RELATED: Chase Grid | Driver standings | How drivers can clinch spot for Miami

AVONDALE, Ariz. — It’s one of NASCAR’s age old questions — would a driver intentionally move a teammate for a win?

How about for an extra point or two?

A handful of drivers may (likely?) find themselves in such a tantalizing position this weekend at Phoenix International Raceway, site of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Round of 8 finale, where the points margin is thin and the potential for beefs coming out of the race is thick.

Joe Gibbs Racing already has one driver locked into the Championship 4 — Carl Edwards, via his Texas win — with three more vying for advancement in Sunday’s Can-Am 500 (2:30 p.m. ET, NBC/NBC Sports App, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Only problem? There are only two spots available, as Hendrick MotorsportsJimmie Johnson claimed one of the four berths at Martinsville.

Think back to Ryan Newman bruising his way through then-rookie Kyle Larson here to advance to the finale in the current Chase format’s inaugural season in 2014. We already know that won’t be an issue.

Flashback: Newman moves Larson to edge into Championship 4

“If it’s not a teammate, I’m hoping their spotter is going to give them a heads up that the 11 is coming,” Denny Hamlin said Friday at Phoenix. “I would have no issues doing something like that. That was a little aggressive, but moving somebody to get that final spot to get in the final four, I’m not sure anybody would really fault you for that.”

Great, now picture a scenario in which it’s the No. 11 Toyota trailing the No. 18 – separated by two points heading into Sunday — because we could certainly be looking at a situation in which one of the JGR drivers is a point below the cutoff on the last lap, with his teammate directly in front of him.

Hamlin said that he “would not” move a teammate to advance to Homestead, but added that “that’s (his) answer today,” implying he may feel a little differently about it on Lap 312 on Sunday.

When told of Hamlin’s feelings on the potential issue shortly after, his JGR teammate and reigning Sprint Cup Series champion Kyle Busch summed up his thoughts on if he’d move a teammate to advance quite succinctly.

“Absolutely.”

RELATED: Meet Denny Hamlin’s spotter, Chris Lambert

Editor’s note: This is the fourth in a series of interviews with NASCAR Sprint Cup Series spotters.

Jason Hedlesky, Spotter for Carl Edwards, No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

How and when did you get started as a spotter?
I grew up (in Clinton, Michigan) and my dad brought me to Michigan Speedway for the first time when I was 8 years old. Before that, I knew I wanted to be a race car driver. When he brought me here … I walked up to the fence at the start/finish line and I want to say it was Neil Bonnett in the Wood Brothers car, he just came flying by me. I stepped back about five feet, it scared me at first, but it was the most awesome thing in the world.

That just confirmed it. I stayed focused on my goals and tried to eventually make it as a driver. I succeeded to some extent — getting my start with Mr. (Junie) Donlavey and had raced locally at Flat Rock and Toledo. Getting my start with Mr. Donlavey in 1998, I drove for him, did a little bit of everything, team manager and spotted for the team as well. In ’04, Mr. Donlavey was retiring and I wanted to keep driving. I didn’t really want another management job or a real job. I wanted to concentrate on driving. Carl needed a spotter. He was driving a truck for Jack (Roush, team owner) and I started spotting for him. We just became … he’s like one of my brothers.

What, if any, other duties do you have with the team?
That’s it. For the last 13 years with Carl, I’ve just been the spotter. At Roush I did some test driving, a little bit. I filled in for him on the XFINITY side in I want to say ’08. I did a couple of practice sessions when he was off with the Cup car.

Do you spot only in Sprint Cup or other series as well?
I work with Matt Crafton in the Truck Series. I’ve been with him probably five years now. We’ve won the two championships together. I’ve got a great relationship with him as well; he’s a great friend of mine. It’s just a great team to work with. Junior Joiner, the crew chief, Duke (Thorson, team owner), they’re awesome. As much as this is home with Carl and everything else and being with them for 13 years, I feel the same way over there at ThorSport.

How long have you been working with Carl?
Since 2004 with Carl, I think that was his second year in Trucks, and then that year he started (at Michigan) in the Cup car, the ’99 car. There was a timeframe when Bobby Hudson would come in just for Sunday only and do the races with Carl because he was already doing that 99 car. So I would do the Truck full-time and the Cup practice. Bobby would be here just to do the Sunday stuff. Then it gradually evolved into me doing everything Carl did. We ran seven straight years of XFINTY Series and Sprint Cup full-time.

Do you remember the first race you worked as spotter?
It goes way back to Toledo Speedway. I helped a guy with a Super Late Model. Toledo is a half-mile race track with a quarter-mile track on the inside. Chuck Roumell, I grew up working on his cars. He gave me a shot to help with the race cars and his brother was spotting. … For some reason, one 100-lap Iceman feature at Toledo, he couldn’t do it, so they just threw the radio at me. At that time, you’d stand on top of the tool box and just spin around in a circle; you really didn’t do the inside/outside type of stuff that we do today. You’d let them know if there was a wreck; you’d give them information but that was about it. I think it might have been about ’97. Chuck ran some ARCA races at Michigan and places like that and I spotted for him there.

