RELATED: Practice 1 results | Final practice results



Joey Logano closed out the final NASCAR XFINITY Series practice Friday with the fastest speed at Michigan International Speedway.



Logano posted a lap of 191.826 mph in the Team Penske No. 22 Ford in the 55-minute session. He was also fast in Friday’s earlier session, landing the third-best lap then.



Blake Koch notched the second-fastest speed on the 2-mile track, dialing up a 191.515 mph lap in the Kaulig Racing No. 11 Chevrolet in the final minute of final practice. Ryan Reed (191.418 mph), Erik Jones (191.159) and Justin Allgaier (191.027) closed out the top five in preparation for Saturday’s Menards 250 Presented by Valvoline (1:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).



Defending race winner Kyle Busch, already a four-time XFINITY winner this season, was 11th-best in the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 Toyota.



Coors Light Pole Qualifying is scheduled Saturday at 10 a.m. ET (FS1, MRN, SiriusXM).



Erik Jones sets early pace in Michigan


Erik Jones rose atop the NASCAR XFINITY Series speed chart in opening practice Friday, leading a session interrupted by track workers trying to capture a stray groundhog on the backstraight.



Jones powered the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 20 Toyota to a best lap of 192.092 mph. He’ll seek his third victory of the season in Saturday’s Menards 250 presented by Valvoline (1:30 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM) at the 2-mile track.



Ty Dillon registered the second-fastest lap at 191.882 mph in the Richard Childress Racing No. 3 Chevrolet. Joey Logano (191.714 mph), Paul Menard (191.296 mph) and defending race winner Kyle Busch (191.215 mph) completed the top five in 55-minute session.



The 55-minute session was delayed more than 10 minutes while track safety workers cornered a groundhog on the loose. The crew’s initial capture was foiled when the critter worked free of a bucket. The chase continued until a larger trash can was brought in to confine the groundhog.

RELATED: Practice 1 results



Rookie Chase Elliott rolled to the top of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series leaderboard Friday, making the most of a new aerodynamics package that debuts this weekend at Michigan International Speedway.



The Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate turned a fast lap of 201.630 mph in the Hendrick Motorsports No. 24 Chevrolet on the 2-mile track. The lap was slower than the track record lap of 206.558 mph set by Jeff Gordon with the No. 24 team in August 2014.



Coca-Cola 600 winner Martin Truex Jr. was second-fastest, pushing the Furniture Row Racing No. 78 Toyota to a lap of 201.314 mph. Carl Edwards (201.218 mph), Dale Earnhardt Jr. (201.213) and Kevin Harvick (200.904) — all former Michigan winners — were third through fifth on the speed chart ahead of Sunday’s FireKeepers Casino 400 (1 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1, MRN, SiriusXM).



The 85-minute session marked the debut of an aero rules package designed to further reduce downforce and sideforce in hopes of promoting more passing. The most visual change was a significantly smaller rear spoiler, chopped from 3.5 inches to 2.5 inches tall and trimmed from 61 to 53 inches in width.



The smaller spoiler on the rear decklid allowed the cars to push through the air with less resistance, pushing corner entry speeds at the end of Michigan’s long straightaways into the fast neighborhood of 210 to 215 mph. But with fewer aerodynamic aids to stabilize the cars in the sweeping turns, mid-corner speeds dropped significantly as drivers wrestled for grip.



The changes were designed to promote side-by-side racing, but the 40 drivers largely concentrated on single-car runs ahead of Coors Light Pole Qualifying, scheduled later Friday at 4:15 p.m. ET (FS1).



Kurt Busch, the defending race winner and a winner last weekend at Pocono Raceway, clocked the 10th-fastest lap in the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 41 Chevrolet.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — NASCAR and the Ross Initiative in Sports for Equality (RISE) today announced a new campaign to promote diversity, inclusion and equality within and outside of sports. A public service announcement (PSA) featuring several NASCAR drivers will encourage fans to take the pledge to end racism at RISEtoWin.org.

 

The PSA features six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson, 2015 Daytona 500 winner Joey Logano, 2014 Coke Zero 400 winner Aric Almirola and NASCAR Drive for Diversity graduates Kyle Larson and Darrell Wallace Jr.

 

The PSA will air during NASCAR national series races this weekend on FS1, culminating with Sunday’s FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan International Speedway (1 p.m. ET on FS1).

