KBM trucks close behind in P2, P3

RELATED: Full practice results

Defending race winner Austin Dillon snuck up the leaderboard late Friday afternoon to top Pocono Raceway’s sole Camping World Truck Series practice ahaead of Saturday’s Pocono Mountains 150 (1 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1).

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Dillon’s best speed was a blistering 166.482 mph.

Rookie Erik Jones was off Dillon’s pace at 165.612 mph, followed closely by his boss and mentor, Kyle Busch, at 165.023 mph.

Saturday’s race will be Busch’s first Truck Series start of the season, after a crash in the XFINITY Series opener at Daytona left him with injuries that sidelined him for several months.

Timothy Peters (164.087 mph) was next on the leaderboard, followed by Johnny Sauter (164.045 mph) to round out the top five.

Reigning Sprint Cup Series champion Kevin Harvick failed to enter the top 10, placing 12th on the charts at 163.245 mph.

The practice was halted and the red flag displayed with a little more than 30 minutes left in the 2-hour, 25-minute session when Jennifer Jo Cobb‘s No. 10 truck lost an engine and started billowing smoke.

The green flag for Keystone Light Pole Qualifying drops at 10 a.m. ET on Saturday on FOX Sports 1.

Dillon, Suarez both looking for first Iowa win

RELATED: Practice 2 results

After running fourth in Friday’s first practice, Ty Dillon topped the leaderboard in the second practice with an impressive fastest lap of 133.012 mph in 23.682 seconds. The No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet completed a total of 67 laps for the session.

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NASCAR XFINITY Series veteran Brendan Gaughan was second on the leaderboard for Friday’s final practice session with his No. 62 Chevrolet coming in hot with a fastest lap of 132.704 mph in 23.737 seconds.

T.J. Bell rounded out the top three with a lap of 131.871 mph (23.887 seconds). This weekend will mark the first time Bell has lined up for a NASCAR XFINITY Series race since 2012’s AAA 400 at Dover International Speedway.

Next on the leaderboard was Drew Herring in his No. 6 Ford. Herring had a fastest lap of 131.519 mph (23.951). This will be his first NASCAR XFINITY appearance since 2013’s Ford EcoBoost 300 at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

And completing the top five for this session was Brian Scott in his No. 2 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet with a lap of 131.403 mph.

Daniel Suarez, who topped the first practice, finished ninth in the Friday night’s practice (131.026 mph). The No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing driver will be on the lookout for his fourth consecutive top-five finish this weekend at Iowa Speedway.

Kenny Wallace, who will be competing in his last race in the series this weekend at Iowa, finished 15th. Wallace is looking for his 10th career win at Saturday’s U.S. Cellular Presented by New Holland (8 p.m. ET, NBCSN, SiriusXM).

NXS action continues Saturday with the Coors Light Pole Qualifying at 4:45 p.m. ET.

RELATED: Practice 1 results

Daniel Suarez topped the leaderboard in the NASCAR XFINITY Series opening practice on Friday at Iowa Speedway. The driver of the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota posted a fastest lap of 133.367 mph.

Next was fellow rookie Brandon Jones in his No. 33 Chevrolet with a fastest lap of 131.965 mph. Saturday’s U.S. Cellular 250 Presented by New Holland marks Jones’ second start in the XFINITY Series. His first race was at Iowa’s May race, the 3M 250, where he finished eighth.

Rounding out the first session’s top three was Ben Rhodes. Rhodes had a fastest lap of 131.744 mph.

Ty Dillon (131.546 mph) and Darrell Wallace Jr. (131.486 mph) came in fourth and fifth, respectively. 

XFINITY Series points leader, Chris Buescher finished practice in the seventh spot, posting a fastest lap of 130.332 mph.

Johanna Long, finished 30th in the first session. This is Long’s first 2015 appearance as she hasn’t raced since 2013’s Ford EcoBoost 300 at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

On-track action continues at 7 p.m. ET with the NASCAR XFINITY Series final practice on NBCSN.

NASCAR drivers take on SHR engineer in trivia game

RELATED: Visit Inside Track presented by Mobil 1 for more great content

Are you smarter than an engineer? That’s not the question we asked NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers like Tony Stewart, Kevin Harvick and Kurt Busch, but that’s the game they played with Stewart-Haas Racing engineer Oliver Rivera.

