See the full list of drivers competing at Kansas

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

Entry # Driver Owner Crew chief Manufacturer Sponsor

1

1

Jamie McMurray

Felix Sabates

Keith Rodden

14 Chevrolet

Cessna/Monopoly

2

2

Brad Keselowski

Roger Penske

Paul Wolfe

14 Ford

Miller Lite

3

3

Austin Dillon

Richard Childress

Gil Martin

14 Chevrolet

American Ethanol

4

4

Kevin Harvick

Tony Stewart

Rodney Childers

14 Chevrolet

Budweiser

5

5

Kasey Kahne

Linda Hendrick

Kenny Francis

14 Chevrolet

Farmers Insurance

6

7

Michael Annett

Tommy Baldwin

Kevin Manion

14 Chevrolet

Accell Construction

7

9

Marcos Ambrose

Richard Petty

Drew Blickensderfer

14 Ford

STANLEY

8

10

Danica Patrick

Tony Stewart

Tony Gibson

14 Chevrolet

Aspen Dental

9

11

Denny Hamlin

J D Gibbs

Darian Grubb

14 Toyota

FedEx Office

10

13

Casey Mears

Bob Germain

Bootie Barker III

14 Chevrolet

No. 13 GEICO Chevrolet SS

11

14

Tony Stewart

Margaret Haas

Chad Johnston

14 Chevrolet

Rush Truck Centers / Mobil 1

12

15

Clint Bowyer

Rob Kauffman

Brian Pattie

14 Toyota

Pink Lemonade 5-hour Energy Benefiting LBBC

13

16

Greg Biffle

Jack Roush

Matt Puccia

14 Ford

3M Filtrete

14

17

Ricky Stenhouse Jr

John Henry

Michael Kelley

14 Ford

Cargill/Sam’s Club

15

18

Kyle Busch

Joe Gibbs

Dave Rogers

14 Toyota

M&M’s

16

20

Matt Kenseth

Joe Gibbs

Jason Ratcliff

14 Toyota

Dollar General

17

22

Joey Logano

Walter Czarnecki

Todd Gordon

14 Ford

Shell Pennzoil

18

23

Alex Bowman

Ron Devine

Dave Winston

14 Toyota

Dr. Pepper Toyota Camry

19

24

Jeff Gordon

Rick Hendrick

Alan Gustafson

14 Chevrolet

Drive To End Hunger

20

26

Cole Whitt

Anthony Marlowe

Randy Cox

14 Toyota

Moen Toyota

21

27

Paul Menard

Richard Childress

Slugger Labbe

14 Chevrolet

Quaker State / Menards

22

31

Ryan Newman

Richard Childress

Luke Lambert

14 Chevrolet

Caterpillar

23

32

Joey Gase(i)

Frank Stoddard Jr

Ben Leslie

14 Ford

Donate Life

24

33

TBA

Joe Falk

Mike Hillman Jr

14 Chevrolet

Little Joe’s Autos

25

34

David Ragan

Bob Jenkins

Jay Guy

14 Ford

DOCKSIDE LOGISTICS

26

36

Reed Sorenson

Allan Heinke

Todd Parrott

14 Chevrolet

TBA

27

37

Mike Bliss(i)

Tommy Baldwin

Tommy Baldwin

14 Chevrolet

TBA

28

38

David Gilliland

Brad Jenkins

Frank Kerr

14 Ford

MDS TRANSPORT

29

40

Landon Cassill(i)

Michael Hillman

Mark Hillman

14 Chevrolet

Snap Fitness

30

41

Kurt Busch

Gene Haas

Daniel Knost

14 Chevrolet

Haas Automation

31

42

Kyle Larson

Chip Ganassi

Chris Heroy

14 Chevrolet

Target

32

43

Aric Almirola

Richard Petty

Trent Owens

14 Ford

Farmland

33

47

A J Allmendinger

Tad Geschickter

Brian Burns

14 Chevrolet

Clorox

34

48

Jimmie Johnson

Jeff Gordon

Chad Knaus

14 Chevrolet

Lowe’s

35

51

Justin Allgaier

Harry Scott Jr

Steve Addington

14 Chevrolet

BRANDT Professional Agriculture

36

55

Brian Vickers

Michael Waltrip

Billy Scott

14 Toyota

Aaron’s Dream Machine

37

66

Mike Wallace(i)

Jay Robinson

Scott Eggleston

14 Toyota

435 Overland Park Place Hotel

38

78

Martin Truex Jr

Barney Visser

Todd Berrier

14 Chevrolet

Furniture Row

39

83

Travis Kvapil

Ron Devine

Joe Williams

14 Toyota

Burger King Toyota

40

88

Dale Earnhardt Jr

Rick Hendrick

Steve Letarte

14 Chevrolet

Diet Mountain Dew

41

95

Michael McDowell

Bob Leavine

Wally Rogers

14 Ford

LFR

42

98

Josh Wise

Mike Curb

Gene Nead

14 Chevrolet

Westside Vapor/Vapor Station

43

99

Carl Edwards

Jack Roush

James Fennig

14 Ford

Fastenal

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Read complete text of Stewart’s first Q-and-A with reporters since incident

RELATED: Stewart answers questions for first time | Stewart timeline

THE MODERATOR: Good morning, everyone. I’m Mike Arning, Director of Communications for Stewart-Haas Racing and want to say thank you for your time this morning. We’ll introduce Tony Stewart and start off with any questions you may have.

Q. Tony, since the accident, when you think of Kevin Ward, Jr., what comes to mind?

TONY STEWART: Honestly, before the accident I didn’t know Kevin. I don’t even know how many times I had raced with him. I race with that group a couple times a year. They’ve always been a great group to race with, but I didn’t know him. Obviously, after the accident I’ve read a lot about him, and from what I’ve read, I think he had a really promising career as a sprint car driver. It sounded like he was doing a good job and learning a lot at a young age, so I think he had a lot to look forward to.

Q. Do you want to and need to talk to the Ward family to have any sort of closure? If so, can you talk to him or will it be years before all the legal stuff is done before you can talk to them?

TONY STEWART: You know, I think at this point it’s — I want to be available to them if they want to talk about it. At this point, I don’t need to talk to them for closure. I know what happened, and I know it was an accident, but I’m offering to talk to them to help them, if it helps them with closure. So I said it when we were in Atlanta, and I still believe that I want to be available to them if and when they ever want to talk.

