RELATED: Johnson’s post-race reaction to being eliminated

DOVER, Del. — Once the crowd cleared, Jimmie Johnson walked around to each member of his crew on pit road, giving them a pat on the back and “good job,” following his 41st-place finish in Sunday’s AAA 400 at Dover International Speedway. His dreams of a seventh title in the 2015 season had been washed away, his finish eliminating the No. 48 team from the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup — coincidentally in what was his 500th premier series start.



The result marked Johnson’s worst finish in his career at Dover, a track that he’s dominated in years past, reaching Victory Lane a series-best 10 times.



“It just wasn’t meant to be,” Johnson said on pit road after the race. “It’s unfortunate. I feel for my team, I feel for Hendrick Motorsports, Lowe’s, Chevrolet.”



Trouble began stirring around Lap 104 when Johnson felt something breaking in his car while running 16th.



“It was instantaneous for me,” Johnson recalled. “I was coming down the frontstretch and it just started vibrating, the right rear hub I guess started seizing up because the fluid was out of it. It was just metal on metal shaking.”



A broken rear axle seal was revealed as the culprit of Johnson’s Monster Mile misfortune — a part that Johnson said retails for around $5.



“It’s really horrible, it’s a simple piece,” Johnson said. “We’re always very cautious, these axles come in and out of the car. I think I had one go in practice earlier this year. Maybe five in my whole career have ever gone.”



The faulty part sent Johnson behind the wall for nearly 30 minutes, as every member of the No. 48 team — and even a few No. 88 crew members — feverishly worked to get the car back on track. They returned to the track in last place, 37 laps down. 



But as the race continued, Johnson’s daunting task became an uphill battle — a monster that even “Six-Time” couldn’t tame.



“I really didn’t have anything to fight for,” Johnson said. “It was completely out of my control with how many laps we were down. Just a matter of what went on.



“But then 20-30 minutes of being back on the track, I could see the flow of the race. Guys were minding their manners pretty well on the track, a lot of green flag runs, so I kind of felt like we were in big trouble.”



Mechanical issues have been few and far between for the No. 48 team in the past. Johnson’s six championship titles prove that, his cars under guidance of crew chief Chad Knaus and his notoriously meticulous nature. But as Johnson showed today, even something as simple as an axle failure can happen to anyone.



“As I worry about things, I worry about a flat, I worry about a pit call, I worry about hard racing, something going on — I don’t worry about an axle seal failing,” Johnson said. “It’s just not on your radar.



“You just take things for granted. There’s so many parts and pieces on these cars and you take for granted what they all do.”



No. 4 crew chief Rodney Childers, who won Sunday’s race at Dover with driver Kevin Harvick, attested to that after the race.



“Honestly, it’s one of the things that is the scariest of everything that race teams deal with,” Childers said in the post-race press conference. “… You think that race teams worry about engine trouble or things like that. But these axle seal problems, they happen all the time, and a lot of times you don’t hear about them.”



With a win at Dover, Childers and Harvick will continue on to the Contender Round in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, vying for a second straight title for the No. 4 team. But while the hunt for a seventh championship title is over for Johnson this season, the chance remains for his Hendrick Motorsports teammates Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr., who advanced to the next round.



And Johnson’s own desire to win races remains furiously intact.



“We had a very, very fast race car today, the past three or four weeks we’ve had very competitive cars,” Johnson said. “We want to win races, that’s what the rest of the season is for us.



“Help our teammates advance, help our teammates win the championship.”

RELATED: Full race results | Series standings | Jimmie exits Chase early

 

The AAA 400 at Dover International Speedway represented the final race of the Challenger Round of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, and Kevin Harvick was able to stave off elimination with a victory. See who advanced to the Contender Round and whose title dreams have come to an end.

Advancing:
Matt Kenseth
Joey Logano
Denny Hamlin
Carl Edwards
Martin Truex Jr.
Kurt Busch
Jeff Gordon
Brad Keselowski
Kyle Busch
Ryan Newman
Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Kevin Harvick

Eliminated:
Jamie McMurray
Jimmie Johnson
Paul Menard
Clint Bowyer

Up next: Bank of America 500, 7 p.m. ET, Oct. 10 at Charlotte Motor Speedway (NBC, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). This will be the opening race of the Contender Round, and the advancing drivers will see their point totals reset to 3,000.

