California native picks up his first XFINITY win at Auto Club

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live
RELATED: Full race results

FONTANA, Calif. — It’s about time to start reserving a spot on the NASCAR podium for Kevin Harvick.
 
With a dominating victory in Saturday’s Drive4Clots.com 300 NASCAR XFINITY Series race, Harvick won his second race of the season, his first at Auto Club Speedway and the 46th of his career, third-most all-time.
 
Incredibly, Harvick scored his 28th consecutive top-10 in the XFINITY Series, dating to 2013. With two victories and two seconds in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series this year to go with two wins and a third in the XFINITY Series, Harvick has recorded seven podium finishes in seven starts in both series combined.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

“I’m just a lucky guy to be piloting really fast cars,” Harvick said in Victory Lane. “We’ve just got to keep riding the wave.”
 
It doesn’t seem to matter whether Harvick is driving his No. 4 Sprint Cup car for Stewart-Haas Racing or the No. 88 Chevrolet he drove to victory for JR Motorsports on Saturday. Once he got to the front from his sixth-place starting position (taking the lead for the first time after a restart on Lap 38), he stayed there, leading 100 of the 150 laps and giving up the top spot only during cycles of green-flag pit stops.
 
JR Motorsports car owner Dale Earnhardt Jr., who competes against Harvick at NASCAR’s highest level, hasn’t been surprised by Harvick’s dominance in both series this year.
 
“They’ve got something figured out,” Earnhardt said. “Kevin’s an amazing driver. He’s really focused, and his work outside the car helps him inside the car and helps his team… It don’t last forever, so you’ve got to enjoy it while it’s happening.
 
“Sooner or later, what they know will be common knowledge, and somebody will be in search of the next advantage — and find it. But they’ve got it right now.”
 
Harvick finished 3.317 seconds — roughly three football fields — ahead of runner-up Brendan Gaughan, who moved from eighth to second after the final restart of the race on Lap 122.
 
There were three cautions in the race. Trailing Harvick by more than three seconds in the closing laps, Gaughan was praying for a fourth.
 
“I love the fact that I’m pissed off at being second,” Gaughan said. “I love my restarts. My restart got us there… Any time you finish second to Kevin Harvick, come on, but — I don’t care if we would have finished fifth — I would have loved a shot at it. I know we’re pretty good on restarts.
 
“I would have loved one shot at a restart, just to see if I still had something for him.”
 
But the caution never came, and Gaughan had to settle for second. Polesitter Erik Jones ran third, followed by defending series champion Chase Elliott and Chris Buescher.
 
Ty Dillon finished 14th and retained the series lead by five points over Buescher, with Elliott 15 points back in third.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

Will start alongside Brian Scott in Drive4Clots.com 300 (4 p.m. ET, FS1)

RESULTS: Full lineup

Joe Gibbs Racing driver Erik Jones picked up his first career XFINITY Series pole, topping all three rounds of qualifying Saturday at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Jones’ best speed of 178.288 mph in the final round was enough to top the field of 12 drivers who advanced past the first two rounds. Brian Scott was the next fastest at 177.686 mph and will start alongside Jones’ No. 20 Toyota on front row.

Denny Hamlin, driving the No. 54 JGR Toyota for the injured Kyle Busch, will start third alongside Team Penske‘s Brad Keselowski in the second row.

Kyle Larson, the defending race-winner, will start 11th after running at a clip of 175.050 mph.

Defending series champion Chase Elliott did not advance to the final round of qualifying and will start 13th alongside Chris Buescher.

For the second day in a row, on-track activity was halted due to a driver’s car leaking oil on the track. After Mike Bliss dropped fluid during yesterday’s second practice session, promptly spinning out both Ryan Reed and Kyle Larson, it was Derrike Cope whose No. 70 engine blew up during qualifying.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

See where your favorite driver will pit for Saturday’s race (4 p.m. ET, FS1)

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live

The pit stall assignments are out for Saturday’s Drive4Clots.com 300 at Auto Club Speedway (4 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1). With his first career pole position in the NASCAR XFINITY Series, Erik Jones has chosen the pit stall closest to the exit of pit road.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Jones, who is coming off his first top-five finish in the XFINITY Series, will have an opening in front of him on pit road and he is not the only driver to have that luxury.

