JR Motorsports and Dale’s Pale Ale have extended their sponsorship arrangement according to the NASCAR XFINITY Series organization, a move that will include primary branding of the group’s No. 88 entry for three races in 2016-2017.


Terms of the multi-year agreement were not announced.


Regan Smith, who competed for JRM full-time from 2013-2015 and currently wheels the No. 7 Tommy Baldwin Racing ride in the Sprint Cup Series, will return to the JRM organization for the Aug. 19 XFINITY event at Bristol Motor Speedway, the first of three races when the No. 88 entry will feature Dale’s Pale Ale as primary sponsor.


Officials have not announced the two remaining events, or the driver or drivers, in which Dale’s Pale Ale will be featured.


The craft beer, a product of Oskar Blues Brewery, served as primary sponsor for one event with JRM last season.


Dale’s Pale Ale will also serve as an associate sponsor on the JRM No. 1 entry driver by Elliott Sadler for the remainder of the 2016 season.


Kelley Earnhardt Miller, JRM general manager, said the partnership with the craft brewery has been “fun and rewarding.”


“For us, there is nothing more fulfilling than renewing partners,” Earnhardt Miller said. “Dale’s Pale Ale has seen the value in sharing its product, and the craft beer revolution, with our many fans. We’re looking forward to building on that, both on and off the track.”


“We had a hell of a good time racing with JR Motorsports in 2015 and connecting with NASCAR fans over red, white and blue cans of Dale’s Pale Ale,” said Dale Katechis, founder of Oskar Blues.


“We like to buck convention and do things our way. We see a similar hard-working, hands-on, American-made attitude in JR Motorsports and NASCAR fans and we’re proud to be a multi-year sponsor of the iconic No. 88 Chevrolet.”


JRM fields three full-time entries in the XFINITY Series — the No. 1 of Sadler, the No. 7 with driver Justin Allgaier and the No. 88, which will feature several drivers sharing seat time throughout the season.

RELATED: Gaughan talks strategy for Bristol heat races

 

FORT WORTH, Texas—Brendan Gaughan is aware of the talk that he might retire after the 2016 NASCAR XFINITY Series season. He even has that conversation every year.

 

“Every year, I almost retire,” Gaughan said at Texas Motor Speedway, site of Friday’s NASCAR XFINITY Series O’Reilly Auto Parts 300 (8:30 p.m. ET, FS1, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

 

“When I closed my team down in 2007 and the way it closed down was personally pretty difficult. I never thought I’d race again from there in NASCAR. We’ve been talking about that for years. What happens is, my father some days is — I think best way I can put it is what my grandfather used to say — trying to tell my father a secret is like telling the Las Vegas Sun. He likes to talk when he gets around reporters.”

 

Gaughan was referring to a story that ran in the Las Vegas Review-Journal last month during the NASCAR Sprint Cup and XFINITY Series weekend indicating that 2016 would be it for Gaughan. And while he considers it each year, he’s not ready to call it a career just yet.

 

“Every year he (his dad) and I talk about retirement,” Gaughan said. “Every year I talk about it, he talks about it, one of us does, one of us doesn’t. We always are saying it and discussing it. But it’s always been the same strategy in my eyes. If I can’t win races, I don’t want to be here.

 

“… As long as I can keep winning races and being up front and if we can make this Chase and keep competing for wins and championships, I think we will stay around as long as I can keep going.”

 

Gaughan, 40, has been around the sport a long time and bounced around a little bit before spending the past five seasons with Richard Childress Racing. In 2014, he captured his first two Nationwide (now XFINITY) Series victories. Through five races in 2016, Gaughan has three top 10s and is sixth in the point standings.

 

Part of what has helped Gaughan in recent seasons is an arrangement he worked out with Childress that allows him to spend most of his time at his Las Vegas home with his wife and two kids.

