No. 88 crew chief mulled going home early Saturday due to daughter’s injury

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TALLADEGA, Ala. — Greg Ives, winning crew chief for Dale Earnhardt Jr. in Sunday’s GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway, almost wasn’t around for the driver’s first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victory of 2015.

On Saturday, Ives, who took over the No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports team prior to the start of the season, found out his 8-year-old daughter Payton had fallen and broken her right arm.
 
"I was actually just talking to my daughter; she’s being discharged from the hospital right now," Ives said after his first Sprint Cup victory as crew chief. "She had a very significant break to her right arm above her elbow, so she had to get three pins (inserted) last night."
 
Earnhardt Jr. offered to fly his crew chief home to be with his daughter. But after a conversation with Payton, whom Ives said is his biggest fan as well as his biggest critic, he was told by his daughter to stay put.

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"After Richmond when we didn’t perform (well), she told me I needed to give Dale better race cars because he can’t win with one like that," Ives said. "She’s pretty tough on me for an 8-year-old, but that’s good, that’s what we need. We need self-assurance that we’re doing the right thing, but at times we also need a kick in the butt."
 
Earnhardt finished 14th at Richmond and dropped to eighth in points. Sunday, he led 67 laps and all but punched his ticket into this year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup with his 24th career win.
 
"She was being a kid," Ives said of his daughter’s accident. "She was … having fun, playing with friends. She fell out of a swing set, just landed awkwardly. She didn’t really recall everything. I haven’t really got to talk to her about it. I just know she broke it.
 
"She didn’t cry one bit. … I thought she would start bawling. She didn’t. She said it hurt but she wasn’t going to cry about it."
 
The long grind and constant travel required by the job can be difficult, especially when family emergencies arise. But Ives said he has a unique way of dealing with the time away from his family, which includes another daughter and son in addition to Payton.
 
"Every time I feel like I’m helpless being on the road or away from my family, I think of all those military folks, men, women and children, all those families that are affected by the things that are out of our control," he said. "Those military families who sacrifice their time, whether it’s a month, six months, or years away from their families so we can do something like this. That helplessness only makes me show more appreciation for what we get to do every weekend as a great nation, how appreciative we need to be for them."
 
Earnhardt said he wasn’t sure if Ives was comfortable staying in Talladega or if he should return home. But he knew that if Ives departed, the team would be left in capable hands.
 
"This race is a little less challenging to call than other events," Earnhardt said. "We’re going to take two tires pretty much every time. We’re going to get as much gas as we need but never fill it up. It’s pretty self-explanatory."
 
Engineer Kevin Meendering "could have called the race just as easy and just as well," he said. "Kevin is a real, real talent just waiting to bust out and get an opportunity to crew chief.
 
"So I felt like if there was ever a weekend that Greg could comfortably go home without any guilt, he could have done it last night without a problem. We’d have fueled up the plane and sent him."
 
But, Earnhardt noted, "(Greg) said she’s tough as nails."
 
Ives won the 2014 now-XFINITY Series title with driver Chase Elliott at JR Motorsports before making the move to oversee the No. 88 team. Before those two jobs, he was race engineer for fellow Hendrick driver Jimmie Johnson and the No. 48 team during Johnson’s run of five consecutive Sprint Cup titles.
 
He replaced Steve Letarte as crew chief for Earnhardt and stepped into the crosshairs of the NASCAR’s most vocal, devoted fan base.
 
Sunday, he helped give them a reason to cheer.
 
"When you have 43 race cars going by, you still hear the crowd cheering, you can see them jumping up in the stands, that puts a chill around you," Ives said. "As far as being emotional, yeah, of course, it’s my first win as a Cup crew chief, first win thinking about things that are more than just race cars, whether it’s my daughter, whether it’s my mom, all those sorts of things. That’s going to weigh on you.
 
"You work hard to get to a point to be in Victory Lane no matter where it is, what it is. That all gathers up in one lap or one race, you’re going to have that.
 
