Sprint Cup Series Managing Director Richard Buck’s post-race comments

Yeah, we got multiple reports over the radio and confirmed there was a piece of material, something, in the racing groove. So we went ahead and called the caution. By the time we called the caution, somebody hit it.

I don’t have it back yet, I don’t have the piece back yet. But we always ask the safety and cleanup crews to return that stuff. But there were multiple reports.

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Q: Regarding no caution after Greg Biffle spun on the frontstretch

Richard Buck: We always make our best effort. I mean, safety is number one. We always make our best effort to let it race back. We had well over a mile. The leaders were coming off of (Turn) 2. We have multiple people in the tower watching multiple things. We’re all communicating very quickly and at a high level.

We could see the cars coming off of 2. We were watching the frontstretch. Biffle got it started back up, got it turned around and headed off. We have two folks in the flagstand that were right there on top of it, so we had a bird’s eye view from their perspective that there was no debris there and we could let it come back and come back to a natural finish.
 
Q: When you say you had multiple reports, were they from drivers…

Richard Buck: It’s a process during the race. It’s pretty consistent. The driver will call it in, then we’ll check with our turn spotters. That’s heard over the radio, whatever the race control is, with a one or 10, so the teams know in case there is a piece of debris they need to know about for safety reasons. Then we’ll confirm it. We’ve got the pit open and the pit closed folks that are close to that area. We have the caution car. We have spotters on the backstretch and on the entrance to Turn 3.

We’ll go through our process quickly and make sure that we have a confirmation that there is debris, if we can identify the debris, where it’s at, if it’s anywhere in the racing groove.

As you know, this place, the racing groove’s all the way across. If it’s anywhere in the racing groove, we’ll have to go to the caution and go get it.
 
Q: Just to confirm so I understand, somebody hit it after it was called in?

Richard Buck: Yeah. Well, I don’t know. That piece should come back on one of the cleanup trucks because they go out there now. But it was reported multiple times as a piece of metal.
 
Q: One of your officials said they saw something but couldn’t tell exactly what it was.  How do you balance trying to find out what it is versus having to throw the caution for safety reasons?

Richard Buck: Safety’s number one. If there’s any question whatsoever, we’ll throw the caution. We want to identify it first, obviously, because there was a lot of paper flying around today, a lot of, you know, paper trash and plastic bags and those kind of things which circulate.

But we got definite confirmation on it that it was debris, actually that it was metal. It looked like a piece of metal.
 
Q: Obviously you don’t have an interest in the race. I’m sure you might be able to sympathize how much a little thing like that can change the whole course of the race. Are you cognizant of that when you make those kind of calls?

Richard Buck: No. It’s strictly a process that we go through. You know, we don’t have any favorites. We try to keep every emotion out of it. Safety’s number one. We have over 100 years worth of experience in the tower with (NASCAR President) Mike Helton, (NASCAR Senior Vice President Competition and Racing Development) Robin Pemberton, (NASCAR Managing Event Director) David Hoots, myself. Between us, we work very closely in a very dynamic way to identify the situation and look for the solution to it, then that solution is backed up by multiple layers. So we feel very, very confident about our actions.

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Manufacturer grabs first victory in 12-hour race in 50 years

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SEBRING, Florida — On an unseasonably hot, humid day and night — even for Florida — the No. 5 Action Express Racing Mustang Sampling Corvette DP team remained cool and collected, taking the overall victory Saturday in the 63rd Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring Fueled by Fresh From Florida.

It was the first overall win for a Chevrolet in 50 years — since a Chevy-powered Chaparral won in 1965. Coincidentally, the Chaparral was the featured car at this year’s race, and that winning car was on hand.
 
The race began at 10:40 a.m., ended at 10:40 p.m., long enough for the brutal 3.74-mile road course to dash the dreams of many of the favorites in the 43-car field.
 
