Gordon, Stewart, Kenseth and Johnson among those that couldn’t get out

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WATCH: Richard Buck explains inspection process

HAMPTON, Ga. – Daytona 500 champion Joey Logano won the pole for Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race here at Atlanta Motor Speedway (1 p.m. ET, FOX).
 
Thirteen others didn’t fare quite so well, never getting the opportunity to make a lap on the 1.54-mile track as Coors Light Pole Qualifying for the Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 got underway.

RELATED: Logano wins Coors Light Pole Award | Qualifying speeds

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Originally scheduled to begin at 5:45 p.m. ET, the start of qualifying for the season’s second race was postponed 15 minutes due to the large number of cars still going through the pre-qualifying technical inspection process.
 
According to NASCAR Sprint Cup Series director Richard Buck, when officials gave notice that qualifying was underway, all 47 cars entered in the race had made at least one pass through inspection.
 
"We did see the area of the laser inspection station where teams were pushing it," Buck said. "And that’s their job. They’re trying to get every bit that they can.
 
"Our goal is to make sure everybody has a fair opportunity to get through there. Our focus was to make sure that we were able to run every car across there at least once … and that’s what we did."
 
Former series champions Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, Tony Stewart and Matt Kenseth were among those that didn’t make it on track before the completion of the opening 15-minute qualifying round.
 
"Yes we are pushing the limits," Gordon said, "but there is something wrong here. I’m embarrassed; I’m embarrassed for our series right now that this just happened."

PHOTOS: Full starting lineup for the Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500
 
Kenseth said he got an inkling that something was amiss when he headed out to pit road and saw "only 14 cars."
 
"So I have a hard time believing it was the teams," the Joe Gibbs Racing driver said.


Stewart took to Twitter to vent about what happened.

This weekend’s Sprint Cup Series race is the first featuring the 2015 rules package, a package that includes less downforce on the cars and less horsepower under the hood, along with several other changes.
 
As such, it was the first time teams made the trip through an official pre-qualifying inspection.
 
Buck said it became evident all teams wouldn’t be able to be through inspection in time for the original 5:45 p.m. start, which is why it was delayed for 15 minutes.
 
"We could see the trend starting to develop … our job was to try and work with the teams (and) allow them to meet the parameters, the rules we set in place," he said. "So we were able to push it 15 minutes to give them as much time as we could."
 
Defending series champion Kevin Harvick qualified second, while Jamie McMurray, Denny Hamlin and Carl Edwards completed the top five.
 
Mike Wallace, Matt DiBenedetto, Michael Annett and Reed Sorenson failed to qualify.

MORE: Strange things afoot at Atlanta Motor Speedway
 
Johnson, a six-time series champion, will start 37th.
 
"We are at a track that’s very forgiving from a starting position standpoint," the Hendrick Motorsports driver said. "If you have a good race car, you’ve got a lot of room here, you can run anywhere on the track and get your way to the front. (There will be) a lot of trips down pit road for tires. We’ll have plenty of opportunities to get there. …
 
"I think we’re all standing here in shock, wondering how did this happen?"
 
Buck said the number of cars having to make multiple trips through the inspection line was nearly double what the sanctioning body sees during a typical weekend.
 
"Today we had at least 20 (go back through)," he said. "We had more cars here than we’ve had.
 
"A new downforce package, new rules package, new under pan, less horsepower, and so there was a lot of things that were put into this recipe that the cooks, if you will, in the garage area were trying to get the recipe right, and they were pushing the edge on everything."

Gordon will start 35th, Kenseth 36th and Stewart 39th.
 
To determine the full 43-car starting lineup, positions 1-34 went to those drivers that posted at least one official qualifying lap. Positions 35-43 were assigned to those entered based on 2014 final championship driver points standings.
 
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Hendrick Motorsports driver won at Atlanta in ’14 to lock up Chase spot

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HAMPTON, Ga. – Last year, Kasey Kahne used a win at Atlanta Motor Speedway to secure one of the 16 available positions in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
 
Six months later, the Hendrick Motorsports driver is hoping for similar results. A win in Sunday’s Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 (FOX, 1 p.m. ET) brings with it no guarantees, but it certainly would put the 34-year-old in a much less stressful situation.
 
