Dewar: ‘Globalization is a key initiative for NASCAR’

Daytona Beach, Fla. (March 16, 2015) – NASCAR announced today it has signed a seven-year media broadcast extension with FOX Sports Latin America, ensuring that sports fans in Latin America can continue to enjoy NASCAR events and news on FOX Sports through 2021.

Through this extension, FOX Sports Latin America will continue to be the home of live races for all three of NASCARs national series – the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series™, NASCAR XFINITY Series™ and the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series™ – across Latin America, including Brazil. Additional NASCAR programming on FOX Sports Latin America includes the NASCAR K&N Pro Series™.

"Globalization is a key initiative for NASCAR, and there is no question that partnering with FOX Sports Latin America has been integral to the sport’s growth in this region over the past several years," said Brent Dewar, NASCAR chief operating officer. "In addition to ensuring the presence of NASCAR racing content for existing fans for the next seven years, this extension will allow NASCAR and FOX to build upon the work that’s already been done in cultivating NASCAR fans in Latin America."

All NASCAR content will air exclusively on FOX Sports 3 in Spanish speaking countries in Latin America and on FOX Sports 2 in Brazil. In addition, FOX Sports’ original production "Central FOX Nitro," – a daily motorsports news show – will feature NASCAR news and highlights.

"We are thrilled to continue to offer NASCAR fans in Latin America the best quality of NASCAR race content across different FOX Sports portfolio of media services," said Carlos Martinez, president of FOX International Channels Latin America. "This long term deal with NASCAR represents our commitment to an exceptional partner and we know that it will yield great value to all of our Latin American viewers."

FOX Sports is the leading sports cable television network in Latin America and has been broadcasting NASCAR races since 2002. The network, which reaches more than 60 million homes in 19 countries in Latin America, is focused on sports-related programming including events, sports news, sports talk shows and other original content.

JGR driver has been splitting time in Nos. 20 and 54 cars

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AVONDALE, Ariz. — Erik Jones sure knows how to make an entrance.

Five races into his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series career in 2013, he scored his first national series win. Seven races into his NASCAR XFINITY Series career, he earned his first top-five. Both came at Phoenix International Raceway with the latter coming in last Saturday’s Axalta Faster. Tougher. Brighter. 200.

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Jones earned a top-five finish at the 1-mile oval, filling in for the injured Kyle Busch in the No. 54 Monster Energy Toyota. The result was even more welcome as it came a week after late contact from Ryan Blaney derailed his chances for a win and a top-five at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

"It’s nice to finally get the finishes I thought we deserved," Jones said. "We struggled with getting caught up in people’s messes early on."

Jones qualified third for the race and spent much of the opening half of the race in the top five. Other teams’ strategy plays saw Jones cycle back to ninth on Lap 120 before he made a charge of his own to get back into the top five by Lap 150. From there, he had to hold off points leader Ty Dillon for the final spot in the top five.

"The Monster Energy Camry was fast — just got behind on adjustments all day. We were tight early and freed it up and just got too free. On the last stop, we wanted to go back and make sure it was going to be snug enough because on those restarts you have to try to get so much and when you’re free you just can’t make anything happen."

Fast pit road times did benefit Jones. He spent the second-lowest amount of time on pit road (2:00:001 for an average of 40.000 seconds during his three stops).

The young driver is no stranger to success at Phoenix. He now has two finishes of fifth and sixth in the XFINITY Series as well as two wins in the Camping World Truck Series at the track.

"It always helps when you have experience at a place, especially confidence with a race win. I definitely think it helped me out a little bit."

The 18-year-old is running full-time in the Camping World Truck Series for Kyle Busch Motorsports, while running a part-time slate in the XFINITY Series for Joe Gibbs Racing.

In the XFINITY Series, Jones is bouncing between the Nos. 20 and 54 Toyota, due to Busch’s recovery from a compound fracture to his right lower leg and a mid-foot fracture of his left foot suffered in a late-race accident in the XFINITY opener at Daytona. Busch’s injury led to Jones picking up a few more XFINITY starts until his mentor returns.

"We’ve been fortunate enough to run every race. So far, it’s been fairly easy. The only roadblock, I guess you’d say, would be switching between the 54 and the 20, which really hasn’t been too big of a deal. Two great race teams. When you go back and forth, it definitely makes it easier when your cars are fast."

