RELATED: Race results | Updated series standings

BRISTOL, Tenn. – Erik Jones‘ third NASCAR XFINITY Series victory was a real triple play.
 
In the series’ new Dash 4 Cash format featuring two heat races and a main event, Jones took advantage of a restart with three laps left in Saturday’s Fitzgerald Glider Kits 300 and 1) won the race, 2) earned the $100,000 Dash 4 Cash bonus and 3) stopped Joe Gibbs Racing teammate and race runner-up Kyle Busch’s streak of four straight NASCAR national series victories.
 
Jones, the pole winner, restarted fourth on the final restart and charged into second place behind leader Kyle Larson when Busch’s No. 18 Toyota hesitated trying to pick up power in the bottom lane. Larson left the preferred top lane open through Turns 3 and 4 and Jones took advantage, taking the lead from Larson with two laps left.
 
Busch followed his teammate into second place, but couldn’t keep up with Jones on the final lap, trailing the No. 20 JGR Toyota by .418 seconds at the finish line. The runner-up result ended Busch’s prospects for a record third straight NASCAR weekend sweep.
 
“We had a really good restart, and Kyle (Larson) just left the top open,” said an elated Jones, who was battling teammate and eventual sixth-place finisher Daniel Suárez for the Dash 4 Cash bonus, a prize available only to drivers competing for the XFINITY Series championship.
 
Suárez had the misfortune to restart third on the bottom on Lap 198 and got bottled up behind Busch as Jones charged forward in pursuit of Larson. That allowed Austin Dillon to take fourth and Justin Allgaier fifth at the finish.
 
It’s doubtful Jones could have scripted a more satisfactory ending if he’d written it himself.
 
“I figured at some point in the year we could get a win when those guys weren’t in the field, but it would be a tall task with them in the field,” said Jones, who picked up his third victory in the series and his first this year.
 
“Here at Bristol, for those two guys, this is one of their best tracks. I’m just so excited and you can tell – I’m out of breath. I wasn’t working that hard. Just so excited about the win and to be here in Victory Lane and beat those guys. This is a really big day for us.”
 
Though Jones was the winner, most of the race was a battle for the top spot between Larson, who led 94 laps, and Busch, who led 43.
 
“The two cars that were the class of the field today didn’t win – oh, well,” Busch said. “It’s a great day for Erik Jones. He certainly stole one today. He didn’t out-race the two Kyles up front, but he certainly did in the final laps that counted.”
 
Larson spent most of his time in the post-race beating himself up for leaving the top lane open for the opportunistic Jones.
 
“I just did a really bad job on that restart – really bad,” Larson said. “I knew I gave it away. I’m really disappointed in myself. I just ran half a groove too low through (Turns) 3 and 4.”
 
The two 50-lap heat races produced a pair of wire-to-wire winners, Jones and Austin Dillon, and no cautions. But the heats did establish the starting order for the 200-lap main event, as well as identify the four eligible Dash 4 Cash competitors.
 
Jones, Allgaier (fourth in the first heat), Ty Dillon (second to his brother in the second heat) and Suárez (fourth in the second heat) took the green as the only drivers competing for the $100,000 bonus.
 
Any driver who wins two of the four Dash 4 Cash bonuses qualifies for the Chase, but as the first XFINITY regular to win a race this year, Jones won’t need the extra help.

RELATED: Dale Jr. shows how to make the perfect banana-mayo sandwich

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Just 10 days after Dale Earnhardt Jr. tweeted out a photo of a banana-mayonnaise sandwich, NASCAR’s 13-time winner of the NMPA Sprint Most Popular Driver has helped raise $145,000 for Blessings in a Backpack, an organization that provides food for elementary school children across America who might otherwise go hungry. With $50,000 of the total donation coming from Hellmann’s, another $50,000 is being matched by Junior, himself.

Along with the Hendrick Motorsports driver’s charitable efforts, the sandwich was picked up by Bristol Motor Speedway for this weekend’s race events. The Tennessee short track plans to sell the unusual sandwich combo to fans for $4, with $1 of every sandwich sold going to the Dale Jr. Foundation.

“It’s awesome that tracks are participating and anyone donating however they want to donate, that’s a great thing,” Dale Jr. said on Friday at Bristol. “But it’s important to say the whole thing was completely organic. I was sitting there bored with a little time on my hands in between taking pictures for a Hellmann’s photoshoot and they always have me make this sandwich at the photoshoots and it was laying there as a prop they were preparing for a picture, and I took a picture of it and I had no idea that that was going to take off like it did.”