Q. On the topic of closure, at some point the focus will turn back to your career as a race car driver. Have you thought about when or how that can happen?

TONY STEWART: Well, I mean, we’ve been racing since Atlanta, obviously, but it’s not been business as usual by any means, and this is going to be a healing process for me. It makes you think about a lot of things other than driving race cars, but the one thing that’s probably helped me more than anything is being back at the race track and being around my racing family and remembering that I have a passion for what I do. So that’s probably helped me more than anything when it’s come to trying to make that next step to move forward.

Q. If you could do anything differently over the past couple months, what would it be?

TONY STEWART: I’d have stayed at Watkins Glen that night. You know, I do this stuff and I go run those cars to have a good time and that’s all I wanted to do that night. I wanted to go have fun. I had just spent the week at Knoxville, and it gives you the edge and desire to want to go race. It wasn’t a big paying race for sprint car standards. I just wanted to go run my sprint car for a night. I do it to have fun, and it didn’t end up being fun that night.

Q. How have you been spending the time since the accident happened, and will your routine change now that you’ve been exonerated?

TONY STEWART: Since we went back to Atlanta, basically, I go from the motorhome to the car, and the car to the trailer, and the trailer back to the car, and that’s literally all I’ve done since I came back. Even after Wednesday here in Charlotte, I haven’t left my house. It’s just an awkward feeling. I think now I’ll start doing some more things. I mean, I’ve got a lot of friends who have been supportive through this entire thing, and there are a lot of people that have shown how much they cared and it would be nice to go and visit and talk to those people again.

Q. Have you reconsidered or considered stopping driving sprint cars as a result of this and your injury the year before?

TONY STEWART: At this point I don’t really have — I’m not going to say I’m never going to get in one. But when I got hurt, it was as soon as I got healed and as soon as things got settled in with the Cup car I was set that I was wanting to get in one, but right now I wouldn’t even be able to give you a small idea of if and when I’ll ever get back in a car. So at this point I won’t be in one for a while.

Q. The life of a driver and an owner is extremely busy. Press conferences, commercials, appearances, fan things, you haven’t done — have you done much of that? When will you think you’d get back to that life?

TONY STEWART: I haven’t done any since the accident. I think after talking with you guys today we’ll start getting back into doing meet and greets and appearances again. I think it’s important for me to do that and to take — I think that’s another step of making forward progress is getting back to trying to resume what was the best of a normal life before this. I think it’s important for me to do that and get back to doing it as soon as possible.

Q. What has been the biggest change within you and the biggest impact upon you as a result of this past month and a half?

TONY STEWART: I honestly think that when you’re — and I’m not going to speak for professional athletes in different forms of sports, but as a race car driver, driving a race car is all that consumed my life. It’s all I thought about, it’s all I cared about, and everything else was second on down the list of priorities for me. I think this has given me the opportunity to sit here and think about other aspects of my life and what they’re going to mean to me in the future.

Not that I don’t love what I do, because I do love it, but it’s not — just like you guys, it’s not what we do all the time. There are more things to our life than what we have as a profession. So it’s made me think about some of those other aspects of my life that kind of have been put on hold for years.

Q. How would you characterize the weeks at home, Tony, following the accident? You basically were in seclusion. What was that like for you to go through that and what did you do?

TONY STEWART: I didn’t really do much of anything to be perfectly honest. I think the first three days that I was home I really didn’t do anything. I didn’t get out of bed. I didn’t care if I took a shower. I left my room to go get food, and that you almost had to make yourself eat. It’s the first three or four days I didn’t want to talk to anybody. Didn’t want to see anybody, I just wanted to be by myself.

You finally get up and you finally start moving around a little bit and every day got a little bit easier, but it was a big, drastic change from what I was used to, for sure, not having the desire to do anything. All you thought about is what happened and asking yourself why. Why did this happen? So you just sat there for entire days on end asking questions and trying to come to terms with what happened and why it happened.

Q. I was at Loudon a couple weeks ago and Jimmie Johnson talked about how people are starting to take sides, and I’m wondering during this process if things coming out on Twitter or people making comments in the media, did you keep yourself insulated from that or did you follow any of that? How did that impact the time that you were at the track?

TONY STEWART: I tried to do my best to insulate myself from that. But I finally started reading what was out there and what people were saying, and you didn’t control that. Last Wednesday the facts came out and people still through the weekend, some people that had the same opinion before the facts came out still have the same opinion, no matter what side they think about.

To me it’s worthless to pick sides. A young man lost his life, and I don’t care what side you’re on, it doesn’t change that. His family’s in mourning. I’m in mourning. My family is in mourning. Picking sides isn’t solving or fixing anything. It’s a waste of time to pick sides. Instead of honoring a young man that had a promising racing career, people are picking sides and throwing — it’s like watching people throw darts at each other. It’s disappointing at this point, honestly, because instead of supporting each other and the racing community is such a strong family, that it’s dividing people that on a daily basis would help each other. There is no point in it. It doesn’t solve anything. It doesn’t fix anything. At the end of the day, it’s not going to make anybody feel any better about it.

It’s just people that — everybody’s entitled to their opinion, and we know that. But everybody, and I’ve seen this for the last seven weeks now, everybody has made their decision and picked their side off of 100 percent of the information that they got, which is about 10 percent of all the information that’s truly out there. And we all do it. Our society does it. We do it every day. Whatever we see on the news we make our decision as people about what we see. But it’s not — I don’t think any of us any day whatever topic we’re trying to come to a conclusion about, ever get all the facts.

So you understand why people think the way they do, but I think more than not, I don’t think people realize that there is more information out there than what we all get on a daily basis about whatever it is.

Q. (No Microphone)?

TONY STEWART: I guess it was more disappointing to me than anything. Even from people that were supportive of us. I mean, listened and reading comments about the sheriff’s department and the district attorney, they did a good job of taking the time that they needed to do to get all the facts and to come to a very thought out conclusion of this. You want to sit there and tell people, hey, let them do their job. But it just shows how passionate people are.

I mean, if they are on our side or on Kevin’s family’s side, they were passionate about that. That’s something I don’t want to see go away. I don’t want to see people lose their passion, but I think people need to understand that there are a lot more facts that they didn’t understand and haven’t seen.