What is the most bizarre thing you’ve ever seen on the spotters’ stand?
I’ve been doing it now almost 20 years just in NASCAR, and every time you think you’ve seen it all … something else crazy happens. … There have been so many things, like Daytona when Juan Pablo Montoya broke that part and hit that jet dryer. That was crazy from our vantage point. We’re watching the race track burn in Turn 3 and thinking we’re never going to go back racing. The race track has to be destroyed. And we ended up going back to racing. I’d say the jet dryer thing and thankfully everyone was OK.

What has been your most memorable experience as a spotter?
We’ve had a lot with Carl. He’s such a special driver. … It stunk how it turned out, but one of the coolest things we were a part of was that championship run at Homestead with Tony (Stewart). That was a heck of a race. You just saw two spectacular race car drivers and they were right on the edge. They were an inch from the wall down there. I talked to Carl afterward; obviously we were all so disappointed. We thought that was our championship. To this day we still think we should have won that championship. But Tony just got us.

I called Carl after that and said I was worried about him scraping the wall. He said, “I was never going to hit the wall; I knew I couldn’t.” But he was running a half-inch from it. Me driving and realizing how hard that is to do that at his speed, that’s why those guys are the best. You realize that after you watch guys like him and Tony. To be a part of that, to watch the skill they had — those guys were running as hard as any human being could ever drive a race car. … That was pretty cool. … That thing there was just a spectacular race, they put on a spectacular show. The cream rose to the top.

What is the most difficult part of your job?
As much as we like traveling, I think the toughest part is being away from my wife and kids. Getting through all the practices and trying to stay focused. The races are fun, that’s what you’re here for. Staying focused all day up on the spotters’ stand … when you’ve got Truck and XFINITY and Cup. That part is tough, but the travel, all the long days and being away from your family.

Your favorite track to work and why?
Michigan, of course, because it’s home. But I love to spot a race at Bristol. Our vantage point, it’s a half mile. You’re looking down and you don’t have to turn your head. You can see everything right there in front of you. And the action happens so quick. It’s probably my favorite.

I’ve enjoyed the racing at Michigan. It’s a big, wide race track. … I’ve enjoyed draft, the fact that you have to lift in the corners, the fact that a guy can still beat you down in the corners.

What is one thing the average fan might not realize about your job or what it entails?
Probably how difficult it can be. I think if I just took the average person up there … they don’t realize maybe sometimes how little you can see at some of these places. We have great, clear vantage points, but you’re still a long way away. You’re listening to NASCAR on one channel, you have the crew chief on another channel and you’re talking to your driver. There’s a lot going on. … Just the ability to stay focused.

It’s not easy or Talladega or Daytona or (Michigan); They’re three- and four-wide and you’re looking through binoculars to make sure you’re as precise as possible. Then wrecks are happening in front of that. … They’re kind of far away from you.

If you do it for a season you just get used to it. … I appreciate all the work all those guys do. It’s not easy. Bristol is a fishbowl but there’s a lot going on. So you have to keep your head in the game.

RELATED: Complete schedule for Phoenix

Here are the hot topics, trending news and key story lines to get you ready for this weekend’s races at Phoenix International Raceway.

WEATHER

The National Weather Service predicts an ideal weekend for racing (and, really, an ideal weekend, in general). Friday should be sunny with a high of 81, while Saturday and Sunday have identical forecasts of sunny with a high of 82.

 

KEY TIMES



 

Sprint Cup Series: The first practice will be Friday at 1:30 p.m. ET (NBCSN/NBC Sports App), with another pair of practices coming Saturday at 3 p.m. ET (NBCSN/NBC Sports App) and 6 p.m. ET (NBCSN/NBC Sports App). Coors Light Pole Qualifying is at 6:45 p.m. ET Friday (NBCSN/NBC Sports App). Sunday’s main event, which is the final race in the three-race Round of 8, begins at 2:30 p.m. ET (NBC/NBC Sports App)

XFINITY Series: The first practice is Friday at 12:30 p.m. ET (NBCSN/NBCSN Sports App) with final practice later that day at 4:30 p.m. ET (NBCSN/NBC Sports App). Saturday is a busy day for the field with Coors Light Pole Qualifying beginning at 4:15 p.m. ET (NBCSN/NBC Sports App) ahead of the 200-mile race (7:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN/NBC Sports App), which is the third in the Round of 8 of the XFINITY Series Chase.


Camping World Truck Series: Friday is the only day of action, kicked off by two practices, at 11:30 a.m. ET (FS2) and 3 p.m. ET (FS2). The third race of the Round of 6 of the Camping World Truck Series Chase is Friday at 10 p.m. ET on FS1 with Keystone Light Pole Qualifying just before at 8:30 p.m. ET (FS2).

CATCH DRIVERS LIVE



We’ll stream every driver press conference in the Phoenix media center at NASCAR.com/presspass. Drivers who will be among the scheduled sessions Friday include Chasers Joey Logano at noon, Kurt Busch at 12:15 p.m., Matt Kenseth at 12:30 p.m., Denny Hamlin at 3:30 p.m. and Kyle Busch at 3:45 p.m. Click here for a full schedule.


