WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — Four-time NASCAR champion Jeff Gordon officially made his 800th NASCAR premier series start Sunday, taking the green flag at Watkins Glen International.

Gordon made his 24th start at the 2.45-mile road course in Sunday’s Cheez-It 355 at The Glen (USA, MRN, SiriusXM), substituting for the third consecutive week in the Hendrick Motorsports No. 88 Chevrolet as Dale Earnhardt Jr. recovers from concussion-related symptoms.

The green flag also marked big milestones from two other drivers. Matt Kenseth, driver of the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 20 Toyota, made his 600th start in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. Michael McDowell, in the Circle Sport-Leavine Family Racing, made his 200th premier-series appearance.

Gordon, who turned 45 on Thursday, becomes the ninth driver in NASCAR history to hit the 800-start plateau in stock-car racing’s top division. Of the eight drivers ahead of him on the all-time list, five are inductees to the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

Kenseth becomes the second driver to cross the 600-start barrier this season. The retiring Tony Stewart also achieved the milestone, making start No. 600 at Kentucky Speedway on July 9.

During the driver meetings prior to Sunday’s Cheez-It 355, Watkins Glen International President Michael Printup announced a grandstand sellout for the second consecutive season.

 

“This is a great testament to the passion and dedication our fans have for Watkins Glen International,” Printup said. “We’re looking forward to a great race and delivering an incredible experience that keeps our fans coming back year after year.”

 

In addition, the track also announced plans for a new viewing deck outside the Esses (turns 2-4) in 2017.

 

Joe Gibbs, owner of the winning No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, acknowledged the massive turnout during a post-race interview session with reporters.

 

“First of all, it’s great to be able to come to New York and Watkins Glen and race,” Gibbs said. “I want to say congratulations to everybody here. What impressed me a lot was that crowd. To have a sell-out crowd here is huge for our sport. It’s big for all of our sponsors. We had a number of them here with us this weekend.”

 

Team Penske driver Joey Logano had similar thoughts.

 

“Typical Watkins Glen,” he said. “I mean, it’s just awesome, crazy racing, full contact. Just insane out there. So a lot of fun from the driver’s seat and I’m sure the fans loved it as well in front of a sold‑out grandstand. It was pretty cool when I pulled over for the red flag in front of the grandstands and I could hear just fans screaming and yelling and loving it. I thought, ‘

RELATED: Results | Standings | Chase Grid
SHOP: Hamlin gear

 

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. – Denny Hamlin, winner of Sunday’s Cheez-It 355 at the Glen, entertained a sold-out grandstand with a celebratory burnout that trailed a plume of smoke the entire length of the frontstretch at Watkins Glen International.

But Hamlin’s smoke show — with a bad back, no less — paled in comparison to the fireworks that preceded the checkered flag, Hamlin’s first at a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series road course.

The race was in doubt until the final corner, with Martin Truex Jr. pressuring Hamlin, who led the final 10 laps after surging past Brad Keselowski and Kyle Busch in Turn 1 following a Lap 81 restart.

RELATED: Second red flag brought out after another wild restart

 

But Truex never got a chance to drag-race Hamlin’s No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota to the finish line. As the cars neared the exit from Turn 7, with Truex running second and Keselowski third, contact from Keselowski’s No. 2 Ford sent Truex’s No. 78 Toyota spinning.

Defending race winner Joey Logano took advantage of the melee to finish second ahead of Keselowski and 2014 Watkins Glen winner AJ Allmendinger, who knocked Kyle Larson off the track and into the inside barrier on the way to a fourth-place finish.

Tony Stewart recovered from an early mistake—blowing the inner loop and losing 10 positions in the process—to finish fifth. Kyle Busch was sixth and Truex seventh after the last-lap spin.

Hamlin won the race in pain, with nerve endings on fire in his back.

“I just woke up with back spasms this morning,” he explained. “Just hits me every three or four months or so. I just wake up and can’t move. Really doubted being in the race car today, to be honest with you, but can’t say enough about this whole FedEx Freight Toyota team.

“Should’ve won both road courses (Hamlin was second to Stewart at Sonoma), which is something we never would’ve predicted going into the year. Sold out crowd, two years in a row, this is a good time. I’ve finally won at all of the (types of) race tracks, so it’s a great accomplishment for us.”

