Three-time champion throws helmet, falls to 30th in points

RELATED: Updated series standings

Tony Stewart turned in his best finish of the season last week with a sixth-place result at Bristol Motor Speedway, but in Sunday’s Toyota Owners 400 at Richmond International Raceway, he spun into the inside wall after contact with Dale Earnhardt Jr., bringing out the seventh caution of the race at Lap 361.

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Stewart and Earnhardt Jr. were battling for 13th when the No. 88 driver was caught between Justin Allgaier on the high side and the No. 14 car below him. Stewart got into Earnhardt Jr.’s left rear and went around in Turn 1.

At the moment of impact, Stewart said, "Dale Jr. dammit!" while Earnhardt Jr. was initially angry with Allgaier, saying "upset with 51."

Stewart wasn’t able to drive away from the accident and finished 41st, his fifth finish of 30th or worse in nine races this season and his worst result since a 42nd-place finish in the season-opening Daytona 500.

Earnhardt Jr., who finished 14th for his third finish outside the top 10 in the last four races after four top-six finishes in the season’s first five races, didn’t have an answer for Stewart’s actions.

"You’ll have to ask him," Earnhardt Jr. said. "He hit me in the left rear quarter panel. I was trying to clear the No. 51 on the outside of me, so I was as high as I could go. So, you’ll just have to ask him."

But after being examined and released from the infield care center, Stewart declined comment, went to the garage and threw his helmet and HANS (head-and-neck restraint system) into his hauler.

The owner wasn’t able to enjoy his Stewart-Haas Racing driver and teammate Kurt Busch‘s win as two of the four SHR teams have all but guaranteed a spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. Stewart hasn’t made NASCAR’s playoff since 2012.

Both Earnhardt Jr. and Stewart lost two spots in the series standings with the Hendrick Motorsports driving falling to eighth while Stewart is in 30th, the last spot in the standings that a race winner can be to make the Chase.

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Austin Dillon, RCR remain supporters of American Ethanol, Green movement

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RICHMOND, Va. — The NASCAR Green initiative concluded a weeklong celebration around Earth Day, culminating with Sunday’s rain-delayed race at Richmond International Raceway. But to NASCAR Chief Operating Officer Brent Dewar, the week was merely a portion of a continuing emphasis on keeping stock-car racing more environmentally friendly.

While the NASCAR Green movement is what Dewar calls a 365-day-a-year initiative, it’s also a 36-race-a-season project for the teams that make the sport go around. When American Ethanol signed on as a NASCAR partner in 2011 with Sunoco, questions about how it would affect speed and reliability cropped up. Four years and 7 million miles without a hiccup on Sunoco Green E15 later, those worries are behind in the rearview mirror.
 
"Their immediate natural concern in the beginning when we started this was, how’s it going to perform," Dewar said. "That’s their concern because they’re race car drivers and they want the best performance. What’s great about the blend is that the ethanol provides greater octane level so it provides the performance. So once we went through the first run and they liked the performance, the next question was ‘what’s the durability like? Is it going to have an impact on the heads, the engine and these things?’ So over time — 7 million miles — we’ve had no issues and so the confidence level is high. So it’s achieved over all these initial concerns.
 
"When you go racing, any change you make — whether it’s a tire, a chassis, an aero package or a fuel — there’s a natural concern, but we’ve passed that. They’re totally behind it and supportive."
 
One of the biggest showings of support has come from Richard Childress Racing, which displayed American Ethanol colors on the No. 3 Chevrolet driven by Austin Dillon this weekend at Richmond. American Ethanol has stepped up its backing of RCR’s teams in recent years and was the primary sponsor when Dillon captured a historic victory in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series’ inaugural dirt-track race at Eldora Speedway in 2013.
 