Who won? How many questions can you get right?

Watch today’s video, which is part of NASCAR Inside Track presented by Mobil 1, then come back throughout the season for more in-depth looks at NASCAR from Mobil 1.

Follow Coors Light Pole Qualifying at 4:45 p.m. ET (NBCSN/Live Extra)

RELATED: Practice 1 results

Brad Keselowski led Friday’s Sprint Cup Series opening practice session at Pocono Raceway in preparation for Sunday’s Windows 10 400 (1:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN/Live Extra, MRN, SiriusXM). 

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The Team Penske driver put up his best time on Lap 7 out of nine total with a speed of 176.606 mph. Keselowski has one win at the Pennsylvania track that came in 2011. His best finish since then was second in 2014’s June event.

Coming up short to Keselowski was Matt Kenseth at 176.339 mph.

Denny Hamlin (176.267 mph), Austin Dillon (176.170 mph) and Kevin Harvick (175.987 mph) completed the top five on the leaderboard.

Martin Truex Jr., the winner of June’s Pocono race, put up a speed of 175.298 mph and came in as 12th-fastest.

Defending race-winner Dale Earnhardt Jr. completed his quickest lap at 175.196 mph, making the Hendrick Motorsports driver 14th-fastest in Friday’s practice.

The Sprint Cup Series returns to the track for Coors Light Pole Qualifying at 4:45 p.m. ET with coverage on NBCSN/Live Extra.

See where drivers will pit for the Windows 10 400

RELATED: Complete lineup at Pocono | See all 43 cars in Sunday’s race

Pole-sitter Kyle Busch nabbed the pick of pit stalls at Pocono with a fast lap of 178.416 mph in Friday’s qualifying. He will service the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota in the first pit stall, entering Turn 1 of the Tricky Triangle.

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Sharing the front row at the start for the Windows 10 400 (1:30 p.m. ET Friday, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM) with Busch is Kevin Harvick, and the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Chevrolet will pit in the second stall, right behind Busch.

Joey Logano qualified third and chose pit stall No. 3 for the No. 22 Ford. Richard Childress Racing‘s No. 3 driver Austin Dillon will pit in the first pit stall coming onto pit road out of Turn 3.

Kurt Busch has an opening in front of the No. 41, which will come in for service at the front of the first set of stalls coming out of Turn 3. Fifth-place qualifier Tony Stewart grabbed the spot in front of Kurt Busch, with a clear rear entry at the back of the second group of pit stalls at Pocono.

Starting No. 9 Sunday is the No. 2 driver, Brad Keselowski, who will pit his Team Penske Ford also with a rear opening, choosing the final pit stall in the first block of pits heading into Turn 1.


Daughter Brittany reveals a special helmet for Iowa race

RELATED: Grand marshal added to Wallace’s Iowa duties | Racing with nephew Matt

NEWTON, Iowa — Until Friday, Kenny Wallace‘s plans to hang up his NASCAR driving helmet this weekend at Iowa Speedway were only missing one small detail — the helmet itself.

His former team kept deflecting his phone calls, telling him not to worry and that his helmet would be there for the 905th start of his long, storied NASCAR career. The smokescreen was effective — it bought his daughter Brittany enough time to have it professionally painted with a commemorative collage of snapshots and memories from his 26 years in the sport.

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While Wallace’s time behind the wheel in NASCAR will end with Saturday’s U.S. Cellular 250 presented by New Holland (8 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM), the sport won’t be saying goodbye to one of its most charismatic characters, who will remain a presence both in TV broadcasting and at local dirt tracks. Though there will be some finality after he steps away Saturday night, Wallace said he’ll do his best to keep his emotions in check along the way.

"I think there’s going to be moments and I hope that it happens after the race, but I’ve done a pretty good job at my career to really focus in on what I have to do," said Wallace, who will carry backing from the race’s title sponsor on his Joe Gibbs Racing No. 20 Toyota. "I remember when Ernie Irvan got hurt (in 1994) and I was in that Texaco/Havoline car in the Cup Series, I was shifting the gears getting on the high banks there at Bristol and I could hear the roar of the crowd, and I was like, ‘No. Focus.’

