RELATED: Amy and Dale through the years

Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s voice has long been a distinctive one. The North Carolina twang didn’t skip a generation after his famous father, who handed down his name, his affinity for fast cars and that trademark drawl.

Two decades after Earnhardt Jr. was introduced to racing on NASCAR’s national stage, that voice has become the sport’s most resonant, with unvarnished colloquialisms seamlessly blending with deeply incisive thoughts.

We’ll hear that voice one more time in Earnhardt’s final media rounds as a full-time competitor this weekend at Homestead-Miami Speedway, where he’ll round out his appreciation tour as NASCAR’s Most Popular Driver. Those farewell interviews ahead of Sunday’s championship race promise to be appointment viewing for fans and reporters alike.

MORE: An evening with Dale Jr.

It’s why veteran ESPN reporter Marty Smith — himself the proud keeper of a vibrant Southern accent — remarked on a recent visit to Richard Deitsch’s SI Media Podcast that Earnhardt Jr. “is the best interview in sports and it is not even close,” owing to Earnhardt’s intelligence and his ability to process questions with genuine, profound answers.

It wasn’t always that way, Smith noted. In the early stages of Earnhardt’s career, drawing responses out of the young, frosted-haired kid in the red fire suit was sometimes like extracting teeth. The relatable plain-spokenness was always there, but there was often an underlying arms-length distance, almost a reluctance to fully connect.

MORE: Dale Earnhardt’s final win: Oral history of the day at Talladega

When he did open up early on, Earnhardt’s words sometimes had the subtlety of a flying elbow off the top rope. Provocative profiles in Rolling Stone (2001) and Playboy (2003) revealed a brash twenty-something still in the acquaintance phase with the responsibilities of his newfound stardom. And the on-air profanity he blurted out in Talladega Superspeedway’s Victory Lane in 2004 was especially ill-timed, with the FCC still on high alert in the months after the Janet Jackson “wardrobe malfunction” Super Bowl performance. NASCAR fined Earnhardt $10,000 and stripped him of 25 points in the midst of a late-season championship pursuit.

Earnhardt’s interviews have remained must-see TV as his career has progressed. But the tenor of those media sessions has turned, transforming into opportunities to spend time with a mature, self-assured man whose soul-baring opinions — both about the sport and life outside it — carry real weight. He shared his decision to donate his brain to concussion research with us in spring 2016 at Martinsville with unflinching openness. And when he decided one year later that this season would be his last, he answered every question in an hour-long news conference — down to the wildest hypothetical — with patience and grace.

Earnhardt has often been at his best when asked to draw from his appreciation of stock-car racing history. I attempted to tap into those memory banks two years ago, enlisting Earnhardt as a participant in our oral history of his father’s breathtaking final win at Talladega in 2000, an undertaking we had internally dubbed “The Earnhardt Project.”

Earnhardt had been briefed about the subject matter when we connected on a sweltering Labor Day Saturday in the drivers’ motorcoach lot at Darlington Raceway. I offered a general first question about that season’s rules package as a table-setter.

“Man, that was 15 years ago,” Earnhardt said, inspiring faint initial confidence in his recall ability with several questions still in the queue. What happened instead was 15 minutes of brilliance as he fondly recounted the specifics of a race almost a decade and a half old.

MORE: Best No. 88 paint schemes

Vivid details about his father’s determination to win that day sprang to life. Earnhardt Jr.’s description about his own efforts spilled out, as if we were watching a replay and he was doing play-by-play commentary. I wanted to use every word; the final product came close to hitting that mark.

As reflective as Earnhardt’s sense of history has been, his perspective on current matters has been just as illuminating. His weekly media availabilities this season have unfolded in 30-minute blocks, expanded from the usual 15 to allow for farewell gifts from each track but also to satisfy media demand and provide Earnhardt time for his typically thorough answers. It’s also why Team Chevy public relations has often split up transcription duties for Earnhardt’s wide-ranging interviews among two or three staffers each week in his final season.

After this weekend, Earnhardt’s competitive career on the track will end, but his voice will still be a familiar sound on race weekends next season. He’ll offer his views, likely with the same characteristic depth and charm but on the opposite side of the media divide, as an analyst for NBC Sports.

