Gordon, Harvick and Keselowski not fined or punished

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NASCAR handed down penalties Tuesday after Sunday’s post-race brawl at Texas Motor Speedway.

NASCAR officials did not fine drivers Jeff Gordon, Kevin Harvick and Brad Keselowski for their involvement in a fight on pit road after the AAA Texas 500. Gordon’s crew chief Alan Gustafson was fined $50,000 and placed on probation through the completion of the next six NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship points races. Kenny Francis, the crew chief for Kasey Kahne (a fellow Hendrick Motorsports driver) received the same punishment as Gustafson. Both crew chiefs were found to be in violation of Section 9-4A: Crew chief assumes responsibility for the actions of his team members; Section 12-1: Actions detrimental to stock car racing and Section 12-4.9: Behavioral penalty.

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Crew members from both the 24 (Gordon) and 5 (Kahne) teams also drew sanctions. Hendrick crewman Jeremy Fuller (No. 5 team) along with Dwayne Doucette and Jason Ingle (No. 24 team) were each fined $25,000 and suspended for the next six NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship points races. All three were found to be in violation of actions detrimental to stock car racing and a behavioral penalty for being involved in a post-race altercation with a driver on pit road.

Additionally, Dean Mozingo — a crewmember for the No. 24 team — was fined $10,000 and suspended through the next three Sprint Cup Series championship points races for the same violations.

"While the intensity and emotions are high as we continue through the final rounds of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, the actions that we saw from several crew members Sunday following the race at Texas are unacceptable," said Robin Pemberton, NASCAR senior vice president/competition and racing development in a release. "We reviewed the content that was available to us of the post-race incident along pit road, and identified several crew members who crossed the line with their actions, specifically punching others."

"We therefore have penalized four crew members as well as their crew chiefs, as they ultimately are responsible for members of their team per the NASCAR rulebook," Pemberton continued. "A NASCAR championship is at stake, but we can’t allow behavior that crosses the line to go unchecked, particularly when it puts others in harm’s way."

In a statement, Hendrick Motorsports announced it would not appeal the penalties. Team owner Rick Hendrick added that the affected crewmembers would not face additional internal discipline.

"With NASCAR’s new Chase format, we’re seeing an unprecedented level of intensity every single week," Hendrick said. "Emotions run high when you’re racing for a championship, and that’s exciting for our fans and everyone involved with the sport. But there’s a line the competitors need to be cognizant of, and we understand that. Jeff was rightfully fired up Sunday night, and it just reiterated to me how passionate he is and how much he wants to win. The No. 24 team is a group that works together and is loyal to one another. They have our full support as we go into these final two races."

In a Wednesday appearance on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, Hendrick Motorsports General Manager Doug Duchardt said that the organization will be paying the fines, which totaled $185,000.

"We will as a team incur that and we won’t put that on the crew members," Duchardt said. "We just have to pay the penalties and move on and hopefully we won’t find ourselves in that situation again."

Keselowski, at the center of the altercation after his late-race contact with Gordon’s car sparked the disagreement, was not punished. He remains under probation until Nov. 12 — after this Sunday’s Quicken Loans Race for Heroes 500 (3 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Phoenix International Raceway — for his post-race actions Oct. 11 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

Earlier on Tuesday, before the penalties were announced, in an appearance on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France said that the sanctioning body was prepared to dole out some "harsh punishment."

"People that were involved in the post-race altercation in terms of throwing punches and doing things that are over the line for us, we’ll be dealing with that with some harsh punishment," France said."

Gordon confronted Keselowski after contact between the two cut a tire on Gordon’s No. 24 Chevrolet during a late-race restart. Gordon, who had restarted as the race leader, continued after his spin caused the last of 13 caution periods, but wound up one lap down by the checkered flag.

Gordon removed his helmet and walked toward Keselowski as tensions and proximity among the teams’ crew members increased. Once Harvick pushed Keselowski closer to the fray, the pushing intensified and some punches landed.

Pemberton on Sunday said after the race that the on-track altercation was attributed to hard racing, adding that "this is a contact sport" and that this year’s new Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoff format has ratcheted up the pressure. He said Sunday that officials would take their time in reviewing footage of the pit-road incident before reaching a decision.

"You just look at it as a whole with the people that were involved," Pemberton said Sunday. "There’s a lot that went on with all the race teams over the past couple months of hard racing, so you have to look at everything out there post-race."

Keselowski finished third to better his standing in the middle leg of the three-race Eliminator Round, the last cut-off point before the Chase field is whittled from eight to four drivers. Gordon, who entered the Texas event as the points leader after the opening Eliminator Round race at Martinsville, sunk to fourth place among the eight as a result of his 29th-place finish.