Brian Scott (starting second) and Denny Hamlin (starting third) also have openings in front of them on pit road.

Brendan Gaughan (starting eighth) chose the pit stall closest to the entrance of pit road at the 2-mile track.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

Coors Light Pole Award winner also topped Friday’s lone practice

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live
RELATED: Practice 2 results

Kurt Busch continued his reign as the fastest at Fontana, topping Saturday’s opening practice session for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series with a fast lap of 187.115 mph.

Busch will be making just his second start since NASCAR reinstated him from a suspension that caused him to miss the opening three races of the 2015 season.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

The Stewart-Haas Racing driver has shown plenty of speed out of the gate this weekend as he topped Friday’s lone practice session and also scored the Coors Light Pole Award for Sunday’s Auto Club 400 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX).

Jimmie Johnson (184.247 mph), David Ragan (184.237 mph), Ryan Newman (183.969 mph) and Brian Scott (183.960 mph) rounded out the top five from the 55-minute practice session.

Martin Truex Jr. (183.814 mph), Brad Keselowski (183.594 mph), AJ Allmendinger (183.510 mph), Kevin Harvick (183.416 mph) and Casey Mears (183.351 mph) placed sixth through 10th in the session.

Harvick, who qualified for a spot on the front row next to his SHR teammate Busch, is looking to sweep the three-race West Coast swing with a win at Fontana.

FINAL PRACTICE | Results

Another Auto Club Speedway practice produced the same result we have seen at the top all weekend with Kurt Busch once again leading the way with a fast lap of 184.971 mph.

The 36-year-old driver topped all three practice sessions at the 2-mile track leading into Sunday’s Auto Club 400 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX). The veteran driver scored a third-place finish at the California track last year, but has just one win at the venue, which came in 2003.

Paul Menard (183.885 mph), Kevin Harvick (183.220 mph), Casey Mears (183.146 mph) and Jimmie Johnson (182.992 mph) placed second through fifth in the 55-minute final practice session.

The Chevrolet dominance of the practice leaderboard extended to spots six and seven, with Martin Truex Jr. (182.783 mph) and Ryan Newman (182.699 mph) occupying those slots.

Team Penske teammates Joey Logano (182.348 mph) and Brad Keselowski (182.292 mph) were the top Fords on the board, placing eighth and ninth for the session, respectively.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. rounded out the top 10 with a lap of 182.099 mph.

David Ragan, who qualified fourth and is making his fourth start filling in for the injured Kyle Busch, was the highest-placing Toyota in the final practice, coming in 12th.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

All three Roush Fenway drivers fail to advance out of first round of qualifying

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live | Full starting lineup

FONTANA, Calif. — Jack Roush stood by the Auto Club Speedway pit wall late Friday afternoon as confused as anyone why none of this three Fords could advance past even the first round of Sprint Cup Series qualifying.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr.’s 27th-place effort was the best of the organization here, with teammates Greg Biffle and Trevor Bayne 29th and 36th fastest, respectively.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

"Yes, I’m disappointed," Roush said. "I thought we were hitting on something after Atlanta and Las Vegas.

"But we have ample time to test and work on this tomorrow in practice and I’m confident we’ll get it straightened out."

Biffle, the veteran of Roush Fenway Racing‘s three drivers, didn’t sugarcoat his frustration. He has only one top-10 start this season, but that’s highest among the team.

"This is unacceptable,"’ Biffle said of his No. 16 Ford’s 29th place effort Friday.

"We’re dying a slow death. We need to start showing up for the weekend closer to where we need to be."

His teammate Bayne has consistently fared worse with only one start (29th at Atlanta) better than 35th.

"We’ve been working really hard. It’s not a lack at all from my guys," Bayne said. "We just haven’t qualified well at all this year as a group, have been slower on our fast runs. In the race we can run top-15 speeds, the problem with qualifying so far back is the leaders are in clean air we have to come from so far back you go a lap down early and you can never get it back.