Jones will be back behind the wheel of the No. 20 XFINITY Series Toyota on March 21 at Auto Club Speedway for the Drive4Clots.com 300 (4 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1). His next turn in the No. 54 will come at Richmond International Raceway in April.

"It’s nice to finally get a finish after having a couple rough weeks and then come back and hopefully gives us some momentum going into Fontana next weekend."

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Rash of late cautions derailed No. 2 team’s Phoenix plan


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AVONDALE, Ariz. — With Kevin Harvick‘s desert dominance on everyone’s mind, strategy plays were the tactic of choice to potentially break up his monopoly.

The No. 2 team of Brad Keselowski tried its hand with two such ploys, but it ultimately wasn’t enough with how the cautions fell in the CampingWorld.com 500 at Phoenix International Raceway on Sunday.

Keselowski finished sixth, while Harvick won his second straight NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race of the season and fourth straight at the 1-mile oval. Afterward, Keselowski lamented the fact that Chevrolet teams seem to have a little more speed than the other manufacturers right now.

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"We just didn’t quite have enough speed," Keselowski said. "I thought we were about a third- or fourth-place car and got shuffled to finish where we did. It was a great effort. We have to keep working to find more speed. There are a lot of Chevys up there and we need to get our Fords running a tiny bit better."



Team Penske‘s No. 2 crew made two crucial strategy calls during the race. One worked out well, while circumstances disrupted the other.



A caution on Lap 117 saw all the front-runners come down pit road, and Keselowski and crew chief Paul Wolfe decided to take two tires. That lifted the 2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion from fourth place to the lead.

From there the 31-year-old was out front for 52 laps — 41 more than he had led in the season’s previous three events. Through three races last year, Keselowski had led 69 laps and already had a race win to his credit.

"We had that one run where we got out to the lead and led like 50 laps which was second to Harvick, that is something here," Keselowski said.



Keselowski gave up the lead for good on Lap 171, but spent the next 50-plus laps in the top three.

During his pit stop after the race’s seventh caution on Lap 227, Keselowski shook up the strategy some more. This time, pitting from third place, Wolfe and Co. elected to put on four tires. The No. 2 restarted in 17th place on Lap 234, with the hope being a lengthy green-flag run would aid their chances of getting back to the front.

However, three more cautions came out between the Lap 234 restart and the finish of the race, allowing drivers on older tires to keep track position near the front. 



Keselowski rose as high as fifth place on Lap 289, but fell back to sixth by the checkered flag as a surging Kurt Busch slipped past him for the final spot in the top five.

"Everybody was on a different strategy it seemed, and it didn’t quite pan out for us to get the third or fourth we deserved but we ran really well," Keselowski said.

For the first time all season, Keselowski led more laps in a race than Team Penske teammate Joey Logano. And despite leading 35 circuits himself, Keselowski’s younger teammate was direct in his assessment about whose car had the upper hand.



"Brad had the better car, for sure," Logano said after his eighth-place finish. "The finishing order kind of showed that."



For Keselowski, the sixth-place result continued his upward trajectory for the season as he has improved on his finish in each race. After a crash in the season-opening Daytona 500 led to his day ending early and a 41st-place result, he has rolled off three consecutive top-10s with a ninth-place finish at Atlanta and a seventh-place finish at Las Vegas.

The Phoenix finish also saw him rise seven spots in the point standings. Still, unlike last year, when the No. 2 crew came out firing with a win and three straight top-three finishes, something seems to be lacking in the early going. Keselowski said he knows exactly what it is.

"We just have to find some more speed," he said. "That is the common theme."

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Earnhardt will drive No. 55 Chevrolet at Auto Club Speedway

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Viva Motorsports announced Monday that NASCAR XFINITY Series driver/owner Jamie Dick will sit out this weekend’s race at Auto Club Speedway after being diagnosed with new onset diabetes.
 
Dick, 26, visited the infield care center at Phoenix International Raceway, reporting symptoms of fatigue and dizziness after finishing 28th Saturday in the fourth XFINITY Series race of the season. Medical personnel at the track recommended Dick visit nearby West Valley Hospital in Goodyear, Arizona, that evening.

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According to the team, Dick was released from the hospital Sunday afternoon. The team said he returned to the Charlotte, North Carolina, area for further treatment and evaluation.
 