 

“A couple years ago, I was spending 18 and 20 days apart from my family pretty regularly and that was just making life very difficult. I’m lucky. I never felt that I should part from the team; I’ve always been a team guy. I played college sports (at Georgetown University). I live with my team, I’m at the shop everyday. I’ve done that my entire career since I owned my team. Luckily for me at RCR, there are seven guys on my race team that have been with me since 1999, 2000, 2002. They’ve been with me since I was in my early 20s. Life was getting difficult and they said ‘Go home.’

 

“… It’s been great and it’s actually what helped us win those couple races in the middle of 2014 and what made us run so good last year. My home life was much happier and in doing that, it made racing go better … I’m still doing the same stuff, I’m just not in the shop every day.”

 

In the summer, the family will head for their North Carolina house and Gaughan will spend more time at the shop. The veteran driver credits being able to have that freedom to those around him.

 

“When you have great people around you, you can get away with sometimes taking the next step in life.”

RELATED: Full schedule for Texas | Standings going into Saturday’s race


FORT WORTH, Texas — Kevin Harvick doesn’t understand why people keep speculating that he is not going to stay with Stewart-Haas Racing as it makes a manufacturer switch to Ford for the 2017 season.


“As far as I know, I thought I had a team extension that had two more years on my contract anyway,” Harvick said at Samuel Beck Elementary School on Thursday.

“I don’t know what everybody is talking about because of the fact that I do have a relationship with SHR, the contracts that we are in, the situations that we’re in are already there. I just let everybody just keep talking about it just because there is really nothing to it.”


An SHR team spokesperson said the team does not discuss contract details.


“I feel like I’ve got the best organization that I could possibly fit with,” Harvick said. “I think I got the best crew chief in the garage. Got everything that we spent years lining up. It would seem silly trying to do something different. Nothing’s changed.”


Those words echo what Harvick, who has driven a Chevrolet his entire Cup career, has been saying since the news of SHR’s move from Chevrolet to Ford was announced in late February.

Harvick took to Twitter on Thursday night to reiterate that he plans to drive the No. 4 car for a long time, a message that the official SHR account retweeted.


At SHR, Harvick and crew chief Rodney Childers have teamed to win the 2014 championship and nine wins in 78 starts together entering Saturday night’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Duck Commander 500 (7:30 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio) at Texas Motor Speedway. Harvick comes into the race as the points leader with a win, three top fives and five top 10s in the books thus far. Childers inked a multi-year extension to remain at SHR in June of 2015.


On top of that, Harvick’s words about three-time champion, friend and SHR co-owner Tony Stewart‘s involvement while sidelined with a back injury sounds like a driver who is in no hurry to leave.


“I think we are getting a glance into the future,” Harvick said. “I think as you see Tony so engaged and so a part of what we are doing, so much around the cars and people and in tune with what’s going on. Very encouraging for all of us to see what we are going to be looking at down the road as far what he wants to do and how he is going to fit in with the communication. That’s been exciting for me.”

Harvick was at the Trophy Club, Texas school to speak to students on Thursday morning as the special guest for a full assembly where he presented fourth-grader Jenna Johnson with a scale replica die-cast of a winning paint scheme she drew for Lionel Racing’s “Design A Die-cast” competition among 11 schools and 6,500 students competing in Texas Motor Speedway‘s Speeding To Read program. The 2014 champion also took student questions and officiated a tricycle race.

Bristol Motor Speedway announced on Wednesday that Peyton Manning will act as an Honorary Race Official and accompany fellow Nationwide spokesperson Dale Earnhardt Jr. through driver introductions and sit atop the No. 88 pit box during the Sprint Cup Series Food City 500 (April 17, 1 p.m. ET, FOX).

 

This will be Manning’s first NASCAR experience, courtesy of Nationwide.

 

“I’m thrilled to get a chance to watch Dale compete at Bristol Motor Speedway,” said the recently retired Manning. “I want to thank Nationwide for bringing me to one of the great NASCAR tracks to watch what I’m sure will be an exciting race in front of some of the most passionate fans in the sport.”

