Driver missed Sprint Cup Series race at Martinsville

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live

Sounding upbeat and ready to race, Kyle Larson spoke with the national media Thursday afternoon about a fainting episode Saturday that kept him out of his race car for last Sunday’s Sprint Cup Series race at Martinsville Speedway and in a hospital bed for two days while doctors performed a litany of tests.

Larson, 22, said that in the end, doctors feel it was a severe case of dehydration.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

"I feel great right now and I felt perfectly fine shortly after I fainted the other day," Larson said. "I just had to get a lot of tests run to make sure nothing serious was wrong with me and all those test came back negative.

"All that time I felt fine and hated I couldn’t race this weekend."

He even joked, "I had stuff hooked up to me from my head to my toes. Probably the only test I didn’t get was a math test."

Larson, last year’s Sunoco Rookie of the Year, fainted while signing autographs at the track. After initially being taken to a local hospital he was transported by helicopter to Carolinas Medical Center closer to his home in Charlotte for further tests. Larson was released late Monday night and on Thursday was cleared by NASCAR to resume competing again.

In a release earlier on Thursday, Chip Ganassi Racing said, "following a thorough review of all test results by his attending physicians and in conjunction with the medical staff from NASCAR, Kyle Larson has been cleared to return to all NASCAR related activities beginning at Texas Motor Speedway next weekend, April 10-11."

Last Friday, Larson qualified his Chip Ganassi Racing No. 42 Chevrolet seventh on the grid. But it was Regan Smith who drove the car Sunday collecting a 16th-place finish as Larson watched the race on FOX Sports 1 as a hospital patient.

"I still felt like I was there," he said of being able to listen to his team’s communication on NASCAR.com.

As for the incident, Larson said he had been rushing around Saturday morning. He actually completed the autograph session but was lingering around to speak with the last fan in line when he felt light-headed.

"I tried to lean forward and maybe see if that fixed it, and then I passed out," Larson recalled.

"I don’t know, it was just kind of a weird morning just because I was almost late to practice, so I just rushed myself that morning and didn’t take very good care of myself throughout the day and just ended up dehydrating myself.

"Just got to do a better job of taking care of myself, and that should never happen again."

Larson said it was the first time he had ever been hospitalized overnight in his life and was a little nervous at first, but reassured by the doctors and by the way he felt.

"Any time you’re in a hospital you get nervous," he said. "But I was confident everything was fine, and it turned out where everything in the end was fine. Like I said, just got to make sure I hydrate myself throughout the day better than I did that day."

Larson dropped from 18th to 24th in the Cup standings after missing that race. He had two top-10 finishes in the last three races in the No. 42 Chevrolet before Martinsville. And he is still eligible for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup postseason because he qualified his car for the event on Friday.

As many of the drivers are enjoying this rare off-weekend on the Sprint Cup schedule, Larson sounded eager to get back behind the wheel. The popular driver said he was never too worried about the outcome of his time in the hospital.

"I pretty much stayed positive through the whole thing," Larson said. "I never thought anything was wrong with me because I felt fine while I was sitting in the hospital. Just was looking forward to when I could finally get out, looking forward to the last test that they had to run so I could get out of there.

"I was never nervous about it being the end of my career or out for a while or anything like that. I had it pretty much set in my mind that I was OK.

"I think the doctors kind of knew what all was going on, they just wanted to, like I said, run every test that they could just to make sure they could scratch everything off the list."

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

NASCAR suspended, fined crew chief and docked owner points

Circle Sport Racing, which fields the No. 33 Chevrolet in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, is appealing penalties for a rules infraction discovered during opening day inspection March 20 at Auto Club Speedway.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

NASCAR deemed a truck trailing arm infraction to be a P4 level penalty and docked car owner Joe Falk 25 championship car owner points.

Crew chief Slugger Labbe, who also leads Richard Childress Racing‘s research and development efforts, was fined $50,000, suspended for three NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races and placed on NASCAR probation through Dec. 31.