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Network has big plans despite not having TV rights after ’14

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Although ESPN will not televise NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races beginning next season, officials said Tuesday the network expects to continue to provide timely content to fans for 2015 and beyond.

"I don’t think you’ll see much of a change," said Rich Feinberg, vice president, motorsports, production for the Bristol, Connecticut-based group. "We obviously won’t be doing the races, but in terms of serving the interests of fans with our news and information coverage, we’re full-steam ahead."

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ABC/ESPN ends an eight-year run of NASCAR race coverage at the close of 2014, during which time the company aired the second half of each season’s races.

FOX returns next year and will continue to air the first half of the season while NBC will replace ABC/ESPN. Races previously aired by TNT in the middle of the year will be split between FOX and NBC groups.

With ESPN not a part of the TV package going forward, many have wondered how the network would handle NASCAR news, or if it would abandon the sport altogether.

"I can assure those asking the question and all fans out there that we’re going to continue to cover NASCAR across all our news and information platforms in a very significant way," Feinberg said. "We don’t have rights agreements with many different sports out there, but SportsCenter has an obligation to their fans to cover all sports."

Feinberg said recent announcements that will keep former driver Ricky Craven, now an analyst, and reporter Marty Smith in-house is a clear indication that NASCAR remains relevant to the network.

"We obviously have a lot of outlets for all our content, both over the air, cable, digital, dot‑com, et cetera," he said. "Our plans are to fulfill the interests of NASCAR fans who watch all our news and information programming, and I can tell you I personally have already been involved in our planning for coverage for the Daytona 500 in 2015 next year."

ESPN will air the season’s last two races — this weekend’s event from Phoenix International Raceway that will determine the four drivers contending for the championship, as well as the Championship Round finale in Homestead-Miami Speedway on Nov. 16.

"When we last left you Sunday night at Texas, all hell was breaking loose at the race track, and you know, no one knows what’s going to happen this week going into Phoenix," Feinberg said. "But with eight drivers separated by only 18 points and none of the finalists determined yet, tune in … because I think it’s going to be one heck of a show and one heck of a shootout. That’s our focus and we’re really, really looking forward to it."

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Co-points leader shares his thoughts on post-Texas brawl

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Denny Hamlin says he doesn’t know if he would have made the same move as Brad Keselowski at the conclusion of Sunday’s AAA Texas 500, but added that, "I would have to know that I’m not going to make it through that hole without having contact of some sort."

There was contact as Keselowski attempted to maneuver his Team Penske No. 2 Ford underneath Jeff Gordon on the first attempt at a green-white-checkered finish at Texas Motor Speedway. And a scuffle between the two teams on pit road afterward.

"That’s fine," Hamlin said of the on-track incident, "But … you’re going to have to respect retaliation, which I’m sure (Keselowski) did."

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How his peers view him in the garage is the bigger issue for Keselowski, the Joe Gibbs Racing driver said Tuesday during a national teleconference.

"I can’t speak for many other guys, but I mean … there’s a lot of animosity. And that’s all you can really say.

"You don’t have to run into people to be successful. And when I hear Brad say ‘this is the only way a person like me can make it,’ what do you mean ‘like you?’ I had to get here just on hard work, too. I didn’t have money behind me or anything else. What’s the difference?

"I hate that statement. (He) made it (this far) because people see potential in the way he drives and that he is fast and he does a great job and has already won a championship in a very short career. I believe that is a bad statement that he throws out there every time. But it’s his prerogative and he can do what he wants. He has a job and has an owner that loves him and he’s driving for a very fast crew chief.

"He’s got a lot of really good things working for him. In my opinion, and I want to stress my opinion … he just has got to work on the respect factor from his peers."

Keselowski and Hamlin are two of eight drivers vying for one of four spots in this year’s Championship Round in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup to be contested Nov. 16 at Homestead-Miami Speedway (3 p.m. ET, ESPN). Gordon, Joey Logano, Ryan Newman, Matt Kenseth, Carl Edwards and Kevin Harvick also remain in contention.

Sunday’s Quicken Loans Race for Heroes 500 at Phoenix International Raceway (ESPN, 3 p.m. ET) is the final race of the Eliminator Round and will determine the four finalists.

If Gordon, a four-time champion, attempts to make his life on the track any more difficult in the coming weeks, Keselowski said last week that it wouldn’t be a surprise. Nor would he be intimidated.

"Will those guys race me hard or harder than others?" Keselowski said following last week’s race. "Absolutely, I’m certain they will. But that’s just part of it; I can’t fault them for that.

"I just feel like I have to go for the gap if it’s there and I have to race the way I race or I won’t even be in NASCAR. I’d rather have enemies in NASCAR than have friends and be sitting at home."