Q. Tony, obviously the season is moving on. Yesterday Kevin Harvick, great run, Kurt Busch, not as great. How much have you let yourself be engaged in that side of the process right now as far as being the Stewart of Stewart-Haas Racing?

TONY STEWART: I’ve let my team down from that standpoint. I haven’t been able to — I’ve been a little bit of a cheerleader, but that’s about all I’ve been able to contribute here the last seven weeks. It’s just, like I mentioned earlier, it’s been hard for me to function day-to-day. There hasn’t been anything normal about my life the last seven weeks, so it’s been very hard to try to do anything to be productive to help those guys. You try to be a cheerleader, you try to keep them pumped up about what they’re do being, but other than that, I haven’t been able to contribute too much.

Q. Just wondering, you talk about being in seclusion and all that that’s meant. What does today represent for you having us all here? You called us all here together. What does today represent for you in terms of going forward?

TONY STEWART: We knew everybody had questions and we knew that everybody was going to want answered to what’s going on. But I think more than anything we wanted to be able to tell everything from the beginning. But it’s, like I learned Wednesday, everybody’s got their opinions about what happened. Obviously, the facts didn’t matter to a lot of those people. They still had their opinions one way or the other. We haven’t let anybody know what’s been going on the last six weeks. We just kind of went through the motions as far as we’re concerned, and we knew a lot of you would have questions about what’s been going on the last six or seven weeks and how have we handled it.

Q. What was it like to learn from the district attorney that in the toxicology report, Kevin Ward was under the influence?

TONY STEWART: Honestly, for me, it didn’t change anything. To me a young driver lost his life. Didn’t matter why or what was going on. The end result was the same. No matter what was said, it was still a tragic accident. I just know in my heart that it was a hundred percent an accident; that detail didn’t mean anything to me personally.

Q. You mentioned earlier the awkward feeling that’s come over you the past several weeks. Can you explain that a little more? Also, talk about will that ever go away given that Kevin Ward has passed away and that will not change?

TONY STEWART: It’s just been awkward because I know what a typical day was like for me and the things that were on my agenda for each day and what I thought about you kind of get in that pattern. This was something that obviously changed that pattern drastically. Everything you thought about, everything you worked on, you stop thinking about. You stopped working on, and this is all you thought about.

Ask me the second part again.

Q. Do you think that will eventually go away?

TONY STEWART: I think it will. The reason I say that is I’ve had other people that I’ve known for years that have come to me and told me personal stories of tragedies that have happened in their life that a lot of us don’t know about. Their experiences and their advice really has hit home for me. I do believe as time goes on it will be different every day. It may. I don’t know if it will ever get back to normal, but it will get better.

Q. Since getting back in a car, rate your performance as a driver?

TONY STEWART: I could rate a before and after almost the same. My year hasn’t been a stellar year by any means. When we came back, we had a decent day started in Atlanta, and had an incident that derailed it. But I think yesterday was probably the best overall race from start to finish that we’ve run. Probably one of the best ones this year that we’ve actually run. I struggled on restarts. I couldn’t get going very good the first three or four laps, but it seemed like after 10 laps or 15 laps we were settling into a pace that was a top-5 race car.

So we didn’t have any major dramas on either side during the whole race. We actually put a whole race together. I know the 14th- or 15th-place finish isn’t anything to brag about, but considering where our season has been, we finally put together a whole day that was consistent, and that meant a lot to us.

Q. Tony, it’s kind of a follow-up, Doug asked you about your NASCAR involvement with Stewart-Haas Racing. Your short track industry, your empire with Eldora and your USAC teams, and the World of Outlaw teams, what’s that been like for you over the last seven weeks?

TONY STEWART: I’ve watched and paid attention to what was going on, but I haven’t been engaged in it. I’ve watched our races that we had online at Eldora. I’ve watched the sprint car races online and listened to them online, but haven’t been engaged with the teams, haven’t been engaged with the drivers. Just kind of been an non-deal.

Q. I don’t know quite how to phrase this, but racing inherently is a dangerous sport. You’ve seen guys get killed in accidents over the years. If this would have been a situation where you guys were racing and he crashed, and he perished in the crash, would it be something you would feel different about? Or does the nature of him coming out on the track, did that change at all for you? Does that make sense?

TONY STEWART: Yeah, it does. For me, I don’t think it would change anything. I’ve worked really hard, especially when I got hurt last year, while I was healing, I spent all that time trying to defend sprint car racing and help — try to help other drivers through the off-season. I do it because I’m passionate about it and I love it. We all know what can happen every time we get in a race car, whether it’s an IndyCar, stock car, sprint car. Anybody that races anything knows what that is and what that danger is and what can happen.

I’ve had close friends die in race cars. I’ve had teammates die in race cars, and there is nothing easy about it. Like I said, the racing community is a very close-knit family. Anytime you lose somebody in that family, there are drivers and team owners and crew members from other sports that may not have ever met that driver but feel for that family and that driver in their tragedy.

So no matter what the circumstances, the end result is something that nobody ever wants to see. Like I said, I’ve spent a lot of time trying to defend it and try to help promote the sport, and none of us want that to happen to anybody under any circumstances.

Q. This is a secondary thing, but it will be important if it hasn’t been already, how are you dealing with sponsors? How are you talking to sponsors about moving forward and what kind of concerns do you have about them being loyal to the team after this?

TONY STEWART: It’s a legitimate question, for sure. Our organization has stayed in close contact with the sponsors through this whole ordeal, and I’ve been able to talk to a couple of them as well. Johnny Morris was one of the people that came to my house to see me while I was in Indiana. We spoke to people from Mobil 1, and they came to see us the last couple weeks at the race track. The support from them has been amazing.

It’s obviously a tough circumstance for anybody to be a part of it, for a corporation to be part of it as well, but they’ve been very supportive through this whole process. I can’t speak to what the future will be for them. They’ve been supportive to this point and that’s something I’ve been very grateful for.

Q. First of all, welcome back. Glad to see you. Following up a little on what Steven said. You own sprint car teams and own tracks and specifically Eldora. It was almost a therapy for you to get to go up and ride around on a four-wheeler and get the shoes dirty and the hands dirty. Has this incident taken away from the cleansing properties of that therapy? Do you think you’ll ever be able to ride Eldora in the four-wheeler and feel the same again?