For the second-straight year, the Daytona 500 champion also has gone to Victory Lane at the 2.45-mile Watkins Glen road course, with Hamlin joining 2015 winner Logano in that accomplishment. The victory was Hamlin’’ second of the season and the 28th of his career, and though Hamlin was in a mood to celebrate, there were plenty of hurt feelings behind him.

Keselowski took responsibility for the incident with Truex, who expressed his displeasure by banging fenders with the No. 2 car on the cool-down lap.

“I got right up to the bumper of the 78 (Truex) and couldn’t do anything there, and he made a move to get by the 11 (Hamlin) on the inside, and the 11 blocked him,” Keselowski said. “I went high, and the 78 went high, and by then I was already deep in the corner and got into him and turned him. That was really unfortunate, and the last thing I wanted to see.

“This track here, when you drive into the corner, you commit, and sometimes you don’t know what will happen when you commit. The last thing I wanted to do was turn him. I’m proud of my guys for a really fast race car and it was another crazy Watkins Glen day.”

That craziness included eight cautions for 20 laps, four for multicar incidents in the final 38 laps. There were two yellows after Hamlin took the lead on Lap 81, when Kyle Busch and Keselowski ran wide in Turn 1, and Hamlin seized the moment.

RELATED: Big wreck brings heavy damage to multiple cars at The Glen

After the final restart on Lap 87 of 90, Truex stayed close to Hamlin, almost getting to the bumper of the No. 11 in the final corner before the contact from Keselowski turned him. The ensuing chaos allowed Hamlin to cross the finish line 2.065 seconds ahead of Logano for a victory that was nowhere near as comfortable as that margin might seem to indicate.

It was an ending befitting a race track accustomed to wild racing.

“Typical Watkins Glen,” Logano said. “I mean, it’s just awesome, crazy racing, full contact. Just insane out there. So a lot of fun from the driver’s seat and I’m sure the fans loved it as well in front of a sold out grandstand. It was pretty cool when I pulled over for the red flag in front of the grandstands and I could hear just fans screaming and yelling and loving it. I thought, ‘Man, this is really cool to be in the driver’s seat right now.’ “

The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and NASCAR XFINITY Series are taking their talents to the Watkins Glen road course this week. With that comes the challenge of pitting, as The Glen is the only place in the Sprint Cup Series where stops are done backward.


What makes this so difficult? The first thing is just simply breaking routines. Pit crews train hard year-round, and all their focus is on gaining one-tenth of a second. Now you take a random week during the year and throw in backward stop and things get interesting.


It’s all good, though — these guys are professionals.


Teams usually will start practicing for Watkins Glen either the week of the race, or sometimes a week earlier. It’s usually a two- or three-stop event, so teams don’t spend a ton of prep time on it. Getting used to the choreography of the stops is difficult, too. Everything is opposite of the usual flow. Getting footwork to match up can be a challenge. What are usually easy left- and right-side wedge adjustments now become more difficult. 


Gasmen also have a different angle to plug their cans into. It’s not uncommon to see lots of gas being spilled at a track where fuel mileage is big.


Perhaps the biggest challenge for crewmen is the penalty they face for jumping early. With the new NASCAR technology, you can’t cheat the jump line. When your routine is changed, so is your timing. Expect to see a few guys leave early because their timing is off.  With the anxiety of change comes the anxiety of getting across the car quicker, and that’s when leaving early happens.   

For more pit crew news, visit PitTalks.com.

RELATED: Live stream | Furniture Row turns eye to future

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — Furniture Row Racing has called a press conference for 10 a.m. ET on Sunday morning in Watkins Glen, N.Y., where it is set to name reigning NASCAR Camping World Truck Series champion Erik Jones to drive a second car for the Denver team in 2017. Multiple sources confirm Jones will drive the No. 77 Toyota with 5-hour Energy sponsorship on its hood for 22 races in 2017.

The press conference will be live-streamed on NASCAR.com.

Jones has three victories in the XFINITY series this year and is ranked eighth in the points standings after finishing 12th in Saturday’s race.