Whether it’s as an interviewer or interviewee, the future should hold many more years of Earnhardt’s enlightened, conversational insights.

All served up with a distinctive dash of twang.

TICKETS: Hang out with Junior in Vegas

In what could be his final Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series race, Joe Gibbs Racing veteran Matt Kenseth will drive a car that looks awfully similar to the one he started with 17 years ago.

JGR revealed the look Tuesday, noting the No. 20 Toyota was designed to honor the car he drove in 2000 with team owner Jack Roush.

Robert Laberge

RELATED: Kenseth’s career highlights

Kenseth, 45, will not return to Joe Gibbs Racing next year as the team has tabbed Erik Jones to drive the No. 20. The veteran revealed earlier this month at Texas that he was going to take “some time off, whatever that means,” although he stopped short of calling it a retirement.

Kenseth won at Phoenix last week, then was overcome with emotion during his post-race interview.

Ah, Race 35 of 36.

Phoenix, the only time of the NASCAR season where people use the word “penultimate.” What looked like a dominant day by Toyota teams Sunday quickly turned into a drama-filled event with a feel-good finish.

Thumbs Up: Staying out of the spotlight

It wasn’t a career race for Brad Keselowski, finishing 16th, but having an unmemorable day is likely what kept him in championship contention heading to Miami.

While Denny Hamlin and Chase Elliott watched their championship hopes slip away after a pair of run-ins since Martinsville — Hamlin punted Elliott at “The Paperclip” and Elliott retaliated late in Sunday’s race — Keselowski was the beneficiary of all the drama.

Elliott needed to win the race in order to advance to the Championship 4. Hamlin needed to score more points than Keselowski, which it appeared he was on track to do before crashing. Keselowski, meanwhile, had to focus on keeping his car clean so he could finish ahead of Hamlin.

Staying away from the drama ended up paying off for Keselowski, who will now race for a championship this week. Thumbs up for #GoingFor2 by staying out of the spotlight — at least for now.

Thumbs Down: Burning walls

When Chris Buescher’s brakes failed on Lap 253, destroying the No. 37, bits of his exploded brake rotors bounced around the track — parts landing in the gap between the SAFER barrier and the concrete wall. Somehow those shards of extremely warm parts led to sections of the wall quite literally catching on fire.

 

The race was stopped for a few minutes to fix the walls, but it’s probably not ideal for walls to catch fire. I guess it adds a unique element of danger, though.

 

After much consideration, burning walls (and brake rotors) earn a thumbs down. The smoke makes it a little difficult to see the racing action.

Thumbs Up: Fast Kenseths

Of course, Matt Kenseth won the race in dramatic, emotional fashion after a championship-affecting late-race pass on Elliott. But Matt wasn’t the only fast Kenseth Sunday afternoon.

 

Yes, it seems Ross Kenseth, Matt’s son, was stopped on his drive home for driving with a little too much gusto.

Thumbs up for following in dad’s footsteps. But maybe consider slowing it down, Ross.

Thumbs Down: More bad luck for Larson

Kyle Larson, who recently made known his disdain of his 2017 season, found himself in trouble yet again. After winning Stage 1, the engine on his No. 42 quit, resulting in his fourth consecutive DNF and his second engine failure during the playoffs (the other, of course, ended Larson’s championship hopes at Kansas).

The good news for Larson is that there’s only one race left this season. Thumbs down for a bad luck streak that could even make Kasey Kahne feel bad.

Biggest Thumbs Up of the Week: Going out a winner

It’s well-documented that Kenseth doesn’t expect to race beyond this week. That’s why his victory at Phoenix, his first in over a year, is an almost-storybook way of going out.

Kenseth also performed a ‘Polish Victory Lap’ celebration, the same way he did in his first victory 39 wins and 17 years ago — at the track where fellow Wisconsin native Alan Kulwicki famously performed the first such celebration in 1992.

 

Sure, there’s one race left in 2017 — one more shot for Kenseth to score a victory — but it must feel good to score one just before going out.