 

Manning is a beloved public figure in Tennessee, known not only for his NFL career — in which he won a Super Bowl title with Denver in February — but also attended the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. At UT, Manning finished his career holding 42 NCAA, SEC and Tennessee records. He won the Maxwell Award as the nation’s most outstanding player, the Davey O’Brien National Quarterback Award, the Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award and Player of the Year honors his senior season, securing his All-American status in 1997.

 

“It’s pretty awesome that Peyton Manning is coming out to Bristol. I think he’s going to enjoy watching the race there because it’s such an amazing race track,” Earnhardt Jr. said. “It’s awesome to have a legend like him coming to participate and enjoy our sport. He’s going to enjoy his experience, I’m sure, and we’re excited to have him.”

 

The No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing team with driver Kyle Busch was the only NASCAR Sprint Cup Series team issued a written warning following Sunday’s STP 500 at Martinsville (Va.) Speedway.

The team failed the Laser Inspection Station (LIS) twice during pre-race inspection on Sunday. Teams requiring three or more passes before being cleared by inspectors receive a warning from NASCAR.

Busch won the race, the sixth stop on this year’s 36-race schedule, leading 352 of the 500 laps contested.

It is the first written warning for the No. 18 team this season.

In the Camping World Truck Series, which also competed at Martinsville this past weekend, the No. 22 AM Racing entry of driver Austin Wayne Self received a warning for truck trailing arms that did not meet NASCAR specifications. The infraction was discovered during opening-day inspection on Thursday.

Both penalties were announced Wednesday by NASCAR.

Self failed to qualify for the Truck Series race, but competed in the No. 44 of Tommy Joe Martins after Martins damaged his primary entry in qualifying and the team did not have a back-up for the race.

Failing inspection twice, either pre-qualifying or pre-race, results in a written warning. A third failure will also result in the loss of 15 minutes of practice time.

Teams receiving four warnings forfeit the opportunity to select a pit stall, either for the event in question if selection hasn’t taken place or at the next event if pit stall selection has been completed.

RELATED: Kenseth honors Steve Byrnes’ family a year later

 

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Matt Kenseth spent the majority of his most recent Sunday afternoon running in the top five at Martinsville Speedway, but when the STP 500 came down to a final 11-lap dash, the Joe Gibbs Racing driver began dropping like a stone through the field.

 

Hoping to battle teammate Kyle Busch for the victory, Kenseth instead found himself searching for any opening that would allow him to drop down to the inside and stop the free fall.

 

By the time Busch took the checkered flag, Kenseth had plummeted to 15th.

 

It was another missed opportunity for the 2003 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion, whose No. 20 Toyota has had plenty of speed but not a lot of good fortune in 2016.

 

“I thought when eight cars stayed out, the way my car handled and the way it would restart … and being on warm tires and all (that) stuff, I knew that it probably wasn’t going to be good,” Kenseth said Tuesday during an appearance at the NASCAR Hall of Fame. “But I didn’t think it would be that bad.

 

“I never thought I would get shuffled to 15th. I thought I would have been able to somewhere find a gap, pop in there fourth or fifth or something like that and hopefully make a position or two up. I knew that my chances for a win were greatly diminished, but I didn’t think that I would fall back that far.”

 

Busch and JGR teammate Denny Hamlin each now have wins (Hamlin scored in the season-opening Daytona 500). Teammate Carl Edwards posted a solid sixth-place finish on Sunday and sits fourth, just behind Busch, in the points standings after six of 36 races.

 

Kenseth is 14th in points but showing no signs of concern as the series prepares to head to Texas Motor Speedway this week for Saturday night’s Duck Commander 500.

 

It’s a long season and there are a lot of laps to be run between now and September, when the field for this year’s 16-team Chase field will be set.

 

His team’s results thus far have been disappointing, “but we’ve run pretty good,” Kenseth said. “We were in contention to win a couple of races, neither of them worked out. We had fast enough cars, if all the stars had aligned maybe even won a couple more.

