RELATED: Results | Standings | Frame-by-frame of finish

TALLADEGA, Ala. — On his 41st birthday, Elliott Sadler got an unexpected present.
 
When Saturday’s Sparks Energy 300 NASCAR XFINITY Series race ended under caution in overtime with the front-runners just short of the finish line, Sadler had the lead, after Joey Logano‘s last-ditch attempt to block Sadler in the tri-oval ended with Logano’s No. 22 Team Penske Ford plowing nose-first into the outside wall.
 
Brennan Poole got to the finish line first and thought he had won the race, until NASCAR officials reviewed the video of the finish and determined Sadler was ahead when the caution lights illuminated before Poole’s No. 48 Chevrolet reached the stripe.
 
“It’s a great birthday gift to me,” said an emotional Sadler, who broke a 65-race winless streak dating to May 2014 at Talladega. “We really needed this win. I told everybody this morning, ‘We’ve got the car to win this with.’ Things went our way, we had a little luck, and we were able to make it at the end.”
 
The victory was Sadler’s second in the series at Talladega and the 11th of his career, and it came with a deft move as the cars roared into the tri-oval on the second overtime lap.
 
Logano had the lead and blocked Sadler’s move to the outside. Sadler dived to the inside and contact between the cars sent Logano’s Ford out of control. The two cars collided again, and Logano’s No. 22 shot up into the wall, but Sadler was able to maintain control with his left-side tires on the infield grass and kept his JR Motorsports Chevrolet moving forward in the lead until NASCAR called the caution that ended the race.
 
RELATED: Ride with Logano to the finish

“I was going to try to get to the outside of Joey,” Sadler said. “He made a great block, I went back to the inside and then I just held it straight. I’ve had some races I’ve done some good driving and some I’ve probably done some bad, but I feel like that was one of the best saves I’ve ever made through the grass to keep it straight.”
 
In fact, JR Motorsports got an unexpected double, because Justin Allgaier‘s JRM Chevy was inches ahead of Poole’s car when the caution flew.
 
Poole took the disappointment with extremely good grace.
 
“I think I’m upbeat today because I had so much fun racing with everybody,” he said. “It was just a blast. As I was waiting there (for the decision), I was thinking, ‘Man, hopefully the caution didn’t come out as early as I think it came out,’ and I’m hoping we raced to the line.
 
“But at the same time, (I thought) hopefully NASCAR gets it right. I want the guy who deserves to win the race to be the winner and go by the rules. And according to the rules, Elliott was the winner. I can’t be mad about it. It is what it is.”

RELATED: No hard feelings for Poole after near-win
 
Logano likewise harbored no ill feelings toward Sadler, despite his hard crash into the outside wall.
 
“I know Elliott is a great speedway racer, and he knew what he had to do to win the race, and I knew what I had to do to try to keep him behind me,” Logano said. “He went to make the move on the top, and then he pulled it down to the bottom and got it underneath me, and then I was a little late to the block.
 
“He was already there. Around I went and hit a bunch of other stuff along the way.”
 
Jeremy Clements finished fourth, a career best, as Chevrolets claimed the top six positions, with Brendan Gaughan fifth and Austin Dillon sixth.
 
Notes: Sadler leaves Talladega tied for the series lead with seventh-place finisher Daniel Suarez — and with a spot in the first NASCAR XFINITY Series Chase… The victory was the second straight for JR Motorsports, piggy-backing on Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s win last week in Richmond.

RELATED: Lineup | See all 40 cars

 

TALLADEGA, Ala. – Numerologists doubtless will have a field day with the front row for Sunday’s GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway (on FOX at 1 p.m. ET, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
 
Touring the 2.66-mile race track in 49.704 seconds (192.661 mph) during Saturday’s time trials, Chase Elliott put the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet on the pole, making the 20-year-old rookie driver two-for-two at restrictor-plate superspeedways.
 
In his first qualifying run as a full-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver, Elliott won the pole for the season-opening Daytona 500.
 
