NASCAR gave warnings to several Sprint Cup Series teams for failing either laser inspection station or template inspection during last weekend’s on-track action at Charlotte Motor Speedway for the Bank of America 500, including the No. 27 Richard Childress Racing team for driver Paul Menard.

The No. 27 team failed pre-qualifying LIS three times, resulting in a written warning and a loss of 15 minutes of practice time for this weekend at Kansas Speedway for the Hollywood Casino 400 (2:15 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). 

The No. 30 team of Josh Wise received a written warning and 15-minute loss of practice time, as well, after failing pre-qualifying template inspection three times. 

The No. 6 Roush Fenway Racing team of Trevor Bayne, the No. 7 Tommy Baldwin Racing team of Regan Smith, the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing team of Matt Kenseth, the No. 41 Stewart-Haas Racing team of Kurt Busch, the No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing team of Kyle Larson, the No. 78 Furniture Row Racing team of Martin Truex Jr., and the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports team of Alex Bowman all received written warnings for failing pre-race template inspection twice.

The No. 17 Roush Fenway Racing team of Ricky Stenhouse Jr., the No. 20 of Kenseth, the No. 23 BK Racing team of David Ragan, the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports team of Chase Elliott, the No. 31 RCR team of Ryan Newman, the No. 34 Front Row Motorsports team of Chris Buescher and the No. 43 Richard Petty Motorsports team of Aric Almirola all received written warnings after failing pre-qualifying LIS inspection twice. 

Stewart Haas Racing’s Nos. 4, 10 and 14 teams — wheeled by Kevin HarvickDanica Patrick, and Tony Stewart, respectively — failed pre-qualifying template inspection twice and received written warnings along with the No. 88 HMS team — driven Charlotte weekend by Alex Bowman.

 

Both Newman and Patrick served their respective penalties in Charlotte. 

 

The No. 3 RCR team of Ty Dillon was the sole XFINITY Series team to receive a written warning after failing pre-race LIS twice. 

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. said it would be hard to explain, the perspective that he’s gained being sidelined from NASCAR competition.

 

The driving part, he clearly misses. The related appearances, autograph sessions and other obligations have gained newfound enjoyment during his absence from the cockpit. The challenge for when he plans to return to driving full-time is finding a way to savor the two parts together.

 

Earnhardt described the contrasts Wednesday at Martinsville Speedway, taking part in the announcement that the .526-mile track would add a lighting system as part of its 70th-anniversary season celebration in 2017. The driver, sidelined since July with concussion-related symptoms, also discussed how his time out of the car has spurred a recent health kick, offered him time to assist in planning his offseason wedding to fiancée Amy Reimann, and how it’s taught him to relish race-weekend moments that go beyond his driving duties.

 

“When I was driving, I really didn’t enjoy everything I did outside the car, reluctantly, just to do the driving part,” Earnhardt said. “Now that I’m not in the car, I enjoy all the stuff that I’m doing outside the car that I’ve always done. I’m getting up in the morning race days to do the hospitalities or coming to do the winner’s circle (appearances) here or Talladega, I’ve really enjoyed doing those things.

 

“The pressure of racing made the majority of everything that came with it miserable, and I probably am responsible for controlling that, right? And so, I think being out of the car has shown me that I’ve got to find a way that if I’m going to race more how to not feel so much pressure that it makes everything else intolerable or hard to do.”

 

Earnhardt Jr., who turned 42 earlier this week, had his NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season cut short after 18 races because of concussion-like symptoms. The unexpected absence has allowed Earnhardt to participate in activities he would’ve otherwise missed, such as attending a drag-racing event in Concord, North Carolina, and taking in his high school’s homecoming football game.

 

But his time away from the circuit’s entry lists has also meant an unburdening, removing the weekly stress of performing for his No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports team, which has found able substitutes in Jeff Gordon and Alex Bowman while keeping Earnhardt Jr.’s name on the windshield and above the drivers’ side window.

 

“I think once I get back in the car, I’ve got to have a whole new frame of mind about how I handle the pressure of driving and the pressures of performing and finishing well and all that good stuff,” Earnhardt said. “… The driving is fun, and I never really had a problem with that. I enjoy being at the track, and I enjoy doing the hospitalities. I’m going to go do a Wal-Mart appearance somewhere in freakin’ who-knows-where, and I would be so frustrated about that because of what I was going to be doing on a race weekend.

 

“It wasn’t the appearance that had me bent out of shape. It’s just the pressure of week to week to week, performing, performing, performing — the expectations of everything, myself and everyone else made all that sort of a heavy, heavy weight on my back. Now without the performance and the worry of having to perform, I go do this stuff and have fun. So I’ve got to figure out how to race and have fun, if that makes any sense.”