Unlike RCR, which requested and was granted a deferral of a suspension for No. 31 crew chief Luke Lambert, Labbe will sit out the next Sprint Cup Series race, the Duck Commander 500 at Texas Motor Speedway (April 11, 7:30 p.m. ET, FOX). Veteran crew chief Pat Tryson will take his place.

A date for the appeal hearing is to be determined.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

Annual motorcycle tour to benefit children with chronic illnesses

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live

The route for the 21st Annual Kyle Petty Charity Ride Across America benefitting Victory Junction — a camp for children with chronic or life-threatening illnesses — was announced Thursday.

Schedule for Petty Charity Ride

Date From To
2-May Santa Cruz, Calif. Bakersfield, Calif.
3-May Bakersfield, Calif. Tonopah, Nev.
4-May Tonopah, Nev. Bryce Canyon, Utah
5-May Bryce Canyon, Utah Moab, Utah
6-May Moab, Utah Colorado Springs, Colo.
7-May Colorado Springs, Colo. Hutchinson, Kan.
8-May Hutchinson, Kan. Branson, Mo.

NBC Sports NASCAR analyst Kyle Petty will lead 200 motorcyclists 2,500 miles from Santa Cruz, Calif., to Branson, Mo., on the fund-raising tour. Former NFL running back Herschel Walker and NASCAR legends Donnie Allison and Harry Gant are expected to be among the celebrities who will join the festivities.

"Each year, we select a route that’s full of breathtaking scenery, while also allowing us to spread the word and build excitement around our mission along the way," Petty said in a press release. "Year after year, the ride creates lasting memories for our riders, most importantly, it provides life-changing opportunities for children at Victory Junction."

As a result of the ride, 7,815 children have attended Victory Junction at no cost to their families, and the camp has been the ride’s primary beneficiary since being established by Kyle Petty in 2004 in honor of his late son, Adam.

Spectators are welcome to attend one of the ride’s eight overnight stops to interact with the riders, purchase ride memorabilia or make a donation to Victory Junction.

To learn more about the ride, go to: www.facebook.com/KPCharityRide, or on Twitter and Instagram, @KPCharityRide.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

NASCAR grants deferral of suspensions and fines, not points

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live
RELATED: Newman loses 75 points | No. 31 team penalized | Comparing to other big penalties

Richard Childress Racing is appealing the penalties handed down against Ryan Newman and the No. 31 team for a rules infraction that occurred at Auto Club Speedway last month, NASCAR Vice President of Integrated Communications David Higdon confirmed on Thursday.

RCR requested a deferral of penalties until its appeal is heard by the sanctioning body. Higdon tweeted that NASCAR will defer the suspensions and fines but not points.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

Newman was penalized 75 points and his crew chief Luke Lambert was fined $125,000 among other penalties after NASCAR determined the team illegally altered air pressures in its tires during a March 22 event at Auto Club Speedway.
 
Following the Auto Club 400 and an audit of tires taken from four teams, NASCAR sent the tires an outside agency for further evaluation.

The 75-point loss dropped Newman from sixth to 26th in the points standings after six races. One of last year’s drivers in the Championship 4 round in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, Newman, 37, has four top-10 finishes this season.
 
Tire audits have been conducted after the last three NASCAR Sprint Cup Series events as rumors of teams illegally altering air pressures swirled through the garage. By allowing air to escape from tires as they heat up, more of the tire’s surface remains in contact with the race track, providing more grip consistently throughout a run.
 
According to the 2015 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series rulebook, "Any device, modification, or procedure to the tire or wheel, including the valve stem hardware, that is used to release pressure, beyond normal pressure adjustments, from the tire and/or inner shield, will not be permitted."
 
Penalties for such infractions are classified as P5 level by NASCAR, and in this case resulted in the loss of 75 championship driver and car owner points for Newman and car owner Richard Childress; a $125,000 fine and six-race suspension for Lambert; and six-race suspensions for team tire technician James Bender and team engineer Philip Surgen.
 