Hamlin said he’d made more than his share of mistakes as well, but that he had learned from them and "I feel like I’ve gotten the respect of my competitors because of that."

It can make a huge difference late in a race when a driver can choose to either help another or make life hard, something he said he "learned the hard way."

"These guys can make your job really hard if they really want to," said Hamlin.

Former NASCAR champion and 2013 Hall of Fame inductee Rusty Wallace said Gordon "got the raw end (of the deal) because his left rear got bumped and he had a flat tire.

"But I don’t think there is a driver in the world that would not have tried to put their car in that hole and go for it," Wallace said.

A NASCAR analyst for ESPN, Wallace scored 37 of his 55 career wins while driving the No. 2 entry for the Penske organization. He said his relationship with the group has no bearing on how he viewed Sunday’s incident or what he thinks of Keselowski.

The driver’s aggressive nature on the track, he said, reminds him of seven-time Cup champion Dale Earnhardt.

"He wants to win, he’s going for it," Wallace said. "There are a lot of … people backing up Brad’s decision, that when Jeff Gordon took the high line going into Turn 1 on the restart and that hole opened up, I’m telling you what, as a competitor, with just a handful of laps to go, when you saw that hole and Brad went for it, he went for it."

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Logano, Hamlin and Newman head to Phoenix in prime spots

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FORT WORTH, Texas — It’s not supposed to happen like this, not late in a tense Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. You’re not supposed to experience the kind of setbacks that Joey Logano, Denny Hamlin and Ryan Newman had in the AAA Texas 500 on Sunday at Texas Motor Speedway and live to tell about it.



But in a wild race that featured a track record 13 cautions, many of them late, drivers were able to rebound from situations that otherwise would have been debilitating. So as the series heads to Phoenix International Raceway for the final race in the Eliminator Round, the top of the standings probably aren’t at all what the odds makers drew up: Logano and Hamlin are tied for first with Newman in third.

To advance to the Championship Round at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Logano and Hamlin need finishes of 11th or better; 12th with at least one lap led or 13th with the most laps led. Newman needs a finish of ninth or better; 10th with at least one lap led or 11th with the most laps led.

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Logano owns the tiebreaker over Hamlin because of a better best finish in the Eliminator Round (fifth-place result at Martinsville), so the fact he is at the top of the standings is perhaps the least surprising. But his hopes to advance to the next round were about to take a hit with less than 50 laps to go at Texas.



That’s when he dropped from fourth place to 23rd after a pit stop. The issue? The glue on the lug nuts didn’t have time to set and three fell off the tire. That led to a long pit stop, and it didn’t seem like there was enough time in the race for Logano to rebound.



Then, less than 15 laps later, a caution came out when Logano spun after making contact with the No. 9 of Marcos Ambrose. Logano dropped to 25th and was in danger of posting the worst finish among Chase drivers.



But four more cautions in the race’s final 28 laps gave Logano opportunities to make up ground. He ended up with a 12th-place finish, which was good enough to give him the catbird seat heading to the desert Southwest.



"I don’t know what happened with the glue on the pit stop and I haven’t gotten the full story yet, but we had a hell of a time trying to put rear tires on the car," Logano said. "We lost all our track position with 30 to go and I came off the corner and the 9 hit me. … We put tires back on it and then just held on till the end and got something decent out of something that could have been way worse."



Newman and Hamlin had similar stories to tell.



For Hamlin, his crew chief Darian Grubb made a two-tire gamble after a caution on Lap 224 that gained the No. 11 car the lead. But it was only temporary, because in just one lap Hamlin lost six positions. Eventually, he dropped as low as 14th before the next caution flag.



"We had a bad car," Hamlin, who finished 10th, said. "We made the best of it. Other guys made mistakes. We weren’t really that good. Luckily other guys had problems. That’s what happened."



Hamlin had a point as every Chase driver ran into an issue. Some were bigger than others. For Newman, his issue came when Matt Kenseth made contact with him on a restart with 24 laps to go and afterward the No. 31 car developed a tire rub.



But a couple laps later, a caution for an accident involving Kasey Kahne and Trevor Bayne allowed Newman to come to pit road and get new tires. Newman’s 15th-place finish was enough for him to stay just two points behind Logano and Hamlin.



About the contact with Kenseth, Newman said, "We just got our quarter panel knocked in. They went three and four wide there and put me in the middle of it. There wasn’t a whole lot of respect out there. We saw that before, during, and after the race."



However, there will be plenty of respect for the four drivers who emerge from Phoenix as the ones advancing to the Championship Round. And if these drivers are among the four who do it, then they can look back at Texas as the place where they survived near-disaster.

