See how the postseason picture looks after 14 races

See how the postseason picture looks after 14 races

Get on-track times for everything at Michigan and Gateway
The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and NASCAR XFINITY Series will race at Michigan International Speedway, and the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series will race at Gateway Motorsports Park this weekend. Check out the full schedule below.
All times are ET
ON TRACK
— 1 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Quicken Loans 400 (200 laps, 400 miles), FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 9:15 a.m.: Brad Keselowski and Dave Pericak
— 10 a.m.: Ryan Newman, Mark Dantonio and Bill Emerson
— 4:15 p.m.: Post NASCAR Sprint Cup race
ON TRACK
— 11:30 a.m.-12:55 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 1-2 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series practice, FOX Sports 1 — CANCELED, due to rain
— 2:20-3:55 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series final practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 4:15 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 2 (Get results)
PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 10:15 a.m.: Joey Logano
— 10:40 a.m.: Kyle Larson
— 1:45 p.m.: Jeff Gordon
— 2:15 p.m.: Clint Bowyer
— 2:30 p.m.: Martin Truex Jr. and Joe Garone
— 5:15 p.m.: Post NASCAR Sprint Cup Series qualifying
GARAGECAM (Watch live)
11 a.m. ET: Sprint Cup Series
2 p.m. ET: XFINITY Series
ON TRACK
— 9:30-10 a.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 10:15 a.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series qualifying, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 10:30 a.m.-1 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series final practice (Get results)
— Noon-12:55 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 1:30 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series Great Clips 250 Benefiting Paralyzed Veterans of America (125 laps, 250 miles), FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 5:45 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series qualifying, FOX Sports 2 — CANCELED, due to rain (Lineup)
— 8:30 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series American Ethanol Presents the Drivin for Linemen 200 brought to you by Ameren (160 laps, 200 miles), FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 11:15 a.m.: Cole Whitt and Nate Burleson
— 3:15 p.m.: Post NASCAR XFINITY Series race
Get full lineup of NASCAR programming for the week
RELATED: See the full weekend schedule
All times ET
Monday, June 8
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network
11 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2
Tuesday, June 9
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network
6:30 p.m., NASCAR America: States of NASCAR #5 (re-air), NBC Sports Network
7 p.m., NASCAR America: States of NASCAR #5 (re-air), NBC Sports Network
7:30 p.m., NASCAR America: Scan All 43 Special 2015 (re-air), NBC Sports Network
Wednesday, June 10
7 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
7:30 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
8 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
8:30 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
4:30 p.m., NASCAR America: States of NASCAR #6 (re-air), NBC Sports Network
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
2:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2
Thursday, June 11
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network
6:30 p.m., NASCAR America: States of NASCAR #6 (re-air), NBC Sports Network
7 p.m., NASCAR America: Scan All 43 2015 (re-air), NBC Sports Network
7:30 p.m., NASCAR America: Scan All 43 2015 (re-air), NBC Sports Network
1 a.m., NASCAR America: States of NASCAR #5 (re-air), NBC Sports Network
1:30 a.m., NASCAR America: States of NASCAR #6 (re-air), NBC Sports Network
Friday, June 12
7 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
7:30 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
8 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
8:30 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
11:30 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1
1 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series practice, FOX Sports 1
2:30 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series final practice, FOX Sports 1
4 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 2
4:30 p.m., NASCAR America: States of NASCAR #6 (re-air), NBC Sports Network
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network
6:30 p.m., NASCAR America: States of NASCAR #5 (re-air), NBC Sports Network
Saturday, June 13
9 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1
10 a.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1
11:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition, FOX Sports 1
Noon, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, FOX Sports 1
1 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: XFINITY, FOX Sports 1
1:30 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Great Clips 250 Benefiting Paralyzed Veterans of America, FOX Sports 1
5:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 2
8 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Setup, FOX Sports 1
8:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series American Ethanol Presentes Drivin’ for Linemen, FOX Sports 1
Sunday, June 14
11 a.m.: 100,000 Cameras: Talladega (re-air), FOX Sports 1
11:30 a.m., NASCAR RaceDay: Michigan, FOX Sports 1
1 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Quicken Loans 400, FOX Sports 1
5:30 p.m., NASCAR: Fans Speak, FOX Sports 1
6 p.m., Being: Stewart-Haas Racing, FOX Sports 1
2 a.m., NASCAR America: States of NASCAR #5 (re-air), NBC Sports Network
2:30 a.m., NASCAR America: States of NASCAR #6 (re-air), NBC Sports Network
Comeback allowed Johnson to nab seventh top-three result in last eight races
RELATED: Full race results | Updated series standings
LONG POND, Pa. — For all the convergence and planetary alignment of factors that seemed to stack up against the Hendrick Motorsports No. 48 team Sunday, Jimmie Johnson seemingly managed to turn back each one at Pocono Raceway. Still, a third-place result in spite of the obstacles left him eager for improvement after coming up short.