"I would like to thank everyone for their support during this difficult time," Dick said in a statement released by the team. "It was quite a surprise to hear the diagnosis from the doctors, but the response from the NASCAR and PIR medical staffs was outstanding. The support from the racing community, my Viva Motorsports team, and the fans has been overwhelming. Now I need to learn about this disease and do whatever it takes to get back behind the wheel as soon as possible."
 
Jeffrey Earnhardt, who drove the Viva No. 55 Chevrolet in the other two XFINITY events this season, will fill in for Dick in Saturday’s Drive4Clots.com 300 (4 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1) in Fontana, California.

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Cars will no longer be pointed nose in on pit road

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The tricky tango of rolling a full field of 3,400-pound stock cars with limited rear view into reverse to begin group qualifying is over.
 
NASCAR Executive Vice President and Chief Racing Development Officer Steve O’Donnell said Monday on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio that a bulletin for the 2015 NASCAR Rule Book would reach teams this week, stating that teams in all three NASCAR national series will start Coors Light and Keystone Light Pole Qualifying pointed nose out. The new procedure would begin with this weekend’s Sprint Cup and XFINITY Series events at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California.

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NASCAR officials have made several tweaks to the knockout-style group qualifying format since its advent in the 2014 season, but the parking method in the idle time before qualifying sessions had endured. The orientation was first determined in part to allow media better access to the drivers; officials have since allowed media members over the pit wall during breaks in group qualifying.
 
"We did that initially working with everybody that, you guys and the TV partners in terms of access to the drivers," O’Donnell told SiriusXM. "As we’ve gone through it, we’ve learned some different things so we won’t have the cars back in. We’ll send a memo out to the teams this week where we tweak it."
 
O’Donnell said the logistics of placing cool-down units and other equipment within reach of the vehicles and crews also was in development.
 
"As with anything, we keep learning," O’Donnell told SiriusXM. "If we can make it better we will, and it’s just another slight adjustment as we head into California."
 
Officials informed NASCAR teams of the impending alterations last weekend at Phoenix International Raceway. Not everyone was receptive to the change, O’Donnell joked.
 
"I heard a great line from Michael Waltrip," O’Donnell said, referring to the full-time owner and part-time driver who now spends the bulk of his time in the FOX broadcasting booth. "He said he likes to be nosed in because that way when he backs up, it’s not his fault. But when he has to pull straight out, he can get in trouble."

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See what’s coming this week to NASCAR.com

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Here’s what you’ll see on NASCAR.com this week:

MONDAY: Brad Keselowski had one of the best cars at Phoenix, yet he missed out on a top-five finish. We’ll tell you the strategy move that didn’t quite pay off. Plus, @nascarcasm regales us with his "useless" race recap.

TUESDAY: Kevin Harvick has two wins in a row, plus seven consecutive finishes of second or better dating back to last season. No. 1 in the Power Rankings? For sure. But who’s behind him in No. 2? Plus our weekly video of the best sounds from the scanner.

WEDNESDAY: Check out the new paint schemes for this weekend’s action at Auto Club Speedway.

THURSDAY: Have you been bitten by the March Madness bug? Stay tuned as NASCAR.com presents its own version of March Madness, complete with fan voting. Plus, who are the ones to watch for your NASCAR Fantasy Live and Streak to the Finish teams? Driver Reports breaks down the best at Auto Club.

FRIDAY: Cars are on track in California. Visit us for live leaderboards throughout the day, plus the best tweets of the week.

Also coming this week: From @nascarcasm — A new feature on the Facebook page of this week’s winner … As the West Coast swing rounds up, we’ll have a gallery of some hot tempers out West.

Breaking down how the full 43-car field fared at Phoenix International Raceway

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1. Kevin Harvick, No. 4 Chevrolet, Stewart-Haas Racing. The desert domination continued for Harvick and the No. 4 bunch, which led 224 of 312 laps in the team’s fourth straight Phoenix victory. Harvick’s second straight NASCAR Sprint Cup Series win increased his streak of top-two finishes to seven, the first driver to accomplish it since Richard Petty in 1975. "That gives me chills," said the defending Sprint Cup champ. 

2. Jamie McMurray, No. 1 Chevrolet, Chip Ganassi Racing. Though he voiced concerns about a tire going down to crew chief Matt McCall in the final 50 laps, McMurray persevered for his best Sprint Cup finish since winning at Talladega Superspeedway in October 2013. McCall’s decision to keep the No. 1 on the track over the final fuel run gave McMurray a chance to battle hard with Harvick in the late stages.