"That’s been a real struggle for us, qualifying. But we’ll figure it out.

"It’s hard not to get frustrated but at the same time, we’re heads down and digging. I’m not getting down on my guys or Roush Fenway as a group. I know we’ve got better things to come. We’ve got to put better effort into qualifying.

"I would be more frustrated if I was the only car struggling. We’re all grouped together, we just need to be 30 spots higher."

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

Joe Gibbs Racing driver was 11th in opening session

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live

FONTANA, Calif. — Carl Edwards will go to a backup car for Friday afternoon’s Sprint Cup Series qualifying at Auto Club Speedway ahead of Sunday’s Auto Club 400 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX).

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

Edwards’ No. 19 Toyota hit the wall exiting Turn 4 with about five minutes remaining in the practice session as he was making a mock qualifying run. He had recorded the 11th fastest practice speed despite running only nine laps.

"We went from a 12-inch to a 6-inch sub pretty quick," Edwards said after the practice accident. "I tried to save it — I got a little bit loose off — and I tried to save it and that was a mistake. I had a ton of throttle and the lap was going really well coming off Turn 4. It got a little bit loose and I was like, ‘Man, I’m not going to hit the fence,’ and I thought, ‘I should lock it down.’ Right there I was thinking ‘Lock it down,’ and I thought, ‘Nah, I’ll save it,’ and that was not the right decision.

"Anyway, the guys — I don’t know if we can use this engine and keep our qualifying spot or what. The guys have a lot of work in front of them. I hate to do that. I think we were having a pretty good lap there."

The team was able to put the primary motor into the backup car.

Edwards won here in 2008 and has 14 top-10 finishes in 17 starts. He comes into the Fontana race 21st in the 2015 driver standings and finished the practice 11th on the leaderboard.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

Brett Moffitt will pilot No. 55 Toyota at Auto Club

FONTANA, Calif. — Looking understandably forlorn, Michael Waltrip explained Friday morning that his driver Brian Vickers will be out of the Michael Waltrip Racing team’s No. 55 Toyota this weekend at Auto Club Speedway after experiencing "a reoccurrence of blood clots" and said he did not have a timetable for Vickers return.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

Brett Moffitt, 22, will steer the car this weekend — his first time ever turning at lap at the 2-mile speedway — while Vickers begins blood-thinning medication which prevents him from racing.

"First and foremost our thoughts are with Brian and his family,” Waltrip said. "He isn’t just our race car driver, he is our friend and we know the NASCAR community will continue to rally around Brian.

Waltrip said he spent time with Vickers in New Orleans this week before they all travelled to California in preparation for Sunday’s Auto Club 400 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX). The team received a call at 1 a.m. local time Friday from Vickers relaying the situation, and he is still in California under the care of doctors. Waltrip said that when he last saw his driver, there was no indication there was a problem.

"Obviously he was disappointed in the results, but Brian has a lot of things in perspective,” Ty Norris, executive vice president of business development and general manager of Michael Waltrip Racing, said. "He was aware of the issue, thought he knew what it was and it was confirmed."

Waltrip reminded that "the situation is very fluid and it’s new information," noting that no plans have been made beyond this weekend. He did say, however, that Moffitt, who finished eighth filling in for Vickers at Atlanta, would be the go-to driver as a replacement.

"For the foreseeable future, Brett’s definitely our guy,” Waltrip said.

Vickers missed the first two races of the year while recovering from heart surgery in December and NASCAR kept him Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup-eligible. Waltrip said he has not spoken with NASCAR yet to see how this setback affects his eligibility for NASCAR’s 10-race, season-ending playoff. It’s the fourth time Vickers has had to take time off for medical issues since 2010.

"Thankfully because I recognized the signs and symptoms the doctors caught this early and I’m going to be OK,” Vickers said in a team statement. "I had finished my treatment for the clot I had in my leg back in 2013 and I haven’t needed to be on a blood thinner for a clot in my leg or lung since.

"I’m going to follow doctor’s orders and do everything I need to do to get well.”

