Growing up close to Martinsville, Peters finds familiarity at the track

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Timothy Peters has always found home-track familiarity on his visits to Martinsville Speedway. His hometown of Providence, North Carolina — not far from his residence in nearby Danville, Virginia — has plenty to do with the right-at-home feel.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

This time, he has momentum as well, thanks to last weekend’s thunderous NASCAR Camping World Truck Series victory at Talladega Superspeedway, his first win of the season and an important cog to keeping his faint championship hopes alive. Peters jumped two spots to fifth place in the standings and enters Saturday’s Kroger 200 (1:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1) with a 77-point deficit to series leader and defending champion Matt Crafton.

No Truck Series regular has posted back-to-back victories this season, but Peters said his expectations are high at the .526-mile track.

"Nothing but a win, but we know these wins are hard to come by," Peters said. "Being able to go to Victory Lane last week (at Talladega) was definitely a big confidence and momentum booster for myself and the whole entire Red Horse Racing team. To have an opportunity to go back-to-back and really feel strong about it coming into Martinsville, we thought that all week. You kind of have to look at Martinsville and Talladega as one in the same — you have to race the race track. If we can see the start-finish line, maybe we’ll have a shot at it."

Peters has had mixed fortunes at Martinsville since he first became a winner here in Late Model competition in 2005. When he broke through for an emotional first truck series triumph, Martinsville was the site of Peters’ coming-out party. He’s been shut out of the track’s Victory Lane since then, perhaps coming closest last March when he led 49 of 256 laps but wound up sixth and in a post-race fender-bashing contest with Red Horse teammate German Quiroga.

Since that first victory in the fall of 2009, Peters has accumulated seven more including his most recent one at Talladega and a win in the 2010 season-opening race at Daytona International Speedway. But when pressed to pick a favorite, Peters couldn’t make a clear-cut call.

"I look at Talladega, that all eight wins that I have been fortunate to get, they’re all a push. Obviously, the Martinsville win stands out because it’s home for me and I’ve had a lot of success with the Late Model here as well as the truck. That one would definitely be number one on my list, but all of them are equal just because they’re so hard. The competition in this series is so tough. The amount of time that you are able to spend in the series, you don’t know the longevity so you make the most of it while you can.

"The only thing that I wish I would be able to experience would be having my wife and son in Victory Lane with me. Hopefully we have four races left and one that I know he will be at and she’ll be at will be (Saturday). I hope we can get that and add a ninth win. All of them are just the same — one doesn’t outrank higher than the other one."

Peters has made the most of a reunion with crew chief Marcus Richmond, whom he has counted as a personal friend since junior high school. Richmond moved over from the Richard Childress Racing operation in the offseason, reforming a driver-crew chief combination that won Late Model championships and had a long history in the truck tour.

Peters said he hasn’t doubted the team’s chemistry or performance, but that Talladega went a long way toward shaking the nagging misfortune around the No. 17 team.

"We always kept in contact and knew that one day we would get back together and it would be the dream team," Peters said. "Last week was kind of like the bad luck is out the window and you’re able to get on the momentum train like we know we can get on and win races. That’s been the hard part. It isn’t that I’ve given up on him or he’s given up on me, it’s that we’ve had speed every week, but it’s the type of deal up until last week if we didn’t have bad luck it seemed like we’d have no luck. We’re pushing through it and our relationship is good. It’s time to get some more wins and get up in the top three in points."

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

No. 77 makes it four-wide trying to take the lead

RELATED: Sauter goes after Peters post-race

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — German Quiroga is trying to win races this year in hopes of securing a ride for next year. That’s why, with 12 laps remaining in the Kroger 200 and his No. 77 Toyota in third place, the Red Horse Racing driver made it four-wide at the smallest track on the NASCAR circuit.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

Leader Darrell Wallace Jr. went high around the lapped truck of Wendell Chavous, second-place Johnny Sauter held his line and Quiroga dove down to the apron. The kamikaze move didn’t quite work, as Quiroga and Wallace met in the middle after making their respective passes, which turned Quiroga’s truck around and brought out the final caution of the day.