 

“If you run good enough, over time the law of averages is going to work out and you’re going to win some races and get some (good) finishes. It’s just tough to go through when you’re not getting the finishes.

 

“I’d much rather run the way we’re running and perform the way we’re performing and not get the finishes than be a 15th-place car and luck into a ninth-place finish or something like that.”

 

Kenseth, 44, has the best average finishing position among active drivers at TMS (8.2) and only six-time series champion Jimmie Johnson has a better driver rating. But his last two starts on the 1.5-mile track haven’t been particularly memorable with finishes outside the top 20. Kenseth missed last year’s Chase race at Texas while serving a two-race suspension.

 

Two of his 36 career victories in the series came at Texas — both earned while he still was competing for Roush Fenway Racing.

 

“I don’t see anybody hanging their heads around (the team’s shop),” Kenseth said. “I don’t think we need a group intervention. … We’re all grown-ups, been doing it for a long time. I think Jason (Ratcliff, crew chief) understands, I understand, I think my crew guys understand. …

 

“It’s easy to dwell on the negatives and be like, ‘Man we were in the process of making a pass for the lead and hopefully win the race and a caution came out and we finished 15th.’ Is that disappointing? Yeah it’s disappointing. But you’ve got to keep it all in perspective.

 

“You’re going to have days where things go right, as well. Like I said, it all starts with performance. … Sometimes it’s painful, but if you’re patient enough you’re going to end up getting the results eventually.”

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Each week millions of NASCAR fans — a massive television and digital audience — tune in to watch NASCAR Sprint Cup Series events, and today CMT announced an unprecedented six-hour, three-night special event dedicated to the fearless men who took stock car racing out of the backwoods and into the national spotlight with “NASCAR: The Rise of American Speed,” premiering Sunday May 8, May 15 and May 22 at 10 p.m. ET/PT.

From Stephen David Entertainment, the Emmy Award-winning company behind the miniseries “The Men Who Built America,” “Gold Fever” and “The World Wars,” the special event is not only a unique look into NASCAR’s legendary beginnings, but in the spirit of racing, it is a no-holds-barred account of the sport’s early pioneers and ascension to national prominence. The film features archival footage, re-enactments and interviews with NASCAR personalities and experts including Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jeff Gordon, Kevin Harvick, Matt Kenseth, Brad Keselowski, Kyle Larson, Joey Logano, Richard Petty, Tony Stewart and Darrell Waltrip.

From bootleggers settling their differences through racing to a singular vision from “Big Bill” France that launched an empire, NASCAR has always been and continues to be a family affair with a long history of “racing royalty” to be shared and passed along. Time and again, fathers, sons, brothers, uncles and nephews would race together — Ray Parks, Junior Johnson, Richard Petty, Dale Earnhardt and more — they were family best friends, rivals and heroes.

In “NASCAR: The Rise of American Speed,” these drivers, mechanics and owners come to life through character-driven scenes that unfold chronologically across the three nights, starting with NASCAR’s founding fathers and concluding with racing’s great modernizers and current superstars of the track.

“Our longstanding and unwavering connection with NASCAR and its fans makes CMT the perfect home to bring the high-octane true story of NASCAR to life,” said Jayson Dinsmore, executive vice president of development for CMT. “This first-of-its-kind television event will take viewers deep inside the enthralling and thrilling rise of an American premiere sports and relentless obsession.”

“NASCAR has one of the most exhilarating and inspiring origin stories in all of sports,” said Zane Stoddard, NASCAR vice president of entertainment marketing and content development. “Our collaborative relationship with CMT and Stephen’s unique style of production will bring it to life in a way our fans haven’t experienced before.”

It’s the story about how a generation of Southern bootleggers and gangsters pursued their version of the American dream and created an industry that defined them. Despite a destitute South, they became wildly rich, while in the process forming the nation’s greatest racing league through their persistence, sweat and moonshine.

