JGR driver aims to overcome personal hurdle in Contender Round opener

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Talladega Superspeedway‘s unpredictable nature has earned plenty of spotlight among the next three venues in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup postseason. For Kyle Busch, however, a different track counts as his personal house of horrors.

As much trepidation as Kansas Speedway might conjure up for the Joe Gibbs Racing driver, Busch was calm and collected in talking about the Contender Round opener Wednesday, two days before opening practice at the 1.5-mile facility in preparation for Sunday’s Hollywood Casino 400 (2 p.m. ET, ESPN).

Crashes in the last two Chase races in the Sunflower State have unraveled Busch’s title hopes the last two years. This season, he’s not setting out to be Mr. October, but hopes to survive with more modest goals.

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"It’s an opportune time for us," Busch said. "It’s definitely a track that you don’t necessarily look forward to going to, but you know it’s coming so you just kind of get ready for it best you can, do the best work you can and put yourself in the best position possible to have a decent day. Essentially, that’s all we need. I don’t necessarily think we’re out there to set the world on fire to win the race in Kansas. I think for us, a solid top-10 is what we need to get out of there with."

Top-10s have been difficult to come by at what statistically ranks as Busch’s worst track, with an average finish of 22.7 and just two top-10 finishes in 14 starts in his Sprint Cup Series career. Since the track reconfigured its banking with new pavement in the summer of 2012, Busch’s fortunes have taken an even further nose-dive with three crashes in the last four events; only his 15th-place effort there in May over that four-race span was wreck-free.

"I don’t know what it is," Busch said. "I thought I was just starting to figure it out there on the old asphalt and getting pretty good at being able to run the top and run around there and be OK. Once they repaved it, I haven’t been able to find my rear with both hands, so definitely got to figure that out.

"This spring, I thought we ran OK. We were running, I think I got as high as sixth or eighth or something like that before I got myself busted for speeding on pit road. We go back there this time, and again, I think we’re very capable of being able to run top-10 and just try to get out of there with that and just build on that consistency for this round."

Busch finished fourth in the series standings in 2013 — his best season-long result thus far in his 10-year career. In previous years, Busch admitted over the offseason, he would fold when faced with a dose of adversity, but last season, a new approach that emphasized resilience carried him.

This season, the new-look rules format for the Chase — with points hitting the reset button after each three-race round — could help Busch compartmentalize any rough patches. To maximize that benefit, he’ll still need to get through Kansas, but at least he heads there with a clean slate after the Challenger Round.

"I don’t think it’s bad; I just think it’s the situation we’re in," Busch said. "It’s not quite what it was before. The Chase format in years past, you essentially eliminated a guy each week. I mean, it’s no different than it is now. Now, every three races, you reset at zero. Right now, Brad Keselowski‘s won five races and I’m at the exact same points as he is and I’ve got one win. It doesn’t matter how many you win, but you’ve got to win them at the right time."

Timing may mean everything for the dozen drivers trying to make the top-eight cut for the Eliminator Round. The dread associated with the Contender Round’s elimination race at fickle Talladega has placed a premium on performance for the round’s first two events — Kansas and Charlotte.

Controlling his own destiny at a restrictor-plate track is a demanding task that Busch would rather avoid. He says that scenario, however, could make even the steadiest driver a daring risk-taker out of necessity.

"I think desperation is going to change everything," Busch said. "What you’ve got to do is going to be anything you can do. If you’re going to go four-wide or five-wide at Talladega in order to get yourself in a spot that’s going to be able to make you transfer through and take yourself a chance of crashing, you’re going to do it. You’ve got to. It’s all about trying to make it through to the final round."

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Rookie is seventh in points, despite not qualifying for season-opening race

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For Chris Buescher, 2014 counts as a season of on-track growth in the NASCAR Nationwide Series. The progress has been even more of an eyebrow-raiser considering that the growth was nearly stunted before the season started.

Early blips aside, Buescher has rounded into competitive form during his rookie season in Roush Fenway Racing’s No. 60 Ford Mustang. He’ll hope to build steam from last weekend’s mistake-free fourth-place finish at Dover into Saturday’s Kansas Lottery 300 (3:30 p.m. ET, ESPN2) at Kansas Speedway.