The pole was the sixth at Talladega for the No. 24, the first five having been recorded by Jeff Gordon, who retired after the 2015 season and turned the car over to Elliott.
 
And the pole run came roughly 30 years after Elliott’s father, Bill Elliott, earned the top starting spot for the spring Talladega race with a lap at 212.229 mph, before restrictor plates were introduced at the superspeedways.
 
Coincidentally, Bill Elliott also won the pole for the Daytona 500 in 1986.
 
“This is definitely a special place,” Chase Elliott said after his pole-winning run. “It’s cool to get it done today. This is a team effort, and those guys and everybody at the No. 5 and No. 24 shop, in particular, and everybody at Hendrick Motorsports and the Hendrick engine department and obviously (sponsor) NAPA Auto parts.
 
“But, man, this is cool. Those guys do such a good job. And as I said in Daytona, this had nothing to do with me. This is the car that we had. This is the same car we had in Daytona. They brought another fast one here.”
 
The car Elliott beat for the pole, the No. 3 Chevrolet driven by Austin Dillon (192.424 mph), also has a noteworthy history at Talladega. Driving the No. 3 for owner Richard Childress, Dillon’s grandfather, the late Dale Earnhardt collected nine of his 10 Talladega victories and all three of his Talladega poles.
 
“There’s a lot of history here with Dale and RCR,” Dillon said. “A lot of good stuff happened with RCR here, so hopefully we can continue that streak of good runs for RCR here. We’ve got a car capable of doing that, obviously, with the qualifying effort, and I’d love for it to be my first Cup win.”
 
Dale Earnhardt Jr., who has never won a pole at NASCAR’s biggest oval track but has six race wins on his resume here, qualified third at 192.293 mph. Matt Kenseth (192.181 mph) claimed the fourth position on the grid, followed by Jimmie Johnson (192.116 mph) and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (192.089 mph).
 
The only other driver to top 192 mph was seventh-place starter Brad Keselowski (192.008 mph), a three-time Talladega winner.
 
Ty Dillon qualified the No. 14 Chevrolet for Tony Stewart and earned the 14th starting spot, but Stewart will start Sunday’s race and will have to drop to the rear for the green flag because of the driver change. The plan is for Stewart, who returned to action last Sunday at Richmond after injuring his back during the offseason, to turn the car over to Dillon during the first caution of the race.
 
Note: Josh Wise failed to make the 40-car field.

RELATED: Full results | Standings post-Talladega | See the finish in photos

 

TALLADEGA, Ala. – Brennan Poole won Saturday’s XFINITY Series race at Talladega Superspeedway.

And then he didn’t.

After a chaotic finish was ruled final under caution, the Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender was initially named the Sparks Energy 300 victor before Elliott Sadler was told to bring his No. 1 Chevrolet to Victory Lane, several minutes after the checkered flag flew.

Before NASCAR came to that conclusion, however, the pair of drivers each patiently sat on opposite sides of the start/finish line at the 2.66-mile Alabama track, about to swap emotions.

“As I was waiting there, one, I was thinking hopefully the caution didn’t come out as early as I think it came out and I’m hoping we race to the line but at the same time I’m thinking ‘I hope NASCAR gets it right,’ ” Poole said in his post-race press conference. “I want the guy who deserves to win the race be the winner and go by the rules. And according to the rules, Elliott was the winner. I can’t get mad about it. It just is what it is.”

The finish was certainly among NASCAR’s wildest — both with the wreck that saw Joey Logano get airborne to spark the caution and with the period of time it took to make the final call. The minutes must have felt like an eternity to Poole and Sadler as the running order was sorted out.

RELATED: See the finish from the point of view of the No. 48

NASCAR is certain it got it right.

“Took us a little time up in the tower. We feel 100 percent that we got it exactly right,” said Wayne Auton, XFINITY Series managing director. “We used film, we used eyes. … We took our time in the tower.