LAST TIME

Dale Earnhardt Jr. encountered the perfect storm at this race a year ago — just as a storm was brewing — to wrest the win away from Kevin Harvick. The race was delayed from afternoon to evening because of rain, and ended with just 219 of 312 laps completed before the rain returned. Earnhardt came to pit road for fuel and tires one lap before Joey Gase and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. crashed in Turn 3 to bring out the second caution of the race on Lap 196. While on pit road, Earnhardt crossed the scoring line at the flag stand before Harvick, who had dominated with 143 laps led.


And when other lead-lap cars came to pit road under the yellow, Earnhardt inherited the top spot, with Harvick second and Joey Logano third. Before track workers could complete clean-up from the accident, rain began to fall, and NASCAR called the race after the light precipitation became a deluge.
 At the time, it was the first Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup race under the current format to be called early because of rain (last week’s race at Texas has since joined that list).


It was Earnhardt Jr.’s third win of the season, but he already had been eliminated from the Chase. Carl Edwards, Brad Keselowski, Kurt Busch and Logano all were eliminated from the Round of 8 in Phoenix. Harvick, Kyle Busch and Martin Truex Jr. joined Martinsville winner Jeff Gordon in advancing to the Championship 4.


YOU SHOULD KNOW


• Kevin Harvick has been the most dominant driver at any track of late with six victories at Phoenix International Raceway since the track was reconfigured in 2011 (and he’s won there eight times overall). He’s led 1,079 laps since the November 2012 race that kicked off his streak of dominance — 51.3 percent of all laps run in 10 races.


• This is the final race in the Round of 8, before the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup field is cut to the Championship 4 for the Homestead-Miami Speedway finale. Jimmie Johnson and Carl Edwards have clinched spots in the Championship 4 by virtue of their victories at Martinsville and Texas, respectively, and two spots remain up for grabs.

 

• Of the six drivers still vying for a spot in the Championship 4 — Harvick, Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, Matt Kenseth, Kurt Busch and Joey Logano — only Logano has never won at Phoenix International Raceway

THE FAVORITE

 

Kevin Harvick. El Toro isn’t also known as “The Cactus King” for nothing. Harvick has won eight times at Phoenix, including six since the fall 2012 race. He’s won five of the last six races at Phoenix, with a lousy runner-up finish mixed in last fall — and that probably was only because it was shortened by rain. 

 

Others to consider: Jimmie Johnson, Kyle Busch

THE SLEEPER

 

Chase Elliott. It’s a very small sample size, but Elliott did finish eighth in the March race at Phoenix. A greater factor is that he has performed well on intermediate tracks all season, with 10 top 10s and five top fives on 1-to-2-mile tracks. 

Others to consider: Ryan Blaney, Kurt Busch

STAFF PICKS


Kevin Harvick: 6

Kyle Busch: 1

Joey Logano: 1 



RELATED: Championship 4 scenarios for Phoenix | Chase Grid

The inaugural NASCAR XFINITY Chase still has some business to settle, namely determining which four drivers will square off Nov. 19 for the championship in the Homestead-Miami Speedway finale.


With all four berths available heading toward the season’s penultimate event, it’s a wide-open race.


The XFINITY Series will figure out its Championship 4 contenders in Saturday’s Round of 8 finale, the Ticket Galaxy 200 (7:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM) at Phoenix International Raceway. Put simply, four drivers will advance and four will be eliminated from the postseason field.


Since Sprint Cup Series regulars won the first two events in the three-race round, no XFINITY Series contender has a free pass to the final before Saturday’s 200-miler. Daniel Suarez — driver of Joe Gibbs Racing‘s No. 19 Arris Toyota — has the favorable perch as the leader in series standings, 17 points clear of the cut-off line.


But even with the momentum of nine straight top-10 finishes on his side, last season’s Sunoco Rookie of the Year said he knows it’s a delicate grip.


“With this Chase format you are never in a real comfortable place,” Suarez said, “but if we continue to do what we’ve been doing the last few weeks as a team, I feel like we will be OK. I really enjoy racing at Phoenix and think the track really suits my driving style. We always have such tremendous fan support when we go out there, it’s really great to see.”


Elliott Sadler, Erik Jones and Blake Koch sit behind Suarez in the Chase pecking order, in position to transfer should they maintain their standing in the points. The remaining four — (in order) Justin Allgaier, Ryan Reed, Darrell Wallace Jr. and Brendan Gaughan — have ground to make up.


Allgaier sits the closest, just one point behind Koch at the cut-off line. It’s four more points back to Reed, another 15 back to Wallace and 13 more back to Gaughan.


With a certain degree of spacing among the bottom four, any points gains would have to come in sizable chunks. The other, more preferred method of advancing involves a trip to Victory Lane to nix any number-crunching.


“I’m not going to worry about the points situation,” said Wallace, driver of Roush Fenway Racing‘s Leidos No. 6 Ford, repeating a familiar personal refrain. “We just need to go out there and go after the win and then hopefully have a chance at that championship at Homestead. Either way, we are going to have some fun this weekend and give it everything we have.”