Johnson’s rally to the short step of the podium in the Axalta "We Paint Winners" 400 cemented the No. 48 group’s seventh top-three finish in the last eight NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races. But how he got there — surviving a flat tire, a scrape with the wall, and issues during pre-race inspection — made the result behind race winner Martin Truex Jr. and runner-up Kevin Harvick all the more impressive.
"Yeah, our race ability has been a shining spot for us this year," said Johnson, a three-time Pocono winner. "Today we really didn’t have pace for the 78 (Truex) or the 4 (Harvick), so we’ve got to get to work there. With the damaged car we ran third, missing half the splitter and the right side knocked in, some hard racing on one of those restarts off Turn 3. To get a good result, we overcame a lot today, having to deal with a flat tire, the damage to the car, and then I got to third.
"We’ll take it. Scrappy day for us, but not the end of the world, either."
The issues began early for Johnson and Co. with difficulty getting their entry through pre-race inspection. The No. 48 was presented to the pit-road grid an hour before Sunday’s 400-miler but not until after at least one extra trip through the inspection line.
Ron Malec, car chief for Hendrick’s No. 48, said the issue dealt with measurements slightly outside the laser inspection’s tolerances, but indicated that trying to catch Truex’s Furniture Row Racing team and Harvick’s Stewart-Haas Racing outfit was the driving motivation.
"You have to get everything you can before the race, and the machine reads certain things and we didn’t have a good baseline for the morning or anything," Malec said post-race. "So it read a little high and we adjusted it once and missed it by just a tick. It’s just a matter of hitting it right on the number, and you want everything you can for the most advantage you can get from all of those.
"It just helps. Guys like the 78 and the 4 are so fast, it’s hard to compete with them, so you have to make sure everything’s right and we just missed it a little bit."
After those issues subsided, Johnson started ninth and was among several drivers caught in a yo-yo effect up and down the leaderboard on widely varying pit-stop strategies. But the six-time series champion faded to the low point of his pendulum just past the halfway mark, when a left-front tire went flat in the 87th of 160 laps.
After falling to the tail end of the lead-lap running order, Johnson methodically rallied back into the top 10 before more trouble cropped up. Racing in close quarters with Joey Logano and Matt Kenseth forced his No. 48 and Logano’s No. 22 to kiss the outside wall in Turn 3 with 26 laps remaining, causing Johnson to key his in-car radio to say, "Can you thank the 20 (Kenseth) for driving me into the frontstretch wall, please?"
Johnson and Kenseth had a calm, civil post-race discussion on pit road about the incident, a run-in that Johnson and Logano shared a laugh about later.
"I really don’t know what happened," Kenseth said. "I’ve got to go watch it on TV, but I thought I was under the 22 (Joey Logano) and the 48 hit the wall and they said they moved up there or something. I don’t know — I’ve got to go home and watch it, to be honest with you."
Johnson continued to gain ground during a series of late-race restarts, but still lamented the team’s performance deficit behind Truex and Harvick. Johnson wound up slightly more than 12 seconds behind Truex, a distant third at the checkered flag; his deficit back from second-place Harvick was almost 11 seconds.
Johnson leads the series with four victories already this season, but still remained eager to reverse Sunday’s seeming disparity. The mammoth comeback and resulting top-three finish left him encouraged about his team’s ability to regain its performance perch.
"I think it says that we’re doing a good job," Johnson said. "Our car drives good in traffic, which is something I didn’t have last year, so I’m very happy to have that. I’ve had to pass a lot of cars through this first part of the season, from poor qualifying efforts or a flat tire like we had today.
"I think we’re doing well. We still need more speed, even if we’re the fastest car, I’d probably still want more, but to have the 78 and the 4 so far ahead and the speed that Kevin showed in practice and what kind of speed is really in our Hendrick equipment, we’ve got to keep working. We’re not really where we need to be exactly."
Chairman and CEO: Meeting ‘gives everybody a really good seat at the table’
RELATED: Drivers react to formation of drivers’ council
LONG POND, Pa. — NASCAR Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Brian France opened up about the recent formation of a drivers’ council, saying Sunday that last weekend’s meeting gave an already fluid communications process a more formal setting.
France spoke after attending Sunday morning’s pre-race drivers’ meeting at Pocono Raceway ahead of Sunday’s Axalta ‘We Paint Winners’ 400 (1 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1, MRN, SiriusXM). He and his wife, Amy, were at the track to promote their charitable work with the Gabrielle’s Angel Foundation.
Drivers who attended last weekend’s summit with NASCAR officials near Dover International Speedway were overwhelmingly positive about the discussion, and the ideas that emerged from it. For France, the meeting was a continuation of an already open line of communication.
"We’ve said from the beginning that we’re going to improve our communications across the board with all the stakeholders, and they’re certainly as important as anybody, so that’s consistent," France said. "What you’re seeing is just more formalized conversations. We talk all the time about things that are important to them… we did the same thing with the track operators. We didn’t have a formal get-together with them; we now do in February of every year where it’s very formal and we lay out things for them.
"That just gives everybody a really good seat at the table to express what’s important to them, and that’s what I’ve said from the beginning that it’s important to us."
The formation of a drivers’ council almost has a parallel group in the Race Team Alliance, which formed last July and grew to include the majority of NASCAR teams last August. When asked whether similar talks would happen with the RTA, France indicated he was open to the idea.
"When anybody has things that can improve the sport, we’re going to be open to that," France said. "It doesn’t really matter how the exact form of communications happens. What matters is, it does happen and we’re getting the stakeholders as close to us as we can because there’s a lot of good ideas that come out of these discussions — the drivers with safety, there’s a business side to this that they have an interest in. There’s all kinds of things that they have an interest in that we need to make sure we communicate well with them."
When presented with the notion that having wide-open, cooperative talks about racing issues represented a major shift to a new-look NASCAR, France demurred.
"Not at all," France said. "It’s exactly what I said a number of years ago that that’s my style is to be collaborative, to do more communications, not less. And if we have to formalize them to get more input, then we’ll formalize them. Whatever it takes to get everybody to be able to express what’s important to them."
Read the notes NASCAR provides during the driver’s meeting
Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live
| Event | Time (ET) |
|---|---|
| Driver Introductions | 12:30 p.m. |
| Pre-race prep: Tires, interior & remove generators | 12:40 p.m. |
| Line up crews — facing the flag | 12:59 p.m. |
| Invocation | 1 p.m. |
| National Anthem | 1:01 p.m. |
| Command to start engines | 1:07 p.m. |
| Number of Laps | 160 laps |
| Pit Road Speed | 55 mph |
| Caution Car Speed | 70 mph |
| Pit Road Speed Begins | 192 feet before the first pit box |
| Pit Road Speed Ends | 100 feet past the last pit box |
| Minimum Speed | 58.82 seconds |
| Exiting the Pits (Blend Line) | Stay low in Turn 1 |
| Fuel Pit Stalls 1-43 | Sunoco pumps |
| Post-Race | 2-6 in the race stop in pit stalls 25-29 |
| All Others/Two crew members per car | Double-file near the outside, across from 25 |
| Event | Track/Day/Time (ET) |
|---|---|
| Next week | Michigan International Speedway |
| Hauler parking | 6 p.m. ET, Thursday, June 11 |
| Garage opens | 6:30 a.m. ET, Friday, June 12 |
| First practice | 11:30 ET, Friday, June 12 |
PARADE magazine bestows honor upon the ‘uniquely American’ sport
NASCAR has been named one of the United States’ "National Treasures" by PARADE magazine and will be featured in the widely distributed print edition this Sunday.
PARADE’s ongoing series highlights "uniquely American people, places and things that make us very, very happy," and so has also recognized the Declaration of Independence, the Hollywood sign, Stevie Wonder and potato chips among other "National Treasures."
The NASCAR distinction is supported by Sprint Cup driver Danica Patrick, who describes the sport as "totally American — NASCAR’s roots are true."
Click here to read more about NASCAR as a National Treasure.
Earnhardt looks to join select few, will line up 20th on Sunday
LONG POND, Pa. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. is looking to join some rare company in Sunday’s Axalta ‘We Paint Winners’ 400 at Pocono Raceway (1 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1, MRN, SiriusXM).