“I think all of you saw the 1 and the 48 come and sit at the start/finish line, which was pretty cool, to just have both drivers sit there really calm. … We used every bit of film that we had; slow down, speed up — we arrived at the finish we did and that’s by using every piece of technology that we had to our availability.”

RELATED: Auton explains video review process

Poole was lauded on social media and by the press for how he handled the situation, being told that he’d picked up his first career NASCAR win at any national level — on a day which his sponsor, DC Solar, brought droves of people to the track — only to have it swept out from under him. He had to settle for a third-place finish.

It was still a career-best showing for the promising 25-year-old, but moreso it was his post-race demeanor that people will come away remembering.

“I was just glad that they were able to take the time to get it right. Happy that the rightful winner has taken the trophy home tonight. I wish it was us, but we were close,” said Poole, who now sits eighth in the points standings. “So, Elliott’s the winner and it is what it is. It’s racing.

“Any time you come up a little bit short, it kind of sucks. We’ve been fast for several weeks this year, we just haven’t been able to close a whole race out and that’s been tough.

“It’s been an exciting last couple weeks and certainly this afternoon is one of the most exciting times in my racing career.”


MORE: See the wild finish

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Bobby Labonte quietly bowed out of full-time Sprint Cup Series competition at the tail end of the 2013 season.

No retirement tour, no gifts. Certainly no ponies.

The 2000 premier series champion has selectively dabbled in the sport since, however, with a handful of unremarkable starts at Indianapolis and the restrictor-plate tracks, knowing the pack racing may be his last remaining shot at picking up his first — and likely final — Cup victory in more than a decade.

Labonte will run in Sunday’s GEICO 500 (1 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Talladega Superspeedway, his second of a scheduled four-race slate in 2016.

While not sure if this same type of deal will continue to be available to him in future years, the brother of NASCAR Hall of Famer Terry Labonte hinted at an interestingly hush-hush opportunity that could be coming down the pipeline later on this season.

“I do have a couple other possibilities I am excited about that might come to fruition later on in the year that I didn’t see coming around the corner but they are opportunities that might lead to something that I have been more excited about than anything I have done in my career,” Labonte said Friday at Talladega. “Racing is still a big passion of mine and I know I am not going to go do a lot of things I used to do but there are still some opportunities out there that are still up on my radar that I would like to do.”

But what does he have left to prove? What racing goals remain?

“That is a great question, too. Winning any race. It might be a bicycle race. Racing at the Sprint Cup level has gotten so intense that if you can’t do it every weekend … (Talladega) is different as we all know. Last weekend and next weekend is different than here,” Labonte said. “It is one of those things that I guess I kind of want to race more in a way but I don’t want to race more in some ways. I don’t want to do it every weekend but I know there are different series you can do that aren’t quite as strenuous as this.

“My brother told me one time after about two years of retirement, ‘You know, you will have a lot more friends later that you didn’t know you had.’ And that is true. I am enjoying that. As far as racing goes I am enjoying it and my opportunity is only four times right now through a little bit of what I want to do and a little bit from other people.”

One remaining goal is obvious: becoming NASCAR’s first Triple Crown winner by notching a championship at each of its three national series levels.

Labonte has the two arguably tougher feats down, winning the XFINITY Series (then Busch Grand National) title by 74 points over Kenny Wallace in 1991, then taking his first and only Sprint Cup Series (then Winston Cup) title by a wide, 265-point margin over Dale Earnhardt in 2000.

It’s a long shot, and Labonte admits that “everything has to line up right,” but he’s at least considered the prospect of running for a Camping World Truck Series title. He has 10 career starts in the series, with one win (2005 at Martinsville).

“It is absolutely something that we have talked about and met with some people about,” Labonte said. “I couldn’t just make it happen by snapping my fingers and we couldn’t quite get it all lined up. I definitely had it in my mind that it was something I really wanted to do. I would still entertain that but there is also a point where if you can chase the championship that is one thing, and you can do it in a lot of ways.