Who it favors
Most wins:
5—Jeff Gordon
Best driver rating: 106.6—Kyle Busch
Best average finish: 10.2—Joey Logano

Who it hurts
Fewest top 10s:
4—Brad Keselowski (in 12 starts)
Worst driver rating: 79.0—Ryan Newman
Worst average finish: 19.1—Kurt Busch

RELATED: Full race results | See the 12 drivers who advanced

Slated to roll off the grid ninth in Sunday’s AAA 400 at Dover, Martin Truex Jr. had to start from the rear of the field for unapproved adjustments on his No. 78 Chevrolet for Furniture Row Racing.

Truex’s car was on the grid during pre-race ceremonies when a NASCAR official was looking at the right rear wheel well and saw something they didn’t like, according to NBCSN. The car had initially passed pre-race inspection.

Truex’s car was brought back to go through inspection and the team had to alter the rear opening. It took about 15 minutes, according to NBCSN. The car was rolled back onto the grid prior to pre-race ceremonies getting underway.

 

The driver of the No. 78 rallied for an 11th-place finish, and he advanced to the Contender Round in the process — although after the race, he was still perplexed by the ruling.

“We didn’t do anything the other teams don’t do,” Truex told NBCSN. “NASCAR tried to make an example out of us today for some reason.”

The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and NASCAR XFINITY Series are at Charlotte Motor Speedway this week, while the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series is off.

Sprint Cup Series and XFINITY Series practices, qualifying sessions and races can be watched on NBC Sports Live Extra


All 
times are ET

SUNDAY, OCT. 11:


PRE-RACE SCHEDULE

—11:40:00 a.m.: NSCS Drivers Introductions
—12:14:00 p.m.: Intro Presentation of Colors: Charlotte Fire Department Honor Guard
—12:14:20 p.m.: Invocation by: Jim Daly, President and CEO of Focus on the Family
—12:14:45 p.m.: Intro National Anthem
—12:15:00 p.m.: National Anthem by: Danielle Johnson
—12:16:30 p.m.: TOT Fly By: Team Bandit from Turn 4 to Turn 1
—12:21:30 p.m.: “Drivers, Start Your Engines” by: Master Sergeants, Shane Perret, Adam Martinez, George Palmer, Stephen Canonico, from Army Soldier for Life Office
—12:30:00 p.m.: Green Flag – Bank of America 500 (334 Laps /500 Miles)


ON TRACK

— 12:30 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Bank of America 500  (334 Laps, 501 Miles), NBCSN/Live Extra (Results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 4:30 p.m. (approx.): Post-NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race

THURSDAY, OCT. 8:


ON TRACK

— 1:30-2:55 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, NBCSN/Live Extra (Results)
— 3-3:55 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series practice, NBCSN/Live Extra (Results)
— 5:30-6:55 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series final practice, NBCSN/Live Extra (Results)

7:20 p.m: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, NBCSN/Live Extra (Results)
8:40 p.m.: NASCAR Whelen Southern Modified Tour race (150 laps, 37.5 miles)


GARAGECAM

— 1 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
— 2:30 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series


PRESS CONFERENCES

— 12:15 p.m.: Regan Smith

3 p.m.: Carl Edwards
4 p.m.: Jeff Gordon
6 p.m.: Crew chief Keith Rodden and honorary crew chief Braylon Beam
8:20 p.m.: Post-NASCAR Sprint Cup Series qualifying


FRIDAY, OCT. 9:


ON TRACK
— 3:30-4:25 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, NBCSN/Live Extra (Get results)
— 4:45 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, NBCSN/Live Extra (Get results)

— 6:30-7:20 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, NBCSN/Live Extra (Get results)
— 8 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series Drive for the Cure 300 Presented by Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina (200 laps, 300 miles), NBCSN/Live Extra (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 10:15 p.m.: Post-NASCAR XFINITY Series race






RELATED: See the full weekend schedule | NBC Sports Live Extra


All times ET

Monday, Oct. 5
6 a.m., NASCAR Victory Lap (re-air), NBCSN
7 a.m., NASCAR Victory Lap (re-air), NBCSN
8 a.m., NASCAR Victory Lap (re-air), NBCSN
2:30 p.m., NASCAR 120, NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
2 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FS2


Tuesday, Oct. 6
6 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBCSN
7 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS12 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FS2

Wednesday, Oct. 7
6 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBCSN
7 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FS1
2 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FS2

Thursday, Oct. 8
6 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBCSN
7 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBCSN
1:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, NBCSN
3 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series practice, NBCSN
4 p.m., NASCAR K&N Series East: Dover International Speedway (tape), NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBCSN
5:30 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series final practice, NBCSN
7 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, NBCSN

