Team issues statement one week before presenting to panel

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Two days after NASCAR announced Tuesday that the National Motorsports Appeals Panel will hear Richard Childress Racing‘s appeal on April 16 for infractions against No. 31 team, the organization issued a statement about next week’s proceeding.

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"Our appeal is scheduled for Thursday, April 16," Richard Childress, chairman and CEO of Richard Childress Racing, said in the statement. "We feel confident we have a very compelling case to present to the appeals panel. We strongly believe in the intent of the rules and the integrity of our own teams while following those same rules. Out of respect for the appeal process, we will have no further comments until after the hearing."

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Ryan Newman and his team were penalized 75 points each, crew chief Luke Lambert was fined $125,000, and Lambert and two other crew members were suspended after NASCAR determined the team illegally altered air pressures in its tires during a March 22 event at Auto Club Speedway.
 
The findings came after an audit of tires taken from four teams following the Auto Club 400. The tires were sent to an outside agency for evaluation.

The fine and the suspensions from the P5 penalty were deferred until the appeal so Lambert, team tire technician James Bender and team engineer Philip Surgen will be with the team at Texas Motor Speedway for Saturday’s Duck Commander 500 (Saturday, 7:30 p.m. ET, FOX).

The team’s appeal will be held at the NASCAR Research and Development Center in Concord, North Carolina next Thursday at 8:30 a.m. ET.

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Driver touched on Fort Worth drama at Richmond test

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RICHMOND, Va. — With the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series schedule winding its way back to Texas Motor Speedway, Brad Keselowski and Jeff Gordon are back in the collective spotlight. The track’s publicists are making certain of it.
 
Their on-track rivalry erupted into pit-road pugilism between their two teams last November at the Fort Worth track, the height of the ramped-up intensity in last year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series playoffs. Keselowski says he’s keeping his focus on Saturday night’s Duck Commander 500 (7:30 p.m. ET, FOX), the seventh race of the season and the first of two trips this year to the Lone Star State.

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Even though Texas track president Eddie Gossage has opted to publicize the race using fighting words with images of the two combatants on area billboards, Keselowski says he’s not feeding into the promotion.

RELATED: All Access: Gordon, Keselowski post-race fight
 
"I try not to," Keselowski said Wednesday at Richmond International Raceway‘s open test session. "I don’t think that’s what racing’s about or what it should be about, but I respect that for Eddie, that sells tickets. He’s got to do what he’s got to do."
 
Extracurriculars aside, Keselowski hopes to keep this year’s momentum rolling at a facility where he’s never won. After finishing 41st with engine failure in the season-opening Daytona 500, Keselowski has rebounded with a string of five consecutive top-10 finishes, including a win at Auto Club Speedway and a runner-up effort the following week at Martinsville Speedway.
 
Keselowski’s modest two-race streak of top-two finishes doesn’t quite reach the stunning level of Kevin Harvick‘s just-ended streak of eight top-twos in a row, but the Team Penske driver said it’s a good start.

 
"That’s what we’re aiming for," Keselowski said. "We feel like we’ve had good cars. We need to be a little bit better on the mile-and-a-half (tracks), but every other week, we feel like we’re where we need to be."
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Driver puts down quick early speeds to dominate Thursday sessions

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RELATED: Practice 1 results | Practice 2 results

Austin Dillon, driver of the No. 33 Chevrolet Camaro, led both practice sessions on Thursday for the NASCAR XFINITY Series O’Reilly Auto Parts 300 at Texas Motor Speedway.

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In the opening practice, Dillon rounded the 1.5-mile track in 29.527 seconds and at 182.883 mph. That was faster than Sam Hornish Jr., who finished second at 182.100 mph. Rounding out the top five were Elliott Sadler (181.537 mph), Ty Dillon (181.305 mph) and Erik Jones (181.190 mph), respectively.

In final practice, Austin Dillon was slightly slower at 181.372 mph but still plenty fast enough to top the field. Regan Smith was second at 179.994 mph, Darrell Wallace Jr. was third at 179.934 mph, Brad Keselowski (179.683 mph) was fourth and Sadler (179.420 mph) fifth.