The Action Express Racing car, driven by Joao Barbosa, Christian Fittipaldi and Sebastien Bourdais, is a Prototype, the fastest of the four classes that race at Sebring. The team finished second in the 2015 TUDOR United SportsCar Championship season opener, the Rolex 24 At Daytona, and won the 2014 season championship. Just as impressive: Since the TUDOR Championship series began at Daytona in 2014, the Action Express team has finished every race, every lap, totaling 10,415 miles.
                                  
The team, led by former NASCAR crew chief Gary Nelson, prides itself in executing. "Always, we are trying to improve, no matter how well we do," said Fittipaldi. "We learn to minimize mistakes, and that pays off at the end of the season."
 
It was an all-Corvette podium, as second overall, and second in the Prototype class was the No. 10 Wayne Taylor Racing Konica Minolta Corvette DP, followed by the No. 90 VisitFlorida.com Corvette DP.
 
Finishing first in the Prototype Challenge (PC) class, and sixth overall, was the No. 52 car of PR1/Mathiasen Motorsports car driven by Mike Guasch, Andrew Palmer and Tom Kimber-Smith, which also won the class at Daytona. In second was the CORE autosport team, followed by the Performance Tech Motorsports team. The PC cars are essentially all the same, using ORECA chassis and Chevrolet V-8 engines. The winning team had a lot of confidence before the event: "We came in thinking, ‘This is our race to lose," Guasch said.
 
The other two classes are based on production cars — the GT Le Mans (GTLM) class cars are slightly faster, and more expensive, than the GT Daytona (GTD) cars. And at the end, it appeared no one wanted to win the two classes, as the lead changed dramatically several times in the final few minutes.
 
GTLM is arguably the most hotly contested class, because the entries typically have the backing of manufacturers including Porsche, Chevrolet, BMW, Aston Martin and Ferrari.
 
At the checkered flag, a Chevrolet Corvette C7.R — a completely different car from the Prototype Corvettes — earned bragging rights in GTLM with a win by the No. 3 car of Jan Magnussen, Antonio Garcia and Ryan Briscoe. A close second was the No. 62 Risi Ferrari 458 Italia, which also won the DEKRA Green Challenge award, given to the cleanest, fastest and most efficient car in the class. In third was the No. 17 Team Falken Tire Porsche 911 RSR.
 
"It was a massive fight every lap," said Garcia.
 
"You couldn’t ask for a better start to the year," Briscoe said. "We ran the first 36 hours of the season without a problem."
 
GT Daytona (GTD) was the largest class with 14 starters, and taking the victory in the class was the Team Seattle/Alex Job Racing Porsche 911 GT America, driven by Ian James, Mario Farnbacher and Alex Riberas. An Alex Job Racing car lost a chance at a win last year due to an officiating error, so it was a sweet return to victory lane for the veteran owner on his home track.
 
Farnbacher drove the closing stint, and the Porsche was suffering from front brake problems. Near the end, he overshot a corner, drove into the dirt, and lost the lead. "I thought it was over," he said. He was passed by the No. 33 Dodge Viper of Riley Motorsports — a car that burned to the ground in last year’s race, but was restored — and it led the class until the final five minutes, when it retired after overheating, giving the lead back to Farnbacher.
 
Finishing second was the No. 007 Aston-Martin Vantage of TRG-AMR, driven by Christina Nielsen, James Davison and Brandon Davis. Third was the No. 63 Scuderia Corse Ferrari 458 Italia. The No. 33 Dodge Viper of Riley Motorsports — a car that burned to the ground in last year’s race, but was restored — was leading the class until the final five minutes, when it retired after overheating, giving the lead back to Farnbacher..
 
Among those making an early exit was the second-fastest qualifier, the No. 1 Extreme Speed Tequila Patron Honda HPD ARX, which driver Ryan Dalziel drove to an early lead. Its sister car, the No. 2, started eighth and also retired early. The No. 1 had steering problems, the No. 2 lost engine turbo boost.
 