“When I started racing when I was little, the passion was to race and win and that is what you want to do. You want the chance to do that. We did it back then and I think the Truck Series is very appealing to me. I loved it when I did a few of them for a couple of guys and won a race and finished in the top five quite a bit. It is definitely a different level and the garage area is a lot calmer there than it is in the Sprint Cup Series and it kind of, at this point in time, is very appealing.”

MORE: How qualifying works at ‘Dega

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Double duty continues this weekend for Ty Dillon as the Richard Childress Racing driver competes in Saturday’s XFINITY Series race and is expected to take over the No. 14 of Tony Stewart at some point in Sunday’s Sprint Cup Series event.

There’s still a bit of newness to the 2016 season but Dillon, 24, has already made 13 starts between the two series. In addition to his full-time role with RCR, he’s made three starts in place of Stewart as well as two for Circle Sport-Leavine Family Racing.

“I was hoping to maybe be full-time this year in the Sprint Cup Series about this time last year,” Dillon said Friday morning at Talladega Superspeedway, site of Sunday’s GEICO 500 (1 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). “That is where I kind of had my goals set, my eyes set, but the opportunity didn’t come along.

“I can’t thank Stewart-Haas (Racing) … enough for giving me the opportunity to fill in this year with Tony being out. Not only has it helped me with my career and getting better as a race car driver, but it’s helped me show people that I can get the job done in other equipment too.”

Stewart, a three-time premier series champion, missed the first eight races after suffering a back injury in the offseason. He made his first start last weekend at Richmond International Raceway.


RELATED: Stewart: Full coverage of injury, comeback

Dillon split time with fellow driver Brian Vickers in the car during Stewart’s absence.

With the potential for multi-car accidents much higher at Talladega, Stewart and Stewart-Haas Racing officials made the call to have Stewart start this week’s race and then turn the ride over to Dillon.

Dillon is also scheduled to qualify the car on Saturday. Because of his extensive time in the car, the interior will be fitted to address his needs.


RELATED: Ty to qualify for Tony at Talladega

 

“I haven’t talked to Tony yet, but I talked with Mike (Bugarewicz, crew chief) and the guys,” Dillon said of the interior work. “They said it’s just a quarter-inch difference and the belt set is all that we are playing with. So, we’ve got adjustable belts to make up for that really quickly.

“We have had to make a couple of changes to kind of compensate for a little bit of both, but mostly everything in there is built for me and for my comfort, because I will be in it for the longer part of the race.”

By starting the race, Stewart will be awarded the points earned as a result of Dillon’s finishing position. In addition, NASCAR officials said that should Dillon win Sunday’s race, it would be counted as a win toward Stewart’s Chase eligibility. Stewart would also have to be among the top 30 in points. He currently trails Matt DiBenedetto, in 30th, by 101 points.

RELATED: How Stewart will be scored at ‘Dega

“First of all it would mean I won a Sprint Cup race and I would be pretty excited,” Dillon said. “On top of that, to be able to get Tony a step closer to being locked into the Chase would be really cool. …

“I haven’t started a race without the goal of winning my entire career. That is what my focus is. As soon as I get strapped into that race car I’m planning on going to the front and hopefully winning the race. If it all comes together and we do win the race, I’m sure it will be a heck of a party and everybody is going to be happy.”

Stewart, who will retire from Sprint Cup competition at season’s end, said he was appreciative of the opportunity to contend for a spot in the 10-race Chase, but said he “wouldn’t feel good about” earning a berth based on a win by another driver.

“I think for me to make the Chase it needs to be because I ran the whole race and won the race, not started it and somebody else won it for me.”

On April 18, 2009, Mark Martin won the Subway Fresh Fit 500 at Phoenix International Raceway. It was the 36th NASCAR premier series win for the 50-year-old driver and his first with team owner Rick Hendrick.

 

A week and a day later, Brad Keselowski won the Aaron’s 499 at Talladega Superspeedway. It was the first career win for the 25-year-old, and the first premier series victory for independent car owner James Finch.