It was a similar late move that set the stage for a post-race discussion between Quiroga and Gray Gaulding that went on outside the watchful eye of television cameras, which were focusing on a different fracas — that of Sauter and Timothy Peters.

While Quiroga remained steady and talked calmly after the race, an irate Gray Gaulding blasted the 34-year-old driver, who is 18 years his senior.

"Yeah, you can’t talk to him," said Gaulding, who was still incensed nearly 10 minutes after the checkered flag fell. "He just don’t know what he’s doing. I was going down the straightaway there and he just turned left and just killed my right front. We were going to have a top-10.

"I’m telling you, the guy has no idea what he’s doing out there."

Quiroga, meanwhile, explained his side by saying Gaulding just didn’t know his group was running four-wide.

"He told me I was running him off, but we were running four-wide at the time," Quiroga said. "He didn’t realize that. That’s what I was telling him when he (confronted) me, and I told him to chill out."

Quiroga would nurse his battered Toyota Tundra across the start/finish line in 10th place, while Gaulding settled for 14th.

The 16-year-old driver — whose age was exposed when his metal braces gleamed in the Virginia sunshine on pit road — started sixth and ran as high as second before getting outside the racing groove on a Lap 53 restart, plummeting 27 spots in the running order.

The NASCAR Next driver, competing in his eighth NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race of the season, worked his way back up through the field and settled on a different pit strategy to put himself in position to challenge for his second top-10 of the year.

"We were fighting our way back through," Gaulding said. "But just, right there at the end when it gets bottled up and when German does crazy moves that he knows aren’t even going to work — I was at his left front tire, and he still wants to turn down. I should have just spun him out. We fought our way back, but unfortunately we came home 14th."

Quiroga was more despondent over the failed late-race move, which he said nearly worked, than his talk with Gaulding.

"I didn’t stick the rear tires," he said. "I left them up. But we’re looking for our first win. It’s coming. Hopefully we can get everything together and pull it off before the end of the year, because I don’t have anywhere to go next year. Hopefully, we can make it happen."

Quiroga has been close this year. He has two runner-up finishes and was in contention in other races. But this isn’t the first time he’s left Martinsville with someone angry at him. In March, it was teammate Timothy Peters.

Peters had a dustup of his own Saturday, but offered his perspective after finishing second to Wallace.

"German had a really good truck and I hate to see what happened," Peters said. "Obviously, maybe four-wide might not be ideal at Martinsville. German had a great truck today. He has a ton of talent. As soon as that is contained to keep it there at the end, he’s going to win a lot of races. He’s shown that he has the ability, and I appreciate a man like that."

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Path to fifth title runs through Martinsville (1:30 p.m. ET, Sunday, ESPN)

RELATED: Follow your picks in the Chase Battle Grid Presented by Toyota

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — The clock has held the key in many of Jeff Gordon‘s four career championship runs.

Being in contention to win that unique Ridgeway grandfather clock, which doubles as a race trophy, in the fall race at Martinsville Speedway was a crucial component for the 43-year-old veteran when he was winning premier series championships over a seven-year span. He used his success at this unique 0.526-mile oval — where he has eight career wins — to gain separation in those title tilts.

As the defending race winner, Gordon can do the same Sunday in the Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 (1:30 p.m. ET, ESPN), where a win would guarantee him one of four spots in the final four-driver Championship Round at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

FULL CHASE COVERAGE

Chase hub page
Chase Grid games
#MyChaseNation

"I can honestly say, never has Martinsville been more important than this weekend," Gordon said. "I definitely think it’s played an important role to my championship runs in the past. Our team is solid here, and we come in here believing that we have a chance at winning. This weekend though, with the way this format is, I think we’re in a situation where this is a great track where we can win it. We’re very focused on this track."

The format Gordon speaks of is the brand-new Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup configuration. The Chase concept wasn’t around when Gordon won his most recent title (2001), and the newest iteration is in its first year of existence.

Typically when the series hits Martinsville in late October, there are five — and often, fewer — drivers still in championship contention. This year, there are eight. The points have reset to 4,000 among all eligible drivers in the Eliminator Round, Gordon included.