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The current run of momentum remains in sharp contrast to Buescher’s delayed start to the season at Daytona International Speedway in February. Buescher was among nine drivers missing out on Coors Light Pole Qualifying in the series’ first try at the new multi-round group qualifying format, a three-round session cut short by rain.

Missing the race and starting the season the following weekend at Phoenix left the team facing a large deficit in the series standings. As the campaign has plodded along, the 21-year-old Texan has made the most of the early setback, steadily advancing to seventh place using the team’s go-for-broke approach with little stake in the championship fight.

All the while, sitting out Daytona has remained in the back of Buescher’s mind.

"Yeah, we always think about that," he said Saturday after the Dover 200. "Not getting to make our first Daytona start due to the new format, rain, weather, what have you — we were extremely fast, but we took it for what it is and we’ve been going forward understanding that we missed a race and we’re still seventh in points. I look at it as a big plus for our whole team. I’m really proud of these guys for sticking with it and going out here.

"We’ve taken a lot of chances this year. We’ve been in position to do it now. We have nothing to lose in the points, so it’s almost been a blessing for us to be able to experiment a little bit and take some chances that you usually wouldn’t do."

The highlight of Buescher’s progression came in August, when he emerged at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course for his first career victory. Since then, the finishes have been solid but not spectacular — up until last weekend’s super-steady top-five result at the Monster Mile.

Though making monumental steps further up in the standings is virtually out of reach — Buescher ranks 78 points behind sixth-place Trevor Bayne, his Roush Fenway teammate — the team still has chances to make strides over the final five races of the season.

"I mean, that’s our goal," said Scott Graves, Buescher’s crew chief. "The end of the season, we’re definitely talking that we want to be top-five and in contention every week. Just really want to show people that we’re here and we’re for real and finish off strong, for sure."

That quest begins this weekend at Kansas, where Buescher finished 16th last year in just his ninth career Nationwide Series start. His results this season on 1.5-mile tracks have been a hodgepodge, but his portfolio of four top-10 finishes in eight races on intermediate-sized tracks this year provides hope.

"It’s been a struggle at first, but we’ve made a lot of gains," said Buescher, who took seventh place in the series most recent race at a 1.5-mile track, two weeks ago at Kentucky. "Our last couple of mile-and-a-halfs have been really good, so I think we can build on that, go out there and contend and get these top-fives."

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Bruce: Whether dominant or just good enough, everything is equal again

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Brad Keselowski‘s average finishing position in the first three races of this year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup is an impressive 3.3.

Team Penske teammate Joey Logano was just a shade better at 3.0.

It’s been the most impressive pairing since the Road Warriors climbed into the wrestling ring.

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Kasey Kahne, meanwhile, idled into the start of this week’s Contender Round with a hefty 18.7 average.

Others were better than the Hendrick Motorsports driver, some by a lot, some by not so much.

Competitively, the gulf from the top to the bottom of the 12-car Chase field looks about as wide as the Mississippi. It’s product of numbers perhaps — as the field dwindles, so too should the gap between the best and the rest.

Yet when the 12 remaining Chase teams roll their cars off the back of their haulers Friday at Kansas Speedway, each will have 3,000 points. The good, the bad and those we’re still not so sure about.

Advancement in the Chase is the Monopoly equivalent of passing "Go" and collecting $200. Some got a "Get Out of Jail Free" card to boot.

All square. Even Steven. Or maybe it’s Stephen.

So now we’re down to a dozen teams and three more races, after which four more drivers will discover they peaked too soon, peaked too late or failed to peak at all.

It’s the ultimate game of peak-a-boo-boo.

The sport that isn’t like other sports is more like other sports today than ever. Baseball teams are just beginning postseason play, and those that advance don’t get to bring along the runs scored in previous contests. Every game begins 0-0.

Meanwhile, back in the Chase, points have always separated the field. Sometimes by a lot, sometimes by a little, but it was always there.

And to some extent, that’s still the case.

One or more positions in every round of this year’s Chase have been, or will be, determined by points earned. Three of the original 16 drivers that advanced into the postseason qualified based on points earned through the first 26 races.

Winners from those championship-eligible teams will continue to advance as the Chase progresses, with the remainder of the field determined at each break by points standings.

Even the lineup for the all-important Championship Round will fall back on points to determine at least one of the final four positions.

The difference this time around is that regardless of how you manage to advance, eventually the competition is allowed to catch up. Points haven’t been tossed aside, but they now come with expiration dates attached.