 

Two distinctly different races won by two distinctly different drivers. Martin’s NASCAR career was beginning to wind down; Keselowski’s, on the other hand, appeared to have only just begun.

 

But there was one string that tied the two together — Hendrick Motorsports.

 

HMS was home to Martin, Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr. And it was expected by many to be the future home of the up-and-coming kid from Rochester Hills, Michigan.

 

But a collection of factors that came together throughout the course of that season altered the racing landscape as well as the career path of Keselowski.

 

It would be nearly three years before the next driver change at HMS. By then Keselowski had not only found a new home, but he was also on his way to winning the Sprint Cup championship.

 

‘I WAS NOT GOING TO LOSE’

 

The sun was out and the grandstands were packed when the 2009 Aaron’s 499, the season’s ninth Sprint Cup race, went green for the final time.

 

As race leader Ryan Newman tried to keep Earnhardt Jr., the crowd favorite, in check, Keselowski darted to the inside behind Carl Edwards on the track’s massive backstretch. It was a move that didn’t seem to mean much at the time.

 

But at the start-finish line with two laps remaining, Edwards and Keselowski shot to the outside entering Turn 1.

 

“Here they come; look at the 99 and …” NASCAR on FOX analyst Darrell Waltrip began.

 

Brad Keselowski,” lead announcer Mike Joy and co-analyst Larry McReynolds chimed in.

 

When the white flag appeared, Edwards and Keselowski had caught and were beginning to pull away from Newman and Earnhardt Jr.

 

Racing back through the tri-oval, Keselowski turned his No. 09 Chevrolet to the outside, and then quickly dropped to the bottom as Edwards moved up to block. Realizing the bottom lane was now open, Edwards reacted quickly — but not quickly enough.

 

Contact sent the No. 99 Ford spinning. Edwards’ car came off the track briefly and was beginning to settle back onto the track it was struck by Newman’s Chevrolet. The impact sent Edwards roof-first into the frontstretch catch fence.

 

Meanwhile, Keselowski kept his foot in the gas, racing across the finish line for the win just ahead of Earnhardt Jr.

 

“I was not going to lose,” Keselowski said in his post-race winner’s interview. “I was not going to lift and (I was going to) hold my ground and consequences be damned.”

 

A full-time competitor at the time for JR Motorsports (which, coincidentally, counts Earnhardt Jr. and Hendrick among its ownership group) in what is now the NASCAR XFINITY Series, Keselowski said he didn’t know what the future held after his first premier series win.

 

“I know I don’t have anything locked in,” he said. “That’s really all I can say … I don’t have a job secured for next year, and everything to this point has been wait-and-see. I know this certainly can’t hurt.”

 

But behind the scenes, moves were already underway. Finch’s Phoenix Racing, which purchased it engines from HMS, had put Keselowski in the car at the suggestion of Hendrick. And the JRM/Hendrick pipeline, which grooms talent in the lower series to help restock the Sprint Cup program, was taking root.

 

Keselowski had made two starts for Hendrick the previous year, and would make seven all together in ’09, in addition to five races with Finch.

 

Perhaps his future wasn’t as cloudy as it appeared.

 

“Rick had come out and told me, actually had made it a point to say to the media that he thought I was a future driver at Hendrick,” Keselowski told NASCAR.com recently.

 

There was only one problem.

 

SWAN SONG?

 

On July 4, 2008, HMS officials announced that Martin had signed a two-year agreement to drive the organization’s No. 5 Chevrolet.

 

According to the news release, Martin, who would run a full schedule in 2009, would “run a partial Sprint Cup schedule … in 2010, sharing the No. 5 Chevy with a to-be-determined second driver.”

 

By most accounts, that driver was expected to be Keselowski.

 

But in May of ’09, less than three weeks after Martin’s Phoenix victory, HMS officials announced a revision to the ’08 agreement. The veteran driver would return in 2010 to once again run the entire season.

 

With Keselowski waiting in the wings and Martin winning and agreeing to return the following year, “Rick was kind of half pregnant,” Keselowski said. “He (was) stuck.