"I’m excited. I’m happy. I feel great about where this race team’s going. Obviously I haven’t cried yet, so that’s good. But I definitely was emotional about it, happy about it. Like I said, just thinking about my daughter with a broken arm, her being tough enough to not want her daddy — that’s pretty cool."

Read the notes NASCAR provides during the driver’s meeting

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NASCAR SPECIAL AWARDS

Award Driver
Coors Light Pole Award Jeff Gordon
3M Lap Leader Kurt Busch
American Ethanol Green Flag Restart Award Kurt Busch
Duralast Brakes "Brake in the Race" Award Joey Logano
Freescale Wide Open Award Jimmie Johnson
Ingersoll Rand Power Mover Award Ryan Newman
Mahle Engine Builder of the Race Award Kurt Busch
Mobil 1 Command Performance Driver of the Race Award Kurt Busch
Moog Chassis Parts Problem Solver of the Race Award Jamie McMurray
Sherwin-Williams Fastest Lap Award AJ Allmendinger
Sunoco Rookie of the Race Award Brett Moffitt

RACE TIME

Event Time (ET)
Driver Introductions 12:25 p.m.
Pre-race prep: Tires, interior & remove generators 12:30 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.

SPECIAL INFORMATION

Number of Laps 188 laps
Pit Road Speed 55 mph
Caution Car Speed 70 mph
Pit Road Speed Begins 175 feet before the first pit box
Pit Road Speed Ends 75 feet past the last pit box
Minimum Speed 55.30 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
Post-Race 2-6 stop in pit stalls 29-34
All Others Double file, near the grass, across from Pit Stall 30

NEXT WEEK

Event Track/Day/Time (ET)
Next week Kansas Speedway
Hauler parking 12:30 p.m. ET, Thursday, May 7
Garage opens 3 p.m. ET, Thursday, May 7
First practice Noon ET, Friday, May 8

Sergeant Dwyer gets IMSA victory in front of fellow Marine who saved him

Photo credit: LAT Photo USA for IMSA (Left to right: SergeantsAaron Denning and Staff Sergeant Liam Dwyer, U.S. Marine Corps)

SALINAS, Calif.– Military veterans who suffer a serious combat injury, and survive, call the date they suffered their catastrophic injury their "alive day."
 
That would be May 22, 2011, for U.S. Marine Staff Sergeant Liam Dwyer, who was on a search team in Afghanistan when he stepped on an explosive. It severed his right leg above the knee, and severely damaged his right arm.
 
If May 22 was his "alive day," he isn’t quite sure what to call May 2, 2015. "A miracle," he said. "A dream come true."

Dwyer’s longtime love has been auto racing, and he refused to give up on his dream. Fitted with a special prosthesis that replaces his leg, he returned to the track, where he adapted to the special equipment his car required. He drove hard, and fast, and it did not go unnoticed.
 
Last year, Dwyer joined a Mazda-backed team, Freedom Autosport, that fields Mazda MX-5 Miatas in the Continental Tire SportsCar Challenge, a tough series that holds endurance races that require at least two drivers. Dwyer and his teammate, Mazda factory driver Tom Long, won a race at Lime Rock Park in Connecticut.
 
"It was amazing," Dwyer said. "I didn’t think anything could top that emotion."
 
Saturday, something did. On the very last lap of a two-hour, 30-minute, 84-lap race at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca, Dwyer’s driving partner, Andrew Carbonell, passed the Freedom Autosport Mazda MX-5 driven by Tom Long, Dwyer’s old driving partner. Carbonell and Dwyer, who drove the first portion of the race, took the victory, defeating 27 other entries in the ST class.
 
The difference this year? It wasn’t so much the win, it was who came to Mazda Raceway to witness it. Dwyer very possibly would have died that day in Afghanistan had it not been for Marine sergeant, Aaron Denning, who rushed to Dwyer’s aid and performed lifesaving procedures that saved his life.
 
While the two sergeants — both still in the Marines, with Denning on the West Coast, Dwyer on the East Coast — stayed in touch, Denning had never seen Dwyer race. That changed Saturday when he not only attended the Continental Tire Challenge, he was an honored guest who waved the green flag to start the race. Dwyer’s mother was also at the track — she had never met the man who saved her son’s life.
 