The success of NASCAR surpassed even their wildest dreams and inspired a new generation of Southern icons. But in the race to always go bigger and faster, sometimes there were casualties along the way. “NASCAR: The Rise of American Speed” is a tale of fearless men who didn’t just live their lives, they raced them to the finish.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Nearly a year after Matt Kenseth drove to victory in the Food City 500 in Support of Steve Byrnes and Stand Up To Cancer at Bristol Motor Speedway, the former series champion met with members of the Byrnes family for a special presentation at the NASCAR Hall of Fame.

 

On Tuesday, the Joe Gibbs Racing driver presented Karen Byrnes, widow of the former NASCAR broadcaster, and son Bryson with a replica of the sword awarded to Kenseth for last year’s Bristol win as well as a framed photograph of the team in Victory Lane. Team members in the photo can be seen holding up signs supporting Byrnes, who passed away two days after the race.

 

“It’s something we’d talked about for a while … just kind of thought with the one-year anniversary of the race coming up and losing Steve shortly thereafter it was a good time to … come down and get a picture with them and give them a replica of the sword trophy and a picture of everybody with their Stand Up With Steve signs,” Kenseth said.

 

Karen Byrnes said she and her son had no idea the presentation was part of Tuesday’s appearance.

 

“The NASCAR Hall of Fame had asked us to come down and meet Matt for a photo,” she said. “But we didn’t know Matt Kenseth was bringing the framed photo and the sword; that was just really sweet and wonderful.”

 

Steve Byrnes was diagnosed with head and neck cancer in September of 2014. His wife said the longtime NASCAR on FOX anchor was “shocked and surprised” at the outpouring of support from the NASCAR industry once others learned of his condition.

 

The past year, Karen Byrnes said, has “been bittersweet.”

 

“Obviously … we’ve lived through the firsts of everything. This month in particular will be tough because his birthday is on the 14th and his passing was on the 21st. So we’ve had to live through a first Christmas, a first Father’s Day and a first Easter. Those are challenging times.

 

“But we’ve tried to be purposeful and also living, too, and moving forward and experiencing life. Because I don’t think we honor Steve in not. I think we do a disservice to him by not going out and living life.”

 

Steve Byrnes, whose broadcasting career spanned more than three decades, was named the 2016 recipient of the annual Squier-Hall Award for NASCAR Media Excellence.

 

“It makes me feel really happy that not only was Dad loved inside the family but was loved by many people outside the family,” Bryson Byrnes said. “He was really special to a lot of people and (that) makes me feel really proud of him.”

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Rick Hendrick probably knew the answer. That didn’t keep the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series team owner from asking the question.

Standing inside the No. 48 hauler, shoulder to shoulder with team members, Hendrick glanced at driver Jimmie Johnson.

“I’d like to have another clock,” he said matter-of-factly. “Jimmie, how many clocks do you have?”

“Not enough,” came Johnson’s rapid reply.

“That’s the right answer,” chimed in crew chief Chad Knaus.

Officially, Johnson has eight career victories at Martinsville Speedway, where the race winner receives a grandfather clock for his or her efforts.

Driver introductions were less than an hour away, and Sunday’s STP 500 would not start for another 90 minutes or so.

Hendrick, 66, was making the first of several stops on a sunny but cool Sunday morning at Martinsville — which is the site of both some of his greatest highs in racing and his most devastating heartbreak in life. His Hendrick Motorsports organization fields four teams in NASCAR’s premier series. The No. 48 of Johnson, the No. 5 of Kasey Kahne, the No. 24 of Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate Chase Elliott, and the No. 88 of Dale Earnhardt Jr., the series’ most popular driver.

On race days, Hendrick visits them all. After chatting with Johnson’s group Sunday, Hendrick ducked into the No. 88 hauler, then the 5 and finally the 24. That the HMS transporters are parked next to one another helps expedite the process.