"I’ve learned a lot along the way. I’ve watched Jeff Gordon this year; I don’t even know how he can go. I’ve learned a lot. I’m ready to race, and then we’ll deal with everything after the race and when I get out of the car."

That theory held true for about 30 minutes after his arrival at the .875-mile track, when Brittany Wallace handed over the special surprise to her father in front of a group of friends and family. Short of choking up, the 51-year-old Wallace said he had sworn he would not be emotional, but was genuinely moved by the gift.

Wallace joked that he hopes to amend the helmet’s graphics Saturday night, changing his nine career XFINITY wins to an even 10. But the joke belied his ever-sharper focus with top-shelf JGR equipment underneath him for this weekend’s swan song.

"If he’s saying he’s blocking it out, he’s way better at doing something like that than I am," said older brother Mike Wallace, like his sibling a nine-time winner in NASCAR national competition. "He said he’s happy with it, content. All I can say is more power to him. It’s outstanding. I just ran into him over there and he’s got his family and friends, he’s the grand marshal for a (K&N Series) race tonight, he’s got a suite here. He seems to be having fun right now. He said, ‘I’ve got to go sign some hats,’ and I was like, ‘Go be famous. That’s what you’re good at.’"

The nature of the family-affair weekend has even more ties. Kenny Wallace will share the track with his nephew, Matt, who is scheduled to make his second career XFINITY Series start Saturday night. His farewell race will also take place on a short track designed by oldest brother Rusty Wallace, a NASCAR Hall of Famer.

The eldest Wallace ended his driving career in 2005, but like his brother, he remained active in the sport with broadcasting stints in television and radio. It’s why both Wallaces have shied away from calling the occasion "retirement" with a capital R.

"I wish him all the luck in the world," said Rusty Wallace, speaking Thursday at a charity event in Pennsylvania for The NASCAR Foundation and the Jeff Gordon‘s Children’s Foundation. "I told him the other day, do not use that word retirement. You don’t need to do that. They’ll label you with that. I said notice Jeff Gordon said he’s quitting, but he’s not retiring, but he’s never going to race again. So he’s kind of retiring but he’s not going to use that word. He learned that from me and Mark Martin. I told Kenny, you didn’t need to do that. He’ll be fine."

So if anyone was hoping to get rid of Kenny Wallace after this weekend, tough luck. The driver known for his boundless energy, his grace with racing fans, his social media presence, his extracurricular dirt-racing travels and his broadcasting moxie isn’t going anywhere.

After 900-plus starts dating back to a 1988 debut at Martinsville Speedway, driving the No. 8 ride owned by Dale Earnhardt in what is now the XFINITY Series, Wallace said simply that "there needs to be a line in the sand" for his driving career. Staying power in NASCAR can often be fleeting and rare, a fact that has made Wallace even prouder of his long run in the sport’s highest levels.

Wallace’s helmet is anchored by the words "Life is a journey," a well-worn adage he said he always tells his three daughters. Wallace’s own journey will enter its next phase after Saturday night.

"My mom, Judy, she said to me, ‘Kenny, hon. You keep reinventing yourself,’ " Wallace said. "I’m like ‘really, Mom?’ It’s not a plan, it’s just that I want to stay in the sport. I think longevity and persistence is what I’m so proud of, because let’s face it, I was never an ‘A’ driver. To me, I feel proud saying I was a ‘B-plus’ driver. I won nine XFINITY races, 177 top-10s — I mean, that counts for something. When I should’ve been down and out, I stayed digging."

Contributing: RJ Kraft from Pocono Raceway

No. 24 Hendrick driver races at Pocono one last time; talks Chase chances

RELATED: Complete lineup for Sunday’s race | See all 43 paint schemes

Sunday’s Windows 10 400 (1:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM) will be Jeff Gordon‘s final start at Pocono Raceway. While he appreciates the support Pennsylvania fans have given him over the years, he won’t be sentimental about his last trip to the Tricky Triangle because he’s still a win away from making the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

"I’m so focused on the competition and trying to compete at a high level, trying to get ourselves in a position to win the race, win the pole, be in the Chase, I just can’t and haven’t been able to allow it to sink in," Gordon said. "It might not happen until the race is over at Homestead. I have no idea when that’s going to impact or sink in."