TONY STEWART: I’m sure I will. It’s just not right now. That’s an important aspect of my life and something that’s very important to me. Right now at this moment today there are other things that are important to me right now, and they still are. But I’m not ready to go do that yet. Going around in a Cup car right now is important to me, and the great thing Eldora and the dirt track teams and our drivers that do great things there, and that’s given me — afforded me the time to think about what I need to do right now.

Q. You talked briefly about your race yesterday. It’s been the best race you’ve had in your five back. Is there any correlation personally in how you performed yesterday to being able to move forward in the decision Wednesday?

TONY STEWART: I really don’t know if it does or not, to be honest. Honestly, at the race track on Friday and Saturday we struggled. Our qualifying effort was the best that I qualified at Dover in a long time, but we really struggled in practice leading up to that, and Saturday all day we struggled. I thought Chad and the engineers did a good job Saturday night of taking all the information they learned on both days, and I could tell right off the bat on Sunday that the car was quite a bit different than the rest of the weekend.

I don’t think it had anything to do with that, honestly. I think getting back in the car every time I’ve gotten in there, it’s given me a chance to focus again, and that’s something that I’ve needed as a diversion. But I think from the time that I went back to Atlanta, the first session there the car felt really good, and we had a good weekend in Atlanta until it got derailed.

But I think at this point in my career as a driver, when you make that decision to put the helmet on you have to know in your heart that you’re ready to go, you’re ready to do it, and I felt comfortable in the car from Day 1.

Q. You’re a championship level driver on the track, and sort of a larger-than-life figure off of it, which is responsible for all of this. Can you get back to that person that you were, that gregarious, likeable sort of guy, or is it going to be a while that you’re that personality that fans have been drawn to all these years?

TONY STEWART: I think the support we’ve had from our fans, I don’t know if they even care if we get back to that. They’re just happy that we’re back right now, and that’s been very comforting for us and for me. I’ve really appreciated their support and how they’ve helped welcome me back to the track.

It’s hard to say to be honest. I appreciate the fact that you said I was a nice guy. This is a process that’s day-to-day. You take it one day at a time. Before the accident happened, a day would fly by, and now a day seems like two or three days. The clock seems like the batteries are running low on the clock. I honestly think every day things will get better, and things will get easier, and I think it will for Kevin’s family as well. Time heals.

Like I said, I don’t know that it will ever be normal again, but we’ll find a place to settle into and we’ll do the best we can like we have to this point. Whether I ever get back to that or not, hopefully through this I will somehow be a better person. That’s all I can hope for.

Q. Until last Wednesday, there was the very real possibility of facing charges, which seems very scary. In your grief or in getting over what happened in the accident, were you able to separate that part? Were you fearful of charges, and how did you deal with that aspect of it?

TONY STEWART: I think you said it best yourself right there. Anytime you’re facing something like that and your fate is in someone else’s hands, it’s natural to be fearful. But all along I knew what the facts are. I knew what had happened, and I know what happened. I think through the process of the sheriff’s department and the district attorney and going to a 23-person grand injury, all the facts were presented and their decision spoke. It was what I knew.

So I can’t say that — I would be lying if I said there wasn’t a piece of relief, but that was very short lived in my heart. Because as quickly as it was relief in my heart, it was at the same time it went right back to the fact that we lost Kevin. We lost a young driver that had a lot of talent.

Q. You discussed the early days and not wanting to do anything but being secluded. What thought have you given to hanging it up all together and being done driving?

TONY STEWART: You know, even with the decision right now, I don’t know if and when I’ll ever get back in a sprint car. I said the support from the fans and the support from peers and people that were around every day, I’ve had drivers I’ve raced with every week and drivers that I haven’t raced with for months that said don’t let this keep you from doing what you love.

This is what I’ve done all my life. This is what I’ve done for 36 years, and I wouldn’t change anything about it. I love what I do. I love driving race cars, but I think it might change right now as far as how much of it and what I do, but there was never a thought in my head about stopping. That would take the life out of me.

Q. Along the lines of what Marty just said, one, how often do you think about the events of what happened? How often do you replay it in your mind? And for a guy that’s passionate about this sport, did it wane at all for the sport?

TONY STEWART: I don’t think your passion ever goes away. Probably more than anything over (no audio), and I wish I could say it was once a day, but it’s not. I think about it a lot every day. That’s the great thing about getting back in the race car because it gives me time to forget about it for a minute and to stop thinking about it. After you get done at the end of the day, you start thinking about it again. It’s not something that goes away. It will never go away. It’s always going to be part of my life the rest of my life. That’s the unfortunate part.

It’s going to be a part of my life. It’s going to be a part of Kevin’s families life, and it’s never going to go away for any of us, but hopefully it will get easier for all of us.

Q. You mentioned replaying what happened in your mind. Have you watched the video of what happened?

TONY STEWART: I’ve seen the video of it, yes.

Q. You said you were disappointed by some of the reaction, but are you hurt by what’s been said about you and your role in this tragedy? Since it’s a sponsor-driven sport, do you feel you need to do or can do anything to repair your reputation?

TONY STEWART: Ask me the first part again. The two-part things, I’ve got a short mind.

Q. You said you were disappointed by some of the reaction, but were you hurt by it?

TONY STEWART: Initially, yes. Initially I was hurt by some of the things I read. But then I looked at who they were from, and it’s people that never met me, never spent time with me, don’t know me, and they’re making a judgment off of either what they — either what was presented or what the facts were that they had, and they were people that didn’t like me to begin with and it didn’t matter what the facts were.

I really stopped wasting my time worrying about it. Like I said, I know what happened. I know what the facts are and that’s all that matters.

Q. A lot of these press conferences that have happened throughout the past few weeks, a lot of your fellow drivers asked about this situation. Some of them saying they attempted to reach out to you and talk to you. Some saying they haven’t heard back and that kind of thing. Have there been certain ones that have leaned on and talked to you and helped you get through this?

TONY STEWART: There have. It’s been done behind closed doors and that’s the way I want to keep it on their behalf and my behalf. Yes, there’s been a lot of support, especially when the accident happened. Like I said, I didn’t want to do anything. So there were a lot of text messages and people that have reached out that I’m now starting the process of getting in touch with them and thanking them for their support and explaining why I didn’t get back to them.