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See how the two drivers break down statistically

Which driver do you think will come out on top in this battle? Vote below!

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Driver-by-driver news and notes from the AAA Texas 500

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Editor’s Note: Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers are in italics

1. Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Chevrolet, Hendrick Motorsports
The defending race-winner looked downright dominant in this race, leading 191 laps and holding off Kevin Harvick and Brad Keselowski late in the race. Johnson was the fastest on restarts (186.226 mph) in his special red paint scheme for Lowe’s. He may not be in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup anymore, but the win was special as it was the 70th of his Sprint Cup Series career. It was also the first time he had led triple-digit laps since his June win at Dover. After the win, Johnson told his team over the radio, "I’m proud of you guys…awesome job today." One of Johnson’s teammates was also thrilled he won: Jeff Gordon. As Gordon said over the radio after learning Johnson won, "Good, yeah, thank him for not letting those other (expletive) win." | See how he won | Get more in-car audio with RaceView

2. Kevin Harvick, No. 4 Chevrolet, Stewart-Haas Racing

Harvick spent practically the entire race in the top-five, but led only two laps on the day. His 500th start came at a track where he’s never one, but Harvick gave it one heck of an effort. He simply didn’t have enough to get to Johnson on the second G-W-C attempt. He also played a part in the post-race melee, shoving Brad Keselowski and setting off a firestorm of post-race activity. The veteran driver said he told Keselowski that he needed to get in there and fight his own fight. Harvick himself is in for a heck of a fight heading to Phoenix, sitting in eighth place but just six points out of the final transfer spot to the Championship Round at Homestead. With three wins in the last four races at Phoenix, will the desert be good to Harvick one more time? | Hear what Harvick said after the race

3. Brad Keselowski, No. 2 Ford, Team Penske

Keselowski and crew chief Paul Wolfe’s gamble to stay out during a Lap 253 caution paid off big-time. Keselowski took the lead and would stay there for 22 laps, running well in the clean air. His contact with Gordon on the first G-W-C attempt had Gordon fuming, but Keselowski said the rubbing was just part of hard racing. The melee that ensued on pit road afterward included Keselowski, Gordon and even Harvick. The 2012 champion heads to Phoenix on the outside looking in at advancing to the Championship Round. He was on the outside heading into Talladega, and that turned out fine for him. Will he be able to do it again? | See the post-race altercation

4. Kyle Busch, No. 18 Toyota, Joe Gibbs Racing

While his bid for a weekend sweep of the Texas tripleheader was denied, "Rowdy" rebounded nicely for a top-five result. On Lap 205, he lost a right rear tire with the carcass of the tire coming out on the track to bring out a caution. By Lap 260, he was in 26th place. But thanks to cautions and strategy, the team was able to improve its track position. Take away his 40th place finish at Talladega and Busch’s average finish in the Chase races would be 6.8.



5. Jamie McMurray, No. 1 Chevrolet, Chip Ganassi Racing

McMurray was among the drivers who finished strong, as he made up 14 spots (the second-most) in the final 34 laps for his top-five finish. Of the non-Chase drivers, McMurray has enjoyed several good races in the postseason, as this was his third top-five finish in the eight Chase races.

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6. Dale Earnhardt Jr. No. 88 Chevrolet, Hendrick Motorsports

Junior followed up his Martinsville win with a solid, workman-like effort. He led the way in quality passes with 64 and made up 11 spots in final 34 laps, according to loop data. Anything, however, would have been better than his spring race result, in which he exited after 12 laps due to a crash.

7. Kyle Larson, No. 42 Chevrolet, Chip Ganassi Racing

The end result of the AAA Texas 500 was Larson’s seventh top-10 finish in 10 races, leaving the Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender with strong loop data numbers. He was tied for fourth in quality passes (52) and tied for sixth in green flag passes (91).

8. Kurt Busch, No. 41 Chevrolet, Stewart-Haas Racing
In his first start with Tony Gibson atop the pit box, "The Outlaw" led 15 laps and looked to have a chance at the win late. With 13 cautions on the day, restarts were important and Busch had speed for them as he was the fourth-fastest car on restarts. It will be interesting to see what Gibson and Busch can do together in the final two races of 2014 as they prep for the 2015 season.

9. Carl Edwards, No. 99 Ford, Roush Fenway Racing
Edwards struggled most of the day to find speed and was two laps down multiple times during the race. So how did he finish in the top 10? Edwards was the best closer of the race. He gained 16 spots in the final 34 laps to put himself one point out of the final transfer spot to the Championship Round. | See the complete standings

10. Denny Hamlin, No. 11 Toyota, Joe Gibbs Racing
A two-tire gamble on a pit stop from the Lap 224 caution backfired as Hamlin went from first to 13th in a matter of three laps. However, Hamlin stayed out of trouble, spent the least amount of time on pit road and scored a top-10 finish out of it. More importantly, he is tied for the points lead with Joey Logano as he looks to make it the Championship Round.