Until the season’s final race, you don’t have to beat everyone, just enough of them to carry you safely into the next round.

There’s an old joke that goes something like this:

Two hikers are making their way off the mountain when a bear suddenly jumps out of the bushes. Both hikers begin running, but one eventually stops to put on a pair of running shoes.

"Are you crazy?" his companion asks. "You can’t outrun a bear!"

"I don’t have to outrun the bear," the first hiker says. "I only have to outrun you."

And that’s pretty much the situation facing drivers in this year’s Chase.

Win and you’re guaranteed to advance.

For everyone else, it’s a matter of making sure you’re better than the rest.

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Veteran says championship hopes improved in new playoff structure

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Officially, NASCAR’s format for determining its champion is known as the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

It could just as easily be called the "Chase for Second Chances."

"My chances are better this year because of this format," Carl Edwards said Wednesday during Contender Media Day at the NASCAR Hall of Fame. "Because right now, we are not the fastest car out there.

"If we were running like Brad (Keselowski) is running right now, I’d hate this format. But right now we’re tied with Brad. So it’s good for us."

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Edwards, twice a winner this season in NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series, heads to what is considered his "home" track this weekend, with Sunday’s Hollywood Casino 400 at Kansas Speedway (ESPN, 2 p.m. ET) kicking off the three-race Contender Round of the Chase.

The Columbia, Missouri, native is one of three Sprint Cup drivers that hail from the region — Clint Bowyer grew up in Emporia, Kansas, while Jamie McMurray is from Joplin, Missouri.

Edwards, though, is the only one of the three still harboring championship dreams.

While his start in this year’s 10-race Chase didn’t produce terrific results — he scored a best finish of 11th last weekend at Dover — it was enough to earn the Roush Fenway Racing driver a ticket into the next round.

And because those that advance have their points reset after each three-race segment, Edwards and his No. 99 Ford team head to Kansas on equal footing with Keselowski, Team Penske teammate Joey Logano and Hendrick MotorsportsJeff Gordon, winners of the opening Chase races.

In fact, from Keselowski to Kasey Kahne, all 12 begin all over again, each with a 3,000-point total.

"The whole season is different now, everything is different," said Edwards, who has 23 career wins. "Before the Chase format, every single position in every single race mattered for the championship. The problem was that you could be out of it before the season was over.

"Now, every single position in every single race, they aren’t as important for a number of reasons. … Once you’re in the next round (by virtue of a win), it just changes."

Positions are still important in that the remaining positions in each round are filled based on points earned in the previous segment.

The pressure to perform "is more punctuated now," he said.

While past years have seen that pressure increase as the cutoff race at Richmond approached, the new format has added three more elimination races (Dover, Talladega and Phoenix) to determine which drivers move on and which are no longer competing for the championship.

"I felt a lot of pressure before we got our first win this year," Edwards said. "And I felt a lot of pressure at Dover to perform well.

"Basically the 26th race of the season for the last (10 years) has been a really pressure-packed race for a lot of people. Now we have that and three or four more in the Chase. As drivers, there are a lot more moments during the year that your whole year rides on that (one) race."

Kansas, a 1.5-mile tri-oval, is one of Edwards’ better tracks, although one of 11 where he has yet to win. In 14 Sprint Cup starts there, he’s scored 10 top-10 finishes. He qualified fourth there earlier this year and finished sixth.

In addition to Edwards, Keselowski, Logano and Gordon, others still in the title picture are Kevin Harvick, Jimmie Johnson, Kyle Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Matt Kenseth, Ryan Newman, Denny Hamlin and Kasey Kahne.

Those eliminated after the first round were Greg Biffle, Kurt Busch, AJ Allmendinger and Aric Almirola.

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Original penalties stand for violations at Chicagoland

The National Motorsports Appeals Panel today heard and considered the appeal of the No. 20 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series team. The hearing concerned penalty notices issued by NASCAR on Sept. 17 to team owner Bob Newberry and crew chief Chris Rice for a rules infraction that occurred during post-race inspection Sept. 13 at Chicagoland Speedway.