Friday, Oct. 9
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour: Stafford Motor Speedway (tape), NBCSN
3:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, NBCSN
4:30 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBCSN
6:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, NBCSN
7:30 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Countdown to Green, NBCSN
8 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Drive for the Cure 300 Presented by Blue Cross
, NBCSN

Saturday, Oct. 10
3:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying (re-air), NBCSN
4 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay, FS2
5 p.m., NASCAR America Saturday, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Countdown to Green, NBCSN
7 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Bank of America 500, NBC (POSTPONED)
11 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Post-Race, NBCSN
11:30 p.m., NASCAR Victory Lap, NBCSN

Sunday, Oct. 11
12:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Bank of America 500, NBCSN
11:30 p.m., NASCAR Victory Lap (tape), NBCSN

 

RELATED: Full race results | Updated series standings

John Wes Townley won the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Rhino Linings 350 on Saturday at Las Vegas Motor Speedway by coasting to the finish line as drivers such a Erik Jones, Matt Crafton and Cameron Hayley ran short of fuel or needed to make a late stop.

For Townley it was his first career victory in a major NASCAR series, but it didn’t come without some tense moments as his crew chief was advising him to use three-quarters throttle in the race’s final three laps.

However, it turned out to be enough as race leader Crafton (eighth place) had to pit for a spalsh-and-go with five laps remaining and Jones (ninth) and Hayley (10th) were seen wiggling their trucks short on fuel in the final laps.

 

“I would have run out of gas if it hadn’t been for (spotter) Terry (Cook),” Townley said after the race. “I took care of this thing (truck) tonight and it took care of me. This is amazing; awesome.”
 
Said crew chief Michael Shelton, a former series championship crew chief, “It’s been a lot of time coming. He’s (Townley) had a tough career at times.”

Timothy Peters finished second, followed by Ben Kennedy, John Hunter Nemechek and Brandon Jones to round out the top five.

Erik Jones leads Crafton by four points in the driver standings, with Tyler Reddick, who finished seventh, 16 points down.

Reddick wrecked with teammate Austin Theriault on Lap 13. Theriault, whose truck went head-on into the wall, was airlifted to a nearby hospital for observation. According to a post on the driver’s Facebook page, Theriault was alert and communicating.

RELATED: Theriault airlifted after Vegas wreck

The Truck Series will return to the track on Saturday, Oct. 24 at Talladega Superspeedway for the Fred’s 250 Presented by Coca-Cola (1 p.m. ET, FOX, MRN, SiriusXM).

RELATED: Full race results | Updated Chase grid | Series standings



SHOP: Harvick gear

DOVER, Del. — By Jove, he’s done it again!

Forced to win at Dover International Speedway to keep his NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship hopes alive Sunday, Kevin Harvick did just that, dominating Sunday’s AAA 400 to stave off elimination from the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

In a virtual carbon copy of last year’s Chase race at Phoenix, where the 2014 premier series champion had to win to advance to the Championship Round at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Harvick led 355 of 400 laps (a career best at any track) in winning for the third time this year and the 31st time in his career.

“I think we’re better than we were last year, just because of the experiences and things that we’ve had,” Harvick said after the race. “I think when we look at everything that’s gone on over the last couple of years, it’s just been a lot of fun.

“So, it’s just that never-quit attitude. That’s what (team co-owner) Tony Stewart said when we went to Homestead last year. He said, ‘Whatever you do, do not quit until they throw that checkered flag.’ “

Harvick won the race and secured his first Sprint Cup title by a half-second over Ryan Newman in the 2014 race.

But there was one major difference between last year’s must-win race and the one on Sunday. Phoenix is Harvick’s best track. At Dover, on the other hand, he had never won before and had posted just four top-five finishes in 29 previous starts.

As fast as Harvick’s No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet was, however, none of the statistics mattered. After a restart with 24 laps left, he pulled away to a 2.639-second victory over Kyle Busch, who, likewise, secured a berth in the 12-driver Contender Round with his second-place finish.

Nor did the stats help Jimmie Johnson, whose shocking ouster from the playoffs took place at the Monster Mile where he holds a record 10 victories. The six-time series champion pitted his No. 48 Chevrolet at Lap 104 and brought it to the garage shortly thereafter, with a failed rear axle seal.