He made three Sprint Cup Series starts in 2015 driving for Joe Gibbs Racing — two times filling in for Matt Kenseth who was serving a two-race suspension and once for Kyle Busch who was healing from injury. His best finish was 12th at Texas Motor Speedway driving Kenseth’s car.

The addition of Jones expands the Denver-based FRR team to two cars. Its lead driver Martin Truex Jr. announced a two-year contract extension Friday that will keep him with the team through 2019.

On Friday, FRR President Joe Garone did not confirm the addition of a second car, but said the team was moving in that direction and added that if they could get it all pulled together the second car would come on board in 2017.

RELATED: Dale Jr. in his own words | Timeline of injury, recovery


WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — The drive into historic Watkins Glen International in upstate New York is as scenic as they come. Yellow, white and periwinkle-colored wildflowers punctuate the rolling countryside. Old, wooden barns are scattered among the wide-open fields, which boast spectacular mountain-top backdrops and some of the freshest air on the NASCAR schedule.

It was all a nice backdrop Friday for the sport’s favorite son, Dale Earnhardt Jr., to make his first trackside visit since stepping out of the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet driver’s seat three races ago to recover from concussion-like symptoms most likely suffered seven races ago at Michigan International Speedway.

Fans were delighted, but respectful in seeking his autograph in the garage area.

It was a similar scene outside the team trailers and inside the garages with Earnhardt smiling and waving to friends and teammates.

“It just felt so weird not being there, so here we are,” Earnhardt said.

It was difficult to determine who was happier with Earnhardt’s single-afternoon, trackside visit — him or everyone else.

With its one-of-a-kind scenery and friendly vibe, Watkins Glen was actually a perfect venue for Earnhardt to join the Sprint Cup Series for a dose of mutual reassurance.

The fans, the whole Sprint Cup garage, want him back. More so, they want him healthy.

And NASCAR’s 13-time and reigning Most Popular Driver is not ready to differentiate between the words “when” and “if” that might be.


His doctors don’t care about either in terms of Earnhardt’s racing return. They just want him better. And so does the garage, the media center and of course, his massive fandom.

“My doctor thinks that to get through the therapy and to get through the symptoms you don’t need to be adding stress to your life,” Earnhardt calmly explained Friday to the room of NASCAR reporters. “The stress will slow down the process.

“So, going into those kinds of conversations (about when to drive) aren’t even necessary at this particular point. The point right now is just to get healthy. Just to get right. I’m not thinking about the what-ifs. I’m just listening to my doctors. We went into this with the intentions of getting back in the car when we get cleared. I think that is a possibility and so do my doctors.”

This is an uncommon situation for NASCAR. A concussion doesn’t require a cast or a splint. It doesn’t come with general timestamps for recovery.

And that nuance is hard for the sport. And tougher on Earnhardt.

He was soft-spoken and thoughtful Friday afternoon with the media. He was open and introspective. It was difficult at times to hear about the challenges and non-specifics.

“Our intentions are to get cleared and get back to racing,” Earnhardt said. “We are just taking it one evaluation at a time. It is frustrating to have to do it that way, but that is the process, and we hope and expect that when we go back for the next evaluation that we are symptom free and can start to see a timeline develop. Until then, we are just taking it one evaluation at a time. Those are typically every two to three to four weeks.”

Earnhardt conceded that in addition to the therapy his is doing — two to three hours of mental and physical therapy daily — he has made a point to update his massive fan base through his Dirty Mo Radio podcasts.

“The one thing I worry the most about and I think I said on the podcast is that I don’t like people to make assumptions on where I am at and how I am doing and what I am up to,” Earnhardt said. “So it is best for my peace of mind, to give me peace of mind and to bring down any stress and anxiety through the process, to just open up and be honest about what is going on and how we are doing.”

The upside of this difficult situation is the attention Earnhardt is bringing to properly dealing with a concussion in this sport. He acknowledged that a decade or two ago, the medical community might not have been as able to so accurately diagnose and deal with the situation.

Decades ago, stepping out of the race car wasn’t always an option despite the sensibility of doing it.

Earnhardt’s example is powerful.