 

NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France is a founding member of the RISE Board of Directors and has helped steer the growing initiative, which was founded by Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross.

 

“Discrimination has no place in our society, which is why we have partnered with RISE and Stephen Ross to help put an end to intolerance in sports,” said France. “With the help of our talented drivers who support this important message, we want to reinforce our sport’s unwavering commitment to promoting diversity and inclusion.”

 

Last fall, NASCAR joined several major sports leagues in partnering with the new alliance of top leagues, associations, media networks and educators. France serves on the RISE board alongside the commissioners of the NFL, NBA, NHL and MLB, and other leading sports executives.

 

“We believe the ideals and values associated with sports can serve as a unifier for positive change,” said Ross. “I want to thank NASCAR for its commitment to RISE and our mission to advance race relations and drive social progress.”

 

In the PSA, NASCAR drivers invite sports fans to take the pledge to treat everyone with respect and dignity, and to speak up whenever they know discrimination is happening.

 

“It’s important to be part of a PSA that shows athletes taking a stand against discrimination of any kind, and I hope that my participation helps to advocate and influence for an end to discrimination and harassment,” said Jimmie Johnson, driver of the No. 48 Chevrolet for Hendrick Motorsports.

 

In addition to its broadcast across the FOX network, the new PSA is available to view on NASCAR.com and RISEtoWin.org.

New asphalt and a new configuration will greet NASCAR Sprint Cup Series teams Monday and Tuesday, June 13-14 when they arrive at Kentucky Speedway for the season’s first organizational test.

The Speedway Motorsports, Inc.-owned facility will host all three NASCAR national series, Sprint Cup, XFINITY and Camping World Truck, the weekend of July 7-9.

The track recently completed a comprehensive renovation that included repaving the entire 1.5-mile layout and increasing the banking in Turns 1 and 2 from 14 to 17 degrees. Additional SAFER barrier has also been installed.

It is the first of five organizational tests scheduled for 2016. Others are slated for Indianapolis Motor Speedway (July 12-13), Watkins Glen International (July 26-27), Chicagoland Speedway (Aug. 23-24) and Homestead-Miami Speedway (Oct. 18-19).

Only one Sprint Cup Series team from each organization is allowed to participate in an organizational test.

According to track officials, the following drivers are among those expected to take part: Jamie McMurray (Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates No. 1 Chevrolet), Kevin Harvick (Stewart-Haas Racing No. 4 Chevrolet), Kasey Kahne (Hendrick Motorsports No. 5 Chevrolet), Ryan Blaney (Wood Brothers Racing No. 21 Ford), Joey Logano (Team Penske No. 22 Ford), Paul Menard (Richard Childress Racing No. 27 Chevrolet), Chris Buescher (Front Row Motorsports No. 34 Ford), Aric Almirola (Richard Petty Motorsports No. 43 Ford), Michael Annett (HScott Motorsports No. 46 Chevrolet) and Martin Truex Jr. (Furniture Row Racing No. 78 Toyota).

The test will incorporate changes to the rules package announced last month for this weekend’s race at Michigan International Speedway as well as next month’s points race at Kentucky. Those changes include a decrease in the size of the rear spoiler (height and width) and altering the size of the rear deck fin, as well as a two-inch reduction in a portion of the splitter located underneath the car.

Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR Vice President of Competition and Racing development, told NASCAR.com last month that because teams have spent plenty of time developing the current package, tweaking that package for only two events will keep what has been accomplished relevant while building a database for ’17.

The Goodyear tire provided for the test, as well as next month’s race, is similar to the tire used earlier this season at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

“We couldn’t wait until they were done paving,” Greg Stucker, Director of Race Tire Sales for Goodyear told NASCAR.com. “We had to make the call. So we went with the Vegas setup. We went pretty conservative because that’s the only choice we had. We thought it was going to be a good fit, still think it will, but we’ll figure that out.

“It’s a test from the perspective of we’re going to learn as we go through, but unless there’s a major issue, that’s what we’re committed to. That’s what all the teams will have to run on. We won’t be there testing multiple compounds and constructions and all those things.”

Stucker said the biggest thing his group monitors when tracks have been repaved is heat buildup in the tires.

“Because we know there’s not going to be a lot of tire wear to dissipate the heat, we’ve got to make sure that we’ve got compounds that are in the right ballpark as far as heat generation and be able to manage that,” he said.