Carrying over 1.4 million Twitter followers, when Dale Jr. tweets, the world listens, so he might be alone in the shock of the sandwich tweet’s takeoff, but leave it to the NASCAR veteran to turn what many viewed as gross, to good.

“The thing is is 25 percent of the country knew exactly what I was talking about and the rest were completely disgusted,” Earnhardt Jr. said. “So, it got a lot of attention and I think the disgust is what really drove the tweet viral. But it had everybody’s attention so I called Mike Davis (Director, Brand Strategy and Communications at JR Motorsports) and said, ‘It just seems silly to let this fizzle out and not seize this opportunity to do something good.’ ”

And with one simple phone call the JRM team has generated awareness for an important cause, all with the help of just three simple ingredients.

“The response from the fans, as far as donations, has been amazing. And also, you have things like this where the tracks are doing their own thing and it’s helping people. So it’s been an amazing thing, and I’m super glad we have the resources at JR Motorsports to make these things happen.”

You can donate to the cause at DaleJrSandwich.com.

RELATED: Weekend schedule | Photos: Day at the track | Standings pre-race


BRISTOL, Tenn. — When your teammate wins the last two consecutive NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races like Kyle Busch has, you’d think the spotlight would be off you. But that wasn’t the case for Carl Edwards on Friday at Bristol Motor Speedway. The No. 19 Joe Gibbs Racing driver arrived at the short track seeking his first win of 2016, as well as his fourth career victory at “The Last Colosseum.”



“This place has been really good to me,” Edwards said. “I feel like our vantage on pit road will pay off here. Hopefully the speed we have in qualifying trim will pay off and with my experience here hopefully we’ll get a win.”



In his last four Cup starts at Bristol, the 36-year-old has earned himself the highest driver rating (109.9) of all Sprint Cup Series drivers at the half-miler, with his most recent win coming in 2014’s spring race. This season, however, Edwards has come up short, earning three top-five and six top-10 finishes in seven races. So while he’s still winless, Edwards is utilizing his teammate’s accomplishments and building off of them.



“The good thing about Kyle’s success right now is I’m on his team and I can talk to him about it,” Edwards said. “But everyone does things differently. But I think the coolest part for me is to see like, ‘Hey, this can be done right now out of this shop, with these cars, these engines’ and that’s the best thing you can have, is someone out there setting the bar.”



Knowing that JGR has the ability to win back-to-back gives Edwards confidence, and being able to compare notes also gives him insight.



“We’re able to go back and look at the entire weekend and kind of compare what we did to the 18 and if we see things that are outstanding, obviously we change them, but if there’s things that aren’t clear we can go talk to them, and that’s really the advantage to having a teammate like that.”

RELATED: Complete rundown on Dash 4 Cash

 

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Daniel Suarez won two of the four Dash 4 Cash events last season, and the Joe Gibbs Racing driver hopes for more success when this year’s bonus program kicks off Saturday at Bristol Motor Speedway.

 

Suarez certainly has to be considered a favorite to take home at least one of the four $100,000 bonus checks, and is equally capable of using the program to pave his way into the NASCAR XFINITY Series Chase.

 

“It’s a good track for me,” Suarez said of the fast, high-banked half-mile. “I hope I can stay in the outside line, but Bristol is a good track for me for sure — two top fives last year.”

 

Suarez pocketed the bonus at Bristol in the August event, thanks to a fifth-place finish, and again in September at Darlington Raceway with a third-place result.

 

This year’s program offers more than a six-figure bonus for finishing highest among the four eligible Dash 4 Cash drivers in each race. Earning the bonus in two of the four events is the equivalent of winning the race itself, and that should translate into a spot in the series’ inaugural Chase.

 

This year’s Dash 4 Cash events are slated for Bristol, Richmond (April 23), Dover (May 14) and Indianapolis (July 23). A year ago, the program’s stops were at Dover, Indy, Bristol and Darlington.

 

There’s no extra effort put forth by himself or his JGR team for the Dash races, Suarez said.

 

“Not really, they happen to be good races for us. It happened to be most of the Dash 4 Cash races were in the second half the year and we were stronger in the second half,” Suarez said. “I think things just worked out for us.”

 

Suarez leads JR Motorsports’ Elliott Sadler by one point in the standings, and his only finish outside the top eight came a week ago at Texas Motor Speedway when his No. 19 Toyota came home in 16th place.

 

“Honestly I think the team is doing an excellent job,” he said. “It doesn’t matter where we go, the team has a good car. I think I’m doing my job decent. We’re working super hard. But … all the work the team did during the winter is paying off. I’m confident in them and it seems like they are confident in me.”

