NASCAR gives behavior penalty to five crew members

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (March 25, 2015) — NASCAR has issued Behavioral Penalties to five crew members for their actions during pre-race March 21 at Auto Club Speedway. The crew members were working for the No. 8 NASCAR XFINITY Series team when the violations occurred.

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The crew members violated the following Sections in the 2015 NASCAR rule book:

12-1: Actions detrimental to stock car racing: Involved in a pre-race incident; failure to comply with a directive from Track Security

12.8a: Behavioral Penalty

Crew member Mark Armstrong has been fined $1,500, suspended from NASCAR until April 21 and placed on NASCAR probation through Dec. 31. Crew members Tyler Bullard, Nathaniel House, Jeremy Howard and Ryan Mulder have all been placed on NASCAR probation through Dec. 31.

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NASCAR penalizes team for infractions at Auto Club Speedway

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (March 25, 2015) — The No. 33 team that competes in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series has been penalized for a rules infraction discovered during opening day inspection March 20 at Auto Club Speedway.

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This infraction is a P4 level penalty and violates the following Sections in the 2015 NASCAR rule book:

12.1: Actions detrimental to stock car racing;

20.14.2: Rear Suspension: Truck Trailing Arm

            E. The left and right side truck trailing arms must be mounted to the truck trailing arm mounting brackets using a one-piece, minimum ¾ inch diameter magnetic steel bolt.

            F. The horizontal centerline of the highest truck trailing arm mounting bolt must not be higher than the top surface of the truck trailing arm crossmember, at the respective truck trailing arm mounting bracket, when the vehicle is at inspection orientation.

INFRACTION: The ¾ inch diameter magnetic steel truck trailing arm mounting bolt was not installed horizontally.

            J.Truck trailing arm must conform to the following drawing as specified in the NASCAR rule book: Rear Suspension-Truck Trailing Arm: A-008-00183-14 Rev.C

INFRACTION: Truck trailing arm monoball sleeve does not meet the drawing specifications. Sleeve is required to be minimum .125 inch minimum thick x two inches wide sleeve machined for press fit of .750 I.D. or .875 I.D. monoball assembly.

20.3.3.2.1: Truck Trailing Arm Crossmember Assembly:Truck Trailing Arm Mounting Brackets

            B. Truck trailing arm mounting brackets must be constructed of magnetic steel flat plate with a minimum thickness of 0.169 inch.

INFRACTION: Truck trailing arm mounting bracket adapter was machined from Aluminum solid.

20.20: Assembled Vehicle Overall Rules

            A. Except in cases explicitly permitted in the NASCAR rules, installation of additional components and/or modifications of existing components to affect the aerodynamic properties of the vehicle will not be permitted, including but not limited to, safety systems, chassis and roll cage, suspension, steering systems, brake systems, heat shields, body fillers, body sealers, filler panels, drivetrain components and exhaust components.

The options for a P4 penalty are outlined the following sections of the NASCAR rule book:

12.5.3.4: P4 Penalty Options:

A. Violations leading to P4 penalties, in general, are very serious. They include, but are not limited to, a broad range of infractions such as:

B.  Parts which do not meet specifications

F.  Measurement failures of significance

G. These often involve primary component or system infractions not otherwise to the magnitude of P5 infractions, but could also include secondary component or system infractions, particularly if of a nature suggesting some of the characteristics described in P5 … and/or involving safety implications.

12.5.3.4.2: Minimum P4 Penalty Options (includes all three points below):

            A. Loss of 25 championship driver and owner points, regardless of whether the violation occurred during a Championship race or not.

            B. $40,000-$75,000 fine

            C. Suspension for the next three series Championship Races, plus any non-championship races or special events which might occur during that time period, for the crew chief, plus probation through the end of the calendar year, or probation for a six month period following the issuance of the penalty notice if that period spans across two consecutive seasons.

As a result of this violation, crew chief Slugger Labbe has been fined $50,000 and suspended for the next three NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Championship races, plus any non-championship races or special events which might occur during that time period. Labbe has also been placed on NASCAR probation through Dec. 31. In addition, car owner Joe Falk has been docked 25 championship car owner points.

