Veteran holds off Malsam, Gallagher for first win of 2014 season

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TALLADEGA, Ala.—Holding off all challengers in a race that went four-wide on the final two laps, Timothy Peters won the fred’s 250 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race on Saturday at Talladega Superspeedway.

Peters arrived at the finish line .143 seconds ahead of second-place starter and finisher Tayler Malsam. Spencer Gallagher ran third, followed by Tyler Reddick and Ryan Blaney, who trimmed 14th-place finisher Matt Crafton’s lead in the series standings to 16 points with four races left in the season.

The victory was Peters’ first of the season, his first at Talladega and the eighth of his career.

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After ducking onto the apron to ensure a strong flow to the fuel pickup in his No. 17 Toyota, Peters, who had charged forward from the 26th starting position, led the field to a green-white-checkered-flag finish on Lap 94 of 95, after Norm Benning‘s spin in Turn 2 slowed the field for the sixth time.

With a strong push from Malsam, Peters hugged the inside line into Turn 1 with Ryan Blaney to his outside. As the field spread out over the final two laps to three-wide and even four-wide, Peters doggedly held the lead and took the checkered flag with Malsam in his tow.

"Chris Lambert, who spots for me, did a great job from the time the green flag fell till the checkered flag waved," Peters said. "It was system overload, telling me everything, how far apart they were in front of me, how close the guy behind me was, what run was coming on the outside coming to the checkered flag…

"We were making our Toyota Tundra as wide as we could (on the final two laps), and so it feels really good to come across the start/finish line and kind of wipe missing the Daytona/Talladega sweep by (16) hundredths of a second (Peters finished second at Daytona by that margin earlier this year).

"It just felt really good to go to Victory Lane."

On the final restart, Blaney got a push from sixth-place finisher Erik Jones and thought he was in position for the win but acknowledged he didn’t expect a third line to develop to his outside as quickly as it did.

"I thought we were in the perfect spot, leading the outside line into Turn 2," Blaney said.

But the side draft from the outside line separated Jones from Blaney and broke their momentum, dropping them out of contention for the win.

A rare engine failure torpedoed Johnny Sauter‘s championship hopes. Sauter’s Toyota slowed on Lap 24 and coasted onto pit road. His resulting 31st-place finish left him fourth in the standings, 36 points behind Crafton, his ThorSport Racing teammate.

"Whatever… the championship’s over," a disconsolate Sauter said in the garage as his team worked on his Tundra. "From here on out, we can just race like hell."

At a track legendary for wild action, Ben Kennedy sustained the hardest hit on Lap 65, when Joe Nemechek lost control of his truck and knocked Kennedy’s Chevrolet into the outside wall.

Nemechek’s first concern was for Kennedy’s safety. After learning he had walked away from the wreck, Nemechek radioed, "Put all of the blame for that one right square on my shoulders," indicating his Toyota had been sucked around in turbulent air.

Note: Daniel Suarez finished 15th in his NCWTS debut. On Sunday, he races in his native Mexico in the NASCAR Toyota Mexico Series.

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Charlotte combatants together again after unapproved adjustments

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After a precautionary engine change on Saturday, Matt Kenseth will start from the rear of the field in Sunday’s GEICO 500 (2 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Talladega Superspeedway. He will be joined by Brad Keselowski, the man he confronted in the garage after last week’s Bank of America 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

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Kenseth’s crew found issues in the bottom of the engine and made the change, rather than risk a failure during the race. Kenseth currently is ninth in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup standings, one point behind Kasey Kahne and one position away from transferring to the Eliminator Round of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

"…we didn’t have anything to gain because we have to start in the back with the engine deal, but you get in it and you get competitive and you’re getting mad and you’re trying to lay back," Kenseth said following Saturday’s qualifying session, who was 13th-fastest.

Keselowski’s No. 2 crew, parked next to Kenseth in the garage this weekend, made an alternator change that will send him to the back at the start of Sunday’s race. The 2012 champion must win Sunday’s race to be among the eight drivers who will remain title-eligible in the Chase next weekend at Martinsville Speedway.

"…we broke an alternator or something," Keselowski said. "I don’t see how it impacts anything. I guess it is an earlier (pit stall) pick for (crew chief) Paul (Wolfe) so he can go home earlier tonight."