“They used kind of a different (asphalt) mix with Kentucky, a lot higher percentage of larger aggregate. Some of the photos I’ve seen, it definitely rougher, more abrasive than a standard repave would be. And they’ve been treating it with lime to try to harden it, cure it up as quickly as they can, too.

“They’re doing all the right stuff to try and get it past that early, grippy, high heat portion of a repave. But we’re still expecting that’s going to be the case.”

The last time NASCAR competition officials came to Michigan International Speedway with new aerodynamics rules for the Sprint Cup Series, it was all about the drag. The package dialed up the wick on downforce, highlighted by a noticeably larger rear spoiler.

 

The rules and the racing it produced were widely panned as a drag in general, but not by everyone.

 

“We did away with that one — unfortunately,” Jason Ratcliff, crew chief for Matt Kenseth and the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 20 Toyota, said with a laugh. Kenseth led 146 of 200 laps at the 2-mile track last August to win from the pole. “I’d like to show back up with that one this time.”

 

Since last year’s experimentation with various aero trims, the pendulum has swung the other way — far the other way. This weekend, the series will take the next step in downforce reduction with several tweaks for Sunday’s FireKeepers Casino 400 (1 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM) in the Irish Hills region.

 

The byproduct of the tinkering was a 2016 rules package that eliminated roughly 900 pounds of downforce from the previous year’s 2,700-pound benchmark, helping promote side-by-side racing while reducing the aerodynamic benefits of running in clean, undisturbed air. Late last month, NASCAR announced that two 400-mile races — Sunday at Michigan and July 9 at Kentucky Speedway — will be run under a rules package that further chops away at downforce and sideforce stabilization, placing an emphasis on handling, plus driver skill and input.

 

Among the changes:

 

— A smaller rear spoiler, reduced both in height (down 1 inch to 2.5 inches tall) and width (down from 61 to 53 inches).

 

— The elimination of cooling fans and rear-axle offset or “skew,” two tweaks that were first used in the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race last month. Cooling fans were dropped for the remainder of the season; elimination of skew is planned only for Michigan and Kentucky.

 

— A smaller, tapered fin on the rear deck lid.

 

— A smaller front splitter on the sides, trimmed from 5 to 2 inches wide.

 

Four teams tested the new configuration during a Goodyear tire test at Michigan on May 17, a session abbreviated by rain. Though the No. 20 camp wasn’t among those participating, Ratcliff said the observations shared in the garage by other teams were encouraging.

 

“Seems like the straightaway speeds, entry speeds, I don’t know that they’re up, but they’re pretty fast,” Ratcliff said. “And then the mid-corner speeds are down, which last year when we tested there, we went through a similar aero package, one that really separated the entry to mid-corner speeds — or the delta — and was much different than what we see with the current aero package.”

 

The variation in corner speeds is designed to promote passing, allowing for “comers and goers” through the field.

 

“I think you don’t really know until you get 40 cars on the track, but I think directionally, it’s going to be good,” Ratcliff said. “As far as for us, for the 20 team, we just have to do our best to be prepared for whatever it’s going to be. Until you get on the track with it, it’s hard to say what we’re going to have. But I think the racing itself, it’s a promising direction to go.”

 

Michigan has become a laboratory for aero experiments over the last two years. NASCAR competition officials tried six configurations there in August 2014 in a 10-team test to determine the 2015 rules package. After giving the high-drag set-up an unpopular whirl during last August’s 400-miler, NASCAR returned in October for a confirmation test of the 2016 rules.

 

Those rules have spawned much-improved racing on the intermediate-sized tracks that dominate the Sprint Cup schedule. After making further aero strides last month with rules trials in Michigan testing and the All-Star Race, Sunday’s event is the next phase in the process.

 

An organizational test with the further-reduced-downforce package is scheduled June 13-14 at repaved and reconfigured Kentucky Speedway, ahead of the July 9 stop on the Sprint Cup schedule. While those events will help to lock in the 2017 rules package, Michigan’s 400 will be the package’s first audition with points on the line.

 

“That should be really interesting,” said Brad Keselowski, a Michigan native still seeking his first Sprint Cup victory in his home state. “I heard the top speeds were really, really fast but the corner speeds were down which I think should provide a really good platform for side-by-side racing and opening opportunities to pass. It is a huge variable for our teams that they will all work through. I think it has a tremendous potential to be the future direction for our sport. That is really interesting and exciting to me personally.