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From NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France

Statement from Brian France, NASCAR Chairman and CEO, on J.D. Gibbs:

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (March 25, 2015) — "All members of the NASCAR and France family extend our thoughts and prayers to J.D. Gibbs and his loved ones. We’ve all watched J.D. grow up within our community, and he always has represented himself, his family, the entire Joe Gibbs Racing organization and NASCAR with the utmost professionalism, enthusiasm and energy. We wish him the best during this time and eagerly anticipate his recovery."

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Humpe led 97 of 125 laps in a convincing win at Auto Club Speedway.

For the second week in a row, Kenny Humpe visited victory lane in the NASCAR PEAK Antifreeze Series Powered by iRacing. This time, Humpe’s win capped a dominating performance at Auto Club Speedway in which he started from the pole and led five times for 97 of 125 laps. Chad Laughton finished runner-up, half a second behind the winner with Justin Bolton third, followed by Ray Alfalla and Nick Ottinger.

From the drop of the green flag, Humpe was clearly the driver to beat. After Laughton drafted by to lead the second lap, Humpe regained control and looked to pull away from the rest of the field, although a trio of cautions would keep that from happening.

The first two incidents were relatively minor but the third, which unfolded on Lap 25, looked like a crash normally reserved for superspeedways. As the field made their way through Turn Two after a restart, Ottinger came down a bit too far and made contact with Thomas Davis, causing Davis to lose his momentum. Tyler Hudson couldn’t slow down or avoid Davis and plowed into him, sparking a massive crash that collected more than a dozen cars including that of rookie standout Patrick Crabtree.

After the field was thinned by the big incident, the race took on a much calmer look as the next 66 laps went caution-free and included a round of green flag pit stops. Humpe’s was the strongest car for most of the run but Ottinger flexed some muscle near the end of the first stint and took the lead on Lap 47.

As the run wore on, the field started to separate even though the draft was strong with the reduced horsepower of the 2015 rules package. Ottinger looked to be about equal to Humpe on the long run, but Humpe got back out in front after Ottinger led for 14 laps and remained in command for the rest of the way.

Until the last caution flew on Lap 95, it appeared fuel mileage could factor into the race. Several drivers running in the bottom half of the field started saving gas and hoped to make it to the end on one less stop knowing it was their only hope of beating Humpe. However, the last caution ruined that strategy and also cost some other drivers who had short pitted, including Michael Conti.

On the last restart the field had one last shot at Humpe but none could take advantage. Even with the draft no one could mount a serious challenge the rest of the way, allowing Humpe to cruise to a relatively easy win.

Humpe also took over the series points lead with the victory and leads the standings by 14 points over Laughton. Two-time champion Ray Alfalla is third, 22 points behind followed by Cody Byus and Chris Overland. Crabtree, the points leader coming in, left Auto Club Speedway seventh in the standings after a disappointing thirty-fifth place finish due to crash damage. He sits just ahead of defending champion Conti, who has yet to find his stride in 2015.

Week Four sees the NASCAR PEAK Antifreeze Series head to a 1.5 mile track for the second time this season as the series visits Texas Motor Speedway. It would be foolish not to consider Humpe the favorite, but look for Laughton and Ottinger to be strong as well. Can anyone in the field stop Humpe’s domination, or will the #58 car visit victory lane for the third straight race? Make sure to catch all the Week Four action by tuning into iRacing Live in two weeks’ time!

Team president to undergo treatment for symptoms impacting brain function

Related: Joe Gibbs gives an update on J.D. Gibbs’ condition

J.D. Gibbs, president of Joe Gibbs Racing, is curtailing his involvement with the NASCAR racing organization due to health issues. JGR announced on Wednesday that Gibbs is starting treatment for symptoms impacting areas of brain function.

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JGR employees were notified of the situation earlier today at the team’s headquarters in Huntersville, North Carolina. Gibbs’ presence at the track will be limited, but he will continue with many of his day-to-day activities for the organization.

NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France made the following statement regarding J.D. Gibbs: "All members of the NASCAR and France family extend our thoughts and prayers to J.D. Gibbs and his loved ones. We’ve all watched J.D. grow up within our community, and he always has represented himself, his family, the entire Joe Gibbs Racing organization and NASCAR with the utmost professionalism, enthusiasm and energy. We wish him the best during this time and eagerly anticipate his recovery."
 
Gibbs, son of JGR founder and former NFL head coach Joe Gibbs, is a former driver, with five NASCAR XFINITY Series starts and eight in the Camping World Truck Series. He is 46.

He was named president of JGR in October of 1997.
 
Gibbs even spent some time as a pit crew member for the group, changing tires on the 1993 Daytona 500 winning entry of Dale Jarrett. It was the first Sprint Cup win for the organization.
 
JGR currently fields four Toyota teams in NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series — the No. 11 with driver Denny Hamlin, the No. 18 of Kyle Busch, the No. 19 of Carl Edwards and the No. 20 of Matt Kenseth.

 
Busch is currently recovering from injuries sustained in this year’s season-opening XFINITY Series race at Daytona International Speedway.
 
In addition, the organization fields three teams in the XFINITY Series.

 
JGR teams have won 114 Sprint Cup races and 101 in the XFINITY Series. The 2015 season is its 24th in the Sprint Cup series.
 
It has won Sprint Cup Series championships three times — in 2000 with driver Bobby Labonte, as well as 2002 and ’05 with driver Tony Stewart.

 

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JR Motorsports will make its Truck debut this weekend at Martinsville

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Kelley Earnhardt Miller appeared on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Wednesday. Among other topics, she discussed JR Motorsports’ first NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race this weekend at Martinsville Speedway.

Earnhardt Miller, co-owner of JR Motorsports, said earlier this year that there were no plans at that time to field the organization’s Camping World Truck Series team for any races beyond the 10 currently in place with driver Cole Custer.

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On Wednesday she said that was still the case, but also said Sprint Cup Series Dale Earnhardt Jr. had broached the subject of driving the truck.
 
"He’s definitely mentioned that that’s something he might be interested in," Earnhardt Miller said. "I think he would want to see how the program is going to do, and make sure we have the resources and the capability to do that. Let Cole the team get off the ground first and see how that goes."
 
The organization will make its CWTS debut this weekend at Martinsville Speedway, fielding the No. 00 Chevrolet for Custer in Saturday’s Kroger 250 (FOX Sports 1, 2:30 p.m. ET). The entry will carry sponsorship from Haas Automation and will be under the direction of crew chief Joe Shear Jr.
 
Earnhardt Miller, Earnhardt Jr. and Sprint Cup Series team owner Rick Hendrick share ownership of JRM. One of the organization’s three full-time XFINITY Series teams features multiple Sprint Cup drivers, Earnhardt Jr., Kevin Harvick and Kasey Kahne, behind the wheel for select events.
 
Two other full-time teams feature drivers Chase Elliott and Regan Smith, who finished 1-2 in points, respectively, last season.
 
"He (Earnhardt Jr.) and some others have expressed interest in running the truck," Earnhardt Miller said. “We’ve actually gotten calls from other people saying ‘do you want to fill out the balance of your schedule and run it full time?’
 
"We really don’t want to do that. We want to focus on Cole. If the opportunity exists to put a couple of the Cup drivers in there to make our program stronger, (that’s) really why would we want to do that…
 
"I won’t say it’s not going to happen but there aren’t any concrete plans for it to happen right now."
 
Even though the XFINITY Series is taking a one-week break after five consecutive races to open the 2015 season, it is shaping up to be a big weekend for JRM.
 
Custer, 17, made his NCWTS debut last season with Haas Racing Development and became the youngest winner in a NASCAR national series event when he won the UNOH 175 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway. In only nine starts, he scored six top-10s and two poles.
 
Elliott, the defending XFINITY Series champion, will attempt to make his Sprint Cup Series debut in Sunday’s STP 500 at Martinsville. The 19-year-old is scheduled to step into the Hendrick Motorsports No. 24 Chevrolet in 2016, replacing four-time series champion Jeff Gordon.
 