11. Tony Stewart, No. 14 Chevrolet, Stewart-Haas Racing
The driver that topped 200-mph in qualifying bounced around the field. He was up front early then in the middle of the pack and then found himself towards the front late, as he was in fourth place on Lap 320. "Smoke" was one of only three drivers that finished on the lead lap to make just nine pit stops, the fewest total among lead lap finishers in the race.

12. Joey Logano. No. 22 Ford, Team Penske

Logano spent much of the afternoon in the top 10 but had to overcome a lengthy pit stop of 26 seconds due to an issue with lugnuts. The extended pit stop pushed Logano back to 22nd place, and he later spun out, bringing out a caution on Lap 305. The Team Penske driver did rebound thanks to several more late cautions to find himself in good shape heading to Phoenix. Told by crew chief Todd Gordon he was the points leader, Logano answered, "can’t be by much." And he is right: he and Hamlin share the honors. | See the trouble Logano overcame

13. Greg Biffle, No. 16 Ford, Roush Fenway Racing
Biffle had a pretty ho-hum race at one of his better tracks. For the second straight week, he finished 13th. He spent just 41 laps in the top 15, but they came at the right time for his end result.

14. AJ Allmendinger, No. 47 Chevrolet, JTG Daugherty Racing
Allmendinger gained 10 spots in the final 34 laps of the race to be the sixth-best closer, according to loop data. The ‘Dinger also scored his fourth top-15 finish in his past five races. This one-car team is trying to finish 2014 on a strong note — and is succeeding.

15. Ryan Newman, No. 31 Chevrolet, Richard Childress Racing
Newman had the fourth-fastest car during green flag runs (179.114 mph) but he had a little scare in this race. A left rear tire rub forced him to pit during a caution on Lap 321. He restarted 21st but was able to get back into the top 15. The winless driver is 11 points ahead of Kenseth, the first Chase driver in a position to be eliminated from the Championship Round. | See the damage Newman had

16. Brian Vickers, No. 55 Toyota, Michael Waltrip Racing
Vickers spent the fourth-most amount of time in the top 15 (330 laps) but finished one spot outside of that position. He finished fourth in the spring at Texas and improved to ninth place in the points standings. This finish left him in 22nd place in the standings.

17. Paul Menard, No. 27 Chevrolet, Richard Childress Racing

Menard was the second-fastest car in traffic, averaging 178.820 mph when another car was within one car length of his under green. The result was also Menard’s fourth straight top-20 finish at Texas.

18. Casey Mears, No. 13 Chevrolet, Germain Racing
Mears’ finish was his second top-20 result in the past three races and a 10-spot improvement from the spring race. Mears’ pit crew was fast this time around, as he spent the eighth-fewest amount of time on pit road. | Get pit road times and more with RaceView

19. Martin Truex Jr., No. 78 Chevrolet, Furniture Row Racing

After two top-10 finishes at Dover and Kansas, Truex has averaged a finish of 24.5. The team has made strides in the latter stages of the season, but needs to finish strong to go into 2015 with some momentum.

20. Justin Allgaier, No. 51 Chevrolet, HScott Motorsports

Allgaier, a Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate, compiled the third-most green flag passes (96), according to loop data. The finish was his third straight top-20 result, with his failure to make the Talladega race thrown in the middle of that.

21. Austin Dillon, No. 3 Chevrolet, Richard Childress Racing
Dillon, also a Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender, spent nearly half of the race in the top 15 and compiled the most green flag passes in the race (100), according to loop data.

22. Michael Annett, No. 7 Chevrolet, Tommy Baldwin Racing
The Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate scored his second straight top-25 result. He even gained a spot in the Sprint Cup standings, moving up to 32nd.

23. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 17 Ford, Roush Fenway Racing
The second-year driver had the lowest finish out of the Roush team. He has five top-25 finishes in his last five starts, but more was expected from him at this point.

24. Aric Almirola, No. 43 Ford, Richard Petty Motorsports

Almirola came into this race with three top-15 finishes in his last four races at Texas. However, as has been the case since he was eliminated from the Chase, the team continued to struggle. In his past six races since a sixth-place result at Loudon, Almirola has an average finish of 27.5.