Ironically, Vickers was supposed to be making appearances on behalf of sponsor Janssen Pharmaceuticals and its blood-thinning drug Xarelto at the track marking what is "Blood Clot Awareness Month," including a press conference at Auto Club Speedway.

"I’m disappointed I can’t be there, but if there is a silver lining in all this, hopefully what’s happened to me will help raise awareness on this important health issue,” he said. 

Vickers took to Facebook on Friday afternoon to thank his fans for their support.

Like other Sprint Cup Series competitors, points leader Kevin Harvick said he really felt for Vickers.  "I feel bad for Brian because he does have that drive and determination to be in the car, and he’s already overcome so much. It’s just really really unfortunate."

The situation especially hits home for Waltrip, whose mother suffered a stroke after a blood clot and has required round-the-clock care ever since.

"When I look at my mom, I’m reminded spreading the word [about blood clots] is so important,” Waltrip said.

"Obviously this is a setback for our team and Brian, but this morning, we’re just glad Brian’s okay."

Moffitt had been driving the No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford. The team announced that XFINITY Series Roush Fenway Racing driver Chris Buescher would take over the ride this weekend.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

Sprint Cup champ’s success owes plenty to tight-knit hometown community

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live

BAKERSFIELD, Calif. — The Bakersfield Kart Raceway sits up the hill and across the street from the Kern River Field of oil derricks — acres and acres as far as the eye can see of these black machines pumping oil from the brown, dusty earth and sustaining the economy of this rural town a couple hours inland and over the Sierra Mountain range from the flashy hustle and bustle of Los Angeles.

Although Kevin Harvick, 39, visits his hometown several times a year, he figured it had been a good two decades since he last stopped by the well-kept winding half-mile go-kart course which, looking back, ultimately launched his NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship career and helped define the way he would approach racing forever after.

And, as Harvick took great pleasure in recounting, it’s the place that made him a master of racing’s great victory celebration: spinning "donuts" — something he’s been demonstrating at a historic pace recently.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

"My dad would bet people in the pits how many donuts his 9-year-old son could do and we’d usually win enough money to buy a new set of tires,” Harvick recalled Wednesday with that wide, cat-ate-the-canary grin that helped earn him his "Happy" nickname.

"We had a 1981 side-step, rear-wheel drive pick-up that my dad had put huge racing exhaust pipes on and that truck made us a lot of money. I’d go up to the top of the hill [beside] the go-kart track and I’d spin donut after donut after donut after donut in that truck then they’d go back to the pits and work on go-karts. Then it would be time for me to go make another run in the go-kart.”


Bakersfield Kart Raceway, amidst the Kern County (Calif.) hills, where Kevin Harvick carved out the early foundations of a big-league racing career.

 

As Harvick visited with old friends and walked the track this week during a visit to his hometown before Sunday’s NASCAR race at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana — a three-hour drive southwest from here — he was sentimental about what this humble venue meant to his early career.

It is fitting that this place where Harvick spent so much time overlooks the expanse of oil derricks, which quietly work and work and work.

It’s a theme in Harvick’s life and the way of life in Bakersfield.

***

Harvick grew up about a 15-minute drive away from the go-kart track — everything is a 15-minute drive away in Bakersfield — in a modest neighborhood in the blue-collar community of Oildale. The area’s residents are known locally as "08-ers" in reference to the zip code: 93308.

If you Google "Oildale, California" one of the first entries directs you to you an "Oildale jokes" page, including one page titled "You might be from Oildale if …"

There are bars on the windows and doors on many of the homes and businesses along the main thoroughfare, Chester Avenue. And the residential area is mostly made up of small, block houses — miles and tax brackets away from Bakersfield’s walled subdivisions with lofty names like "Palisades."

On the Oildale side of the Kern River Bridge, Chester Avenue is lined with small, mom-and-pop businesses such as taco restaurants, hair salons and tire stores. Down the road from one of Harvick’s favorite old stops, "Donut Star" is a shuttered old-style movie theater, its marquee completely empty. Each corner seems to have an empty, fenced parking lot with overgrown grass and weeds.