3. Ryan Newman, No. 31 Chevrolet, Richard Childress Racing. Newman went all the way into late June last year before he notched his first top-five finish of the season. Four races into the 2015 campaign, Newman already has two top-fives — his 99th and 100th of his career — thanks to his second straight third-place finish. 

4. Kasey Kahne, No. 5 Chevrolet, Hendrick Motorsports. Kahne saved his best finish of the season for his 400th start in NASCAR’s premier series, moving up two spots to fourth place in the Sprint Cup standings in the process. "I hope I get 400 more," said the 34-year-old driver. 

5. Kurt Busch, No. 41 Chevrolet, Stewart-Haas Racing. The driver formerly known as "The Outlaw" ran second to his SHR teammate Harvick for much of the waning stages, but lost ground when he pitted for fresh tires with 22 laps left. In his first race of the season since NASCAR lifted his suspension, Busch was all business, telling his crew on the radio on the cool-down lap that he thought he had "enough good will saved up, but top five is exactly where we need to be." | Sign up for Scanner today to hear in-car audio

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6. Brad Keselowski, No. 2 Ford, Team Penske. The 2012 Sprint Cup champ led the second-most laps (52) and landed his best finish of the season, but remains on the hunt for his first top-five. "We just didn’t quite have enough speed," said Keselowski, who drove the top-finishing Ford. "I thought we were about a third- or fourth-place car and got shuffled to finish where we did."

7. Martin Truex Jr., No. 78 Chevrolet, Furniture Row Racing. The scrappy Colorado-based team continued its upswing, moving to third in the early Sprint Cup standings. Truex rose to as high as second place Sunday, gaining two spots on a 126th-lap restart and leading his spotter to exclaim, "All clear, you are the man!" Truex joins points leader Kevin Harvick and Daytona 500 winner Joey Logano as the only three drivers with top-10 finishes in all four races thus far. | Sign up for RaceView to see in-car video on race days

8. Joey Logano, No. 22 Ford, Team Penske. Logano led twice (the only driver other than Harvick to lead more than once) for 35 laps, benefitting from some fleet-footed pit work from his No. 22 crew. He rallied back after a pit stop during the next-to-last caution period, saying afterward, "getting a top-10 is great but we want to win some more." 

9. Jeff Gordon, No. 24 Chevrolet, Hendrick Motorsports. The first top-10 finish of Gordon’s final full season in NASCAR’s top division couldn’t come soon enough, helping him jump five spots to 25th in the Sprint Cup standings. He gave up third place by pitting during the ninth of 10 yellow flags, but threaded his way back for his fourth top-10 in his last five Phoenix races.

10. Kyle Larson, No. 42 Chevrolet, Chip Ganassi Racing. Larson survived a dicey moment shortly after a restart in the 126th lap when Kevin Harvick pushed on his back bumper, getting the No. 42 askew off Turn 4. Larson kept headed in the right direction, securing his second straight top-10 finish. 

11. Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Chevrolet, Hendrick Motorsports. Johnson’s adventures came early and late in the 312-lapper at Phoenix: He collided with Brian Vickers at the end of the first lap, leading Johnson to tell crew chief Chad Knaus on the radio, "It’s so weird, he left me a lane and came over on the straight." Johnson pressed on after more contact with Carl Edwards on pit road during the race’s seventh caution.

12. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 17 Ford, Roush Fenway Racing. Stenhouse was at the head of the Roush Fenway class Sunday, marking his best Sprint Cup finish since a sixth-place effort at Bristol Motor Speedway last August. The effort wasn’t without some drama, an 81st-lap nudge from Tony Stewart that sent him out of the groove and cost him a handful of spots early on. 

13. Carl Edwards, No. 19 Toyota, Joe Gibbs Racing. Over his radio in the final stages, Edwards — who withstood a collision with Jimmie Johnson‘s No. 48 on pit road — radioed his crew that the No. 19 was "shaking like hell," but he was assured that a flapping piece of sheet metal at the rear was upsetting the car’s balance. His JGR entry was the highest-finishing Toyota in the 43-car field. | Sign up for Scanner today to hear in-car audio

14. Paul Menard, No. 27 Chevrolet, Richard Childress Racing. Menard’s third straight finish on the outskirts of the top 10 didn’t come without some excitement as he just missed Tony Stewart‘s spinning car in the 238th lap. "I may have just kissed it, but nothing major," he told his RCR crew.