 

MORE: Heat races add spice to program

 

Also new to the program this year are heat races, short sprints following qualifying that will determine the starting order for the main event. At Bristol each heat will consist of 50 laps, followed by a 200-lap main.

 

“It will be interesting, different for sure,” Suarez said of the heat races. “For a driver, we’re going to be racing those races harder, be more aggressive. But at the same time you can make many mistakes and if you (do), you are in trouble for the main. It’s going to be difficult to manage that. But it’s going to be something new for everyone.

 

“But if you do well, if you win two, you can lock yourself in for the Chase.”

 

An outright win in any XFINITY Series race would accomplish the same thing, something that’s not lost on Suarez. He has 11 top-five finishes In 41 career starts, including a runner-up this year at Las Vegas, a third at Phoenix and a fourth at Auto Club Speedway. He took the lead briefly on the final lap at ACS before running out of gas on the backstretch.

 

“Yeah, that would be easier,” he said, “but we’re right in there. I think we’ll win sooner or later. We just have to keep working to make it happen.”

RELATED: All of Busch’s Cup Series wins | Busch tops standings pre-Bristol

 

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Joe Gibbs Racing driver Kyle Busch is attempting to continue his winning ways here at Bristol Motor Speedway, having swept race weekends at Martinsville Speedway and Texas Motor Speedway the past two weekends.

Sprint Cup victories at the two tracks inched the 30-year-old closer to another notable mark — he’s only one win away from tying three-time premier series champion Tony Stewart as the winningest driver to ever suit up for JGR.

Between 1999 and 2008, Stewart scored 33 of his 48 career wins while driving for Joe Gibbs. He has won 15 times since moving over to become a driver and co-owner at Stewart-Haas Racing in 2009.

Busch has earned 32 of his 36 career victories since moving to JGR in 2008. His first four wins in the Cup Series came while driving for Hendrick Motorsports.

“I never even knew that, but that’s pretty neat,” Busch said of the overall win mark at JGR. “It does mean a little bit. Tony being there for the amount of years that he was there and winning two championships for the Coach (Joe Gibbs) … he was a huge part of our team and the way that it grew from when it went from one car to two cars and then from two to three, obviously he was there for all of that.

“I certainly wish that I was teammates with him for a lot longer than I was, but to have the opportunity to go out there this year and maybe win a few more races and to beat him as far as the all-time wins leader at JGR, that would be pretty special and I would like that a lot.

“Maybe I’ll give him a handshake when it’s all said and done.”

Eight drivers have scored premier series wins for the organization. In addition to Stewart and Busch, others are current JGR drivers Denny Hamlin (27), Matt Kenseth (12) and Carl Edwards (2) as well as Bobby Labonte (21), Joey Logano (2) and Dale Jarrett (2).

Jarrett scored the organization’s first premier series win when he captured the 1993 Daytona 500.

JGR drivers have combined for 131 premier series victories overall.

RELATED: Busch closing in on JGR record

BRISTOL, Tenn. — Kyle Busch‘s march toward an undefeated April resumes here this weekend at Bristol Motor Speedway as the Joe Gibbs Racing driver competes in Saturday’s NASCAR XFINITY Series event and Sunday’s Food City 500 Sprint Cup Series race (1 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

Busch hasn’t “lost” anything since an uncharacteristic 25th place finish at Auto Club Speedway last month.

 

Well, he did lose his watch; an anniversary present from wife Samantha, but that was last fall before Busch stormed his way to his first premier series title.

 

“I lost it from last September, but I won the championship (without it) so that was pretty good,” Busch said. “But then I found it before I left for the West Coast swing and we’ve been on a bit of a roll so I don’t know, maybe that had something to do with it.”

 

Busch, 30, swept the Camping World Truck and Sprint Cup Series races at Martinsville Speedway earlier this month, then won the XFINITY and Sprint Cup races last weekend at Texas Motor Speedway.


RELATED: Recap all of Busch’s Cup wins


Richard Petty holds the distinction of winning 10 consecutive premier series events in 1967 (he also won six in a row in 1971); Bobby Allison won five straight and 11 other times have seen a driver win 4 in a row, including Harry Gant in 1991.

 

Gant also won a pair of NASCAR XFINITY races during his September run of success.

 

Busch has five career Cup wins at the .533-mile track. And he rates his chances at a third consecutive weekend sweep as “really good.”

 

“It’s been a really good place for me on the (Camping World) Truck side, the XFINITY side and on the (Sprint) Cup Series side,” he said. “But on the XFINITY Series side, I’m not going to say it’s going to be easy as it’s going to be a little different this weekend with the heat races and things like that.