And to see Dwyer not only race, but win? "It’s like a fairy tale," said Denning, trying hard to hold back tears. "Liam Dwyer is the living, breathing embodiment of a man who was knocked down, and got back up. I’m honored to be here, and I’m honored to be his friend."
 
As for Dwyer, his story is even more remarkable than most of his fans know. In 2007, four years before Dwyer’s "Alive Day," he was serving in Iran when his Humvee was hit by a roadside bomb. He took shrapnel on the left side of his body. He left the military and returned to civilian life — and then he re-enlisted. It was on his second tour when he was almost killed in Afghanistan.
 
As expected, Dwyer was humble after the victory, giving credit to co-driver Carbonell, to his team, to Mazda, and of course to Marine Sgt. Aaron Denning. "I don’t have words for the emotion," he said. "I’m just so proud to be part of this team."

Watch the last-lap pass and emotional celebration.

Kentucky natives meet again at Talladega, renew relationship

THROUGH MAY 8: Nominate a volunteer for the 2015 award

The NASCAR Foundation’s Betty Jane France Humanitarian Award presented by Nationwide is accepting nominations for 2015 through next Friday, May 8. The winner will receive $100,000 and a brand new Ford vehicle while three other finalists will receive a minimum $25,000 donation from The NASCAR Foundation.

While I was Miss Kentucky USA in 2012, I served on the board of the Kentucky chapter of Best Buddies International, a foundation that promotes friendship and equality to children with special needs.

Each member of the foundation gets paired with a "buddy," and Daniel Noltemeyer and I were paired together in February of 2012. We participated in activities around the state.

It’s Derby Week actually in Kentucky right now, and three years ago, Daniel and I walked in a Kentucky Derby fashion show. We also participated in dance marathons and other events.

Last December in Las Vegas when I was named Miss Coors Light, I found out that Daniel had won the Betty Jane France Humanitarian Award for Best Buddies International. He was up on stage at the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Awards Ceremony, and we had a little reunion.

We’ve kept in contact since then. I’ve got his email so we’ve been best buds, and we write on each other’s Facebook walls. You have no idea how excited I was to see him here at Talladega because it’s been five months since we last saw each other.

It’s so funny how we got introduced three years ago through Best Buddies Foundation, and now we’ve found our worlds colliding again in NASCAR.

He’s such a good person, and it’s been exciting seeing him do his thing.

(Left to right) Miss Coors Light Amanda Mertz, 2014 Betty Jane France Humanitarian Award presented by Nationwide winner Daniel Noltemeyer and Emily Cleveland, State Director, Kentucky at Best Buddies International, meet in the garage at Talladega Superspeedway on May 2, 2015.

Chase, points won’t alter No. 88 driver’s restrictor plate strategy

TALLADEGA, Ala. – Dale Earnhardt Jr. is well aware of the expectations he carries into Talladega Superspeedway twice a year. These are his grandstands, his Nation, his personal playground.

The roar of adoration every lap Junior leads echoes through the foothills surrounding this track, and with 832 laps out front here, it’s been a loud and constant refrain. But, it’s been 11 l-o-n-g years (October, 2004) since Talladega’s crown prince last won a Cup trophy here.

"I feel like it’s a real disappointment for a lot of people when we don’t finish well and if we are not up in the battle trying at the end,” Earnhardt said. "If we are not in that group crossing the finish line that is up front, I feel that disappointment from all the supporters of our team, more so here and at Daytona than other race tracks for sure.”

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Earnhardt will start his No. 88 Nationwide Chevy fourth in Sunday’s GEICO 500 (1 p.m., FOX), trying to win for the sixth time in a Cup race here.

A year ago Earnhardt came into this race already qualified for the Chase for the Sprint Cup thanks to a victory in the season-opening Daytona 500. Interestingly though, he says his strategy for Sunday isn’t much different than last May when his postseason already had been decided.