15. Austin Dillon, No. 3 Chevrolet, Richard Childress Racing. Another RCR driver having a more definitive brush with Tony Stewart was Dillon, who sustained a 143rd-lap bump off the fourth turn. Displeased team owner Richard Childress, Dillon’s grandfather, gave him some stern instruction for dealing with Stewart over the team radio: "You know what to do when you get back there."

16. Matt Kenseth, No. 20 Toyota, Joe Gibbs Racing. Kenseth spent his fair share of the day mixing it up among the top 10, but an 188th-lap penalty for speeding exiting the pits cost the No. 20 group precious track position.

17. AJ Allmendinger, No. 47 Chevrolet, JTG-Daugherty Racing. The ‘Dinger overcame a pair of Phoenix setbacks — starting at the rear of the field because of a Saturday engine change, then seeing his jack man sidelined by injury on an early pit stop. The solid finish kept Allmendinger firmly in the provisional Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoff grid, fifth in the series standings.

18. Justin Allgaier, No. 51 Chevrolet, HScott Motorsports. Allgaier sewed up his best finish of the season, but also drew some initial criticism from Tony Stewart after their 238th-lap battle sent Smoke spinning. "I don’t think I crowded him, but you know how it is," Allgaier told his crew, noting the difficulties in judging his line through the third and fourth turns. | Sign up for Scanner today to hear in-car audio

19. Aric Almirola, No. 43 Ford, Richard Petty Motorsports. Almirola lamented his car’s struggles with handling, especially in traffic, but was hopeful for a rebound next Sunday at Auto Club Speedway, site of the third and final leg of NASCAR’s West Coast Swing. "Our intermediate program has been good this year, so we’ll look to getting up front next week in California," Almirola said. 

20. Casey Mears, No. 13 Chevrolet, Germain Racing. Handling woes kept the No. 13 from making progress during the 500-kilometer race, but Mears tweeted hours after the checkered flag that the team found a problem in the right-rear that was the culprit. Despite the midpack finish, he still held a tenuous grip on the 12th of 16 spots in the provisional Chase grid.

21. David Ragan, No. 18 Toyota, Joe Gibbs Racing. Ragan’s stint as a substitute for the injured Kyle Busch has yet to produce a finish better than his interim car number. Sunday, it produced an irate Danica Patrick after their late-race run-in. Ragan’s JGR team celebrated as last year’s winner at Auto Club Speedway, where Busch scored his only Sprint Cup victory of the season.

22. Landon Cassill, No. 40 Chevrolet, Hillman Smith Motorsports. The Iowa native posted his best finish of the Sprint Cup season by a wide margin, finishing on the lead lap for the first time in 2015. He was the recipient of the free pass back onto the lead lap three times in the early going. 

23. Denny Hamlin, No. 11 Toyota, Joe Gibbs Racing. Finishing last among the JGR contingent didn’t sit well with Hamlin, who hopes to bounce back into form at Auto Club Speedway, a track that has been a house of horrors, injury-wise, for him the last two years. "We have to go to California and offset this," he told his No. 11 team on the cool-down lap. | Sign up for Scanner today to hear in-car audio

24. Clint Bowyer, No. 15 Toyota, Michael Waltrip Racing. An unscheduled pit stop for a loose wheel in the 143rd lap left Bowyer shouting a stream of profanities over his team radio near the race’s midpoint. He received the free pass back onto the lead lap during the sixth of 10 caution periods. 

25. Cole Whitt, No. 35 Ford, Front Row Motorsports. Whitt matched his best performance in five career Sprint Cup starts at Phoenix International Raceway, but also held the distinction Sunday as the race’s biggest gainer, finishing 14 spots up from his starting position.

26. Danica Patrick, No. 10 Chevrolet, Stewart-Haas Racing. Patrick found herself at the tail of the field after drawing a 201st-lap penalty for her crew’s failure to control a tire on pit road, then spun through turns 3 and 4 after a significant nudge from David Ragan‘s No. 18. "Nice try, Mr. Nice Guy Ragan," she told her crew under caution. | Sign up for Scanner today to hear in-car audio

27. Greg Biffle, No. 16 Ford, Roush Fenway Racing. A loose wheel with roughly 75 laps to go cost Biffle dearly when he was forced to make an unscheduled green-flag pit stop. He was the beneficiary of the race’s next caution flag, but wound up as the final driver on the lead lap in his worst finish of the season.