"It’s just great to see how much we’ve grown from the beginning of our partnership from the last three years with RCR and then being with NASCAR," said Dillon, an official spokesman for the marketing campaign. "I’m a huge sports fan, and I think NASCAR is the greatest platform for American Ethanol and corn growers to be a part of. It really shows the green initiative that we’ve taken here in NASCAR. I think we’re a leader among other sports as far as going green, and I think we have the best thing to show what ethanol can do, and that’s a big motor that runs well on any given weekend."
 
The American Ethanol partnership is just a part of NASCAR Green, which began in 2008. The cumulative environmental measures also include solar farms at several tracks, charging stations for electric cars at NASCAR facilities and offices, tree-planting and a sharp focus on recycling.
 
Advancements in technology have recently shaped how teams gauge performance and how NASCAR officiates the sport. As similar progress trickles into the realm of environmental sustainability, Dewar says the sanctioning body plans to adapt and move forward.
 
"It was important for our values that we’re doing everything we can in our communities and giving back," Dewar said. "When you look at an event like (Sunday’s race), the number of fans that come out to the race track and the footprint that we have in the community economically is great, but there’s also the environmental footprint. … So it’s started us down a path and we had an initial vision of the fuel and the recycling, and now it’s making us think more and more of all the additional touchpoints. We’ve had partners come into the sport, bringing their ideas to say, ‘what about this? Should we try this next level?’
 
"I think it’s a journey. We’re proud of where we’re going, but we’re also looking forward."

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Get full lineup of NASCAR programming for the week

RELATED: See the full weekend schedule

All times ET

Monday, April 27
10 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Toyota Owners 400 (re-air), FOX Sports 1
1 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Toyota Owners 400 (re-air), FOX Sports 2
4:30 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBC Sports Network
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2

Tuesday, April 28

10 a.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series ToyotaCare 250 (re-air), FOX Sports 1
5:30 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBC Sports Network
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2

Wednesday, April 29
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2

Thursday, April 30
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2

Friday, May 1
11:30 a.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series practice, FOX Sports 1
2 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1
3 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition, FOX Sports 1
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, FOX Sports 1
5:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition, FOX Sports 1

Saturday, May 2
3 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice (re-air), FOX Sports 1
11 a.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1
12:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition, FOX Sports 1
1 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX
2:30 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay: XFINITY, FOX
3 p.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series: Winn Dixie 300, FOX

Sunday, May 3
3 a.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Winn Dixie 300 (re-air), FOX Sports 1
5:30 a.m., The 10: Talladega Moments (re-air), FOX Sports 1
11:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Day: Talladega, FOX Sports 1
12:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Day: Talladega, FOX
1 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series: GEICO 500, FOX
1 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series: GEICO 500, FOX Deportes
4 p.m., TUDOR United SportsCar Championship – Mazda Raceway, FOX Sports 1
Midnight, NASCAR Victory Lane, FOX Sports 1

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Get the on-track times for everything at the Alabama track

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The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and NASCAR XFINITY Series head to Talladega Superspeedway for a doubleheader of NASCAR action, while the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series is off. Check out the full schedule below.

All times are ET

SUNDAY, MAY 3:

RUN OF SHOW
12:30:00: FOX on air
1:00:00: Intro to presentation of colors by Alabama National Guard
1:00:20: Invocation by Allen Singley, volunteer Alabama Raceway Ministries, student pastor Grandview Baptist Church, Dothan, Alabama
1:00:45: Intro to national anthem (30×50 American Flags Unfurled, ball field) (West Lowndes High School JROTC, Alabama National Guard)
1:01:00: National anthem by 313th United States Army Band (Marshe’ Brownlee, senior student, Alabama Institute for the Deaf and Blind)
1:02:30: Fly-by: Alabama State Police (3 helicopters from Turn 4 to Turn 1, Semi truck flying American flag passes by start-finish line)
1:03:00: Bill Elliott video
1:05:30: Grant Lynch addresses crowd from start-finish line
1:07:30: "Drivers, start your engines" by Sr. Airman James A. Sottile, biomedical equipment tech, Maxwell Air Force Base, Montgomery, Alabama
1:08:00: TSS Sizzle Video (3 minutes)
1:19:30: Green flag GEICO 500 (188 laps, 500 miles)