That makes all the details extra important, which is why Gordon and his Hendrick Motorsports teammates tested here earlier this season in preparation for Sunday’s race. Gordon came back to the paper clip-shaped track for the test on the heels of a 12th-place finish in the spring. That result was one of just three finishes outside the top 10 at the track since 2003, a span of 23 races.

It’s a staggering statistic, one that is only equaled by teammate Jimmie Johnson. In addition to eight wins here, which matches Gordon’s total, "Six-Time" has 22 top-10s in his 25 career Martinsville starts. Excluding his very first start at the track in 2002, Johnson’s worst career finish is 12th.

Like Gordon, he’s long used the unique oval as a springboard toward his six championships.

"This has been a track that can certainly shuffle the deck," Johnson said. "With Jeff and the situation he’s in in the points, I’m hopeful he can take advantage of things this weekend and have a good run."

Gordon having a good run is of utmost importance to Hendrick Motorsports. After all, he’s the only one of the stable’s four drivers to have qualified for the Eliminator Round.

Johnson, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kasey Kahne were all ousted after Talladega, with Kahne finishing above the cutoff line in points but failing to transfer after Brad Keselowski — who finished the Contender Round with fewer points than Kahne — won the GEICO 500 to earn an automatic entry into the third round.

It presents a scenario in which the main character is different, but the theme is the same for Hendrick Motorsports. Drivers in the organization are accustomed to having one of their teammates running for a title, and having to be mindful of his situation — it’s just that for the past eight years it’s been Johnson, not Gordon.

"I’m going to be aware of where (Gordon) is on the track and try not to give him a hard time," Johnson said. "I’ve always won championships by keeping it simple and feel like getting too far away from normal and overthinking things creates problems for me. I’m not sure how Jeff wants to go about things. I wouldn’t be surprised if they keep to themselves and do what they can. That’s what got them in this position and that’s what’s going to win them a championship."

And Gordon being in position to win a championship at sunny Homestead starts here Sunday in the chilly Virginia foothills, where a grandfather clock has historically helped determine if it’s time to win a title.

"When you get the opportunity to have that clock delivered to your home or to the shop, it’s very special," Gordon said. "I cherish every one and I look forward to that opportunity, and we’ve got a great opportunity this weekend. Everybody always says, ‘Oh man, do you ever have trouble finding places for those?’ No.

"We can win more and more and more and we’ll never have a problem finding a good place for it."

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

CGR driver will lead field to green in Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 (Sunday, 1:30 p.m. ET, ESPN)

RELATED: Follow your picks in the Chase Battle Grid Presented by Toyota
MORE: Full Martinsville race lineup

FULL CHASE COVERAGE

Chase hub page
Chase Grid games
#MyChaseNation

MARTINSVILLE, Va.— When the green flag waves to start the Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 on Sunday at Martinsville Speedway (1:30 p.m. ET on ESPN), it won’t be a Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup driver who leads the field to the start/finish line.

Touring the .526-mile short track in 18.954 seconds (99.905 mph) in his No. 1 Ganassi Racing Chevrolet, Jamie McMurray upstaged the championship contenders on Friday in winning the pole for the first race in the Eliminator Round of the Chase.

In claiming his second Coors Light pole award of the season, his second at Martinsville and the 11th of his career, McMurray beat title contenders Joey Logano (99.605 mph) and Matt Kenseth (99.318 mph) for the top spot.

Tony Stewart (99.297 mph) qualified fourth, followed by Chase driver Denny Hamlin (99.266 mph). Six of the eight eligible remaining Chase drivers qualified in the top 12. Brad Keselowski will start sixth, Ryan Newman ninth and Carl Edwards 11th.

In McMurray’s case, practice made perfect. His pole followed a productive recent test session at the historic short track.

"We tested here a couple of weeks ago, and I thought we had one of the best tests that I’ve been a part of, really since I started racing," McMurray said. "Really well organized… We made the car better throughout the test and hit on a couple things that really had a lot of speed in it.

"So I was pretty excited about getting here this weekend. Our cars have been so quick the past two or three months—really all year, but more so in the past few months. This is a great track for me, and we had a really good test. When things are going well, you get excited to come back to the track. It was really great that we were able to take that test and use that toward earning the pole today."

