RELATED: Qualifying results | Postseason Bubble outlook


RICHMOND, Va. — Chase Elliott certainly isn’t used to the view he’ll have from way back on Saturday night’s starting grid at Richmond International Raceway, but he sounded confident after qualifying that it would be a temporary situation.

Elliott will start his 3M-American Red Cross No. 24 Chevrolet from the 34th spot on the 40-car grid — the worst qualifying effort in the rookie’s brief 31-race NASCAR Sprint Cup Series career. But listening to the 20-year-old on pit road Friday evening after first-round qualifying, he was clear that the start may just make the finish more dramatic.

“I think for us, it doesn’t change our outlook or anything,” Elliott said. “It’s an unfortunate starting spot, terrible really. But we’ll think about it tonight and just try to look at what our teammates have. They were really fast and we struggled on our mock runs today as well. Hopefully our race trim stuff is better.

“The bad news is it’s a bad starting spot. The good news is it’s a long race.”

In two previous Richmond races, Elliott had finishes of 16th and 12th.

And all three of his Hendrick Motorsports teammates advanced to the final round of qualifying. Kasey Kahne was fastest of the three with a seventh-place effort. Toyota driver and Virginia native Denny Hamlin won the pole.


“This is a race track where if you can get yourself driving well, the stopwatch doesn’t mean a whole lot if you have your car driving the way you want it to,” Elliott said. “So I can’t say we have that either right now, but hopefully we will tomorrow night.”

WATCH: Buescher says he’s not in full defensive mode

RICHMOND, Va. — Jamie McMurray and Ryan Newman have adjacent garage areas this weekend at Richmond International Raceway. And Friday morning the two chatted briefly and smiled before climbing into their Chevrolets for practice.

McMurray, who is making his 500th Sprint Cup start, holds a 22-point edge over Newman for the 16th and final Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoff berth – and the field will be decided in Saturday night’s regular season finale, the Federated Auto Parts 400 (7:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, Sirius XM NASCAR Radio).

It would have been an even closer contest between the two drivers, but Newman was penalized 15 points this week after his car failed post-race inspection following a eighth-place run at Darlington on Sunday. That turned a 7-point difference into a 22-point difference.


RELATED: Chase Bubble Watch | Clinching scenarios for Richmond


With many scenarios in play, Newman and McMurray each could clinch a Chase berth with a win. But Pocono winner and Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate Chris Buescher also poses a challenge. He enters Saturday’s race in 13th place on the Chase Grid, ahead of McMurray (16th) and Newman (17th).


“I feel pretty good about our car after practice,” McMurray said of his No. 1 Sherwin Williams–sponsored Chevrolet.

“Richmond has actually been a pretty good track for me, finishes-wise and we’ve raced pretty well. Thought we were pretty good that first practice. I’m encouraged by the speed of the cars and hope to have a trouble-free night and that the race is just a normal race, you don’t get hung out by a caution or have something happen. 

“Or,” he said smiling and pausing, “you don’t have a first-time winner. That could happen. But if the race plays out normal we’ve got a really good car and can have a really good finish.”

McMurray’s crew chief Matt McCall said he expects business as usual for the Ganassi Racing team. He acknowledged that, of course, the team will keep an eye on Newman, but insisted the best route for McMurray is simply to try to win.

“I guess every race you come to, you try to pay attention to what everyone else is doing,” McCall said. “We still want to come here and try to win the race. To me, that makes the easiest scenario.

“Anytime you start looking back, you go backwards. I’m a big believer in that. No different approach here.

“Jamie’s been doing this a long time and he’s not going to put himself in any crazy situations that he wouldn’t normally get in.”


RELATED: Chase Grid | Driver standings

For all the dramatic scenarios coming into the Richmond Chase-setter, only one time has a driver raced his way into the Chase with a victory: Jeremy Mayfield won the Richmond race in 2004 to earn a postseason bid.

Because of the penalty this week, the 22-point differential that separates McMurray and Newman is certainly wider. But these two drivers have raced right around one another most of the season.

Both drivers have one top-five and eight top-10 finishes in 2016. And they have finished within five positions of one another in nearly half the season’s races.

While McMurray is understandably glad to have gained a little more cushion, he seemed genuinely regretful it came by way of Newman’s penalty.


RELATED: No. 31 and No. 42 teams penalized after Darlington


“I’ve been on both sides of that,” said McMurray, who was penalized 25 points after the Bristol race in 2004 and ultimately missed the Chase by 15 points.