ON TRACK  
— 1 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series GEICO 500, FOX (188 laps, 500.08 miles) (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 9:45 a.m.: Daniel Noltemeyer, Betty Jane France Humanitarian Award Winner
— 10 a.m.: Hugh Freeze, Ole Miss football coach
— 10:30 a.m.: Joey Logano
— 4:45 p.m. approx.: NSCS post-race

FRIDAY, MAY 1:

ON TRACK
— 11:30 a.m.-1:50 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series final practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 2 p.m.-2:55 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 4:30-5:25 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)

GARAGECAM (Watch live)
— 11 a.m.: XFINITY Series
— 1:30 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 1 p.m.: Danica Patrick
— 1:15 p.m.: Kevin Harvick
— 3 p.m.: Ty Dillon
— 3:30 p.m.: Erik Jones
— 3:45 p.m.: David Ragan

SATURDAY, MAY 2:

ON TRACK
— 11 a.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 1 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX (Get results)
— 3 p.m.: NASCAR XFINITY Series Winn Dixie 300, FOX (113 laps, 300.58 miles) (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 10 a.m.: BK Racing announcement
— 12:30 p.m.: Dale Earnhardt Jr.
— 2:15 p.m. approx.: NSCS post-qualifying
— 5:15 p.m. approx.: NXS post-race 

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Richmond race will be at 1 p.m. ET on FOX

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RELATED: Full race lineup | See all 43 cars | Richmond weather updates

RICHMOND, Va. –  The Toyota Owners 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Richmond International Raceway scheduled for 7 p.m. ET Saturday night has been postponed to 1 p.m. ET on Sunday due to inclement weather. FOX will carry the race.

Saturday night’s rain out was not a huge surprise to the NASCAR teams who have learned to practice amateur meteorology themselves and saw the forecast earlier in the week.

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NASCAR officials said that Saturday night’s decision was made after assessing weather forecasts and consulting with government and law enforcement officials. Unlike last weekend’s race at Bristol Motor Speedway, forecasts did not provide any suitable window of opportunity for precipitation to end and to dry the track.

Rain began around noon Saturday and picked up intensity shortly before the driver/crew chief meeting at 5 p.m. – two hours before the green flag.

"I know it’s a rough day," RIR track president Dennis Bickmeier said during the meeting, acknowledging the threat of delays. "Thank you for hanging with us."

And while the rainout is aggravating and inconvenient the drivers have come to accept it as a part of the job. Persistent showers last week at Bristol Motor Speedway meant several race stoppages before the checkered flag finally fell almost 10 hours later.

"It is tough a lot of times because you have your whole routine in the morning you go through with appearances and drivers meeting and do all your stuff and then you sit and wait," pole-sitter Joey Logano said. "At that point you start to relax again. It just changes a little bit. It is like any other athlete. You get in your mode and do the same thing every week before the race or before a game and when it rains it kind of throws you off a little bit.

"Usually by the time you get back in the car, they give you enough warning the race is about to start and you get your head back straight again and off you go. Usually it isn’t that big of an effect for what we do."

Knowing that it’s going to rain, however, doesn’t necessarily make it any easier to prepare for the race. Moving the race from night to day or day to night creates an extra challenge for crew chiefs.

"Even if it does rain and I know there’s a possibility I guess it would be a day race which might change it a little bit." last week’s Bristol winner Matt Kenseth said. "It might bring it more back to your notes for [practice] today than what your typical adjustments are for night time.

"Like I said, for me I don’t have a really good handle or feel on how this track changes from day to night during a race and all that, so [crew chief] Jason [Ratcliff] probably does a lot better than me.