Jeff Gordon, one of the pre-race favorites, narrowly missed advancing to the second round of knockout qualifying and will start 13th. The real casualty of Friday’s time trials, however, was Kevin Harvick, who scraped the wall in the 30-minute first round and will start 33rd.

"We just missed it today," said Harvick, whose career-average finish of 15.8 at Martinsville is worst among the eight remaining Chase drivers. "We were way too loose. We struggled in practice and just missed it in qualifying.

"We’ll just have to get it better (in Saturday’s practice) and be ready to go on Sunday."

Gordon, who missed advancing to the second round by .003 seconds, shrugged off his position on the grid.

"I don’t mind starting 13th," he said. "It’s not a bad place to start. You just want that really good pit stall, and so we’ll definitely suffer with a pit stall a little bit.

"But we can definitely still win it from there. Our car is really good."

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

See how the field will lineup up for the Eliminator Round premiere

RELATED: Follow your picks in the Perfect Chase Grid Challenge for chance at $100,000 prize

Pos Car

Driver

Team

1

1

Jamie McMurray

McDonald’s Chevrolet

2

22

Joey Logano

Shell Pennzoil Ford

3

20

Matt Kenseth

Dollar General Toyota

4

14

Tony Stewart

Bass Pro Shops/Mobil 1 Chevrolet

5

11

Denny Hamlin

FedEx Freight Toyota

6

2

Brad Keselowski

Alliance Truck Parts Ford

7

48

Jimmie Johnson

Lowe’s Chevrolet

8

18

Kyle Busch

M&M’s Halloween Toyota

9

31

Ryan Newman

Quicken Loans Chevrolet

10

41

Kurt Busch

Haas Automation Chevrolet

11

99

Carl Edwards

Ford EcoBoost Ford

12

15

Clint Bowyer

AAA Insurance Toyota

13

24

Jeff Gordon

Drive To End Hunger Chevrolet

14

27

Paul Menard

Richmond/Menards Chevrolet

15

47

AJ Allmendinger

Clorox Chevrolet

16

42

Kyle Larson #

Target Chevrolet

17

55

Brian Vickers

Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota

18

17

Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

Roush Fenway Racing Pit for a Pair Ford

19

3

Austin Dillon #

Dow Chevrolet

20

13

Casey Mears

GEICO Chevrolet

21

16

Greg Biffle

3M Ford

22

51

Justin Allgaier #

Auto-Owners Insurance Chevrolet

23

88

Dale Earnhardt Jr.

National Guard Chevrolet

24

5

Kasey Kahne

Great Clips Chevrolet

25

9

Marcos Ambrose

Stanley Ford

26

78

Martin Truex Jr.

Furniture Row Chevrolet

27

43

Aric Almirola

Smithfield Ford

28

40

Landon Cassill(i)

Newtown Building Supplies Chevrolet

29

34

David Ragan

Wendell Scott HOF Tribute Ford

30

10

Danica Patrick

GoDaddy Breast Cancer Awareness Chevrolet

31

36

Reed Sorenson

Zing Zang Chevrolet

32

23

Alex Bowman #

DipYourCar.com Toyota

33

4

Kevin Harvick

Outback Steakhouse Chevrolet

34

38

David Gilliland

A&W All American Food Ford

35

98

Josh Wise

Phil Parsons Racing Chevrolet

36

26

Cole Whitt #

Uponor Plumbing Systems Toyota

37

7

Michael Annett #

Allstate Peterbuilt Group Chevrolet

38

93

Clay Rogers

Burger King Toyota

39

33

Travis Kvapil

Little Joe’s Autos Chevrolet

40

83

JJ Yeley(i)

DipYourCar.com Toyota

41

44

Timmy Hill

Phoenix Warehouse Chevrolet

42

32

Kyle Fowler(i)

corvetteparts.net Ford

43

66

Mike Wallace(i)

Testoril Toyota

(i) Ineligible for driver points in this series

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Each week a tech question is answered on GarageCam presented by Mobil 1

RELATED: Mobil 1 Technology Center

Each week the host of NASCAR.com’s GarageCam presented by Mobil 1 will take an automotive technology question and get it answered by the experts in a NASCAR garage.

