fastest growing companies and this little team that was progressively getting bigger and bigger was starting to turn some heads.

    NASCAR’s new Gen-6 car put a strain on all the smaller teams who had to spend a lot of money building new cars but FRM persevered once again and showed up to Daytona with three brand new Ford Fusions. On lap 139, disaster struck for the team as they looked on in horror as all three of their cars piled into a wreck in turn 1. They were all damaged beyond repair posting DNF’s and finishing 35th, 38th and 40th. It was a massive blow to this team that had worked so hard to construct these new cars hoping to build on the momentum gained from 2011 and 2012. If that wasn’t bad enough, they destroyed two more cars in wrecks at Phoenix the very next week.

    Photo Credit: George Diaz/Orlando Sentinel
    Photo Credit: George Diaz/Orlando Sentinel

    The team arrived at Talladega Superspeedway with an intense feeling of trepidation knowing that their fleet of cars could be wiped out in an instant just like they were in Daytona. They dodged the massive 16 car crash early on in the race and when rain struck with 60 to go, it looked like the race was over but after a 3 hour rain delay, they went back racing. A second big wreck erupted in front the three drivers with just a handful of laps remaining. Gilliland and Ragan dodged the flipping No.78 of Kurt Busch by taking their cars to the apron as the spinning car of Jeff Gordon threw mud and grass everywhere. Josh Wise on the other hand was surrounded by smoke and spinning racecars but he somehow emerged from the carnage unharmed. The race became a 2 lap scramble to the finish as darkness crept over the light-less track.

    Ragan restarted 10th, Gilliland 11th and Wise 14th. Josh went up the track with flat tire in the first corner but was able to limp home to a 19th place finish; the best of his NSCS career. The two David’s took the snarling pack of racecars head-on as they cut their way through the center of it. They passed the likes of Gordon, Kenseth and Johnson as they charged to the front of the field. With the titans of the sport all around them, this little team did not back down and fought their way to 2nd and 3rd with half a lap to go. The No.99 of Carl Edwards was the only driver that stood in their way and in a heart stopping moment, Ragan got sideways at 190mph and just about put it in the fence but thankfully, kept it straight. He dove underneath Edwards with the pedal through the floor and the No.38 followed.

    Gilliland shoved with all his might and as Edwards made contact with the right rear of Ragan’s Ford. David Ragan drove across the track blocking a wall of cars hell bent on taking the victory away from him as the field roared through the tri-oval. He drove back down to the yellow line and began to throw sparks as his No.34 scraped the track with left side. With cars slamming into each other behind him with sparks and debris flying, David Ragan stunned the racing community and won the race! David Gilliland brought home 2nd as the crowd screamed in utter shock and amazement at this spectacular showing by Front Row Motorsports. Bob Jenkins’ 8 year struggle to win in NASCAR was over, now it’s time to go do it again. He made it this far by being smart, calculated and not making any imprudent decisions along the way.

    Their battle is by no means over though, this is just another step forward in a never ending fight to find success in NASCAR. FRM is a team that refused to give up and refused to walk away even when there seemed to be no hope of prospering in this cut-throat business of auto racing. Quitting is not in this team’s vocabulary and their determination is paying major dividends now. They would not bow to the pressure and they prevailed against the greatest stock car racing has to offer. Finally, their dreams of winning in NASCAR have come to fruition and I’d like to say congrats to David Ragan and Front Row Motorsports on their incredible victory at Talladega!