"For me, it’s always kind of a guess. I’m not sure what I’m going to get when the race starts. Whenever I’m pretty confident I know what the track is going to do, it seems like my car goes the other way. Just kind of leave that up to Jason and the guys to figure out."

From a practical level, Sprint Cup Series Managing Director Richard Buck told the drivers there would be a competition caution on Lap 50 of the 400-lap event. The race would be legal with 201 laps completed, but NASCAR always tries to finish its races, as it did last week at Bristol, including a green-white-checkered finish after a red flag for rain.

And the Air Titan track drying machines have greatly shortened the time it takes to get the track race ready.

"When this place gets the rubber washed off of it, it is really, really fast for a little bit," second-year driver Kyle Larson said. "But then it wears out tires quicker. You have to think about that kind of stuff. I’m sure we will have a competition caution at some point so you have to be patient at the beginning of the race. And the track will change a whole bunch throughout the whole race."

NASCAR.com’s Zack Albert contributed to this report.

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BK Racing says J.J. Yeley will return to car at Talladega

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Jeb Burton will get to race in the Toyota Owners 400 (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET, FOX) at Richmond International Raceway but he will do so in the No. 23 Toyota for BK Racing and not his usual No. 26 Toyota.

The team announced via its Twitter handle that Burton, a Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate who failed to qualify on Friday for the 43-car field at Richmond, would instead be piloting the No. 23 Toyota in place of J.J. Yeley.

Yeley was slated to start 39th in the race. Because this is a driver change, Burton will have to start at the rear.

This season, Burton has made six starts in his No. 26 Toyota, with his best showing a 29th-place result at Martinsville Speedway. The 22-year-old has failed to qualify for three races so far this season.

The team tweeted that Yeley would be back in the No. 23 Toyota next weekend at Talladega Superspeedway for the GEICO 500. Yeley, 38, had started in all eight of this season’s Sprint Cup races. His best finish was a 26th-place result at Martinsville.

Burton took to his own Twitter handle to express how grateful he was for the chance to race at Richmond after being one of two (Brendan Gaughan was the other) to not make it into the main event.

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Joe Gibbs Racing driver: ‘I’m 100 percent for sure’

RELATED: Hamlin dominates ToyotaCare 250
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RICHMOND, Va. — In previous seasons, Denny Hamlin might have felt compelled to tough it out, rub some dirt on his injury and keep plugging for as many points as possible. But with a postseason format in its sophomore year, placing an emphasis on winning, Hamlin had little to gain and far more to lose by staying in the car last week at Bristol Motor Speedway.

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With one victory already in the bank this season and his place in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoffs virtually secure, Hamlin joined his Joe Gibbs Racing team in making the prudent call to heed the painful warnings of neck spasms during a rain-induced red flag and sit out the grueling 400-plus-lap remainder of last Sunday’s Food City 500 in Support of Steve Byrnes and Stand Up To Cancer. Nearly a full week later, Hamlin says he’s ready to roll at his home track, Richmond International Raceway, for the long haul of Sunday’s Toyota Owners 400 (1 p.m. ET, FOX). And he romped to an XFINITY Series victory here Friday night as he led 248 of 250 laps in the ToyotaCare 250.

"Yeah, I’m 100 percent for sure," Hamlin said after claiming the second starting spot in Friday’s Coors Light Pole Qualifying. "I thought I was really 100 percent probably on Tuesday, but just had something pop out of place and it affected the muscles in my upper back and kind of went to the back of my head. Unfortunately, I just couldn’t move my head. I couldn’t even look in the mirror, so luckily we had that caution.

"For myself, it was — given the format and the points reset and everything — we do have a win — it all did play a factor in obviously getting out, but I would not have been a contender for sure if I chose to continue to run all 500 laps. It would have been an ugly race, so I just thought the better thing to do to make sure — given that I had back problems in the past, I didn’t know what it was, so I didn’t want to chance anything and make it worse and then not be 100 percent here. I thought it was best to sit it out and be 100 percent when we got to Richmond and here we are."