Sealing a Championship 4 spot in style with a win will mean denying one of seven Sprint Cup regulars in the field. Kyle Busch is a nine-time Phoenix winner who has won five of the last seven XFINITY events on the 1-mile track. And Ricky Stenhouse Jr., a two-time XFINITY champ, will make his first start in the series since 2013, driving Roush Fenway’s No. 60 Ford.

RELATED: Truck Series Chase Grid | Driver standings


With two races left in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series season, only Johnny Sauter has a sure-fire berth in the championship finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway. The rest of the title-hopeful roster is a five-driver pour into a three-driver funnel.

The Championship 4 field for the series’ inaugural Chase finale will get clarity after Friday night’s Lucas Oil 150 (10 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM) at Phoenix International Raceway. William Byron, Christopher Bell, Matt Crafton, Timothy Peters and Ben Kennedy will aim to join Sauter in the Championship 4, but two drivers will be eliminated in Friday’s Round of 6 finale.

Sauter clinched his spot with a victory at Martinsville Speedway two weeks ago, then blocked anyone else from an automatic berth with a back-to-back win at Texas Motor Speedway last weekend. He’s the only driver who can afford to be conservative at Phoenix.

“We’re peaking at the right time but we need to peak in a few weeks when it really counts at Homestead,” Sauter said.

Byron and Bell, two Kyle Busch Motorsports teammates with limited experience on the Arizona oval, may be in the best position to join him. Byron is the top points-earner among the five remaining drivers hoping to transfer, with Bell just one point behind him.

Their KBM organization also has solid footing at Phoenix. The Kyle Busch-owned group won four straight races at the 1-mile track from 2011-14. Plus, the 18-year-old Byron has some level of confidence by competing in a race-winning chassis — the same one that he drove to a triumph in the Chase opener at New Hampshire and that Erik Jones powered to Victory Lane at Phoenix in 2014.

“It’s a little bit of pressure for everyone who is not locked in,” Byron said. “Hopefully we can capitalize on that and have the finish we need in order to get to Homestead. I think we’re going to have a really good shot at a win, so if we can do that, it would be the easiest way to ensure we are in the Championship 4 next weekend.”

Bell, 21, will also be at the controls of proven equipment, driving the same KBM truck that spurred him to victory at Gateway Motorsports Park. He also finished second to Byron using the same chassis in the Chase opener at New Hampshire.

“I expect that we’ll be really fast again this week,” Bell said. “I feel we are in a good enough position points-wise that if we just go out and have a solid day and not make any mistakes then we should advance.”

Not much distance separates the three drivers behind the Kyle Busch Motorsports duo in the standings. Two-time series champ Crafton sits three points behind Bell, with Peters — the defending race winner – another point back. Kennedy, smarting from a pair of mid-pack finishes in the round’s other events, is just 13 points behind Crafton’s grasp on the provisional final transfer spot.

Of the six, only Peters is seeking his first win of the season. A repeat of his late-race surge to victory in Phoenix’s 150-miler last year would be well-timed.

“I’d say we have momentum on our side, we’ve been strong through the Chase and at short tracks this season,” Peters said. “I think we have a good Toyota Tundra this weekend and this team has the heart to come back and go for the win.”

RELATED: Driver moves and team changes for 2017


Richard Petty Motorsports announced Thursday that NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Brian Scott will retire from full-time auto racing competition at season’s end.

Scott, 28, began his NASCAR national series career in 2007. He is currently a Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate in his first year driving team owner Richard Petty’s No. 44 Ford.

In a release provided by the Petty team, Scott indicated that the decision was a personal one.

“This was a difficult decision, but one that I made myself for my family,” Scott said. “Racing and specifically NASCAR has been and will always be in my heart, but right now, I want to turn all my attention to my family and to be able to spend more time with them. Racing has blessed me with great opportunities, and I’m very grateful for everything that it has allowed me to do, but for me, it’s time to move on.

“I can’t thank everyone enough who helped me in my career. I would not have made it to where I am at today without their trust and commitment.”

In a separate release provided by the team, Albertsons Companies announced Thursday that it would cease its sponsorship. The Boise, Idaho-based grocery retailer has been a featured sponsor for eight of the 34 Sprint Cup races this year. Scott, a Boise native, is the great-grandson of Albertsons’ founders.


WATCH: Scott gives a tour of his hometown of McCall, Idaho

In 51 starts in NASCAR’s premier series, Scott has one Coors Light Pole Award and one top-five finish — both coming at Talladega Superspeedway. But this season has been marked by struggles, with five crash-related DNFs feeding a 32nd-place ranking in the Sprint Cup standings.

After posting his career-best second-place effort last month in Talladega’s Hellmann’s 500, Scott acknowledged the adversity in a trying first season at the Sprint Cup level.

“Just trying to get any bit of a bright spot in this year has been difficult,” Scott said Oct. 23 at the Alabama track. “I think that this is by far the brightest spot that we’ve had in a really challenging 2016 for Richard Petty Motorsports. I don’t know, I guess the results and what this does for us going forward is yet to be determined.”