25. Matt Kenseth, No. 20 Toyota, Joe Gibbs Racing

The pole-sitter for this race had an eventful day — one that saw him lead 59 laps but also have his share of problems. Those included a pit road mishap when a lugnut fell off and was wedged in the hub, as well as damage on a Lap 309 incident that forced him to pit on a caution late. The waning laps of the race seemed to take a toll on Kenseth, who radioed in, "I can’t drive this car in traffic, I just can’t without crashing." The winless driver is now one point out of the final transfer spot for the Championship Round. | See what happened to him late | Get more in-car audio with RaceView

26. Cole Whitt, No. 26 Toyota, BK Racing

The Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate is quietly putting together a nice stretch to close out the season. The key to his performance this week? Spending the third-fewest amount of time on pit road for the race. | Get more pit road stats with RaceView

27. Marcos Ambrose, No. 9 Ford, Richard Petty Motorsports

As he closes out his full-time Sprint Cup career, Ambrose has had a string of finishes between 20th and 27th in eight of his past nine races. A late accident with Kasey Kahne on Lap 314 took a top-20 finish off the table, but the Tasmania native did finish on the lead lap.

28. Clint Bowyer, No. 15 Toyota, Michael Waltrip Racing

Bowyer’s run of two straight top-10 finishes came to a close with his Texas result. His accident on Lap 331 set up the first attempt at a G-W-C finish. And during the middle of the race, Bowyer seemed to have an issue with contact from Jamie McMurray, though nothing happened between those two after that.

29. Jeff Gordon, No. 24 Chevrolet, Hendrick Motorsports

Don’t be fooled by his finishing position — Gordon had one of the best cars all day. He led 49 laps and would have won the race if not for a caution on Lap 332. Shortly after the Lap 335 restart, Keselowski made contact with Gordon resulting in a flat left rear tire and a spin for the four-time champion as Gordon yelled into the radio, "The (expletive) 2 car ran into us, that’s what happened." After the race, Gordon added, "I’m going to beat the (expletive) out of the 2." Tensions boiled over post-race as Gordon confronted Keselowski and a scuffle ensued. Gordon is still on the right side of the Chase bubble, but only by one point. | See the on-track contact | See the scuffle | Hear their reactions

30. Michael McDowell, No. 95 Ford, Leavine Family Racing

McDowell matched his spring result at Texas in close to every regard. In both races, he qualified 28th, finished 30th and got 14 points for his result. He also had some troubles on pit road in this race, getting hit with three pit road penalties.

31. JJ Yeley, No. 83 Toyota, BK Racing


For the fourth time in five races, Yeley improved his finish from his starting position. During the race though, the Arizona native was interested in how the Cardinals were faring against the Cowboys. When told Arizona beat Dallas 28-17, he radioed in to his crew chief, "Can you go down to the 38 box and get my 20 bucks?" | For more in-car audio, get RaceView today

32. David Ragan, No. 34 Ford, Front Row Motorsports

After his first top-10 of the season last weekend at Martinsville, Ragan was hoping to build on that run. Unfortunately for him and the No. 34 team, that didn’t happen at Texas.

33. Reed Sorenson, No. 36 Chevrolet, Tommy Baldwin Racing

Sorenson matched his spring race performance and, for that matter, average finish of 32.5 in 13 starts at the 1.5-mile track.

34. David Gilliland, No. 38 Ford, Front Row Motorsports

In the spring, Gilliland finished 22nd, but that would not be the case in this race. The veteran driver finished six laps off the pace.

35. Timmy Hill, No. 33 Chevrolet. Circle Sport Racing
For the third time in four weeks, Hill’s finishing position was better than where he started. His 35th-place result matched his second-best result this season.

36. Danica Patrick, No. 10 Chevrolet, Stewart-Haas Racing
In her first start with interim crew chief Daniel Knost, things did not go well for Patrick. First, she had to start at the rear of the field for a transmission change. Then, she had an unscheduled pit stop on Lap 37 after losing the handle in Turn 2. And then on Lap 250, she hit the wall as a tire went down. Not the start this pairing was hoping for.

37. Joey Gase, No. 32 Ford, Go FAS Racing


In his first two Sprint Cup starts, Gase finished in 37th place. Where did he finish at Texas? 37th place. He is nothing if not consistent.

38. Kasey Kahne, No. 5 Chevrolet, Hendrick Motorsports


It was a tale of two races for Kahne. He ran well early, peaking with a second-place position on Lap 80. He was later involved in two accidents less than eight laps apart, however.

39. Trevor Bayne, No. 21 Ford, Wood Brothers Racing


Bayne’s involvement in a Lap 320 accident with Kahne ended his day. As he gets set to move into a full-time Cup ride with Roush Fenway Racing, Bayne’s past five finishes with Wood Brothers have been 32nd or worse.

40. Brett Moffitt, No. 66 Toyota, Jay Robinson Racing


For the third time in his six Sprint Cup Series starts, Moffitt finished 40th or worse. He hit the wall on Lap 296 and finished 58 laps back.