“As relieving as it is when you come here because it is a little different environment now [with Newman’s penalty], you hate it for that team, and those guys because you know they have worked so hard to get to that point and then to have it taken away sucks.”

Buescher, the 2015 XFINITY Series champion who won the season’s second Pocono Sprint Cup race, said he will also be cautiously aggressive Saturday night as he attempts to make his first Cup Chase.

“We need to race aggressively for every position, every point we can get without taking unnecessary risks,” Buescher said. “We can only control, what we can control. “We’re going out there to race and have a really good day and avoid the risks that would put us in a bad spot or possibly take us out of this Chase.”

“If we can see the 23 car (Ragan), for the most part, we’ll know we’re OK.‘’

Although both the veterans, McMurray and Newman, appeared cool and calm going about their Friday practice at Richmond, there was an unmistakable hint of what’s dramatically on the line.

“That would be huge if we’re able to pull this off,” McMurray said. “It would be great for our organization. To go from where we were to [teammate] Kyle [Larson] winning a race and both cars competing in the top-10 for the last month, that’s a really big step and not something that happens these days.

“Maybe 15 years ago you could do that. Now you can’t, so pretty phenomenal what they’ve been able to pull off and our whole group should be pretty proud of themselves.”

The celebration, he’s hoping, will come Saturday night.

RESULTS: Practice 1

Pos

Car

Driver

From Lap

To Lap

Avg Speed

1

18

Kyle Busch

1

10

119.781

2

78

Martin Truex Jr.

2

11

119.458

3

19

Carl Edwards

3

12

118.840

4

48

Jimmie Johnson

2

11

118.330

5

2

Brad Keselowski

1

10

118.162

6

10

Danica Patrick

1

10

117.788

7

17

Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

1

10

117.770

8

34

Chris Buescher #

1

10

117.367

9

44

Brian Scott #

2

11

117.201

10

23

David Ragan

2

11

117.072

11

88

Jeff Gordon

12

21

117.058

12

11

Denny Hamlin

31

40

116.948

13

41

Kurt Busch

19

28

116.670

14

13

Casey Mears

1

10

115.956

15

95

Michael McDowell

12

21

115.513

16

1

Jamie McMurray

16

25

114.978

17

83

Dylan Lupton(i)

2

11

114.908

18

6

Trevor Bayne

19

28

114.763

19

21

* Ryan Blaney #

26

35

114.259

20

31

Ryan Newman

22

31

114.198

21

14

Tony Stewart

31

40

114.000

22

93

* Matt DiBenedetto

32

41

113.668

23

24

Chase Elliott #

25

34

113.616

 

RESULTS: Practice 2

 

Pos

Car

Driver

From Lap

To Lap

Avg Speed

1

19

Carl Edwards

2

11

116.652

2

20

Matt Kenseth

1

10

116.607

3

11

Denny Hamlin

2

11

116.580

4

18

Kyle Busch

1

10

116.575

5

78

Martin Truex Jr.

9

18

116.514

6

 4

Kevin Harvick

32

41

116.485

7

 2

Brad Keselowski

1

10

116.461

8

48

Jimmie Johnson

1

10

116.343

9

 1

Jamie McMurray

1

10

116.305

10

41

Kurt Busch

1

10

116.304

11

88

Jeff Gordon

1

10

116.236

12

 5

Kasey Kahne

1

10

116.113

13

 3

Austin Dillon

1

10

116.084

14

 6

Trevor Bayne

1

10

116.042

15

17

Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

2

11

115.873

16

14

Tony Stewart

45

54

115.751

17

47

AJ Allmendinger

1

10

115.721

18

24

Chase Elliott #

31

40

115.697

19

42

Kyle Larson

1

10

115.696

20

10

Danica Patrick

4

13

115.678

21

27

Paul Menard

1

10

115.656

22

31

Ryan Newman

2

11

115.578

23

22

Joey Logano

26

35

115.397

24

13

Casey Mears

4

13

115.362

25

34

Chris Buescher #

1

10

115.194

26

44

Brian Scott #

48

57

114.973

27

23

David Ragan

2

11

114.880

28

43

Aric Almirola

2

11

114.871

29

 7

Regan Smith

1

10

114.857

30

95

Michael McDowell

1

10

114.565

31

46

Michael Annett

2

11

114.447

32

16

Greg Biffle

13

22

114.261

33

21

* Ryan Blaney #

17

26

114.222

34

83

Dylan Lupton (i)

15

24

113.740

35

15

Clint Bowyer

23

32

112.406

Car must run 10 consecutive laps on the track to be included in the above chart.
*Required to qualify on time, (i) Ineligible for driver points in this series, # Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate

RELATED: Practice 1 results | Final practice results

 

Casey Mears set the pace in final NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice Friday afternoon at Richmond International Raceway.