After qualifying fifth, Keselowski’s team chose the 16th pit stall at the end of the first group of pit stalls at the Turn 1 exit of pit road. Meanwhile, Kenseth will pit back in the 41st stall at the entrance to pits off of Turn 4.

In May at Talladega, a laps-down Keselowski triggered a 14-car wreck, collecting Kenseth, who wasn’t complimentary of his competitor’s actions following the race.

"Well, I will say one thing, if it was the other way around and it was anybody else except for him (Keselowski) we’d all be getting lectured,” Kenseth said. "I didn’t know he was that many laps down, honestly.

"He came down across the front of Danica’s car early (in the race) and spun in front of the field and thankfully didn’t collect any cars. This time we weren’t so lucky. He was driving really, really, really aggressively to try to get back up there."

NASCAR Wire Service contributed to this report.

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No. 29 car failed post-qualifying inspection, shuffling lineup


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Joe Nemechek‘s qualifying time for the GEICO 500 (Sunday, 2 p.m. ET, ESPN) was disallowed, NASCAR officials said after Coors Light Pole Qualifying for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.

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Nemechek’s No. 29 car, which had qualified 24th, failed post-qualifying inspection for an improperly sealed oil tank encasement. Reed Sorenson, who was initially thought to have missed the race, was replaced in the field based on his qualifying speed. Sorenson posted a speed of 189.305 mph in the opening round of group qualifying.

The driver of the No. 36 Tommy Baldwin Racing Chevrolet will line up 36th in Sunday’s field. Sorenson has one top-10 finish at the 2.66-mile track, which came in 2007. By making the GEICO 500 grid, Sorenson has now been in the starting lineup for every race this year.

Nemechek has made 15 Sprint Cup Series starts this year but has failed to make it into the field in both of his tries in the No. 29 Toyota.

Nemechek joined Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Justin Allgaier as the drivers who failed to make the 43-car field at Talladega.

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See where your favorite driver will pit for Sunday’s race (2 p.m. ET, ESPN)

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Brian Vickers won the Coors Light Pole Award and the right to the first pit-stall pick for Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway (2 p.m. ET, ESPN). His No. 55 team chose the first stall at the exit of pit road.

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Six-time champion Jimmie Johnson, in a must-win situation, qualified second and chose the 17th stall, the first one on pit road with a front opening. Johnson will pit across the opening from another driver who has to win to get into the Eliminator Round of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup as former champion Brad Keselowski will park in the 16th stall.

The rest of the 12-driver Contender Round will pit in the following stalls:

Kasey Kahne, Stall 7
Kevin Harvick, Stall 11
Denny Hamlin, Stall 13
Ryan Newman, Stall 14
Kyle Busch, Stall 15
Dale Earnhardt Jr., Stall 21
Joey Logano, Stall 32
Carl Edwards, Stall 36
Matt Kenseth, Stall 41
Jeff Gordon, Stall 42

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See how the field will lineup up for the Contender Round finale

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Pos Car Driver Team
1 55 Brian Vickers Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota
2 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s Chevrolet
3 47 AJ Allmendinger Scott Products Chevrolet
4 12 Ryan Blaney(i) SKF Ford
5 2 Brad Keselowski Redd’s Wicked Apple Ale Ford
6 95 Michael McDowell Jordan Truck Sales Ford
7 33 Travis Kvapil Little Joe’s Autos Chevrolet
8 5 Kasey Kahne Farmer’s Insurance Chevrolet
9 32 Terry Labonte C&J Energy Services Ford
10 7 Michael Annett # Golden Corral Chevrolet
11 31 Ryan Newman Caterpillar Chevrolet
12 78 Martin Truex Jr. Furniture Row Chevrolet
13 20 Matt Kenseth Home Depot Toyota
14 23 Alex Bowman # Dustless Blasting Toyota
15 99 Carl Edwards Subway Ford
16 21 Trevor Bayne(i) Motorcraft/Quick Lane Tire & Auto Center Ford
17 43 Aric Almirola Smithfield Ford
18 41 Kurt Busch Haas Automation Chevrolet
19 13 Casey Mears GEICO Chevrolet
20 27 Paul Menard Moen/Menards Chevrolet
21 38 David Gilliland Long John Silver’s Ford
22 26 Cole Whitt # Bad Boy Mowers Toyota
23 49 Mike Wallace(i) Royal Teak Collection Toyota
24 16 Greg Biffle 3M Ford
25 34 David Ragan Dockside Logistics Ford
26 9 Marcos Ambrose Black & Decker Ford
27 10 Danica Patrick GoDaddy Breast Cancer Awareness Chevrolet
28 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Diet Mountain Dew Chevrolet
29 40 Landon Cassill(i) Carsforsale.com Chevrolet
30 3 Austin Dillon # Dow Chevrolet
31 1 Jamie McMurray Cessna Chevrolet
32 83 JJ Yeley(i) Burger King/Dr Pepper Toyota
33 15 Clint Bowyer PinkLemonade5HrEnergybnftLBBC Toyota
34 66 Michael Waltrip MyAFibStory.com Toyota
35 98 Josh Wise Dogecoin/Reddit.com Ford
36 36 Reed Sorenson Zing Zang Chevrolet
37 14 Tony Stewart Bass Pro Shops/Mobil 1 Chevrolet
38 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx One Rate/Deliverminator Toyota
39 4 Kevin Harvick Budweiser Chevrolet
40 22 Joey Logano Shell Pennzoil Ford
41 18 Kyle Busch M&M’s Halloween Toyota
42 42 Kyle Larson # Energizer Chevrolet
43 24 Jeff Gordon Axalta Chevrolet