That’s probably been one of the hardest parts. The hardest part for me is not having that contact with my friends and my peers, and going to the racetrack was the first step in reconnecting with a lot of those people and being able to thank them for their kind words and their advice. There’s been so much that I’ve learned from my peers, my friends through this whether it’s been through personal experiences or just kind words that they’ve said. That is the advice that they’ve given us that’s really meant a lot. And that’s something that the rest of my life I don’t think I could spend the rest of my life and accurately thank everybody for what they’ve done to help us get through this.

Q. Would you say it’s people inside NASCAR or outside NASCAR?

TONY STEWART: Both. It’s been all across the racing community. Inside NASCAR, outside NASCAR, people I’ve met along the way that aren’t involved in racing at all but are people that understand. So that’s been a huge, huge part for me.

Q. I imagine a substantial moment of vulnerability for you must have been that introduction in Atlanta. First time you’ve been in public, you don’t know what people are thinking. What was it like to walk up there and hear what you heard from the grand stands?

TONY STEWART: At first I thought I accidentally walked out in Dale Jr.’s spot, but it was very overwhelming. I’m glad I had sunglasses on. But it was probably the most flattering and humbling part of my career was to walk out there and have that kind of reception. Riding around in the back of the pickup truck and seeing people against the fence that were cheering for us and they had Jeff Gordon shirts on and Carl Edwards shirts and Matt Kenseth shirts. Didn’t matter what they had on, it really showed the support. Hearing about at Bristol how something that I was really happy with was the fact that on the 13th lap, people held up 13 for Kevin, and on the 14th lap held it up for us. And I think it shows the kind of bond that race fans and the racing community have with each other.

It was very flattering in Atlanta for sure. I’ll never forget that moment.

Q. You talked about in the article with the Associated Press last week about how (No Audio)?

TONY STEWART: I think our whole life I don’t think any of us ever read anything in a book at school or read anything on how to deal with a tragedy like this. To have somebody there that could help us through that and help us be able to make forward progress was very important, and it’s still — we’re still using them. It’s not something that gets back to normal overnight.

It’s something we’ll deal with a for a long time, but it’s nice to have that kind of support and that kind of guidance that will help you learn how to cope with it, deal with it, and start moving on.

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Kyle Busch Motorsports takes top two spots in Rhino Linings 350

RELATED: Full race results | Updated series standings

LAS VEGAS—He isn’t old enough to gamble, but Erik Jones played his cards right on Saturday night and won the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Rhino Linings 350 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

Jones, 18, made a late-race pass on his Kyle Busch Motorsports teammate Darrell Wallace Jr. with 13 laps to go, earning his second victory in nine starts this season.

"It was a blast," said Jones, who recovered from an early race hiccup on pit road to win in his debut at Las Vegas. "I learned a ton. To get a win on a mile-and-a-half that’s awesome. It drove so good at the end, I couldn’t ask for any more than this. I wanted to win out here so bad, I had this marked down as one I was looking forward to. This is really surreal for me right now."

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

Jones, who notched KBM’s 10th NCWTS win of 2014 credited crew chief Eric Phillips with the right adjustments on the final stop that earned him his third-career victory in 14 NCWTS starts.

"It was perfect," he added. "We were way, way too loose in traffic before it, but we had a strong Tundra. It was a perfect adjustment. We made a big swing at it, it just worked out."

For Wallace Jr., after a dominant performance, took the defeat as a huge bust.

"Just got beat, flat out," said Wallace Jr., after recording his fifth runner-up performance of the season. "Congrats to the 51 (Jones), hate that it’s not the 54. We need a win. (It’s) frustrating, I hate finishing second so bad. Thanks to my guys though. I thought it was ours. Another KBM dominance for sure. We’ll go onto Talladega and try to finish one spot better."

Ryan Blaney recorded his second 21 Means 21 Pole Award of the season and led the field to green, but Wallace Jr. used momentum to make the pass for the lead on Lap 1.

Blaney, though, reclaimed the top-spot for six laps on Lap 2, before Wallace Jr. retook control on Lap 8 and led for 10 laps, when German Quiroga made a move on the second restart of the night. His Red Horse Racing teammate Timothy Peters flexed his muscles, taking the lead on Lap 19, before Jones muscled ahead for five laps, until the scheduled competition caution on Lap 30.

When the leaders hit pit road, Jones barely overshot his pit stall, which cost him the lead, allowing Peters to put his No. 17 Toyota Tundra back on the point.

Peters controlled the field for 17 laps, before Wallace Jr. muscled back around him on Lap 51. The fourth and final caution of the race waived on Lap 57 for an accident in Turn 4, which sent the leaders to pit road.

Peters’ crew won the race off pit lane, but Wallace Jr. soared ahead on the restart, which set the tone for the second half of the event, until green flag pit stops began on Lap 105.

Wallace Jr. cycled back through to the lead on Lap 114, but Jones already on the prowl caught him, making the move on the frontstretch on Lap 133, sealing his triumph.

With five races remaining, the NCWTS will take a three-week break before returning to action at Talladega Superspeedway on Saturday, October 18.

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Second-place result at Las Vegas is Bubba’s fifth runner-up finish this year

LAS VEGAS — After Darrell Wallace Jr. climbed from the cockpit of his No. 54 Toyota Tundra following Saturday night’s Rhino Linings 350 Camping World Truck Series race, he walked around the tail of his ride and towards the big patch of grass in the infield of Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

Dejected, he looked up, shook his head and let out a big sigh.

You’d never have known that he just picked up his best finish at the 1.5-mile track — second.

After leading a race-dominating 84 of 146 laps, Wallace stumbled in lapped traffic and begrudgingly ceded the lead to his Kyle Busch Motorsports teammate Erik Jones, who wound up winning his second race in just nine 2014 starts.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

"Just got beat; I gave it my all and that was it," said Wallace. "We were OK. We’ll rebuild on this. I’m kind of at a loss for words, man. I thought this would be ours.

"I was trying my hardest not to let him by. Lapped traffic was big here. We were just a little bit free and this thing would act wicked when you got around other cars and he just got around me, simple as that. I tried to keep it on his door and I just got loose up top. Just got beat."

The second-place finish, Wallace’s seventh result of either first or second in 17 starts this season, was enough to inch a little bit closer to defending series champion and current points leader Matt Crafton. However, the fellow Toyota driver crossed the start/finish line right behind the 54 for a third-place result, leaving Wallace 33 points behind.

"Crafton, still right behind me, for sure, as always," Wallace said, alluding to the fact that the pair finished 2-3 in last week’s race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

Wallace, who said he "ain’t worried about (the points race)," doesn’t miss the fact that a win for the 18-year-old Jones is good for his organization and did offer his support for his teammate, but that doesn’t mean he doesn’t wish it was him celebrating Saturday night.

"Congrats to Erik and the 51 guys; another KBM dominance for sure," he said.

"It was a good race for us. This was a brand new Toyota Tundra and our mile-and-a-half program is turning around; I keep saying that and it’s definitely shown. Finally caught some good luck here, just finished one spot short.

"It’s cool to see a KBM truck win, a Toyota in Victory Lane, but I’m ready to get back in Victory Lane. We’re hungry. It’s just frustrating."

While it’s likely little consolation, Crafton knows the feeling.

"Darrell and me were talking about it in the elevator, just second and third it’s good, don’t get me wrong, but it’s just aggravating to sit here and finish second," the ThorSport driver said. "I know how he feels. My teammate beat me here about four years ago; passed me right at the end of the race. I know what he’s feeling right now. He’s probably not going to sleep very well tonight, I can promise you that."

Despite the pep talk from his competitor, this one still stings a bit.

"It’s a bittersweet moment," Wallace said, "but we’ll go on to Talladega, go to some (University of Tennessee) games here in the next couple of weeks, relax and get ready for the hell show at Talladega.”

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Scores fourth win of 2014; one of 12 drivers to advance to Contender Round

MORE: 12 drivers advance to Contender Round | Full race results | Updated series standings
RELATED: Track your picks in the Perfect Chase Grid Challenge and Chase Battle Grid Presented by Toyota

Jeff Gordon took the checkered flag in Sunday’s AAA 400 at Dover International Speedway, but four other drivers got the axe in the first Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup elimination race in the history of the sport.

FULL CHASE COVERAGE

Chase hub page
Chase Grid games
#MyChaseNation

AJ Allmendinger, 2004 series champion Kurt Busch, Greg Biffle and Aric Almirola missed the cut for the next round of the Chase, as the field was pared from 16 drivers to 12 following the third and final Challenger Round race.

After the dominant car of Coors Light Polesitter Kevin Harvick had a major issue with the left front wheel on Lap 254 of 400, Gordon took control of the event on Lap 305, passing runner-up Brad Keselowski for the lead on Lap 305.

After a cycle of green-flag pit stops, Gordon led the last 71 laps, pulling away to win by a comfortable 4.352 seconds.

Jimmie Johnson ran third, followed by Joey Logano and Matt Kenseth, as all of the top-five drivers advanced to the Contender Round, a three-race elimination with visits to Kansas Speedway, Charlotte Motor Speedway and Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway.

Harvick (13th Sunday), Kyle Busch (10th), Dale Earnhardt Jr. (17th), Ryan Newman (eighth), Carl Edwards (11th) and Denny Hamlin (12th) also advanced to the Contender Round.

The victory was Gordon’s fourth of the season, fifth at the Monster Mile and 92nd of his career, third most all-time behind Richard Petty (200) and David Pearson (105).

And victory No. 92 had special significance beyond an automatic ticket to the next round of the Chase—especially after a blown tire last week at New Hampshire produced a 26th-place finish and put the four-time champion one disaster away from elimination from NASCAR’s 10-race playoff.

"I think this is huge," Gordon said in Victory Lane. "We came in here with a little bit of extra pressure because we weren’t guaranteed to be in. If we hadn’t finished where we were running at New Hampshire last week (sixth when the tire blew), it would have been kind of an easy day for us.

"But all we did was focus on executing as a team and trying to win this race and nothing else. It wasn’t about the points; it wasn’t about just squeezing by to get to the next round. It was about making a statement. I don’t know how you make a bigger statement than what this team just did right there."

If Gordon took the suspense out of the closing laps, making what he called a "statement" with the victory, there was plenty of drama mid-pack, as Kasey Kahne rallied from four laps down to claim the 12th and final spot in the next round by two points over Allmendinger, who finished 23rd to Kahne’s 20th.

On Lap 161, Kahne brought his No. 5 Chevrolet to pit road with a loose left rear wheel and lost two laps in the process. He lost two more during a subsequent green-flag pit stop.

Thanks to a wave-around and a timely caution for Harvick’s issue on Lap 254, Kahne ran the rest of the race one lap down and gained enough positions to knock both Busch and Allmendinger out of the Chase.

Keselowski already had a victory in the Chase and a guaranteed spot in the Contender Round, but he wanted more.

"Yeah, we’ve had a really good start, so we can’t really complain that much having won a race, and a second and a seventh," Keselowski said. "But it’s hard to look at that. All I can think about is how I wanted to win all three races, and now it’s time to move forward.

"Three more races, a new start, and what we were able to do in these last three, other than getting us to this next round, really mean nothing. We’ve got to keep our head on straight and push forward these next three like we have these last three."

All 12 remaining Chase drivers start the Contender Round with a baseline of 3,000 points. Any Chase driver who wins at Kansas, Charlotte or Talladega will advance automatically to the Eliminator Round. The Chase field will be reduced from 12 to eight drivers at Talladega.

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Moments that changed the course of the 29th race of the 2014 season

GORDON PULLS AWAY FOR WIN AT DOVER

Jeff Gordon took the checkered flag in Sunday’s AAA 400 at Dover International Speedway, but four other drivers got the axe in the first Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup elimination race in the history of the sport.

After the dominant car of Coors Light Polesitter Kevin Harvick had a major issue with the left front wheel on Lap 254 of 400, Gordon took control of the event on Lap 305, passing runner-up Brad Keselowski for the lead on Lap 305.

After a cycle of green-flag pit stops, Gordon led the last 71 laps, pulling away to win by a comfortable 4.352 seconds.

Jimmie Johnson ran third, followed by Joey Logano and Matt Kenseth, as all of the top-five drivers advanced to the Contender Round, a three-race elimination with visits to Kansas Speedway, Charlotte Motor Speedway and Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway.