 

A giant thumbs up to everybody’s favorite race-winning dad comedian.

RELATED: Full Miami championship weekend schedule 

For the first time, NASCAR fans on smartphones and tablets will have access to live, 360-degree views of pre-race events at Homestead-Miami Speedway before Sunday’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Championship finale. 

Leading up to the Ford EcoBoost 400 on Nov. 19 (3 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), fans will be able to “teleport” themselves into the driver’s meeting and throughout the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series garage via NASCAR.com and the NASCAR Mobile app, regardless of their location.

The live video, delivered by Ultracast, can also be viewed through smartphone, VR headsets and laptops. This innovative technology platform transforms the device into a launchpad, propelling viewers into fully immersive, 360-degree or virtual reality live experiences.

“For years, NASCAR has prided itself on providing fans with unprecedented access to the sport and its drivers, especially on race days,” said Tim Clark, managing director of NASCAR Digital Media. “With live, 360-degree video, fans everywhere can feel what it’s like to attend the driver’s meeting and experience the garage before the green flag waves at Homestead-Miami Speedway.”

When engaged with the 360-degree view, fans can choose where they look as live events happen to personalize their experience. As the individual’s phone, tablet or headset moves, so does the live camera angle.

In addition to Sunday’s driver’s meeting, much of the at-track content available via NASCAR’s GarageCam will be presented in live VR, 360 video during Ford Championship Weekend.

The 2017 NASCAR Playoffs will conclude with the Ford EcoBoost 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway on Nov. 19. The first to finish the race among the four remaining playoff drivers — Martin Truex Jr., Kyle Busch, Kevin Harvick and Brad Keselowski — will be crowned 2017 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Champion.

RELATED: Buy tickets for Homestead-Miami Championship Weekend

NASCAR XFINITY Series crew chief Jason Burdett has been fined $10,000 and suspended from this week’s championship-determining Ford EcoBoost 300 for a rules violation during this past weekend’s race at Phoenix Raceway.

Burdett is crew chief for the No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet driven by Justin Allgaier, who is one of the drivers in the Championship 4.

Team co-owner Kelley Earnhardt Miller said Tuesday that the team will not appeal the penalty.

According to the NASCAR penalty report issued Monday, Burdett and the JR Motorsports team were penalized for a rear brake cooling assembly issue. Per the NASCAR Rule Book, Section 20.15.2.2, rear brake cooling assemblies must be sealed from air inlet to exhaust.

The infraction was discovered during post-race inspection.

MORE: XFINITY Series standings

As a result of the infraction, Allgaier’s 10th-place finish in Saturday’s Ticket Galaxy 200 at Phoenix is also encumbered.

Additionally, the team has been assessed with the loss of 10 championship driver and car owner points. It will not affect Allgaier’s championship eligibility.

Allgaier, 31, is one of three JRM drivers who will compete for the XFINITY Series championship Saturday at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Teammates William Byron and Elliott Sadler, along with Richard Childress Racing driver Daniel Hemric, make up the Championship 4 that will battle for the 2017 title.

Burdett has been crew chief of the No. 7 team since 2015 and has four wins in the series, including two this year.

RELATED: Buy tickets for Homestead-Miami Championship Weekend

Editor’s note: This is the first in a series of four stories examining why each driver could win the 2017 Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series championship.

RECAP: Kyle Busch | Kevin Harvick | Brad Keselowski

• • •

Martin Truex Jr. will win the 2017 championship because … 

He has been the best driver this year, and he has been the best driver on 1.5-mile tracks.

Typically, having just one of those marks would be enough to make a driver a favorite at Miami. Having both? It’s going to be difficult for any other driver to overtake the No. 78 at 1.5-mile Homestead-Miami Speedway.

Here are Truex’s finishes in the past five races at 1.5-mile tracks, dating back to this summer: Win, win, win, win, runner-up.

PHOTOS: Martin and Sherry through the years

With a series-high seven wins, and a bevy of playoff points, the No. 78 Furniture Row Racing team has had Miami in its sights for a long while. Crew chief Cole Pearn has had plenty of time to get the exact car he wants for what likely will be the biggest race in the organization’s history.