 

“If we can win a heat and then start up front for the feature and how the pit strategy plays out with it only being 200 laps and seeing what tire wear is all about here, I think we’ve got a really good shot there.

 

“Then of course we’ve got the 500 lapper on Sunday and that’s going to be harder to figure out, but … we were good here last fall and led a lot of laps, we ran up front and we weren’t very good on the long run.”

 

Bristol was one of the tracks, he said that he and crew chief Adam Stevens attempted to address with an eye toward this weekend’s Food City 500.

 

In August of 2010, Busch pulled off the first triple sweep in NASCAR, winning the Truck Series, XFINITY Series and Sprint Cup Series races at BMS. Last year’s Food City 500 was one of 11 Cup races he missed after suffering injuries in a hard crash in February at Daytona International Speedway.

 

He returned in August to finish eighth in the annual night race.

 

“I’d like to think that there’s a good shot to (sweep) here and then we’ll hopefully be talking about whether we can do it or not at Richmond,” Busch said. “It would be a pretty good story.”

RELATED: Bristol quick facts | Full weekend schedule


BRISTOL, Tenn. – It began with a promotion to help former series sponsor RJ Reynolds sell product.

Today, 25 years later, the Food City sponsorship of Bristol Motor Speedway‘s spring NASCAR Sprint Cup Series event is as strong as ever.

It is the second-longest race entitlement in NASCAR – trailing only the Coca-Cola sponsorship of the 600-mile May race at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

“We started in 1992, followed up the Valleydale 500,” Steve Smith, Food City President and CEO, said Thursday at BMS. “That was back when it was still Winston Cup. We worked with RJ Reynolds on a promotion … that was the whole genesis of us getting involved in racing.”

Initially, it wasn’t a long-term deal, but by the time the next season had arrived, officials with the grocery chain were ready and willing to return.

“We signed the (initial) agreement and we had a great first race,” Smith said. “Alan Kulwicki actually won our first race in 1992; I remember that well. We were off and running.”

Kulwicki, an owner/driver, went on to win the series title that season. Tragically, the following year he was killed in a plane crash while en route to BMS to defend his Food City 500 title.

Smith said his company, founded by his father Jack, became involved at the right time in the sport, when the fan base was on the upswing, TV coverage was gaining traction and sponsorship dollars were flowing.

“What happened with Bristol was really indicative of what was happening with NASCAR, it was just growing and growing,” he said. “Five years later Bruton (Smith, Speedway Motorsports Inc. founder) bought the track and things just really started to escalate here with the amenities and the things that they did for the race fans. … Folks love coming here, they love the racing environment, and they love, I think, the southern hospitality.

“We try, as a sponsor, to do a lot of things to get them in here a little bit early, whether it’s Food City Race Night or other events to really make it a full week of fun for the race fan.”

In addition to the Sprint Cup race sponsorship, the company also sponsors the August NASCAR XFINITY Series event at Bristol. While there have been times that spending money on race entitlement rights might have been questionable, Smith said “I don’t think there’s ever been a time when we really thought about dropping the race.

“Now, we’ve negotiated pretty tough with Speedway Motorsports because obviously the fan base dropped a little bit, the viewership dropped a little bit, but when you’ve got folks like (former BMS General Manager) Jeff Byrd and (current GM) Jerry Caldwell that you know are going to do everything they can to give the race fan, our customers, that experience, it makes it pretty easy to continue to spend the dollars and continue to keep our associates that work in our stores involved in racing, and that’s a big part of it, too.”

The return for Food City, he said, comes in many forms. No. 1 is name recognition.

“We’re a relatively small regional company — we’re in four states, 135 stores, 16,000 associates,” Smith said. “It sounds like a lot but in the scheme of things compared to some of our competition, it’s not. But it’s a sense of pride for our associates, our customers who know we sponsor racing.

“NASCAR fans are very loyal, they’re loyal to the brands that are involved whether it’s Food City or other consumer products sponsors. We think it helps us sell more products and bring more people in to our stores.”

In February of 2014, Food City and BMS officials announced a five-year extension for the naming rights of the track’s spring Sprint Cup race.

“At the end of the day, it’s hard to put a financial statement together that proves that it’s a great spend, but we’ve been doing good ever since we been sponsoring racing so we don’t want to stop there,” Smith said.

BRISTOL, Tenn. — The unveiling of Colossus, the world’s largest outdoor, center-hung, four-sided video screen, is the latest addition in amenities race fans can enjoy when attending NASCAR-sanctioned events at Bristol Motor Speedway.