Later, he speaks again briefly with the drivers and others out on the starting grid before the beginning of the race.

“I start at the back of the grid and work my way to the front speaking to the drivers,” Hendrick said of his own personal weekly grid walk. “It makes it hard sometimes when you’ve got one in the back, one in the front, one’s going to the bathroom, things like that. It’s tight between the time they get out of the truck (after driver introductions) and they start the race.”

That’s the case at Martinsville, with Johnson starting uncharacteristically deep (24th) in the 40-car field, and Kahne pitting at the front thanks to a No. 2 qualifying effort.

Slowing the process to a crawl are the fans and fellow competitors with whom Hendrick stops to chat as he makes his way from the frontstretch to the Turn 2 side of the series’ smallest venue.

The founder of a hugely successful NASCAR operation and automotive sales group, Hendrick remains an incredibly humble person. Fans that stop the team owner seeking an autograph get an autograph; those who ask for a photo get their picture taken with the team owner. The only request, coming again and again from those who help ferry their boss from one location to the next is a simple: “Give him room to walk, please.”

After stopping to offer Johnson and Earnhardt, who rolled off 21st, encouragement, Hendrick stops to speak with owner/driver Tony Stewart on pit road. Stewart remains sidelined after a back injury in a non-racing incident before the start of the season. His Stewart-Haas Racing organization purchases engines and much technical information from HMS, though that will change next season when SHR moves to Ford.

SHR driver Kevin Harvick speaks briefly with Hendrick as well, then crew chief Rodney Childers. A few yards farther and it’s Felix Sabates, minority owner of Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates, who steps around the cars on the grid to greet Hendrick.

The team owner is still two teams shy of completing his task by the time the national anthem has ended and the planes in the flyover have flown over, colored smoke trailing from each.

Elliott and Kahne are already behind the wheel, but Hendrick manages to lean in and speak to each before the window nets go up on their respective cars and the command is given to start engines.

Hendrick will often visit each of the four teams’ pit boxes, joining the crew chiefs, car chiefs and engineers for varying periods of time throughout the race. When the green flag finally falls, he’s poised atop the No. 24 box of Elliott, standing in the background and watching the action unfold.

Team owner Rick Hendrick, center, speaks to all of his drivers before a race — Dale Earnhardt Jr. (left) is one of four.
 

WORDS OF ENCOURAGEMENT

“I just tell them good luck,” Hendrick says of the pre-race conversations with his drivers. He offers words of encouragement to those who might be struggling, as well those who aren’t.

Staying out of trouble, making good adjustments and driving smart can pay off, he tells each one. Do that “and then you’re going to be there,” he says. “We’ve won a lot of races that way.”

Johnson, who has driven exclusively for Hendrick at the Sprint Cup level, calls his boss “a great motivator.”

“He can say a lot in a few words,” the six-time champion said. “Here it would be, ‘You know I won my first race here.’ And just smile at you.

“Yes sir. Message delivered. Let’s go win another.”

RELATED: Top moments from Martinsville

Of course, conversations can sometimes take a delightfully unexpected turn.

“I can think back to my rookie year at Charlotte for qualifying,” Johnson said. “There was some cool car I wanted to buy. He knew that I had ordered it through his dealership; I was going to lease it, and he stuck his head in (the window) just as I was getting ready to roll off for qualifying, and said ‘You know how much I love to win the pole at home,’ and I said ‘I’m sure you do.’

“He goes ‘You won’t have to worry about paying for that car if you win the pole.’ “

Johnson indeed wound up winning the pole for the 2002 Coca-Cola 600. It was his first pole at a non-restrictor plate track. It wasn’t until he was headed home, he said, that he remembered the owner’s comments.

“I was like ‘Damn! I got a car out of this!’ ” Johnson said. “So I call him and go ‘Hey what about that car?’ and he goes ‘No problem. A deal’s a deal.’ “

There have been similar deals, some that paid off and some that didn’t. But the primary message on Sunday for each team was straightforward and simple. “I’m here to support you,” Hendrick said. “Give them that moral support and acknowledge how hard they work.