 

“My feeling was, after I had won Talladega, I’m going to get this 5 car ride partially next year, pair it with something else, let’s go. I didn’t know what it was going to be. We’ll figure it out; let’s go.”

 

A phone call and subsequent meeting with Hendrick, however, changed all that.

 

“I was kind of expecting more of a ‘Hey, we’re going to expedite the process of clearing out the rest of this,’ ” Keselowski said of the meeting, “And instead I got a ‘Hey, I don’t have a ride for you. You need to figure something else out. I’ll try to help.’

 

“That was late April, early May of that year. My intent … was to give him that time to kind of make right on it somehow, find a ride because he had made me the promise that I would have that car. It didn’t sit all that well, but I understood the circumstances and so forth.”

 

Months passed and Keselowski busied himself with his full-time XFINITY Series effort at JRM while making a handful of Sprint Cup starts for Hendrick and Finch.

 

Hendrick, in the meantime, was exploring the various avenues that might keep Keselowski in the HMS camp.

 

Possible scenarios included Stewart-Haas Racing, at the time a two-team effort, and Red Bull Racing. Consideration was even given to fielding a Sprint Cup entry out of the JR Motorsports shop, according to the owner.

 

But the pieces didn’t fit and as the summer wore on, Keselowski’s future remained uncertain.

 

“I wanted him to wait a year,” Hendrick told NASCAR.com. “… I don’t remember all the details, but I do remember that Mark had done so well, and I had tried to talk (Mark) into staying.

 

“I’ve told all our guys, the first time I sat down with Brad he impressed me because he was so intense about the whole car and wanted to be involved in everything. He was just so committed. I told our guys he’s got the right attitude about racing and driving. I just needed him to wait.”

 

Waiting, though, wasn’t part of Keselowski’s plan.

 

“My perception is a driver is a lot like a perishable fruit,” Keselowski said. “You’ve got so much time, then he spoils and goes bad. There are a lot of variables, much like anything.”

 

PENSKE COMES CALLING

 

The Keselowski family has always been involved in racing. Brad’s father Bob was an ARCA Series standout and a former winner in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.

 

Ron Keselowski, an uncle, scored two top-five finishes in 68 premier series starts while older brother Brian Keselowski has one or more starts in all three of NASCAR’s national series.

 

“We knew the Keselowski name from being here in Detroit,” Walt Czarnecki, an executive vice president at Penske Corp., said. “His dad, his uncle, all that. They would run out at MIS (Michigan International Speedway) when (Penske) owned the track.”

 

But it was a business associate, lawyer/agent John Caponigro, who brought up the young driver’s name during a conversation in 2009.

 

“We thought he was committed to Hendrick,” Czarnecki said. “He’d been on loan to James Finch to run several races. But some things were changing.”

 

Conversations with Keselowski ensued, in Michigan as well as Mooresville, North Carolina, where Team Penske is headquartered. “All this time,” Czarnecki said, “Still having this somewhat uncertain situation with Mr. Hendrick.”

 

Team Penske had grown from a two-team to a three-team organization in ’08, fielding cars for drivers Kurt Busch, Ryan Newman and Sam Hornish Jr.

 

In ’09 Newman departed to join owner/driver Tony Stewart at Stewart-Haas Racing and 32-year-old David Stremme was brought on board to fill the open seat.

 

But the Keselowski opportunity was intriguing, according to Czarnecki.

 

“We’ve tried to sign on what we consider to be the best available young drivers with a great deal of potential that we could mold and have them grow in our organization,” he said. “And I think that Brad certainly fit that description.

 

“But above and beyond that, he had a bigger vision as to what role he wanted to play in terms of the development of the team. … Just how he saw different things coming together …

 

“Some of it may have been a little unrealistic; some of it was certainly the enthusiasm of a young man who had a goal in mind. … But he had this great enthusiasm and he had this great desire and this great commitment. And that appealed to us.”

 

With the Hendrick effort seemingly stalled, Keselowski went back to Penske with a request — to compete full-time in both the Sprint Cup and XFINITY Series.