28. Trevor Bayne, No. 6 Ford, Roush Fenway Racing. After going a lap down to leader Kevin Harvick in the race’s first half, Bayne said, "I about flipped over trying to keep up with him. Loose in, about to wreck every lap. Just terrible." Bayne matched both his result from the previous week and the number of laps down at the finish (3). 

29. David Gilliland, No. 38 Ford, Front Row Motorsports. Gilliland illustrated the tooth-and-nail nature of racing back in the pack when he traded paint with Mike Bliss down the backstretch early on, trying to avoid going a lap down. He eventually did, winding up three laps back at the checkered flag in his worst result so far in 2015. 

30. Alex Bowman, No. 7 Chevrolet, Tommy Baldwin Racing. The second-year driver made the most of an ill-handling car, telling his TBR crew over the radio about feeling "brake shake" as the race entered its second half. It marked a modest improvement over Bowman’s last-place finish the previous weekend in Las Vegas. 

31. J.J. Yeley, No. 23 Toyota, BK Racing. High hopes for a solid day in his Arizona hometown went for naught with his worst finish at the 1-mile track since spring 2011. The performance left him 0-for-13 in the top-10 column over his Sprint Cup career at Phoenix.

32. Brett Moffitt, No. 34 Ford, Front Row Motorsports. In two starts thus far as David Ragan‘s sub in the No. 34, Moffitt has been unable to replicate the magic from his eighth-place outing earlier in the season as Brian Vickers‘ fill-in at MWR. He’ll get another shot this Sunday at Auto Club Speedway in the last of his three scheduled drives for the Front Row team.

33. Mike Bliss, No. 32 Ford, GoFAS Racing. After Bliss failed to qualify the previous weekend at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, the No. 32 was back on track Sunday at Phoenix. The veteran won a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series event at Phoenix in 1998, but has been no better than 20th in the desert in his Sprint Cup career.

34. Jeb Burton, No. 26 Toyota, BK Racing. The rocky start to Burton’s Sprint Cup tenure continued Sunday at Phoenix, but the 22-year-old can take some solace in wrapping up a career-best finish. "We made big gains this weekend had a better car then (sic) where we finished," Burton tweeted after the race. "Proud of the effort all weekend."

35. Matt DiBenedetto, No. 83 Toyota, BK Racing. After failing to qualify the previous two weeks at Atlanta and Las Vegas, DiBenedetto’s Sprint Cup debut finally came. He drove home in the same position that he started — 35th.

36. Josh Wise, No. 98 Ford, Phil Parsons Racing. Wise lagged to his lowest finish of the season, continuing a trend of finishing 35th or worse in all six of his Sprint Cup starts at Phoenix International Raceway

37. Brendan Gaughan, No. 62 Chevrolet, Premium Motorsports. Gaughan sits sixth in the standings in his regular circuit, the NASCAR XFINITY Series, but the results haven’t been there on the Sprint Cup side. His third start of the season in the Jay Robinson-owned ride marked his 45th career start in NASCAR’s top series.

38. Alex Kennedy, No. 33 Chevrolet, Circle Sport Racing. Kennedy started last in the Joe Falk-owned Chevy and recovered from a Turn 3 spin during the 16th lap. He wound up eight laps down in making his first Sprint Cup start of the year.

39. Tony Stewart, No. 14 Chevrolet, Stewart-Haas Racing. Smoke used brute force to complete two passes earlier in the race, but found close-quarters racing with Justin Allgaier to be his undoing in the 238th lap. Stewart scraped the wall again 52 laps later, ending his day. The three-time series champ has just 32 points, lowest among drivers who have run all four Sprint Cup events this year.

40. Sam Hornish Jr., No. 9 Ford, Richard Petty Motorsports. Involvement in the fourth yellow flag (for a solo spin) and the ninth caution period (for catching a piece of Tony Stewart‘s second crash of the day) doomed any chances at Phoenix, the site of his first NASCAR XFINITY Series victory. The Petty No. 9 spent plenty of time behind the wall for repairs, finishing 35 laps down at the end. 

41. Brian Vickers, No. 55 Toyota, Michael Waltrip Racing. Vickers’ second start of the year went awry as he crossed the stripe to complete Lap 1, when he collided with Jimmie Johnson‘s car on the frontstretch. "What happened to all clear?" Vickers exclaimed, raising the possibility of miscommunication with his MWR spotter.