When you cross the mostly-dried up Kern River into Bakersfield proper, things change before your eyes. Manicured lawns, new modern buildings and chain stores take over the landscape.

Harvick’s family still lives in Oildale. His mom still works as a secretary at the local elementary school and still lives in the same, small modest home where Harvick grew up and recently updated for her. The large letter "H" on the gate outside is the only clue this is the champ’s house.

His younger sister, Amber Reece, lives nearby and works as a special education teacher’s aid at a junior high school. She jokes that often when she introduces herself in town as "Amber," she is quickly but affectionately corrected, "You’re Kevin Harvick‘s sister."

Brother and sister remain as close today as they were during the days traveling in the family’s box van, sharing a mattress in the back while their parents took turns driving to Kevin’s next race.

She fondly remembers the afternoons when she and Kevin used to put together sponsorship opportunity "portfolios" and sell his racing like Girl Scout cookies around the neighborhood and to local businesses.

"We didn’t come from anything, we worked for everything, but it was fun,” Reece said. "Everyone was so supportive [of Harvick] because it is a racing town and growing up that’s all we ever did. So everyone that was a part of this when we were little, to see him succeed now, it’s amazing.”

And that’s evident wherever you go in Bakersfield.

***

Harvick’s presence is felt from the posters all over town celebrating their NASCAR champion as "Bakersfield’s own" to the water cooler talk with guys back at Bob’s Auto Glass Repair shop — where the Harvicks used to house their race cars — to the vast dirt field outside of town where Mesa Marin Raceway used to stand and groom NASCAR champions weekly for 30 years.

People here prefer to think of Bakersfield as "a big town that acts like a small town."

And when it came to Harvick’s racing career, "it took a village," as they say.


The leveled remains at the former site of Mesa Marin Raceway.

 

Local businessman Terry Harron remembers inviting a teenage Harvick to take parts from the massive Advanced Distribution warehouse he owns, eager to help offset the promising young racer’s costs.

The only thing Harron asked was that Harvick make lists of the parts he took so Harron could keep up with inventory.

"Kevin was actually very bashful back then, but he’d take these pieces of paper and go through the warehouse with a cart and a box and get anything from nuts and bolts, to spray paint or brake cleaner,” Harron recalled. "He’d just leave me lists with the parts numbers of what he got and I would just throw the lists in a drawer.

"It was probably five or six years ago I was going through some old stuff and I found all these lists of what Kevin got. It was pretty funny. He could never write his name in cursive, it was always printed so his name was written at the bottom "KEVIN HARVICK" in block letters. We were laughing at that the other day."

"When you hear them call Kevin ‘The Closer’ there’s something about that tenacity that Kevin has. It’s the very same thing we’d see when he raced at the local tracks. That guy never ever gave up and it’s the same thing you see from him in NASCAR today.”

Having the support of people such as Harron and the other local businesses and even residents who would contribute to the cause were not luxuries for Harvick. They were essential.

Harvick figures he paid for one full season by recycling air conditioning cores as scrap metal.

"The struggles really weren’t struggles because we were having fun,” Harvick said. "That’s how we survived. We recycled all the cans in the shop. Literally $100 meant one tire and that’s how you thought about things.

"You had to think about everything you could to save money and put money toward the race car and didn’t want to wreck it because the $600 at the pay window didn’t go a long ways.

"That bled over into what we did on daily basis and how we ran our race teams and how you think about approaching a race. You can still race really hard but you have to take care of your stuff because you used to not be able to afford it. The way I was brought up, the way I raced, a lot of that bleeds over into today."

***

And now, Harvick has the fortunate and hard-earned chance to give back.

He brought news of that this week, proudly announcing Wednesday that his Kevin Harvick Foundation — in partnership with the Cal Ripken Sr. Foundation — would be financing a major renovation and redevelopment project for the largest branch of the Boys and Girls Club of Kern County.

Giving back to the youth in the community has been a priority for Harvick and his wife DeLana from the beginning. Quite often, Harvick’s donations to various Bakersfield organizations and families is purposely kept low-profile.

