JGR driver missed 11 points races, will suit up Saturday

RELATED: Drivers react | Timeline of Busch’s injury, recovery | What has Busch been up to?

Let there be no doubt that Kyle Busch is ready to be back.

Asked what he missed most in the three months he’s been recovering from injury, he didn’t hesitate.

"The biggest thing I missed is being able to hold up trophies and being in Victory Lane,” Busch said Tuesday in a conference call with the national racing media to announce his return to the seat of the No. 18 Toyota Camry in Saturday’s Sprint All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway (9 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1, MRN, SiriusXM).

Busch received medical clearance from his doctors and NASCAR on Monday. He has yet to make a start this season after suffering a compound fracture in his right leg and a broken left foot in the Feb. 21 season-opening XFINITY Series race at Daytona International Speedway.

RELATED: See Baby Busch’s nursery

The shorter All-Star race and its segment-and-break format was enticing for the return, Busch said.

"I think it’s a great race to come back to, it’s shorter and it’s a non-points event and there’s mandatory cautions after every 25 laps so it gives you an opportunity to take a breather, take a rest and that will all help me make adjustments to myself as well as being behind the wheel of the 2015 Camry for the first time because I haven’t had the opportunity to race at all in this aero package," Busch said.

" … For me, getting into the All‑Star Race I felt like was a good idea just based of the fact of being able to get in, get behind the wheel, being able to go 200 miles an hour again, get a small taste of it, make sure everything is good, the body is good, everything is fine, which I anticipate it to be.

"If there’s things I need to work on, maybe I can work on during the week to get myself a little bit more prepared for the 600 coming up to the longest one. I definitely would have said coming back for the 600 is going to be really, really tough. That’s why I feel like the All‑Star Race is the perfect advantage to be able to come back. "

MORE: @nascarcasm imagines the texts Kyle received with news of return

While NASCAR has given Busch the green flag to compete, it has not ruled yet on whether Busch would receive a medical exemption to challenge for the championship should he otherwise qualify for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. (UPDATE: NASCAR grants Busch Chase waiver)

The rules state a driver must at least attempt to qualify for all 26 regular-season races to be eligible to earn a berth. A driver earns a Chase berth by winning a race and being ranked among the top 30 in the points standings, with the remaining slots filled by the highest-ranking driver in the Sprint Cup standings. (RELATED: How Busch can earn his way to playoffs)

There are 15 races remaining for Busch to score a victory and gather enough points to break into the top 30. The maximum number of points a driver can earn each weekend is 48 — and that includes winning a race and leading the most laps.

The current 30th-place driver is Tony Stewart, who has 179 points through the first 11 races.

"I know there’s been some good dialogue on the subject but I’m not aware that there’s a decision made at this point,” Busch said. "As I mentioned last month, I’d love to race for a win and a spot in the Chase. I believe the top-30 rule makes a lot of sense.

"For me, in my mind, it was intended for someone in my situation, for someone who has a car and team and sponsor set to run the entire year for a championship. I think it was set up to try and keep guys from just trying to grab a win at a road course or restrictor-plate track or something like that.

"We’ll see what happens. That’s in (NASCAR’s) hands and we’ll see what the decision is."

Should Busch receive a medical exemption, he has reason to be optimistic about his playoff chances. He has wins on 10 of the 13 tracks left to set the Chase field, including both road courses, Sonoma Raceway (one) and Watkins Glen International (two).

In fact, 19 of Busch’s 29 career Sprint Cup wins have come on the 13 remaining regular-season venues. He has four wins alone at Richmond, which hosts the regular season finale, and five at Bristol.

Busch has shared the recovery process with his fans on social media during the past three months, showing the evolution from hospital bed to wheelchair to standing alone. And in the last two weeks Busch finally got behind the steering wheel again, testing a late model at a North Carolina short track.

"Well, it was shaking the rust off for me, but also just proving that I can handle brake pressures, clutch, all that stuff with the foot, making sure the leg wouldn’t tense up or spasm or anything in the race car being locked in sort of a particular angle,” Busch explained. "The test went really well. It worked good to simulate as much of the racing situations as we could. I ran over 300 laps in the first lap down in Greenville‑Pickens (S.C.). The brake pressure I felt was probably comparable most to Dover, Charlotte being lighter than what Dover would be."

He and team owner Joe Gibbs have maintained from the very beginning that there was no rush on the recovery — that everyone has been committed to a cautious and safe healing taking precedence.

And Busch joked even after getting medical clearance from the doctor, team and NASCAR, "I don’t know that I convinced my wife 100 percent yet. It’s a process." 

On the practical side, however, Busch said even his doctors were impressed with the speed and thoroughness of his recovery.

"I think as far as physical shape and working out, I’ve been doing therapy three, sometimes four and five days a week, so I feel like I’m well ready to go and the cardio aspect is there and the physical aspect is all well there,” Busch said.

He likened the pedal pressure he felt testing the car to being about the same pressure he has felt doing leg presses in physical therapy.

"There’s probably some soreness there, but I wouldn’t call it pain," Busch said. "In my mind, if I had to say the thing that concerns me the most and it would only be on a 2-factor out of a scale of 1-10 is the amount of walking I have to do between the hauler and the car and pit road for qualifying, but (qualifying) won’t be an issue this week for the All-Star Race. … Being in the car I felt really good in the late model tests.

"My feet and legs, everything works good inside the race car. It’s just the amount of time standing on my feet, they tend to get tired a little more quicker than they used to.”

During his first few races back, Busch said his Joe Gibbs Racing team will have 18-year old Erik Jones on stand-by to fill in if necessary. Jones was one of three drivers — along with Matt Crafton and David Ragan — who substituted for Busch this season. The rookie Jones made his first Cup start last weekend at Kansas Speedway, qualifying Busch’s Toyota 12th and running among the top 10 before a late-race accident relegated him to a 40th-place finish.

RELATED: Erik Jones smacks wall, ruining Kansas run

May is a big month for Busch even beyond his impending return to racing. He celebrated his 30th birthday on May 2, and he and wife Samantha are expecting their first child, a son, in the coming weeks.

Busch said the baby is actually due on May 22, but acknowledged the possibility of it being born this weekend, coinciding with the Sprint All-Star Race. With Jones already on stand-by and with the race taking place near their home in the Charlotte, North Carolina, area, Busch said he felt very comfortable with the situation.

INSIDE GROOVE: Samantha Busch reveals baby nursery

"If she goes into labor my plan is always to be there for the birth," Busch said. "The good thing about Charlotte is we have more flexibility being here than if we were on the other side of the country. We’ll see what happens the next few days."

Keep tabs on the activity at both tracks this weekend

This weekend, the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series will be rounding laps at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Meanwhile, the NASCAR XFINITY Series will take to Iowa Speedway for the series’ first standalone event of the season.

The Sprint Cup Series Sprint Showdown, in which two drivers will transfer to the Sprint All-Star Race field, will be held on Friday, May 15, at 7 p.m. ET, with coverage on FOX Sports 1, MRN and SiriusXM. The Sprint All-Star Race, which will see the winning driver take home $1 million dollars, will be on Saturday, May 16 with coverage starting at 7 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1, MRN and SiriusXM.

The Camping World Truck Series NC Education Lottery 200 is on Friday, May 15, at 8:30 p.m. ET with coverage on FOX Sports 1, MRN and SiriusXM.

The XFINITY Series 3M 250 is on Sunday, May 17 at 2 p.m. with coverage on FOX Sports 1, MRN and SiriusXM.

For more information on track times, press conferences and GarageCam, you can check out the full weekend schedule.

We know you may not have the time to watch the race action without any interruptions, so if you’re on the go, here’s how to keep up with all the action this weekend.

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NASCAR.com’s live Sprint Cup Series leaderboard, XFINITY Series leaderboard and Camping World Truck Series leaderboard update in real-time and offer constant text updates of lead changes, cautions, strategies, strong runs and everything in between. From the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series leaderboard, fans can also access live standings. On the go? Download the NASCAR Mobile app to follow the leaderboards live from your device.

Lap-by-Lap will keep you caught up even if you can only take a peek here and there. Check in to read back through all the laps you’ve missed, or keep an eye on the feed for real-time race updates.

We’ll also send race updates via Twitter through the official @NASCAR and @NASCARStats handles.

RaceBuddy will have enhanced views and coverage for the Sprint Cup Series with 10 HD live race views, including up to eight in-car cameras, two mosaic views, live leaderboard and interactive chat.

Haven’t tried RaceView yet? If you sign up, you’ll get virtual videos of cars on the track from various angles and hear what your favorite team is saying over the radio in the Sprint Cup Series races. Use it as a second screen or as your only screen. Just want to scan the radios? You can have that too with Scanner (formerly RaceView Audio) for all three series. On a mobile device? Get RaceView Mobile here.

Mobile users can also download NASCAR Connect, a game from OneUp Sports that allows users to play other fans with race predictions for some off-track competition while drivers battle it out on the track.

Live Press Pass video streams will keep the NASCAR action rolling even after the winner goes in and out of Victory Lane. Catch interviews with the top finishers and series champions immediately following the checkered flag for both national series events, and stay tuned to NASCAR.com throughout the week for the latest news.

Entire team shares joy of Talladega win

RELATED: Junior eager to compete in Coca-Cola 600

CONCORD, N.C. — One by one, Hendrick Motorsports employees took their places Tuesday afternoon, forming a receiving line that reached into the deeper regions of the Nos. 48 and 88 shop. Rarely has being single-file meant so much to a NASCAR team.

With each movement forward, a resounding signal came from the Hendrick Victory Bell, a relatively new but already rich tradition. Each blast from the bell’s clapper helped trumpet the No. 88 team’s most recent Talladega Superspeedway triumph — resounding in its own right — courtesy of Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Earnhardt himself stood at the end of the line, individually congratulating each team member for the win nine days earlier. It was a moment to see Junior not as the 40-year-old son of anointed stock-car royalty or as NASCAR’s most popular driver, but as merely another member of the team.

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"I think he just likes to be really in tune with his guys," said Travis Peterson, in his first year as an engineer for the No. 88 operation. "He’s obviously a huge figure and everybody sees that side of him, but I think he likes to just be his regular self and be buddies with everyone who’s on his team, just to know you on a more personal level.

"He wants everyone to enjoy it and have a good time. He doesn’t want it to be such a strict job. He wants everybody to enjoy racing, since for us, it’s not a real job — it’s what we enjoy doing. We just make our hobby into a career."

Earnhardt shook every hand Tuesday to extend what was already a raucous celebration of his sixth career victory at Talladega. There was enough bell-ringing to make churches envious, but there was also the personal touch of heartfelt appreciation at the end of the line.

Since Earnhardt has an ownership stake in the Hendrick-affiliated JR Motorsports team, he’s already comfortable keeping tabs on racing operations from the shop floor. But beyond the ownership connection, there’s humility that transcends his at-track stardom.

"I don’t think it’s the ownership. It’s just his personality," said Rob Lopes, the No. 88 Chevrolet’s tire specialist. "He’s one of us, he knows what it takes and what goes into this deal. He knows it’s not just him, he knows it’s not just us — it’s a whole team thing and he know that without us, there is no him and without him, there is no us. It’s just ‘us.’ "

Lopes has been with the team since 2011, the year that HMS president Marshall Carlson first broached the idea for a Victory Bell tradition, taking a page from college football’s playbook with the creation of unique trophies for rivalry games. In the five years since, Hendrick cars have scored 41 wins in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.

When the ritual was first created, Earnhardt was in the midst of a career-long slump that spanned more than three seasons. On the other side of the shop, stablemate Jimmie Johnson had just polished off the last of his five consecutive Sprint Cup championships for the No. 48 team.

Over the last two seasons, the division of success has balanced out somewhat, but the competitive fire hasn’t. Each team wants its place at the bell’s side. The fact that Tuesday’s celebration happened to take place within earshot of the office of Chad Knaus, Johnson’s crew chief, wasn’t lost on the No. 88 crew.

"In here, we’re one. But at the end of the day, we’re also competitors," said Adam Jordan, the No. 88 team’s interior mechanic. "We work together, but man, I really want to beat Chad Knaus every single day of the week. He just gets pissed when we beat him and vice versa."

Said Lopes: "It’s probably the healthiest competition out there, but it’s also the best-oiled two-car team you’re going to see. This building here has been referred to as one team that fields two cars, and that’s the way we treat each other."

After the shop portion of the ceremony was complete, the Victory Bell was off for the rest of its journey, hitting virtually every office on Hendrick Motorsports‘ sprawling 100-plus-acre campus. Fittingly, Earnhardt did the driving, turning the upright controls that helped the wagon’s go-kart wheels find their way around.

Peterson was able to celebrate atop the pit box — by his own admission, excitably so — at the track two weekends ago. But seeing the Victory Bell make its usual rounds, clanging all the while, brought home the team concept — from the engine and machine shop all the way through accounting and human resources — as the celebration touched all corners of the company.

"When you’re traveling, you get to experience it going to Victory Lane, being part of the intense moments of the race, but watching on TV is just not the same," Peterson said. "Being able to bring this around and get everybody involved is great for everyone who is here on the weekdays while we’re gone and keeps grinding on the cars."

WATCH IT AGAIN: Full race replay of Talladega, other races

Earnhardt handed a gift to each crew member as he exchanged greetings Tuesday afternoon. Inside each packet was a team-specific sticker commemorating the victory for each team member.

To hear the team members tell it, the celebration rarely deviates from its structured schedule, save for perhaps the recognition for winning the Daytona 500, NASCAR’s crown jewel race. While a certain amount of routine goes into each Victory Bell celebration, Lopes said savoring the spoils while adding another chapter to the team’s winning heritage never gets old.

"Any race, you don’t ever take a win for granted because you never know when your next one is going to be and you never know when your last one is going to be," Lopes said. "So you treat them all special. The bigger milestone races, sure, they might hold a little bit more light up to it, but … a win’s a win. The points are the same. The stickers that they put on next to a driver’s name, they aren’t a different color for a different race, they’re all the same.

"A win’s a win — we’ll take it."

Youngest national series winner will be age-eligible to run full time next season

RELATED: NASCAR’s future is bright … and young

Cole Custer was one of five returning members back for an encore with the unveiling of the 2015-16 NASCAR Next class of up-and-coming drivers on May 5. 

In the year-plus since being tapped to the youth initiative, Custer said he’s benefited from the extra visibility that the program provides. Landing a prized spot with JR Motorsports, co-owned by Dale Earnhardt Jr., hasn’t hurt.

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The 17-year-old Custer said he’s learned plenty about the sport’s inner workings from his NASCAR Next participation, especially in dealing with media requests as his profile rises. But he suggests there may be some carryover in the confidence category as well.

"We’re definitely going to have more hype going into our future races because of this, but it’s something that’ll bring some momentum going into the races, too," Custer said. "Just being talked about — you’re known now. I think it definitely helps you going in."

When JR Motorsports announced in January that it would expand its racing program in to the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Custer was selected for a 10-race slate. Though his truck resume spanned just nine career starts at the time, one of those was a comeback victory from the pole position last September at New Hampshire, making him — at 16 years, 7 months and 28 days old — the youngest winner in one of NASCAR’s three national series. 

The triumph — and the potential for more in the years ahead — made team owners take notice.

"It’s definitely jump-started it," Custer said of the win’s impact on his career. "We had a real good run there at Loudon and that was a real key thing in trying to progress in a different series and with different teams, meeting new people. I think it was just something that was real important for me."

PHOTOS: Meet the NASCAR Next Class of 2015

Custer carried the flag for JRM in the organization’s Truck Series debut at Martinsville Speedway in March, springing into the lead with five laps left in regulation before late-race contact shuffled him back in the finishing order. While 16th place wasn’t the favored result, the performance — bookended by a front-row starting spot and leading laps late — was encouraging.

Custer said there’s pressure that goes along with the expectations. He also indicated he hopes the team can handle both.

"For sure. They expect championships and wins at that program. That’s the deal there," Custer says. "We definitely want to go out there and win every single weekend, and we think we have the capability of it." 

Custer’s schedule this season is a partial one, in part because of a NASCAR-mandated age limit of 18 years old for tracks longer than 1.25 miles. Though he’ll be free to compete virtually unrestricted when he turns 18 next January, he said his 2016 plans are still in the formative stages.

"We’re not fully sure right now," Custer said. "We’re really focused on this year and trying to succeed but we’ll see. Hopefully, I would love to run full-time for them, but we’ll see in the future. I think there’s a lot of different things that happen, and we’ll see."

MORE: Learn more about NASCAR Next

 

Allgaier discusses cautions, Charlotte to have new tires and more

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Justin Allgaier says he understands the concern voiced about the timing of caution flags in the past two weeks, but said Tuesday from his team’s shop in Spartanburg, South Carolina, that he has no issues with how the end of the races have been officiated.

"Obviously if you are the car that everybody’s screaming by, you’re probably going to have a lot greater issue with it," the HScott Motorsports driver said.

Two weeks ago at Talladega after Carl Edwards crashed on the final lap of the GEICO 500, the Joe Gibbs Racing driver was critical of the lack of a caution flag being thrown for his incident as well as how others reacted after his No. 19 Toyota slid down onto the apron then shot back up on the racing surface.

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Several cars, including Allgaier’s, were still at speed and with no caution being thrown shot past Edwards’ out-of-control entry.

"I saw the crash, and I’ve seen enough crashes in that regard with the way that it happened to know that they don’t (normally) come back onto the race track," Allgaier said.

"When I came into the sport, the answer was always lock it down and turn to the left, that was always the big deal. In my mind, and seeing what happened to Carl, I felt like the way the circumstances were playing out that that’s what was going to happen."

Edwards’ teammate, Denny Hamlin, voiced similar concerns this past weekend after he was involved in a crash at Kansas Speedway.

"I keep spinning out, I keep hitting the wall and I can’t figure out why everyone is still coming at 200 (mph), and I look and the green light is still on," Hamlin said afterward.

"They didn’t throw a caution until seven seconds after I wrecked. Luckily nobody hit us. They’ll continue to monitor the situation is what they’ll say."

On Monday, Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR’s executive vice president and chief racing development officer, said officials hoped to speak with Hamlin this week.

Officials did throw the caution at Talladega when a multicar incident occurred just moments after Edwards’ spin.

"My spotter had already done a great job calling the wreck out, the back straightaway wreck had already happened, so obviously the attention had already moved to that because there were more cars involved," Allgaier said.

"The first wreck was kind of buttoned up and we’d already kind of written it off. I think when I got there I wasn’t at full speed by any means but I wasn’t (going) 50 mph, either."

On larger tracks such as Talladega where drivers often would have enough time to slow their cars before making their way back around to the scene of an incident, officials lean toward allowing the race to finish under green-flag conditions when it’s the last lap of the race. If the crash is severe, then getting emergency vehicles dispatched to the scene takes precedence.

If a crash brings out the yellow flag before the leader has taken the white flag (signifying one lap remaining), officials will make up to three attempts at a green-white-checkered finish.

RELATED: NASCAR’s racing flags and what they mean

Allgaier says that’s important for the fans.

"I look at the IndyCar finishes that end under yellow. They had one earlier this year I think, and I think everybody would have loved to have seen it … finish under green.

"For us, we get three attempts. If you can’t figure out in three attempts, we probably don’t need to finish it. But I feel like if I was a fan paying money to see a race, I’d like to see it end under green."

New Right-Side Tires for Charlotte

A Goodyear tire test in March has resulted in a change to the right-side tires for teams competing in this weekend’s Sprint All-Star Race (May 16, 7 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1, MRN, SiriusXM) as well as next weekend’s Coca-Cola 600 (May 24, 6 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM).

The new tire contains a multi-zone tread, according to Goodyear. The outboard 10 inches of the tire features the same compound used at Charlotte Motor Speedway last season.

Aric Almirola (Richard Petty Motorsports), Kasey Kahne (Hendrick Motorsports), Martin Truex Jr. (Furniture Row Racing) and J.J. Yeley (BK Racing) participated in the tire test.

The left-side tire is the same as that used in ’14.

Teams competing at CMS in Friday’s NASCAR Camping World Truck Series NC Education Lottery 200 (May 15, 8:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1 , MRN, SiriusXM) will use the same tire set-up as those in Sprint Cup.

XFINITY Series teams competing this weekend in Iowa in the 3M 250 (May 17, 2 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1, MRN, SiriusXM) will have the same left-side tire set-up as last season, but it will be paired with a new right-side configuration.