This week, a member of Danica Patrick‘s team answers the Mobil 1 Tech Question of the Week.

Watch the video above to hear why air pressures in the tires could be a key to winning at Martinsville Speedway.

Be sure to tune in to GarageCam presented by Mobil 1 next week at Texas Motor Speedway and see another question answered.

Sprint Cup Series GarageCam, presented by Mobil 1: 12:30 p.m. ET, Friday, Oct. 31. (Watch here)
Camping World Truck Series GarageCam, presented by Mobil 1: 11:30 a.m. ET, Friday, Oct. 31. (Watch here)

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

See where your favorite driver will line up on pit road

RELATED: Follow your picks in the Chase Battle Grid Presented by Toyota

Coors Light Pole Award winner Jamie McMurray earned first pick of pit stall, and the No. 1 team chose the No. 1 stall at the exit of pit road for the Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 (Sunday, 1:30 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Martinsville Speedway.

FULL CHASE COVERAGE

Chase hub page
Chase Grid games
#MyChaseNation

Two Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers qualified behind him — Joey Logano and Matt Kenseth. McMurray will share the front row with Logano, who also will pit right next to the pole-sitter in stall No. 2. Meanwhile, Kenseth’s team selected the 11th pit stall, the first box with an opening on pit road.

Fourth-fastest in qualifying, Tony Stewart will pit across the opening from Kenseth in stall No. 10.

The remaining six Chase participants will pit in the following stalls:

Jeff Gordon, Pit stall No. 6
Denny Hamlin, Pit stall No. 8
Carl Edwards, Pit stall No. 13
Brad Keselowski, Pit stall No. 18
Ryan Newman, Pit stall No. 26
Kevin Harvick, Pit stall No. 32

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

See the order the trucks will go off in for qualifying (Sat., 10:15 a.m. ET, FS1)

# Car Driver Team

1

99

Bryan Silas

Bell Trucks America Inc. Chevrolet

2

07

BJ McLeod

RaceTrac Chevrolet

3

05

* John Wes Townley

Zaxby’s Toyota

4

35

Peyton Sellers

Danville Toyota Toyota

5

00

* Cole Custer

Haas Automation Chevrolet

6

51

Erik Jones

ToyotaCare Toyota

7

21

Joey Coulter

Allegiant Travel Chevrolet

8

02

Tyler Young #

Randco/Young’s Building System Chevrolet

9

23

* Max Gresham

Amwins Group Inc. Chevrolet

10

10

Jennifer Jo Cobb

Driven2Honor.org RAM

11

92

* Austin Hill

BTS Tire/Goodyear Fleet HQ/Wynns For

12

0

* Matt Tifft

Chevrolet

13

98

Johnny Sauter

Smokey Mountain/Curb Records Toyota

14

33

* Brandon Jones

Russell/Grupo Friopecas Chevrolet

15

20

Gray Gaulding #

Gemini Southern/Krispy Kreme Chevrolet

16

50

TJ Bell

Dedicated to Electrical Linemen Chevrolet

17

77

German Quiroga

Otterbox Toyota

18

88

Matt Crafton

Ideal Door/Menards Toyota

19

75

* Caleb Holman

Food Country USA/Gain Flings/Lopez Wealth Mgmt. Chevrolet

20

74

* Wendell Chavous

Vydox Chevrolet

21

87

* Charles Buchanan Jr.

Spring Drug Ford

22

8

John H. Nemechek

SWM Toyota

23

6

Norm Benning

Tom Corbett for PA Governor Chevrolet

24

34

Darrell Wallace Jr.