Also out early after a crash was the No. 60 Honda HPD Ligier JS P2 of Michael Shank Racing, which qualified fourth. Both Mazda SKYACTIV diesel Prototypes fell out long before the end, one with a broken drive belt, the other with overheating issues, as the cars finished 38th and 39th. The innovative DeltaWing had issues all day, until a broken suspension finally sent the team to the paddock for good.
 
There were multiple incidents during the race, but the scariest moment occurred on pit road, when two Prototype cars running side-by-side collided, sending one into Kevin Fox, a crewman for the No. 50 Fifty Plus Racing Riley BMW Prototype. Fox went flying, landing hard on the concrete, but was able to walk to the ambulance. He was evaluated and released at a Sebring hospital. Also making a quick trip to the track’s care center was Oliver Gavin, who crashed the No. 4 GTLM Chevrolet Corvette C7.R with about two hours to go. He was evaluated and released.
 
If you missed the Twelve Hours of Sebring, a two-hour highlights show will air Sunday morning from 8 to 10 a.m. on FOX Sports 1. The TUDOR Championship moves from Sebring to California for the third round of the series on April 18 for the Tequila Patron Sports Car Showcase at Long Beach.

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Denny Hamlin and Matt Kenseth: 99 laps led, two finishes outside top 25

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FONTANA, Calif. — Denny Hamlin went into Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Auto Club 400 at Auto Club Speedway looking for redemption.

But what he found was ill-timed misfortune. 

After leading 56 laps, the second-highest total of the race, Hamlin suffered a pit road penalty on Lap 186 when an uncontrolled tire left his pit box, dropping the Joe Gibbs Racing driver from third to 30th.

"We worked our way up to the top five and then the top three and then had a penalty," Hamlin said on pit road following his 28th-place finish. "You just can’t come back from that. There ain’t nobody in the field with a fast enough car to come back from that. We had (a penalty) at an inopportune time and it just led to a bad finish and we blew up at the end, so that topped everything off."

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Last week at Phoenix International Raceway, Hamlin received a pit road penalty on Lap 68 for a crewmember being over the wall too soon, and after the Virginia native received the penalty this week he came over his radio to express his displeasure. 

"This better not be two weeks in a row, I’m telling you," Hamlin radioed to his team. "We can’t catch a (expletive) break."

Hamlin had high hopes of shaking his California calamities after fracturing his L1 vertebra in 2013 on a last-lap wreck when battling Joey Logano — an injury that sidelined him for the four races that followed. And last year, Hamlin qualified 13th at Fontana, but had to be replaced in his No. 11 Toyota when he experienced vision issues that was later found to be caused from a piece of metal lodged into his eye. 

Hamlin wasn’t the only JGR driver who experienced pit road mishaps, either. Both the No. 20 of Matt Kenseth and the No. 19 of Carl Edwards also saw setbacks.

After leading 43 laps, Kenseth went to pit road as the leader on Lap 185 and left with four tires and a damaged axle when the jack dropped, resulting in a mechanical failure and a 31st-place finish. He had logged two pit stops of fewer than 11 seconds before that incident.

"I let the clutch out to go and the axle broke," Kenseth explained. "I don’t know why. I didn’t do anything different than we ever do, so it just broke.

"I don’t think that’s (bad) luck. An axle breaking is either a faulty part or not the right part or not the gear ratio or — there’s usually a reason. We busted one last year — somebody did, one of our cars — and I don’t know that we ever figured out why and then we just broke another one, so it’s certainly something you’ve got to get a handle on. You can’t break parts. Nobody breaks parts anymore, so you can’t afford to do it obviously."

Edwards was penalized on Lap 200 (the race was extended to 209 laps due to two attempts at a green-white-checkered finish) for being too fast on pit road, but he was able to work his way back up from the rear to finish 13th. 

"That was a hard-fought race," Edwards said. "I got a speeding penalty toward the end and put us back in the back and made it back up to 13th. A great group effort by my guys with the backup car. Even though we couldn’t get a win, to put that effort forth was huge."