 

Another unintended byproduct of his time away has been weight loss. With Reimann’s encouragement, Earnhardt said he’s had more of a dedicated fitness routine, something he never had to consider much during his weekly racing obligations since drivers routinely burn hundreds of calories inside the car during a race weekend.

 

“The only thing I ever had to worry about was just making sure I fit in my suit,” Earnhardt said, adding that he’s lost roughly eight pounds since beginning his rehab regimen for his concussion-like symptoms. “Any time we had to alter the suit, I had to start watching what I was eating, like we’re getting out of control here.”

 

And Earnhardt Jr. has also kept busy with planning his upcoming nuptials with Reimann in the offseason.

 

“We’re definitely not being lazy and pushing everything off until the last minute, but it feels like it’s right around the corner,” Earnhardt said. “We just want it to be a great day. I think that’s the same way everybody kind of feels. They just want everything to go right and not have anything go wrong. We’re just making sure we’ve got all our T’s crossed and all our I’s dotted, so that that day’s a special day for us.”

 

While he’s finding advice on floral arrangements and other details to make the event go off without a hitch, he’s also been receiving unsolicited advice from all corners about his treatment plan. If there was a Highlights for Children etiquette lesson on how best to interact with people with his condition, the would-be physicians lighting up his XFINITY Series team’s switchboard fall under the heading of Goofus as opposed to Gallant.

 

“I think the wrong thing to say would be to give any kind of medical advice because you’ve got to listen to your doctors,” Earnhardt said. “We’ve got people calling every single day to JR Motorsports: ‘tell Dale to try this, tell Dale to drink this drink, tell him to eat this, tell him to quit milk’ — all kinds of crazy, hare-brained reasons why I’m ill or need to get better, what’ll speed it up and all that stuff. I’ve got doctors, they’re smart, they know everything I need to do and that’s who I need to listen to, obviously.”

 

And the right way to offer support?

 

“‘Look forward to seeing you back at the track,’ sounds awesome,” Earnhardt said. “I want to hear that. ‘Get well’ is great. I like to know that people want me to be well, so anytime, that feels good.”

RELATED: See the race that led to Martinsville changes


MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Martinsville Speedway track president Clay Campbell remembers the tipping point well. Watching from outside Turn 4 as Jeff Gordon led the final laps of last November’s rain-delayed NASCAR Sprint Cup Series playoff race practically by candlelight, Campbell knew big changes were needed.

“It looked like a rock concert with people taking pictures with their phones and the (auxiliary) lights in the grandstand,” Campbell said. “I knew then that being in the Chase, such a critical point in the season, and thinking what would’ve happened if we hadn’t finished that race? We don’t want to be in that position, so there’s our reason.”

With that eventful race as a fulcrum, Martinsville Speedway announced Wednesday that it will have an LED lighting system in place for its NASCAR weekends next year. Campbell made the announcement Wednesday as part of an early kickoff to the historic short track’s 70th anniversary season in 2017.

Campbell said that the track did not currently have plans in place for nighttime races, with its premier series dates in 2017 already locked in to start at 2 p.m. ET (in April) and 1 p.m. ET (October). But Campbell indicated that the $5 million initiative — which he described an “insurance policy” against late-afternoon finishes in diminished sunlight — should provide flexibility in case of inclement weather.

“It’s a race that all the drivers really want to win because of the uniqueness of the track and the history of the trophy as well, so adding lights can only add to its legacy and the special-ness that this place has held for so long,” said Dale Earnhardt Jr., part of the delegation helping to make the announcement at the .526-mile track. “I’m really happy for the track. Believe that it’ll, like I say, open up a lot of possibilities for the future.

“The fans can come knowing that if we are pushed back early in the day, there’s still a great opportunity if we get good weather throughout the remainder of the day, we’ve got time to get the race in and can run late and you won’t have an issue. … I think it’s awesome and a long time coming.”

The announcement means that 16 of the 23 tracks that host NASCAR premier series events in 2017 will have lights in place.

Campbell said that the choice of LED lights over conventional halogen lighting is an example of “doing so much more with less,” providing better illumination with less power. The track indicated that the project will use an estimated 750 lights mounted from both inside and outside the track.

With a project of this magnitude, Campbell said, one of the largest challenges has been keeping the details under wraps for so long.

“It’s been hard because we’ve been working on it for months,” Campbell said. “As we got closer and closer, it’s tough because it’s a huge deal with a lot of people involved in making this happen.