Did Not Qualify: # 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr.; # 51 Justin Allgaier #; # 29 Joe Nemechek(i).

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MWR driver ends five-year pole drought in topsy-turvy Talladega qualifying

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Brian Vickers roared to the Coors Light Pole Award on Saturday afternoon, working the aerodynamic draft to great effect during a qualifying session full of surprises at Talladega Superspeedway.

Vickers, driving the Michael Waltrip Racing No. 55 Toyota to a fast lap of 196.129 mph, will start first in Sunday’s GEICO 500 (2 p.m. ET, ESPN), the sixth race of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoffs and the finale of the three-race Contender Round. After Sunday’s race, four drivers will be eliminated from the field of title-eligible drivers, leaving just eight remaining in the championship hunt.

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Vickers’ pole position was his first since August 2009 and the 12th of his Sprint Cup career.

"It’s crazy," said Vickers, who benefited from a slowing field that allowed him to catch an aero pull at the end. "I thought with coming to three (laps) to go we had literally no shot. … I just tried not to wreck."

Six-time series champion Jimmie Johnson turned a lap of 195.732 mph in the third and final round of group qualifying, allowing him to start second in Sunday’s main event in the Hendrick Motorsports No. 48 Chevrolet. Johnson, mired back in a tie for last place among Chase eligible drivers, likely needs to win Sunday to keep his championship hopes intact.

AJ Allmendinger qualified third with Ryan Blaney — making his second Sprint Cup start — fourth ahead of Team Penske teammate Brad Keselowski in fifth place. Terry Labonte qualified an impressive ninth for the final start of his career in NASCAR’s top division. Keselowski, though, will be dropping to the rear of the field because of a change to the alternator on his No. 2 Ford.

Saturday’s qualifying on the 2.66-mile speedway was the first for NASCAR’s premier series using a new format at restrictor-plate tracks. Each knockout stage of multicar qualifying was scheduled for five minutes, with the field being divided into two five-minute group sessions (determined by random draw) for the first elimination phase. The rules change was intended to curb the tactic of drivers on the track at widely varying speeds, lagging behind for an aerodynamic pull or better positioning in the draft.

Paul Menard, making his first start with crew chief Justin Alexander atop the Richard Childress Racing No. 27 pit box, was fastest in the first group of the first session with a lap at 198.903 mph. That time held up as the best overall after the second 23-driver group clocked their times.

In each opening-round group, a Chase driver took to the track in a solo run while others waited on pit road for an advantageous time to start qualifying. Denny Hamlin drove off by himself and was slowest of the 23 drivers in the opening five-minute group. Carl Edwards did the same in the second opening group, but rejoined the rest of the field on pit road to draft with the others.

The waiting game cost a handful of big-name drivers in the second qualifying group in the opening session. It cost Ricky Stenhouse Jr. the most as he failed to make the field for the first time in his Sprint Cup career.

Four-time series champion Jeff Gordon was also bitten early on, as he never got up to full song for a qualifying lap at speed before time expired; he registered the slowest time among the 46 drivers at 176.562 mph.

"I messed up, ultimately," Gordon said. "I just mistimed getting to the line. The whole group was moving so slow and I had to have a gap. … It’s a mess out there. It’s not easy."

Stenhouse blamed Gordon and the No. 24’s spotter for the qualifying mix-up: "He kept slowing the pack down and we didn’t get a good lap and never got across the start/finish line in time," Stenhouse said. "My spotter was giving me the information I needed and I wish the 24 would have been doing the same."

Others affected were Kevin Harvick, Joey Logano and Kyle Busch — who claimed the 40th- through 42nd-fastest laps and failed to advance past the first elimination. Greg Biffle was 25th-fastest, making him the first driver failing to make the cut for the second qualifying session.

"You are trying to set yourself up to go fast. I don’t know," Logano said. "If you lay back you get a faster lap but if you don’t go, you don’t get there in time. I don’t know how much we missed it by. I guess it was about a half a second that we missed it by and that was enough. You have to draw the line somewhere and that is where it was."

NASCAR spokesperson Kerry Tharp said Saturday afternoon that though teams were made aware of the rules change to qualifying on Sept. 4, several were still uncertain about the format’s nuances come Saturday.

"You would think that that information and all of that strategy would have filtered down from the race teams to the drivers," Tharp told SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. "You would think they would’ve had a better understanding of what we were doing out here today. That’s why I said lessons learned today. I think that there were some drivers, probably moreso than we thought, that had not fully comprehended that this was a change from what we did here in the spring, and I think that unfortunately they were trying to approach it in a similar way that we did it in the spring, and it kind of bit them in the rear."

A large contingent of part-time drivers and surprising names making the 24-driver first cut — Blaney, Trevor Bayne, Michael McDowell, Travis Kvapil, Cole Whitt and Mike Wallace among them — made for what seemed to be three stunners on the failed-to-qualify list: Stenhouse, Justin Allgaier and Reed Sorenson.

That list changed, though, in a post-qualifying inspection when the qualifying speed for Joe Nemechek was disallowed after officials discovered an improperly sealed oil tank encasement. That ruling left Nemechek out and reinstated Sorenson to the starting lineup.

The surprises continued in the second round, with Kvapil topping the board at 196.907 mph in the Circle Sport Racing No. 33 Chevrolet, the same car that won the pole position with Brian Scott aboard at Talladega in May. McDowell, Labonte and McDowell also advanced to the final five-minute session.

The four drivers currently outside the top eight positions in the Sprint Cup standings can control their own destiny with a victory on Sunday, but others have better than outside chances of advancing with solid results and significant points.

Two of those drivers in the bottom four — Matt Kenseth and Keselowski — will drop to the rear for unapproved adjustments. Kenseth, just one point behind eighth-place Kasey Kahne at the cut-off line, will drop to the rear of the field during pace laps Sunday because of an unapproved engine change in his Joe Gibbs Racing No. 20 Toyota before qualifying. He participated in time trials regardless of the penalty, winding up 13th in an attempt to grab a favorable selection of pit stall and just missing the final 12-driver cut.

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Driver of the No. 17 Roush Fenway Racing Ford fails to make GEICO 500 field

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TALLADEGA, Ala. — Changes to NASCAR’s qualifying format for the GEICO 500 at Talladega Superspeedway produced a number of surprises, not the least of which was the failure of Ricky Stenhouse Jr. to earn a starting berth in the 43-car field.

The Roush Fenway Racing driver was one of three that failed to earn a starting position based on his qualifying speed — Justin Allgaier and Reed Sorenson also failed to post times fast enough to crack the top 36 here Saturday at Talladega Superspeedway.

Sorenson (Tommy Baldwin Racing), 36th fastest in the opening round, was eventually added to the lineup after Joe Nemechek‘s No. 29 Toyota failed post-qualifying inspection.

"I didn’t consider the fact that our position in points would leave us in jeopardy," Roush Fenway Racing co-owner Jack Roush said afterward. "That was a blind side on my part. It’s unfortunate we weren’t in a better place in points, and that we had as many good cars as we did that didn’t qualify based on time. It’s just unbelievable that we didn’t get on the race track in time to get a lap there."

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Stenhouse has made 72 starts in Sprint Cup competition, including 67 in a row since moving up to the series full time a year ago. He made five starts between 2011-12 while winning back-to-back championships in NASCAR’s Nationwide Series.

His team’s DNQ was the result of several things, from Saturday’s slow qualifying speed to his team’s position in the owner points standings.

During the first round, Stenhouse posted a speed of 176.947 mph, just 43rd overall for the round. While unfortunate, under normal circumstances, he would have been one of several slotted into the field in one of the seven remaining positions available based on owner points.

But because seven drivers higher in owner points failed to crack the top 36 (Tony Stewart, Denny Hamlin, Kevin Harvick, Joey Logano, Kyle Busch, Kyle Larson and Jeff Gordon), Stenhouse Jr. wasn’t able to secure one of those starting spots.

NASCAR determines its 43-car lineup based on the following: positions 1-36 are awarded based solely on lap times. Positions 37-43 are awarded based on a team’s rank in the owner standings, and assigned positions based on their lap times. (If a former champion fails to post a speed in the top 36, he may be assigned the 43rd position, if his team isn’t high enough in the owners’ points standings to receive one of those berths.)

NASCAR made changes to the qualifying format for Talladega, with teams split into two groups for the first round, and limiting the time of the round to five minutes. The latter change meant teams would likely get one opportunity to post a qualifying run with no time to return to pit road, allow their cars to cool and return to the track should it be necessary.

Stenhouse was last in line in a group of cars that included Gordon and Harvick making their qualifying laps in the first round. But when Gordon slowed (to create a gap between his group and another group ahead of the pack), it slowed those behind him. Because they didn’t get back to the start/finish line in time, they were unable to post another lap.

"I thought being the last car in line would be beneficial for us," Stenhouse said. "We had Jeff Gordon leading the pack there; I thought we would have a good shot at putting a good lap in, but my spotter was telling me ‘‘hey, you have 30 seconds to get across the start/finish line’ as we were entering Turn 3.

"I don’t guess the 24’s (spotter) was giving him a lot of information. He kept slowing the pack down and we didn’t get a good lap and never got across the start/finish line in time.

"My spotter was giving me the information I needed and I wish the 24 would have been doing the same."

Stenhouse later tweeted the following:

Gordon said the qualifying plan "was shot before the plan started."

"I messed up ultimately," the Hendrick Motorsports driver said. "I just mistimed getting to the line. The whole group was going so slow I knew I had to have a gap and when I came across the line I thought I had enough (time) to be able to complete that lap and get one more, which was the only way we were going to make it.

"But we came up short. It’s a mess out there. It’s not easy."

It was the second time this season a driver from the RFR stable failed to qualify for a Sprint Cup race. A week ago at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Nationwide Series regular Trevor Bayne was unable to qualify for the Bank of America 500 in a fourth RFR entry fielded just for that race.

Roush, whose organization also fields Sprint Cup entries for drivers Greg Biffle and Carl Edwards, didn’t blame the qualifying format for the setback.

"We just didn’t get on the race track fast enough and I’m not sure who actually made that call. I’m not sure if it was left up to Ricky or the spotter or (crew chief) Mike Kelley," Roush said. "It’s my responsibility to make sure we execute our program so we have a chance to qualify. We clearly didn’t do it here and that’s an oversight."

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New crew chief for Paul Menard prepared for Talladega

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TALLADEGA, Ala. – Justin Alexander makes his NASCAR Sprint Cup Series debut Sunday at Talladega Superspeedway as a crew chief.

Alexander, 33, is replacing Richard "Slugger" Labbe atop the pit box for the Richard Childress Racing No. 27 team with driver Paul Menard.

"I’ve been looking forward to this for a long time," Alexander said Saturday at the 2.66-mile track. "It’s a special opportunity."

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A Charlotte native, Alexander worked in several roles at Hendrick Motorsports before making the move to RCR before the start of the 2014 season. He served as a shock specialist for the teams of drivers Jeff Gordon and Jimmie Johnson in 2003 before moving into the role of lead engineer for Johnson’s No. 48 team in ’05. He spent the ’06 season as an R&D engineer at Hendrick, then was named lead engineer for Gordon’s No. 24 organization in ’09.

"It’s all the same; just different organizations," Alexander said. "I learned a lot at Hendrick and that prepared me a lot for what I’m doing right now. It’s just a really good preparation. But really, the same things apply. Nothing is really that different. It’s just organizational stuff.

"I’ve worked with Chad (Knaus) and Steve Letarte and I’ve learned a lot from those guys. They both have different styles in doing things. And honestly, you don’t really know until you get to this position to how you’re going to run things. But I have my own way and it’s not like anybody else’s. But I’m learning as I go a little bit and so I’m looking forward to it."