 

“As far as how it is going to play out, you don’t know. It is really unknown. That always seems to make for our best racing when we don’t know what will happen.”

 

One thing that won’t happen: a repeat of last August, with teams employing the air-grabbing, 9-inch-tall rear spoilers that gave the high-drag package its signature look. The facets of that setup failed to achieve slingshot passes as hoped, but instead limited passing and produced the unintended consequence of searing cockpit heat.

 

Ten months later and with spoilers a whopping 6 1/2 inches shorter than last time at Michigan, it’s yet another wrinkle that keeps crew chiefs hopping.

 

“That can be challenging and frustrating at times, but it’s kind of like going to speedway races occasionally or doing a road-course event,” Ratcliff said. “It’s just something different, so you get to change it up a little bit and maybe get some new creativity going and don’t get kind of caught in the mundane of what we do every week. So hopefully we can do the same thing as we did last fall and show up and do well.”

The No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates team of Kyle Larson was assessed a P3 penalty for lug nuts not properly installed in the post-race inspection following the Axalta ‘We Paint Winners’ 400 at Pocono Raceway, NASCAR announced Wednesday.

 

As part of the penalty, crew chief Chad Johnston has been fined $20,000 and suspended for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series FireKeepers Casino 400 at Michigan International Speedway this weekend, and has been placed on NASCAR probation through Dec. 31. The violation fell under Sections 12-1; 10.11.3.4 a; 12.5.3.4.1 p of the rule book.

 

Written warnings were assessed to:

• The No. 7 Tommy Baldwin Racing team of Regan Smith and No. 83 BK Racing team of Matt DiBenedetto for twice failing pre-race laser inspection. It’s the fourth offense for the 7 team and the first for the No. 83 team.

• The No. 1 Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates team of Jamie McMurray failed the template inspection twice pre-race. It was the first offense for the 1 team.

• The No. 43 Richard Petty Motorsports team of Aric Almirola failed laser inspection twice pre-qualifying. It was the first offense for the 43 team.

• The No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing team of Danica Patrick and No. 95 Circle Sport-Leavine Family Racing team (Ty Dillon drove the car at Pocono) failed template inspection twice pre-qualifying. This was the first offense for the 10 team and the second offense for the 95 team.

RELATED: Buy Darlington tickets | ’16 throwback schemes 
SHOP: Almirola gear | Petty gear


There might not be a more historic number in NASCAR than the No. 43.


One of the oldest, most iconic tracks on the NASCAR circuit is Darlington Raceway.


Those two came together on Wednesday when Richard Petty Motorsports revealed the paint scheme for Aric Almirola‘s No. 43 Ford for the 2016 Bojangles’ Southern 500 (Sept. 4, NBC, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) on NBCSN’s “NASCAR America.”


This marks Darlington’s second-straight year — in a five-year plan — hosting a throwback-themed race for the famed event.


The Petty Blue and Day-Glo Red STP pays homage to 1979, a year in which Petty won the first nationally televised broadcast of the Daytona 500.


“I’m excited to run the 1979 STP paint scheme this year at Darlington,” Almirola said in a team release. “We had a lot of fun with the throwback theme last year, and it should be fun to throw back again this year. It makes the race so special. There are so many great STP paint schemes over the years, which makes it special for our team to run throwbacks. 1979 was definitely a breakout season when it comes to catapulting the sport into the mainstream, so it’s cool to recognize that this year with our throwback scheme.”


Petty’s 1979 Daytona 500 win cemented what has become one of the most memorable, important races in NASCAR. He took the checkered flag as previous race leaders Cale Yarborough and Bobby Allison fought in the infield after wrecking.


“We started the season really good because we won Daytona to kick off the year,” Petty said in a team release. “In 1978, we didn’t win any races, and then we won at Daytona to start the year. That was one of our better years, and we ended up winning the Championship that year, too. That was our last Championship, so it was a breakthrough year of sorts after not winning the year before. Having the car throwback to that year is special because it was a good year for us.”


(Image is Richard Petty’s 1979 STP car)

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (June 8, 2016) — NASCAR, in collaboration with broadcast partner NBC Sports Group, Kansas Speedway and Phoenix International Raceway, today announced adjustments to start times and network coverage for NASCAR XFINITY Series races at both tracks this fall.