Coincidentally, the only JGR driver who didn’t have trouble on pit road spun out on the track. David Ragan, who is still filling in for an injured Kyle Busch in the No. 18, brought out the first caution of the day when Jeff Gordon took the air off Ragan’s Toyota. Ragan ultimately finished 18th. 

Through five races none of the JGR drivers are in the top 10 in points. Kenseth is currently the highest-running driver in the team sitting 13th in the driver standings with Hamlin and David Ragan following in 14th and 15th, respectively. JGR newcomer Edwards is close in 17th. 

Next week, the Sprint Cup Series heads to Martinsville Speedway, where Hamlin has earned four wins, nine top-five and 14 top-10 finishes in 18 career Cup starts.

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Driver to be on blood thinners for next three months

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RELATED: Vickers sidelined with recurrence of blood clots

FONTANA, Calif. — Brian Vickers, driver of the No. 55 Michael Waltrip Racing Toyota, addressed the media on Sunday at Auto Club Speedway for the first time since team owner Michael Waltrip announced Friday that Vickers will not race in the Sprint Cup Series Auto Club 400 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX).

Vickers explained that he will have to be on blood thinners for three months because of recurring blood clots that were discovered on his lungs in a CT scan on Thursday. The driver said he cannot drive while he’s on blood thinners.

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"I have not been on a blood thinner since the end of 2013," Vickers said in a press conference on Sunday.

While Vickers gave no specific timetable for his return, he said he remains hopeful about resuming his racing career and is far from crossing that bridge.

Vickers has been dealing with frequent blood clots in his leg and lungs that caused him to miss the first two races of the year while recovering from heart surgery he had in December. NASCAR kept Vickers Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup-eligible. This is the fourth time since 2010 that Vickers has missed had to sit out due to medical reasons.

"I’ve been told a thousand times I’ll never race again," Vickers said. "And I’ve raced the last two weeks."

In the only two races that Vickers participated in this season (Las Vegas, Phoenix) he finished 15th and 41st, respectively.

Waltrip explained on Friday when the news was announced that he had spent time with Vickers in New Orleans recently and that when he last saw his driver, there was no indication that Vickers was experiencing health issues. It wasn’t until 1 a.m. local time on Friday that the MWR team received a call from Vickers detailing his situation.

Filling in for Vickers in the No. 55 will be 22-year-old Brett Moffitt. This will be Moffitt’s first time ever racing on the 2-mile speedway in California. Moffitt had been piloting the No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford for David Ragan as he filled in for injured No. 18 Kyle Busch. NASCAR XFINITY Series driver Chris Buescher will be behind the wheel of the No. 34 Sprint Cup car.

When asked if the North Carolina native is worried that his medical condition could push him into an early retirement he responded with confidence.

"Am I worried? Yeah, of course," Vickers said. "Have I given up hope? No.

"Whatever happens next I couldn’t have been happier to be in that car for the last two weeks," Vickers said.

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Three-time champion scores best finish of season in Auto Club 400

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FONTANA, Calif. — A 14th-place finish for the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 14 Chevrolet wouldn’t normally feel good or elicit smiles. But it’s the best showing for Tony Stewart this year, and the three-time champ was at least feeling encouraged when he climbed out his car following Sunday’s Auto Club 400 at Auto Club Speedway.

A late-race gamble not to pit during a caution period that came out on the last scheduled lap put him in second place just behind another race gambler, Jeff Gordon. And while they were both promptly passed on that start and again on a second green-white-checkered overtime a couple laps later — the end result for Stewart was progress.

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"We just had to do the opposite of what everyone else did," Stewart said. "It wasn’t the best-case scenario for us, but we had to take a chance."

Two of Stewart’s teammates, Kevin Harvick and Kurt Busch, were challenging for the win Sunday, ultimately finishing second and third, respectively. It’s the eighth consecutive time Harvick has finished first or second — dating back to the final three races of his 2014 Sprint Cup Series championship season.

Harvick leads the standings by a hefty 28 points over Joey Logano, giving Stewart the official lead in the owner standings.