“To be able to unveil Colossus today is a neat experience and definitely one for the history books at Bristol Motor Speedway,” BMS General Manager Jerry Caldwell said Thursday during a private unveiling of the engineering marvel.


The entire piece weighs approximately 700 tons and is suspended by cables attached to towers located outside the track. The screens on each side measure 68 feet wide by 30 feet high. Construction, which began last fall, was completed earlier this month.


“What Bruton and Marcus (Smith) continue to do with this place and re-invest, I mean look at this, look at the sound system,” Caldwell said. “They didn’t have to do that. But they wanted to do that because it’s the right thing to do for the fans. They want it to be great.”


Officials said there are no concerns outside of those that existed for the previous scoring pylon that was anchored in the center of the .533-mile track’s infield.


“This thing is so over-engineered that … all those questions were asked when we were going through this process,” Caldwell said. “We’ve had engineers from all over the world study this and peer reviews upon peer reviews of that. So we feel good about everything that’s up there and having Colossus is going to be a great experience for all of us.”


Steve Smith, CEO of race sponsor Food City, said the new video screen “is just another of those pillars that Bristol Motor Speedway does for the race fans.”


BMS will host the Fitzgerald Glider Kits 300 NASCAR XFINITY Series race Saturday (first heat race at 12:30 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN) and the Food City 500 on Sunday (1 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).


RELATED: Full weekend schedule at Bristol


“What it does even more so than during the races is (enhance) our pre-race shows,” Caldwell said. “Our pre-race shows are amazing. There have been times when it’s been hard for the race fans to hear the pre-race show, to hear from the drivers and what they’re saying. And we’ve heard from the race fans; this sound system came from the race fans. They said they wanted new speakers. Of course Marcus and Bruton answered their call. We’ll see what happens with the races but I know it’s going to enhance the pre-race experience tremendously.”

  

The idea for Colossus came about as officials began preparations for hosting this year’s inaugural Battle at Bristol college football game between the University of Tennessee and Virginia Tech.


Other similar non-racing events are being considered; Caldwell wouldn’t confirm anything beyond this fall’s football game, scheduled for Sept. 10. “We’ve had some really good conversations,” he said.


“No question, Bristol is already on the map for hosting world-class NASCAR events, but this is for other sporting events and entertainment events. Look at this place; it really is a colosseum. What else can we do? Colossus is the start of that.”

Losing any pit crew member is tough on a team, but losing a tire changer is even tougher.

Rear tire changer Jon Moore of the Roush Fenway Racing No. 17 team for Ricky Stenhouse Jr. will be out for the majority of the season after tearing the labrum in his right shoulder during the first stop at Martinsville. Moore finished the race but knew he had potentially hurt himself.

“I went to pull the left rear tire out during the stop and it didn’t come out clean,” Moore said. “I felt something pop and knew I was in trouble.”
 
Martinsville is the most difficult place to get left rear tires out without dragging, and when a tire changer loads up to pull the tire and it doesn’t move — it’s not good.

Longtime RFR tire changer Cory Baldwin will take Moore’s place. Baldwin was changing on the No. 6 RFR team until getting moved over to the No. 17.

Moore says he’s not sure on the timeline for his return but hopes to be back toward the end of this year.

For more pit crew news, visit PitTalks.com.

Red Horse Racing announced Friday that the organization has parted ways with driver Ben Kennedy.

 

Red Horse indicated in a statement that it had a three-race agreement with the 24-year-old Kennedy to open the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series this season. Kennedy recorded finishes of 23rd, 15th and 11th in the No. 11 Toyota.

 

The Tom DeLoach-owned operation indicated in a statement that it plans to field two teams the rest of the season. Timothy Peters, who has been with the organization since 2009, will continue to wheel the No. 17 Toyota for the Mooresville, North Carolina-based team.

 

“We wish Ben all the best in his career,” DeLoach said in the team statement. “Red Horse Racing will continue to focus on pursuing the championship with Timothy Peters and the No. 17. We expect to field two teams in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and we will announce further plans as they are confirmed.”

Kennedy issued a statement on his website, BenKennedyRacing.com that read: “I wish Red Horse Racing and Timothy [Peters] the best for the 2016 season and beyond. I thank them for their support since 2015 as I have enjoyed competing with them. However, I’m interested in pursuing other racing opportunities in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and possibly the NASCAR XFINITY Series. I love NASCAR racing, and I’m eager to continue to compete, learn and improve.”     

 

Kennedy joined the team in 2015, one year after claiming Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors in the series. He landed four top-five finishes in 23 races last season and earned his only pole position at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

 

The Camping World Truck Series’ next race is scheduled for May 6 at Kansas Speedway.