 

In addition to its Sprint Cup effort, Team Penske was fielding one full-time XFINITY Series team with driver Justin Allgaier. Expanding that program to two teams running all the races was problematic, given the economy at the time.

 

Told such a scenario was unlikely, Keselowski was left to consider his few available options. But Penske officials continued to work until enough of the appropriate pieces were in place.

 

“Sure enough, Roger called me one night and said ‘Alright, I’ve got it put together,’ ” Keselowski said. “It kind of caught me off guard. I was sold. That’s it; he made it happen.”

 

“I couldn’t sit around and wait. … Roger had gone above and beyond to put something together that I felt like was the opportunity I needed. … The economy was on its way down fast; Roger (through his various businesses) had a lot of immunities to the economy. Rick made it very clear to me that he was not going to invest himself without having a sponsor, and the economy was not in a spot where he could facilitate that.”

 

Hendrick had been aware of the Penske interest from the beginning, having had conversations with his fellow team owner about Keselowski’s status.

 

“Roger called me and asked me could he talk to him,” Hendrick said. “I didn’t want to stand in his way. Brad’s a hell of a talent. It was a timing issue.

 

“It’s worked out for him. At his age it would have been nice if we could have kept him. … If I got a call from Roger and I was in his spot I would have done exactly what he did.”

 

POSTSCRIPT

 

On Sept. 1, 2009, Team Penske officials announced that the organization had signed Keselowski to compete full-time in both the Sprint Cup and XFINITY Series beginning the following season.

 

Since then, Keselowski has won 17 Sprint Cup races, 28 XFINITY Series races and championships in both series.

 

“I don’t want to sound mercenary but he brought us our first Sprint Cup championship (in 2012),” Czarnecki said. “Because that vision that he outlined, we tried to work with him and bring people along, bring people into the organization, have him work with people like (crew chief) Paul Wolfe, it was really the realization of that vision. That’s what it (has) meant.

 

“And his intensity hasn’t changed.”

 

Former teammates Busch and Hornish have departed, and fellow driver AJ Allmendinger has come and gone. Keselowski, now 32, is the veteran of a Penske group that now includes 25-year-old teammate Joey Logano.

 

“I wasn’t looking to switch,” Keselowski said. “If things would have gone the way they were supposed to go before Mark won that race at Phoenix, I would still be there.”

Eldora Speedway announced Friday that Aspen Dental will sponsor the Ohio dirt track’s annual race for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.

 

The fourth annual 150-lap race, the only NASCAR national series event on a dirt speedway, is scheduled July 20 (9 p.m. ET, FS1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). The track discontinued the Mudsummer Classic name in the offseason because of a conflict with Major League Baseball’s “Midsummer Classic” name for its annual All-Star Game.

 

NASCAR returned to dirt-track racing with the inaugural truck event at Eldora in 2013, marking the first national series race on dirt since 1970.

 

Friday’s announcement coincided with a media event at Talladega Superspeedway featuring Danica Patrick — who drives the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 10 Chevrolet with Aspen Dental sponsorship — and Tony Stewart, who purchased the Eldora track in 2004.

 

Aspen Dental is in the midst of a five-year partnership with Stewart-Haas Racing. The East Syracuse, New York-based business increased its backing of Patrick’s efforts this season, doubling its role as primary sponsor to four NASCAR Sprint Cup races in 2016.

Practice 2: Results

 

Matt Tifft kicked off the weekend strong, topping final NASCAR XFINITY Series practice at Talladega Superspeedway. Tifft, who was wheeling the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, earned a fastest lap of 181.918 mph.

 

Next was the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet of Ty Dillon (181.515 mph), last week’s Dash 4 Cash winner.

 

Rounding out the top three was the No. 33 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet of Brandon Jones (180.346 mph).

 

The No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota of Daniel Suarez, the current points leader, and No. 51 Chevrolet of Jeremy Clements were fourth and fifth, respectively. 