But when it comes to his own results behind the wheel, Stewart has struggled this year. The 14th-place finish is only the second top-30 effort of the season and moves him up four positions in the standings to 32nd. He still trails Busch, despite having five starts to Busch’s two.

Stewart’s previous best finish of the year was 30th at Atlanta three weeks ago. He finished 33rd and 39th in the last two races at Las Vegas and Phoenix, respectively.

On Sunday, however, Stewart’s No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Mobil 1 Chevrolet ran among the top-15 for nearly half of the race (95 of the 209 laps). And Stewart thought it would have been a legitimate top-10 car before a brush with the No. 78 Chevy driven by Martin Truex Jr.

"He (Truex) had a problem with someone else and I paid the price for it," Stewart said motioning toward the middle of his front hood which sported a large area of black duct tape.

"I wasn’t delusional that we were going to win the race or anything but if he’s got a problem with someone else and got his hand out the window changing three lanes and (he) drives back across punching a hole in my nose."

But, Stewart added with a slight smile, "we’re gaining on it. We got to where we were sniffing the edge of the top-10 anyway all day. We’re gaining on it a little chunk at a time. We didn’t need to get it all today anyway.

"But this is a big gain for us for sure."

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Defending series champion extends top-two streak to eight races

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FONTANA, Calif. — Things are going pretty well when people wonder if you are disappointed by a runner-up finish.

Such is Kevin Harvick‘s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season.

The reigning Sprint Cup Series champion led 34 laps, contended for the win and ultimately finished second in Sunday’s Auto Club 400 at Auto Club Speedway. He didn’t hoist the track’s cool surfboard trophy and just missed sweeping the three West Coast races by 7-tenths of a second — Sunday’s margin of victory.

All-time consecutive top-two finishes

Streak Driver Year
11 Richard Petty 1975
10 Richard Petty 1971
10 Richard Petty 1967
9 Richard Petty 1964
8 Kevin Harvick 2014-15
8 David Pearson 1968

But Harvick — who won at Las Vegas and Phoenix — did extend his streak of finishing first or second to eight consecutive races dating back to last season. The record is 11 set by Richard Petty in 1975.

"I’m not disappointed at all," Harvick said Sunday. "I’m just glad to be a part of such a good race there. I’m really happy that all the fans got to come out and see a great finish to a great day.

"I’m just really proud of everybody on our Jimmy John’s/Budweiser team. You could have flipped a coin as to what the right strategy there was at the end with tires. Just proud of Rodney Childers (crew chief) and the pit crew and everybody for just having a solid day."

Another solid day.

Harvick trailed his Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Kurt Busch by less than a second in the closing laps, when a caution came out for track debris on the final lap.

Harvick got two tires on his No. 4 Chevrolet and race winner Brad Keselowski got four during the ensuing caution. Another yellow flag a lap later forced a second green-white-checkered restart and Keselowski was able to get around both Harvick and his SHR teammate Kurt Busch, leading only the last lap for the win.

"Well Rodney (Childers, crew chief) he has a lot of information up there and there were so many cars on the lead lap that you just didn’t want to get buried in there," Harvick said of the decision to get two tires.

"If you get buried in the middle of the field and you don’t get a good restart, you are just going to have a tough time making up ground. We won the championship because of a pit call and didn’t win a race today.

"I don’t think it was because of a pit call, just dumb luck and how many times we had to restart. All-in-all just really proud of everybody."

"You just never know how the strategy is going to work out," Harvick said. "You are kind of on both sides of the fence there as to what you should or shouldn’t do. If the second restart doesn’t come about then two tires is the right call. But you just never know."

The effort extended Harvick’s championship lead to 28 points over Team Penske‘s Joey Logano headed into next weekend’s STP 500 (Sunday, March 29, 1 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1) at NASCAR’s smallest track, the 0.526-mile Martinsville Speedway.

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Kevin Harvick finishes second for eighth straight top-two finish

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FONTANA, Calif. — After Sunday’s Auto Club 400, there may be a warrant issued for Brad Keselowski.
 