42. Michael Annett, No. 46 Chevrolet, HScott Motorsports. Annett’s car sputtered down on the apron in the 63rd lap, leading him to radio his crew: "Something rattling around in the drivetrain. … It’s in gear and nothing gets power to it." Once in the garage, crew chief Jay Guy issued a warning to the No. 46 crew: "The gear is burned up. Do not expose it to air, it will catch on fire." Annett eventually returned to the track, finishing 110 laps down. | Sign up for Scanner today to hear in-car audio

43. Dale Earnhardt Jr., No. 88 Chevrolet, Hendrick Motorsports. A blown right-rear tire sent Earnhardt’s car careening into the Turn 2 wall, severely damaging the rear end and snapping his streak of three top-five finishes to start the season. Earnhardt was uninjured and was at least able to joke about the situation, which happened suddenly in the 182nd lap. "They never tell you they are going to blow out, never," he said with a laugh. "You don’t ever have a warning."

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CGR duo scores top-10 finishes with McMurray challenging Harvick late

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AVONDALE, Ariz. — The CampingWorld.com 500 at Phoenix International Raceway brought the two-car Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates organization something that became very familiar in the latter part of the season: two top-10 finishes.

Strategy plays to stay out on older tires led Jamie McMurray to a runner-up finish and Kyle Larson to a 10th-place finish.

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McMurray gave race winner and Phoenix dominator Kevin Harvick a late challenge on the final restart on Lap 301, but he couldn’t quite get ahead of the defending Sprint Cup Series champion. The late restart was something in particular that McMurray lamented after the race.

"If I could do my restart over again right now, I would have done something a little different," McMurray said.

What exactly would he have done?

"It was really hard on the last two restarts to get any drive," McMurray said. "When you would get to the corner, it didn’t want to turn and it was loose. No grip. Sliding around a lot. Honestly, when I went through one and two I felt like I totally missed the corner and I was waiting to hear, three-wide, you’re in the middle. I heard, clear. I wish I would have moved up immediately. He had momentum on the outside.

"I didn’t feel like I was clear. The cars are kind of like what we have at Daytona. When you’re clear of someone or when someone gets to your quarter panel, you can feel it bog the car down. I didn’t feel like I was clear. Hindsight, I would have listened to my spotter a little bit and just moved up. I felt like I missed the corner so I didn’t have any idea how I could be clear."

Still, McMurray was pleased with the day overall and praised crew chief Matt McCall‘s late-race call to stay out on older tires in just his fourth race as the crew chief for the No. 1 team.

"I’m really happy with second. It would be nice to be in Victory Lane and know you were locked into the Chase the way the point format works.

"Matt did a great job calling the race. That’s hard in your first four or five races to make that decision in the end to stay out on old tires. In hindsight, it was the right one.

"When you’re in the car, you run that many laps, you know how bad the car feels, when he asks me, ‘what do you want to do?’  I’m like, you’re the crew chief. I’m going to do whatever you think is right.’ He did a great job today."

The two drivers carry their mojo forward at Phoenix and used quick stops on pit road to do so. McMurray spent the least amount of time on pit road (160.584 total seconds) and Larson spent the third-least amount of time on pit road (163.666 total seconds).

Last season, despite not being in the 16-driver Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoff, McMurray and Larson were arguably two of the strongest cars during that 10-race stretch, combining for 11 top-10 finishes (Larson had 6, McMurray had 5).

The first races of 2015 did not see that strong late-season showing carry over as the organization’s Daytona and Atlanta results drew finishes of 26th-or-worse in both races. The team seemed to regain its footing with last weekend at Las Vegas with Larson finishing eighth and McMurray finishing 11th.

For Larson, the second straight top-10 was a welcomed sight and he gained four spots in the point standings to move up to 17th.

"I’m happy to get a second top-10," Larson said on pit road after the race. "Wish we could have been a little bit better. Wish it would have stayed green there a little bit more without getting those last couple cautions because we were all good on fuel."

Now, the California native is preparing to head back home for the Auto Club 400 at Auto Club Speedway on March 22 (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX). The reigning Sunoco Rookie of the Year scored his first career top-five finish there last year with a runner-up showing.

"Last year, we finished second but we weren’t racing up front the whole time," Larson said. "We just had a good restart. But we’ve learned a lot with our intermediate cars so we should be a lot better when we go back. We’ll just have to wait and see when it comes to practice on Friday."

