Six-time Sprint Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson gave us a quick look into Saturday night’s wedding reception for the union of his crew chief, Chad Knaus, and former Miss Sprint Cup Brooke Werner.

RELATED: SHR driver announces engagement

 

Knaus and Werner weren’t the only two NASCAR couples tying the knot during the Sprint Cup Series off-week. BK Racing driver Matt DiBenedetto married his longtime girlfriend Taylor and shared his excitement on Twitter.

 

On behalf of NASCAR.com, congrats to the new happy couples and props on the killer dance moves, Knaus.

The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and the NASCAR XFINITY Series will be at Darlington Raceway for a Labor Day weekend doubleheader. Sprint Cup and XFINITY Series on-track action can all be watched on NBC, NBCSN and NBC Sports Live Extra. The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series is off for the weekend.

All times are ET

SUNDAY, SEPT. 6:

ON TRACK
–7 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Bojangles’ Southern 500 (367 laps, 501.3 miles),
NBC/Live Extra (Results)

PRE-RACE SCHEDULE
—5:00:00 p.m.: NSCS Driver & Crew Chief Meeting (NSCS Meeting Tent)
—5:20:00 p.m.: Grand Funk Railroad Pre-Race Concert (45 min)
—6:17:00 p.m.: Recognition of Fan Hall of Fame Members (5 members) – CW to present rings
—6:18:00 p.m.: Recognition of Landmark Award for Outstanding Contributions to NASCAR Recipient Harold Brasington
—6:20:00 p.m.: Recognition NASCAR Hall of Fame Members (14) – Will exit stage to pre-race trucks
—6:30:00 p.m.: NSCS Drivers Introductions with Coors Light Pole Award
—7:05:00 p.m.: Intro Presentation of Colors by: South Carolina Joint National Guard Color Guard
—7:05:20 p.m.: Invocation by: “Mr. Darlington Raceway” Harold King
—7:05:45 p.m.: Intro National Anthem
—7:06:00 p.m.: National Anthem by: Nashville Recording Artist Tanya Tucker
—7:07:30 p.m.: Flyover TOT by: C-17, Charleston Air Force Base
—7:12:30 p.m.: “Drivers, Start Your Engines” by: Terry Labonte accompanied by Bojangles’ CEO Clifton Rutledge
—7:20:30 p.m.: Green Flag – Bojangles’ Southern 500 (367 laps, 501.3 miles)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
–11 p.m.: Post-NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race


FRIDAY, SEPT. 4:

ON TRACK
–11 a.m.-12:55 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, NBCSN/Live Extra (Results)
–1-1:55 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series practice, NBCSN/Live Extra (Results)
–3-4:25 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series final practice, NBCSN/Live Extra (Results)
–4:30-6:25 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, NBCSN/Live Extra (Results)

GARAGECAM (Watch live)
–10:30 a.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
–12:30 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series

PRESS CONFERENCES
— 9:40 a.m.: Chase Elliott
— 9:55 a.m.: Joey Logano
— 10:15 a.m.: Matt Kenseth
— 1:30 p.m.: Aric Almirola
— 2 p.m.: Jeff Gordon
— 2:30 p.m.: Bill Elliott


SATURDAY, SEPT. 5:

ON TRACK:
–11:45 a.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, NBCSN/Live Extra (Results)
–1:45 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying,
NBCSN/Live Extra (Results)
–3:30 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series VFW Sport Clips Help a Hero 200 (147 laps, 200.8 miles), NBC/Live Extra (Results)


PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)

–11:30 a.m.: National Motorsports Press Association announcement
–2:45 p.m.: Post-NASCAR Sprint Cup Series qualifying
–5:45 p.m.: Post-NASCAR XFINITY Series race

 

 
 


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


All times ET

Monday, August 31
3 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Chevrolet Silverado 250 (re-air), FOX Sports 1
5 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
2 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2