Mears steered the Germain Racing No. 13 Chevrolet to a best lap of 120.557 mph on the .75-mile track in final preparation for Saturday night’s Federated Auto Parts 400 (7:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM). Saturday’s regular-season finale will determine the 16-driver field for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoffs.

Kyle Larson posted the second-fastest lap in the 85-minute session at 120.096 mph with the Chip Ganassi Racing No. 42 Chevrolet. Martin Truex Jr., last weekend’s winner at Darlington Raceway, turned the third-fastest lap (119.808 mph) in the Furniture Row Racing No. 78 Toyota.

Jamie McMurray, currently clinging to the last playoff spot on the provisional Chase grid, was fourth-fastest (119.665 mph) in the Ganassi No. 1 Chevrolet. Tony Stewart, a three-time Richmond winner, completed the top five at 119.612 mph in the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 14 Chevy.

Jeff Gordon, making another substitute start as Dale Earnhardt Jr. continues to sit out with concussion-related issues, was 14-fastest in the Hendrick Motorsports No. 88 Chevrolet.

Defending Sprint Cup champion Kyle Busch, who was fastest in opening practice Friday morning, was 17th-fastest in the afternoon session in the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 Toyota.

Coors Light Pole Qualifying for Saturday’s 400-lapper is scheduled Friday at 5:45 p.m. ET (NBCSN).

 

Kyle Busch fastest in opening practice

 

Kyle Busch topped the leaderboard in Friday’s first Sprint Cup Series practice at Richmond International Raceway at 120.979 mph in the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

‘Rowdy’ has four wins at the 0.75-mile Virginia track and a sterling 6.9 average finish in 22 starts. 

Right behind him was last week’s Darlington Raceway winner Martin Truex Jr. in the No. 78 Furniture Row Racing Toyota at 120.649 mph. 

Rounding out the top five were Denny Hamlin in the No. 11 JGR Toyota, Kasey Kahne in the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet and Matt Kenseth in the No. 20 JGR Toyota. 

Series points leader Kevin Harvick was 13th fastest with a speed of 119.105 mph in the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet.

Editor’s note: NASCAR.com will celebrate Fan Appreciation Weekend by making all premium features free in the NASCAR Mobile App. Those features include driver audio, in-car cameras and live, real-time telemetry.

 

The driver who finishes first in Saturday night’s Federated Auto Parts 400 race won’t be the only winner this weekend at Richmond International Raceway.

 

As part of NASCAR’s inaugural Fan Appreciation weekend, more than one lucky fan will have the opportunity to go home with prizes like an iPad Mini, or even a fire suit worn by Miss Sprint Cup.

 

“I’m really excited about everything we have this weekend to recognize the fans. They are the heart-and-soul of this sport and the reason we’re so passionate about what we do,” Richmond International Raceway President Dennis Bickmeier said. “This goes far beyond Richmond International Raceway, as the entire industry has jumped on board to say ‘Thank You, Fans’.”

 

The prizes have been donated from companies and teams like XFINITY, Monster, Roush Fenway Racing, Sprint, and MARS.

 

The prizes will be awarded to both fans at the track and watching at home through the RIR mobile app, @RIRinsider on social media and www.rir.com.

 

The prize giveaways are in addition to the fan experiences already in place, such as Gridside Live! and premium fan upgrades in the Midway at displays like Chevy, Coca-Cola and Sprint.

 

While the bulk of fan appreciation-related activities will take place on Saturday, kids will be the ones getting the recognition on Friday, before the Virginia529 College Savings 250 NASCAR XFINITY Series race.

 

The first 50 kids 12-and-under who stop by the RIR Kids Club Tent on the Midway will have the chance to take part in the Kids’ High-Five Tunnel with their favorite NASCAR XFINITY Series drivers during driver introductions for the Virginia529 College Savings 250 NASCAR XFINITY Series race. In addition, one lucky kid will present the NBC12 pole award to the driver with the fastest time in qualifying. 

 

“Providing a fun and entertaining experience for all fans is a priority,” Bickmeier said. “Opportunities to put young fans in the center of the sport, like we are doing with some of the kids-related activities during Fan Appreciation Weekend, provides a strong connection to NASCAR in a fun and educational environment.”