In the past eight years, his foundation has given college scholarships to Bakersfield students, built a wrestling room for his former North High School and outfitted the golf team with new equipment including putters that weren’t even for sale to the public yet.

The school welcomed him this week on their marquee: "Way to go #4. Two in a row," referring to his wins in the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 4 Chevrolet in Las Vegas and Phoenix the past two weeks.

"Kevin has been to several rallies here and shared that if you get involved with school you can accomplish your goals and dreams and that anything’s possible with hard work,” North High School Principal Alan Paradise said.

"That’s the message Kevin has been sending to our students. It’s a lot more than financial support and athletic equipment, it’s also that message that he has given."

On Wednesday, Harvick sat on stage at the Boys and Girls Club gymnasium surrounded by community leaders and high-ranking state politicians, who offered presentations and praise for his work.

Bakersfield Mayor Harvey Hall, who remembers watching a 5-year-old Harvick pick up nuts and bolts in his dad’s race shop and even helped sponsor his early racing career, proclaimed this past Wednesday "Kevin Harvick Day."


Signs and well-wishes, just part of the adulation for the reigning Sprint Cup champion in his hometown.

 

The other leaders followed with words of sincere gratitude for Harvick’s long-standing charity work and for his unwavering support of his hometown youth.

And when the public — some who stood in line for four hours — was given a chance to ask questions of Harvick after the formal presentations, instead, they stood up and made declarations. One-by-one they passionately told him how much he has meant to this community. His community.

Ironically, it’s Harvick who has been trying to thank the community for most of the last decade. Investing with his heart is as important as writing a check. And that matters a lot to people around here.

No matter where Harvick went this week, people shouted out congratulations, wanted to pose for photos or get an autograph — so proud of Harvick for his championship and the streak of seven straight races finishing first or second, a mark that hasn’t been seen since Richard Petty did it 40 years ago.

And yet as good as winning races and titles has been, Harvick is quite sure, the support is unwavering.

"Honestly, I come back here all the time and it would be the same type of event, same turnout whether I’m winning or losing,” Harvick said. "These people have supported me through the years, win, lose or draw. It’s just the type of community it is."

It did, however, take great pride when after winning the 2007 Daytona 500 and then again in November after hoisting the 2014 Sprint Cup championship trophy, Harvick offered them an inside message, proclaiming his work, "Not bad for an 08-er."

Actually, around here, they think it’s pretty darn great.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

Company to remain entitlement sponsor through 2021 for 12-consecutive years

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (March 20, 2015) — NASCAR® announced today it has reached a five-year agreement with K&N Filters to continue as the entitlement sponsor of the NASCAR K&N Pro Series™ through 2021. The renewed deal ensures that K&N Filters will own exclusive rights as the title sponsor for a total of 12-consecutive years. Additionally, K&N Filters acquires the designation as the "Official Automotive Filters of NASCAR."

The extended agreement is the latest in a number of landmark partnerships and renewals recently signed with the sanctioning body. In recent history, NASCAR has announced momentous 10-year deals with series entitlement sponsor XFINITY; broadcast partners FOX and NBC; and international broadcast rights partner IMG. NASCAR also announced a seven-year extension with series entitlement sponsor Camping World in 2014.

"The NASCAR K&N Pro Series features the most competitive regional racing in the country and thanks to this newly signed agreement the series has never been healthier," said Jim Cassidy, Senior Vice President of Racing Operations for NASCAR. "K&N Filters has the unique ability to showcase its products to a fiercely brand-loyal fan base on a national stage, while partnering with NASCAR to introduce professional motorsports’ stars of tomorrow."

The NASCAR K&N Pro Series is universally recognized in the racing industry as the top rung in NASCAR’s developmental ladder — notable alumni include Joey Logano and Kevin Harvick, both finalists in last year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup™, as well as rising stars like Kyle Larson, Chase Elliott and Darrell Wallace Jr. The series introduces NASCAR fans and industry stakeholders to the next generation of stars, and the diverse mix of short tracks, road courses and national series speedways appeals to a broad range of motorsports fans.
 