“I’m so thankful that there is knowledge and there is rehabilitation that is specific to what I have going on,” Earnhardt said. “There is just not this umbrella of treatment that they sort of give to everybody. They have specific ways to help and heal specific types of concussions and certain symptoms. That is why I think I enjoy talking to my doctor so often and going to see him so often — because you have so many questions.

“Every day you get a new concern or a new question and you really can’t wait to get in the room and be able to talk to him about it. For them to have the knowledge they have today versus where we were 10 or 20 years ago is something I am very thankful for. And I feel very fortunate when I got to see my doctor, he will put me in front of four or five different specialists that handle a lot of different things as far as my rehabilitation and medication and so forth. There is so much to grab on to.”

Throughout his time in front of reporters, Earnhardt reassured the crowd of his hopes to get back behind the wheel of the Hendrick Motorsports Chevy.

Most importantly, however, is his desire to get better, feel better, be better.

And time is his.

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. – Boris Said is a bona fide hero in these parts.

And the loyal band of free-spirited “Said Heads” have come out in force this weekend to welcome their road course-racing hero at the Connecticut native’s adopted home track, Watkins Glen International.

The fans wear big curly-haired wigs, a nod to Said’s head of hair and a sign of their allegiance to one of America’s most successful road racers. They are local and vocal and fiercely fond of their hero Said, who met up with several of his fans at the area’s famous Seneca Lodge restaurant this week.

His meal consisted of taking a bite of food, signing an autograph, taking a bite of food, posing for a photo. You get the idea.

“It makes you feel good, it does,” a smiling Said said. “You go to Seneca Lodge to eat dinner and it’s crazy. I was in there last night, having dinner with [Daniel Suarez] and he has no idea, he’s a young kid. He was freaked out by it.

“It was just a lot of hugging and people wearing the T-Shirts coming up the whole time to talk or get an autograph. It’s fun and kinda neat.”

Said will drive the No. 32 Genesee Beer Ford in Sunday’s Cheez-It 355 at The Glen (2:30 p.m. ET, USA/MRN/Sirius XM). It’s his first NASCAR start of the 2016 season, but 16th career green flag at The Glen where he has often been tabbed to lead a team’s road racing effort.

His best finish is third in 2005. He’s led nine laps (all in his first start in 1999) and raced cars from James Finch’s “Thank A Teacher Today”-sponsored Chevy in 2011 to the famed Wood Brothers’ No. 21 Little Debbie Ford in 2007.

He won the pole here in his first-ever XFINITY Series start in 1998 driving a car owned by former Cup driver Jimmy Spencer. Twice he finished fourth including last year for Joe Gibbs Racing.

“It’s crazy for me because I still love driving, but I’m almost 54,” Said said.

“I keep thinking I’m going to retire, but …” he said smiling and putting his hands up. “I have no hope to win, but it’s still fun to drive.

“It’s still better than watching it on TV and this is one of my favorite places to come, the track, the people, Seneca Lodge, the whole thing.”

After his drive at Watkins Glen, Said is set for some sports car racing in Europe and will start the Monterey Motorsports Reunion, a historic car race driving one of his former Corvette racer.

And, he said, there’s a chance he may make an XFINITY Series start.

Said also owns BMW and Volkswagen dealerships in his home state of California and his K1 Speed indoor go-kart track franchise recently opened its 34th facility.

As Said spoke about his busy life and reflected on his winning career, there was a knock on the team’s door from 23-year-old Nicolas Hammann. The young driver met Said through the GT Academy reality show, where he bested thousands of aspiring racers. He wanted to get some advice from Said before his maiden XFINITY Series start Saturday at Watkins Glen.

“Best thing you can do is run all the laps,” Said offered. “The risk versus reward is a touchy situation, so play it safe and be there at the end and then be aggressive. Race to the checkered.”

Hammann was clearly eager to discuss the day’s strategy with his mentor.

And Said clearly enjoyed the opportunity to help a young driver. Especially at a place that has meant so much to Said’s career.

“Now when I come here I just think about all the years here and the memories of rubbing fenders with Dale Earnhardt Sr., and Jeff Gordon and Tony Stewart and Carl Edwards,” Said said. “It’s been awesome. The competitive side of you is a little bummed out you can’t be competitive, but you know the limit of your equipment.

“But,” Said said breaking into a grin. “It’s always a blast driving the car fast here.”