Fresh of a 2014 sweep of both NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races at the Tricky Triangle, Earnhardt is looking to become the third driver to win three in a row at 2.5-mile Pennsylvania track. Bobby Allison and Tim Richmond are the other two to accomplish that with the latter’s being the most recent occurrence in 1987.
However, the Hendrick Motorsports driver will be starting 20th in his bid to win three straight at Pocono and he explained what led to his worst starting spot since Richmond.
"I chopped the entrance to (Turn) 1 on the first lap and that cost us a little bit of time. And then the next run we went into Turn 1 and turned sideways and got loose and just kind of killed the lap. So, we had pretty good speed in practice and just didn’t … the driver didn’t do a good job."
That qualifying performance led Junior to help his No. 88 team push the car back to the garage.
Here @DaleJr helps the @nationwide88 team push the car, saying "It’s the least I can do after qualifying 20th." pic.twitter.com/BcFfDohG8X
— Mike Davis (@MikeDavis88) June 5, 2015
Earnhardt showed speed in Friday’s opening practice, placing fourth in the 85-minute session (176.564 mph). In the second practice, Earnhardt was second on the speed chart (175.596 mph) in the 55-minute session.
Still, he understands the difficulty in winning one race at Pocono let alone three straight win.
"It’s just difficult to win one, you know?" Earnhardt said Friday at Pocono. "It’s difficult to win, period. And there’s so much competition in this series now."
Junior will be looking to do something Allison and Richmond did not have to do in their run of three straight victories. He will try and join their club by winning with two different crew chiefs. Greg Ives is on top of the box this season as Steve Letarte, his crew chief for the sweep last year, left to be part of NBC’s NASCAR coverage after last season.
"Well we won those two races by having some great pit strategy," Earnhardt said on Friday at Pocono. "Steve (Letarte) got real aggressive on his pit calls and I think that is definitely going to be what is going to put you in position to win. You kind of call this race in reverse.
"The tire is pretty tough here and durable. There is not a whole lot of fall off. You can call the race sort of like a road course in reverse and put yourself up toward the front like we did last year. It makes it pretty difficult to get around you if you have a good car. I mean we were able to pass some guys that tried to get more aggressive than we were. Everything has kind of got to fall in the right place and allow you to make those choices."
The change in crew chiefs hasn’t affected Earnhardt’s performance this season. Entering Pocono, Earnhardt is fifth in the point standings and scored a win last month at Talladega Superspeedway, his 24th victory in the Sprint Cup Series. He has top-five finishes at all intermediate and restrictor-plate tracks this season (seven in total).
Earnhardt is looking to keep the good vibes and good times going with Ives, who worked as a crew chief for two years for Earnhardt’s NASCAR XFINITY Series organization, JR Motorsports.
"He takes this super, super serious. This is his dream come true to be able to crew chief in the Cup Series, and I want to give him every opportunity to be successful and us as a team, we’re in a good position winning races, running well; we don’t want to take a step back."
Hendrick Motorsports has had stretches of dominance at Pocono. The organization’s four drivers have won the last five races, Jeff Gordon has the most wins here (six) and Jimmie Johnson swept the 2004 events here. In total, the organization has 17 wins at the Tricky Triangle.
Johnson says its hard to win here regularly, making a sweep all that more of an accomplishment. Something only seven drivers, including Junior and Johnson have done.
"I kind of put sweeping here in the same box as sweeping at Daytona or Talladega," Johnson said. "There are just so many circumstances out of your control at this track. And those lead to the difficulty in winning often and sweeping, for that matter.
"This race, there are always long green-flag runs and varying strategies. The teams that don’t have the raw speed to race for the win roll the dice and usually catch cautions and lose track position. Track position is so important. There are a lot of moving targets. It’s not just a straight-up downforce-style race. And I think that increases the difficulty to win here regularly."
With the success that the four-car stable has had here, Earnhardt’s recent run of success here makes him the prohibitive favorite this weekend. In addition to last year’s sweep, he posted two top-five finishes in the 2013 races at Pocono and has scored top-10 finishes in seven of his last eight starts there.
So what contributes to that dominance for Junior and Hendrick as a whole?
"Well, we’ve got four fast cars," Earnhardt said. "This is a horsepower race track where engines can make a difference. I feel like over the last several years we’ve had one of the best engine programs in the sport. So, I think we’ve just got really good stuff.
"Your car really, really shines here; whereas the driver is a little bit of the factor or a lot of the factor, especially on restarts and trying to work that difficult air when you’re behind somebody and make a pass and set it up on a particular part of the race track where it will happen. But the car really shines here and we’ve got some of the best equipment in the garage."