The Petty-owned team indicated that it would field the No. 44 Ford in 2017 with “further announcements” at a later date. The organization underwent significant changes on Aug. 31, temporarily assigning Philippe Lopez and Scott McDougall oversight of the competition department in place of Sammy Johns.

Scott ends his full-time driving days as a two-time winner in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. He prevailed on the mile-long layouts of Dover (2009) and Phoenix (2012).

Scott also competed in six full seasons in what is now the NASCAR XFINITY Series, spending two of those years with Joe Gibbs Racing and three with Richard Childress Racing. He netted 20 top-five finishes and five pole positions over 208 career starts.


“Brian made it to and competed at a level that very few do in NASCAR,” said Brian Moffitt, RPM’s Chief Executive Officer said in the team release. “Brian became part of the Petty family this year, and he committed himself to making our organization better. We feel fortunate to have had the opportunity to get to know Brian and wish him nothing but the best for him and his family.”

RELATED: See the pre-Phoenix Chase Grid


Dry spells happen with regularity in the Arizona desert, where rain typically falls a thimble at a time.

For NASCAR Sprint Cup Series hopefuls competing at Phoenix International Raceway against Kevin Harvick in recent years, it’s been positively arid.

Harvick’s torrid tear at the 1-mile track includes a dominant stretch of five wins in the last six Phoenix races, part of his series-best eight victories on the Southwestern oval. That run of success bridges the end of his long tenure with Richard Childress Racing to his current home as driver of the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 4 Chevrolet.

The former series champion returns to Phoenix for Sunday’s Can-Am 500 (2:30 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) in need of another stellar performance to clinch his spot among the Championship 4 in next weekend’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway. History might suggest a Harvick cinch, but the 40-year-old driver says he’s leaving nothing to chance.

“I feel like that can be gone at any point,” Harvick said about any potential Phoenix advantage. “That’s the hardest thing about having success. You have to have an open mind to try new things to keep moving forward. If you don’t have an open mind or are not willing to try a fresh approach, then it will get stagnant. You’re going to become stale and get left behind.”

Harvick has found himself with challenging Chase scenarios before, but in each instance since the current postseason format debuted in 2014, he has found ways to advance. Two years ago, Harvick converted a must-win in the penultimate race at Phoenix by leading 264 of 312 laps to clinch a spot in the final. He won the finale the following week for his first series crown.

Harvick has managed similar escape acts this season. In the previous pair of three-race stages in this year’s Chase, Harvick has overcome a shaky start in the round-opening event with a victory to stave off elimination. Heading to the Round of 8 curtain-closer this weekend, Harvick is in need of another clutch outing, ranked seventh out of the eight remaining title hopefuls and 18 points behind a jumbled cut-off line for advancement.

The favorite’s role seems to apply, but Harvick said plenty of factors — weather, track conditions, handling characteristics — remain in play.

“There are all kinds of things to navigate through once you get there,” Harvick said in a release provided by his team. “There are a lot of good race car drivers and lots of circumstances that could play out to have things go wrong. You go there with a fresh start like you’ve never won there before and try to get the car dialed in.”

One different factor heading to Phoenix this season — fewer spots in the Championship 4 final field up for grabs. Victories by Chase-eligible drivers Jimmie Johnson (two weeks ago at Martinsville) and Carl Edwards (last weekend at Texas) have gobbled up two berths in the Nov. 20 season finale. In 2014, all four spots were open before the Phoenix race; last year, three of the four slots were unclaimed.

It’s a cozy contest along the cut-off point. Four drivers — Joey Logano, Kyle Busch, Matt Kenseth and Denny Hamlin — are separated by just a two-point margin, with Logano and Busch in a deadlock for the final two spots. It’s 18 points off the cut line for Harvick with a sizable 34-point deficit for his Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Kurt Busch.

Of those remaining six title hopefuls, four have been included in the Championship 4 in past seasons. If Kenseth and Kurt Busch were able to advance and join Johnson and Edwards in the final, the field would be full of drivers making their first appearances in the Homestead-Miami title race under the current Chase format.

Four of the six drivers still in limbo are former series champions — Harvick, Kenseth, Kyle Busch and Kurt Busch. Like finalist Edwards, Hamlin and Logano are still seeking their first Sprint Cup championship.


RELATED: An inside look at Dale Jr. joining the NBC team in the booth

A black Suburban pulls into the NBC TV compound just outside of Turn 3 at Talladega Superspeedway. Pit reporters Dave Burns, Marty Snider, Kelli Stavast and Mike Massaro jump out into the brisk, fall morning.

“All right, we can get started, now that we’re here,” Burns jokes as he fake yawns theatrically. It is 9:42 a.m. local time, more than three hours before the green flag will drop on this Sunday in mid-October.

Someone standing nearby offers helpful advice: “Don’t screw it up.”

“We’ll try not to,” Burns replies.

The pit reporters file into a portable trailer nearby called BP’s Place. “BP” stands for Benny Parsons, the late and beloved NASCAR broadcaster who will be inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame early next year. Around the table sit analyst Steve Letarte; lead race announcer Rick Allen; Jeff Behnke, NBC’s vice president of NASCAR production; Matt Marvin, the race producer; Mike Wells, the director; Rene Hatlelid, the pit road producer; the pit road reporters; and other NBC personnel.