The infraction was a P2 level penalty with reference to the following sections in the 2014 rule book:

· 12-1: Actions detrimental to stock car racing;
· 20B-12.8: Truck failed to meet post-race body height/ground clearance requirements

After hearing and reviewing the evidence presented and after deliberations, the National Motorsports Appeals Panel finds that the team did violate the rule(s) set forth in the penalty notice and upholds the original penalties levied by NASCAR, which was a $7,500 fine, suspension (from NASCAR for the next NASCAR Camping World Truck Series event), and probation for Rice. It also included the loss of 10 series championship owner points for Newberry.

The hearing consisted of the following Appeals Panel Members: Bill Lester, Dale Pinilis, and Jay Signore.

The team has the right under Section 15 of the rule book to appeal this decision to the National Motorsports Final Appeals Officer.

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Drivers discuss difficult second round during Contender Media Day

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – With NASCAR’s home to history as a backdrop, members of the Contender Round discussed the perils that face them over the next three weeks.

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Brad Keselowski, who finished the recently completed Challenger Round first in points, described this upcoming round thusly: "You look at this round, the Contender Round with Kansas, and you’ve got Talladega at the end. … Two of the three races are as much of a wild card as you can get in NASCAR racing these days. I think when we get all said and done, and it comes to Homestead and the champion’s crown, whoever wins it will have earned it."

This was Contender Media Day, a two-hour program held at the NASCAR Hall of Fame to set up the Contender Round of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. The three tracks that will test the versatility of all 12 Contenders: Kansas Speedway, Charlotte Motor Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway.

Hosted by ESPN’s Kevin Negandhi, drivers still in contention for the 2014 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship recapped the thrilling Challenger Round and looked ahead to the 12-driver three-race Contender Round which starts Sunday at Kansas (2 p.m. ET on ESPN, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

Wednesday’s media day, streamed live on NASCAR.com, was the first of its kind under the revamped Chase format. Starting this season, the Chase is broken down into four rounds. After each of the first three rounds – each consisting of three races – four drivers are eliminated, setting up a four-driver finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway. The first to the finish line among the remaining four contenders at Homestead will win the title.

And speaking of Miami, the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Championship race just got bigger. Announced today during Contender Media Day, country music superstar Jason Aldean will perform a pre-race concert in the infield prior to the start of the race (Sunday, Nov. 16 at 3 p.m. ET on ESPN, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).

The elephant in the room during today’s media sessions: Talladega Superspeedway, now a cut-off race. Always a wild card in the previous 10 editions of the Chase, it is even more so under this revamped format.

"It will be interesting to see how Talladega plays out from the guys that have a good lead going into the last race, whether they’re going to maybe try to hang back," Denny Hamlin said. "Then you’ll have a group that’s going to want to be aggressive and lead laps, so it will be very interesting to see how the final Chase cutoff race for this round plays out."

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Slugger Labbe to take over lead role in research, development

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Longtime crew chief Slugger Labbe is taking a new role in research and development with Richard Childress Racing effective following the Bank of America 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway later this month. Justin Alexander, a race engineer who has worked his way up through the ranks, will become the new crew chief for the No. 27 Chevrolet team of Paul Menard.

Labbe has been Menard’s crew chief since 2010 and a crew chief in NASCAR since 1998. He is perhaps best known for leading Michael Waltrip to a Daytona 500 victory in 2003 as a crew chief for Dale Earnhardt Inc.

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Labbe earned a victory in the 2011 Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway with Menard and compiled 13 top-five and 43 top-10 finishes. A native of Saco, Maine, Labbe has been in NASCAR since 1986 and felt it was time to scale back his career.

"I’m looking forward to slowing down in my NASCAR career a little bit and spending more time with my family," Labbe said in a release.

Alexander, 33, started his NASCAR career at Hendrick Motorsports as the shock specialist for the Nos. 24 and 48 teams in 2003, became lead engineer on the No. 48 team in 2005, moved to a R&D engineer in 2006 and then became lead engineer for the No. 24 team in 2009.

Alexander was part of five NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championships while at Hendrick. He joined RCR in January of 2014.

"Slugger is a great leader and will be a huge asset in making RCR stronger in his new role with the team," Menard said in a release. "I am looking forward to working with Justin. Throughout this season, he has shown the qualities and potential to be a great crew chief."

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Keep tabs on all the action this weekend at Kansas

This weekend brings the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and NASCAR Nationwide Series to Kansas Speedway.

The Sprint Cup Series Hollywood Casino 400 is on Sunday, Oct. 5, at 2 p.m. ET with coverage on ESPN.

