Restrictor plate tracks return to single-car qualifying starting this weekend

Related: Biffle tops final practice | Stenhouse fastest in first practice

TALLADEGA, Ala. – Defending NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Kevin Harvick said, “it just didn’t work.”
 
Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Danica Patrick likened it to the TV show “Survivor.”
 
The shelf life of group qualifying on restrictor plate tracks has expired.
 
Tradition, some would say sanity, has returned.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

When NASCAR Sprint Cup and XFINITY Series teams hit the 2.66-mile Talladega Superspeedway for qualifying Saturday, fans won’t see packs of cars jostling for position, trailing cars laying back trying to catch the air and possibly ride the draft to a front-row starting spot.
 
They also won’t see multi-car crashes similar to the one that unfolded at Daytona when the format was put into play for this year’s season-opening race.
 
Instead, teams will go it solo with one driver’s qualifying attempt coming to a close as the next begins.
 
“I feel really good about what it has evolved into,” Harvick said Friday at Talladega, site of Sunday’s GEICO 500 (FOX, 1 p.m. ET). “I think all the competitors feel that way. We were tearing up a lot of cars in qualifying.”
 
According to NASCAR officials, each driver will complete three laps – the first to get up to speed, the second which will be the official qualifying lap, and a third as he or she returns to pit road.
 
Approximately halfway through the qualifying lap, the next driver in line will head out for his or her attempt.
 
The qualifying order in each series will be based on a random draw for the first of two rounds.
 
In the final round, the order will be based on first-round times, from slowest to fastest.
 
Each session is expected to take less than one hour to complete.
 
Patrick’s only pole in the Sprint Cup Series came in the Daytona 500 two years ago, under the single-car qualifying format.
 
“It just was, I feel, like a very unnecessary stress for everybody,” Patrick said of the group qualifying format at Daytona and Talladega. “The amount of conversations and meeting with drivers … I felt like I was on ‘Survivor’ … trying to make alliances and finding out the best thing to do was not have any and just be the one that tags onto the group. Because nobody really cared if it was just one car.
 
“But when a group of five saw you, you’re like ‘oh, I can’t have all five of those going faster.’”
 
The speed and closing rate of a car, or cars, catching a group in front often meant the pole winner wasn’t the first to cross the line.
 
Friday’s two practice sessions saw plenty of pack drafting but no significant contact. Roush Fenway Ford driver Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (200.780 mph) led the opening practice while teammate Greg Biffle (197.929 mph) topped the leaderboard in the second.
 
Biffle, who has one restrictor plate pole and one win, says he’s pleased with the change to the qualifying format “because it’s the speed of the car.”
 
“It’s not who got the lucky lane or who got a draft or who laid back so far and got sucked up on a big run,” Biffle, 45, said. “… I feel (this is) the right way to do it.”
 
Group qualifying will continue to be used to set the starting lineup at tracks other than Talladega and Daytona. Such a format works well at those shorter tracks, Harvick said.
 
“I think there have been a lot of things that have changed, but … our qualifying change has been week-in and week-out probably one of the better changes that we have had in our sport in a while.
 
“I think when you look a the adjustment and the time everybody has put in, I hope it evolves into that … this weekend as well.”

Driver isn’t discouraged after GoDaddy announces departure

RELATED: GoDaddy to end sponsorship with No. 10

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Just how big of a marketing machine is Sprint Cup Series driver Danica Patrick?
 
The world of NASCAR is about to find out.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

With the announcement that GoDaddy, the Internet web service provider, will not return as primary sponsor after the 2015 season, officials at Stewart-Haas Racing now must find funding to continue to support the 33-year-old and her No. 10 SHR team.
 
Funding that was said to run between $18 million and $20 million for an entire season not that long ago has escalated. Today, those on the high end of the scale seek anywhere from $22 million to $25 million.
 
That increase has led to fewer sponsors willing or able to fund teams for an entire season. The result for the fortunate few has been multiple primaries scattered throughout the year.
 
Companies such as TaxACT and Aspen Dental have provided associate support, and have served as primary sponsors on occasion for Patrick and the No. 10 team. But GoDaddy has funded the bulk of the group’s efforts, as well as Patrick’s, since she made the move to NASCAR from the open-wheel ranks.
 
"It was good that GoDaddy gave us, as a team, time to find someone else for that (sponsorship) role," Patrick said Friday at Talladega Superspeedway, site of Sunday’s GEICO 500 (FOX, 1 p.m. ET). "Either someone new or one of my great partners that already exists and wants to step up. …
 
"They have been an enormous supporter through every transition. They supported me when I just wanted to run (XFINITY) to get experience. So they’ve been great. But it is a new scenario and we’re going to have to figure it out and it’s a challenge, no doubt. Finding primary sponsors is a challenge. But I feel confident that in all the people to find sponsors, I believe in my agent and my team. And we’ll figure it out."

RELATED: Holly Cain on Patrick’s marketability
 
Patrick, who has 91 career starts, enters this weekend’s race 16th in points and has two top-10 finishes this season. Her ninth-place run at Bristol was her sixth career top 10, the most ever by a female driver in NASCAR.
 
In addition to Patrick, Stewart-Haas Racing fields Sprint Cup Series teams for defending series champion Kevin Harvick, co-owner/driver Tony Stewart and 2004 Sprint Cup champ Kurt Busch.
 
Patrick said she expects to maintain her personal relationship with GoDaddy but that "it’s just going to look a little bit different from an overall standpoint.
 
"I think we’re going to continue on, obviously, with the things that I have been doing for them as of late," she said, "more smaller events and more specific events for them as opposed as just trying to get their name out there."
 
GoDaddy’s recognition as a brand is huge — officials tout 81 percent brand awareness "so the program worked," Patrick said.
 
"It worked so well that they’ve evolved. But I’m glad to still be with them, and I’m glad that they gave us time to find someone else for that position."
 
As for her future, Patrick said she is happy at SHR. "and they’re working hard … to find someone for the new primary position.
 
"My team is working to find someone for the new primary position. So, I think at this point in time, we’re moving forward with all those intentions.
 
"But I guess it is on some level open season in a lot of areas. So, I don’t think you can ever say never, of course; but I am happy where I’m at right now."

Coors Light Pole Qualifying, 1 p.m. ET, May 2 (FOX)

# Car Driver Team
1 10 Danica Patrick GoDaddy Chevrolet
2 78 Martin Truex Jr. Furniture Row/Visser Protection Chevrolet
3 33 Brian Scott(i) Shore Lodge Chevrolet
4 5 Kasey Kahne Farmers Insurance Chevrolet
5 40 Landon Cassill(i) Chevrolet
6 7 Alex Bowman Golden Corral Chevrolet
7 27 Paul Menard Quaker State/Menards Chevrolet
8 26 Jeb Burton # Maxim Fantasy Sports Toyota
9 9 Sam Hornish Jr. Medallion Bank Ford
10 46 Michael Annett Bene-fit Chevrolet
11 47 AJ Allmendinger Kroger/Hungry Jack Chevrolet
12 83 Matt DiBenedetto # Dustless Blasting Toyota
13 23 JJ Yeley(i) Dr Pepper Toyota
14 20 Matt Kenseth Dollar General Toyota
15 16 Greg Biffle Ortho Ford
16 21 Ryan Blaney(i) Motorcraft/Quick Lane Tire & Auto Center Ford
17 62 Brendan Gaughan(i) Dia Thrive Chevrolet
18 32 Bobby Labonte C&J Energy Services Ford
19 1 Jamie McMurray McDonald’s Chevrolet
20 3 Austin Dillon Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet
21 98 Josh Wise Phoenix Construction Ford
22 51 Justin Allgaier Brandt Chevrolet
23 18 David Ragan Pedigree Toyota
24 24 Jeff Gordon Drive To End Hunger Chevrolet
25 13 Casey Mears GEICO Chevrolet
26 43 Aric Almirola Fresh from Florida Ford
27 38 David Gilliland Farm Rich Ford
28 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s Chevrolet
29 42 Kyle Larson Target Chevrolet
30 2 Brad Keselowski Miller Lite Ford
31 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Fifth Third Bank Ford
32 35 Cole Whitt Speed Stick Ford
33 41 Kurt Busch Haas Automation Chevrolet
34 95 Michael McDowell Thrivent Financial Ford
35 31 Ryan Newman Caterpillar Chevrolet
36 14 Tony Stewart Bass Pro Shops/Tracker Boats Chevrolet
37 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Express Toyota
38 19 Carl Edwards ARRIS Toyota
39 15 Clint Bowyer PEAK Commercial & Industrial Toyota
40 55 Michael Waltrip Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota
41 22 Joey Logano Shell Pennzoil Ford
42 4 Kevin Harvick Outback Steakhouse Chevrolet
43 34 Chris Buescher(i) CSX/Play It Safe Ford
44 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Nationwide Chevrolet
45 6 Trevor Bayne AdvoCare Ford

Coors Light Pole Qualifying, 11 a.m. ET, May 2 (FOX Sports 1)

# Car Driver Team
1 0 Harrison Rhodes # Flex Seal Colors Chevrolet
2 85 Bobby Gerhart Lucas Oil Chevrolet
3 3 Ty Dillon Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet
4 6 Darrell Wallace Jr. # Sponge Bob Square Pants Ford
5 1 Elliott Sadler OneMain Financial Ford
6 98 Aric Almirola(i) Shelby American Ford
7 16 Ryan Reed Lilly/American Diabetes Association Ford
8 52 Joey Gase Donate Life/DB Sales Company Chevrolet
9 4 Ross Chastain # Flex Shot/Winn-Dixie Chevrolet
10 25 John Wes Townley(i) Zaxby’s Chevrolet
11 9 Chase Elliott NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet
12 51 Jeremy Clements Conquest Completion Services Chevrolet
13 8 Blake Koch LeafFilter Gutter Protection Toyota
14 19 Mike Bliss Steely Lumber Toyota
15 84 Chad Boat(i) CorvetteParts.net Chevrolet
16 54 Boris Said Monster Energy Toyota
17 13 Mark Thompson Phoenix Air Dodge
18 90 Mario Gosselin CrashClaimsR.us Chevrolet
19 33 Austin Dillon(i) Rheem Chevrolet
20 18 Daniel Suarez # ARRIS Toyota
21 55 Jeffrey Earnhardt FW1/Viva Auto Group Chevrolet
22 2 Brian Scott Shore Lodge Chevrolet
23 01 Landon Cassill GK Services Chevrolet
24 60 Chris Buescher Bit-O-Honey Ford
25 40 Derek White Braille Battery/Grafoid Dodge
26 39 Ryan Sieg Uncle Bob’s Self Storage Chevrolet
27 43 Dakoda Armstrong WinField Ford
28 17 Benny Gordon VSI Racing/SRWR Toyota
29 24 Eric McClure Hefty Easy Grip Cups Toyota
30 28 J.J. Yeley Texas 28 Spirits Stage Toyota
31 44 David Starr Zachry Toyota
32 26 Kenny Wallace JGL Racing Toyota
33 15 Carlos Contreras BYB Extreme Fighting Series Chevrolet
34 88 Kasey Kahne(i) Armour Vienna Sausage Chevrolet
35 35 Chris Cockrum Advanced Communications Group Chevrolet
36 22 Joey Logano(i) Discount Tire Ford
37 42 Brennan Poole DC Solar Chevrolet
38 20 Erik Jones(i) Sport Clips Toyota
39 62 Brendan Gaughan South Point Chevrolet
40 70 Derrike Cope SWAE Watches Chevrolet
41 7 Regan Smith Hellmann’s Chevrolet
42 14 Cale Conley # IAVA Toyota
43 74 Mike Harmon LB Trailers Dodge
44 10 Jeff Green TriStar Motorsports Toyota
45 97 Peyton Sellers # VroomBrands Chevrolet

Meet Earle Official NASCAR Fan Council member of the month

Name: Earle (son pictured)

Hometown: Mammoth Spring, Arkansas

Current City: Ozark, Missouri

Member since: 2011

Getting to know Earle

Q. Why did you join the Official NASCAR Fan Council?

"Because, I thought it would be great to be personally involved in a sport that I enjoy."

Q. What comes to mind when you think of NASCAR? What’s your favorite NASCAR memory?

"Without a doubt, the Craven/Busch fight to the finish at Darlington. My wife and I attended that race, it happened to be her first. The entire grandstands were up cheering for those two drivers, it didn’t matter who "your driver" was. At that moment those two were all that mattered. Great ending to a great race."

Q: Do you have a favorite in any of the following categories?

Driver: "Mine: Dale Jr. My Son: Kyle Busch."
Track: "Darlington."
Memorabilia: "My favorite is a signed hat from Dale Jr. and a signed hat from M. Waltrip"

Q: If you could go to any NASCAR race/track, where would you go?

"Without a doubt Daytona"

Q: What do you like to do in your free time?

"Work on old cars, watch racing, go hunting and fishing and spend time with my family."

Q: Tell us about your family. Do you have children and/or pets?

"I have a wife and two kids. My son absolutely loves racing and wants to be a race car driver when he grows up."

Q: What’s your dream car?

"I have two and I’m currently working on one.  My great-grandparents ’68 Chevy Impala. And my first car which was a pickup truck, a ’65 Chevy C-10 which was also owned by my great-grandparents."

From all of us at NASCAR, we thank Earle for his continued support and look forward to hearing from him in 2015!

NASCAR Chairman and CEO, wife attend BCRF’s Hot Pink Party in New York

On Thursday evening at the Waldorf Astoria, NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France and wife Amy attended the Breast Cancer Research Foundation’s (BCRF) Hot Pink Party, an annual gala to celebrate the organization’s investment in high-value, high-yield research, as well as all the breakthroughs and progress in the fight against cancer.

"We support a variety of important causes, because it’s the right thing to do," Amy France said. "The work the Breast Cancer Research Foundation does is a vital step toward finding a cure for breast cancer."

Contributing money to and raising awareness for charities is nothing new for the Frances, who are committed to helping worthy and wide-reaching causes, particularly through the Luke & Meadow Foundation.

Not only are the Frances’ long-standing supporters of vital causes — such as the BCRF — that benefit healthcare, but also those that support military servicemen and families like the Bob Woodruff Foundation, as well as those that address issues affecting children such as Autism Speaks.

Greg Biffle, David Ragan and more to run special schemes

In honor of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series SpongeBob SquarePants 400 at Kansas Speedway (May 9, 7:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1), drivers will be sporting characters from the Nickelodeon show for their paint schemes. 

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

Joining in on the fun is David Ragan (in the No. 55 Michael Waltrip Racing Toyota),  Greg Biffle (in the No. 16 Roush Fenway Racing Ford) Casey Mears (in the No. 13 Germain Racing Chevrolet) and Michael McDowell (in the No. 95 Leavine Family Racing Ford).

"It’s really fun to be part of the Nickelodeon lineup for the Kansas race and get to feature Patrick Star and Cheez-It on our No. 16 Ford," Biffle said in a press release. "Nickelodeon does a lot to bring sports to kids, which is something that is important and I’m glad to be a part of it. Kansas is a good track for us and Saturday night races are always exciting. Hopefully we can get another Kansas win."

NASCAR XFINITY Series driver Darrell Wallace Jr.’s No. 6 Roush Fenway Racing Ford will also feature a SpongeBob-themed scheme, along with Ben Kennedy‘s No. 11 Truck Series ride.

Along with the special schemes, Kansas Speedway will offer a Nickelodeon Kids Zone, which will be located in the Kansas Speedway Fan Zone. The area will feature appearances from the "SpongeBob SquarePants" costumed characters, a "SpongeBob SquarePants" photo station and more.

Awesome Bill’s thrilling triumph was 30 years ago

RELATED: Best #TBT posts of April

On May 5, 1985, Bill Elliott started from the pole and won his first race at Talladega Superspeedway.

There’s much, much more to that story, however.

Perhaps the most improbable comeback win in NASCAR’s rich history, Sunday’s GEICO 500 (1 p.m. ET, FOX) will mark the 30th anniversary of Elliott’s amazing run in the 1985 Winston 500 where he made up more than a 5-mile deficit — without the benefit of a caution period — to capture the impossible triumph.

Elliott, with smoke billowing from under his Ford Thunderbird’s hood, was within a few hundred yards of going two laps down to the leaders on the 2.66-mile track after taking an unscheduled pit stop to make repairs to an oil fitting line. Elliott climbed all the way back to the front and rocketed to Victory Lane.

That unexpected 1985 pit stop, which occurred on Lap 48 after Elliott had already led 25 laps — he wound up leading 60 total — lasted 1 minute and 9 seconds, putting the Dawsonville, Georgia, native within shouting distance of falling two laps down. He began his march up the leaderboard by turning laps nearly a second faster than the leaders, banking that his brother’s (Ernie Elliott) prepared engine would last. Ninety-seven laps later on Lap 145, he passed Cale Yarborough down the Alabama Gang Superstretch for the lead.

"I will never forget that day in 1985," said Elliott, who topped the scoreboard 35 of the last 44 circuits, including the final 20. "I remember coming down pit road and our guys dealing with the oil line issue. We went back out and ran wide open and I was totally shocked the motor lived all day long; totally shocked.

"We were a bunch of misfits put together, 12 of us total on the team, and that included the motor shop and the chassis shop. Most of the guys who pitted the car came in on weekends. We all had a good understanding of the race cars, though. It seems like it was yesterday."

Elliott’s margin of victory was 1.72 seconds ahead of a pack of cars, including Kyle Petty, who edged Yarborough at the start/finish line for second. He averaged a then-record of 186.288 mph in the race, which only had two cautions, both late in the event. The trip to Victory Lane was his first at Talladega, and he added to his legacy two years later with another victory.

"I about kissed everything goodbye because I didn’t know what happened when it started missing there (and engine started smoking)," the 16-time NASCAR Most Popular Driver said on that momentous day in 1985. "But, they raised the hood and got it fixed faster than I thought they would. It felt like I sat there six or 10 laps. I worked my tail off to try and keep up. I just kept on digging. This old car kept on digging. I want to thank the good Lord for making up those laps. The old car just held together and worked."

Last week, Elliott celebrated his tremendous 30-year accomplishment by donning a helmet, firing up the engine of that famed red, white and gold Ford that made him a legend, and made hot laps around NASCAR’s biggest and baddest track. The car’s engine hadn’t been cranked since it was put on display at the nearby International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 1986.

"It felt like a million bucks (being back in his historic car)," Elliott said in a press release. "I really miss the competitive side of racing week-in and week-out. I ran so many laps around this race track and tested here so many times in my career. It feels like it was yesterday I was racing here."

The NASCAR Hall of Famer made five laps around the track, then drove to Victory Lane and was presented a replica trophy from 30 years ago.

"The car actually drove surprisingly well. I don’t know how fast I went — couldn’t see for some dirt blowing in my eyes. I think that is the way I drove here in ’85 — with my eyes closed most of the race, so I was right at home. I wanted to go faster but the oil temp went up a bit and I said ‘it (the engine) isn’t going to live long.’ "

When asked if he wanted to come out of retirement to compete at Talladega again, Elliott joked, "I want to come back Sunday (for the GEICO 500). Don’t tell anyone. I hope the car gets through inspection."

JR Motorsports driver eyes first top-10 finish at restrictor-plate track

Much of the attention given to Chase Elliott lately has centered around his five scheduled NASCAR Sprint Cup Series starts as he readies to replace Jeff Gordon in the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet next season. Elliott performed well at Richmond Sunday, finishing 16th in just his second NSCS start.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Quietly, the 19-year-old Georgia native has climbed to second in the NASCAR XFINITY Series standings, eight points behind leader Ty Dillon. Elliott posted a fifth-place showing in last Friday’s ToyotaCare 250 at Richmond, jumping Chris Buescher in the standings as he tries to defend his XFINITY Series championship.
 
Since his 28th-place finish in the season-opener at Daytona, Elliott has produced seven consecutive top-10 finishes, including four top fives. The NASCAR Next alum will put his streak on the line in Saturday’s Winn Dixie 300 at Talladega Superspeedway (3 p.m. ET on FOX).
 
Restrictor-plate tracks have proven to be Elliott’s kryptonite in his young career. He has only finished outside of the top 10 in eight of his XFINITY Series races (19.5%), including all four of his restrictor-plate contests. His best restrictor-plate finish was 15th at Daytona in his XFINITY Series debut last year. Elliott placed 19th at Talladega last spring.
 
Elliott feels his experience at the Alabama track from last season has prepared him for Saturday’s showdown.
 
"It’s really tough to plan for a race like this, since there’s so much uncertainty that can happen," he said. "We were in contention last year late in the race, but got caught up in a wreck, which eventually killed our day. Going into this Saturday’s race, I have more confidence knowing I’ve been in a late-race situation there."

Company to sponsor at least 24 Sprint Cup races for multiple years

JTG Daugherty Racing announced Thursday that Kroger will ramp up its backing of the No. 47 Chevrolet and driver AJ Allmendinger, with primary sponsorship for at least 24 races for multiple years.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

The expanded sponsorship deal with the Cincinnati-based supermarket chain is set to begin with Sunday’s GEICO 500 (1 p.m. ET, FOX) at Talladega Superspeedway. The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series team — owned by Tad and Jodi Geschickter with Brad Daugherty — also carries backing from Scott Products, Kimberly Clark, Clorox, Kingsford and Bush’s Beans.
 
"To get personal text messages from their executives, I know they are overjoyed about it," Allmendinger said in a release provided by the team. "It’s neat to see firsthand how involved all of our sponsors want to be. Tying everything together will really help us take our race team to the next level. Kroger is really passionate about this sport and about our team. We look forward to making them a bigger part of the JTG Daugherty Racing family."
 
Kroger has worked with JTG Daugherty as a primary sponsor of the No. 47 team for the Daytona 500 since 2010. Tad Geschickter said the company plans a "Race to Saving" initiative around the sponsorship.
 
"Obviously, expanding our relationship with the largest grocery retailer in America is huge for our team and our sponsors, but is equally significant for the NASCAR industry," Geschickter said. "We are humbled that they chose us to fly their colors over the coming race seasons."
 
Allmendinger currently ranks 22nd in the Sprint Cup standings after last weekend’s 13th-place finish at Richmond International Raceway. The 33-year-old driver qualified for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoffs for the first time last year, clinching his berth with his first victory in NASCAR’s premier series last August at Watkins Glen International.