Kahne was the final driver to secure a Chase spot by virtue of a victory here last August, however a schedule change now finds the 1.54-mile track hosting the season’s second stop.

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A win would go a long way toward easing his team’s concerns as the 2015 Sprint Cup Series season begins to pick up steam.
 
"It would be a lot better and a lot less stress, but it is what it is," Kahne said Friday as teams began preparations for Sunday’s race. "We’ll take it any way we can."
 
There are goals this year that the ’14 effort failed to accomplish, he said. Winning and running up front more often for starters. Better results in practice and better qualifying results as well.
 
"It all starts this weekend," Kahne said. "It would be great to come off with a win right away … and then just go from there.


The end of the ’14 season also signaled the end of the Kahne/Kenny Francis driver/crew chief pairing. The two had worked together, with two brief exceptions in ’07 (due to Francis’ suspension) and ’10, for a stretch of more than 300 races from the 2005 season finale at Homestead through ’14.
 
They have 17 wins in their respective positions, with 16 coming while working together. Francis earned his first win as crew chief with former driver Jeremy Mayfield; Kahne went to the winner’s circle for the first time with Tommy Baldwin Jr. calling the shots.
 
Today, Francis oversees car design and development as the vehicle technical director for Hendrick Motorsports.
 
Keith Rodden, crew chief for Jamie McMurray last season at Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates, returned to the HMS fold to replace Francis on the No. 5 team.
 
He and Kahne have a history.
 
"I think the first time he was my engineer was 2004 in the XFINITY Series," Kahne said of Rodden, "and we have kind of been on and off together ever since.
 
"There is a lot more to it than just the communication side. It’s kind of the preparation at the shop throughout the winter, how the guys look at things and how our cars are built. He’s done a really good job with all that stuff."
 
Kahne, who agreed to a three-year contract extension last November, joined HMS in April of 2010 but didn’t officially make the move until 2012. Five wins have come since the move and he is a three-time winner at Atlanta.

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No. 10 driver finished sixth at Atlanta in 2014, now ranks 18th in standings

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HAMPTON, Ga. — Danica Patrick, 21st a week ago in the season-opening Daytona 500, returns to the site of her best finish in a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race this weekend as teams prepare for Sunday’s Folds of Honor QuikTrip 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway (1 p.m. ET, FOX).
 
Patrick, beginning her third season of full-time Sprint Cup competition, finished sixth here last August, one of four top-10 results since she debuted in the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 10 Chevrolet.

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It’s her fifth race with crew chief Daniel Knost after SHR made a crew chief swap late in the ’14 season. Knost had previously worked with teammate Kurt Busch while Patrick’s efforts had been under the direction of veteran Tony Gibson.
 
"It went good the last time," Patrick said Friday of her last visit to the 1.54-mile track. "It probably sucked before that. That’s just the way racing is — sometimes you’re good and sometimes you’re not."
 
Teams spent almost four hours on the track Thursday, testing the new 2015 rules package in two separate sessions. Patrick ended the first 18th on the board and was 14th in the final session.
 
Patrick called Thursday’s efforts "a good, steady day."
 
"We found some things that were good and some … that weren’t as good," she said. "I feel like in a race weekend, if you can find one or two good changes to your race car that don’t hurt it in … any way but help it somewhere … that you have a shot at a decent weekend and being competitive."
 
Her first outing with Knost atop the pit box "was kind of a disaster," she said, referring to a 36th-place finish in the fall race at Texas last season. But the team closed the year with a 22nd-place result on the one-mile Phoenix layout and an 18th a week later in the season-ending stop at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
 
She finished 28th in points, one spot below her 2013 results.
 
At Daytona this year, where track position is often dictated by the whims of the draft, Patrick ran as high as the top 10 as well as outside the top 25. The same could be said for many of those competing in the season-opening event.
 
She enters this weekend’s race 18th in the standings, with 83 career starts in the series. It’s still a learning process, and the potential for continued improvement exists.
 
"It is our unrealized potential that is exciting to me," she said.
 
"It is my fourth year in stock cars (she ran a partial Sprint Cup schedule in ’12 while competing fulltime in the XFINITY Series), and my third year in Cup. It’s Daniel’s sixth year in NASCAR and his second year as a crew chief. We don’t have a ton of experience and you would think that there is only ‘up’ to go.
 
"The potential of where we could end up and where we can get to is encouraging."

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Jones, Hayley also post top speeds

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RELATED: See full practice results

HAMPTON, Ga. — After propelling his No. 29 Toyota at 178.695 mph around Atlanta Motor Speedway, BK Racing team owner Brad Keselowski soared to the top of the leaderboard during Friday’s final NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice for the Hyundai Construction Equipment 200 (Saturday, Feb. 28 at 5:30 p.m. ET, FS1).

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Kyle Busch Motorsports’ Erik Jones came in second, circling the Georgia track at 178.677 mph in his No. 4 Toyota.

ThorSport Racing’s Cameron Hayley made a late run during the session, ultimately propelling his No. 13 ride to third-fastest on the board with a top speed of 178.482 mph.

Kyle Busch Motorsports’ Daniel Suarez and Athenian Motorsports’ John Wes Townley rounded out the top five, recording high speeds of 178.040 mph and 177.903 mph, respectively.

Halfway through the session, Ray Black Jr. scraped the wall in Turn 2 in his No. 07 Team Scuba Chevrolet. Cody Ware followed up the incident with a loss of power in his No. 50 Rick Ware Racing Chevrolet, which brought out the caution flag for the second time during the two-hour session. The yellow flag was displayed earlier in practice for debris. Black and Ware ended up with 21st and 25th-place rankings on the leaderboard, respectively.

The Camping World Truck Series is back on the track on Saturday, Feb. 28 at 10:40 a.m. for Keystone Light Pole Qualifying, with coverage on FOX Sports 1.

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Roush Yates manager provides roadmap to success for other women

The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series engine is made up of 600-plus parts and pieces, every single one critical to performance.

"Without what I do, without what the guy next to me does, every person in this company matters to how we perform on the track," said Jennifer LaFever, the quality assurance manager at Roush Yates Engines, builder of Ford engines in NASCAR’s top series, including Joey Logano’s Daytona 500-winning engine.

"I understood math and how things went together and how they came apart; I always wanted to take things apart."

— Jennifer LaFever

The quality department at Roush Yates is broken into two parts: quality control and quality assurance. Quality control is about inspecting the parts as they arrive before they are used to assemble the engines. Quality assurance is more preventative, anticipating issues before they become problems.

LaFever, a native of San Jose, California, has grown the quality assurance department and oversees five people.

"We do teamwork activities where engineering, purchasing and quality all get together," LaFever said. "We go after one issue that we might find with a certain supplier or a certain part, working before a problem occurs."

To understand how LaFever’s career has flourished in the high-tech, high-speed world of Roush Yates Engines just consider her passions: motorsports and engineering.

"I grew up with my dad racing at local tracks (San Jose, Antioch and Ocean Speedways)," she said. "I always had a pretty good mechanical aptitude. I understood math and how things went together and how they came apart; I always wanted to take things apart."

That mechanical aptitude led her to the University of California-Davis where she earned a B.S. in mechanical engineering with a minor in managerial economics. After college she was hired as a quality engineer at Ceres Integrated Technology, a company that manufactured equipment for semiconductor processing.

"I loved my job," LaFever said. "It came naturally to me, but in the back of my mind I felt like I wanted to work in motorsports. I was in California and there just wasn’t anything for employment in motorsports there."

Along the way, LaFever’s father saw an advertisement for Universal Technical Institute (UTI) and more specifically NASCAR Technical Institute (NTI).

"In 2010, right after the economy tanked I quit my high-paying job and moved to Los Angeles and started at UTI and did my automotive core classes there," LaFever said.

"About halfway through I decided that if I wanted to be in motorsports I needed to get to North Carolina, so I signed up for the NASCAR elective and moved to North Carolina in March of 2011."

She qualified for The UTI Foundation Brienne Davis Memorial Scholarship, named after a young woman who fulfilled her dream of working in NASCAR. When Davis tragically lost her life in an automobile accident in 2008, NASCAR officials established the scholarship program in her memory. Each year, $10,000 scholarships are awarded to four young women who wish to attend a UTI school of their choice. The program is funded by the NASCAR community and fans via a series of fundraisers.

"The scholarship allows Brienne’s legacy to continue by inspiring other young women with the same dream to reach their educational and career goals," said Jennifer Maher, Vice President & Executive Director, Universal Technical Institute Foundation. "It also helps to fill the technician pipeline with qualified and motivated women."

Jennifer LaFever working with her Roush Yates teammates (Photos by Scott Hunter/NASCAR Productions).

LaFever’s passion for motorsports and engineering hit high-gear with the move to North Carolina. Within a short period of time she was in an engine building elective, which led to an interview with Roush Yates Engines and days later an internship there.

"When I graduated, they called me in and asked if I would run the department," said LaFever of her transition from internship to employment.

"To be here for a few short years and to rise to that level shows her talent," said Doug Yates, CEO of Roush Yates. "She just has a passion for it. You get people who are interested in racing, but they don’t have that desire to succeed."

"That coupled with her engineering talent," continued Yates, "is just something really special and we are blessed to have her in our company."

"I started off just inspecting parts to the drawings," LaFever said. "Then I started running the coordinate measuring machines and learning how to program the software. Then I started supervising and helping other people with their tasks."

And while the engineering oversight of those 600-plus parts is monumental, the reward is a matter of turning on the television on Sundays.

"There is nothing like being able to turn on the TV on Sunday and watch the product of your work driving around the race track," concluded LaFever. "To be able to compete for a living and be able to see your work every Sunday on national television is something you can’t put a monetary value on."

Know a deserving young woman who wants to pursue a career in automotive or motorsports? The UTI Foundation begins accepting Brienne Davis Scholarship applications March 1. Visit utifoundation.net and click "Get Support."

Eleven drivers have legitimate shot in wide-open race

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The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series has long been a proving ground for young drivers to test their talents against grizzled veterans.

The 2015 season is no exception.

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Eleven drivers are in contention for Sunoco Rookie of the Year honors in the series.

In the first race of the season, three of the top five drivers at Daytona were Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidates: Erik Jones (second), Austin Theriault (fourth) and Ray Black Jr. (fifth).

Fellow rookies Korbin Forrister (12th at Daytona), Spencer Gallagher (21st), Cameron Hayley (23rd), Daniel Hemric (26th) and Justin Boston (29th) will attempt to catch up to the pack in Saturday’s Hyundai Construction 250 at Atlanta Motor Speedway (5:30 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1).

"I’m really looking forward to Atlanta this weekend," Boston said. "KBM has a lot of success at intermediate tracks. It will be nice to race at a place where truck handling, race strategy and skill play a bigger part than just luck."

Many of the rookies lack experience on 1.5-mile tracks like Atlanta, putting them at a disadvantage to their older counterparts.

"With the speeds you reach at Atlanta being a mile-and-half, it is definitely a lot harder on the tires than at the short tracks we race in late models," Jones said. "But I guess the concept of managing your equipment is the same, so hopefully I can apply some of it."

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Looks to build on breakout win at Daytona

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In February of 2011, Ryan Reed was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes and was told by doctors he’d never be able to drive a race car again.

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Four years later he’s a NASCAR national series race winner.

Reed pulled a crafty move to the inside to pass 2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Brad Keselowski on the final lap of the season-opening race at Daytona International Speedway and received a timely push from Roush Fenway Racing teammate Chris Buescher to capture his first NASCAR XFINITY Series victory.

"I can’t describe the emotions and the feelings that go into the first win," Reed said. "So much hard work and sacrifice from all my guys — (crew chief) Seth (Barbour) and (owner) Jack (Roush) and everyone who stood behind me, including Lilly Diabetes and the American Diabetes Association."

Reed will attempt to win his second race when he leads a quartet of RFR drivers — which includes young guns Buescher, Darrell "Bubba" Wallace Jr. and two-time NASCAR XFINITY Series runner-up Elliott Sadler — to Atlanta Motor Speedway for Saturday’s Hisense 250 (2 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1). The 21-year-old finished 18th in his only start at Atlanta last season.

"This past week has been a whirlwind after earning my first win at Daytona — just overwhelming. Seth (Barbour), the team and I have a tremendous amount of confidence and momentum from the win that will carry us into this weekend’s race at Atlanta," Reed said.

"Our communication has improved so much since the last time we were there and I really think we have a chance to continue our hot streak and bring home another win."

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Modest big-league debut launched four-time champion’s transcendent career

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With this being Jeff Gordon’s final full-time season of NASCAR competition, there will understandably be a lot of talk about Gordon’s "lasts." So as NASCAR rolls into Atlanta Motor Speedway for Sunday’s Folds of Honor QuickTrip 500, it seemed appropriate to remember Gordon’s "very first."

As it is coincidentally again this week, it was a very cold race weekend at Atlanta Motor Speedway in November of 1992, when a highly-moustached, low-profile Gordon made his first, mostly unremarkable Cup start. Gordon won his career first NASCAR race at Atlanta — in what’s now called the XFINITY Series — that March at the age of 20 and was fastest of the second-round qualifiers in the Cup race in November, but finished 31st after crashing out mid-race. His showing that day didn’t even make most reporter’s stories.

We all know now the storybook narrative of how Gordon’s debut came in Richard Petty’s last race. We didn’t know at the time what a seamless handover of talent and legend it was.

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This year’s schedule takes the series from Daytona to Atlanta, but the reverse chronology two decades ago ultimately shaped Gordon’s and NASCAR’s future. His journey from the 1992 season finale at Atlanta to the 1993 season-opener at Daytona was the send-off into a Hall of Fame career and ultimately launched him into the most transformative driver in the sport’s history.

While Gordon’s debut at Atlanta may not have been headline-worthy, his follow-up at Daytona International Speedway three months later certainly caught people’s attention. And he’s been spotlight-worthy ever since.

Gordon’s first Cup trophy hoist came in NASCAR’s most iconic Victory Lane — a win in today’s version of the Budweiser Duel Daytona 500 qualifying race over Bill Elliott, Kyle Petty and Ken Schrader. Three days later Gordon finished fifth in his first Daytona 500.

By the time he won his first Daytona 500 in 1997, Gordon was a bona fide superstar — as talented behind the wheel as Petty and the other great seven-time Cup champion Dale Earnhardt, but able to attract a new fanbase as well — an important element for a growing sport.

Gordon’s ascension paralleled NASCAR’s move into the mainstream and its rise from being shrugged off as a "Southern" sport or hobby. And Gordon’s rivalry with Earnhardt — "Wonder Boy" versus "The Intimidator" — was racing at its best.

The down-home, hard-knocks North Carolina native Earnhardt was everything diehard NASCAR fans prided themselves on, while the new-generation Californian Gordon was everything attractive to a new generation of fans.

Gordon raced as hard and as gritty as the sport’s traditional heroes — something Earnhardt appreciated — but he was also TV-ready, fresh-faced and a sponsor’s dream. And his rise through the ranks came as NASCAR was expanding in all directions from the Mason-Dixon Line.

At the time Gordon made his first start in Atlanta, few people would have guessed a NASCAR champion would one day host "Saturday Night Live" or attend New York Fashion Week.

And the best thing about Gordon is that all his off-track accomplishments — including millions of dollars in charitable work — have always been matched by his effort on track. That may sound counterintuitive, but in this sport proving yourself behind the wheel matters much to the longtime, devoted fans, who begrudge those with celebrity, but without trophies.

Gordon has plenty of both — his 92 wins is third all-time behind Petty’s 200 and David Pearson’s 105. If not for a bad back, at only 43 years old, Gordon stood as the last real chance to surpass Pearson’s mark.

He moved into third place on the historical record after winning his 85th race at … Atlanta in 2011.

Gordon has shown he is appropriately sentimental about such things and perhaps as the season wears on, his memories will become more vivid, his recollections at each venue more cherished.

He was surprisingly philosophic last weekend after unfortunately getting caught up in a last-lap crash in his final Daytona 500 after starting the race from the pole and leading a race-best 87 laps.

Obviously disappointed with his 500 farewell, Gordon’s first words out of the car showed perspective.

"For some reason I’m still smiling and enjoyed every moment of it,” he said.

A record five NASCAR Cup wins at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, three Daytona 500 trophies, four hard-earned Cup championships and — I believe — a never-to-be-equaled again 92 Cup wins will define Gordon’s career and give him the FastPass into NASCAR’s Hall of Fame.

And ever since that chilly November Sunday 23 years ago in Atlanta, so many others are smiling, having enjoyed — or at least respected — what Gordon has brought to this sport.

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Vehicles must keep rolling once they back out of stalls

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NASCAR announced a qualifying change Thursday across all three national series participating at Atlanta Motor Speedway this weekend, beginning with NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying on Friday at 5:45 p.m. ET (FOX Sports 1).

The vehicles will be assigned to pit stalls, and they will park nose in. Once the vehicle backs up and starts rolling, it cannot stop and must proceed to the track. The vehicles may go one at a time or in a group, but they must keep rolling once they start.

This change was put in effect for last week’s NASCAR XFINITY and Camping World Truck Series qualifying sessions at Daytona International Speedway. Like last week’s change, this week’s rule update is specific to this weekend’s racing at Atlanta.

In addition to two races being held on Saturday, two qualifying session will be held as well. XFINITY Coors Light Pole Qualifying will roll off Saturday at 9:10 a.m. ET for the Hisense 250, which will be run at 2 p.m. ET. Camping World Truck Keystone Light Pole Qualifying starts at 10:40 a.m. ET with the race at 5:30 p.m. ET.

Both qualifying sessions and both races can be seen on FOX Sports 1 in addition to final Sprint Cup practice at noon ET.

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Biagi-DenBeste extends partnership with RPM

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Richard Petty Motorsports teammates Aric Almirola and San Hornish Jr. will expand their driving duties in the NASCAR XFINITY Series, adding three races with Biagi-DenBeste Racing.

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Hornish, who rejoined the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series full-time with RPM this season, will wheel the Biagi-DenBeste No. 98 Ford in XFINITY competition this weekend at Atlanta Motor Speedway and at Auto Club Speedway on March 21. Almirola, who drove the No. 98 to a seventh-place finish in the XFINITY season opener at Daytona International Speedway, will return to the Biagi-DenBeste seat March 7 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
 
"The Biagi-DenBeste Racing team have been great to work with," said Sammy Johns, RPM’s director of competition. "They prepare good cars with good people. I really believe having Aric and Sam on the track throughout the weekend gives us an advantage on Sunday. Also, I believe they can win races for this team. It’s a beneficial partnership for everyone involved."
 
The three-race announcement is the latest endeavor to provide Richard Petty Motorsports drivers with more track time. Biagi-DenBeste fielded the No. 98 for RPM development driver Corey LaJoie in five races last season. Almirola also drove for the Mooresville, North Carolina, team in XFINITY races last year at Chicagoland Speedway and Dover International Speedway in an effort to increase his on-track time on race weekends during the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoffs.
 
"We have seen that Aric can race at the front of the field and compete for wins with us," said Fred Biagi, the No. 98 team’s co-owner. "Adding Sam to our race schedule only allows us more opportunities to be successful. We’re proud to have experienced drivers who can bring immediate success to our team. It provides great value to our sponsors who partner with us each weekend."
 
Almirola opened his fourth full season at Richard Petty Motorsports with a 15th-place finish in last weekend’s Daytona 500. Hornish, a three-time XFINITY Series winner, wound up 12th in Daytona as he begins his first season with RPM and his first full-time Sprint Cup campaign since 2010.
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