The Nationwide Series Kansas Lottery 300 is on Saturday, Oct. 4, at 3:30 p.m. ET with coverage on ESPN.

For more information on track times, press conferences and GarageCam, you can check out this weekend’s schedule. For TV times, see this week’s TV schedule.

We know you may not have the time to watch the race action without any interruptions, so if you’re on the go, here’s how to keep up at Kansas.

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NASCAR.com’s live Sprint Cup Series leaderboard and Nationwide Series leaderboard update in real-time and offer constant text updates of lead changes, cautions, strategies, strong runs and everything in between. From the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series leaderboard fans can also access live standings. On the go? Download the NASCAR Mobile app to follow the leaderboards live from your device.

Lap-by-Lap will keep you caught up even if you can take a peek here and there. Check in now and then to read back through all the laps you’ve missed, or keep an eye on the feed for real-time race updates.

Want to see enhanced coverage? RaceBuddy has you covered with 10 live high definition feeds for this week’s Sprint Cup Series and Nationwide Series action.

For all the information you need on the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup format check out Chase 101 for an easy-to-follow guide as Kansas is the first race in this year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Contender Round. Fans can also keep up with how their fantasy Chase Grid is doing here.

We’ll also send race updates via Twitter through the official @NASCAR and @NASCARStats handles.

Haven’t tried RaceView yet? If you sign up, you’ll get virtual video of cars on the track from various angles and hear what your favorite team is saying over the radio. Use it as a second screen or as your only screen. Just want to scan the radios? You can have that too with RaceView Audio. On a mobile device? Get RaceView Mobile here.

If you want to be more involved in the on-track action, you can manage your fantasy team on NASCAR.com and follow your team’s performance in NASCAR Fantasy Live. Mobile users can also download NASCAR Connect, a game from OneUp Sports that allows users to play other fans with race predictions, for some off-track competition while drivers battle it out on the track.

Live Press Pass video streams will keep the NASCAR action rolling even after the winner goes in and out of Victory Lane. Catch interviews with the top finishers immediately following the checkered flag for the Sprint Cup Series and Nationwide Series, and stay tuned to NASCAR.com throughout the week for the latest news.

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CMS, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina team up

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The Nationwide Series race at Charlotte Motor Speedway this month now has a name: the Drive for the Cure 300 Presented by Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, the speedway announced Wednesday in conjuction with BCBS. The agreement includes a three-year sponsorship of the race.

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The announcement was made during a press event at the speedway where officials were joined by up to 100 breast cancer survivors to kick off National Breast Cancer Awareness Month by painting the pit road wall pink. The partnership is aimed at raising awareness of breast cancer prevention, detection and treatment.

"We are proud to partner with the official health insurance company of Charlotte Motor Speedway, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, " Marcus Smith, president and general manager of Charlotte Motor Speedway said in a statement. "At the core of both of our companies is a commitment to providing an unparalleled customer experience. We are eager to get to work raising awareness about breast cancer and creating an unforgettable race day experience for fans."

The Drive for the Cure 300 is the 30th Nationwide Series race of the season and will air on ESPN2 on Friday, October 10.

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Driver, team owner break the news on Twitter

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If it ain’t broken, don’t fix it — an adage that Regan Smith and Dale Earnhardt Jr. both live by. Dale Jr. took to Twitter to report that Smith and his Nationwide Series team, JR Motorsports, have a deal in place for 2015.

Smith later confirmed the news on Twitter as well.

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Smith has spent the past two seasons with JRM as the full-time driver of the team’s No. 7 Chevrolet. The veteran was brought on full-time last season after running one race with the organization in 2012, a win in the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

The 31-year-old has been a title contender in his two seasons at JRM, finishing third in the 2013 Nationwide championship race behind Austin Dillon and Sam Hornish Jr. This season, Smith trails only his JRM teammate, rookie Chase Elliott, in the standings.

In 28 races this season, Smith has a win, which came in the season-opening race at Daytona, seven top-five finishes and 24 top-10 finishes. All four of his career Nationwide Series victories have come with the organization.

Smith also has a Sprint Cup Series win to his credit, which came in 2011 at Darlington as the full-time driver in the sport’s top series for Furniture Row Racing. He ran one Sprint Cup race this season, filling in for Tony Stewart in the No. 14 Chevrolet at Watkins Glen with a 37th-place finish.

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