The Kansas Lottery 300 from Kansas Speedway on Oct. 15 will air on NBC at 3 p.m. ET, while the penultimate race in the NASCAR XFINITY Series Chase from Phoenix International Raceway on Nov. 12 will air on NBCSN in primetime, beginning at 7:30 p.m. ET. Radio coverage will be provided by the Motor Racing Network and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, channel 90. The full 2016 broadcast schedule is available at www.nascar.com/en_us/xfinity-series/schedule.html. Tickets to all NASCAR national series events are available at www.nascar.com/tickets.

“These updates were made with the goal of benefitting NASCAR fans, with Kansas now airing on NBC and Phoenix airing in primetime,” said Steve Herbst, senior vice president, broadcasting and production at NASCAR. “Our ability to adjust the start times for these two critically important races in the NASCAR XFINITY Series Chase is a testament to the collaboration between NASCAR, our broadcast partners, teams and tracks to deliver the best product possible to our fans.”

Both Kansas and Phoenix races are part of the inaugural NASCAR XFINITY Series Chase. The NASCAR XFINITY Series, where “Names Are Made,” will implement a seven-race, three-round Chase format with unique characteristics, but very much in the same spirit of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. All three national series will conclude with a CHAMPIONSHIP 4 race at Homestead-Miami Speedway. The NASCAR XFINITY Series will crown its champion in the Ford EcoBoost 300 on Nov. 19 at 3:30 p.m. ET (NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM).

All three national series return to action this weekend, beginning with the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Rattlesnake 400 at Texas Motor Speedway Friday, June 10 at 9 p.m. ET. The NASCAR XFINITY Series returns to Michigan International Speedway for the Menards 250 presented by Valvoline Saturday, June 11 at 1:30 p.m. ET. The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series also will race at Michigan in the Firekeepers Casino 400 Sunday, June 12 at 1 p.m. ET. FS1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio will provide live coverage for all three events.

WELCOME, N.C. — Richard Childress Racing (RCR) has announced the addition of four drivers to its 2016 NASCAR XFINITY Series team roster to compete in races at Iowa Speedway, Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course, Road America and Kentucky Speedway. The drivers — Ben Kennedy, Sam Hornish Jr., AJ Allmendinger and Michael McDowell — all will share seat time in the No. 2 Chevrolet Camaro with crew chief Danny Stockman.

“I’m looking forward to working with this talented group of drivers,” Stockman said. “It’s going to be great to work with Ben (Kennedy) in his XFINITY Series debut and also with all the veteran drivers. They’ll bring a lot to the table for us. I’m confident we’ll have a shot to win with all of these guys.”

Kennedy is scheduled to pilot the Ruud Chevrolet in the XFINITY Series race at Iowa Speedway on June 19. The 24-year-old driver currently competes in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and will make his XFINITY Series debut with the Welcome, North Carolina-based organization. Kennedy has three starts to his credit at the 0.875-mile track in the Camping World Truck Series, where he’s earned one top-10 finish.

Hornish Jr. is slated to drive the Rheem Chevrolet for RCR at the second Iowa Speedway race of the season on July 30 and at Kentucky Speedway on September 24. Hornish brings a wealth of XFINITY Series experience to the driver’s seat of the No. 2 Chevrolet. To date, Hornish has accumulated 110 starts in the XFINITY Series, earning three victories, seven pole awards, 32 top-five and 57 top-10 finishes with 1,124 laps led.

With an off weekend on the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series schedule, AJ Allmendinger will join the Rheem team at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course on Aug. 13 for the road course race. In more than 40 career road course starts, Allmendinger has garnered seven wins and five pole awards.

Rounding out the season’s road course races, Michael McDowell takes to the seat of the Rheem Chevrolet at Road America. The No. 2 team earned the victory at the Plymouth, Wisconsin track last season with driver Paul Menard. McDowell has 12 road course starts in the XFINITY Series, collecting three top-five and five top-10 finishes with two pole awards.

“We’re honored to have these gifted drivers join the team for selected races during the 2016 season,” said Mike Dillon, RCR’s vice president of competition. “We’re working hard to put together a driver lineup that allows us to compete for the XFINITY Series owner’s championship. With Ben, Sam, AJ and Michael joining Austin (Dillon) and Paul (Menard) in the No. 2 Camaro seat, I’m confident we’ll be able to challenge for the title this season and be a threat to win in each of the races.”