“It’s easy to be positive when you’re winning every week, but when you’re not, to come back with the right attitude to work together, figure it out and not point blame. We’re a team. Drivers are going to make mistakes, crew chiefs are going to make a bad call, and pit stops are going to be bad. Nobody’s perfect. Just keeping them all motivated. That’s it.”

THE TRIP THAT NEARLY WASN’T

Winning at Martinsville is special for Hendrick. At only .526 miles, it is the smallest venue on the Sprint Cup Series circuit. From an emotional standpoint, it might well be the biggest for him.

As a kid, Hendrick traveled with his father, Joe, from their home in South Hill, Virginia, to watch the races. The younger Hendrick got Richard Petty’s autograph “in Turn 4 down there,” he said. “I don’t remember how old I was.

“I used to pull for Rex White here in the convertible (division).”

Martinsville eventually became the launching pad for Hendrick Motorsports, known as All-Star Racing in 1984 when a former Modified driver from Chemung, New York, named Geoff Bodine put the team in Victory Lane for the very first time.

“Had we not won this race in 1984, I wouldn’t be here today,” the car owner said. “That’s how close it was. We had made the decision to close the shop until we got a sponsor. You know, usually when you do that, you never come back.

“But Harry (Hyde, crew chief) talked me into coming up here and Bodine won the race. The rest is history. We owe the track a lot.”

There have been 22 more wins at Martinsville for the organization since Bodine’s victory.

Most were celebrated. Jimmie Johnson’s win in the Subway 500 on October 24, 2004 was not.

It was Johnson’s first short-track victory.

It was the day Hendrick, feeling under the weather, chose to stay home.

And it was the day a company plane carrying 10 passengers, including son, Ricky, and brother, John Hendrick, president of the company, crashed while attempting to land at Blue Ridge Airport in nearby Stuart, Virginia. There were no survivors.

Saturday, the day before this year’s STP 500, was Ricky Hendrick’s birthday. He would have been 36.

“It was kind of one of those days where — I really thought about this morning just not coming,” said Hendrick, adding that returning to the spring race each year is difficult but that “it’s really hard to come back in the fall.

“Once I’m here with the guys, that’s what those guys would have wanted me to do,” he said. “When you come back and fly in you think about that.”

He returned for the spring race in 2005, and the reception from fans, officials and other competitors “just blew me away,” Hendrick said.

Skipping the fall race, he learned that “sometimes it’s harder not to be here than to be here.

“As tough as it is, at home it’s worse. You’re watching it or maybe you don’t want to watch it. It’s hard to explain,” he said. “But I think I’ve learned that it’s going to be tough because it was so much of a loss that day. But being here is easier than being at home thinking about it.”

‘LET’S GO TO TEXAS’

A constant, cool breeze eventually pushed Hendrick inside one of his team’s haulers for the completion of Sunday’s race. It had been a trying day, and while a glimmer of hope remained in the closing laps, it turned out to be a rare un-Hendrick-like day in the series’ first of two annual stops at Martinsville.

Johnson finished ninth, Earnhardt Jr. 14th, Elliott 20th and Kahne 22nd.

“When you have days like this, I do more trying to console them than anything else,” Hendrick said, removing the radio headset that had kept him in contact with each of his four teams throughout the day.

“I always just try to tell them, ‘Let’s go to Texas.’ “

The teams will gather Tuesday to go over what worked and what didn’t, filing it away for later in the year when the series returns. But the focus will be on the upcoming race this weekend at Texas Motor Speedway.

“We’ve been good on the mile-and-a-half stuff,” he said. “They’ll just have to decipher where they think they were off here.”

The man whose teams have won 11 premier series titles and 242 races — including nearly two dozen here — headed back outside into the fading light and growing shadows.

“This is,” he admitted, “a humbling sport.”

MORE: Key takeaways from Martinsville