Weather delayed the start of final practice by about 20 minutes, but there were no incidents on the track once practice got underway.

The O’Reilly Auto Parts 300 is set for 8:30 p.m. ET on Friday with TV coverage on FOX Sports 1.

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All four team members in top 10 in points

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It was a similar scene for each of the four Roush Fenway Racing drivers standing by their Fords on Auto Club Speedway pit road following the March 21 NASCAR XFINITY Series race there. 

An initial look of disappointment gave way to a smile or a slap on the back for a team member.

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All four RFR drivers – Chris Buescher, Ryan Reed, Darrell Wallace Jr. and Elliott Sadler — finished in the top-12 that afternoon, and while they were encouraged by their results, they weren’t satisfied. At all.

"We should have had a better finish,” said 21-year-old Ryan Reed of his 11th-place effort. "We’re improving and getting better every week. But I think we still have a lot of room to grow. I think we have a lot of work to do, but we have to look at the gains, and we all ran better here today than we did last year."

To be that frustrated after a solid day of contending is actually a good problem to have for the RFR team, whose XFINITY Series drivers — three of them 22 years old or younger — are leading the way for the storied championship organization.

Buescher, 22, has three top-fives in the five XFINITY Series races and is ranked second in the championship standings, a mere five points behind leader Ty Dillon entering the series’ next race, April 10 at Texas Motor Speedway.

Reed won the season-opener at Daytona International Speedway and is ranked fourth in the standings. The rookie Wallace, 21, has three top-12s and is fifth in the standings. And the veteran, 39-year old Elliott Sadler, is eighth after picking up his first top-10 at Fontana.

Meanwhile, their NASCAR Sprint Cup Series counterparts, Greg Biffle, Trevor Bayne and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. are ranked 20th, 26th, and 28th respectively in the standings and have only one top-10 among them (Biffle 10th in the Daytona 500). The three have combined for only six top-20 finishes.  

As good as the XFINITY side is doing for RFR, the Cup side is struggling. Carl Edwards scored the last two Cup wins for the team last year at Bristol and Sonoma, and he left RFR to join Joe Gibbs Racing this year.

While everyone agrees it’s a morale boost for the organization to have four teams running that well on the XFINITY side, there’s little technical benefit that side of the shop can offer its Cup counterparts.

“That certainly is a boost for the organization that the XFINITY cars are running well,” said Biffle, whose two laps led in the Daytona 500 are the only laps out front this season for the Cup team. "Unfortunately, they’re like black and white.  They don’t have anything to do with the Cup side. The cars are completely different."

Biffle went so far as to pinpoint one of the technical challenges.

"Since the ride height rule changed from 2013 to ’14, that has really affected us on the Cup level,” he explained. "If you look at that change, which we were excited about and thought getting our cars on the track and what-not, that’s the way the Nationwide cars still are. They still have that minimum ride height, and really we’ve kind of struggled when that ride height rule came in. 

"We’ve sort of struggled a little bit with that, so we are still working through figuring that out, but it’s a positive that our XFINITY cars are running good.  And there are some things we can take from that – tire pressures, trends, what the track is doing, and things like that because they are running up front and they are running fast."

And while the spring slate of races – with tracks ranging from the tiny Bristol bullring to the massive Talladega Superspeedway – will be a test for RFR’s mostly young XFINITY Series roster, there’s only reason to be optimistic.

"It’s really unfortunate because I know how hard those guys are working over there on the Cup side,” Reed said. "I know we’re working hard with them to see if anything we learn here can help them over there and vice versa.

"We’ve all just got to keep digging."

Darrell Wallace Jr. is the focus of a new series of videos produced by XFINITY to showcase rising stars in the series that boasts ‘Names are made here.’ Over the next month, XFINITY will roll out more clips with drivers Ty Dillon and Chase Elliott. Check out the Wallace video below.



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$1 million awaits winner of annual classic at Charlotte Motor Speedway

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (April 6, 2015) — Showcasing the sport’s top talent, NASCAR announced changes for the 2015 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race that will elevate the excitement of this annual classic. Race coverage is set for 7 p.m. ET, Saturday, May 16 at Charlotte Motor Speedway (FOX Sports 1, MRN Radio and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

The field will include race winners from the 2014 and 2015 seasons, as well as all former NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race winners and NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champions who are full-time competitors — all of whom will compete for the $1 million prize awarded to the winner. Prior to this change, former NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race winners and NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champions were eligible only if they accomplished the feat within the past 10 seasons.

In addition, the five-segment race will increase by at total of 20 laps, with the first four segments each scheduled for 25 laps as compared to 20 in recent years. With the final 10-lap shootout, the race now totals 110 laps.

"These updates were made to ensure that our fans have every opportunity to see the best drivers in one of our crown jewel events and give them even more on-track action," said Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR executive vice president and chief racing development officer. "Expanding this field and adding laps delivers that to our fans, raising the competition level and ensuring that this race continues to be the biggest all-star event in all of sports."

The 2015 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race will have a minimum field of 20 drivers. There are currently 17 drivers eligible, with three additional spots available. Two of those are reserved for the segment winners from the two 20-lap Sprint Showdown segments beginning at 7 p.m. ET, Friday, May 15 at Charlotte Motor Speedway (FOX Sports 1, MRN, SiriusXM).

The final spot belongs to the Sprint Fan Vote winner; voting at www.NASCAR.com/sprintfanvote and the NASCAR MOBILE application closes at 7 p.m. ET on May 15. The winner of the Sprint Fan Vote will be announced in Victory Lane following the conclusion of the Sprint Showdown.

Drivers in the 2015 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race will compete in cars that conform to all 2015 rules. The race format will consist of a total of five segments: four 25-lap segments, with the average finish of the first four segments determining the order cars will enter pit road for a mandatory four-tire pit stop following the fourth segment. Running order ties will be broken by the finish of the fourth segment. The order of the cars returning to the track following the mandatory pit stop determines the starting order for a final winner-take-all 10-lap segment.

All laps will count in segments one through four. In the fifth and final segment, only green flag laps will be counted. There will be optional pit stops during the breaks following each of the first three segments, with the field set by the pit stop/stay out positioning during the five caution laps.

The following drivers are eligible to compete in the 2015 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race: AJ Allmendinger, Aric Almirola, Kurt Busch, Kyle Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Carl Edwards, Jeff Gordon, Denny Hamlin, Kevin Harvick, Jimmie Johnson, Kasey Kahne, Matt Kenseth (2004 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race winner), Brad Keselowski, Joey Logano, Jamie McMurray (2014 winner), Ryan Newman (2002 winner), Tony Stewart (2009 winner).

This will be the 31st running of the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race. McMurray is the defending race winner.

Fans can catch all the action from the Sprint Showdown and North Carolina Education Lottery 200 on Friday night to All-Star qualifying and the biggest all-star event in sports, the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, on Saturday with weekend packages starting at just $99. For just $20, fans can purchase a special Golden Ticket upgrade to secure a prime location with special early access to a reserved area directly in front of the stage for the Rayovac presents Little Big Town pre-race concert. A limited number of Golden Tickets are available and can be purchased online at www.charlottemotorspeedway.com or by calling the speedway ticket office at 1-800-455-FANS (3267).

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No. 88 ThorSport Racing driver chasing third straight NCWTS championship

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It took Matt Crafton a while to get his career going, but now he’s turned success into a habit.
Crafton holds the dubious distinction of taking longer to get his first victory than any other driver who has ever visited Victory Lane at a NASCAR venue.

He’s now on top of the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, but Crafton’s journey required a lot of perseverance.

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Crafton’s first Trucks race was in 2000, and he didn’t get his first win until 2008 — the 178 starts before his initial victory remains a record for futility in the Truck Series.

In 2013, Crafton’s career turned the corner. His third career win at Kansas was a charm. He took over the points lead after that win and never gave it up.

The No. 88 Menards Toyota Tundra driver proved his 2013 series championship was no fluke when he repeated in 2014.

Now three races into the 2015 season, Crafton is on top again.

The two-time Truck champ couldn’t hold off Joey Logano at the end of the Kroger 250 at Martinsville Speedway, but his second-place finish was enough to push him to the top of the standings.

Crafton has 128 points after three races — he won at Atlanta and placed eighth in the opener at Daytona — giving him a two-point advantage over rookie Tyler Reddick.

Reddick placed fifth at Martinsville, giving him a top-five finish in all three races this season.

Erik Jones is also in the hunt, six points behind the leader, while Johnny Sauter (-16) and James Buescher (-28) round out the top five.

Jones has a pair of top-fives this season, including a third-place finish at Martinsville.

Crafton, Reddick, Sauter and Buescher are the only drivers in the NCWTS to finish in the top 10 in all three races this season.

Crafton has now run 341 Truck races during his 16-year career, with six wins among his 195 top-10 finishes.

The Camping World Truck Series is in the midst of a 40-day layoff. The next race is at Kansas Speedway on May 8 (8:30 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1).

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Children’s Miracle Network receiving $1 million donation if he wins

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Whether or not a check made out to the Children’s Miracle Network has an extra zero on the end depends on how well Carl Edwards does at Texas Motor Speedway this weekend.

If Edwards wins the Duck Commander 500, Stanley will donate $1 million to the Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals through the Ace Hardware Foundation.

Three of Edwards’ 23 career wins have been at TMS, and he has three other top-five finishes in 20 career starts.

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"We’ve got a lot of extra motivation at Texas," Edwards said in a release by Joe Gibbs Racing. "We’re going to visit Cook Children’s Hospital early in the week. We’re going to meet a lot of kids who are battling and we’re inspired by them."

Even if Edwards doesn’t win, the "Racing for a Miracle" program has pledged to donate $100,000 to CMN Hospitals.

But he’s not thinking that way. Edwards is bent on seeing them cut the bigger check.

"That’s huge motivation to go out there and perform well for them," Edwards said. "… It’s humbling for Stanley and Ace Hardware Foundation to put this much on the line, and to do it at a track at which we feel like we can win, that is really cool."

Edwards calls Texas "one of my favorite tracks" and could see this being an opportunity to taste success for the first time with new crew chief Darian Grubb, who served in the same role when Tony Stewart won the series championship in 2011.

Encouraged by their season-high 13 laps led at Martinsville, Grubb is eager to get to Texas.

"I’m looking forward to pulling the win off there and get an extra million dollars for those kids in need," Grubb said. "Carl’s done really well at Texas in the past and so has Joe Gibbs Racing, so we’re looking forward to getting there and seeing what we can put together. Between those two things, we should have a really good shot at it."

Coverage of the Duck Commander 500 begins Saturday at 7:30 p.m. ET on FOX.

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Danica Patrick, Joey Logano included on open test roster

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Eight NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers and teams are scheduled to participate in the April 15 open test at Kentucky Speedway ahead of the track’s Quaker State 400 presented by Advance Auto Parts (July 11, 7:30 p.m. ET, NBC Sports Network).

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The open test will be preceded by a closed Goodyear tire test on April 13 and 14 with one team each from the following organizations: Chip Ganassi Racing, Michael Waltrip Racing, Richard Childress Racing and Roush Fenway Racing.

On April 15, Greg Biffle, Ryan Blaney, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Matt Kenseth, Brad Keselowski, Jamie McMurray, Danica Patrick, Ryan Newman, Brett Moffitt and Sam Hornish Jr. are scheduled to participate in the open test with April 16 serving as a rain date before the Sprint Cup Series heads to Bristol Motor Speedway next weekend. No tests are scheduled for nine of the 23 tracks hosting Sprint Cup events in 2015.

Here’s a complete look at the 2015 testing schedule:

Date Track Type Teams
Jan. 19 Las Vegas Motor Speedway Goodyear Stewart-Haas Racing (SHR); JTG Daugherty Racing (JTGD); Team Penske (TP); Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR)
Feb. 26 Atlanta Motor Speedway Team One car/one driver from any organization
March 2-3 Atlanta Motor Speedway Goodyear Richard Childress Racing (RCR); Chip Ganassi Racing (CGR); Roush Fenway Racing (RFR); Michael Waltrip Racing (MWR)
March 10 Charlotte Motor Speedway Goodyear Hendrick Motorsports (HMS); Furniture Row Racing (FRR); Richard Petty Motorsports (RPM); BK Racing (BK)
March 11 Charlotte Motor Speedway Team One car/one driver from any organization
April 7 Richmond International Raceway Goodyear SHR, JTGD, TP, JGR
April 8 Richmond International Raceway Team One car/one driver from any organization
April 13-14 Kentucky Speedway Goodyear RCR, CGR, RFR, MWR
April 15 Kentucky Speedway Team One car/one driver from any organization
April 27-28 Indianapolis Motor Speedway Goodyear HMS, FRR, RPM, BK
April 29 Indianapolis Motor Speedway Team One car/one driver from any organization
May 11-12 Dover International Speedway Goodyear SHR, JTGD, TP, JGR
May 13 Dover International Speedway Team One car/one driver from any organization
June 9-10 Darlington Raceway Goodyear RCR, CGR, RFR, MWR
June 11 Darlington Raceway Team One car/one driver from any organization
July 13-14 Chicagoland Speedway Goodyear HMS, FRR, RPM, BK
July 15 Chicagoland Speedway Team One car/one driver from any organization
July 28-29 Bristol Motor Speedway Goodyear SHR, JTGD, TP, JGR
July 30 Bristol Motor Speedway Team One car/one driver from any organization
Aug. 24-25 Homestead-Miami Speedway Goodyear RCR, CGR, RFR, MWR
Aug. 26 Homestead-Miami Speedway Team One car/one driver from any organization
Sept. 14-15 Kansas Speedway Goodyear HMS, FRR, RPM, BK
Sept. 16 Kansas Speedway Team One car/one driver from any organization
Oct. 12-13 Phoenix International Raceway Goodyear SHR, JTGD, TP, JGR
Oct. 14 Phoenix International Raceway Team One car/one driver from any organization
Oct. 27-28 Auto Club Speedway Goodyear RCR, CGR, RFR, MWR
Oct. 29 Auto Club Speedway Team One car/one driver from any organization

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Four-time Cup champ will call Friday’s XFINITY Series race (8:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1)

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Making his NASCAR analyst debut, four-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Jeff Gordon will call his first race for FOX Sports Friday at Texas Motor Speedway for the XFINITY Series O’Reily Auto Parts 300 (8:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1). 

Track Analyst Date/Time/TV
Texas Gordon April 10, 8:30 ET, FS1
Bristol Gordon April 18, 1:30 ET, FS1
Richmond Keselowski April 24, 7:30 ET, FS1
Talladega Gordon May 2, 1:30 ET, FOX
Charlotte Bowyer May 23, 2:30 ET, FOX
Dover Harvick May 30, 2:30 ET, FOX
Michigan Patrick June 13, 1:30 ET, FS1

The No. 24 driver will be offering analysis alongside Adam Alexander and Michael Waltrip

Gordon’s debut will follow up with a consecutive full-race appearance in the FOX Sports 1 booth for the XFINITY Series race at Bristol Motor Speedway on April 18 (1:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1). The Hendrick Motorsports driver will return again for the May 2 XFINITY Series race at Talladega (1:30 p.m. ET, FOX). 

In his final full-time season, Gordon joins five other NASCAR Sprint Cup Series drivers in the rotation of analysts. Recent Sprint Cup champion Kevin Harvick received high praise for his appearance on the broadcast. 

RELATED: Harvick gets rave reviews for TV analysis

Clint Bowyer called the XFINITY Series race at Auto Club Speedway in March. And Brad Keselowski and Danica Patrick are scheduled to appear on the broadcast later in the season.

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Rubber confirmed for April’s Richmond race (April 25, 7 p.m. ET, FOX)

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RICHMOND, Va. — The engineers and mechanics who hunched over an array of computers plied their trade with typical high-tech flair during Wednesday’s open NASCAR test at Richmond International Raceway, analyzing data feeds and crunching numbers while their drivers made the rounds.

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Clint Bowyer‘s contribution to the cause was more dial-up connection than high-speed wireless.

"I don’t even know how to open a laptop," Bowyer said. "I know how to hold a steering wheel."

Bowyer left the computers to the experts on a chilly, damp Wednesday at the .75-mile track as teams gathered important data ahead of the first Richmond stop on the Sprint Cup Series schedule, the April 25 Toyota Owners 400 (7 p.m. ET, FOX). The seven-hour session, which started 2 1/2 hours late because of early morning rain, came on the heels of Tuesday’s rain-delayed Goodyear tire test here, where teams confirmed the rubber that will be used in the springtime 400-lapper.

But in addition to making tires work, teams used the extra time to try different setups that may pay dividends in a little over two weeks.

"You’ve got to use everything. That’s what we’re here for," Bowyer said. "They throw the crash-test dummy in there and we go out and make a bunch of laps, come in and make a change, then you go back out and make a bunch more laps. Really, it isn’t as much for us as it is for these engineers. In this day and age, it’s all about that."

NASCAR competition officials instituted a ban on testing before the season, but have sprinkled several open tests across the calendar to help teams prepare for race weekends. To offset the lack of test time, teams have shifted some of their attention to simulations back at the shop. While simulators have made strides toward approaching real-life accuracy and precision, track time remains a precious commodity.

"It does a pretty good job of it, but man, it’s nothing like the real thing," said Austin Dillon, driver of the Richard Childress Racing No. 3 Chevrolet. "So it’s nice to come out here and have the track and really work on dialing something in, more than what you can do on a computer."

Chris Heroy, crew chief for the Chip Ganassi Racing No. 42 Chevy driven by Kyle Larson, seconded that emotion.

"It’s a big deal," Heroy said. "We’re able to answer all the little questions you don’t get to during a race weekend. We test quite a bit now; we just don’t do the Nashvilles. I wouldn’t call it a testing ban, it’s more of a testing focus because you’re testing at tracks you race at, which is a good thing. We’ve had pretty good luck coming back to places we’ve tested, so we feel pretty good about it."

Thirteen drivers added the Richmond detour before heading to this weekend’s racing at Texas Motor Speedway, driving cars equipped with ride-height sensors and pitot tubes to measure wind velocity. Additionally, three "wheel-force" cars — one for each manufacturer and marked with a "W" beside their number on the scoring sheet — also made the trip, each outfitted with a complex sensor attached to each wheel to measure load on the tires.

The information from those three cars — with Team Penske representing Ford, JTG-Daugherty Racing for Chevrolet, and Joe Gibbs Racing for Toyota — would be shared within each manufacturer network.

Brad Keselowski drove the No. 2 wheel-force car for Team Penske, but also placed his regular test mule at the top of the leaderboard for the bulk of the seven-hour session. The scoring feed looked eerily similar to the most recent race at Richmond last September, when Keselowski led a staggering 383 of 400 laps in a dominant victory.

"Well, that’s what we’re hoping for," Keselowski said. "The spring and fall race are very similar and I think you see the same cars run well a lot here because of that. I feel like we were a very good car here for both races, but we had some weaknesses to work on and we know that, and that’s what we’re here to do."

Tuesday at Richmond, teams tested tires for nearly four hours after steady showers pushed back the on-track schedule. Goodyear will employ zone-tread technology — using two different rubber compounds, one for improved endurance and one for enhanced traction, in a single tread — on its right-side tires. The left-side tire compound will remain the same as the one teams raced on last September.

Both test days were conducted with additional tire-pack barriers along the inside walls in Turns 1 and 3 and at the exit of pit road. RIR president Dennis Bickmeier announced Monday that the track’s expanded use of energy-absorbing barriers would remain in place for its April race weekend, a safety measure that didn’t go unnoticed by the drivers.

"I think NASCAR’s made a big effort at safety for a long time now," said Roush Fenway Racing‘s Trevor Bayne. "Obviously there are incidents that open our eyes sometimes to things we missed, and I think they’re trying to cover everything that they can with the softer walls. It still hurts when you hit those things, but not as bad, but I really appreciate them looking into that for every race track." 

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