They represent a small fraction of the 230 people required to broadcast the race. The topic at hand is what stories they will cover during today’s race. There are many to choose from. It’s Talladega, so there’s always the chance of a big wreck. It’s a cutoff race in the Round of 12 in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, so four drivers will be eliminated from the postseason. The table discusses the many different strategies drivers could use throughout the race. Some drivers will try to run up front. Others will hang out in the back. They will form and disband packs throughout the day. Keeping track of all of it all day will be a difficult but important task. 

“This could make for some very exciting things for the viewer all the way through,” Behnke says in words that seem prophetic after the checkered flag falls late that afternoon.

NBC Sports No. 1 goal in all of its programming is to tell stories, and the team of analysts and reporters finds them on this day before, during and after the race; on the track and off. Indeed, so much happens in the hours ahead that the challenge is not finding stories but deciding which ones to tell. 

Most of the key players on NBC’s NASCAR broadcast team have televised other sports, and they unanimously say NASCAR is the most complicated and difficult to cover.

“For three and a half to four hours, it’s a real mental workout,” Marvin says. “It just doesn’t stop. Which, to be honest, is also the best part about it.”

Over and over again, they say broadcasting a NASCAR race is like broadcasting the Super Bowl week after week. If you set aside the world-wide viewership that the Super Bowl attracts as a factor, they are correct.

A case can be made that a cutoff race at Talladega is the single most complicated sporting event broadcast in the United States this year. Start with the fact it’s an important race in the Chase and for points: When the race starts, there are 12 drivers still alive in the Chase; when it ends, four will be eliminated. The drivers who are in and the drivers who are out changes from lap to lap. 

Yes, there are other cutoff races—at Richmond, Dover and Phoenix and then the championship race at Homestead-Miami — and those are complicated, too. But none of those has the draft and the ever-present tension of drivers straddling the line between danger and daring. 

If all of that wasn’t complicated enough, the technical, geographic and personnel scope of the Hellmann’s 500 is staggering. For this race, NBC uses 115 cameras, 150 microphones and 25 miles of cable to go along with the 230 production personnel. The track is 2.66 miles around and 48 feet wide. That’s 674,150 square feet—or more than 11 times the size of a football field (57,600 square feet). 

Factor in additional space on pit road, the garage area and the drivers’ motor coach lot—which pit reporter Marty Snider visits to interview Brad Keselowski after a blown engine eliminates him from the postseason—and the total ground covered is unprecedented.

RELATED: Engine woes end Keselowski’s Chase

And even that fails to adequately address the challenges a NASCAR broadcast team faces. The play on a football field happens in one spot and moves at foot speed. There are breaks after every play. In a NASCAR race, the action happens in 40 places, moves at 200 mph and stops only for red flags.

It’s a few minutes before 1 p.m. local time and the drop of the green flag is fast approaching. Pit reporter Mike Massaro and his spotter, Brian Cox, work the scene on the starting grid.

 

Shiny racecars sit silently, awaiting the command that will roar them to life. Hundreds of people mill about. When security orders pit road cleared, millionaire car owners who arrived this morning in private jets walk alongside fans who slept in rickety RVs in the infield last night as they both retreat to their favorite spots to watch the race.

 

NASCAR is a sport of extremes. Started by moonshiners, it is now dominated by massive corporate sponsors. The sport’s drivers have transformed themselves from greasy-knuckled brawlers (who made sponsors happy if they had to) to polished corporate spokesmen (who still sometimes brawl). The cars are engineered to fractions of inches, yet, as driver Carl Edwards put it during qualifying, “With all this technology, you can still bang on something with a Stanley hammer to fix it.”

 

That tension between extremes exists even in the way the broadcast team reports on the race. The simple and the complicated exist side by side, and each needs the other. 

 

Let’s say a pit reporter wants to know if a crew chief thinks his team has enough fuel to get to the finish. The crew chief, having just crunched the numbers, thinks unholy expletives but merely shakes his head. That’s literally the simplest form of communication humans use. The pit reporter uses his radio to tell his pit road producer, Rene Hatlelid. Hatlelid tells Marvin. Marvin uses his radio to tell Allen. Allen reports the news, and his comments fly to outer space, hit a satellite, and bounce back to your cable provider, which sends Allen’s report to your TV (or whatever device you watch on). 

 

All of that happens in a matter of seconds … and then your team runs out of gas on the last lap and you scream unholy expletives.

 

Even the way pit reporters gather information carries whiffs of these extremes. Cox, Massaro’s spotter, writes longhand notes on a tablet. Massaro is old school—he uses a pen to write on a piece of cardboard. “It’s worked since 1999,” he says, laughing, “and I’m not changing.”

 

Massaro and Cox are responsible for 10 cars. Massaro unfolds his cardboard to show what he has prepared for today’s broadcast. In small, legible print, he has outlined stories he might tell about each of his teams, including the No. 19 of Edwards. For that team his notes say simply this: “JGR car draft? diff. Agenda.”