41. Josh Wise, No. 98 Chevrolet, Phil Parsons Racing


For the second time in four weeks, Wise finished 41st. He hit the wall on Lap 42 and finished 85 laps back.

42. Alex Bowman, No. 23 Toyota, BK Racing


Engine issues led to Bowman’s sixth DNF of the season. The Arizona native will hope for a better run at his home track next weekend.

43. Landon Cassill, No. 40 Chevrolet, Hillman Racing


A blown engine derailed Cassill’s day after just 134 laps and snapped a run of four straight top-25 finishes. The finish was the worst of the season for Cassill.


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After Texas brawl, team owner backs 2012 champion in statement

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Brad Keselowski may have heard a raucous response from fans at Texas Motor Speedway on Sunday evening, but Monday he received a thorough show of support from the venerable team owner signing his checks.

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Roger Penske gave Keselowski a vote of confidence less than 24 hours after a frantic finish touched off a post-race brawl in the Lone Star State. The Team Penske driver finished third in the AAA Texas 500 to keep his title hopes alive in the first year of the new-look Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoffs, but his on-track methods angered Jeff Gordon and Kevin Harvick, who both initiated physical contact with the championship contender on pit road.

Monday, Penske backed his driver.

"The Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup has provided great excitement and intense competition," Penske said in a statement released by the team. "Brad Keselowski is a champion who competes to win in every race, which is what I expect of him. While the actions by others following the race in Texas were unfortunate, Brad has my 100 percent support as we now move on to Phoenix for the next stage of the NASCAR championship."

The 77-year-old racing magnate’s remarks substantiated those of Keselowski in his post-race media availability.

"A lot of my strength personally comes from my team, whether that’s the guys who work on the team or my boss, Roger Penske," Keselowski said Sunday night. "If Roger Penske came up to me tomorrow and said, ‘Brad, you drove that race wrong, you shouldn’t have done what you did,’ it would affect me. But the management team at Penske tells me to drive the way I did and tells me there’s nothing to be ashamed of and continues to support me. And they’re my boss. My boss isn’t the other drivers in the field. My boss is them.

"As long as they’re on my side, I feel strong and I feel proud and encouraged to continue."

Keselowski dove to the inside of Gordon’s car during a restart in a green-white-checkered finish in the late stages Sunday, and the two cars made contact. Gordon took the worst of it, cutting down a tire and spinning out to spiral to a 29th-place finish, worst among the title-eligible Chase drivers.

Gordon parked alongside Keselowski’s car after the cool-down lap as the crews of both teams engaged in a bitter shouting match. The fracas intensified after Harvick scooted Keselowski closer to Gordon’s reach, and both crews became more active in the scrum.

It’s the second such incident involving Keselowski in this year’s Chase. At Charlotte in October, Keselowski’s No. 2 Ford came in contact with three other cars on the cool-down lap, and rival Matt Kenseth physically confronted him in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series garage.

The eight remaining Chase drivers — Keselowski, Gordon, Harvick and Kenseth included — tackle this Sunday’s Quicken Loans Race for Heroes 500 (3 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Phoenix International Raceway. The finale to the Chase’s Eliminator Round will whittle the championship-eligible field from eight drivers to four.

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Crew chief scuttles notion of friction after Texas victory

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Fresh off a win atop the pit box for Jimmie Johnson, one of the first questions crew chief Chad Knaus got was about his future with Johnson and the Hendrick Motorsports No. 48 team.

Knaus quickly squashed talk of him leaving.

"I don’t foresee a change with the 48 car from a driver or crew chief standpoint in the near future," Knaus said at Texas Motor Speedway on Sunday night. "I don’t foresee that happening."

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Johnson also touched on any concerns of friction between him and Knaus after the Texas win.

"You guys ask me questions in here about us raising hell with one another on the radio, but that’s part of the process," Johnson said in his post-race victory press conference. "That’s one thing that has been good about us. We’ve always been able to be honest with one another and say tough things. Sure, you might not want to hear it, it might sting a little bit. But it’s what has kept us together for all these years."

Johnson and Knaus have teamed up for six Sprint Cup Series championships and 68 wins (two of Johnson’s 70 wins came while Knaus was suspended at the start of the 2006 season), but the partnership has had its moments, including a testy exchange during the Bank of America 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway last month and the infamous "milk and cookies" meeting organized by team owner Rick Hendrick after the 2005 season.

Johnson was eliminated from the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup following the GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway. The following week at Martinsville Speedway, Johnson said he had no desire to make a change.