 

Kids can also visit the Virginia529 Kids Zone, where children and their parents can enjoy games, crafts and science experiments.

 

As in years past, all children 12-and-under are admitted free to the Virginia529 College Savings 250 with a paying adult.

 

For the latest news, weekend schedules, and behind-the-scenes exclusive content, follow @RIRInsider on social media. Searching #ThanksFans is the fastest way to stay up-to-date with latest Fan Appreciation Race news from around the sport including NASCAR, partners, media, and other fans.

 

Tickets for the Who’s Your Driver NASCAR race weekend at Richmond International Raceway are still available for purchase.

 

The action starts Friday with US Department of Veteran Affairs Pole Qualifying for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and continues with the Virgina529 College Savings 250 NASCAR XFINITY Series race. On Saturday night, the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series takes to the track for the Federated Auto Parts 400 at 7:30 p.m. The race marks the last chance for drivers to clinch a spot in NASCAR’s Chase for the Sprint Cup. To purchase tickets call 866-455-RACE or visit www.rir.com.

RELATED: Full race results | Updated series standings | Chase Grid

SHOP: Busch gear


RICHMOND, Va. — With one ferociously fast pit stop, Kyle Busch erased a lackluster qualifying effort and cruised to victory in Friday night’s Virginia529 College Savings 250 at Richmond International Raceway.

A master at getting on and off pit road in minimal time, Busch entered the pits in fourth place under the first caution of the race after a tap from J.J. Yeley sent Justin Marks spinning into the frontstretch grass on Lap 48.

Busch was first off pit road — decisively — and at that point it was game over, thanks for playing, and Busch was well on the way to his sixth NASCAR XFINITY Series victory at Richmond, his eighth in 14 starts this season and the 84th of his career, extending his own gargantuan series record.

“I never would have guessed that,” Busch exulted on the team radio before he started his celebratory burnout. “Great pit stop! Awesome!”

Before the second caution flew on Lap 164 of 250, Busch had a lead of 7.312 seconds and had lapped up to eighth place in the running order before a cycle of green-flag stops began.

Busch finished 6.453 seconds ahead of Joe Gibbs Racing teammate and runner-up Erik Jones, who ran the same setup Busch had in his No. 18 Toyota. The victory marked a decisive return to form for the reigning NASCAR Sprint Cup champion, who had crashed out of his two previous XFINITY races.

“I just doubted our car today,” said Busch, who led 197 laps and scored a perfect driver rating of 150.0. “It just wasn’t right. We just kind of missed it all through practice. It wasn’t good there, and then we qualified, and it was just a handful in qualifying. We didn’t qualify very well — seventh. That’s not very well for my expectations.

“We worked on it there at the start of the race. We were really out of control and loose, and I got to fourth, I thought that was kind where we were going to be. But my guys had an awesome pit stop, got me out front, and (crew chief) Chris Gayle made some really smart adjustments to it that first time on pit road.

“After that, it was lights out. It was on a rail from there.”

Jones could only admire the skill of his more experienced teammate —  when he was close enough to see Busch ahead of him, that is. 

“Not much to say,” said Jones, whose two laps led during a cycle of green-flag pit stops constituted the only interruption to Busch’s charge to the finish. “He had the same setup as us. He’s just that good. It’s unfortunate. We’ve run second to him a number of times this year.

“I wish all those were wins, but we’ve been getting stronger every time.”

Brad Keselowski ran third, followed by XFINITY regulars Elliott Sadler, the series leader, and Justin Allgaier. Ty Dillon, polesitter Austin Dillon, Daniel Suarez, Alex Bowman and Brennan Poole completed the top 10.

Ryan Reed, the last driver to finish on the lead lap, clinched a spot in the inaugural XFINITY Series Chase with an 11th-place run, leaving two berths still open heading to the Sept. 17 cutoff race at Chicagoland Speedway.

RELATED: Starting lineup | See every car in the field


RICHMOND, Va. – Don’t tell Denny Hamlin his first pole of the season isn’t significant.

In the money round of Friday’s knockout qualifying session, the driver of the No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota toured .75-mile Richmond International Raceway in 22.069 seconds (122.344 mph) to earn the top starting spot for Saturday night’s Federated Auto Parts 400 (7:30 p.m. ET on NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio), the final race in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series regular season.

“I thought for sure we had too many laps on our tires,” said Hamlin, who qualified in the top 10 for the 24th consecutive race. “A lot of the guys that we were challenging only had one lap per session, but my car didn’t really come in that quick, so I had to run multiple laps.