RELATED: Full iRacing schedule, results

Ray Alfalla (Slip Angle Motorsports) captured his third NASCAR PEAK Antifreeze Series championship, capping a remarkable season with a second-place finish in the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway. PJ Stergios (ineX Racing), Alfalla’s competition for the championship, won the race in a clutch performance but fell two points short of winning his first championship.

The difference in the championship came down to laps led, with Alfalla’s 50 giving him the bonus point for leading the most laps while Stergios could manage only 34 circuits at the front of the field. If Stergios had led 17 more laps, he would have taken the championship on a tiebreaker.

The night started off with Alfalla starting on pole while Stergios rolled off 13th. Pole position gave Alfalla an immediate advantage in that he would have a very good chance at leading a lap early on and picking up an all-important bonus point. When the race went green, Alfalla did exactly that by jumping out to an early lead over Michael Conti and Justin Bolton.

As the first run wore on, Alfalla’s lead stabilized at around 1.5 seconds over Brad Davies, who overhauled Conti for second on Lap 28. Further back, Stergios had moved into the top five. A few laps later sim racers started heading into the pits for tires, but the two championship contenders stayed on the track not wanting to get trapped a lap down in case a caution flew.

On Lap 41 the two pitted together with Alfalla winning the battle off pit road. However, due to running several additional laps Alfalla lost the lead to Conti with Nick Ottinger (Gale Force Sim Racing) in second.

The first caution flag flew on Lap 58 when Ottinger was battling Davies and Kenny Humpe (The TEAM) for second. Davies got loose under Ottinger coming off Turn 2, hit Ottinger, and spun down into Humpe. Humpe got the worst of it, smashing into the inside wall and ending his night. Ottinger continued without damage and won the race off pit road during the yellow, earning the race lead.

Alfalla did not wait long to reclaim the lead, doing so on a Lap 75 restart just before a massive crash happened behind him when Kevin King was hooked in front of the field. Nearly a dozen cars piled into the melee on the backstretch, but both Alfalla and Stergios were unscathed.

After trailing Alfalla for much of the race, Stergios made his move on the next round of green flag pit stops. Stergios pitted before Alfalla and jumped in front thanks to his fresher tires. When the field cycled through pit stops, Stergios held the lead with Conti leading Alfalla for second.

Stergios looked to be in prime position to threaten Alfalla’s laps-led mark but another caution flew for a crash on the front stretch and bunched the field up again. Stergios hung on, though, winning the race off pit road and maintaining the lead on the restart only for the yellow light to flash again, forcing him and Alfalla to pit road again for another set of fresh tires.

With 17 laps to go, the race resumed, this time with Taylor Hurst in the lead courtesy of a two-tire pit stop. Stergios and Alfalla both looked to pounce on the restart with the fresh tires and the next 10 laps featured phenomenal sim racing among Hurst, Alfalla, Stergios and Ottinger. Stergios finally took the lead from Hurst with nine laps to go, but was unable to secure the bonus point for most laps led.

Alfalla also came through for second with Ottinger finishing third ahead of Cody Byus as Hurst slipped to fifth at the checkers.

Alfalla’s third championship brings to six the number of consecutive top-two finishes in the NASCAR PEAK Antifreeze Series standings, dating back to 2011. Stergios, to his credit, had the second-best year ever in series history. Both drivers had an average finish of fourth to go along with 13 top-10s in 16 races, but Alfalla was more consistent and had a better average starting position (sixth versus 12th).

Jake Stergios won the battle for third in the standings, though he was well back of the top two. Chris Overland took fourth despite finishing 27th at Homestead as Dylan Duval also found trouble, finishing 31st, but taking fifth in the standings over Ottinger.

With another season in the books, the NASCAR PEAK Antifreeze Series enters into hibernation until March 2017. Alfalla will once again bask in the glow of being crowned the best oval sim racer in the world at Homestead-Miami Speedway during the Ford Championship Weekend (where he will collect a check for $10,000 prize and third NASCAR championship ring), while the rest of the field has to wonder what they can do to knock him off his perch. His success is truly unprecedented in a field that is loaded with talent and gets more competitive each year.

Congratulations to Ray Alfalla, 2016 NASCAR PEAK Antifreeze Series champion!

https://www.nascar.com/drivers/jimmie-johnson/
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Hendrick Motorsports

A win at Charlotte puts Johnson one major step closer to achieving his seventh Sprint Cup title, a goal that seems more and more obtainable with the No. 48 team’s recent momentum.

RELATED: Johnson locks up Round of 8 spot at Charlotte

https://www.nascar.com/drivers/brad-keselowski/
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Team Penske

Keselowski has been relatively quiet in his 2016 Chase run, but the numbers are a bit louder: 5.0 average finish and four straight top 10s since the Chase began (seven straight counting races before the Chase).