Lambert, Bender and Surgen have also been placed on probation through Dec. 31.
 
Sprint Cup Series Managing Director Richard Buck said Monday that teams were reminded of the severity of penalties for tire infractions during a meeting with crew chiefs on Friday at Martinsville Speedway.
 
"We generally have crew chief meetings where we will address topics and issues with crew chiefs, get information to them," Buck said. "And that was the case at Martinsville. We had several things that we addressed there, but one of the things was the tires."
 
"We reiterated to the garage area that it is very serious; our process has not changed. … We take that very seriously."
 
NASCAR took tires from several teams at Phoenix and again at Martinsville in addition to those taken at ACS. Those from ACS were believed to be the only ones sent to an outside source for further evaluation.
 
"We’ve been very clear that any modifications to race vehicle tires is an unacceptable practice and will not be tolerated," Steve O’Donnell, NASCAR executive vice president and chief racing development officer, said in regard to the penalties dealt to the No. 31 team.

NASCAR.com’s Kenny Bruce contributed to this report.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView toda

NASCAR Hall of Famer will compete in Off-Road Truck race

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live

NASCAR Hall of Fame driver Rusty Wallace will end a 10-year hiatus from competition in June when he takes part in this year’s Off-Road Truck Racing event at the X Games in Austin, Texas.

"I may be retired from driving, but that doesn’t mean I don’t have the itch to get back behind the wheel; I love to compete," Wallace said in a statement provided by Rusty Wallace, Inc.
 
"Plus, the X Games are just such a big deal. During my time (as a commentator) with ESPN, I watched the X Games a lot and really enjoyed them. Some of the world’s best athletes are there. So when the opportunity came to be a part of the event, there was no way I was going to say no."
 
The 1989 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion and winner of 55 Sprint Cup Series points races, Wallace retired from competition after the 2005 season. He was inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame in 2013, along with fellow drivers Buck Baker, Cotton Owens, Herb Thomas and noted crew chief Leonard Wood.
 
The 2015 X Games will be held June 4-7 at Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas. The Off-Truck Racing event is scheduled for June 7.
 
"It’s different than stock cars, that’s for sure, but at the end of the day, racing is racing," said Wallace. "I grew up racing motocross as a kid and as I moved into cars, I always enjoyed racing on rough, slippery race tracks, places where you had to have a lot of car control. That description definitely applies to this style of racing."
 
Wallace, 58, said he had spoken with former NASCAR driver and Off-Road Truck racer Robby Gordon about the opportunity and what he could expect. The two met earlier this week to give Wallace an idea of what was in store.
 
"(Gordon) was totally confident that I would be competitive in these vehicles," he said, "and even offered to be my coach. …
 
"I felt really comfortable. It was a total blast to drive."
 
But fun is only part of the reason behind the decision, he said.
 
"I’m not going down to Austin just to have fun. I’m going down there to bring home a medal."
 
Wallace won his NASCAR championship while driving for former drag racing champion and NASCAR car owner Raymond Beadle. The bulk of his career, however, was spent with team owner Roger Penske, with whom he won 37 points races.
 
Wallace’s final Sprint Cup win came at Martinsville Speedway in 2004.
 
ABC and ESPN will carry live coverage of the 2015 X Games.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

Tracks the latest to make safety enhancements ahead of events

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live

Michigan International Speedway and Bristol Motor Speedway announced Thursday that they will augment their use of impact-absorbing barriers before the first of two NASCAR weekends for each track this season.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

Both tracks plan to expand their use of Steel and Foam Energy Reduction (SAFER) barrier over existing concrete retaining walls. Bristol opens its doors for NASCAR on-track activity April 16-19; Michigan’s opening NASCAR race weekend is scheduled for mid-June.
 