The reality of his current points position hit hard when he finished 42nd last week at Indianapolis and his margin over Clint Bowyer, the last driver currently in the Chase on points, narrowed to 37 points. Just a week earlier, he enjoyed a 71-point cushion over the final provisional Chase position.

RELATED: See updated series standings

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In his final full-time season, Gordon wants to do more than just make the Chase; he wants to compete for his fifth championship.

"Obviously having a bad finish like that, it can shake things up in a hurry," Gordon said. "I think our team is very capable of getting ourselves in the Chase, but we want more than that. We want to be battling for wins, and we’re fighting extremely hard to do that. We know what a win can do in securing that spot, but we’re also a strong team that has overcome adversity in the past. We’re going to fight all the way through Richmond to make sure no matter what, whether it’s by points or with a win, that we get ourselves in there."

The six-time winner at Pocono stands atop the all-time leaderboard at the track, and Hendrick Motorsports‘ 17 victories are nearly twice as many as the next closest teams on the list. Joe Gibbs Racing and Roger Penske have nine apiece. Gordon also enjoys racing on the unique three-sided surface.

"I love the challenge that this race track presents on track," Gordon said. "I’ve been driving for a team that has great performance on tracks like this as well. We’ve been known to get down the straightaways pretty good. This place has a lot of straightaway, but I also like the shifting and the unique corners that are here as well."

Gordon acknowledged how the negative side of the fast straightaways figured into the single moment that stands out from his 23 years of racing at the facility.

"I wrecked really bad in Turn 1, that stands out," Gordon said, referring to a 2006 crash. "It’s funny those types of incidents stand out to you as much as some of the good moments that you have. You never forget moments like that. Let’s put it that way.

"I can remember coming here early, early on and maybe even watching a race here or an IndyCar race here on TV prior to me ever racing here and just in awe of how long the front straightaway was, how fast the cars are going into Turn 1. And I always said, ‘You don’t ever want to have a brake problem going into Turn 1 at Pocono,’ and I had one and experienced it so that stands out to me."

But the people of Pocono Raceway have left a lasting impression as well. On Friday, track president Brandon Igdalsky presented Gordon with a $24,000 check for the Jeff Gordon Foundation to go with nearly $58,000 raised Thursday night for Gordon’s foundation and The NASCAR Foundation at a charity poker tournament. In addition to the funds, Igdalsky’s team painted "Gordon" on the track, which didn’t go unnoticed by the driver of the No. 24 car.

RELATED: Gordon, Wallace cash in chips for a good cause 

"This track has been really special to me over the years," Gordon said. "I thought it was enough that you put my name at the start/finish line but what we did last night at the event and this (check) is above and beyond."

The fans of the area welcomed Gordon as a young racer, even before he joined NASCAR’s premier series, and he’s continued to benefit from their support throughout his racing career.

"I go back to when I raced dirt around Pennsylvania and Ohio and Indiana in sprint car racing and how big racing is in this state," Gordon said. "And I think that was very evident to me immediately when I got in the Cup Series and started flying into the airports here, and it was always the biggest crowds of fans that we had, anywhere we went, standing there waiting for the teams and the drivers to arrive, wanting to get a glimpse, a picture, an autograph.

"That’s been maintained throughout all the years, and when I put a fan club together, our largest number of members were from Pennsylvania, if you took it by state. This is a big racing part of the country, and I think that’s why the track has continued to do so well through the years because they have people that love racing, that love NASCAR racing."

The four-time champion’s love for Pocono would grow with a win this weekend that would keep alive his drive for five titles.

Talks Chase, MWR owner buying interest in CGR; gets new sponsor

RELATED: MWR co-owner buys interest in CGR

LONG POND, Pa. — Michael Waltrip Racing driver Clint Bowyer met with media Friday at Pocono Raceway and gave a statement that echoed the "focused on 2015" sentiments expressed by MWR a day earlier that team owner Rob Kauffman had purchased an interest in Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates.

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"You need to bear with us," Bowyer said. "There’s obviously some change on the horizon. I got the same release you guys did.

"We’ve got a new sponsor on the car this weekend. It’s a big deal for us. We’ve been working on this a long time. Got a lot of momentum going into this. We’re 20 points out of the Chase. We’ve got to finish this year off strong.

"Like I said, there’s a lot of work to be done in the future, and we’re all working on it. When I have something to tell you guys, you all know me, and I’ll tell you."

According to Thursday’s statement, MWR and CGR would "continue to operate separately and compete against each other for the remainder of the 2015 season. They are also currently evaluating ways to field the most competitive race teams possible to provide an excellent platform for their partners and employees for the 2016 season and beyond."

The sponsor Bowyer referenced, Maxwell House, will run the first of four races this season as a primary on his No. 15 Toyota Camry in Sunday’s Windows 10 400 (1:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN/Live Extra, MRN, SiriusXM).

RELATED: Maxwell House to sponsor MWR cars

Bowyer hopes the coffee maker will perk up his Chase chances this weekend and next at Watkins Glen. He currently sits in the final provisional position in the Chase Grid.

RELATED: Chase Grid

"There’s obviously change on the horizon, and we’re going to have to work on the future and see what that looks like but for right now, we’re focused on 2015 — getting Maxwell House to Victory Lane this weekend and getting in this Chase," Bowyer said. "We’re close, and this can happen and these guys got to stay focused. I’ve got to stay focused. If we do our job, we can get in this Chase and compete for the championship."

During Friday’s first practice, in which he was 19th-fastest, Bowyer shed more light on his state of mind.

"The good news is there’s a car next to me that’s kind of falling like a rock (Hendrick MotorsportsKasey Kahne) and those two RCR cars (Ryan Newman and Paul Menard) are right there for the taking, only 20 points out," Bowyer told MRN. "This is doable."

Former Michael Waltrip Racing driver Martin Truex Jr. expressed surprise at the developments surrounding his former team and teammate Bowyer.

"I don’t really know a whole lot of what’s going on," Truex said. "Hearing that Rob is buying into another team is interesting, for sure, so I’m not sure what they’ve got going on but it was definitely surprising. 

"Got a lot of friends over there. They’ve got a lot of great people there. Hopefully they’ll all land on their feet and figure out some way to keep going."

Heading into the weekend, Bowyer is 15th in the points standings, 20 behind Kahne and Menard and trails Newman by 25, for the final drivers getting their way into the Chase on points. Currently, 10 drivers are locked into NASCAR playoffs with wins. Kyle Busch can make it 11 and take away another spot if he cracks the top 30 in points and stays there over the next six races.

No. 18 driver has won three straight races with three different rules packages

RELATED: How ‘Rowdy’ can make the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup

LONG POND, Pa. — The 2015 season has been one of change for Kyle Busch, missing the first 11 races of the season with a broken leg and a broken foot and then coming back with a new crew chief, Adam Stevens, for his No. 18 ride. On Friday, the winner of the last three NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races said embracing change has been key to his success.

As the Joe Gibbs Racing driver attempts to become the first driver to win four consecutive races since 2007 when Jimmie Johnson did it on the way to his second Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup championship, Busch hopes this strong streak will carry over into the fall to follow in Johnson’s footsteps.

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"I look forward to continuing on our Chase march here and then once we get to Chicago, being able to capitalize on this hot summer to have a continuation of that into the Chase," Busch said.

The driver has not only won three races in a row, but has done so with three different rules packages. His first win in the string came with the low downforce package at Kentucky Speedway, followed by a victory under 2015 rules at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. His first win at Indianapolis Motor Speedway the next week came with NASCAR’s high drag package.

"With the different aero packages, I actually was pretty excited about it," Busch said. "I kind of like change, and I feel like I’m the best at being able to adapt to it the fastest before crew chiefs and engineers get too much of an understanding of the basis of what they have to work on to make those packages better in order to get their drivers better, their cars better and to be able to keep up with me. I kind of like the change."

Busch likes change so much that he suggested running last weekend’s rules at Pocono Raceway, a track where he’s winless in NASCAR’s premier series.

"I actually wouldn’t mind if we had that high drag package here at Pocono," Busch said. "I think here would definitely be a place that you’d want to see it with these long straightaways. That would certainly make for a really interesting race."

Pocono is one of only five tracks where he hasn’t won a race. The other four — Martinsville Speedway, Charlotte Motor Speedway, Kansas Speedway and Homestead-Miami Speedway — are in the Chase, and the last three are 1.5-mile tracks, which make up half of the races in NASCAR’s playoffs.

When the Chase starts, Busch will have run only one points race with the 2015 package on a 1.5-mile track, Charlotte in the Coca-Cola 600. He earned an 11th-place result behind JGR teammate and winner Carl Edwards. Busch acknowledged his lack of track time with the current package, and the driver may need to learn behind the wheel during the final 10 races of the season.

"The lower downforce at Kentucky was fun," Busch said. "It’s definitely a lot harder than what a lot of the other mile-and-a-halfs have been this year. I haven’t run in a whole lot of them. But just from the drivers’ sense of what I got, the off-throttle time was a heck of a lot more. Everybody enjoyed it a lot so I hope to continue on down that path."

Although Busch’s first win of 2015 came on a road course last month at Sonoma Raceway, Busch said next week’s return to road racing may present the biggest obstacle over the final six races of the regular season as he needs to make and then stay in the top 30 in points to secure a playoff berth.

"With Watkins Glen coming up next week, that’s going to be another hard one to get through so that’s going to be a tough challenge for myself in the left foot. So we’ll make it, and I think we’ll be OK like Sonoma," Busch said. "It’ll be sore on Monday afterwards, and we’ll continue to ice it and make it feel better."

Sunday’s Windows 10 400 (1:30 p.m. ET, NBCSN, MRN, SiriusXM) will be the first time this season Busch will run a second race at the same track. He finished ninth in June, and hopes to replace the zero in his victory column with a win based on JGR adjustments over the last six weeks.

"I’ve never won at Pocono Raceway, and I hope that’s about to change," Busch said, using the "c" word again. "We’ve certainly had some good runs over the years, sometimes in the spring race, sometimes in the summer race, but overall, I feel like our team’s really come a long way. I like where we’re going and where we’re at so I just hope that we can continue that here this weekend and get ourselves a win and make it four in a row."

Partnership to focus on benefits of residential and commercial solar power tech

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla., and BELMONT, Calif., (JULY 30, 2015) — NASCAR and SunEdison, Inc. (NYSE: SUNE), the world’s largest renewable energy development company, today announced SunEdison as the Official Solar Energy Partner of NASCAR Green. This new partnership builds on the expanded use of solar technology across the sport, particularly at race team shops and race tracks across the country.

Over the next three years, SunEdison and NASCAR will embark on an effort to educate millions of NASCAR fans on the financial and environmental benefits of solar power use. SunEdison plans to work with NASCAR partners, tracks and teams on commercial-scale solar solutions. The White House cited this newly forged partnership as a prime example of making renewable energy accessible to all U.S. homeowners.

"Solar power is a proven and reliable form of renewable energy and the technology is already making a significant impact throughout our industry," said Steve Phelps, NASCAR chief marketing officer. "Our strategic partnership with SunEdison will help NASCAR further reduce the sport’s environmental impact and help continue to educate our fans on renewable energy."

"SunEdison is excited to be partnering with NASCAR to highlight the benefits of solar both at and away from the race track," said Vikas Desai, SunEdison senior vice president of residential and small commercial. "We look forward to being a strategic NASCAR Green partner and helping fans, partners and the sport save money while reducing their carbon footprint."

NASCAR has taken a holistic approach across its wide-ranging effort to help protect the environment and has been collaborating in earnest with teams, tracks, partners and fans to do that since 2008. NASCAR’s efforts to champion sustainable behavior align with NASCAR fan values.

According to a 2014 study commissioned by NASCAR and conducted by Research Now, four out of five NASCAR fans believe the earth is going through a period of climate change, and two out of three of these fans feel a personal responsibility to do something about it. The study shows approximately two out of three NASCAR fans who believe there is climate change support buying cost-effective solar panels for the home. For additional information on NASCAR Green, visit www.nascar.com/green