Tuesday, Sept. 1
6 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBCSN
7 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBCSN
2:30 p.m., Empty Cup: Quest for the 1992 NASCAR Title (re-air), FOX Sports 1
3 p.m., A Perfect Storm: The 1979 Daytona 500 (re-air), FOX Sports 1
4 p.m., Being: Stewart-Haas Racing (re-air), FOX Sports 1
5 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1

Wednesday, Sept. 2
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, FOX Sports 1

Thursday, Sept. 3
6 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBCSN
7 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBCSN
4:30 p.m., NASCAR America: The States of NASCAR (re-air), NBCSN
5 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1

7 p.m., NASCAR K&N Pro Series East: Virginia International Raceway (tape), NBCSN
12:30 a.m., NASCAR K&N Pro Series East: Virginia International Raceway (re-air), NBCSN

Friday, Sept. 4
6 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBCSN
7 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBCSN
11 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, NBCSN
1 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series practice, NBCSN
2 p.m., NASCAR K&N Pro Series East: Virginia International Raceway (re-air), NBCSN
3 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series final practice, NBCSN
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, NBCSN
6:30 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBCSN
9:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice (re-air), NBCSN

Saturday, Sept. 5
10 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice (re-air), NBCSN
11:30 a.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, NBCSN
1 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBCSN
1:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, NBCSN
3 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Countdown to Green, NBC
3:30 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series VFW Sport Clips Help a Hero 200, NBC

11:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying (re-air), NBCSN

Sunday, Sept. 6
11 a.m., Continental Tire SportsCar Challenge: Virginia International Raceway (tape), FOX Sports 1
1 p.m., 1979 Daytona 500 (re-air), FOX Sports 1
1:30 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay, FOX Sports 1
5 p.m., NASCAR America Sunday, NBCSN
6 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series: Countdown to Green, NBCSN
7 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Bojangles’ Southern 500, NBC
11 p.m., NASCAR Victory Lap, NBCSN
Midnight, NASCAR Victory Lane, FOX Sports 1
2:30 a.m., NASCAR Victory Lane (re-air), FOX Sports 1

 

ELKHART LAKE, Wis. — Blake Koch spent a lengthy caution period Saturday afternoon performing the customary practice of saving fuel, shutting his No. 8 car off and on to conserve precious drops. What wasn’t customary was his late-race view, up front and with only the pace car in sight.



That’s why the heartache was especially difficult to take Saturday at Road America, when his TriStar Motorsports entry lost power while leading with five laps remaining in the Road America 180 Fired Up by Johnsonville. With it went his hopes for an upset NASCAR XFINITY Series victory, a breakthrough five years in the making.



“It just … nothing. Dead. Totally dead,” Koch said, managing a sheepish smile while describing the helplessness of coasting to a stop, relinquishing his position during the final yellow flag. “No voltage, no power, no lights, no nothing. I got pushed all the way around the track to pit road and they reconnected the battery. They got me back out there on the lead lap to salvage a 21st-place finish, but that’s where we always finish. We were looking for something better.”



Koch had worked his way to the front under green-flag conditions, his team working a fuel strategy ploy to near-perfection in the final road-course race of the season. When the final yellow flew for pole-starter Ben Rhodes‘ crash, the 30-year-old driver was in prime position, ready to restart alongside eventual race winner Paul Menard, who was in an even more aggressive fuel-saving mode.



Besides his flirtation with Victory Lane, Koch had extra motivation to perform well in front of representatives attending from the nearby Milwaukee office for his sponsor, LeafFilter.



“For them to see their car leading, it had to have been awesome and that’s what I was thinking about,” Koch said. “I’d love to win this race for them, and we were in position to give it our best shot. If the thing had kept going green, we had enough fuel. We saved early enough to where when we needed to run hard, we could’ve run hard. Unfortunately that caution came out and we were just saving, saving, saving, and then one time the car just wouldn’t start back up.



“Battery came disconnected and the rest is history. I was going to give it my best shot there, restarting in the lead next to the 33 (Menard) and we would’ve seen what happened.”