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The No. 4 driver led a race-high 224 laps in the desert

RELATED: Full race results | Updated series standings

AVONDALE, Ariz.—Yes, the best car won Sunday’s CampingWorld.com 500 at Phoenix International Raceway — but one-man juggernaut Kevin Harvick had to hold off charging Jamie McMurray on the final restart with 12 laps left to notch his fourth straight victory at the one-mile track.
 
The box score will show that the reigning NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champ led 224 of 312 laps, but McMurray took his best shot on the Lap 301 restart, driving hard to the inside of the race winner and, for the briefest of moments, clearing Harvick’s No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet off Turn 2.

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 David Pearson 1968
7 Kevin Harvick 2014-15
7 Richard Petty 1967

But the driver who has become an all-but-irresistible force in NASCAR’s premier series fought back to the outside, cleared McMurray’s No. 1 Chevrolet and cruised to the finish line 1.153 seconds ahead of the race runner-up.
 
The victory was Harvick’s second straight this season, his fourth straight at Phoenix and the 30th of his career. Harvick has won five of the last six races at the one-mile track in the Sonoran Desert — seven overall — and his string of seven straight top-two finishes in the Sprint Cup series, dating to last season, is the longest since Richard Petty rattled off 11 consecutive top-results in 1975.
 
“When you said the Richard Petty part, that just gives me chills,” Harvick said after the race.
 
The last driver to win four straight NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races at the same track was Jimmie Johnson at Charlotte in 2004-05.
 
With restarts as crucial as they were on Sunday, Harvick was glad he had raced in the XFINITY Series event on Saturday afternoon.
 
“The restarts were just really slippery, and I learned that in the race yesterday,” said Harvick, who finished third in Saturday’s race. “You had to really maintain your entrance speed and really slide the thing through the center of the corner to try to help keep it pointed up off (the corner).”
 
Harvick did that to perfection on the last four restarts, holding off Stewart-Haas teammate and fifth-place finisher Kurt Busch when action resumed on Laps 234 and 242 and outdueling McMurray (after Busch pitted for tires under the ninth of 10 cautions) on Laps 296 and 301.
 
Ryan Newman ran third, followed by Kasey Kahne and Busch. Brad Keselowski, Martin Truex Jr., Joey Logano, Jeff Gordon and Kyle Larson completed the top 10. Truex posted his fourth consecutive top-10 finish, the first time a Furniture Row Racing driver has accomplished that feat.
 
McMurray left the track wishing he had a mulligan on the final restart.
 
Matt McCall (crew chief) made a really good decision at the end to stay out (on old tires) and got us on the front row,” McMurray said. “That was a fun battle with Kevin. Those are the kinds you wish you could do over again, because I would have slid up earlier.
 
“It’s similar to plate racing with the engine package we have now, where if you don’t get the guy cleared, he can kind of stall you out a little bit. And I saw Kevin coming and I thought I could slide up in front of him, but I also knew it was for the win and that we would probably have wrecked there.”
 
Notes: With two victories and two second-place finishes this season, Harvick leaves Phoenix with a 22-point lead over Logano in the series standings… Dale Earnhardt Jr. blew a right rear tire — the result of a melted bead — and slammed the Turn 2 wall on Lap 180. Credited with a 43rd-place finish, Earnhardt dropped four spots to sixth in the series standings, 56 points behind Harvick… Busch scored 39 points in his return from a three-race suspension, good for 33rd place in the standings. To be eligible for the series championship, Busch must be in the top 30 in points at the end of the 26-race regular season.
 

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‘Smoke’ made contact with Justin Allgaier, got into wall

RELATED: Full race results | Updated series standings

Tony Stewart was running 10th during Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Phoenix International Raceway when he got into the No. 51 Chevrolet of Justin Allgaier on Lap 236, essentially ending his chance for a top-10 finish.

Stewart lost control during contact, spun out and hit the wall, bringing out the eighth caution flag of the day.

"Smoke" had been running aggressively throughout the day, knocking Austin Dillon out of the way earlier. He had also initiated contact with Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

Stewart’s No. 14 ride was repaired and returned to the track three laps down, and outside the top 35. Shortly after his return to the track, he hit the wall again, bringing out another caution.

The veteran finished in 39th place and completed 282 of 312 laps.

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