After all, the driver of the No. 2 Team Penske Ford committed his own version of "Grand Theft Auto" at Auto Club Speedway — he stole an entire race.

All-time consecutive top-two finishes

Streak Driver Year
11 Richard Petty 1975
10 Richard Petty 1971
10 Richard Petty 1967
9 Richard Petty 1964
8 Kevin Harvick 2014-15
8 David Pearson 1968

Benefitting from a four-tire call on the last lap of regulation and two opportune cautions that extended the event nine laps beyond its scheduled distance, Keselowski passed polesitter Kurt Busch on the final lap (209) and pulled away to win his first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race of the season.
 
Trying to make one last desperation run at Keselowski, Busch scraped the wall in the final corner at the two-mile track, allowing Stewart-Haas Racing teammate Kevin Harvick to pass him for the runner-up spot.
 
Keselowski arrived at the finish line .711 seconds ahead of Harvick, simultaneously taking the checkered flag and leading his first lap of the day. The 2012 champion, who led the series with six victories last year, recorded his first victory at Fontana — and his first finish higher than 18th — and the 17th of his career.
 
"At the end, we caught some breaks, made the most of the breaks we caught," Keselowski said. "That was kind of the story of our race. It looked like we were probably going to finish sixth or seventh. That yellow came out (on Lap 185 for debris). We came in and pitted and drove up a little bit, then caught another yellow. Now what do we do?
 
"So (crew chief) Paul (Wolfe) made the call to come down pit road and put four tires on. When he said that, I said, ‘This can either go really good or really bad.’ Didn’t know which one it was going to be. Some guys stayed out, some guys took two tires, all different types of strategies on the restart.
          
"We were able to find our way through the lanes and get to the front there, somehow end up in Victory Lane leading the last lap. Kind of a race car driver’s dream. This is one we’re going to sit back and go ‘Wow!’ for a while."

Keselowski can call it a break, but it was theft, pure and simple. Aside from a stretch before the halfway point where Denny Hamlin got out front in clean air and led 56 laps, the cars of Busch and Harvick dominated the race, leading 65 and 34 laps, respectively.

But Keselowski’s Wolfe made what turned out to be the winning call on Lap 200, after NASCAR called the sixth caution of the race because of debris in Turn 4. Opting for four new tires, where the vast majority of the field took right sides only for track position, Keselowski restarted 18th on the first attempt at a green-white-checkered-flag finish on Lap 203.
 
The No. 2 Fusion quickly moved forward. When Kyle Larson lost his bumper cover during a melee on the restart, NASCAR threw caution No. 7, and by then, Keselowski was already up to seventh place.
 
Using the new tires to full advantage, Keselowski shot into second place like a lightning bolt after a green-white-checkered restart on Lap 208. As Greg Biffle crashed on the frontstretch on the white-flag lap, Keselowski rocketed past Busch off Turn 2 and pulled away for the win.
 
Busch came home third, followed by Richard Childress Racing teammates Paul Menard and Ryan Newman. Dale Earnhardt Jr., Joey Logano, Martin Truex Jr., Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon completed the top 10.
 
Having won at Las Vegas and Phoenix in the previous two races, Harvick fell one position shy of completing a sweep of NASCAR’s three-race West Coast swing, but he could commiserate with Busch, who was trying to win for the first time this season after serving a three-race suspension.
 
"I hate that the 41 (Busch) wasn’t able to hold on for the win there," said Harvick, who posted his eighth straight top-two finish, dating to last year, and extended his series lead over Logano to 28 points. "I would have loved to see those guys get their first win.
 
"But you never know how the strategy is going to play out here. There’s so many cars on the lead lap, you didn’t want to get buried in there (by taking four tires). One little bad move for Brad, he would have been stuck in the middle of that traffic. But it all worked out for him. The second restart, he was in prime position up on the outside with fresh tires."
 
Busch was disappointed but philosophical about the result.
 