"When Chad decides he’s had enough of being the guy on the box, it’ll be his decision to step down. As far as I’m concerned, we’ve made it 13 years with this thing, and I want to see it go as long as it can. … This is really more of a timeframe when Chad says someday, ‘I’ve put in my time here as crew chief, and I need to slow down a little bit.’ "

This year has been a bit uneven for Johnson and Knaus. They have four wins, but have not dominated in the fashion that was their trademark in recent years. Johnson will have his fewest top-fives since 2006 and is on pace to lead his lowest total of laps in three seasons.

Following three wins in a four-race stretch in late May to mid-June, Johnson went 18 races without a win, one of his lengthier dry spells between visting Victory Lane. Knaus admitted following the Texas triumph that the winless streak had his confidence low.

"I hate losing more than I enjoy winning. Obviously going through this stretch has been difficult. We’ve looked for answers. Haven’t found them. We’ve lifted every stone to try to figure out how to get the 48 car to run a little bit better throughout the course of the season. I think we got blinded a little bit by our own just misguidance.

"It was difficult. My confidence was definitely low. I know Jimmie’s was definitely low. You know, look, winning cures a lot of things, but the proof is in how we react beyond this point, how we go to Phoenix, how we produce there, how we go to Homestead, how we race there. Those will be the true tales of where we’re at."

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17-year-old to drive No. 33 in part-time XFINITY schedule

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Richard Childress Racing announced Monday that Brandon Jones will drive the team’s No. 33 Chevrolet on a part-time basis in the NASCAR XFINITY Series next season.

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Jones, 17, has entered seven NASCAR Camping World Truck Series races over the last two seasons, scoring a best finish of fourth in May at Dover International Speedway. The Atlanta native just completed his first full season in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East, highlighting his fourth-place finish in the 2014 standings with a victory in August at Iowa Speedway.

"I have been watching Brandon the past few years and like what I see in him as a driver and a person," said team owner Richard Childress. "Adding him to our developmental program and putting him in our No. 33 Chevrolet is a good move for us and his career. I look forward to seeing his progression next year and welcome him to the RCR family."

According to the team, Jones plans to continue with a limited schedule in the Camping World Truck Series and in the ARCA series, where he notched two wins last year.

RCR also indicated that the No. 33 will continue with a rotation of drivers in 2015. This year, the car has run on a part-time basis alongside Childress’ three full-time teams, fielded for drivers Ty Dillon, Brendan Gaughan and Brian Scott.

Rookie Cale Conley drove the No. 33 Camaro in 11 races, Paul Menard in seven (including a victory at Michigan in June), defending Nationwide Series champion Austin Dillon in one and defending NASCAR Camping World Truck Series champion Matt Crafton in one.

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Get the full lineup of NASCAR programming for the week

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All Times ET

Monday, November 3
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
6:30 p.m., The 10: NASCAR’s Most Outrageous Moments, FOX Sports 2
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2
7 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network

Tuesday, November 4
7 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
8 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
6:30 p.m., The 10: NASCAR’s Closest Calls, FOX Sports 2
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2

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Wednesday, November 5
7 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
7:30 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
8 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
8:30 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
6:30 p.m., The 10: NASCAR’s Wildest Throw-downs, FOX Sports 2
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2

Thursday, November 6
7 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
7:30 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
8 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
8:30 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
6:30 p.m., The 10: NASCAR’s Most Bizarre Moments, FOX Sports 2
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2

Friday, November 7

7 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
7:30 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
8 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
8:30 a.m., NASCAR America (re-air), NBC Sports Network
Noon, NASCAR Nationwide Series Practice, FOX Sports 1
1:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Practice, FOX Sports 1
3 p.m., NASCAR Nationwide Series Final Practice, FOX Sports 1
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1
6:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, ESPN2
8 p.m., NCWTS SetUp, FOX Sports 1
8:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Race at Phoenix, FOX Sports 1
4 a.m. (Sat.), NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Race at Phoenix (re-air), FOX Sports 1

Saturday, November 8

11:30 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Practice, FOX Sports 2
12:30 p.m., NASCAR Nationwide Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 2
2 p.m., NASCAR Live, FOX Sports 2
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Final Practice, FOX Sports 2
3 p.m., NASCAR Nationwide Series Countdown, ESPN
4 p.m., NASCAR Nationwide Series Race at Phoenix, ESPN

Sunday, November 9

11 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Practice (re-air), FOX Sports 2
Noon, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Final Practice (re-air), FOX Sports 2
1 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay, FOX Sports 1
2 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Countdown, ESPN
3 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Race at Phoenix, ESPN
7 p.m., NASCAR Victory Lane, FOX Sports 1
12:30 a.m. (Mon.), NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Race at Phoenix (re-air), ESPN2

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