Jerry Caldwell, executive vice president and general manager for Bristol Motor Speedway, said that the track has secured an additional 600 feet of SAFER barrier, which will completely cover the outside retaining wall at the .533-mile track. Caldwell said in a statement provided by the track that the construction was based on recommendations from parent company Speedway Motorsports Inc., and NASCAR.
 
"The safety of our fans and competitors continues to be a focal point for Bristol Motor Speedway," Caldwell said.
 
Officials at MIS, which ranks among the fastest tracks that NASCAR visits, said that the 2-mile speedway will add SAFER barrier to the inside retaining walls at pit road’s entrance and exit. The track will also install tire-pack barriers along the angled wall inside the D-shaped oval’s first turn.
 
Michigan also plans to pave the infield near pit road exit in an effort to slow skidding cars in the event of a crash. The newly paved area will also house an entrance and exit for the pace car.
 
"The safety of our guests, competitors and staff is our number one priority," said track president Roger Curtis. "We will continue to review our facility and provide updates as circumstances warrant."
 
Track officials said work will be completed before Michigan hosts the NASCAR Sprint Cup and XFINITY Series June 12-14. After the track’s second NASCAR weekend Aug. 14-16, the track plans to add SAFER barrier to the outside retaining walls on the frontstretch and backstretch, plus the wall separating pit road from the frontstretch infield grass, before the 2016 season.

Four-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Jeff Gordon, who hit a wall without a SAFER barrier at Atlanta Motor Speedway in the second race of the season, tweeted his approval of the addition at Bristol.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

Penalty for Newman, RCR another in a list of advantage-seeking

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live
RELATED: RCR appealing penalties

The effort to go faster than anyone else has landed Ryan Newman in the doghouse, the Sprint Cup Series driver stripped of 75 points by NASCAR for issues related to his team’s tires earlier this month at Auto Club Speedway.
 
In NASCAR’s realm, tire tampering is among the most severe of offenses. Any broom pusher in any race shop knows that much. You don’t mess with engines. You don’t mess with fuel. And you don’t mess with tires.
 
That’s not to say folks don’t, of course. The sport is full of examples of teams caught dealing from the bottom of the deck.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

More than 30 years ago, NASCAR nipped seven-time champion Richard Petty for an over-sized engine, among other things, after a victory at Charlotte Motor Speedway. The $35,000 fine and 104-point penalty that followed were record amounts for the time.
 
In 2007, findings of an illegal fuel additive nearly sunk Michael Waltrip Racing before it made its debut in Daytona. The move cost Waltrip 100 points and crew chief David Hyder $100,000.
 
And in 2010, toying with the valve stems cost Travis Kvapil 150 points and crew chief Steve Lane $100,000 and a 12-race suspension after a race at Pocono.
 
Like I said, serious stuff.
 
Manipulating the air pressures resulted in a level P5 penalty for Newman and the Richard Childress Racing No. 31 team.
 
The sanctioning body rates the seriousness of offenses on a scale of 1-6. A P1 infraction will send you to the back of the field; a P6 will send you to Siberia.
 
And anything above a P3 carries additional "multipliers" tacked on to the initial penalties. Siberia without a coat. In the dead of winter.
 
Because the Newman infraction was discovered after the completion of the race, those "multipliers" came into effect, and a 50-point deduction for Newman and car owner Richard Childress became 75 points. A $75,000 fine for crew chief Luke Lambert swelled to $125,000.
 
Get caught earlier, save money and points, I suppose.
 
Was Newman’s team the only one circumventing the tire rules, or the only one caught?
 
NASCAR took tires from teams after races at Phoenix, Auto Club and Martinsville — Stewart-Haas Racing’s Kevin Harvick (twice) and Kurt Busch (once); Team Penske‘s Joey Logano (twice); RCR’s Newman and Paul Menard (once each); as well as the teams of JTD Daugherty (AJ Allmendinger), Furniture Row Racing (Martin Truex Jr.) and Joe Gibbs Racing (Matt Kenseth).
 