Dillon and Menard will continue to share the seat of the No. 2 Chevrolet for the remainder of the 2016 season.

RELATED: Edwards reveals tie to former U.S. president

BOSTON — Carl Edwards wants to win at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.


Like, wicked bad.


The Joe Gibbs Racing driver made the trip due north to New England on Tuesday as part of a historic visit to downtown Boston with representatives from New Hampshire Motor Speedway — Milo the Mascot moose, included — to promote the upcoming New Hampshire 301 Sprint Cup Series race (July 17, 1:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). The veteran made it abundantly clear that he plans to take home his first lobster this summer — and eat him, too.


“I really like eating lobster, so that lobster’s out of luck if we win, I can tell you that,” Edwards told a crowd gathered on the iconic cobblestone outside the famed Quincy Market at City Hall Plaza. “I want to win this race. It’s a tough place and a lot of fun, but if you win at New Hampshire, you know you’ve done something … you’ve earned it. It’s a really hard track. We’ve won in the XFINITY Series, but in the Cup Series we haven’t done it.”


Spoken like a driver who, despite a respectable 13.3 average finishing position, has just seven top-10s in 23 attempts at the “Magic Mile.”


Don’t forget about the heartbreak of last year, either, when Edwards’ No. 19 Toyota Camry started from the pole at both Loudon races, only to see two of his teammates (Kyle Busch and Matt Kenseth) sweep the season.


Perhaps the resiliency of the USS Constitution, a wooden-hulled frigate known as “Old Ironsides” for withstanding a heavy amount of fire during the War of 1812, can inspire Edwards after he toured one of America’s most famous ships, ported in the Charlestown Navy Yard.


“I hear she’s 33-0 (in naval battles), which is not bad.”


Despite a history of near-misses at the track, it ranks among the 2011 Sprint Cup Series runner-up’s favorites. If you’ve ever been to a race at the New England motorsports mecca, you may be able to take some of the credit.


“There are a number of things that make (New Hampshire Motor Speedway) great,” Edwards said at the USS Constitution Museum. “Number one, really, I’d say it’s the fans. I truly feel like when I’m up here racing in New Hampshire, I feel like I’m racing in front of my peers. There are more racers in the grandstands watching us race and more racers walking around than probably anywhere we go. To me, it’s a real honor and a lot of pressure in that.

“The track itself is very unique. It looks simple, just a 1-mile race track and it’s really flat and it’s a true oval, but it’s a really tough place. Any driver will tell you that success at New Hampshire is a true success and you really have to do everything right. No matter how good you are, it’s those restarts … as you know if you’ve been to the race, they’re insane. Lot of crazy stuff that happens.

“… You look at it you say ‘Well, that’s pretty easy.’ The problem is, it’s easy for everybody. It’s the little tiny nuances, very small things in the pavement that you figure out. There’s a couple little bumps that you have to be careful of. Everybody is just on edge the entire time. To be fast at New Hampshire, you have to be right on the edge, just sliding the car perfectly and it’s real easy to screw up.”


Now just imagine that with the new lower downforce, higher-passing package we’ve seen thus far in 2016. Sounds like something wicked awesome every New Englander should see, no? 


NASCAR’s audience continues to expand in Boston, its market already saturated with so much of New England’s focus on its four major professional sports teams in the Boston Red Sox, Celtics and Bruins and New England Patriots, which have combined for a mesmerizing nine champions since 2001.


If any driver is aware of this challenge and ready to take it on headfirst, it’s Edwards — whose former team co-owner also, you know, signs the checks over at Fenway Park.


“I drove for Jack Roush and (Boston Red Sox owner) John Henry owned half that team, Roush Fenway (Racing), and I got to spend quite a bit of time down in Boston. Got to throw out a pitch at Fenway Park, which was one of the most nerve-wracking things I’ve ever done in my life. It’s a lot of pressure,” said Edwards, fourth in points.

” … New Hampshire Motor Speedway is NASCAR New England style. It’s as good as it gets. I say that because it’s tough and it’s really competitive. It’s just an hour away (from Boston). … I can say there are a lot of similarities between stick and ball sports here and the racing up at the speedway.


“Folks that haven’t been to New Hampshire Motor Speedway … it’s a short drive (from Boston) and it’s an amazing experience. … You can see the whole track. It’s a beautiful facility.


” … There’s no better place to watch a race.”