Though Joe Gibbs Racing development driver Erik Jones filled in and wheeled the car to a 26th-place finish, Hamlin received credit for the results since he started the race. After receiving treatment on his neck, Hamlin proclaimed himself race-ready by midweek ahead of the third short-track event of the season. 

It wasn’t the first instance where Hamlin was presented with a health situation and a difficult decision to make. Last season, Hamlin withdrew with vision problems barely an hour before the green flag at Auto Club Speedway after a sliver of sheet metal from Saturday practices stuck in his eye. After receiving an exemption for his missed start, Hamlin prevailed later in the spring at Talladega Superspeedway to clinch his Chase berth. 

Though the circumstances were different, Hamlin said in both cases, the new format’s nuances made the decision not to play hurt that much easier. 

"Yeah, I think it does change things for sure and it’s not anyone taking advantage of the rule — it’s people doing the right thing," Hamlin said. "I think that drivers have raced with injuries in the past and toughed it out, but we’re running speeds faster than we ever have been and hitting walls faster and harder than we ever have been. I didn’t want to take a chance on getting in a wreck and I was already in bad shape, so for me knowing I had a win, absolutely, call up somebody else to come in this thing and do a better job than what I can. It’s different obviously had we not — we’d already started the race. It’s not like — I probably still would have got out even if I didn’t have a race win simply because I knew I wasn’t going to be very competitive that day, but I think that this rule was set out to protect us from injuries and it’s done its job. 

"We missed a race last year at California with an eye injury and won a race and put ourselves in there, so that’s what this thing is all about and I think that just like any other sport, they’re paying more attention to concussions and injuries and all that stuff. It’s better to be safe than sorry because we’re seeing now that past injuries are starting to rear its head in some of these people physically."

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Read the notes NASCAR provides during the driver’s meeting

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NASCAR SPECIAL AWARDS

Award Driver
Coors Light Pole Award Joey Logano
3M Lap Leader Kevin Harvick
American Ethanol Green Flag Restart Award Matt Kenseth
Duralast Brakes "Brake in the Race" Award Kevin Harvick
Freescale Wide Open Award Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
Ingersoll Rand Power Mover Award Kyle Larson
Mahle Engine Builder of the Race Award Matt Kenseth
Mobil 1 Command Performance Driver of the Race Award Matt Kenseth
Moog Chassis Parts Problem Solver of the Race Award Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
Sherwin-Williams Fastest Lap Award Matt Kenseth
Sunoco Rookie of the Race Award Brett Moffitt

RACE TIME

Event Time (ET)
Driver Introductions 6:20 p.m.
Pre-race prep: Tires, interior & remove generators 6:30 p.m.
Line up crews — facing the flag 6:46 p.m.
Pledge of Allegiance 6:47 p.m.
God Bless America 6:48 p.m.
Moment of Silence 6:50 p.m.
Invocation 6:51 p.m.
National Anthem 6:51 p.m.
Command to start engines 6:58 p.m.

SPECIAL INFORMATION

Number of Laps 400 laps
Pit Road Speed 40 mph
Competition Yellow Lap 50
Caution Car Speed 45 mph
Pit Road Speed Begins 235 feet before the first pit box
Pit Road Speed Ends 150 feet past the last pit box
Minimum Speed 25.11 seconds
Exiting the Pits (Blend Line) Keep all four tires below the yellow line until the exit of Turn 2
Fuel Pit Stalls 1-43 Sunoco pumps in the NXS garage
Post-Race 2-5 stop in pit stalls 17-22
All Others Double file across from 17

NEXT WEEK

Event Track/Day/Time (ET)
Next week Talladega Superspeedway
Hauler parking 6 p.m. ET, Thursday, April 30
Garage opens 7 a.m. ET, Friday, May 1
First practice 1 p.m. ET, Friday, May 1

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