"K&N Filters has played an integral role in NASCAR for years and we’re thrilled to renew our commitment to the sport and specifically as the title sponsor of the NASCAR K&N Pro Series," said Jesse Spungin, Chief Sales and Marketing Officer, K&N Filters. "Our ability to leverage the power of NASCAR’s intellectual property on and off the track while cultivating the sport’s rising stars across the country elevates our brand and drives our business."

K&N Filters is the established leader in reusable filters, high flow oil filters and high performance intake systems. In addition to its series entitlement, K&N Filters’ Contingency Sponsorship extends to the NASCAR Whelen All American Series™ and NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour™ as well as the three national series.

The NASCAR K&N Pro Series West will kick off the 2015 season at Kern County Raceway Park with the running of the NAPA Auto Parts 150 on March 28.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today

Former Cup champion will start first in second race back from suspension

Play: NASCAR Fantasy Live
RELATED: See the lineup for Sunday

FONTANA, Calif. — One week removed from his return from a three-race suspension, Kurt Busch rewarded the unwavering support from Stewart-Haas Racing team co-owner Gene Haas by putting his No. 41 Chevrolet on the pole for Sunday’s Auto Club 400 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX).
 
"It’s amazing to do this in Gene Haas’ back yard," said Busch, who streaked around two-mile Auto Club Speedway in 38.889 seconds (185.142 mph) during the third and final round of Friday’s knockout qualifying for the fifth NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race of the season.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

A day after making an appearance at the Haas Automation headquarters in nearby Oxnard, Busch won his record fourth Coors Light Pole Award at Auto Club Speedway and the 17th of his career. In winning his first pole since May 2013 at Darlington, Busch edged Stewart-Haas teammate and reigning Sprint Cup champion Kevin Harvick (185.047 mph) by .020 seconds.
 
Behind the Stewart-Haas sweep of the front row, Matt Kenseth qualified third at 184.966 mph, followed by David Ragan (184.886 mph) and Kyle Larson (184.337 mph). At the track closest to Toyota Racing Development’s home in Costa Mesa, four Toyota drivers made the top 12 on the grid — Kenseth, Ragan, Denny Hamlin (sixth) and Clint Bowyer (10th).
 
"This is huge for Gene Haas," said Busch, who was suspended by NASCAR in the wake of allegations of domestic violence against former girlfriend Patricia Driscoll and the finding of a State of Delaware Family Court commissioner that, more likely than not, Busch had committed an act of domestic abuse. "Thank you, Gene, for believing in me. This is my job. Come to the track, drive the car and put it up on the pole and go for wins.
 
"That is what Gene has told me to do from the get-go, and I’m glad I have this chance to go back out there and live up to why he hired me. It feels good. The guys were just spot-on all day with all the adjustments. The car started off so fast and it is all due to the work back at the shop. Thank you Stewart-Haas Racing. Appreciate it. No. 41 car up front feels good."
 
NASCAR lifted Busch’s suspension after he completed a reinstatement program and after the Delaware Department of Justice declined to file charges in the case, citing insufficient evidence.
 
Since his return, Busch has been fast on the race track, qualifying eighth and finishing fifth last week at Phoenix and winning the pole at Fontana on Friday.
 
Harvick, who is trying for a sweep of the three races on NASCAR’s West Coast swing — Las Vegas, Phoenix and Fontana — had a good lap going before abandoning his intended line because of cars rolling slowly on the apron.
 
"I got down into Turn 3, and I was committed to the bottom, and there were three cars on the apron that were cooling off," Harvick explained. "I wanted to run the apron because I ran it in the second round and thought that I knew what I needed to do in the third round.
 
"I got through (Turns) 1 and 2 fairly good, got to the green really good and then I had to abort down here. All-in-all, still a good effort."
 
Notes: Jeff Gordon will start seventh in his final run at Fontana. … Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Danica Patrick both made the top 24 in the first round of knockout qualifying but failed to advance to the final round. They will start 17th and 22nd, respectively. … Travis Kvapil and Reed Sorenson failed to make the 43-car field.

MORE:

READ: Latest
 NASCAR news

PLAY: Sign up
 for Fantasy Live

WATCH: Latest
 NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
 RaceView today