Truex has toiled at NASCAR’s top level before finding the perfect fit at Furniture Row. His longtime girlfriend, Sherry Pollex, is in inspiration to those battling cancer, as she’d done in the past – and she’s doing now. And team owner Barney Visser won’t be at Miami as he recovers from a heart attack.

It’s been a trying season off the track for this group. That’s why Sunday’s championship will be extra meaningful.

MORE: Breaking down the Championship 4

RELATED: High drama between drivers

Denny Hamlin’s whirlwind Round of 8 came to an abrupt end at Phoenix, courtesy of a nudge into the wall from Chase Elliott that forced Hamlin’s No. 11 Toyota into the garage early. It was the culmination of a conflict between the two drivers that began at Martinsville, when Hamlin knocked Elliott up the track and into the wall while positioning for the lead in the closing laps.

“It just proves to the people that thought I was a bad guy that he would do the exact same thing in the same circumstances,” Hamlin said in his post-race interview. “It’s just part of racing. I got into him and he chose to retaliate.”

MORE: Elliott explains his side

The veteran driver did some more thinking on the long flight back to North Carolina, and tweeted some further thoughts he dubbed “random thoughts.”

Acknowledging he was “mad and dejected” on the flight home, daughter Taylor helped Hamlin cope with her carefree spirit.

“There’s something to be learned in all this,” Hamlin wrote, “and I’m not sure I know what it is.”

Here’s his full message:

RELATED: Elliott-Hamlin Phoenix run-inRace results | Kes grabs final Miami spot 

Sunday’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Playoffs Round of 8 cutoff race at Phoenix Raceway was a wild bout of up-and-downs for the five drivers vying to secure the fourth and final spot in the Championship 4 at Miami next weekend.

Here’s an analysis of how the races played out for Ryan Blaney, Chase Elliott, Denny Hamlin, Jimmie Johnson and Brad Keselowski as they battled to be the one still racing for a title next week.

Start of race

Ryan Blaney: 1st

Chase Elliott: 4th

Denny Hamlin: 2nd

Jimmie Johnson: 12th

Brad Keselowski: 16th

Analysis: Blaney backed up his Phoenix speed from the spring (when he qualified second) by winning the pole — a great start for a team that needed a spark in a near must-win situation. Hamlin joining him on the front row added some pressure to stay out front for the No. 21 team. Elliott put himself in position to compete for a race win, which he needed, while Johnson could’ve used a better starting spot. Keselowski just needed to maintain his points lead, so a starting position of 16th wasn’t a race-breaker.

MORE: Blaney wins Phoenix pole | What playoff drivers were saying before race

 

Stage 1 finish

Blaney: 14th

Elliott: 3rd

Hamlin: 2nd

Johnson: 10th

Keselowski: 18th

Analysis: Blaney dropped back in the field considerably after struggling to find the speed in race trim that his No. 21 Ford showed in qualifying trim — not a good sign for his title hopes. Hamlin and Elliott about maintained their positioning toward the front of the field, but the rivals racing so close to each other put each of them in a dicey spot … but more on that in a minute. Johnson started the slow climb toward the front while Keselowski dropped back slightly, falling behind Hamlin for the first time for the provisional Championship 4 berth.

MORE: Full Stage 1 results | Hamlin, Elliott race each other aggressively early

 

Stage 2 finish

Blaney: 11th

Elliott: 9th

Hamlin: 1st

Johnson: 34th

Keselowski: 13th

Comment: Hamlin was cruising in the middle of this race, as he snatched up the Stage 2 win and led a whopping 193 laps when all was said and done. At this point, Hamlin would have been in the Championship 4 if the results stayed the same. Elliott dropped back a bit while Keselowski moved up slightly. The big takeaway here was Johnson cutting a tire just before the conclusion of Stage 2. His No. 48 Chevrolet hit the wall, took heavy damage and just like that, the race for eight was pushed to 2018. Down to four drivers.