Johnson lost 36 laps while his team replaced the rear end housing and was credited with a 41st-place finish, leaving him 12 points shy of the Chase cutoff, which came down to a tiebreaker for the 12th and final spot between third-place finisher Dale Earnhardt Jr. and fourth-place Jamie McMurray.

Joining Johnson and McMurray on the Chase sidelines were Paul Menard (25th Sunday) and Clint Bowyer (14th), who, like Harvick, faced a win-or-bust scenario at the one-mile oval track.

Narrowed to 12, the field for the Contender Round now includes Challenger Round winners Matt Kenseth (Chicago), Denny Hamlin (New Hampshire) and Harvick, as well as Carl Edwards, Martin Truex Jr., Kurt Busch, Jeff Gordon, Brad Keselowski, Kyle Busch, Newman and Earnhardt Jr.

But on Sunday, Harvick showed his hand as the speed horse in the Chase, just as he was last year. Harvick’s car was fast last week at New Hampshire, but he ran out of fuel while leading with three laps left to create the must-win scenario at Dover.

“Anytime you can go through moments like this and gain some momentum and prove to yourself that you can do things like this, there’s no way you can’t be stronger,” Harvick said. “I’m just so proud of those guys and so proud of our fans and everybody for all their support all week. There it is — stay the course.”

Kyle Busch conceded Harvick’s victory was bad news for everyone else still in the Chase.

“The way he ran today — hell, yeah,” Busch said. “That was a guy that we wanted to knock out. That’s a guy that can win all these races, and you don’t want to have to compete against a guy like that.

“But that’s why they’re as good as they are, and they were last year’s champion, so they’re going to have an opportunity to continue on. We’ll see what happens. There’s still two more rounds to figure out who’s going to make it to Homestead.”

RELATED: Team transporter catches fire coming home from Kentucky 

 

DOVER, Del. — It might be the oldest transporter in the garage. Hard to say, but if there’s one older …

Up front in the lounge area there are mirrors on the ceiling. The cabinet includes a stereo system that features a side-by-side cassette tape deck. The lone photo on the wall is an artist’s rendering of the No. 52 entry. The car in the picture is sporting sponsorship from Alka-Seltzer.

Maybe it’s the oldest hauler, maybe not. But the white trailer used to move the Jimmy Means Racing entry from its shop in North Carolina to Dover International Speedway this weekend served its purpose. Called back into active duty after a fire destroyed the team’s primary hauler, it’s a throwback of sorts to an earlier era.

“Watch your head when you go up there,” team owner Jimmy Means advised. “This one’s old school.”

Driver Joey Gase finished 21st in last Saturday’s NASCAR XFINITY Series race and Means was headed back to North Carolina when a wheel bearing overheated and caught a tire on fire. The fire quickly spread into the hauler.


RELATED: Dover race results

“We had just stopped 30 miles up the road,” Means said Saturday, “fueled up and I personally went around and laid my hand on all the hubs and they were normal.”

In the days after the incident, other teams reached out and offered assistance. Some offered to loan trailers. One Sprint Cup team owner told his group to give Means whatever he needed to make sure he made it to the next race.

Friends and fans raised more than $10,000.

Fortunately, help from the No. 22 Team Penske team, which stopped to help, lessened the damage done by the fire.

“If it hadn’t been for them … we used up all the fire extinguishers, 42 bottles of water, coke soda, orange soda, ice by the handful,” Means said. “We actually thought we had it out and it (flared) up again and we were all out of supplies. Watched it burn for about 15 or 20 minutes until the fire department got there.

“At least they helped us keep it from burning the cars up. If they hadn’t have stopped it would have burned the cars up for sure.”

Other than damage to the hauler itself, and the pit box used on pit road, most of the damage to the contents was smoke and water related. The cars, while looking the worse for wear, were salvageable. The trailer and pit box were not. Gase competed in Saturday’s Hisense 200 at Dover in the same car he raced at Kentucky.

“The cars, I’m amazed they weren’t hurt,” Means said. “They needed to be completely taken apart, everything painted and all that. They did get warm and from the water on them naturally they all rusted. Plastic strips to keep the heat and the air in (at the rear of the transporter) melted, all that went up in the air and just settled on everything. It was just a big mess.

“It really didn’t hurt the equipment that much other than just being filthy and water damage to some of it. We were fortunate that our radios were in the front … did get a little water damage but didn’t get any intense heat.”

Prepping the back-up hauler, built in 1990, was a task in itself. It had been sitting idle for several years — Means said he hadn’t kept the license plates up to date and had to rush to the courthouse to pay three years’ worth of taxes to get it back on the road.

Volunteers joined in to help the team prepare for this week’s race.

“Definitely a thrash to get it done,” he said. “Actually, by the last day it came out better than we thought it was going to be. We were prepared to be here Friday morning; we loaded Wednesday night at 9:30. Thought that was a pretty good job.

“Probably the average age of the crew helping us was 65. Anywhere from 78, 74, 65, 68 working on this stuff, getting it clean. Crew chief (Tim Brown) did a whale of a job of getting everything cleaned up and hopefully putting on the truck what we needed to get through this weekend. That will give us a little more time to get this thing stocked so we can operate out of it the rest of the year.”

Gase called it “kind of the worst time possible for us for this to happen,” but said after going through the car “as best we could,” nothing seemed beyond repair.

“We had a lot of guys come in, worked a lot of hours, even my girlfriend came in and helped get everything cleaned up,” he said. “That was the hardest thing. But it was a group effort and I think we did pretty good to get it back and get it here.”

Gase’s Donate Life Chevrolet started 28th Saturday as the field was set per the rulebook when qualifying was canceled. After a flat left rear early in the race, he finished 24th.

It wasn’t a win, but given all that the team had to overcome just to get to Dover, it was impressive just the same.

RELATED: See the full lineup for Sunday’s race
MORE: Driver standings | Chase Grid

DOVER, Del. — The second-guessing began after Chicago and escalated a week later following New Hampshire.

Back-to-back finishes outside the top 20 have put defending NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Kevin Harvick in a must-win situation heading into Sunday’s AAA 400 at Dover International Speedway (2:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

“Everybody’s an armchair quarterback on Monday morning,” Rodney Childers, crew chief for Harvick and the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 4 team, said Saturday prior to the start of practice at Dover. “I think you’re always going to have that.”

Contact with fellow driver Jimmie Johnson led to the blown tire at Chicagoland in the opening race of this year’s Chase for the Sprint Cup; last weekend at Dover, Harvick had a dominant car and led for a total of 216 laps, but ran out of fuel while leading just three laps from the finish.

As a result, Harvick finds himself 15th among the 16 Chase drivers; only the top 12 remain in title contention following this weekend’s Challenger Round cutoff race.

Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Denny Hamlin and Matt Kenseth took the first two Chase races to guarantee they will be around for the Contender Round, which begins next weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

“The deal at Chicago, it smoked that first corner and the next lap it didn’t smoke at all,” Childers said. “We had the rear bumper camera on our pit box; if there is anything coming out of the back of the car you can see it on that rear bumper camera. The second lap it didn’t smoke at all. Timmy (Fedewa) on the spotters’ stand said it didn’t smoke. I think really … (Kevin) ran the car easier that lap and we didn’t really know that. The next lap, when we told him it wasn’t smoking anymore, he ran it hard through (Turns) 1 and 2 and it smoked again and then blew the tire out.”

Running out of fuel at Loudon, he said, was tougher to swallow.

“There shouldn’t have been any issues,” he said. “But there were a few things during the pit stop that looked like the pit crew could have done differently to try and do more to get it full and it wasn’t.

“Most of the time you know. But to be honest, he never really ran hard all day so we didn’t have good readings on what it should be. Even that last run, our mileage was the best it had been all day. Everybody thought Matt (Kenseth) was pushing us but he really wasn’t, we were never really running hard the whole time he was behind us. It’s not too often you have a car like that. It was just so fast that he could do whatever he wanted.”

Harvick was fourth fastest in the opening, abbreviated practice Saturday at Dover. Rain had canceled all on-track activity on Friday.

Technically, Harvick can advance based on points, but the scenarios that would allow that to occur are a mathematician’s nightmare. “Really, those guys (ahead of us) would have to crash out early in the race,” Childers said.

Win the race and the rest will take care of itself.

Harvick has two wins, at Las Vegas and Phoenix earlier in the year, and 10 runner-up finishes. He’s never won at Dover, a high-banked 1-mile track.

“We try every week to win; if you don’t, that’s pretty much it,” Childers said. “You just hate that it comes down to that, to lead the points all year, have the consistency that we’ve had, just hate to see that it’s come down to this.

“But on the other hand I feel like we’ve got the team to do it and the driver to do it.

“I think if you’re going to back any team against the wall, this is the one to do it.”