"We will just try to be a little more aggressive I guess to try to win Sunday,” Earnhardt said. "We don’t have anything to lose."

"I don’t expect there to be 16 winners. I believe we are good enough to get in (the Chase) in one of those last positions by points. I’m not really nervous.

"I feel like I can go out there and be as aggressive as I want to be and take some chances and see what happens. So I don’t feel like that points or the Chase or anything will be in the back of my mind bugging me or buzzing around. I can go out there and do what I need to do and enjoy myself.”

Contrary to what you’d think based on his success on superspeedways, Earnhardt says "I love short track racing … love Bristol and Martinsville the most."

But there’s no denying his ability at the other end of the spectrum.

With eight restrictor plate wins – 11 top 3s at Daytona alone and a string of four consecutive Talladega wins from 2001-2003 (five in a span of seven races), Earnhardt is considered one of the best in this genre and he shared a little about his mindset during races.

"You’ve got to be in the top-three all day long to expect to be in the top three in the end when it counts,” Earnhardt said. "If you get shuffled out, it’s so hard to pass these people with this kind of car, we sit there in two lines, the bottom and the middle. And you aren’t going to jump out there by yourself and go around them.

"So you’ve sort of got to sit there in line and hopefully some dummy pulls out and he gets shuffled back,” Earnhardt said laughing. "Hopefully that happens a lot and you end up toward the front."

Three-time champion clears air after Richmond, seeks Talladega turnaround

RELATED: Stewart, Dale Jr. make contact at Richmond | Junior’s Talladega strategy

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Tony Stewart has heard the talk-radio callers and seen the posts on social media, his mighty fandom worried about the three-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champ’s slow start to the season.

He’s frustrated too. But he’s also hopeful.

The video has been replayed repeatedly showing Stewart throw his helmet and HANS device into the back of his team’s race hauler after a late-race accident at Richmond International Raceway with Dale Earnhardt Jr. last Sunday ended one of the better runs he’s had this season.

"That wasn’t frustration at Dale Jr., that was frustration that we haven’t had many days where we were running as well as we were that day. … and then to have it end up like that,” Stewart said Saturday from Talladega Superspeedway. "Junior and I are friends. We’re fine."

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Dressed in golf clothes, eating a sandwich before heading out to an afternoon round of golf — his new hobby — Stewart sat down for a rare one-on-one interview this season. Certainly aggravated by unacceptable results in the 2015 season, he was also steadfastly committed to getting things on track.

He has only one top 10 in nine starts and five finishes 30th or worse. He’s ranked 30th in the championship standings — the minimum points position a race winner must have to qualify for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

Stewart has heard the critics, but remains his own worst. He says the new rules package with the cars — high downforce and low horsepower  — does not suit his style. In fact, it is the opposite of everything he’s ever driven. So even a driver with 48 Cup wins and three championship trophies is learning all over again.

"It’s like I’m in the middle of a calculus equation, and I didn’t take pre-calculus,” Stewart said. "I’m working on it."

The part that upsets him most is any blame directed toward his crew chief, Chad Johnston. Stewart says the two have the best driver-crew chief relationship he’s ever had and has nothing but good things to say about Johnson’s talents.

"Chad isn’t getting the results he deserves,” Stewart said.

The pair did have some encouraging results with the No. 14 Bass Pro Shops/Tracker Boats Chevrolet SS in qualifying for Sunday’s GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway. Stewart rolled off sixth, tying his best qualifying effort of the season at Martinsville Speedway, but would finish 19th.

As far as his Stewart-Haas Racing team, Stewart is very happy for his other drivers. Reigning Sprint Cup champ Kevin Harvick has a pair of wins and leads the championship standings. Kurt Busch won last week at Richmond to earn his Chase berth and for more than a month, Danica Patrick has been inside the top-16 in points  — the cut-off mark to qualify for the Chase.

He sounds like a proud father talking about the trio. And as for the news this week about Patrick needing a new primary sponsor for next year and her status in a contract year, Stewart was upbeat.

"Are you kidding me? She’s the most marketable driver in the sport,” Stewart said. "And as for her driving, I’ve never been more proud of her.”

Still, Stewart wants nothing more than to beat her to Victory Lane this year — winning for his fans as much as for himself. He said it’s frustrating to hear his longtime supporters doubt him.

Reminded that the summer months have traditionally tended to be his time to collect race trophies, Stewart sat back and smiled.

"I pray that’s the case,” he said. "I’m hoping so.”

Team Penske has no substitute driver planned at Kansas

RELATED: Brad Keselowski’s opinions on the Sprint Cup schedule

TALLADEGA, Ala. — A three-time winner at this week’s Sprint Cup Series venue, the wildly unpredictable Talladega Superspeedway, Brad Keselowski knows a thing or two about getting the timing right. When it comes to the impending birth of his first child, he’s pretty confident he’s got the timing down there, too.

Keselowski and his girlfriend, Paige White, are expecting a daughter sometime in the next two weeks, the 2012 Cup champ confirmed Friday from Talladega.

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Because he expects to be home in Charlotte for the back-to-back weekends of the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race May 16 and the Coca-Cola 600 May 24, Keselowski said Team Penske has not tabbed a replacement driver for him.

"As far as contingency plans, we haven’t really made any because we’re very, very fortunate that everything at this time looks to fall directly in line with the race weeks in Charlotte, which is where we live," Keselowski said.

"Fingers crossed. We’ll see how it all plays out, but I’m looking forward to it very much."

Keselowski addressed the topic Friday during an announcement that his No. 2 Ford would carry new primary sponsorship from high tech company Avaya in next week’s race at Kansas Speedway. It’s a major get for the team and a sign of the times in NASCAR in general.

"I think NASCAR is trying very, very hard to continue to push the technical side and having more technical partners," Keselowski said. "So I think this is not just a win for Team Penske, but also a win for all of motorsports and NASCAR, in particular."

Wins are something Keselowski is familiar with at Talladega, where he scored three of his 17 career victories — including his first Cup win in 2009 and perhaps his most clutch Cup win last October.

Needing nothing less than a victory to advance to the third round of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Eliminator Round, Keselowski got a push from his Penske teammate Joey Logano and held off the charging field in overtime to take the win.

The result had major championship implications with Keselowski and Logano advancing in the playoffs and three preseason favorites, Hendrick Motorsports drivers Jimmie JohnsonDale Earnhardt Jr. and Kasey Kahne having their title hopes stopped.

"Talladega, last fall was unbelievable," Keselowski said. "I think that’s probably the most emotional I ever got besides my first win in NASCAR. … That’s probably the most emotional win I’ve had in quite some time, so it certainly meant a lot to me."

"As far as the clutch factor, or whatever, I try not to read too much into that. I feel like if you get caught up in that you kind of let those emotions get to you and sometimes that’s maybe not in your best interest focus-wise.

"But all in all that was just an incredible weekend and one I’m gonna look back on for quite some time and be proud of."

Hendrick Motorsports places four cars in top five in Talladega qualifying

RELATED: Qualifying results

Jeff Gordon surged to the 80th Coors Light Pole Award of his NASCAR Sprint Cup Series career in Saturday afternoon qualifying at Talladega Superspeedway.

Gordon, in his final full season driving the Hendrick Motorsports No. 24 Chevrolet, notched a fast lap of 194.793 mph on the 2.66-mile track. The Coors Light Pole Award was also Gordon’s third of the season and fourth at Talladega.

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All-time Coors Light Pole Awards

Rank Driver Poles
1. Richard Petty* 123
2. David Pearson* 113
3. Jeff Gordon 80
4. Cale Yarborough* 69
5. Darrell Waltrip* 59
6. Bobby Allison* 58
7. Mark Martin** 56
8. Bill Elliott* 55
9. Ryan Newman 51
10. Bobby Isaac** 49

*NASCAR Hall of Famers
**NASCAR Hall of Fame nominees

Gordon, who also won the pole position for the season-opening Daytona 500, claimed the No. 1 starting spot by .281 seconds.