MORE: Johnson sees eighth title bid end | Full Stage 2 results

 

Exhilarating Moment: Elliott passes Hamlin on Lap 270

Comment: Things shifted tremendously again on Lap 270, when newfound rivals Elliott and Hamlin gave credence to the old saying “rubbin’ is racing.” The pair traded a considerable amount of paint before Elliott was able to maneuver his No. 24 Chevrolet past Hamlin’s No. 11 Toyota — but not without consequence for Hamlin, who was forced into the wall. The Joe Gibbs Racing driver came away from the duel with a tire rub that eventually blew and sent his car — arguably the strongest in the race — into the wall on Lap 275. Elliott vaulted into contention for the win, and Hamlin was sent to a 35th-place finish. From first to 35th in a minute’s time. And then there were three.

MORE: Hopes dashed for Hamlin after run-in | Elliott: ‘Race guys how they race me’

 

Exhilarating Moment: Matt Kenseth passes Elliott on Lap 303

Comment: Elliott took over the lead from Kenseth — who had led for 52 straight circuits — on Lap 284. The 21-year-old driver appeared set to ride his way to his first career Monster Energy Series win and a berth in the Championship 4, leading the next 19 laps. Heartbreak hit once again for Elliott, however, as he couldn’t hold off the eventual race-winner, Kenseth, with less than 10 laps remaining. The No. 24 pressed Kenseth’s No. 20 as the final laps ticked off, but in the end Elliott came up just short. He placed one spot short of what he needed to advance.

MORE: Kenseth chases down Elliott late | Elliott’s stingers continue

 

End of race

Blaney: 17th

Elliott: 2nd

Hamlin: 35th

Johnson: 39th

Keselowski: 16th

Comment: It’s hard to believe that out of the five drivers looking to clinch a Championship 4 berth at Phoenix, just one of them finished in the top 15. It’s even harder to believe that he isn’t the one that is moving on to Miami, despite notching a runner-up finish. Keselowski is the one moving on after starting and finishing 16th. The 2012 champ knew he didn’t need to push for a solid finish on Sunday; just maintain a steady, above average pace and he’d be fine as long as one of his playoff competitors didn’t win the race. That strategy worked, and the Team Penske driver will join Kyle Busch, Kevin Harvick and Martin Truex Jr. in South Beach.

MORE: Kes grabs final Miami spot | Full race results

RELATED: Full race results | Playoff standings | Homestead-Miami schedule

AVONDALE, Ariz. — Brad Keselowski’s prospects of qualifying for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series Championship 4 race weren’t looking good.

Keselowski entered Sunday’s Can-Am 500 at Phoenix Raceway with a 19-point lead over Denny Hamlin for the final spot in the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway, but by the end of the second stage of the race, his advantage was gone.

Hamlin finished second in the first stage and won the second to pull even with Keselowski, who was mired in traffic with an ill-handling No. 2 Team Penske Ford and scored no points in either of the first two stages.

RELATED: Stage results in Phoenix

Hamlin led 193 laps and appeared headed to Homestead before eventual race runner-up Chase Elliott pinched Hamlin’s Toyota into the outside wall. Five laps later, Hamlin was out of the race after a blown tire and hard contact with the Turn 3 wall, and Keselowski preserved his spot in the championship race with a 16th-place finish.

“It kind of feels a little bit like Christmas,” Keselowski said. “We overcame a lot of obstacles and jumped a lot of hurdles today. I’m glad I don’t have to relive this day, that’s for sure. I’m just looking forward to going to Homestead.

“Sometimes you need a little luck on your side. Today we had that. It wasn’t by any means where we wanted to run. We wanted to run up front and have a shot for the win. That wasn’t in the cards. We tried to run the smartest race we could and survive, and it ended up paying off in the end.”

After Matt Kenseth’s emotional victory in Sunday’s Can-Am 500 at Phoenix Raceway, his son, Ross, was understandably thrilled following what might be the second-to-last race of his father’s Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series career.

So much so, his excitement gave him a little bit of a leadfoot.

Kenseth was pulled over for speeding shortly after the conclusion of the race, but thankfully, the officer was forgiving and appeared to let him off with a warning.

Prior to the flashing lights in his rearview mirror, Ross Kenseth tweeted that he was a “#proudson” watching his dad win one more time.