RELATED: All the 2016 throwback paint schemes | Buy tickets | Vote now


HScott Motorsports unveiled the throwback paint schemes that Clint Bowyer (No. 15 Chevrolet) and Michael Annett (No. 46 Chevrolet) will sport at Darlington Raceway for next week’s Bojangles’ Southern 500 (Sept. 4, 6 p.m. ET, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Bowyer’s car honors 2017 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee Benny Parsons. The paint scheme sponsored by 5-hour Energy features Parsons’ name just below the net opening and photos of the racer on the hood. The scheme itself is a tribute to the L.G. DeWitt deep-orange with blue wheels ride from Parsons’ championship season of 1973. 

Parsons compiled 21 premier series wins over a 21-year career. Parsons was named one of NASCAR’s 50 Greatest Drivers in 1998. Parsons also transitioned into television work following his NASCAR career, commentating for NBC and TNT until his passing in 2007, at the age of 65.




Annett’s car pays tribute to the logos of sponsor Pilot Flying J.


RELATED: Full practice results | Top 10 consecutive lap averages

Denny Hamlin set the pace in final NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice Saturday at Michigan International Speedway, but damaged his Joe Gibbs Racing No. 11 Toyota in a spin midway through the session.


Hamlin, who qualified third in Friday’s Coors Light Pole Qualifying, clocked a lap of 197.878 mph in Saturday’s final practice. The session, originally scheduled for 50 minutes, was halted with approximately 27 minutes left because of lightning in the area of the 2-mile track.


Hamlin told NBCSN that the car got loose “out of the blue” as he navigated Turn 4. He avoided contact with the wall, but did slight damage when the nose of his car dug into the grass bordering the frontstretch. Hamlin indicated the team did not expect to deploy the reserve car.


RELATED: All the cars at Michigan as they’ll line up


Rookie Chase Elliott was second-fastest at 197.786 mph in the Hendrick Motorsports No. 24 Chevrolet. He was followed by two Hendrick teammates on the leaderboard — third-fastest Jimmie Johnson (197.694 mph) and fourth-best Kasey Kahne (197.455 mph).


Michigan native Brad Keselowski completed the top five in the final prep for Sunday’s Pure Michigan 400 (2 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM). Team Penske teammate Joey Logano, who secured the Coors Light Pole Award in Friday qualifying, was seventh-fastest.


Alex Bowman, subbing for Dale Earnhardt Jr. in the Hendrick Motorsports No. 88 Chevrolet, was 10th-fastest at 196.969 mph.


Stewart atop Saturday’s early practice


Tony Stewart topped the speed chart in Saturday’s morning NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice session at Michigan International Speedway ahead of Sunday’s Pure Michigan 400 (2 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Stewart circled the 2-mile track in his No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet with a fast time of 202.122 mph to pace the 55-minute practice session. “Smoke” has one win in the Irish Hills in 33 starts there.

Sunoco Rookie of the Year contenders Ryan Blaney (No. 21 Wood Brothers Racing Ford, 201.427 mph) and Chase Elliott (No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, 201.196 mph) came in second and third, respectively. Both drivers are in search of their first win in the sport’s top series.

Kurt Busch (No. 41 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet, 201.089 mph) and Kyle Larson (No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates Chevrolet, 200.932 mph) completed the top five.

Alex Bowman, who will pilot the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet for the sidelined Dale Earnhardt Jr. this weekend, placed eighth in practice. All told, 12 drivers crossed the 200 mph mark on their laps Saturday morning.

Polesitter Joey Logano placed 16th in the session.


RESULTS: Practice 1 | Practice 2 | Practice 3

 

Average speeds for drivers running 10 or more consecutive laps in NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice at Michigan International Speedway:

Practice 1

Pos Car Driver From Lap To Lap Avg Speed
1 42   Kyle Larson 1 10 194.178
2 14     Tony Stewart 1 10 193.710

Practice 2

Pos Car Driver From Lap To Lap Avg Speed
1 18 Kyle Busch 2 11 199.713
2 48 Jimmie Johnson 1 10 199.578
3 88 Alex Bowman(i) 2 11 199.403
4 5 Kasey Kahne 1 10 198.817
5 1 Jamie McMurray 10 19 198.165
6 19 Carl Edwards 10 19 198.115
7 24 Chase Elliott # 2 11 197.939
8 4 Kevin Harvick 10 19 197.802
9 2 Brad Keselowski 14 23 197.462
10 15 Clint Bowyer 1 10 197.177
11 83 Matt DiBenedetto 1 10 192.298

 

Practice 3

Pos Car Driver From Lap To Lap Avg Speed
1 42 Kyle Larson 1 10 196.346
2 24 Chase Elliott 1 10 196.015
3 48 Jimmie Johnson 1 10 195.995
4 5 Kasey Kahne 1 10 195.789
5 47 AJ Allmendinger 1 10 195.703
6 1 Jamie McMurray 1 10 195.514
7 41 Kurt Busch 1 10 195.442
8 31 Ryan Newman 1 10 195.322
9 20 Matt Kenseth 1 10 194.883

*Required to qualify on time, (i) Ineligible for driver points in this series, #Rookie

RELATED: Full race results | Standings


BROOKLYN, Mich. — In five NASCAR Camping World Truck Series starts, Brett Moffitt had never led a lap.

But in Saturday’s Careers for Veterans 200 at Michigan International Speedway, Moffitt picked the perfect time to take the point for the first time.

Powering around Red Horse Racing teammate Timothy Peters and five-time series winner William Byron off the second corner of the final lap at the two-mile track, Moffitt held off Peters by .098 seconds to win a NASCAR national series race for the first time.

Moffitt’s victory, however, left Shane Huffman, Peters’ crew chief, slapping his seat on the pit box in frustration. Peters, who led a race-high 42 laps, could have locked himself into the inaugural Camping World Truck Series Chase with a victory. Running a limited schedule this season, Moffitt is ineligible for the championship this year.

But Moffitt made no apologies for taking advantage of the opportunity that presented itself when Byron pushed Peters into Turn 3 on the white-flag lap, cut to the inside and slowed both trucks down. Moffitt cruised around the outside off Turn 2 on the final lap and kept Peters behind him.

“I’m here to win,” Moffitt said. “I said it earlier and I’ll say it again. I’m not going to wreck him (Peters) for it. I’m going to race him clean because I know he needs to get in the Chase, but this team needs to win and these guys deserve to win.

“That’s what we come to do, and our partners at Toyota want to do the same, and we got it.”

Daniel Hemric passed Byron on the last lap to come home third, with Byron following in fourth and Cameron Hayley in fifth.

The good news for both Peters and Hemric was the wide margin both drivers opened over their closest pursuers in the race to make the Chase. Though winless this year, Hemric and Peters lead Cameron Hayley by 55 and 47 points, respectively, in the battle for the last two Chase spots.

If no new winner surfaces in the final two regular-season races, both Hemric and Peters are highly likely to qualify on points.

“It’s a good day for Red Horse Racing,” Peters said. “Congrats to Brett Moffitt. One-two finish. I wish we were ‘one,’ but all in all, the company brings the trophy back. The 9 (Byron) locked onto our bumper there in Turn 2 and pushed us really hard down into Turn 3.

“We had to do all we had to do to stay in front. … Tough to swallow right there, but it felt good to run the way we did all day.”

Both Cole Custer and Tyler Reddick entered the race needing to win to make the Chase. Reddick’s Ford bounced off the side of Johhny Sauter’s Chevrolet on Lap 70 and sustained heavy damage during contact with the Turn 3 wall.

Custer, however, had the lead for a restart on Lap 84, only to lose control and spin into the Turn 4 wall, grazing the left rear of Moffitt’s No. 11 Toyota in the process.

“We didn’t have the raw speed of the guys up front, but it drove pretty well, and it was hard to keep those guys off of me,” Custer said. “The 11 (Moffitt) stopped pushing me — which it’s his right to do that.

“We were kind of losing the 17 (Peters) there. He (Moffitt) went to the outside and I started getting tight. Once he got on my door, I got loose and over-corrected it. I just hate it for my guys that brought a great truck.”

Like Hayley, Custer and Reddick will have two more chances to force their way into the Chase by winning one of the final two regular-season races.

ELKHART LAKE, Wis. — Alex Tagliani has made a handful of NASCAR starts across the XFINITY and Camping World Truck Series over the past several years, remaining winless despite often, if not always, looking like the man to beat.

 

Being the accomplished road course ace that he is — along with the horsepower and backing from Team Penske/Brad Keselowski Racing that he’s enjoyed since 2014 — you can typically count on the 42-year-old to start up front, and stay there.

 

A third career Coors Light Pole for Saturday’s Road America 180 Fired Up by Johnsonville at Road America — in just his eighth XFINITY start — once again put Tagliani in prime position to compete for his first NASCAR national series victory, but once again he came up short.

 

For the second consecutive year, his sole XFINITY start was foiled by contact from the eventual race winner. Last year it was Regan Smith at Mid-Ohio; Michael McDowell was Saturday’s culprit.

 

With 17 laps remaining in the 48-lap event (extended three laps by overtime), Tagliani — who’d led a dominating 17 laps already at that point — retook the lead from Erik Jones, only to be spun after left-rear contact from the No. 2 of McDowell in Turn 5. He was relegated to 30th place after the contact, having to battle back to salvage a seventh-place finish.

 

“I could basically say what I want to say, but I don’t know if it’s going to matter at the end,” Tagliani told NASCAR.com on pit road following the race. “I think the 2 realized that we were the car to beat and it’s unfortunate he presents himself to take us out, and he did it to take away some competition from him. In those instances, I’m a firm believer that you have to resist the temptation of doing it, but it seems in this world, in this series, in this sport, everything goes.

 

“I think I should try to play smarter and drive him that way. At that time, instead of trying to fight clean with the 2 and give him a hard time and try to be creative and try to go around me, I should’ve let him go by and do what he did to me and take away the competition. It crossed my mind, but I said ‘Walk, man.’ Because other than the 2, there was nobody else that could touch us. After what I saw, I should’ve. Should’ve, could’ve, but it’s not the way you win races.”

 

Looking at the replay, it’s tough to tell whether or not McDowell should’ve lifted, or Tagliani shouldn’t have dove into the corner, but it was evident neither driver was willing to budge. Particularly after some prior in-race contact between the two.

 

Regardless, McDowell — while implying in his post-race press conference that he was in a bit of a damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don’t situation — stands by his declaration that the spin was not intentional.

 

“No, it wasn’t intentional; I wasn’t intentionally doing it, but at the same time I was clearly in there and I wasn’t really sure what he was doing when he came across the nose … ” the Richard Childress Racing driver said. “… I don’t know. I didn’t see the replay yet. The 22 and I had a little run-in earlier in the race and basically I kept putting my nose in and he kept slamming the door. He went wide in Turn 5 and I got underneath the 42 (Justin Marks) and 22 and I was alongside of him and he decided just to turn in. Once we made contact, I just came off the brake and pushed him out of the way. The reason I did that is because had I not, I would’ve been stuck there, too, and I would’ve gotten ran over. Once he committed to turn in and I was on the inside, we already made the contact.

 

“But I haven’t seen a replay. A lot of times, I watch the replay and I go, ‘Yeah, yeah, yeah, I was right.’ And a lot of times I go, ‘Oh, gosh … ‘ I hope it’s not an ‘Oh, gosh’ moment. But by no means did I come out of Turn 5 and be like ‘Here’s my shot. I’m going to wipe him out.’ That wasn’t the case at all. I got a run and went underneath him and when he slammed his door, I wasn’t expecting him to slam the door.”

 

McDowell now heads to Michigan International Speedway, where he will race in Sunday’s Sprint Cup Series race.

RELATED: Reddick tops final practice at Michigan

BROOKLYN, Mich. — As the owner of a two-truck organization, Brad Keselowski has more than a passing interest in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.

That interest increased exponentially this weekend as the series visits Michigan International Speedway.

The 2-mile track hosts Saturday’s Careers for Veterans 200, a collaborative sponsorship effort between Cooper Standard and Keselowski’s own Checkered Flag Foundation.

Cooper Standard, which has been affiliated with Keselowski since 2011, is also the primary sponsor for the organization’s No. 29 Ford driven by Tyler Reddick, one of two entries fielded by Brad Keselowski Racing. Teammate Daniel Hemric competes in the No. 19 Ford.

The Careers for Veterans program, run by Cooper Standard, provides career opportunities for military veterans as well as those transitioning from active service. It’s an endeavor embraced by Keselowski’s Checkered Flag Foundation as well.

“It started through my foundation, which has some similar efforts helping members of the community,” Keselowski said of the sponsorship association. “Careers for Veterans is one of those examples. It kind of grew into this relationship — ‘Hey, we’re both from Michigan, we both have the same goals and initiatives. What can we put together?’ “

Keselowski, the 2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion, hails from Rochester Hills, Michigan. Cooper Standard, based in Novi, Michigan, specializes in the production and marketing of various automotive components and systems.

Keselowski competes for Team Penske and is used to dealing with a variety of sponsors and understands their various goals. The connection between Cooper Standard and his foundation, “is not your typical pact,” he said.

“Usually there are B-to-B (business-to-business) plays, marketing plays, but usually it’s not foundation-related,” he said.

“The way Cooper Standard allows me to give back to the sport is two-fold. One, it’s with the race team, the people that are on it that have a spot to work and hopefully grow and prosper whether it be for their families or their future career which is something I enjoy immensely.

“But also I get the chance to connect the foundation to what I do which is very difficult. I think it’s very important to show to others that we have a commitment to looking out to others who are less fortunate or have had some tough times.

“I think that’s an important part of the sport, the ability to realize and acknowledge how well off we have it and to try to … be an example of that realization and efforts to do something with it.”

The race sponsorship at MIS has been in place since 2014. Keselowski said 3,000 guests of Cooper Standard will be on hand this weekend for the event.

Reddick, 10th in points, said everyone in the organization understands the added importance of this weekend’s race.

“This is my first year of driving (with Cooper Standard sponsorship), but I’ve been a part of this team long enough to know how important it is to everybody,” he said. “It goes unsaid.

“Everyone understands and knows what this race means to Brad and Cooper Standard, all the veterans that will be here and all the ones watching at home.

“We all understand what we have to do and hopefully we can go do just that.”

RELATED: Exclusive look at the ThorSport shop in Ohio

SANDUSKY, Ohio — No matter what happens from here on out, win or lose, championship or bust, ThorSport Racing officials likely will look back on the 2016 season as something of a rebirth.

It’s been a year in which the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series organization has literally risen from the ashes.

Cut short just seven races into the season by a raging fire that damaged much of the team’s race shop, the company marched on, spent weeks working piecemeal out of everything from the parking lot of a former grocery store to a section of bays inside a custom trailer manufacturing facility.

Each off-site venue was within roughly a five-mile radius of the team’s 100,000-square-foot home base. Each was also an example of a small, tight-knit community reaching out to help in any way possible.

ThorSport, owned by Duke and Rhonda Thorson, has fielded entries in the Camping World Truck Series since 1996, the second year of the series’ existence. Today, four teams run out of the large cream-colored building — the No. 88 Toyota Tundra of two-time series champion Matt Crafton, the No. 13 of Cameron Hayley, the No. 41 of Ben Rhodes and the No. 98 of Rico Abreu. Rhodes and Abreu are Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidates.

But for six weeks, the four teams and approximately 85 employees worked “old school,” minus many of the technological necessities prevalent throughout all three of NASCAR’s national series. They did so while traveling to and competing at Iowa and St. Louis, Kentucky and Eldora.

Walk into the shop today and you might not realize the place had been filled with smoke “so thick you couldn’t see your hand in front of your face,” one first responder recalled on Thursday, or that water was “up to our knees in most places, and running out of the hauler bays in back like a river,” said another.

But the smell tells another story.

“There were times,” said Jim Johnson, captain of the Perkins Township Fire Department, “I thought we were going to lose the entire building.”

Johnson was the first to arrive on the scene, just after midnight on Monday, June 13. Assuming it was nothing more than a small brush fire out back of the team’s headquarters, he said he quickly realized the severity of the situation and alerted departments from nearby townships as well as Sandusky. Three other localities and 47 firefighters quickly responded.

The fire, which began outside behind the main building, had spread up the rear wall and then began moving beneath the rubber-sealed roof.

The rear portion, which housed a fabrication area and machine shop, had to be knocked down in order for firemen to get to the blaze. Johnson said it took approximately 500,000 gallons of water to finally extinguish the fire.

Most equipment was quickly removed from the shop — a large grassy area outside was soon filled with race trucks, pit boxes and assorted tools.

There were no injuries and, surprisingly, no race vehicles were damaged to the extent that they had to be discarded.

While ThorSport teams regrouped and continued to focus on racing, workers began the process of renovating the shop. Walls, blackened by smoke and damaged by water, were torn down to the studs and rebuilt. New wiring was installed. Eventually, equipment was brought back in. And what little remained of the destroyed rear portion, about 25,000 square feet of shop space, was hauled away.

The organization was slowed, perhaps, but not stopped.

“We can’t use (the fire) as an excuse to under-achieve,” ThorSport General Manager David Pepper said.

Today, trucks in various states of assembly sit on the pristine shop floor. Work has resumed in a building, a former slaughterhouse that was first put into use by the group in 2011.

“Duke and Rhonda have given us our biggest, best resource you could possibly ask for to win races, and we’ve proven we can do that from here,” Carl “Junior” Joiner, crew chief for Crafton, said. “Not having it, you were lost.

“At this level, you need resources like this to win and we didn’t have that for a long time.”

The smell, less strong now, still lingers inside the shop. Inside some of the trucks, too.

“We still have to put air fresheners in some of them because of the stench,” he said.

It is not only a reminder of what happened, but how far the organization has come in such a short period of time.

“When something bad happens, my father always told me, ‘Well kid, it builds character.’ And I know that we’re going to be stronger from it,” Joiner said. “I know we will.”

RELATED: Full timeline of Junior’s injury


BROOKLYN, Mich. — Alex Bowman is just like every 23 year old, balancing the ins and outs of a new career as a young adult.


He was pulled away from his day job this week when he was asked to fill in for Dale Earnhardt Jr. — who continues to recover from concussion-like symptoms — for Sunday’s Pure Michigan 400 (2 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).


And where is his day job? Bowman said Friday during his media availability at Michigan International Speedway that he spends his Tuesdays and Thursdays at Hendrick Motorsports working in the simulation department.



“They’re pretty flexible when you tell them that you’ve got to drive the No. 88 car and that you need to leave a couple of hours early to get to the airport, Bowman said with a laugh. “… And (the job) kind of keeps me relevant at HMS and I get to learn a lot and still be part of a race team even though I’m not driving every week. So, it’s been really cool and I’m just as thankful for that opportunity as I am for this.”


This weekend marks the second time Bowman will wheel the No. 88 Chevrolet in place of Earnhardt. He made his debut at July’s New Hampshire Motor Speedway Sprint Cup Series event, where he finished 26th after a late tire rub.

He will lineup for the weekend’s main event in the sixth position — the best starting position of his career — following Friday afternoon’s three-round qualifying session.


It is unclear whether Bowman will be back in the HMS entry for a third time this year with Jeff Gordon taking over driver responsibilities for next weekend’s Bojangles’ Southern 500, but he’s there if his employer needs him.


“We’ll just have to see Dale’s timeline, but I’m definitely happy to get in the car whenever needed,” said.

BROOKLYN, Mich. — Swapping his Front Row Motorsports fire suit for a Snap Fitness T-shirt, a pair of athletic shorts and sneakers, Landon Cassill stood at Michigan International Speedway‘s start/finish line ready to take his daily workout to the 2-mile track and turn some laps Friday morning — on foot.


Donning sunglasses and handling his 1-year-old son Beckham via stroller, the No. 38 wheelman wore his signature smile, eager for some cardio before driver duties called.


“I feel like I get out more than most of the other race car drivers,” Cassill told NASCAR.com, admitting that he even tries to get in a “bike ride Saturday afternoons.”


All of this is to help the 27-year-old train for his various competitions, which include triathlons and other races. Cassill recently spent a rare off weekend in Ireland to compete in a half Ironman (a 1.2-mile swim, 56-mile bike ride and a 13.1-mile run) on Aug. 14.


His answer was simple when asked why he traveled to Europe for the 70.3-mile race instead of enjoying some hard-earned downtime.


“It’s just my hobby. I really look forward to it. … (We) made a vacation of it.”


His “hobby” correlates nicely with his primary sponsor, Snap Fitness, and helps the six-year NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver as he balances his racing career on top of his off-track interests.


“Snap really supports what I do,” he furthered while jogging toward Turn 1. “They give me the resources to train on the road because their fitness centers are open 24 hours.”


When Cassill isn’t racing by foot and bike or behind the wheel, he is connecting with his fans on social media, making sure his personality comes across on his time line — from his token “38, nice” slogan to adorable shots of his young family.


And with no upcoming Ironman races planned, Cassill can now focus solely on his driving responsibilities as he gears up for Sunday’s Pure Michigan 400 (2 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).


Race day, however, presumably will commence with a workout before he gets behind the wheel.