Knaus has won six championships with Johnson while Letarte served as Gordon’s crew chief before taking over the same role with driver Dale Earnhardt Jr.

Alexander holds a mechanical engineering degree from North Carolina State University.

Although the racing can be intense at Talladega, he said it’s a "good place" to make his debut.

"Talladega is not too terribly intensive on the set-ups of the cars, so to speak, and changes on pit road," Alexander said. "From that standpoint, it makes it a little bit easier.

"But really, anywhere, I think I’d be fine. But Talladega is a good place to start."

Labbe will oversee the research and development program at RCR. The car chief for Terry Labonte‘s championship-winning team in 1996, Labbe won five races as crew chief. Among those victories were the 2003 Daytona 500 with Michael Waltrip and the 2011 Brickyard 400 with Menard.

Menard enters Sunday’s GEICO 500 (2 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Talladega 21st in points.

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See where every driver will pit on Saturday, 1 p.m. ET on FOX

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After earning his first career 21 Means 21 Pole Award on Friday at Talladega Superspeedway, Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender Tyler Reddick chose the second pit stall — first off of pit road into Turn 1 — for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series fred’s 250 Powered by Coca-Cola (Saturday, 1 p.m. ET on FOX)

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It’ll be the Tyler and Tayler Show on the front row as Tayler Malsam will start along Reddick. Malsam chose the 10th stall, the first with a front opening on pit road. Reigning champion and current points leader, Matt Crafton, was third-fastest in qualifying and chose the 17th stall, the next one back with a front opening.

Crafton’s ThorSport Racing teammate, Johnny Sauter, is four stalls behind the No. 88 in the 21st stall with an opening in front of him. The fifth-fastest qualifier, Ryan Blaney, will pit in the 26th stall with an opening in front of him.

At the entrance to pit road in the 43rd stall will be Jennifer Jo Cobb, who qualified 24th.

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Get up to speed for the 18th Camping World Truck Series race of 2014

What: Ninth annual fred’s 250 powered by Coca-Cola
Where: Talladega Superspeedway in Talladega, Alabama
When: Saturday, Oct. 18 at 1 p.m. ET
TV: FOX
Distance: 94 laps, 250.04 miles
Defending race winner: Johnny Sauter

Pit road speed: 55 mph
Fuel window: 40 laps

On The Front Row | Full lineup
1. Tyler Reddick, Brad Keselowski Racing No. 19 Ford (186.827 mph)
2. Tayler Malsam, Turner Scott Motorsports No. 32 Chevrolet (186.714 mph)

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Fastest in practice: Ben Kennedy, No. 31 Chevrolet, Turner Scott Motorsports (188.902 mph)

Best consecutive 10-lap average: Darrell Wallace Jr., No. 54 Toyota, Kyle Busch Motorsports (181.877 mph)

Former winners in the field: 
Johnny Sauter (2013)

About the sponsor:
 fred’s is a discount general merchandise store with more than 700 locations centered around the southeastern United States.

Shake-and-bake: "Actually a couple days ago I was talking with some friends in Mexico. I talk very often with them and they asked me where is going to be my race this weekend, and I told them Mexico and Talladega and they told me, ‘Hey, Talladega like the movie?’ So, definitely there is a lot of history in this race track." — Daniel Suarez, who is making his first career Camping World Truck Series start this weekend

Not as easy as it looks: "It sounds simple — holding it wide open and being in the draft, but at the end of the day there is a lot of things that you can do with it. I’ll just be trying to learn as much as I can in practice and early in the race and be ready for when it matters." — Erik Jones, who is making his first start at Talladega

Keeping your head: "I’ve never raced at Talladega Superspeedway, but I already know that it’s going to be a wild one. Something crazy always happens here. We ran well in Daytona earlier this year and we’re bringing back the same truck, but I know Talladega can be a whole different animal. The key is racing smart so that you can make it to the last lap, and then it’s game on until you can cross the finish line." — Ben Kennedy, who is also making his first start at Talladega

Relying on fate: "Racing at Talladega is just like going out and buying a lottery ticket — you’re damned if you do and damned if you don’t. There’s just no telling — but you’ve got to play the game." — Matt Crafton, the defending series champion and current points leader

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