Besides the exposure and the potential for a feel-good underdog story, Koch said plenty of positives stood out. He led five laps, two more than he had cumulatively led in his previous 136 XFINITY Series starts.



“The guys will learn and you lose as a team, you win as a team,” Koch said, “and it’ll just make winning that first race that much better when you remember times like today.”

Much like their fellow NASCAR drivers who are deservedly spending the season’s final off-week relaxing on a beach or jet-setting to some exotic location, Landon Cassill and Josh Wise are using the rare downtime to travel and enjoy the scenic Austrian Alps.



The difference, however, is that these two Sprint Cup drivers won’t be sightseeing or taking leisurely day hikes. They will be experiencing one of the world’s most beautiful regions while competing in the elite Ironman 70.3 World Championships at Zell am See-Kaprun outside Salzburg, Austria on Sunday.



Their breathtaking views will be just that as they swim 1.2-miles in Lake Zell, bike 56 miles through the glacier-tipped Alps and then finish with a 13.1-mile run along the lakeshore and through the area’s small villages in one of the world’s most grueling and prestigious physical competitions.



“When we looked at the schedule both of us had aspirations to qualify for the 70.3 or Kona (Ironman 140.6 in Hawaii),” explained Wise. “The Worlds happened to fall on our last off weekend and there was a qualifier on the next to last off weekend.



“It looked like this is a once in a lifetime chance. It’s a bucket list goal just to qualify, but to have opportunity to do Austria was super special and it just felt like it was meant to be.”



But not without a lot of work.



Anyone who still dismisses the athletic ability of NASCAR drivers would have a losing argument when it comes to the training regimen of Cassill, 26, and Wise, 32, who have taken their dedication to fitness and competition to a new level.



RELATED: Johnson: ‘If you want to be fast, you’ve got to suffer’



More often than not, these two drivers show up at the race track having already swam, biked or run for miles and hours before some of their competitors have even rolled out of bed.



Their dedication and commitment means a 5 a.m. wake-up call even on race weekends and using a special “Swim Radar” app to find a public pool near the race track that’s open early enough and will allow them to swim. They’ve done their laps everywhere from the small town YMCA to the pool at Ohio State University.



They strategically place their long bike rides as well and that can be tricky — both finding a safe route close to the track and “not getting lost,” Wise joked. They did a 60-mile bike ride after qualifying at Indianapolis this summer and squeezed in a 20-miler between practices at Pocono. Last week at Bristol, the two swam a mile and a half and ran five miles before the night race.



Cassill did his World Cup qualifier in Muncie, Ind. during NASCAR’s Kentucky Speedway race weekend, flying to Muncie after the Friday night XFINITY race, competing in the 70.3-mile triathalon Saturday morning then returning to Kentucky Speedway for the Cup race that night.



“That was a little test of endurance,” Cassill said. “Saturday morning I got my qualifying slot and flew back and raced Saturday night (at Bristol). I felt pretty good.”



Both Cassill and Wise say that competitive spirit lift is an important motivation for both. Driving for small, lower-funded Sprint Cup Series teams, they are admittedly not contending for wins every week. Success in the triathalons not only is a huge fitness benefit to them both, but gives them a sense of accomplishment and success.



“I think a big part of the inspiration to do this has to do with obviously with the benefit of what it does for us in the car, but for us, we drive for small teams and we don’t have a chance to win every race in a car and when you’re doing that for 38 weeks in a row, it can get taxing,” said Cassill, the 2008 XFINITY Series Rookie of the Year who now drives the No. 40 Hillman-Smith Chevrolet in the Cup Series and the No. 01 JD Motorsports Chevy in the XFINITY Series.



“This is something for us, we can control and it really just helps that confidence in the garage just to know what we’re capable of with our bodies and pushing ourselves to the limit. To me, it’s a confidence builder.”



Wise, who scored a career-best 10th at Talladega in May driving the No. 98 Ford, agreed.



“It’s an amazing competitive outlet,” he said. “There’s not a lot of things that you can do that you have so much control over. It goes back to the alarm clock. Are you going to get up and get the swim in and the running before you go to work? It’s your choice. With the sport we’re in, people don’t realize all the external factors there are that you can’t control.”



“When our cars aren’t driving right or we’re communicating with our crew in the midst of battling with someone, I feel the mental gain from the type of work we do off the track even beyond the physical.



“I’m far beyond physically where I need to be, but mentally I can still continue to push myself, my body and my brain to dig deeper. When you can overcome every cell in your body shutting you down and you have to mentally force your legs to pick up and move in a run, there is a mental strength that comes from that.



“I feel there’s a real specificity to what we do that applies to our type of racing.”



The benefits go beyond just them personally.  



“My team has so much confidence in me that although they may not see me during the week, they don’t have a doubt in their mind that I’m still working; that I’m trying to make myself the fittest race car driver, the best race car driver I can be, focused and prepared,” Cassill said.



“It’s important because when teams are fighting for sponsorship, tough finishes the wheels can come off and you want to instill in your team that you’re doing everything you can.”



Their pursuit is not only recognized by their team members but in the garage and bigger NASCAR community as well. While these two drivers don’t typically generate the same racing headlines as their good friend and frequent training partner, six-time Cup champion Jimmie Johnson, they do have his great respect — especially with this weekend’s Ironman in Austria.



“My hat is off to Josh and Landon,” Johnson said. “They’ve put in the hard work. I’ve watched them get very serious about it. They are both faster than me (smiling) and I’m so proud of them.”



All three drivers are confident that this kind of extreme cross training will be more prevalent on the starting grid in coming years. It’s a visibly growing group of cyclists that join Johnson, Wise and Cassill on the bike rides during race weekend downtime or meet up at a nearby public pool for some laps.



Jimmie Johnson, in my opinion, sparked that fire by winning six championships and being the fittest driver the sport has ever seen,” Cassill said. “We are in some ways just copycatting what he did. Eventually, a lot of the drivers that have the skill — and have had the success in the past — but aren’t consistently getting the success now are going to start getting pressure from their owners and sponsors that will say they’re sick of getting of their butts kicked from these fit drivers, you need to do something.



“I think in the next five to 10 years you’re going to see a lot more of our drivers getting fitter and fitter,” Cassill continued. “I think our sport is going to go through similar transition that golf saw and I compare our sport to golf because it’s a skill sport. It takes a certain skill and technique to swing a golf club and it takes a certain skill and technique to drive a race car. It doesn’t necessarily take athleticism to drive a race car or hit a golf ball, but athleticism enhances that skill.”



This weekend Cassill and Wise will be representing their sport on a world platform and just qualifying for the world championship in the midst of a busy and demanding NASCAR season is already a huge accomplishment.



“There are a lot of cyclists in the garage and people that know what’s going on. I had a lot of people asking me about this weekend at the Bristol race and crew members wishing me good luck,” Cassill said. “Obviously a lot of text messages from my team wishing me good luck.”



“I’d love to set a new PR (personal record), I feel like I try to do that at every race. But just another finish would be a win. This is a very challenging event and this is a world championship event so the competition is a lot tougher than I’ve competed against.”

RELATED: Full lineup for Sunday’s race

Wheeling the No. 29 BK Racing Ford at 110.539 mph in a second-lap attempt, road course veteran Alex Tagliani earned the Keystone Light Pole Award at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park in Saturday’s two-round qualifying session. The Quebec native and road course veteran shattered the previous track record with a 80.084-second lap around the track.

This marks Tagliani’s first Camping World Truck Series start of 2015 and his second consecutive pole win in this event.

Tagliani’s late run took the top spot away from Erik Jones, who settled for second with a fastest lap of 110.492 mph in his No. 4 Kyle Busch Motorsports Toyota.

Reigning series champion Matt Crafton (110.113 mph), BKR’s Tyler Reddick (110.002 mph) and JR Motorsports’ Cole Custer (109.777 mph) rounded out the top five.

Reddick led the first round, propelling his No. 19 Ford at 110.276 mph, while teammate Tagliani drafted with him.

Robert Mitten brought out the red flag in the first round of qualifying when he smacked the tire wall off Turn 8, leaving his No. 53 Dodge nearly vertical. Mitten climbed out unharmed and ultimately secured a 22nd-place starting position.

The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series is back on track Sunday at 1:30 p.m. ET for the Chevrolet Silverado 250 (FOX Sports 1, MRN, SiriusXM).

RELATED: Complete race lineup

Ben Rhodes won the Twenty One Means Twenty One pole for the NASCAR XFINITY Series Road America 180 Fired up by Johnsonville on Saturday as rain washed out the qualifying session.

Rhodes, who was the 2014 K&N Pro Series East champion, landed on the front row for Saturday’s race (3 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM) based on his top speed in the first practice. Defending XFINITY series champion Chase Elliott will start alongside Rhodes on the front row for the 45-lap race on the 4.048-mile Wisconsin road course.

For Rhodes, a NASCAR Next product and the driver of the No. 88 Chevrolet for JR Motorsports, this was his first pole in a major NASCAR series. This will be Rhodes’ seventh race this season in the XFINITY Series. He finished 35th and 10th in this year’s previous road-course races at Watkins Glen and Mid-Ohio, respectively.

Ryan Blaney, Justin Marks and Brian Scott rounded out the top five in the starting lineup. Current series points leader Chris Buescher was sixth. And Boris Said, the highest-ranking Toyota driver, was seventh in what may be his last NASCAR race.

RELATED: Is this Said’s final run?

RELATED: Full Practice 1 results

Defending Chevrolet Silverado 250 pole winner Alex Tagliani got off to a hot start at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park on Saturday, topping the opening practice session of the weekend by a landslide.

Tagliani’s best speed of 109.853 mph topped runner-up Erik Jones‘ effort of 108.916 mph, making his way around the 2.459-mile, 10-turn course at a 1:20.584 clip. It’s just Tagliani’s second career start in the Camping World Truck Series, but he has experience at the Bowmanville, Ontario, Canada track in the Canadian Tire Series.

Reigning champion Matt Crafton was third (108.894 mph), with Ben Kennedy (108.584 mph) and Gray Gaulding (108.509 mph) rounding out the top five.

 

RELATED: Full Practice 2 results

 

Tagliani again was fast in the final session, but it was Jones who topped the leaderboard with an even faster pace at 110.436 mph.

 

The Brad Keselowski Racing driver was just off Jones’ pace at 110.364 mph.

Canada native Cameron Hayley was third at 110.273 mph, followed by teammate Johnny Sauter at 110.177 mph. Ben Kennedy rounded out the top five with a best speed of 110.132 mph.

The practice was halted twice for drivers who ran into the tire barriers. Both Jennifer Jo Cobb and John Wes Townley were checked and released from the infield care center after their respective incidents.

Tune in Sunday to see the Chevrolet Silverado 250, when trucks hit the track for a 1:30 p.m. ET start on FOX Sports 1, MRN, SiriusXM.

Tony Stewart claims he did not see fellow driver Kevin Ward Jr. walking down the track until just before Stewart’s car struck the driver during a sprint car race last year in upstate New York, according to court documents.



Stewart’s view of the incident — in which Ward was killed — was made public Friday in a legal response to the wrongful death lawsuit filed by Ward’s parents earlier this month.



In an Aug. 9 event at Canandaigua Motorsports Park, Ward climbed out of his car following a wreck and walked down onto the track to apparently confront Stewart under caution. Stewart’s car struck the 20-year-old, who was killed.



An Ontario County (N.Y.) grand jury ruled last September that Stewart would not face criminal charges.



Friday’s filing by Stewart’s attorney Brian Gwitt in part reads: “Stewart did not see Ward Jr. exit his vehicle and was not aware that Ward Jr. had exited his vehicle. Stewart was not aware that anyone had exited the vehicle.



“Stewart did not see Ward Jr., or anyone else walking on foot on the track until just prior to contact, and did not know the identity of the person walking on the track until afterwards.”



The document also notes the initial toxicology report that found Ward had marijuana in his system, which the district attorney said last year impaired the driver’s judgment, in its counter to the claims by Ward’s parents.

RELATED: Complete race results | Updated series standings

ELKHART LAKE, Wis. — All the positives — the determined late-race comeback, leading the most laps, moving up a rung in the standings — meant little to Chase Elliott in the immediate aftermath of Saturday’s matinee at Road America. His own harshest critic, Elliott didn’t hold back in giving his performance a scathing review.
 
“Absolutely terrible job on my part,” Elliott said after a fourth-place finish in the Road America 180 Fired Up by Johnsonville. “That was the worst race, just beyond way too many mistakes. Just absolutely screwed that up, so terrible day for me. I hate it for my guys. I had such a good car and I let ’em down.”
 
The clouds that hung over the 4.048-mile road course were missing the silver linings, according to the defending NASCAR XFINITY Series champion, who guided the JR Motorsports No. 9 Chevrolet from 11th place over the final four-lap stretch to the checkered flag in the 45-lap event. That span was part of an even bigger rally, from 23rd place after his final pit stop on Lap 30, just two laps after an off-course excursion at Turn 11 that cost him plenty of momentum.
 
Both comebacks left him with little consolation.
 
“Top five’s not a win,” Elliott said. “Have to be honest with yourself. I screwed it up.”
 
The negative side of Elliott’s day didn’t resonate as strongly with crew chief Ernie Cope, who discussed the race at length with the 19-year-old driver in the XFINITY garage.
 
“He is hard on himself. He expects to win and he doesn’t want to let us down, which he didn’t,” Cope said. “He came back in three laps and went from (11th) to fourth, so I look at that. I mean, we were pinned back there and then passing about seven cars in three laps. I mean, you’re going to have altercations during it.”
 
The ending was a sharp contrast to how Elliott’s day started. The youngster started on the front row after Coors Light Pole Qualifying was scratched by rain, then jumped out to lead the opening 12 laps. After briefly giving up the top spot on an early exchange of pit stops for fuel strategy, Elliott reassumed the lead, stretching it to more than 12 seconds during the dominant first half.
 
“It was as good as it looked and by far I feel like the best road race car I’ve ever had,” said Elliott, who led 23 of the 45 laps. “I was beyond pleased with the race car. It wasn’t the race car’s fault, I can tell you that.”
 
Elliott pitted after putting all four tires into the grass off the 14-turn circuit’s kink, apologizing to his JRM crew over the radio after leaving pit road back in the pack. From there, though, his comeback trail began, only to be stemmed by a six-lap caution period — a seeming eternity on the lengthy course — after multiple breakages and fluid leaks in the pack delayed the final restart.
 
“They’re going caution after caution after caution, but I still feel like we would’ve had time to get back up there and have a shot at winning as good as the car was,” Cope said. “You just don’t know how they’re going to fall. It was just a bad storm.”
 
Once the clouds lifted, Cope took solace in the big-picture plusses. With 10 races left in the season, Elliott now sits in second place in the standings, supplanting Ty Dillon, who took 10th Saturday.
 
Elliott’s top-five result, combined with series leader Chris Buescher‘s ninth-place run, chopped his deficit to just 16 points heading to next weekend’s event at Darlington Raceway.
 
“Looking at the positives, we gained seven, but it was a day we could’ve gotten 15,” Cope said of the points tally. “But it’s all good. We’re right where we need to be. That puts us back (to) second, we’re only 16 out of it and we’re going to go stomp their asses at Darlington.”