 

JGR refers to Joe Gibbs Racing (Edwards, Kyle Busch, Matt Kenseth and Denny Hamlin) and diff. means different. Massaro’s notes are based on a conversation he had that morning with Dave Rogers, Edwards’ crew chief. Rogers told Massaro that the four Joe Gibbs Racing drivers might drive in a pack together. But he wasn’t sure, because Edwards, Busch and Kenseth were relatively comfortable points-wise while Hamlin was not, so Hamlin might have a “diff. Agenda.” 

 

Massaro’s little note tells a story that goes on to become one of the biggest of the race. He first reports it on-air at 1:32 p.m. local time, and the broadcast re-tells it, in varied forms, throughout the day, as Edwards, Busch and Kenseth spend the entire race in the back of the pack, trying to avoid trouble. They tell it again when Hamlin, after racing among the leaders all day without help from teammates, makes the cutoff via a tiebreaker. The other three drivers’ decision to stay in the back becomes a hotly debated topic throughout the week. 

RELATED: Bold strategy pays off for JGR at Talladega

 

And Massaro’s five-word jot and title predicted it before the race even started.

 
Marty Snider is among the NBC reporters who works the garage, looking for interviews.

The roar of the engines explodes as drivers mash their throttles near the start/finish line. In the booth, lead race announcer Rick Allen declares that the green flag is in the air. In NBC’s production truck, director Mike Wells yells, “Here we go, baby!”

Wells, a skinny man with straight brown hair that hangs to his collar, sits in the center of the first of two rows of seats. A bank of screens spreads to his right and left, reaching high above his head. He concentrates much of his attention on the two big ones directly in front of him. The one on his left shows what fans at home see. The screen on his right shows what they will see next. 

He calls out instructions to the assistant director seated to his right. “Ready camera 22,” he says, and the screen to the right shows camera 22. Watching both, Wells waits … waits … waits. Then he snaps his fingers, which signals the assistant director to make the scene captured by 22 appear on the screen on his left.

Soon Wells calls for another camera to be ready, waits, and snaps again. Over and over this happens. In one two-minute span early in the race, he snaps his fingers 17 times.

Wells snaps his fingers because directing requires precision, and the snap provides it. He has directed every sport, and racing is his favorite because it’s so complicated — and therefore challenging. “I still learn something every race,” he says.

Behnke and Marvin stand and/or sit to Wells’ left. Behnke is like the owner, Marvin the coach and Wells the quarterback. They work as a team. If Marvin wants someone in the booth or on pit road to tell a story, he asks Wells to call up the appropriate camera angle. Throughout the race, Marvin also orders pre-packaged stories to be shown. 

During live racing action, Behnke and Marvin trust Wells’ timing and judgment completely. The most common suggestion comes when Marvin says, “Ghost me when you can, Mikey.” That means Marvin wants Wells to display the “points as they run” graphic that runs down the left side of the screen, which is used increasingly as the cutoff approaches. 

Behnke and Marvin marvel out loud multiple times during the race at how Wells directs the race with precision equal to the most exacting driver executing a perfect lap. “The director’s job in any sport is to capture the moment,” Wells says, and he has captured so many he has an incredible sense of when one moment is about to end and the next to begin.

Wells has directed so many races he couldn’t count them if he tried. His first NASCAR Sprint Cup race was in the early 1980s for ESPN, and he has directed numerous other racing series as well.

Considering Wells has decided what images fans see over hundreds of races in the last 30-plus years, there aren’t many people who have done more to shape NASCAR storytelling than he has. He shrugs off that notion. “I’m just so fortunate to be able to have the opportunity to be able to bring it to the people,” he says.

Everyone in the production truck is a NASCAR fan now. Pit road producer Rene Hatlelid was probably the biggest before she started covering the sport. She sits directly behind Wells. It’s her job to sift through the stories the pit road reporters want to tell as well as assign others. She pitches the best ones to Marvin, who has the final say of what makes it on air.

Wearing a metal-studded bracelet on her right wrist, Hatlelid works the radio buttons in front of her like a concert pianist. She holds one and talks to Massaro, holds others and talks to Burns, Snyder, Stavast and more.


Sometimes she sits, sometimes she hovers over her seat, and when something really big is happening — which is often — she bursts up and stands. Pit stops start, and the production truck explodes in organized chaos. “I need the 3 first, and then the 78,” Hatlelid says. “3 first, then the 78,” she repeats, shouting now.

She appears to be talking to Marvin, Wells and the pit road reporters at the same time, telling them all the order she wants reports to be filed. Working live, the pit reporters tell their stories—about tire changes, chassis adjustments, the quality of the car so far—which last only a few seconds each.

Pit stops are frenetic, but at least they are (usually) predictable and come at (usually) expected times. But NASCAR on NBC often has to crank out unpredictable, unexpected stories on the fly, which is what makes working in live TV fun, exhilarating and exhausting. 

As a round of pit stops ends, NBC’s cameras catch Joey Logano’s car completing an entire lap with a jack wedged under his car. At the snap of a finger, Wells’ direction beams those images into TVs. He snaps again and the cameras follow Logano as he swerves back and forth, trying to dislodge it.