HMS will field a No. 25 entry for Elliott this weekend, with veteran crew chief Kenny Francis heading up the team.
 
With Elliott already tabbed for the move to Sprint Cup next season, Custer could be auditioning for a full-time XFINITY Series ride with the organization.
 
"Hopefully, that (truck effort) will roll into an XFINITY Series ride for Cole, depending on how he performs," Earnhardt Miller said.
 
It will be the first start of the season for Custer, who is limited to competing on road courses and tracks 1.1 miles or less in length due to his age.

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Storied paperclip oval was one of original tracks on NASCAR circuit

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NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series heads to Martinsville (Va.) Speedway this weekend, one of two annual treks to the legendary half-mile that have taken place for more than 65 years.
 
Before Charlotte, Bristol, Texas or Talladega. Before Daytona or Darlington even, there was Martinsville.
 
They were racing at Martinsville before NASCAR grew from an idea into reality.

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“Stock car racing makes its debut at the new Martinsville Speedway next Sunday afternoon when more than 35 of the nation’s leading drivers risk their necks and cars for over $2,000 in prize money. … The new track boasts the largest grandstand of any speedway in the South, a huge affair which will seat 10,000 spectators. The total capacity of the speedway is 20,000 people. Built at a cost of $85,000, the Martinsville Speedway is regarded as one of the finest half-mile dirt tracks in the United States.”

The item appeared in one of the region’s daily newspapers. The date was Monday, Sept. 1, 1947. NASCAR was officially incorporated in February 1948.

 

Built by local businessman H. Clay Earles, Martinsville hosted one of the eight original stops on the NASCAR Strictly Stock schedule in 1949. Before that, drivers who would become some of stock car racing’s earliest stars could be found hustling their way around the paperclip-shaped track. Red Byron, winner of the inaugural ’49 race, won the track’s first official event two years earlier, a 50-lap affair for Modified stock cars. Fonty Flock won there in ’48 just as NASCAR was getting started.

One by one, the other tracks on the schedule that first season eventually fell by the wayside – Charlotte Speedway, Daytona’s beach and road course, Occoneechee Speedway in Hillsboro, North Carolina, Langhorne and Heidelberg (Pennsylvania), Hamburg (N.Y.) Speedway. Even North Wilkesboro, a staple from the start, eventually faded into the background when NASCAR departed after the ‘96 season.
 
Martinsville, however, remains.
 
“It means we, and by that I mean going back to when the place was built by my grandfather all the way through until now, are doing something right,” said Clay Campbell, grandson of the track’s founder and president of the facility since 1988.
 
“A lot of guys that started close to the same time, obviously they aren’t around now. I think my grandfather had the vision to keep investing in the facility and doing things that were necessary not only from a fan standpoint but from a competitor’s standpoint and everything that he did, I think we’re pretty much following the same philosophy.”
 
• • •
 
“It was dirt to begin with,” Richard Petty said, easing back in the recliner inside his motorhome. “I never ran on it when it was dirt. My daddy did and he won some races.”
 
Outside, cars are circling Phoenix International Raceway, site of the recently completed CampingWorld.com 500 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races. PIR is roughly 2,000 miles from Martinsville, and Petty, now 77, is nearly as removed from his days as a championship driver.
 
One of the five inaugural members of NASCAR’s Hall of Fame, Petty is the sport’s all-time leader in premier series wins with 200 and is one of only two drivers to win seven championships.
 
He’s also a valuable link to NASCAR’s past. And Martinsville, much like the Petty family, is an unbroken piece of ribbon that has run through the sport from its earliest days.
 
Petty’s father, Lee, was NASCAR’s first three-time champion. A Hall of Fame member as well, Lee Petty won 54 times. Three of those victories came at Martinsville – two when it was dirt and a third after the track was paved.
 
“When they asphalted it (in ’55), it was completely different,” Richard Petty said. “When they re-did the track, they cleaned up the infield. When (NASCAR) ran there and it was dirt, there were bushes in the infield, a little creek running down through there. All that was there was the track.
 
“Once they asphalted it, they didn’t just do the track, they cleaned up everything else. It was like a brand new track. It was shaped the same, but everything else was different.”
 
The creek is still there today, running underneath the track and working its way from one end of the speedway to the other.
 
Petty won 15 times at Martinsville, a record matched only by his success at North Wilkesboro.
 
It’s no surprise that Martinsville remains a staple on the schedule after all these years. “Not really,” he said. “It’s just so different from any other track we run.”
 
At 0.526 mile, it’s the shortest of the short tracks and unlike other venues, there’s only the slightest banking in the turns. Turn 43 cars loose all at one and it isn’t just close-quarters racing — it’s the closest-quarters racing fans are likely to see all season long.
 
“Back when we had drum brakes, the deal was being able to run 500 laps and have brakes when the race was over,” Petty said. “Probably wasn’t but two or three cars that had brakes that could stop the thing when it was over with.
 
“It was just a good track for the way I drove and the way (crew chief) Dale Inman set up cars; we just had a good combination for that race track. We understood the track.”
 
From 1967-73, Petty won 10 times at Martinsville, including five straight starts between ’68-71.
 
“We spent more time working on the brakes that week than we did on getting (the car) to handle or run fast,” Petty said. “From our strategy standpoint … a lot of times we didn’t race that hard. We saved our brakes, stayed in the race. But as far as going out and trying to lead all the laps and everything, that wasn’t our deal. It was more of a survival track. Over a period of time they got the brakes better and it got to where you had to race all the time.”
 
• • •
 
The lone block concession stand in the infield is one of the few reminders of Martinsville’s past.
 
“The last piece of history,” Campbell said. “It goes back as far as the ‘60s, probably longer than that.”
 
Other structures have been upgraded or replaced through the years. The sport has changed, and those that follow it have as well.
 
Keeping up with the fast-paced sport, and everything it entails “is difficult,” Campbell said, “but therein lies the fun part of the business and the challenge of it.
 
“It’s no different than the competitors – they have to keep changing to newer things and keep up with the pace; and the same thing for the facilities. Fortunately now with us being a part of ISC and a bigger global picture we’re more in touch with things that we need from a social media standpoint, Wi-Fi and on and on and on. Things we now have and things we’re exploring for the future.”
 
International Speedway Corp. owns 12 of the 23 tracks hosting NASCAR Sprint Cup Series events in 2015. The company purchased the speedway in 2004.
 
Nearly 170 tracks have hosted one or more NASCAR premier series races since that inaugural 1949 season, from Airborne to Wine Creek, Auto Club to Watkins Glen. Most are now gone.
 
Martinsville, one of the very first, is still there.
 
“We’re very fortunate that we had the things we needed and on are par with most of the others so we can keep on moving right along,” Campbell said. “Things like the garage, access roads coming in, the (Turn 4) tunnel, the suites, and things of that nature.
 
“Luckily, as time went on with my grandfather, he didn’t sit still and that was a good thing. Because had he done that we’d be playing catch-up, and now’s not the time to be playing catch-up.”
 

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Veteran driver sits sixth in the XFINITY Series point standings

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FONTANA, Calif. — NASCAR XFINITY Series veteran Brendan Gaughan earned his career-best Auto Club Speedway finish of second-place in the Drive4Clots.com 300 on Saturday after starting eighth in the field.

The Las Vegas native must have been feeling his roots because Gaughan scored three straight top-10 finishes on NASCAR’s West Coast swing (Las Vegas, Phoenix, Auto Club).

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"I’m glad I’m pissed off about being second," Gaughan said at Auto Club Speedway after coming up short to 2014 Sprint Cup Series champion Kevin Harvick.

The NASCAR veteran attributes his success to his commitment to run double-duty this season, splitting his time between the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series No. 62 Premium Motorsports Chevrolet and the XFINITY Series No. 62 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet.

And with double-duty comes a shortage of breaks that drivers who are just running one series get. As the XFINITY Series takes a break until April 10 at Texas Motor Speedway, the Sprint Cup Series keeps roaring on to the shortest track on the Cup Series schedule, Martinsville Speedway.

"I’m racing my Premium Motorsports Chevrolet at Martinsville," Gaughan said. "So I’ll be going to Martinsville and I’ll be having what I consider to be an easy weekend all of a sudden because I only have to do one race car. I don’t know where I decided that I was going to turn 40 years old this year and do double-duty all season."

Although racing in both the Cup and XFINITY Series can be draining, Gaughan explains that he’s learning a lot and looking at things differently than he ever has before.

"It’s helping me in a lot of ways," Gaughan said. "The main thing is is that I’m getting on the race track first in a Cup car.

"It’s helping me with the points racing. I’m trying to learn how to race that race car and look at points in a completely different way so we can keep making races. I’ve never looked a racing that way. I’ve never been in a situation like that. So it’s helping me on the big picture side, but I’m racing different now than I ever have and looking at points differently than I ever have and I think it’s going to make me better at the end of the year."

Aside from Saturday’s runner-up showing, Gaughan’s best finish at the Fontana track came in 2009 when he finished seventh.

In 122 XFINITY Series starts, the Richard Childress Racing driver has two wins, 12 top-fives and 32 top-10 finishes under his belt. The No. 62 driver’s first win came just last season at Road America. He added a win at Kentucky Speedway in September.

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Third-place finish after late cautions didn’t diminish day’s gains

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FONTANA, Calif. — The disappointment was palpable as Kurt Busch candidly answered questions from a handful of reporters huddled around his No. 41 Chevrolet on Auto Club Speedway pit lane Sunday afternoon.

A hundred yards away Brad Keselowski was performing a loud victory burnout for the sold-out California crowd. The celebration could have easily belonged to Busch, who started from the pole position, led a race-high six times for a race-best 65 laps, but finished third after getting out-maneuvered on the restart of NASCAR’s second attempt at a green-white-checkered finish.

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Keselowski led only that final lap.

Busch was obviously letdown by the outcome. Yet even in the highly emotional moments immediately after the race, he didn’t deflect his fortune on the late caution flag controversy.

Busch actually seemed upbeat despite the outcome.

"I don’t know what we could have done different,” Busch said matter-of-factly. "We just got pinned in by the yellows and the sequence at the end on which tires we needed to have to optimize how many laps were left.

"We had two tires; Keselowski had four. We didn’t need that extra yellow at the end, and I just got out-muscled by Keselowski."

And contrary to what one might have expected, Busch even described the day as being "fantastic" overall.

For him, every day racing a Sprint Cup car is fantastic.

After missing the first three races of the 2015 while serving a NASCAR suspension for legal issues off-track, Busch has wasted no time returning to form behind the wheel of the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 41 Haas Automation Chevrolet.

He started eighth and finished fifth in his first race back at Phoenix a week ago and added a Coors Light Pole Award and third-place effort in California.

In those two starts, Busch has earned more points (82) than four drivers who have started all five races — his team owner Tony Stewart among those he has outpaced in just two races (see the full standings here). And because NASCAR granted Busch an exemption, he is Chase eligible as long as he stays among the top 30 in points. He’s already 28th.

"Some of it is the preparation of the team and some of it is the cars coming back toward my driving style," Busch explained of his fast start. "I like cars with less downforce in the rear and that balance feel I think has complemented the way that I drive. So, honestly I think it has to do with some of the rules packages that NASCAR has implemented and you’ve got to drive the car a little bit looser."

After winning the pole position at the super fast California 2-miler on Friday, Busch insisted he wasn’t looking for redemption necessarily. But he was frank about how much it means to be back in a car and the extra motivation he carries.

"It’s about driving,” Busch said. "I have said it before on how this is a privilege to have a chance to drive at this top level. When it is taken away from you or you have made a mistake and you don’t get a chance to go out there and do it on your terms, it is tough. 

"I don’t have anything to prove. I have my job to do, which is to go out there, drive and race for wins."

His talent has never been in question, but his drive has never more apparent.

"(I’m) just putting the blinders on and focusing on the car," Busch said. "It’s my love. It’s my passion. It’s what I do."

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