Second-year driver will start sixth in Sunday’s Axalta ‘We Paint Winners’ 400
LONG POND, Pa. — Halfway through the 2015 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series regular season, Austin Dillon admits the results aren’t where the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet team wants them in his second season in the sport’s top series.
"It’d be like a C-minus on our finishes," Dillon told NASCAR.com at Pocono Raceway, site of Sunday’s Axalta ‘We Paint Winners’ 400 (1 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1, MRN, SiriusXM).
"As far as on speed compared to last year, we’re better. We haven’t had the finishes that we want. I think my driving style is fine. We just could be better on the last couple restarts. Our points aren’t there because of motor issues and failures. Hopefully, we can get rid of some of those failures."
Those issues Dillon speaks of are an electrical problem in March at Martinsville that led to a 41st-place finish and an engine failure in May at Talladega that resulted in a 35th-place finish.
"I think we’d be in the top 14, 13 in points if you take away two engine failures, a blown tire in Atlanta. A couple of different things that didn’t go our way that we could have back would really benefit where we should be."
One of the hallmarks of his rookie campaign was Dillon’s ability to log laps and stay on track. In 2014, he missed logging only 53 laps of the 10,541 circuits. Keeping his car clean and out of trouble had him 15th in points this time last year. This season, he has already been off track for 259 laps of the 4,321 laps run in large part due to engine woes he simply didn’t have last year.
Dillon comes into Sunday’s race at Pocono 24th in the points standings with one top-10 finish (a 10th-place result at Bristol). With the exception of a 16th-place showing last month at Charlotte, Dillon has finished outside the top 20 in four of the past five races.
On the plus side, Dillon’s average starting spot is 17.2 (counting Pocono), an improvement from the 19.9 mark he averaged last season.
That mark was further improved as Dillon backed up his fifth-fastest time in Friday’s opening practice (176.561 mph), with a fast lap of 176.526 mph in the final round of qualifying. He will start Sunday’s race sixth. This is his third straight start in the top 12 and his best starting spot in 2015.
The two-time national series champion (2011 in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and 2013 in the NASCAR XFINITY Series) has been spending some time in the XFINITY ranks, running the No. 33 Chevrolet for RCR. Dillon has scored two wins (at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in March and Charlotte Motor Speedway in May) and seven top fives in 10 starts in that series. The 25-year-old sees great value in the prepaation the extra seat time allows him.
"It’s definitely been more beneficial having the laps (in XFINITY) on Saturdays to be prepared for Sundays, the start of the race especially," Dillon said. "We take off a lot better knowing what the track is going to do. We have two wins in the XFINITY cars, so the confidence has been really high. It’s been great to have the XFINITY car."
Dillon’s two Sprint Cup starts at Pocono produced an average finish of 16.0 and starting positions of 11th in both races. But the driver is ready for what the Tricky Triangle has to offer and has a Camping World Truck Series win (in 2014) at the 2.5-mile track to boot.
"Last year, both (Cup) races were pretty solid for us. We had one stint where we were really fast in the race last year and we took a similar package here.
"Track position’s always big. And if we can keep that, that would be beneficial."
“Bat boxes” constructed from Chevrolet Volt car battery covers
The Chevrolet Volt has enough technology and environmental friendliness to go around, but thanks to some old-fashioned ingenuity from the automaker’s engineers, the car’s battery covers have found a second life housing endangered bats.
The longtime NASCAR manufacturer’s crafty way to find extra uses for scrap automotive materials took center stage Saturday at Pocono Raceway as part of the NASCAR Green environmental initiative. Children attending the weekend’s racing at the 2.5-mile track helped assemble the wildlife shelters affectionately known as "bat boxes," which will help provide alternate housing for brown bats affected by a deadly fungus that gravely impacts their hibernation habits.
Finding an unconventional re-use for the Volt battery cover, which doesn’t fit easily into conventional recycling methods, has helped keep the part out of landfills. It also has helped General Motors provide homes to 34,800 insect-hungry bats as of last October, helping to keep a delicate environmental balance in order.
Saturday’s activity gave youngsters at Pocono a chance to get hands-on with the environmental issue. GM has frequently gotten school groups, youth clubs and recreation centers involved to make homes using battery covers, solidified adhesives for Corvette body panels as makeshift stalactites, and anti-chip paint coating to give bats a grippy surface from which to hang.
The 15 bat boxes that youth assembled Saturday will reside at the Pocono track’s campgrounds.