“And on a short track that wears out tires, I thought we were at a huge disadvantage. Just proud of the effort. … And, obviously, running that fast for that many laps tells us we have a really good car for the long runs. So pretty optimistic, and we’ll see if we can’t get a win.”

Though Hamlin edged Kyle Larson by .010 seconds to earn his first Coors Light Pole Award of 2016, his third at Richmond and the 24th of his career, the real drama of Friday afternoon involved drivers who qualified deeper in the field—in some cases, much deeper.

Pocono winner Chris Buescher, who is fighting to stay in the top 30 in the standings and thereby earn a Chase spot, qualified a disappointing 31st. Adding to the stress of the driver of the No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford was the qualifying performance of David Ragan, who is 31st in points and immediately behind Buescher.

Ragan was 19th fastest in the first round of knockout qualifying, 12 positions better than Buescher. The problem? Buescher is just 11 points ahead of Ragan entering Saturday’s race, with each position worth one point. Ragan slipped to 21st in the second round and failed to advance, meaning he’ll start the No. 23 BK Racing Toyota 10 spots on the grid ahead of Buescher—too far for the rookie driver to enjoy a comfortable night’s sleep.

Buescher also can stay in the top 30 if he finishes 10 spots ahead of Landon Cassill, his teammate.

“That’s not where we wanted to be in qualifying with our CSX Ford Fusion,” Buescher said. “We were a little better than we were last time here, so there is a little bit of positive to it, believe it or not. We’ll be able to work our way up.

“At the end of the day, this weekend is about something bigger. We’re trying to stay out of trouble and be there at the end. It won’t be an easy walk from where we are at right now, but we’ll be able to work our way up.”

RELATED: How bubble drivers fare at Richmond

Jamie McMurray (122.189 mph) took control of another important head-to-head matchup, making the final round of qualifying and earning the fourth starting spot. The last driver currently in a Chase-eligible position on points, McMurray enters Saturday’s race with a 22-point advantage over Ryan Newman, whose effort stalled in the second round.

Hit with a 15-point penalty on Wednesday after his No. 31 Chevrolet failed the laser inspection station after Sunday’s race at Darlington, Newman will start 15th, likely needing a victory to advance to the Chase.

“Well, it’s a really big weekend for us, but more than that, I’m just thrilled how both of our cars are running,” said McMurray, Larson’s teammate at Chip Ganassi Racing. “We’ve just made such big improvements. 

“We ran good at a two-mile track at Michigan. We ran good at Darlington with a different rules package, and we’ve run good at a short track. As an organization, it’s been really good, and the next 10 races, if we can get in, it’s going to be pretty awesome, because our cars have peaked at the right time.”

Austin Dillon, who starts on Saturday nine points ahead of McMurray, took a significant step toward his first-ever Chase spot with an eighth-place qualifying effort at 121.638 mph. At the other end of the spectrum, another driver likely to experience a sleepless night is Chase Elliott, who qualified 34th in his No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.

Elliott starts the night eight points ahead of Dillon and 17 ahead of McMurray. All three drivers share one hope, however—that there’s not a new 2016 winner currently outside the Chase grid to reduce the number of Chase spots available on points from three to two (assuming Buescher remains in the top 30).

RELATED: Elliott positive despite career-worst starting spot

“We’re just not going fast enough, for sure,” Elliott said after failing to reach the second round. “I really don’t know what our problem is, but we struggled in our mock runs earlier today, too. So, we just need to think about it, I guess, and try to go to work tonight.

“We’re giving it our best effort. It just hasn’t been where we need to be. The bad news is that it’s a terrible starting spot; but the good news is that it’s a long race tomorrow night. We have some teammates that are fast, so hopefully we can lean on them and try to get our Chevrolet a little better.”

Matt Kenseth, Hamlin’s teammate, qualified third. Kurt Busch, who paced the first two rounds, slipped to fifth in the session that decided the starting order of the top 12.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. —  International Speedway Corporation (NASDAQ Global Select Market: ISCA; OTC Bulletin Board: ISCB) (“ISC”) today announced that it has named Rick Brenner as President of Michigan International Speedway (“MIS”) effective Monday, September 19. Brenner accepts the role, making a move from Minor League Baseball (MiLB) to motorsports.

“We are proud to announce Rick Brenner as President of Michigan International Speedway,” stated ISC Chief Operating Officer Joie Chitwood. “He is a seasoned sports executive who is well positioned to lead Michigan International Speedway into the future. We welcome him to the ISC family and look forward to the great things he will accomplish within our company.”