Kansas Penalty Totals

NASCAR officials meted out 30 penalties during the running of Saturday night’s SpongeBob SquarePants 400 at Kansas, flagging teams most often for pitting before pit road was officially open. It’s a common occurrence during events as teams typically hit pit road early to repair damage as soon as possible, knowing that the violation will result in re-starting the race at the back of the field. It’s a loss of track position that, in most cases, they’ve already lost.

J.J. Yeley and the No 23 team became the first to be penalized this season for pitting after already having taken the wave-around. The infraction occurred on Lap 100. The penalty was the loss of one lap.

There have been 30 or more penalties handed down in seven of this year’s 11 Sprint Cup races.

Despite troubles, Team Penske driver scores fifth-place finish

KANSAS CITY, Kan. – If Joey Logano hopes to contend for this year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup championship, the Team Penske driver and his No. 22 team will have to avoid the kind of mistakes that took them out of contention during Saturday night’s rain-delayed SpongeBob SquarePants 400 at Kansas Speedway.
 
Logano passed more cars than any other driver at Kansas, 147 according to NASCAR loop data, and came home with a not-so-terrible fifth-place finish, his sixth top-five result in this year’s first 11 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races.

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But missteps by the driver and team continually put the yellow Ford at the back of the field, requiring Logano to work his way through rush-hour-like traffic on at least two occasions.
 
"We inverted the field on ourselves," Logano said sheepishly. "We got most cars passed and it was fun, but … man, we did a terrible job. That’s pretty much what it comes down to."
 
The Daytona 500 winner joins the rest of the series this week at Charlotte Motor Speedway, site of Saturday night’s Sprint All-Star race (7:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1, MRN, Sirius XM). A week later, Charlotte plays host to the Coca-Cola 600 (May 24, 6 p.m. ET, FOX, PRN, SiriusXM), the series’ longest affair.
 
He has finished as high as second in the non-points race and his average finish in points races there is better than any other facility. But he has yet to win at the 1.5-mile track.
 
And unless they avoid problems such as those that surfaced at Kansas, he’ll remain winless at Charlotte.
 
Although he started on the pole for the fourth time this season last weekend, and led the first 29 laps of the 267-lap race, a penalty during pit stops on Lap 95 (his crew was over the wall too soon) dropped him to the tail end of the field.
 
After working his way from 32nd back inside the top 10, Logano was flagged again on Lap 186 when he came down pit road before it was open under caution. That miscue sent him back to the rear once more, this time just outside the top 15.
 
"I typically hear it on my radio, whether (pit road) is open or closed," he said of the mistake. "I heard the call to pit but I never looked (at the pit entrance lights). I saw no one else was pitting and thought ‘we’re going to get off strategy here. I’m the only guy (pitting).’"
 
Fortunately for the team, Logano’s car had speed. He was back inside the top 10 once again by Lap 220 and fifth by the time the checkered flag finally appeared.
 
"We got a top five out of it because we had a fast car and we were able to recover," he said. "But just on all aspects we all just did a terrible job; We know how to do it, we’ve done it before, we execute really well; we just kept screwing up."
 
Logano made it to the Championship Round of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup a year ago, winning a career-best five times in his second season with the Penske organization. Based on his team’s showing thus far this year, he’s once again considered one of the favorites to battle for the title.
 
As long as he and the team avoid putting themselves in the type of precarious positions they found themselves in last weekend.
 
"We had a fast race car and that’s what saved us," Logano said. "But our execution was not very good. We’ve got to raise our game a little bit. We’ve got to clean it up."

See which drivers are set to compete in Saturday night’s race

Entry # Driver Owner Crew chief Manufacturer Sponsor

1

1

Jamie McMurray

Felix Sabates

Matt McCall

15 Chevrolet

Bass Pro Shops

2

2

Brad Keselowski

Roger Penske

Paul Wolfe

15 Ford

Miller Lite

3

4

Kevin Harvick

Tony Stewart

Rodney Childers

15 Chevrolet

Hunt Brothers Pizza

4

5

Kasey Kahne

Linda Hendrick

Keith Rodden

15 Chevrolet

Time Warner Cable

5

11

Denny Hamlin

J D Gibbs

Dave Rogers

15 Toyota

FedEx Express

6

14

Tony Stewart

Margaret Haas

Chad Johnston

15 Chevrolet

Bass Pro Shops / Arctic Cat

7

18

Kyle Busch

Joe Gibbs

Adam Stevens

15 Toyota

M&M’s Red Nose Day

8

19

Carl Edwards

J D Gibbs

Darian Grubb

15 Toyota

ARRIS

9

20

Matt Kenseth

Joe Gibbs

Jason Ratcliff

15 Toyota

Dollar General

10

22

Joey Logano

Walter Czarnecki

Todd Gordon

15 Ford

Shell Pennzoil

11

24

Jeff Gordon

Rick Hendrick

Alan Gustafson

15 Chevrolet

Axalta

12

31

Ryan Newman

Richard Childress

Luke Lambert

15 Chevrolet

Cat/Quicken Loans

13

41

Kurt Busch

Gene Haas

Tony Gibson

15 Chevrolet

Haas Automation

14

43

Aric Almirola

Richard Petty

Trent Owens

15 Ford

Smithfield

15

47

A J Allmendinger

Tad Geschickter

Brian Burns

15 Chevrolet

Kingsford

16

48

Jimmie Johnson

Jeff Gordon

Chad Knaus

15 Chevrolet

Lowe’s Patriotic

17

88

Dale Earnhardt Jr

Rick Hendrick

Greg Ives

15 Chevrolet

Mountain Dew Baja Blast

See who is on competing in Friday night’s event

Entry # Driver Owner Crew chief Manufacturer Sponsor

1

3

Austin Dillon

Richard Childress

Gil Martin

15 Chevrolet

Dow

2

6

Trevor Bayne

John Henry

Bob Osborne

15 Ford

AdvoCare Ford Fusion

3

7

Alex Bowman

Tommy Baldwin

Bono Manion

15 Chevrolet

TBA

4

9

Sam Hornish Jr

Richard Petty

Bono Manion

15 Ford

Victory Junction/Shop.com

5

10

Danica Patrick

Tony Stewart

Daniel Knost

15 Chevrolet

Mobil 1 / Aspen Dental Chevrolet SS

6

13

Casey Mears

Bob Germain

Bootie Barker III

15 Chevrolet

GEICO Military Chevy SS

7

15

Clint Bowyer

Rob Kauffman

Brian Pattie

15 Toyota

Cherry 5-Hour Energy/Special Operations Warrior Foundation

8

16

Greg Biffle

Jack Roush

Matt Puccia

15 Ford

Ortho Ford Fusion

9

17

Ricky Stenhouse Jr

John Henry

Nicholas Sandler

15 Ford

Fastenal

10

23

J J Yeley(i)

Ron Devine

Joe Williams Jr

15 Toyota

Dr. Pepper "I’m a Pepper"

11

25

Chase Elliott(i)

Rick Hendrick

Kenny Francis

15 Chevrolet

NAPA AUTO PARTS

12

26

Jeb Burton

Anthony Marlowe

Patrick Donahue

15 Toyota

Maxim Fantasy Sports

13

27

Paul Menard

Richard Childress

Justin Alexander

15 Chevrolet

Serta / Menards

14

30

Jeff Green(i)

Curtis Key Sr

Dave Fuge

15 Chevrolet

Curtis Key Plumbing

15

32

Mike Bliss(i)

Archie St Hilaire

Clinton Cram

15 Ford

TBA

16

33

Alex Kennedy

Joe Falk

Patrick Tryson

15 Chevrolet

TBA

17

35

Cole Whitt

Bob Jenkins

Randy Cox

15 Ford

Speed Stick

18

38

David Gilliland

Brad Jenkins

Donnie Wingo

15 Ford

Love’s Travel Stops

19

139

Travis Kvapil(i)

Gordon Smith

Mike Chance

15 Chevrolet

TBA

20

40

Landon Cassill(i)

Michael Hillman

Mark Hillman

15 Chevrolet

Snap Fitness

21

42

Kyle Larson

Chip Ganassi

Chris Heroy

15 Chevrolet

Target

22

46

Michael Annett

Harry Scott Jr

Jay Guy

15 Chevrolet

Pilot Flying J

23

51

Justin Allgaier

Harry Scott Jr

Steve Addington

15 Chevrolet

BRANDT

24

55

David Ragan

Michael Waltrip

Billy Scott

15 Toyota

Aaron’s Dream Machine

25

62

Brendan Gaughan(i)

Jay Robinson

Scott Eggleston

15 Chevrolet

Vydox Plus

26

66

Tanner Berryhill

Jay Robinson

John Monsam

15 Chevrolet

TBA

27

78

Martin Truex Jr

Barney Visser

Cole Pearn

15 Chevrolet

Furniture Row/Visser Precision

28

83

Matt DiBenedetto

Ron Devine

Douglas Richert

15 Toyota

Dustless Blasting

29

95

Michael McDowell

Bob Leavine

Wally Rogers

15 Ford

Thrivent Financial

30

98

Josh Wise

Mike Curb

Gene Nead

15 Ford

TBA

https://www.nascar.com/drivers/jimmie-johnson/
1
Hendrick Motorsports
The first driver to three 2015 wins, Johnson has a great chance to pick up a fourth and a $1,000,000 check over the next two weeks at Charlotte, where he once won five of six straight races.
Tough to fault Harvick for finishing second or better for the eighth time in 11 races, but Johnson’s three wins – all of which have come at 1.5-mile tracks – speak volumes. Either way, it’s a toss-up for No. 1 between these two this week, as it likely will be from here on out.
https://www.nascar.com/drivers/dale-earnhardt-jr/
Hendrick Motorsports
Logano has earned four poles this season, finishing fourth (Atlanta), third (Martinsville), fifth (Richmond) and fifth (Kansas). The whole “start out front, stay out front” strategy seems to be working for him.
Truex’s race-high 95 laps led at Kansas were exactly 94 more than he led in all of 2014. That about sums up how things are going for the No. 78 driver this year as opposed to last year.
Junior came within just a few laps of winning consecutive races for the first time in his career. Still, that third-place finish, behind his Hendrick Motorsports teammate and JR Motorsports employee? He’ll take it.
Keselowski may get lucky if his first child is born over the next two weeks while the series is home at Charlotte – he presumably wouldn’t miss the All-Star Race or Coca-Cola 600. That said, despite his win at the 1.5-mile speedway in 2013, it historically hasn’t been a stellar track for him.
With Kevin Harvick the clear A+ driver at Stewart-Haas Racing right now, Busch isn’t too far off, hovering somewhere in A-/B+ territory. He once led nearly half of the Coca-Cola 600 (2010) — no small feat — so look for him to be strong over the next few weeks. Especially since he won’t be flying back and forth to Indianapolis.
https://www.nascar.com/drivers/denny-hamlin/
-2
Joe Gibbs Racing
Gordon couldn’t quite match his Kansas feat of a year ago – i.e. picking up his first win of the season – but his fourth-place finish was still strong. As a four-time Sprint Cup All-Star Race winner and three-time Coca-Cola 600 winner, Gordon always does well at home, too.
As perhaps the lone bright spot of the Joe Gibbs Racing organization right now, Kenseth continues to rise both in the standings and Power Rankings. Now, he’ll head back to Charlotte to try to shake off the 19th-place finish the last time the series was there, along with the memory of his infamous run-in with Brad Keselowski.
Newman picked up his seventh top-10 of the season at Kansas, but with so many ahead of him also having strong runs, he gets the short end of the “Didn’t do anything wrong, but drops anyway” stick.
https://www.nascar.com/drivers/clint-bowyer/
Stewart-Haas Racing
Many pegged the No. 42 as the stronger Chip Ganassi Racing car heading into 2015, but take a look at the standings. McMurray is eighth, with Larson a disappointing 22nd.
Kahne continues to start well (front row last two races) but hasn’t quite put it together in 2015 yet. If we don’t see strong performances from him over the next two weeks (career-high four wins at Charlotte) it may be time for the No. 5 team to reassess where they’re at.
https://www.nascar.com/drivers/danica-patrick/
-3
Stewart-Haas Racing
Hamlin was the odd man out in a four-wide situation that only had room for two, maybe three, cars on Saturday, and wrecked his race car. Still, just four top-10s in 11 races for a Championship 4 driver in 2014 is concerning.