"It was a solid day," Busch said. "I don’t know what we could have done different. 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. That last restart, I just didn’t get the job done, and I just got out muscled by Keselowski."

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Get the on-track times for everything at the Virginia short track

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

All times are ET

SUNDAY, MARCH 29:

ON TRACK
— 1 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series STP 500, FOX Sports 1 (500 laps, 263 miles) (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 10 a.m.: Joe Gibbs
— 10:30 a.m.: Carl Edwards
— 4:45 p.m. (approx.): Post-NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race

FRIDAY, MARCH 27:

ON TRACK
CANCELED: 10-11:45 a.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice, FOX Sports 1
— Approx 2:05 p.m.-2:50 p.m. ET: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 3-5:30 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series final practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 6:10 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 9 a.m.: Tyler Reddick
— 10:30 a.m.: Alan Gustafson and Chad Knaus
— 11 a.m.: Martinsville sponsor announcement
— 11:40 a.m.: Dale Earnhardt Jr.
— noon ET: Jeff Gordon
— 3:30 p.m.: Denny Hamlin
— 7:10 p.m. (approx.): Post-NASCAR Sprint Cup Series qualifying
— 7:45 p.m. (approx.): Chase Elliott

GARAGECAM (Watch live)
CANCELED
: Camping World Truck Series

SATURDAY, MARCH 28:

ON TRACK
— 10 a.m.-10:55 a.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 11:15 a.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 1-1:50 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, FOX Sports 2 (Get results)
— 2:30 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Kroger 250, FOX Sports 1 (250 laps, 131.5 miles) (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 8:30 a.m.: Aric Almirola
— 9 a.m.: Paul Menard
— 4:45 p.m. (approx.): Post-NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race

GARAGECAM (Watch live)
— Saturday, 9:30 a.m.: Sprint Cup Series

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Get full lineup of NASCAR programming for the week

RELATED: See the full weekend schedule

All times ET

Monday, March 23
3 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Auto Club 400 (re-air), FOX Sports 1
10 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Auto Club 400 (re-air), FOX Sports 1
2 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Auto Club 400 (re-air), FOX Sports 2
4 p.m., The List: Greatest Finishes (re-air), NBC Sports Network
4:30 p.m., The List: Rookie Seasons (re-air), NBC Sports Network
5 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBC Sports Network
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2

Tuesday, March 24
10 a.m., NASCAR XFINITY Series Drive4Clots.com 300 (re-air), FOX Sports 1
5 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBC Sports Network
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2

Wednesday, March 25
4:30 p.m., The List: Iconic Cars (re-air), NBC Sports Network
5 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBC Sports Network
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2

Thursday, March 26
5 p.m., NASCAR America Live, NBC Sports Network
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
6:30 p.m., The List: Memorable Moments (re-air) NBC Sports Network
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2

Friday, March 27
10 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice, FOX Sports 1
Noon, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1
1:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice, FOX Sports 1
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition, FOX Sports 1
3 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series final practice, FOX Sports 1
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1

Saturday, March 28
8 a.m., FOX Sports One on One: Kevin Harvick (re-air), FOX Sports 1
8:30 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying (re-air), FOX Sports 1
10 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1
11:30 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1
12:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub: Weekend Edition, FOX Sports 2
1 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, FOX Sports 1
2 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Setup, FOX Sports 1
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Kroger 250, FOX Sports 1
5 p.m., The 10: Greatest Truck Series Moments (re-air), FOX Sports 1

Sunday, March 29
3 a.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Kroger 250 (re-air), FOX Sports 1
5:30 a.m., The 10: Greatest Truck Series Moments (re-air), FOX Sports 1
10 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying (re-air), FOX Sports 1
11:30 a.m., NASCAR Race Day, FOX Sports 1
1 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series STP 500, FOX Sports 1
3:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Auto Club 400, FOX Deportes
6 p.m., NASCAR Masters of the Clock: The Legend of Martinsville, FOX Sports 1

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