All were examined. Only Newman’s failed under further scrutiny.
 
Say what you want about Harvick’s run of top-two finishes but the fact remains that no one’s car is dissected more closely than that of a race winner. Just ask six-time champ Jimmie Johnson and crew chief Chad Knaus — the pair practically had a standing date with NASCAR’s tech crew at the Research and Development Center during the No. 48 team’s run of dominance.
 
Rumors of skirting the tire rules have seemed to grow with each passing week this season, but at least one driver said crew chiefs were warned to leave well enough alone as far back as last year’s fall race at Phoenix.
 
Maybe some took the message to heart, and some didn’t.
 
Blame the new rules package? More things to tinker with or just different ones maybe. Speed can be found in all sorts of places these days in NASCAR, not just under the hood. That’s why the bigger stock-car teams invest heavily in laptops, spreadsheets and engineering degrees.
 
But wheels and tires haven’t changed. Swap four when you need ’em, and two when you’re in a hurry.
 
Just don’t monkey with the air pressures.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

Earnhardt explains broken shifter, team sticks together

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live

When Dale Earnhardt Jr‘s No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet SS got caught in a seven-car stack-up in Turn 2 on Lap 228, he and his team already were in the midst of a long day. So could have been excused if they decided to pack up and go home.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

But the driver and pit crew rallied, and Earnhardt was pleased with their efforts and happy to get back on track 47 laps down and fight for every point he could earn. The team improved from 39th to 36th, gaining valuable points that helped him keep pace in the point standings with winner Denny Hamlin in a tie for seventh.

Following a 14th-place start, Earnhardt was running fourth by Lap 50. A broken shifter dropped him as far as 38th by Lap 100. But he made it back to 20th place before the crash on Lap 228 sidelined him until his return at Lap 276.

"When you have those kinds of days, what’s important is that you get the car fixed and you go back out there," Earnhardt said on the "Dale Jr. Download" on Dirty Mo Radio. "And even though you’re 37th worrying about how you can be 36th, you’re still fighting, and you’re still trying and putting forth your best effort. It may seem pointless to worry about gaining a spot or two, but as a competitor, you have to find something to work for, some goal. Something has to matter.

"So it felt good to get back out there and keep digging. As a team, we have to stick together and try to go to the next race and put it behind you, and that’s the best way to do it. Get out there and do everything you can do, run every lap you can run and load up and go to the next race."

The broken shifter was the second for the No. 88 team in the last 12 races. Earnhardt suffered a similar problem last October during the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Earnhardt described how one problem led to a vibration that ultimately caused the shifter to break.

"We had some kind of issue I think with the driveshaft," Earnhardt said. "There was maybe like a little roller bearing or something in the universal joint fell out or came out, disappeared, disintegrated and created a real bad vibration.

"And that vibration is so bad that it actually will break the shifter. It’ll shake the shifter so bad, the shifter literally breaks right off, right on top of the transmission, and I think you guys saw that from the in-car, how we were having that problem. We put another shifter on the car, and it broke that one real quick. And then we put a third shifter on there that actually was a completely different model that held up.

"That had us in the back, but the guys were doing a great job, keeping the car on the lead lap and trying to get that changed. I felt like we needed to come behind the wall and change the driveline, and I’m glad we didn’t because we would have lost a lot of laps doing it. But I felt like that vibration was so bad that we weren’t going to ever get the shifter thing fixed."

Although he was ultimately disappointed with result, Earnhardt said his car, which returned to the track without a nose and resembled a Whelen Modified Tour vehicle, stayed fast like it was to start the day.

"The car was fast even with the nose tore off like it was," Earnhardt said. "We still were passing guys up into the top 20. Got to feel good about the speed we’ve had this year aside from Phoenix. The car has been pretty fast everywhere we’ve gone."

The crew’s determination combined with a competitive ride got him back on track and racing to the end of the 500 laps. Even though his Mooresville, North Carolina, home is a relatively short ride from Martinsville, Virginia, Earnhadt said it was important to finish what the team started last Sunday.

"We had a real good car and got it behind the wall, fixed it up, got back out there and kept digging," Earnhardt said. "That’s what you gotta do. I’ve had times when we’ve tore the car up and basically just packed it in and went home. And you don’t really know at the time, but once you get home and you’re bumming around the rest of the week about how you finished, there’s a part of you that feels a lot of remorse for not trying to do everything you could and run every lap you could run and fight for every position you could fight for. That’s a terrible feeling."

Following an off-weekend, Earnhardt returns to Texas Motor Speedway on the 15th anniversary of his first career premier series victory. It’s also marks a year since a 43rd-place finish that ended in a fireball on the frontstretch when he drove into the grass. But Earnhardt is optimistic he’ll have a result more like his win during his rookie campaign in 2000.

"I expect us to be quick," Earnhardt said. "If we keep showing up fast, we’ll eventually get us a win. We’re going to have a lot of fun running toward the front until we do."

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

Speedway adds 250 feet of tire barriers ahead of Duck Commander 500

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live

Texas Motor Speedway has finished a two-day installation project to add 250 feet of tire barriers ahead of the Duck Commander 500 (April 11, 7:30 p.m. ET, FOX).

The installation was done following the recommendations and guidance of NASCAR officials, according to the track.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

Tire bundles were added to five inner wall areas of the 1.5-mile oval. The locations, length of runs and general construction of the safety additions were per the instruction of NASCAR.

The inner wall at the pit lane exit was the most wide-ranging area with 115 feet of tire barriers added while the areas near the entrance to pit road, the jet truck staging area in Turn 1 and emergency vehicle cut-out areas in Turns 1 and 4 varied between 30 and 35 feet each. According to a track release, approximately 450 tires were used in constructing the barriers, which will serve to complement the existing and extensive SAFER barrier system that currently encompasses a majority of the walls at the track.

"NASCAR officials were here last Sunday and examined the speedway," Texas Motor Speedway President Eddie Gossage said in a release provided by the track. "We always follow their advice on safety matters, but they requested we only add 250 feet of tire barriers. Considering that the inside wall and outside walls total almost 16,000 feet, adding 250 feet of tire packs is a minor addition. To me, that means NASCAR found the track to be extremely safe."

Following Kyle Busch‘s hard crash into a wall without SAFER barrier at Daytona International Speedway during the NASCAR XFINITY Series opener in February, NASCAR and tracks have been working together to make safety enhancements. Drivers have also been vocal about wanting to see more SAFER barriers at facilities.

The track will also host the XFINITY Series O’Reilly Auto Parts 300 on April 10 (8:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1).

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

Duck Commander 500 will mark Moffitt’s sixth start in 2015; fourth with MWR

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live

Brett Moffitt will be back behind the wheel of the No. 55 Toyota for Michael Waltrip Racing at Texas Motor Speedway, the race team announced on its Twitter account Wednesday.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

Brian Vickers is out for the next three months as he takes blood thinners for a reoccurance of blood clots that were discovered last month. Vickers missed the first two races of 2015 while recovering from heart surgery in December, returned for two races, before missing the past two races due to reoccuring health issue.

Moffitt scored his best Sprint Cup finish driving in place for Vickers at Atlanta Motor Speedway in March. The eighth-place result stands as his lone top-10 finish in his career 12 Sprint Cup starts.

After making two starts in the No. 34 Ford for Front Row Motorsports at Las Vegas and Phoenix, Moffitt was back to fill-in for Vickers at Auto Club and Martinsville.

The 22-year-old driver has one career Cup start at Texas Motor Speedway, a 40th-place finish that came in last November’s Sprint Cup race at the 1.5-mile track.

The Duck Commander 500 is set for Saturday, April 11 at 7:30 p.m. ET with TV coverage on FOX.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today