Harvick (13th Sunday), Kyle Busch (10th), Dale Earnhardt Jr. (17th), Ryan Newman (eighth), Carl Edwards (11th) and Denny Hamlin (12th) also advanced to the Contender Round.

The victory was Gordon’s fourth of the season, fifth at the Monster Mile and 92nd of his career, third most all-time behind Richard Petty (200) and David Pearson (105).

And victory No. 92 had special significance beyond an automatic ticket to the next round of the Chase—especially after a blown tire last week at New Hampshire produced a 26th-place finish and put the four-time champion one disaster away from elimination from NASCAR’s 10-race playoff.

"I think this is huge," Gordon said in Victory Lane. "We came in here with a little bit of extra pressure because we weren’t guaranteed to be in. If we hadn’t finished where we were running at New Hampshire last week (sixth when the tire blew), it would have been kind of an easy day for us.

"But all we did was focus on executing as a team and trying to win this race and nothing else. It wasn’t about the points, it wasn’t about just squeezing by to get to the next round. It was about making a statement. I don’t know how you make a bigger statement than what this team just did right there."

UPS

KAHNE HOLDS OFF ALLMENDINGER, BUSCH FOR FINAL SPOT

For Kurt Busch, the promise of advancing in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup postseason dwindled lap by lap. With 25 laps to go, the scenario went from discouraging to bleak.

By the time the checkered flag fell late Sunday afternoon at Dover International Speedway, Busch faded out of the playoff picture with an 18th-place finish in the AAA 400. The former series champion joined AJ Allmendinger, Greg Biffle and Aric Almirola amongthose failing to advance to the Contender Round, the next three-race series in the 10-race Chase.

"It’s all my fault," Busch radioed to his Stewart-Haas Racing crew on the cool-down lap. "Sorry, guys. Lay all that on the driver."

Busch went from twopoints ahead of Kasey Kahne for the final transfer spot at Lap 300 to six points behind Kahne by the finish. The net loss of eight points — eight positions on the track — came in part because of Kahne’s rally from midrace adversity and deteriorating handling on Busch’s No. 41 Chevrolet over the final 100 laps.

"I thought we were good with 100 miles to go, and then boom — got way tight and didn’t maintain position and so, we didn’t advance," said Busch, in his first year with the Stewart-Haas team. "Gene Haas believed in me, started this team, and we put what we thought was the best effort together. You can’t run 15th every week expecting to advance. That’s just where we got caught here. The lap times that we’re running aren’t top-five lap times to continue to push for a championship.

"So we can run for pride these next seven weeks, learning, building and trying to get all we can."

With the Challenger Round complete, 12 drivers advance to the three-race Contender Round: Keselowski, Joey Logano, Johnson, Kyle Busch, Kevin Harvick, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Gordon, Kenseth, Denny Hamlin, Ryan Newman, Carl Edwards and Kasey Kahne.

The four drivers eliminated from the Chase are Aric Almirola, Greg Biffle, AJ Allmendinger and Kurt Busch.

Hamlin started the day on the outside looking in (13th in the Chase Standings) but his 12th-place finish allowed him to advance.

The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series moves to Kansas Speedway next Sunday for the Hollywood Casino 400 (2 p.m. on ESPN).

HARVICK LOSES LEFT-FRONT TIRE AFTER DOMINATING DAY

A left front tire went down on Kevin Harvick‘s car on Lap 252, which saw the polesitter give up the lead in what had been a dominating run in the AAA 400 at Dover International Speedway.

However, the Stewart-Haas Racing driver was never in any real danger of missing the Contender Round of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup and ultimately, finished 13th in the race, which was more than good enough to advance him in the Chase.

The resulting pit stops under the caution from his tire trouble dropped Harvick to 21st place but he was able to stay on the lead lap after coming several times for left-side tires and to repair damage from the flat tire.

Harvick’s No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing team told him over the radio that the inner valve stem in the left front was knocked out, causing the tire to go down.

Harvick radioed to his crew: "I mean, something had to cut that tire, don’t you think? … That’s two times here."

Earlier in the race, Harvick thought he had a broken left shock telling his team, "the left front is slamming on the ground. After the team closely monitored the issue, it appeared that everything was ok with the car.

Harvick led a race-high 223 laps in the race. His 13th-place finish was good enough to advance to the Contender Round. Entering the Dover race, Harvick needed to finish no worse than 36th with the most laps led to clinch a spot in the next round of the Chase.

No. 4 car led 223 laps before damage took him out of contention for win

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

A left front tire went down on Kevin Harvick‘s car on Lap 252, which saw the polesitter’s dominating run take a hit in the AAA 400 at Dover International Speedway.

However, the Stewart-Haas Racing driver was never in any real danger of missing the Contender Round of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup and ultimately, finished 13th in the race, which was more than good enough to advance him in the Chase.

FULL CHASE COVERAGE

Chase hub page
Chase Grid games
#MyChaseNation

The resulting pit stops under the caution from his tire trouble dropped Harvick to 21st place but he was able to stay on the lead lap after coming several times for left-side tires and to repair damage from the flat tire.

Harvick’s No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing team told him over the radio that the inner valve stem in the left front was knocked out, causing the tire to go down.

Harvick radioed to his crew: "I mean, something had to cut that tire, don’t you think? … That’s two times here."

Earlier in the race, Harvick thought he had a broken left shock telling his team, "the left front is slamming on the ground. After the team closely monitored the issue, it appeared that everything was ok with the car.

Harvick led a race-high 223 laps in the race. His 13th-place finish was good enough to advance to the Contender Round. Entering the Dover race, Harvick needed to finish no worse than 36th with the most laps led to clinch a spot in the next round of the Chase.

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

See who will make up the 12-driver field for the Contender Round

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

The AAA 400 at Dover International Speedway marked the third race of the 2014 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup and the final race of the Challenger Round of the Chase. With four drivers eliminated, the Chase field now stands at 12 drivers entering the Contender Round.

FULL CHASE COVERAGE

Chase hub page
Chase Grid games
#MyChaseNation

The four drivers eliminated from the Chase after Dover are: AJ Allmendinger , Kurt Busch, Greg Biffle and Aric Almirola.

The 12 drivers advancing to the Contender Round are: Brad Keselowski (Won at Chicagoland), Joey Logano (Won at New Hampshire), Kevin Harvick,
Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon (Won at Dover), Kyle Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr, Matt Kenseth, Ryan Newman, Carl Edwards, Denny Hamlin and Kasey Kahne.

For the 12 drivers advancing to the Contender Round, their point totals will be reset to 3,000. For the four drivers that are eliminated from the Chase field, they will see their point totals reset to the Chase-start base of 2,000 plus any bonus points for regular-season wins and the additional points they have earned in the Chase.

The Contender Round consists of three races: Kansas Speedway, Charlotte Motor Speedway and Talladega Superspeedway. A Chase driver who wins one of those three races will automatically advance to the Eliminator Round. The rest of the eight-driver field to make the Eliminator Round will be determined by the points scored in the three Contender Round races.

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Get all the on-track times for the weekend’s NASCAR action

RELATED: Track your picks in the Perfect Chase Grid Challenge and Chase Battle Grid Presented by Toyota

All times ET

TV LISTINGS / BUY TICKETS FOR KANSAS / WEEKEND TRACK EVENTS

This week, the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and the NASCAR Nationwide Series head to Kansas Speedway.

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5:

RACE-DAY RUNDOWN
12 p.m.:
Driver/Crew Chief Meeting (Watch live)
1 p.m.: ESPN on air
1:19 p.m: Intro Honorary Starter: Chris McGivern, Vice President of Human Resources, Hollywood Casino at Kansas Speedway
1:19:30 p.m.: Intro Miss Sprint Cup: Kim Coon
1:20 p.m.: Drivers Introductions with NASCAR Special Awards
1:50 p.m.: Black Daggers Skydivers jump
2:02 p.m.: Presentation of Colors by: Kansas Army National Guard [accompanied on on stage by: Special Forces Operational Detachment Alpha 5312, from the 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne), located at Fort Campbell, KY]
2:02:20 p.m.: Invocation by: Reverend Tom Curran, President of Rockhurst University
2:02:45 p.m.: Intro National Anthem
2:03 p.m.: National Anthem: Stephanie Ramos, KMBC and KCWE Morning News Anchor & U.S. ARMY Reserve Captain
2:04:30 p.m.: Fly-by TOT: 10 RVs from the KC Flight Team
2:09:30 p.m.: "Drivers, start Your Engines" introduced by: Bob Sheldon, Vice President & General Manager, Hollywood Casino at Kansas Speedway
VIDEO of Ned Yost, Manager, Kansas City Royals
2:18 p.m.: Start of the Hollywood Casino 400 (267 laps, 400 miles)

ON TRACK
— 2 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Hollywood Casino 400 (267 laps, 400.5 miles), ESPN (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 5:30 p.m.: Post-NSCS race

SPECIAL EVENTS (Watch live)
— Noon: Driver’s meeting

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3:

ON TRACK
— noon-12:50 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series practice, FOX Sports 1 CANCELED
— 1-2:30 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 4-5:30 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series final practice, ESPN2 (Get results)
— 5:45 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, ESPN2 (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)

— 11 a.m.: Regan Smith
— 11:30 a.m.: Betty Jane France Humanitarian Award finalist announcement
— 11:45 a.m.: Dale Earnhardt Jr.
— Noon: Clint Bowyer
— 12:15 p.m.: Jimmie Johnson
— 2:30 p.m.: Carl Edwards
— 6:30 p.m.: Post-NSCS qualifying

GARAGECAM PRESENTED BY MOBIL 1 (Watch live)
— 12:30 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series GarageCam
— 3:30 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series GarageCam

SPECIAL EVENTS (Watch live)
— 11:15 a.m.: Miss Sprint Cup’s live chat with Joey Logano

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4:

ON TRACK
— 11-11:50 a.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 12:15 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 2 (Get results)
— 2-2:50 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, FOX Sports 2 (Get results)
— 3:30 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series Kansas Lottery 300 (200 laps, 300 miles), ESPN (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 6:15 p.m.: Post-NNS race

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Rookie hopes to win Kansas, Charlotte, make Chase drivers scramble at ‘Dega

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

DOVER, Del. — Many Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup title hopefuls circled the Contender Round as the biggest question mark heading into the postseason. Now on the eve of the next three-race segment, Kyle Larson has a strategy for throwing a wrench into the Chase drivers’ best-laid plans.

FULL CHASE COVERAGE

Chase hub page
Chase Grid games
#MyChaseNation

Jimmie Johnson, after finishing third in Sunday’s AAA 400 at Dover International Speedway, said he hoped to win one of the next two races — at Kansas and Charlotte — in order to take the pressure off for the elimination race at Talladega Superspeedway, a track prone to unpredictability even without the added spotlight of the playoffs. That’s when Larson, a plucky rookie on the verge of his first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victory, piped up.

"Hopefully I can be the guy that wins Kansas and Charlotte so all the Chase guys can be nervous going into Talladega," Larson said.

Replied Johnson: "That’s fair."

Larson’s humor and moxie prompted a chuckle from race winner Jeff Gordon, who has long been an admirer of the 22-year-old’s talent. But the laughter could be tinged with anxiety in three weeks at the 2.66-mile Alabama tri-oval, where the postseason field will be trimmed from 12 to eight.

Though Gordon has six wins over the course of his career at Talladega, he rated the chances at 80 percent of being involved in one of track’s typical multicar crashes. It’s just another reason he hopes Larson’s claim is more an idle threat than a promise.

"Well, if he wins the first two, I hope I finish second to him both of those races because that’s the only thing that would give me any comfort at Talladega," said Gordon, who notched career victory No. 92 in search of his fifth title. "Yeah, I mean, he’s capable of it. He’s running good. They’ve been really running good every weekend. But yeah, if a Chaser doesn’t win it’s going to make Talladega extremely interesting. Now you guys are going to be writing all your stories hoping that nobody in the Chase wins the next two races. I hope that doesn’t happen.

"It’s our job to make sure we go out there and win those races, and the guys that aren’t in the Chase, it’s their job to make their own statement and try to make Talladega that much more interesting and exciting, which would be good for the sport. There’s certain things that happen that is more good for the teams and drivers and other things that are good for the fans and media and people watching. Yeah, I don’t want to know ‑‑ even think about what that would be like going to Talladega under those circumstances."

MORE:

READ: Latest
Chase news

PLAY: Monitor your Chase Grid Game picks

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView