No. 48 crew chief: ‘We did our due diligence as extreme as we can’

RELATED: Johnson overcomes hurdles for third-place finish

Crew chief Chad Knaus of the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports team weighed in Monday on his team’s third-place finish as well as its three failed inspections before the Axalta ‘We Paint Winners’ 400 at Pocono Raceway.

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After going through inspection a fourth time before being cleared to race, the team fought back from a blown tire and contact with Matt Kenseth‘s No. 20 before Jimmie Johnson brought home a podium finish.

"We did our due diligence as extreme as we can," Knaus said on FOX Sports 1’s "NASCAR Race Hub" without specifying what the pre-race inspection holdup was. "We went through the first time and weren’t in compliance. Went through a second and failed again. It’s just about guys making the most out of every advantage that we can."

 

No. 24 driver and crew chief exchanged heated words at Pocono

RELATED: No. 24 team: "What the (expletive) is the problem?"

Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series event at Pocono Raceway was particularly tough for the No. 24 team, with frustrations from both Jeff Gordon and crew chief Alan Gustafson bubbling over onto the radio.

Gordon has yet to get a win in his final full-time Sprint Cup season despite starting from the pole three times. He finished 14th at Pocono after starting fourth.

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In one exchange late in the Axalta ‘We Paint Winners’ 400, Gustafson wanted to bring the car in for fresh tires and gas but Gordon wanted to stay out. Here’s how the exchange unfolded:

Gordon: "What do you think we’re gonna win from here?"
Gustafson: "I don’t want to finish (expletive) 20th."
Gordon: "Tires are not our problem."
Gustafson: "What the (expletive) is the problem?"

Spotter Eddie d’Hondt jumped into the fray, attempting to tamp down the tempers.

Crew chief Chad Knaus, a six-time champion with Jimmie Johnson, joined "NASCAR Race Hub" on FOX Sports 1 Monday to discuss the conversation between his fellow Hendrick Motorsports‘ teammates.

"Here’s the deal and I think everybody can understand this," Knaus said. "If everybody around the table is getting along, someone is lying. Jeff’s doing everything he can and the guys are doing everything they can to get a fast car out there. It’s not personal.

"What Eddie did there was fantastic. He chimed in and tried to calm the waters and put some sense back into it."

Steve Letarte, Gordon’s former crew chief, was an analyst on NBC Sports Network’s "NASCAR America" Monday and echoed much of what Knaus said.

"I think we had some conversations like that," Letarte said of his 186 races atop the No. 24 pit box. "But we did a good job of keeping them off the radio."

Letarte added that frustration has been a factor for Gordon all season with the current rules package. Among the changes this season are a reduction in horsepower and a shorter rear spoiler, which reduces downforce.

"I know Jeff Gordon well, and this package doesn’t suit Jeff’s style," Letarte said.

Fellow analyst and former Sprint Cup driver Jeff Burton added that the rules package could be as damaging mentally for Gordon as it is technically.

"I think Jeff Gordon went into this year knowing he didn’t like this package. You can’t tell me that going into something thinking it’s not good is going to be good," Burton said. "You gotta get your head around it. Whatever the rules are, you have to make it work."

Driver will be in the No. 54 seat this weekend at Michigan

RELATED: Entry List for Saturday’s Michigan race

Kyle Busch will return to the XFINITY Series this weekend at Michigan International Speedway, his second start of the season in the series and his first since severe injuries sustained in a crash forced the Joe Gibbs Racing driver to the sidelines.

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Busch, 30, suffered a broken right leg and left foot when he crashed during the season-opening Alert Today Florida 300 at Daytona International Speedway. Busch’s No. 54 Toyota slid across the track near the entrance to Turn 1 and struck a wall not covered by SAFER barrier head on.
 
The injuries kept Busch out of action for the better part of three months. He returned to his Sprint Cup Series duties last month at Charlotte Motor Speedway, competing in the annual Sprint All-Star Race, a short, non-points event, and has since returned to full-time competition in the series.
 
In a release previewing the team’s MIS effort, Busch said his return was "a continuation of my recovery … and we hope to continue to add to my schedule going forward through the rest of the year."
 
NASCAR XFINITY Series drivers will be competing in the Great Clips 250 benefiting Paralyzed Veterans of America at MIS (FOX Sports 1, MRN, SiriusXM, 1:30 p.m. ET).
 
It will be just the second race together for Busch and crew chief Chris Gayle.
 
"My goal in February was and still now is that you have to get to the point where not only do I understand what Kyle is asking for," Gayle said, "but I also show Kyle what I can give him.
 
Then the trust develops and continues to build. … We are obviously grateful and excited that we have that chance again."
 
In Busch’s absence, drivers Denny Hamlin, Erik Jones and Boris Said shared the driving duties in the No. 54 JGR entry.

Allmendinger assumes blame for accident, not for being aggressive

Related: Newman says Allmendinger has one coming

AJ Allmendinger started Sunday’s Axalta ‘We Paint Winners’ 400 in hot water and ended it the same way. In between, he methodically moved up the leaderboard before ending the day for himself and Ryan Newman.

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By Lap 2, Allmendinger reported, "Water temps already 255."

Crew chief Brian Burns asked Allmendinger to turn on his fans, but the No. 47 JTG Daugherty Racing Chevrolet SS fell back to 28th by Lap 20.

"I don’t know what else to do," Allmendinger said at Lap 16. "I’m not a miracle worker. How to find speed!"

As Allmendinger tweeted Sunday night, thanks to strategy and strong pit stops, he had climbed to 11th by Lap 130.

Racing Ryan Newman for seventh at Lap 139, Allmendinger got into the Richard Childress Racing driver, sending his fellow 2014 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup driver into the wall. JTG Daugherty shares information in an alliance with RCR, and as Allmendinger tweeted following the race, that relationship is important to his one-car organization.

Allmendinger defended his attempt to get spots on the track as he sought his third top-10 finish of the season and first top five. But he apologized again for the results of his actions that dropped him to 39th and Newman to 40th.

After earning his first DNF since last August at Watkins Glen, Newman warned the winner of that road-course race that payback may be coming.

"The No. 47 (Allmendinger) just ran out of talent," Newman said. "He has got one coming now."

See what’s coming this week to NASCAR.com

Here’s what you’ll see on NASCAR.com this week:

MONDAY: Pocono may be behind us, but we’ll take a look at every driver in the field and explain why they finished where they did. @nascarcasm recaps the race in photo form, and senior writer Kenny Bruce previews a pair of events for later this week: Tuesday’s appeal by the No. 48 team and Wednesday’s open test at Darlington.

TUESDAY: Look for Power Rankings presented by John Deere to get another shakeup this week. Does finally getting in the win column elevate Martin Truex Jr. to the top? NASCAR.com will also cover the appeal from Jimmie Johnson‘s team, plus feature the exceptional pit crew of Carl Edwards‘ No. 19 group.

WEDNESDAY: Check out which paint schemes will be on display at this weekend. We’ll also have a staff debate about whether or not Martin Truex Jr. is a title contender.

THURSDAY: Driver Reports analyzes which drivers have the best shot to win at Michigan. Our #TBT piece takes a look back at Dale Earnhardt Jr. conquering the 2-mile oval to break a pair of long winless skids.

FRIDAY: There are four on-track events, and we’ll cover them all, starting at 11:30 a.m. (ET) with Sprint Cup Series practice and culminating later in the evening with the Sprint Cup qualifying. In between, there are a pair of XFINITY Series practices. We’ll also have eight of the best tweets that you may have missed from the previous week.

Also coming this week: We’ll recap the entire Pocono weekend in GIF form, a fun way to look back at the top moments from the track … @nascarcasm will have a mockup of Martin Truex Jr.’s Facebook page after Sunday’s win … gone to a race this year, and got all decked out? See if you make the cut in our gallery of the best fan photos of the year.

No. 22 car finishes fourth after starting from the rear

RELATED: Full race results | Updated series standings

LONG POND, Pa. — Joey Logano likened his fourth-place finish Sunday at Pocono Raceway to one of those "blue-collar days." After helping his Team Penske No. 22 Ford team grind out a top-five from unlikely odds, Logano was still smiling post-race on pit road at the workmanlike effort.

Logano started at the back of the 43-car field in the Axalta "We Paint Winners" 400 after a Sunday morning rear-gearing change, then recovered from a pit-road speeding penalty on his first stop to claim his seventh top-five finish in 14 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races this year. At the heart of it was a solid game plan from crew chief Todd Gordon, who shouldered the blame for the penalty but made amends with his pit strategy.

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"Everyone did a good job," Logano said. "We weren’t fast all weekend, so we fought hard and tried to use some strategy early. With the speeding penalty, I lost some there and then tried to keep moving up and got something decent out of it."
 
After starting in the rear of the field, Logano quickly moved forward, gaining 15 positions in the first 10 laps. He’d picked off three more places by the time he reached his first scheduled pit stop, where Gordon called him in early on Lap 22.
 
Logano was among the first to come down pit road, attempting to make the 400-miler a three-stop race from that point. In doing so, the team employed a strategy similar to those at road courses, where green-flag stops are less of a hindrance.
 
"This place lends itself to being a little creative," Gordon said. "Pit road’s fairly short compared to the track length, so pitting under green doesn’t cost you a lap. Obviously starting in the back with a gear change made it a little anxious and (we) had to create something."
 
But Gordon — driven to gain more ground early — also directed Logano to push the limits on the pit-road timing loops, netting the No. 22 entry a pass-through penalty for speeding.
 
"I told him we could go to a point that he couldn’t. I’ll own that one," Gordon said. "Just trying to figure out what we could do for later and figured we’d take the lump early if it was an issue, and it was. Overall, a good recovery."
 
The recovery effort was aided by Logano’s ability to pick off spots during a handful of restarts in the race’s second half, pushing him to as high as second place in the running order with 20 laps remaining. That stretch also included a brush with the Turn 3 wall, a glancing scrape with 26 laps left that didn’t dramatically affect his progress.
 
But his post-race lament was one shared by several teams — the inability to keep pace with dominating race winner Martin Truex Jr. and runner-up Kevin Harvick.
 
"We weren’t fast from when we unloaded here on Friday and we worked it into a top-five piece," Logano said. "I’m proud of that. I felt like we might’ve had a third-place car at the end of the race possibly, but we just had nothing for the 4 (Harvick) and 78 (Truex). They’ve been so fast here the last couple of weeks, so we’ve got our work cut out to figure out how to beat those guys."
 
The next site for that assignment comes Sunday at Michigan International Speedway, where Logano and Co. have enjoyed a measure of recent success. Since joining Team Penske two seasons ago, Logano has led at least 20 laps in each of his efforts at the 2-mile track, scoring a victory from the Coors Light Pole in August 2013.
 
After converting a major Pocono rally, Gordon said there’s something to the notion of Michigan momentum, but there’s also the confidence that comes with making strides with the 2015 rules package.

"This sport’s all about the psychology of it and how you do, but it’s good to get back to us making our race car better all day and we made our runs better all day," Gordon said. "That’s something that we did very well last year, and with this new package and this new track bar adjuster, it’s something that we’ve had to kind of work at trying to figure out how to handle that, and we’re getting better at it."

Thomas began racing in ’50s, guided son Ronnie’s NASCAR career

Cerry Era "Jabe" Thomas, a former NASCAR driver and father of 1978 Rookie of the Year Ronnie Thomas, passed away Thursday, June 4.

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Thomas, a native of Christiansburg, Virginia, was 85.

Between 1965 and 1978, Thomas made 322 starts in NASCAR’s premier series, earning three top-five and 77 top-10 finishes. During a four-year stretch from 1968-71, he finished eighth or higher in the season-long points standings. His top-five results came at Greenville, Asheville and Columbia while competing in an entry fielded by himself and fellow owner Don Robertson.

Thomas began his racing career in the 1950s, competing on dirt tracks in Virginia; he won the ’58 track championship at Radford Speedway (known today at Motor Mile). He was 35 when he made the move to NASCAR’s top division.

Although he made his final start in ’78, finishing 37th in the Delaware 500 at Dover International Speedway, Thomas continued to be involved in NASCAR, serving as the guiding force for his son Ronnie’s racing career. The younger Thomas posted two top-10 finishes in 1978, at Nashville and Darlington, en route to the rookie title against a field that also included Roger Hamby, Blackie Wangerin, Baxter Price and Al Holbert.

No. 48 team waits for situation to play out before Michigan

RELATED: Johnson stands behind decision to appeal

Hendrick Motorsports‘ appeal of a P1 level penalty will be heard by the National Motorsports Appeals Panel Tuesday at the NASCAR Research & Development Center in Concord, North Carolina.

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The Sprint Cup Series organization’s No. 48 team, with driver Jimmie Johnson, was penalized May 27 for receiving written warnings in two consecutive events during last month’s All-Star and Coca-Cola 600 events at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
 
As a result of the multiple warnings, the team was scheduled to receive one of the final two choices in the pit selection process for the May 31 FedEx 400 benefitting Autism Speaks at Dover International Speedway.
 
However, the penalty was deferred due to the notice to appeal by the organization.
 
Should the Appeals Panel uphold NASCAR’s penalty, the team would have the last choice in pit selection for this weekend’s Quicken Loans 400 at Michigan International Speedway (FOX Sports 1, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR, 1 p.m. ET).
 
Before the Dover race, Johnson, a six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion, said his team didn’t agree with the penalty.
 
"I look forward to the appeal process running its course, and respect it and certainly hope for a different outcome once everything has run its course," he said.
 
Written warnings are typically issued for minor infractions and do not result in penalties. However, when multiple warnings are issued, the infraction is considered a P1 level penalty under NASCAR’s Deterrence System.
 
The HScott Motorsports team, with driver Justin Allgaier, was also penalized for receiving consecutive warnings at Charlotte.
 
More recently, the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 4 team with defending series champion Kevin Harvick was penalized for multiple warnings during the Dover race weekend.
 
Both HScott and SHR teams chose to not appeal.

At least 10 teams expected at track Wednesday

RELATED: Buy tickets for Darlington

At least 10 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series teams are expected to participate in a one-day open team test Wednesday at Darlington Raceway.

The historic 1.366-mile track, the first paved speedway to feature NASCAR competition, will host the Bojangles’ Southern 500 Sprint Cup Series race Sunday, Sept. 6.

Drivers scheduled to take part in this week’s test are: Aric Almirola (Richard Petty Motorsports), Greg Biffle (Roush Fenway Racing), Clint Bowyer (Michael Waltrip Racing), Kurt Busch (Stewart-Haas Racing), Kyle Busch (Joe Gibbs Racing), Jimmie Johnson (Hendrick Motorsports), Joey Logano (Team Penske), Jamie McMurray (Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates), Ryan Newman (Richard Childress Racing) and Martin Truex Jr. (Furniture Row Racing).

The test is scheduled to run from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. ET. (UPDATE: End time pushed up to 4:45 p.m. ET because of expected showers.)

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Biffle, Bowyer, McMurray and Newman will also be on hand Tuesday for a single-day Goodyear tire test.

"This is a great, free opportunity for fans to watch NASCAR Sprint Cup Series teams race around our famed oval for the first time in nearly 14 months," track president Chip Wile said. "This will be the only time the teams and drivers will be able to see Darlington before the series returns on Labor Day weekend."

The Sprint Cup Series hasn’t visited Darlington since April of 2014. An offseason schedule change moved the event back to the holiday weekend, a spot it held on the schedule for more than 50 years.

The open test will be the seventh of the season. Future single-day tests are scheduled for Richmond International Raceway, Chicagoland Speedway, Bristol Motor Speedway, Homestead-Miami Speedway, Kansas Speedway, Phoenix International Raceway and Auto Club Speedway.

Nearly all of the tests follow one- or two-day Goodyear tire tests at the individual tracks. The Richmond team test, scheduled for June 17, is a recent addition. Meanwhile, a two-day Goodyear tire test at Bristol was changed to a single-day open team test (July 30).

NASCAR banned private team testing for 2015, developing the National Series Master Unified Test Schedule instead to provide teams an opportunity to work with this season’s new rules package. Only one team from each Sprint Cup organization is allowed to participate in the open team tests.

The four teams taking part in the Goodyear portion are the only ones from their organizations allowed to participate in the open test, if they choose.

"With the Bojangles’ Southern 500 being the second-to-last race before the Chase cutoff, I’m sure the teams will be looking for a little something extra to get to … Victory Lane and potentially secure a Chase berth before times runs out," Wile said.

Two sections of the Colvin Grandstands, located on the backstretch, will be open to fans.

Kevin Harvick, 2014 NASCAR Sprint Cup champion, is the defending winner of the Bojangles’ Southern 500.

In addition to the Sprint Cup race, Darlington Raceway will also host the VFW Sport Clips Help A Hero 200 NASCAR XFINITY Series race Saturday, Sept. 5.

Hendrick driver upbeat despite not pulling off third straight win at Pocono

RELATED: Full race results | Updated series standings

LONG POND, Pa. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. came to Pocono Raceway looking to join the select company of Bobby Allison and Tim Richmond as the only drivers to win three straight races at the Tricky Triangle.

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And while that didn’t happen for the driver of the No. 88 Chevrolet, his reaction on pit road after the Axalta "We Paint Winners" 400 wouldn’t have given away an 11th-place finish.

"I had so much fun today," Earnhardt said after the race, his first result outside the top 10 at Pocono in his last five starts at the 2.5-mile track. "My car was awesome, we were passing five, 10 cars on restarts, having a blast."

Earnhardt started the race 20th and by Lap 20, found himself in the top 10. On Lap 75, he was running in second place and looked to be making his way toward the lead. He would spend a good amount of the next 50 circuits in the top five before restarting sixth on Lap 126.

On that restart, Earnhardt made contact with his Hendrick Motorsports teammate Kasey Kahne, resulting in some left-rear quarter-panel damage on the No. 88 Nationwide Chevy. Junior went from sixth to 12th in a short span before pitting under the next caution on Lap 131. He explained what happened after the race.

"I can’t visually picture what exactly I saw coming off of Turn 2, but I thought I was up on the quarter-panel of the 2 (Brad Keselowski)," Earnhardt said. 

"I knew the 5 (Kahne) was down there, and I thought the 2 yanked off the wall as if he had almost hit the fence or something. He sort of yanked the car to the left, and I saw that and moved and hit the 5. Tore the left side of my car up. I’m sorry whatever it did to Kasey. I’m sure it didn’t help him being run into like that." 

Junior restarted in 28th on Lap 134 and in two green flag laps had moved up to 17th before another caution came out. He was able to do something similar on the next restart on Lap 140, moving up to 11th before the last caution of the day occurred. 

From there, he couldn’t work his way into the top 10 over the final green flag run of 16 laps, despite recording the most green flag passes (83) and second-most quality passes (41) on the day, according to NASCAR loop data.

"I’m racing hard. It’s so hard to pass here. You got to take every position you can and when you get a position on a guy, when you can get to his quarter-panel and draft, you got to go."

Earnhardt also didn’t think the team’s pit stall did them any favors, a result from their worst starting spot since the April race at Richmond International Raceway. The 88 team had stall No. 12, which was right in the middle of the first block of 24 stalls on pit road at Pocono. 

"We had a really bad pit stall behind the 4," Earnhardt said. "They had to pick last because of their penalty and ended up forced into the stall behind us. So we had to come around him all day and the 16 come around us all day. So we’re terrible getting in our stall, losing several spots because of that. And that cost us a lot."

Still, on a day where he could have been disappointed by his showing and seeing Hendrick’s five-race winning streak at Pocono end, the sport’s most popular driver remained very upbeat.

"We had a good enough car to run in the top three. Probably not win the race, but I had a blast."