There is little time to laugh. Using an off-air radio, Allen asks Marvin if the fact Logano returned to his pit stall mean that will serve as his penalty for leaving pit road with equipment.

Marvin calls the NASCAR tower to ask NASCAR official Christy May that question directly. May says yes, returning to pit road to remove the jack covers Logano’s penalty. Marvin tells Allen, and soon Allen reports this on air. And another story, albeit one nobody in the production meeting this morning could have dreamed up, gets told.

RELATED: Why Logano’s jack stuck to his car

Guests in the booth are more of a staple in radio than TV. Listen to almost any NASCAR race on the radio and you’ll hear a few minutes of forced banter with the leading regional salesman from the Poughkeepsie office of whatever company bought the rights to tout its wares on that particular day.


The TV booth hosts guests relatively infrequently. But when your name is Dale Earnhardt Jr., space is always available. And so Junior joins the booth on this day, and the result is pure TV magic. The analysis he provides in the hour-plus he spends in the booth is widely lauded. 


A couple of surprising things about the booth and the guys in it—former driver Jeff Burton, Letarte and Allen: The view of Alabama is beautiful. The view of the track is limited. The backstretch is so far away—roughly 3,000 feet—that it’s almost impossible to tell one car from the next. They watch the TV monitors at least as much as they watch the track.


Their collective sock game is strong; Letarte’s have what appear to be penguins on them. Allen’s voice is immediately recognizable, and then he introduces himself and he’s like 8 feet tall and distressingly handsome. He’s also friendly and a big fan of Nutter Butters.


Burton, Letarte and Allen drive the storytelling throughout not just the broadcast but the weekend. At the production meeting this morning, Letarte dominated the conversation. On Friday, Burton drove NBC’s Toyota on-track car around the track and recorded several stories that were used throughout the weekend, and it appeared they were largely his ideas.


Many of the stories that come up during the race are first proposed off the air by the guys in the booth. Allen’s questioning of the Logano situation is one example. Junior provided another when he said off the air that the lead car in the high line during a single-file run always gets debris on his grille. When that happened twice during the race, a pit reporter lobbed him a question about the topic. 


With 10 laps to go, it’s not yet clear who will qualify for the next round and who won’t. But seconds after the race ends, the pit reporters and the booth quickly tell a succession of stories. Hamlin is in, Austin Dillon is out on a tiebreaker, JGR’s passive strategy worked, and Kevin Harvick might have punched teammate Kurt Busch. That story remains half told. The video isn’t conclusive, Kurt Busch’s interview is as clear as mud, and Harvick’s contains no useful information.

RELATED: SHR teammates got physical post-race | Logano wins at Talladega

Oh, and there is one more tale to tell. It’s about a runaway jack, a bizarre race and a coveted checkered flag. “Win and you advance,” Allen says. “That’s what Joey Logano did today.”


The final story of the day is as simple, and complicated, as that. 

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Grammy Award-winning artist Sting will perform at the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Awards on Friday, Dec. 2, at Wynn Las Vegas. The finale of NASCAR Champion’s Week festivities, the annual awards show brings together some of the greatest names in sports and entertainment to celebrate the 2016 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Champion, team owner and 16 Chase drivers.

Sting will headline the event, performing both a classic hit and a selection from his new album, 57th & 9th, released November 11 on A&M/Interscope Records. His 12th studio album and first rock/pop project in more than a decade, the 10-song collection represents a wide range of Sting’s musical and songwriting styles, including the raucous first single “I Can’t Stop Thinking About You,” the anthemic, “50,000” and the ferocious, Road Warrior style imagery of, “Petrol Head.” The latter is also the aptly named anthem of NASCAR’s latest video release designed to build anticipation for the final two races of the season and ultimately the crowning of a new champion.

NBCSN presents complete coverage from Wynn Las Vegas beginning at 7 p.m. ET with “NASCAR America,” followed by red carpet coverage at 8 p.m. ET and subsequent coverage of the 2016 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Awards at 9 p.m. ET. Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90 will carry the show live at 8 p.m. ET.

Sting released five studio albums as a member of The Police alongside Stewart Copeland and Andy Summers, earning six Grammy Awards, two Brits and induction into The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003. As one of the world’s most distinctive solo artists, he has earned an additional 10 Grammy Awards, two Brits, a Golden Globe, an Emmy, three Oscar nominations, a TONY nomination, Billboard Magazine’s Century Award, and MusiCares 2004 Person of the Year. Later this month, the American Music Awards will bestow him with their “Award of Merit.”

Sting joins a star-studded group of musicians who have previously performed at NASCAR’s championship celebration, including Andy Grammar, Sam Hunt, Lady Antebellum, Sara Bareilles, John Mellencamp, Aloe Blacc, and Kid Rock. Please visit ChampionsWeek.NASCAR.com to view the full NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Champion’s Week schedule.

Tune in to watch as the Chase drivers vie to make the Championship 4 in the Can-Am 500 at Phoenix International Raceway this Sunday, Nov. 13, at 2:30 p.m. ET on NBC, Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.