Coca-Cola 600 winner Truex couldn’t recreate his Charlotte dominance Sunday, settling for a 13th-place result — and not much love from Austin Dillon.

https://www.nascar.com/drivers/kyle-busch/
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Joe Gibbs Racing

"Rowdy" rallied at Charlotte from a faulty tire for his fifth straight top-10. While his entire history at Kansas isn’t stellar, he’s the most recent race winner at the Midwestern track.

Kenseth savored a solid runner-up at Charlotte and now looks to Kansas, a track where he’s a two-time winner. High expectations for the No. 20.

Charlotte marked the second straight 37th-or-worse finish for Harvick. Good news? He’s only eight points behind the cutoff after multiple Chase drivers had issues Sunday.

RELATED: Engine problem plagues Harvick

https://www.nascar.com/drivers/chase-elliott/
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Hendrick Motorsports

Elliott led 103 laps before falling victim to a messy restart at Charlotte. With the team’s recent resurgance, don’t expect Johnson to be the only Hendrick driver up front.

RELATED: Restart woes for Elliott, Dillon

Tire issues on Sunday plagued the No. 22 team, which now sits 11th on the Chase Grid. But having swept this round last season, Logano is capable of a last-minute save.

RELATED: Tire issues for Logano at Charlotte

https://www.nascar.com/drivers/denny-hamlin/
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Joe Gibbs Racing

A late blown engine hampered Hamlin’s run at Charlotte, and his Kansas outlook is iffy at best, with an average finish of 16.8 at the Midwestern track.

WATCH: Hamlin’s engine expires at Charlotte

While he’s never won at Kansas, Edwards has certainly experienced strong runs there, finishing four of his last six races in the top 10.

Busch has been quiet, but steady, in recent weeks and now heads to Kansas, where he’ll look to continue a three-race top-10 streak at the Midwestern track.

https://www.nascar.com/drivers/austin-dillon/
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Richard Childress Racing

A two-tire gamble might have worked for Dillon & Co. at Charlotte, but it went south fast when Truex’s No. 78 got into the back of the No. 3.

RELATED: Elliott, Dillon wreck at Charlotte

After being eliminated from the Chase at Dover, Larson powered his way to a fifth-place result at Charlotte. A second win could be in the cards for the No. 42.

Stewart found some rhythm again at Charlotte with a ninth-place result and now sets his sights on Kansas, where he is a two-time winner.

Despite his Chase elimination, McMurray has an opportunity to end his season on a high note — just maybe not at Kansas, where he has an average finish of 20.2.

Buscher’s 16th-place run at Charlotte marked the rookie’s best finish since Bristol in August. 

RELATED:  Johnson locks up Round of 8 berth | ‘Six-Time’ through the years


As Jimmie Johnson took the checkered flag at Charlotte Motor Speedway Sunday — for the eighth time in his career — he was full of emotion and adrenaline. It is his well-earned Fast Pass ticket into the next round of the championship, which amazingly will be the farthest he’s advanced under NASCAR’s newest title Chase format.


The victory also ended the longest winless streak in the six-time Sprint Cup champion’s career — a 25-race span. It has been six whole months since the most accomplished driver of his era hoisted a trophy in Victory Lane. The seasons are practically ready to change. Massive worry has been averted.


Please.


“Nobody ever gave up, we know what a champion Jimmie is,” said team owner and 2017 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee Rick Hendrick, adding with a smile, “I’ve never taken the champagne bath in 30-something years, so it was like our first race (victory) again.”


This win for Johnson wasn’t just another trophy, another confetti moment in his surefire Hall of Fame career. This was a concerted effort to make good on this team’s own high standards.


It was the product of hard work from behind the scenes at the No. 48 Lowe’s team and all of Hendrick Motorsports. And the result was verification that the sport’s most celebrated champion of the time is not done yet.


“There wasn’t any fist pounding per se, but what we did do was try to get together with all the heads of state, let’s say,” Johnson’s crew chief Chad Knaus explained. “… what we were trying to do was identify where our weaknesses were, and once we started to hone in on where we thought we needed to get some gains, we started to allocate the resources to where we needed it.


“We’ve put responsibility in some different areas that maybe we hadn’t in the past and I think that all of Hendrick Motorsports is definitely going to feel a lot of responsibility for this victory, which is great for all of us.”


And a long time coming.


RELATED: Power Rankings after Charlotte


Johnson — who qualified for the Chase with wins at Atlanta (in February) and California (in March) — has led the most laps (363) of any competitor in the first four races of the Chase. Only two-time Chase winner Martin Truex Jr. is  near that total (360 laps). The best of the rest hasn’t even resulted in 200 laps out front.