2015 NASCAR HOF Inductee Wendell Scott Toyota

25

15

* Mason Mingus #

811 Call Before You Dig Chevrolet

26

86

* Brandon Brown

Willmar Concrete Pumping Chevrolet

27

82

* Cody Erickson

Haugeberg Farms/PSI/Performance Auto Ford

28

93

* Dustin Hapka

Sure-Step Chevrolet

29

31

Ben Kennedy #

Heater.com Chevrolet

30

13

Jeb Burton

Estes/Carolina Nut Company Toyota

31

80

* Jody Knowles

Clayton Signs Inc. Ford

32

63

Justin Jennings

Papa Murphy’s/Mittler Bros. Machine & Tool Chevrolet

33

17

Timothy Peters

Red Horse Racing Toyota

34

29

Ryan Blaney

Cooper Standard Ford

35

9

Brennan Newberry

Qore-24 Chevrolet

36

19

Tyler Reddick #

Broken Bow Records Ford

37

08

Camden Murphy

Ronald McDonald House Charities Chevrolet

38

32

Alex Guenette

Motos Illimitees Chevrolet

* Required to qualify on time, (i) Ineligible for driver points in this series

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Four-time champ Jeff Gordon leads opening session

RELATED: Follow your picks in the Chase Battle Grid Presented by Toyota

Sprint Cup Series Practice 1 | Get results

FULL CHASE COVERAGE

Chase hub page
Chase Grid games
#MyChaseNation

Hendrick Motorsports driver Jeff Gordon led opening Sprint Cup Series practice on Friday afternoon at Martinsville Speedway.

Gordon, the defending race-winner, will look to pick up his second victory of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup and advance from the Eliminator Round to Homestead-Miami Speedway‘s Championship Round race on Nov. 16.

The four-time 2014 winner led the way with a best speed of 99.250 mph, achieved on the 32nd of 36 total laps around the 0.526-mile circuit. Gordon was trailed by a pair of Chase drivers in Joey Logano (99.198) and Denny Hamlin (99.141). Jamie McMurray was fourth at 99.115, while last week’s winner at Talladega, Brad Keselowski, rounded out the top five with a speed of 99.069.

Kurt Busch, who won the race earlier this season at Martinsville and will soon be swapping crew chiefs with teammate Danica Patrick, was 22nd at 98.170. Patrick, meanwhile, was 16th with a speed of 98.328.

In the opening minutes of the practice, Justin Allgaier spun his No. 51 Chevrolet for the session’s only caution period. Jamie McMurray also brushed the wall lightly, but incurred minimal damage and no caution was thrown.

Qualifying for Sunday’s Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500 (1:30 p.m. ET, ESPN) is at 4:40 p.m. ET (FS1) on Friday, while a pair of practices will run Saturday at 9 a.m. and noon ET (both on FS1).

Camping World Truck Series Practice 1 | Get Results

Brad Keselowski Racing driver Ryan Blaney topped opening Camping World Truck Series practice on Friday afternoon at Martinsville Speedway.

Blaney — who will participate in all three NASCAR national series this month — paced the 50-minute session with a best speed of 95.184 mph, achieved on the third of 10 laps around the 0.526-mile circuit. Chevrolet driver Gray Gaulding nearly matched Blaney’s speed, falling 0.001 seconds off his pace at 95.180 mph.

Brandon Jones (95.122), Austin Hill (95.084) and Johnny Sauter (94.913) rounded out the top five, with spring Martinsville winner and points leader Matt Crafton pulling in seventh at 94.704.

Defending race-winner Darrell Wallace Jr. was 16th in the practice, running a best speed of 94.111.

Camden Murphy forced a caution early in the practice with a mechanical issue.

Camping World Truck Series Practice 2 | Get Results

Defending race-winner Darrell Wallace Jr. led the way in final Camping World Truck Series practice on Friday afternoon at Martinsville Speedway.

Wallace, who picked up the first win of his national series career in this race last year, paced the session with a top speed of 95.888 mph. His Kyle Busch Motorsports teammate Erik Jones was just off the pace at 95.801 mph, good for third place.

Series points leader and spring Martinsville winner Matt Crafton was second with a speed of 95.869. Cole Custer (95.690) and Timothy Peters (95.651) rounded out the top five.

Ryan Blaney, who led the opening session, fell to 18th in the final run-through, turning his eighth and final lap at a 94.157 clip.

Late in the session, Charles Buchanan Jr. spun to bring out a caution. He placed 36th. The caution gave the track crew a chance to clean up fluid leaking from the No. 08 of Camden Murphy.

The Kroger 200 is Saturday at 1:30 p.m. ET with coverage on FOX Sports 1.

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView