Driver missed 2014 race with vision issues, injured in last-lap wreck in ’13

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If Denny Hamlin were feeling a bit apprehensive about this weekend’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Auto Club Speedway, it would certainly be understandable.
 
The Joe Gibbs Racing driver has had memorable experiences in his last two trips to the 2-mile track, but not necessarily positive ones.
 
In 2013, Hamlin won the pole for the Auto Club 400 and was battling with Joey Logano for the win on the final lap of the race when contact between the two sent Hamlin into the inside wall.
 
The impact left Hamlin with a fractured L1 vertebra, an injury that kept him on the sidelines for the next four races. He returned to competition at Talladega, where he completed 23 laps before turning the car over to relief driver Brian Vickers.

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Last year, Hamlin qualified 13th at Auto Club, only to be replaced before the start of the race due to vision problems. It was later discovered that a piece of metal had become lodged in Hamlin’s eye.
 
Hamlin said he thought his team had a car capable of winning last year at ACS. In his absence, Sam Hornish Jr. drove the No. 11 Toyota, eventually finishing 17th.
 
"I’m just as motivated (this year)," Hamlin said last weekend at Phoenix International Raceway. "The last race laps I ran around there was when I got crashed on the last lap racing for a win.
 
"Ultimately, my motivation is to go there and perform at a really high level. It’s been circled for like a year or two now to run well there. I just didn’t get a chance last year and hopefully I will this year."
 
The last two races at Auto Club have been won by teammate Kyle Busch. This year, it will be Busch that is the one on the sidelines as the No. 18 driver is recovering from leg injuries sustained in an XFINITY Series race at Daytona last month.
 
Crew chief Dave Rogers, previously with Busch, currently heads up Hamlin’s team.
 
Hamlin has a pair of top-five finishes this season — he was fourth at Daytona and fifth at Las Vegas — and two results outside the top 20.
 
He’s 13th in the points standings and, like a lot of other drivers, still trying to sort out this year’s rules package.
 
"I wouldn’t think this rules package would suit me and my style particularly," he said. "I’d rather have 1,000 horsepower than 700. The less downforce I would say probably does suit me a little bit better, but I think we’ve just kind of optimized where we’re at. We’ve been a top-five car every week and it’s a shame that we made a mistake at Atlanta and spun out, but we were top-five for sure going to finish there, I thought.
 
"We’re top-five, but we’re still just a little behind on speed from where we need to from the 4 (Kevin Harvick) and then the Hendrick cars, but it’s all about for us trying to find that little bit of extra speed."
 
Even as they continue to search, Hamlin sees improvement, saying the team is "way closer" than where it stood competitively a year ago.
 
While he has 24 career wins in Sprint Cup competition, none have come at ACS. He has, however, qualified on the pole for the last two events there and scored a career-best finish of third in 2008.
 
"I’m pretty optimistic about what’s to come in the months ahead and hopefully if we can make it in the Chase then we can make another run at it," he said.

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Driver’s foundation announces gift for hometown Kern County Boys and Girls Club

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BAKERSFIELD, Calif. — Kevin Harvick will need to make room among the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series trophies he’s collecting right and left these days for some other significant recognition he received in his hometown Wednesday — or as they officially proclaimed it in Bakersfield — "Kevin Harvick Day."

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NASCAR’s reigning Cup champion and current championship leader has spent the early portion of the week in his California hometown. And while he was honored with words and bestowed with gifts from community leaders and influential lawmakers Wednesday at the Kern County Boys and Girls Club, it was Harvick who did the giving.

His Kevin Harvick Foundation, in partnership with the Cal Ripken Sr. Foundation, announced a major gift to the Kern County Boys and Girls Club — the largest in the state — which will include new athletic fields, a fitness track and modern scoreboard. And the large gymnasium where Wednesday’s ceremony was held will be completely remodeled and renovated.

The announcement went over very well with community, which packed the gym, and the hundred or so children in the audience who held up a large "Thank you Kevin" sign and offered the greeting in unison after the big news was revealed. They are among the 5,700 kids who use one of the county’s Boys and Girls Club daily.

"Kevin is a fantastic individual and hometown boy who remembers his roots and gives back to his hometown to make a difference,” local Budweiser executive Ken Ouellette told the crowd to rousing applause.

Through his foundation Harvick has consistently and generously given back to the area his family still calls home, and for years has also provided major financial help to the local high school and scholarships to several of its students.

It’s a track record that is clearly as important to Harvick as the historic racing streak he’s on — including seven consecutive top-two finishes and back-to-back wins in the first two of the three-stop "NASCAR Goes West" swing that concludes Sunday at Auto Club Speedway (3:30 p.m. ET, FOX).

"This is an impact we can make with thousands of kids,” Harvick told Wednesday’s crowd adding with a proud smile, "This town is responsible for the direction my career took.

"And right now, the year’s going pretty well.”

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Alabama superspeedway the latest to make safety enhancements

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Talladega Superspeedway announced plans on Thursday to add SAFER (Steel And Foam Energy Reduction) barriers to its existing barrier system ahead of the NASCAR weekend on May 1-3.

The track will add SAFER barriers in three locations — along the inside wall at entrances to pit road, Turn 1 and Turn 3.

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"We are committed to making Talladega Superspeedway a safe environment for drivers as well as for our fans," Talladega Superspeedway Chairman Grant Lynch said. "Safety is our top priority and will continue to collaborate with ISC, NASCAR and ARCA on any future safety enhancements."

The 2.66-mile track will host the NASCAR XFINITY Series Winn Dixie 300 on Saturday, May 2 (3 p.m. ET, FOX) and the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series GEICO 500 on Sunday, May 3 (1 p.m. ET, FOX).

Since Kyle Busch‘s accident in the XFINITY Series opener at Daytona International Speedway, in which the Joe Gibbs Racing driver hit a wall that did not have a SAFER barrier, tracks have been analyzing their protective barriers and making immediate enhancements where possible. Busch suffered a compact fracture to his right lower leg and a mid-foot fracture of his left foot from the accident and is out indefinitely.

Drivers have also been more vocal about the need for more SAFER barriers. Jeff Gordon and Ryan Newman met with NASCAR officials recently, and safety was among the topics of discussion.

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Defending series champion comes to Fontana with three straight top-10s

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After starting the season with a disappointing 28th-place showing at Daytona International Speedway, Chase Elliott looks like he’s back in his 2014 form. The same form that allowed the 19-year-old JR Motorsports driver to run away with the NASCAR XFINITY Series championship.

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Since Daytona, Elliott has registered two fifth-place finishes and a seventh-place showing. He will attempt to run for his fourth consecutive top 10 in Saturday’s Drive4Clots.com 300 at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California (4 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1).
 
Elliott remains fond of the two-mile track where he finished sixth last season in his first-ever start there.
 
"It’s such a blast to race at Auto Club," he said. "There are so many different grooves drivers run, and that’s what makes it so exciting. You may see four-wide as we fan out on restarts during Saturday’s race.
 
"If you’re a race fan, this is a must watch, no question about it."
 
Next weekend, Elliott will make his long-awaited NASCAR Sprint Cup Series debut at Martinsville Speedway, but first he must focus on defending his XFINITY Series title. The No. 9 NAPA AUTO PARTS Chevrolet driver ranks fourth in the standings, 25 points behind leader Ty Dillon.
 
He hopes to close in on Dillon with a visit to Victory Lane.
 
"The West Coast swing has been a good two weeks," Elliott said. "We are looking to close on a high note this weekend in California. A win would do that."

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See who is eligible to run May 16, 7 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1 in Charlotte

VOTE: Show your support for your favorite driver in the Sprint Fan Vote

As you vote to put a driver into the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway on May 16 (7 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1), see the 17 drivers that are already eligible to run the event.

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Eligibility for participation is restricted to those drivers who have been approved by NASCAR for NASCAR Sprint Cup Series competition and have met all other eligibility requirements.

Those requirements include being an active driver who has won at least one (1) NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Championship event during either the 2014 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season or as of May 11, 2015.

Additionally, any full-time competitors who have won a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Championship or NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race are eligible to compete.

Driver Eligibility
AJ Allmendinger Win at Watkins Glen (2014)
Aric Almirola Win at Daytona-2 (2014)
Kurt Busch Win at Martinsville-1 (2014)
Kyle Busch Win at Auto Club (2014)
Dale Earnhardt Jr. Win at Daytona-1 (2014)
Carl Edwards Win at Bristol-1 (2014)
Jeff Gordon Win at Kansas-1 (2014)
Denny Hamlin Win at Talladega-1 (2014)
Kevin Harvick Win at Phoenix-1 (2014)
Jimmie Johnson Win at Charlotte-1 (2014)
Kasey Kahne Win at Atlanta (2014)
Matt Kenseth Win in NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race (2004)
Brad Keselowski Win at Las Vegas (2014)
Joey Logano Win at Texas-2 (2014)
Jamie McMurray Win in NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race (2014)
Ryan Newman Win in NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race (2002)
Tony Stewart Win in NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race (2009)

Thirty years later: ‘I always looked up to that trophy, literally and figuratively’

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On April 6, 1985, Dale Earnhardt celebrated his third of what would be nine wins at Bristol Motor Speedway. In Victory Lane, Dale Earnhardt Jr. gained a respect for the World’s Fastest Half-Mile as well as the hardware handed out to the winners.

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"When I was at Bristol in the ’80s, dad won there in the Wrangler car, and in Victory Circle in a picture, the trophy is much taller than I am," Earnhardt said Thursday on "The Morning Drive" on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.  "I always looked up to that trophy, literally and figuratively. Dad had three or four or five of those trophies in his house, and it was just a big, big trophy.

"It stood tall over a lot of the other trophies including the championship trophies that he was winning. So I thought it was one I wanted to have because of the size and then the uniqueness of the race track itself also makes that trophy very coveted."


(Right to left) 10-year-old Dale Earnhardt Jr. with stepmother Teresa, NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt and Kelley Earnhardt Miller, age 12

In 2004, Earnhardt was able to win one of his own in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, and when he attempts to go back to Victory Lane after the Food City 500 on April 19 (1 p.m. ET, FOX), he’ll be running a special throwback paint scheme.

On Thursday night in Nashville, Tennessee, Earnhardt unveiled the scheme with a little help from Jerry Caldwell, executive vice president and general manager of Bristol Motor Speedway, and Old Crow Medicine Show. The double Grammy winners will headline the AutoTrader.com Prerace Concert on April 19 at the track. The DEWshine paint scheme is a homecoming for Mountain Dew, which was invented in Bristol’s neighbor, Johnson City, Tennessee, and was created to mix with moonshine.


Dale Earnhardt Jr. unveils the No. 88 Mountain Dew DEWshine Chevrolet that will compete in the April 19 Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway. Also in photo, featured left to right: Chance McCoy, Critter Fuqua, Cory Younts and Ketch Secor of Old Crow Medicine Show and Jerry Caldwell, executive vice president and general manager of Bristol Motor Speedway.

"I like the throwback scheme and the track’s a bit of a throwback so they kind of pair up well," Earnhardt said. "I’d love to be able to take it to Victory Lane."

RELATED: Get the DEWshine die-cast and gear

With wins as an XFINITY Series driver and owner to go with his Cup triumph, Earnhardt knows the way to the winner’s circle and enjoys interacting with fans there.

"It’s a fun, energized win because you’re so close to the fans in Victory Lane in Turn 3," Earnhardt said. "You drive up on top of a building for one. That’s pretty cool so it’s a cool place to drive your race car. And then to be able to get out there right with the fans all around you, it’s a great energy so it’s a lot of fun to be able to win there."

The configuration and the track surface may change, but Earnhardt said racing at the short track has always been fun for driver and fan alike.

"Just as a pure fan of watching a race, I think it’s the best ticket on the circuit," Earnhardt said. "You’re not going to have a bad seat, no matter where you’re at. You’re right on top of the action. Everything is just right there in front of you. There’s no other track like it. The high banks. The half-mile. The speed.

"They do a great job putting on a good show. There’s a lot of good hospitality in and around the track for the fans prior to the event. It’s just a good location, right up the road from the house. But I always loved going there as a kid and always admired how those races were run. I always admired the way dad raced there and a lot of other guys raced there as well."

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Post-race spat between the drivers detailed in radio interview

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RELATED: Bowman puts Patrick on blast post-Phoenix

Danica Patrick‘s post-race threat to Alex Bowman‘s family jewels got the unabridged re-telling it deserved Thursday, courtesy of Bowman himself.
 
Bowman, the second-year NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver, again explained himself Thursday as a guest on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, saying he didn’t realize that Patrick was on the lead lap while he raced her a handful of laps down last Sunday at Phoenix International Raceway. But he also felt like the situation, which escalated when Patrick confronted him as he walked back to the drivers’ motorcoach lot, he said, would eventually settle down on its own.

"Just a tough situation," Bowman told SiriusXM. "Phoenix is one of the harder places to, I don’t want to call it staying out of the way, but to let someone go when you need to, so it’s unfortunate. She was really, really mad. I don’t know. I guess she feels like I completely ruined her day, and I guess it’s hard for me to see how I did that in four laps, but it is what it is and we’ll move on."

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Bowman, in his first season driving the No. 7 Chevrolet for Tommy Baldwin Racing, said his car had an issue setting sail on restarts during the CampingWorld.com 500, and that he needed to race harder to regain the lost ground. After passing the No. 34 Front Row Motorsports Ford of interim driver Brett Moffitt, Patrick caught Bowman quickly, but TBR crew chief Kevin "Bono" Manion hadn’t informed his driver of her position on the track.
 
Either way, Bowman offered the bottom lane as an avenue for Patrick to pass him.
 
"She struggled to get by us, and a couple times, she just drove through the corner and drove in the side of us," Bowman said. "I guess her car must’ve been free in, or she was struggling with whatever she was fighting. And it wasn’t until the next caution came out that Bono came on the radio and said, ‘Just so you know, we’re not racing that 10 car. She’s on the lead lap.’ I’m like, ‘Well, I wish I would’ve stopped a little more for her,’ but at the same time, if I would’ve just pulled over and stopped for her, I was going to lose the spot to the 34."
 
Patrick’s rough day was compounded by her late-race spin after contact with David Ragan, perhaps fueling the robust chewing-out of Bowman in the Phoenix garage afterward. Another factor that likely didn’t help: Bowman chuckling during the tirade’s delivery.
 
"I’d say it’s being emotional," Bowman said when asked if the confrontation crossed the line. "Honestly, I stood there laughing, which probably made her a lot more mad in all honesty. I was just walking through the garage back to the coach lot, and she came up to me absolutely screaming at me, which whatever, she had a rough day, I get it. And I was trying to explain, hey, I’m sorry, I didn’t know you were on the lead lap, and she said something that I’m the worst out there and I’m always in the way and I’m always a back-marker and blah blah blah.
 
"At that point, I was pretty insulted and I said something about what happened at Bristol last year when she was two or three laps down and I was on the lead lap, and she was holding me up, the field got checked up and I spun her out. She tried to wreck me for the rest of the night. So then she told me that I’m a punk and she was going to knee me in the cherries and whatnot, and I just laughed at her and let her walk away."
 
Bowman said he didn’t feel the incident would carry over, especially not at the high-speed layout at Auto Club Speedway, site of this weekend’s Sprint Cup and XFINITY Series events.
 
"I honestly feel like everybody’s just going to get over it," Bowman said. "I didn’t go out there and wreck her; she didn’t go out there and wreck me. I don’t think we’re going to go to Fontana and try to wreck each other by any means. I think it’s just one of those heat of the moment deals. It’ll blow over and be just fine."
 
Bowman hasn’t let the incident keep him from enjoying NASCAR’s West Coast Swing. In addition to sitting in on NASCAR.com’s Spring Break party with fans in the Phoenix infield, Bowman kicked off the #NASCARGoesWest experience with a true Las Vegas wedding involving his engine tuner, Frankie Good.
 
The nuptials for Good, held at the Little White Wedding Chapel on Las Vegas Blvd., involved the entire Tommy Baldwin Racing crew outfitted in tuxedo T-shirts. Bowman said Manion one-upped the group with a purple, green and yellow suit — purchased at Goodwill for $13.
 
"When they said, ‘You may now kiss the bride,’ I screamed ‘3 for Dale!’ and made it official and it was a good ‘ol time."

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Bruce: Track’s famous hot dogs have been essential part of race weekend

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They’re trifling with tradition at Martinsville, and you’d think a track that has been on the circuit ever since there was a circuit to be on would know better.
 
They’re not changing race dates or moving the start/finish line from the frontstretch to the backstretch. There will still be asphalt on the straightaways and concrete in the corners. And the train tracks up on the hill? They’re still there.
 
This goes deeper. Much deeper.
 
Martinsville Speedway is changing hot dogs.

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In a pig’s eye, you say?
 
There’s a new purveyor of pink wienies at the series’ shortest venue and its name is Valleydale, a division of Smithfield Foods.
 
Jesse Jones has been gunned down.
 
You remember Valleydale, don’t you? Cartoon pigs playing trombone, drum and cymbals back in the day. "Everybody shouts hooray for Valleydale!"
 
The racing connection came later — title sponsorship of the spring Sprint Cup race at Bristol Motor Speedway, the Valleydale 500, lasted 11 years, from 1980 through 1991.
 
Jesse Jones hot dogs have been a staple at Martinsville for much longer. Some say they’ve been a part of the concession fare almost from the beginning, which would have been around 1948.
 
That may or may not be the case, but they’ve certainly been an essential part of the race weekend experience for decades.
 
The infield concession stand, located near the start/finish line and run by a local booster club, does a brisk business on race weekends. Crewmen and fans can be found lined up throughout the day purchasing hot dogs for breakfast, lunch and dinner.
 
Officials are hoping that’s again the case next week, when the track hosts the Kroger 250 Camping World Truck Series race (March 28, 2:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1) and STP 500 Sprint Cup race (March 29, 1 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1).
 
Other tracks have gone hog-wild with different types of food offerings. Phoenix International Raceway officials unveiled the CARBuretor Crunch for this past race weekend. The deep-fried peanut butter and jelly sandwich came with Cap’n Crunch and caramel on the outside, bacon and bananas on the inside.
 
Fans visiting Charlotte Motor Speedway can partake of the new Brunch Burger, a quarter-pound cheeseburger topped with hash browns, cheese, bacon and egg. It comes on French toast and includes hot maple syrup.
 
But the Martinsville hot dog? It’s gone unchanged and unchallenged. Until now.
 
Actually, that’s not quite true. The track did switch hot dog vendors several years ago when International Speedway Corp. purchased the facility.
 
New owners, new hot dogs, same $2 price.
 
It caused quite a ruckus. Folks complained. The original hot dogs were quickly brought back. Order was restored.
 
Track officials seem confident that this latest change will satisfy fans and competitors alike. Lessons were learned.
 
I hope they’re right. Race fans have adapted to schedule changes, rules changes and how the championship is determined.
 
But when it comes to the Martinsville hot dog, they’ve proven to be less understanding.

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Furniture Row driver striving to build on his hot start

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AVONDALE, Ariz. — Martin Truex Jr.’s fast start in 2015 can be traced back to last fall.

At the end of October, the driver of the No. 78 Chevrolet for Furniture Row Racing took part in a Goodyear tire test at Auto Club Speedway. He credits that experience with his team’s blistering start in the Sprint Cup Series this season.


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The 34-year-old has rattled off four straight top-10s to open the season with the best result being a runner-up finish at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. The seventh-place result in the CampingWorld.com 500 at Phoenix International Raceway gave the Furniture Row organization four straight top-10s for the first time in the team’s history and placed the driver third in the point standings.



Now, the series shifts to the Auto Club 400 (March 22, 3:30 p.m. ET, FOX) at the 2-mile track in Fontana, California. Auto Club has not been the kindest track to Truex in his Sprint Cup career. In 14 starts, he has three top-10s with the last one coming in 2012; his average finish there is 20.1. He has only one top-10 in Fontana in the past nine Sprint Cup events there, but with the way he’s been running this season, he has a good feeling heading into the finale of the three-race West Coast swing.

"Definitely looking forward to California," he said. "I feel like it’s a place we should be strong. We did the Goodyear tire test there last fall. … Really liked what we saw there with the new package. We ran 2015 rules and learned a lot there that has helped us throughout this season. I feel really good about it. I had a good car at Atlanta and Vegas and that’s a good indication that we should be good on the 1.5-mile, 2-mile tracks. I feel like that will be a good one for us."



Truex said last year’s testing is an advantage for his the team, but there are other factors.

"It depends on what tire they bring back I guess," Truex said. "Any time you get track time, especially a new rules package coming in effect. We got some time on the 2015 rules, which was definitely, I think, a little bit of an advantage. I think at the end of the day we were fast out there. We felt good about what we had and we have some data to work off of for this year. It really just gave us a step up on the competition I think."

The roots of his confidence-building fast start date back to last fall, but there’s another major reason for his progress — the promotion of Cole Pearn from lead race engineer to crew chief last December.

"He’s certainly a big part of turning the team around," Truex said of Pearn. "He’s a big part of why we’re running well, obviously. I don’t want to give him all the credit because there are a lot of other people that deserve it as well.

"He has a bright future in the sport. He is a guy you are going to talk about for a long time being a good crew chief. … I think one of the neatest things is that there were a lot of big teams after him last year and this winter. We are very proud that he stayed with us. I’m proud that he stayed with us because he knew what we were capable of."

The team struggled in Truex’s first season with the organization. He came over last year from Michael Waltrip Racing, which went from three full-time teams to two due to the fallout from MWR’s involvement in the Richmond race manipulation scandal that took Truex out of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoff in 2013.

With Todd Barrier atop the pit box last season, Truex recorded only five top-10s all season. His first top 10 of 2014 didn’t come until the 13th race of the season — in June — at Dover International Speedway. With 30-plus races to go, Truex is just one top 10 away from matching last year’s total. The synergy with his new chief couldn’t be going much better.

Pearn’s transition to crew chief was part of Furniture Row’s offseason plan to get the one-car organization back in the Chase.



"I would say the biggest thing to start with was personnel," said Joe Garone, General Manager of Furniture Row Racing. "Advancing Cole Pearn to crew chief, which really had been planned for awhile. The last I think eight races of the season, he was a lot more heavily involved. It was just kind of a perfect fit for him. We boosted up our engineering staff around him.



"We were able to go into the offseason with a good plan, and focus on our downfalls that we learned through the season and just listen to the driver. He told us the cars weren’t working and went to work on them and got them better."

The plan is looking good, but Truex said execution has been the key.

"All the guys on the team, Joe, Barney (Visser, team owner), Cole, having a good plan and executing throughout the offseason," Truex said, referring to the setup for success. "Cars have been running good. The team has been making good decisions. The team hasn’t been making mistakes. Reliability’s been there, so everything we needed to work on and wanted to get better at has been there. Now it’s just a matter of how much better can we get."

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Driver’s first full-time Cup ride since 2010 figures to get better

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Sam Hornish Jr.’s return to full-time competition in NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series hasn’t gotten off to the best start, and the former open-wheel champion heads into this week’s stop at Auto Club Speedway 24th in points.
 
Blame some of it on circumstances such as a melted tire bead at Phoenix where he finished 40th, or hitting debris from another driver’s cut tire at Atlanta where he finished 21st.

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Blame some of it on an organization that’s still trying to play catch-up with the fast and powerful.
 
Hornish, 35, says he isn’t sure where his Richard Petty Motorsports team stacks up after just a handful of races, but admits, "we’re not where we want to be."
 
"Really if we want to look at where we have been trending compared to the people that have the closest race cars to us, I don’t feel like we are doing a bad job. I feel like we are actually doing pretty good, but it’s not as good as what we want to be doing at this point in time," he said.
 
Hornish replaced former RPM driver Marcos Ambrose when the latter chose to return to Australia after a nine-year career in NASCAR. Hornish hasn’t competed full-time in Sprint Cup since 2010 and his last full season in any series came in 2013 when he drove for owner Roger Penske in the XFINITY Series.
 
His 135 Sprint Cup Series starts is more than only a handful of others running the full schedule this season.
 
At RPM, Hornish is paired with teammate Aric Almirola. The two have similar driving styles, a bonus for an organization that’s posted just five Cup wins since 2009 with a variety of drivers.
 
"He’s capable of winning races, capable of racing (up front)," Richard Petty said. "So far this year we’ve not given him anything to run with car-wise.
 
"It’s just one of those deals where the combination has got to come together, fate and all that stuff. But the ability of helping us with sponsors and things, he’s good with people, good with sponsors and I think he’s a pretty good race car driver if we give him something to run.
 
"If you go back and look, he drove for different people and when he had a good car, he ran good. Nobody can run good in a bad car. He was always capable of getting everything that was in that car that day. We’ve got to give him something. Right now … the only Fords that have done anything at all are the Penske cars. We’ve done as good as the Roush cars and we’ve done terrible. … It’s going to take time."
 
Team Penske‘s two-team effort of Brad Keselowski and Joey Logano has been the cream of the Ford crop in recent seasons, winning 14 times since becoming teammates in 2013. Roush Fenway Racing has five wins since ’13 while RPM has one.
 
Crew chief Drew Blickensderfer likens Hornish to Matt Kenseth, with whom Blickensderfer won the 2009 Daytona 500. He also guided Kenseth to a win at Auto Club Speedway, and won with David Ragan in the summer race of ’11 at Daytona.
 
Both Hornish and Kenseth have "a feel from the seat that can focus on what they need for Sunday afternoon or what they need to go faster for qualifying," he said. "Their personalities are fairly similar, too. They’re both pretty low key, quiet guys that care about their families and race cars. … Sam is also similar to Matt in that respect where he can filter the outside noise.
 
"Sam has told me that when he first came into the sport that was hard to do, filter all the stuff that’s coming to him. He used the analogy ‘it was a fire hose spraying water at me when I first came in the sport. Now it feels like a garden hose. Now, if this is how it’s going to be, how can you help me get better?’ "
 
Like his team owner, Blickensderfer knows there’s still plenty of work to be done. Almirola is 14th in points but has yet to crack the top 10. Hornish has yet to top his 12th-place finish in the season-opening race.
 
"We don’t expect to take cars that were 20th-place cars last year and make them race winners," Blickensderfer said. "But we expect to take 20th-place cars and make them 15th-place."
 
Almirola made his first appearance in NASCAR’s Chase for the Sprint Cup last season. Having Hornish as a teammate, he said, has been beneficial in part because the two share similar driving styles, something the teams discovered while testing at Nashville before the end of ’14.
 
"Me and Marcos were total opposites," Almirola said. "Marcos has a very unique driving style because of all of his road course racing experience … and it made it very difficult to match his setups when he was better than us and vice versa.
 
"I think Atlanta was a great example. I think (Hornish) qualified eighth and his car was really good on Friday, so starting Saturday we kind of transitioned more of our setup towards his setup. We didn’t copy it exact, but over the winter we understood what the differences were that we needed to have in my car versus his and we had a good Saturday at Atlanta. That translated into a good Sunday. We ran top 15 all day and finished 11th, and I think a large part of it was due to the 9 car being so competitive off the truck."
 
Hornish has seven career starts at Auto Club, site of Sunday’s Auto Club 400 (FOX, 3:30 p.m. ET), with a best finish of 12th on the 2-mile track. It will be an opportunity to halt the early-season slide and perhaps begin moving back in the right direction.
 
In the meantime, he said, he’s happy to be back in the series and working for RPM.
 
"I feel like I couldn’t ask for a better group of people," he said, "and what they are looking to do within the company and what we are trying to do with the pieces we have at this point in time. I think we are doing a good job. We just need to continue to evolve on that to make the program better.
 
"It will be worthwhile no matter how it turns out. It has been a lot of fun to get to know these people and we are all working in the same direction. I think we will continue to progress and get better and better."

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