 

The defending race winner Joey Logano finished the 55-minute session 33rd (153.787 mph). 

 

Practice 1: Results

 

Darrell Wallace Jr. scooted to the top spot in opening NASCAR XFINITY Series practice Friday at Talladega Superspeedway.

Wallace wheeled the Roush Fenway Racing No. 6 Ford to a best lap of 192.413 mph around the 2.66-mile track. He vaulted to the top of the leaderboard with an aerodynamic boost from teammate Ryan Reed, who clocked the second-fastest lap at 192.355 mph in Roush Fenway’s No. 16 Ford.

Ty Dillon, last week’s winner of the Dash 4 Cash $100,000 bonus from the series sponsor, was third-fastest at 191.827 mph in the Richard Childress Racing No. 3 Chevrolet.

Matt Tifft (191.670 mph) was fourth-best in the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 Toyota with Austin Dillon (190.601) completing the top five in Childress’ No. 2 Chevy in early prep for Saturday’s Sparks Energy 300 event (3 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Series points leader Daniel Suarez, in the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 19 Toyota, wound up 10th of the 43 drivers to turn laps in the opening 55-minute session. Sprint Cup regular Joey Logano, the defending race winner, was 18th-best in Team Penske‘s No. 22 Ford.

Practice 2: Full results

Joey Logano launched to the fastest speed in final NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice Friday afternoon at Talladega Superspeedway.

Logano, winner of the series’ most recent race here last October, posted a best lap of 196.290 mph in the Team Penske No. 22 Ford. He was just .013 seconds ahead of Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate Ryan Blaney, second-fastest at 196.238 mph in the Wood Brothers Racing No. 21 Ford.

Fellow rookie Chase Elliott was third-fastest at 196.185 mph in the Hendrick Motorsports No. 24 Chevrolet. Danica Patrick (195.094 mph) and rookie Brian Scott completed the top five in the final 55-minute prep for Sunday’s GEICO 500 (1 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Few drivers participated in large packs, with most spending time concentrating on single-car runs to prepare for Saturday’s Coors Light Pole Qualifying (12:30 p.m. ET, FOX). But with inclement weather in Saturday’s forecast, several drivers attempted to better their position in the practice order should qualifying be washed out.

Among those was Blaney, one of five drivers attempting to qualify for the four starting berths reserved for open, non-chartered teams. He received aerodynamic help from Logano, whose Penske team shares an alliance with the Wood Brothers, a fellow Ford operation.

Ty Dillon, on standby for Tony Stewart in his second race back from a back injury, was 16th-fastest in the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 14 Chevrolet. The team spent the majority of the session practicing in the garage for a quick driver change, something the team plans to do midstream in Sunday’s 500-miler as Stewart eases his way back from his injuries.

Defending race winner Dale Earnhardt Jr. was seventh-fastest at 193.584 mph around the 2.66-mile track.

 

Practice 1: Full results

 

Two-time Talladega Superspeedway winner Jamie McMurray topped opening practice. The wheelman of the No. 1 Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates Chevrolet posted a fastest lap of 199.737 mph. 

 

Rookie Chase Elliott was second-fastest during the 55-minute session, propelling the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet around the 2.66-mile track at 199.729 mph.

 

Stewart-Haas Racing‘s Kurt Busch rounded out the top three with his No. 41 coming in at 199.409 mph. 

 

Busch’s teammate Danica Patrick was next in her No. 10 Chevrolet (199.384 mph) while the No. 6 of Trevor Bayne earned the fifth-quickest lap (199.317 mph).

 

The back-to-back race winner of 2016, Carl Edwards was 23rd (196.552 mph) in his No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

 

Tony Stewart and Ty Dillon took turns wheeling the No. 14 throughout practice and earned 29th (195.884 mph). Dillon will fill in as a relief driver for “Smoke” during qualifying and the 500-mile event. 

 

Six-time Talladega winner, and defending race champ, Dale Earnhardt Jr. finished practice 32nd (195.150 mph).