Brenner most recently served as President of DSF Sports and Entertainment for more than 10 years, the company that owns the New Hampshire Fisher Cats. In that role, Brenner managed all facets of the multi-unit business as well as leading the design and construction of the Bowling Green Ballpark.


Prior to DSF, Brenner spent six of his 11 years with the Trenton Thunder as Chief Operating Officer and General Manager. Brenner earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Plymouth State University in Plymouth, New Hampshire.

One play, one stop.  A kick and punt return — or five lugnuts and four tires. Football, air gun.

The differences between NASCAR pit stops and the game of football are striking — but according to former Virginia Tech place holder and current No. 11 gas man/engineer Caleb Hurd, the mentality is the same.


Tough.


“You can go out there and block a punt or something and spin the whole game around,” Hurd said Aug. 19 at Bristol Motor Speedway, site of Saturday’s Battle at Bristol between the Hokies and University of Tennessee. “So that’s the way pit stops work. You can blow the race, you can help the race, you can be a non-factor … So the mentality is the same — you just focus on your next job. Think small, don’t think about the big picture because you don’t have to.


“And you’ve just got to be mentally tough.”


Mentally tough has been a mantra of Hurd’s for two decades: He began his collegiate athletic career playing football under beloved head coach Frank Beamer at Tech from 1996-99. During that period, the Hokies went 37-11, making appearances at the Orange Bowl in 1996 and the national championship under the leadership of quarterback Michael Vick in the 1999 Sugar Bowl (played in 2000).


“My first year it was awesome to go to the Orange Bowl when I was a freshman because growing up, it was like the biggest thing in the world,” the Pulaski, Virgina, native said. We played Nebraska, who was just coming off a national title. So that was like an introduction to the big leagues a little bit.


“And of course, the national championship game, just to be a part of it, even though we didn’t get to win. We were with Vick, we were leading in the fourth quarter … Just the crowd, the excitement … It was just a lot of fun. A lot of rings out of the deal, so that’s cool.”


Since moving into NASCAR full-time as an engineer and pit crew member in 2001, Hurd’s ring collection has grown quite a bit: He started his racing endeavor interning with Hendrick Motorsports‘ engineering department as a college student. Upon graduation, he began working double-duty as an engineer and pit performer with Jimmie Johnson‘s newly formed crew and then Jeff Gordon‘s No. 24 crew before ultimately moving to Joe Gibbs Racing with 2016 Daytona 500 winner Denny Hamlin’s No. 11 car.

“I was kind of a local guy growing up near Virginia Tech so I just liked racing in general,” Hurd said. “So that’s why I went to Virginia Tech to get an engineering degree — I didn’t know if I would get in NASCAR, but that was my goal. And playing football, when they had the pit crew tryouts for Jimmie Johnson‘s team, it was an opportunity to stay on the sports side of the sport, versus just the engineering.


“It’s kind of like being a scholar athlete still, I get to do my engineering job during the week and get to come out here on weekends and have a little fun going over the wall.”


Hurd’s entrance into the sport was interesting, as teams around that time were just starting to use pit crew members that were first athletes — rather than shop mechanics who moonlighted as pit performers.


“(My first year) I was on a team with mechanics and stuff and I was the first kind of guy that did an athletic sport first and came in to do this,” Hurd said. “Then, (I) was at Hendrick when the transition happened to just start recruiting these guys and train them to do pit stops.


“It’s not like other sports where you learn it in high school and then college. You don’t learn pit stops until you start doing pit stops. You have the athletic ability, but you definitely have to learn the craft to go along with it. If you can do both, you definitely have a big career ahead of you.


“But luckily the craft is so important to it, that’s why some of us old guys are still around,” Hurd said with a smile.


Hurd’s worlds of NASCAR and college football will merge in a different light when the Battle at Bristol — a face-off between Hurd’s Hokies and the Tennessee Volunteers — takes place at Bristol Motor Speedway on Sept. 10.

For someone who went from dressing in maroon and orange uniforms to putting on a fire suit each weekend, Hurd believes the gameday atmosphere will be similar to a NASCAR event at the Last Great Colosseum.


“I’m curious how much crowd noise can actually be generated,” Hurd said of Bristol’s deafening reputation. “I feel like it should be pretty loud, so I’m sure it will be. But when we get racing, we don’t hear the crowd anymore — it’s usually blocked out at that point.


“… I’ll be checking scores and crossing fingers.”