"We definitely have a fast Drive To End Hunger Chevrolet," said Gordon, the last driver to make a qualifying attempt. "I think we’ve shown that all weekend long. But you never know what you’ve got until you put it on the clock. I am so proud of this pole because we got the pole in Daytona, but it was a totally different format. I knew the car was fast there. For this team to bring another car, a different car here, and all the hard work from the engine shop and what they do with the bodies, and chassis and prep. A lot of hard work goes into this and (crew chief) Alan Gustafson takes a lot of pride in these. They should, this is awesome.

"And awesome for Hendrick Motorsports to be on the front row. This was all them. I played a small role at Daytona, but I played no role today, but it was fun."

Kasey Kahne pushed the Hendrick No. 5 Chevy to a lap of 193.685 mph, snaring the second starting spot for Sunday’s GEICO 500 (1 p.m. ET, FOX). Ryan Blaney qualified third at 193.611 mph in the Wood Brothers Racing No. 21 Ford. Teammates Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Jimmie Johnson were next, placing all four Hendrick Motorsports cars in the top five starting spots.

The session was the series’ first since NASCAR mandated rules changes for qualifying on tracks where restrictor plates are used to limit engine horsepower. The group qualifying format introduced before the 2014 season often created large aerodynamic packs, gamesmanship and the threat of multi-car crashes.

After a particularly wreck-heavy Speedweeks to open the season for all three national series at Daytona International Speedway, NASCAR competition officials dropped the group format for Daytona and Talladega. Instead, drivers participated in single-car runs, released to the track in staggered intervals, in two rounds — the opening round for all cars, with the final 12 advancing to the final round.

David Ragan, making his final start in the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 Toyota in place of the injured Kyle Busch, was ninth-fastest in qualifying. He’ll move to the Michael Waltrip Racing No. 55 Toyota for the rest of the season, starting next weekend at Kansas Speedway, where JGR development driver Erik Jones plans to make his Sprint Cup debut in the No. 18.

In the meantime, team owner and occasional driver Michael Waltrip qualified the No. 55 ride in 23rd spot for Sunday’s 500-miler at Talladega.

Defending Sprint Cup Series champion and current points leader Kevin Harvick was 24th-fastest in the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 4 Chevrolet. Defending race winner Denny Hamlin managed the 17th-fastest lap in the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 11 Toyota.

Kyle Larson took the 13th starting spot in the Chip Ganassi Racing No. 42 Chevrolet, missing out on a place in the final round by just three-thousandths of a second. Michael McDowell and rookie Jeb Burton failed to qualify for the 43-car field.

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See where all 43 drivers will pit in Sunday’s GEICO 500 (1 p.m. ET, FOX)

RELATED: Starting lineup

In his next-to-last race at Talladega Superspeedway, four-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Jeff Gordon won his 80th Coors Light Pole Award and chose the first stall at pit exit in Turn 1.

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Hendrick Motorsports teammate Kasey Kahne qualified second and took the 17th stall with an opening in front of him. Wood Brothers Racing with Ryan Blaney nabbed third in qualifying and chose the 39th stall toward the entrance to pit road, also with front opening. The last stall with an empty spot in front is the 29th, and fourth-place qualifier Dale Earnhardt Jr. chose it.

The fourth Hendrick driver, Jimmie Johnson, qualified fifth and picked the 43rd box, the first open stall at the entrance to pit road off of Turn 4.

Stewart-Haas Racing‘s Tony Stewart tied for his best qualifying effort of the season in the sixth spot, and he chose the 38th stall with an open box behind him. Richard Childress Racing‘s Paul Menard was seventh-fastest in Saturday’s session and picked the 28th stall with a space between him and Earnhardt behind him.

Joe Gibbs Racing‘s Matt Kenseth and David Ragan qualified eighth and ninth respectively with Kenseth choosing the 41st stall and Ragan selecting the second stall.

Richard Petty Motorsports driver Sam Hornish Jr. rounded out the top 10 and chose the 16th stall with a blank space behind him.