Still pit road miscues — speeding penalties, crew mistakes — ultimately derailed Johnson’s trophy moments no matter how many laps he has led in the Chase. His finishes of 12th, eighth and seventh, have not been indicative of how competitive he was in the opening Chase Round of 16.


He has been competitive but too often gutted with the result.


This win Sunday wasn’t just the breathe-a-little-easier ticket to the Round of 8. It was a rebirth, a reminder of what this organization is capable of.


In the last two years, Johnson has famously and painfully been eliminated from the Chase in by the second round.


And now, he is six races away from a chance to tie NASCAR’s all-time greatest drivers —  Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt — with seven Sprint Cup titles.


Some — probably Johnson and Knaus — would say it’s much too early to start thinking in those terms. But part of the allure and amazement in earning so many championships is the work it takes to even be in position for them.


With so many changes in NASCAR’s title structure throughout Johnson’s career — more so than what Petty and Earnhardt faced even — it has been an accomplishment to even realistically contend for the big trophy. And there is no time to leave anything on the table.


“There’s no way I could have dreamed about this,” Johnson allowed Sunday. “To have one sponsor (Lowe’s), one manufacturer (Chevrolet), one crew chief (Knaus), being at one team (Hendrick), this is fairy-tale stuff. It’s been really special.”


But Johnson is the first to insist those are deep thoughts reserved for November.


RELATED: Chase Grid after Charlotte


Right now, he’s got some races to win, messages to send, trophies to hoist, and history to make.


“You know, I’ve always raced for the experience I’ve had in the car,” Johnson said Sunday in Charlotte. “It hasn’t been about stats or the previous trophies that I’ve won or what’s really ahead of me. There’s an experience that I have in the car that I chase and I love.


“The community that’s created on a race team, the bond and friendship that you have with the crew chief and teammates, that’s the stuff that keeps me going.”


“And,” he added. “we’re doing what we need to and that brings a lot of optimism to the team. You get this machine of Hendrick Motorsports rolling and some momentum on our side, we can accomplish a lot and I think all four cars are showing that.


“We’ve got a lot more to show the rest of the year.”

Chase Elliott‘s 2017 NAPA Auto Parts paint scheme for the No. 24 Chevrolet was revealed by the driver and Hendrick Motorsports on Tuesday.



The 2017 season will mark Elliott’s second season in the No. 24 car. This season he has the car that he took over from sure-fire Hall of Fame driver Jeff Gordon in the Round of 12 of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup and looking to advance even further in the Chase.


Still pursuing his first win in the legendary ride, Elliott has accumulated nine top fives and 15 top 10s in his rookie Sprint Cup season. He ran well at Charlotte on Sunday leading 103 laps, but was collected in a pileup on a Lap 259 restart. 

RELATED: Elliott, Austin pick up pieces after big wreck at Charlotte

Chase Elliott‘s 2017 NAPA Auto Parts paint scheme for the No. 24 Chevrolet was revealed by the driver and Hendrick Motorsports on Tuesday.



The 2017 season will mark Elliott’s second season in the No. 24 car. This season he has the car that he took over from sure-fire Hall of Fame driver Jeff Gordon in the Round of 12 of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup and looking to advance even further in the Chase.


Still pursuing his first win in the legendary ride, Elliott has accumulated nine top fives and 15 top 10s in his rookie Sprint Cup season. He ran well at Charlotte on Sunday leading 103 laps, but was collected in a pileup on a Lap 259 restart. 

RELATED: Elliott, Austin pick up pieces after big wreck at Charlotte

RELATED: Getting to know the 2016-17 NASCAR Next class


KHI Management announced Tuesday that the marketing agency has signed NASCAR Next driver Harrison Burton to its list of clients.

Burton, who turned 16 on Sunday, is the son of former Sprint Cup Series driver Jeff Burton, who currently provides on-air analysis for NBC Sports. He also is a member of the current class of drivers in the NASCAR Next program, an initiative designed to highlight the young crop of new talent climbing the stock-car racing ladder.

The younger Burton, who has already established himself as a talent in asphalt Late Model competition, is scheduled to make his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series debut for Kyle Busch Motorsports on Oct. 29 at Martinsville Speedway. Burton logged a seventh-place finish in the standings this year in his first full season in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East.

KHI Management — co-owned by DeLana and Kevin Harvick — represents several prominent figures in the sports, broadcasting and music industries. In addition to both Jeff and Harrison Burton, KHI Management counts celebrities in MMA, motocross, golf and country music among its clients.