See the order drivers will roll off for Keystone Light Pole Qualifying (Sat., 10:10 a.m. ET, FS1)

# Trk Driver Team
1 10 Jennifer Jo Cobb Oohrah! Hydration Drink Chevrolet
2 98 Johnny Sauter Nextant/Curb Record Toyota
3 86 * Brandon Brown Dominion Recycling Chevrolet
4 99 Bryan Silas Bell Trucks America Inc. Chevrolet
5 07 BJ McLeod Geneva-Liberty Steel Chevrolet
6 88 Matt Crafton Slim Jim/Menards Toyota
7 50 TJ Bell Dedicated to Electrical Linemen Chevrolet
8 6 Norm Benning Chevrolet
9 02 Tyler Young # Randco/Young’s Bulding Systems Chevrolet
10 54 Darrell Wallace Jr. ToyotaCare Toyota
11 08 Ray Black Jr. ScubaLife Chevrolet
12 51 Erik Jones ToyotaCare/Project Pink Toyota
13 77 German Quiroga NET10 Wireless Toyota
14 29 Ryan Blaney Cooper Standard Ford
15 57 * Ted Minor Chevrolet
16 21 Joey Coulter Allegiant Travel Chevrolet
17 32 Cameron Hayley Cabinets by Hayley Chevrolet
18 8 John H. Nemechek Smoke-N-Sear/SWM Toyota
19 00 * Cole Custer Haas Automation Chevrolet
20 9 Brennan Newberry Qore-24 Chevrolet
21 36 * Justin Jennings Mittler Bros Machine & Tool/Ski Soda Chevrolet
22 17 Timothy Peters Red Horse Racing Toyota
23 19 Tyler Reddick # DrawTite Ford
24 0 * Caleb Roark Grimes Irrigation & Construction Chevrolet
25 63 JR Heffner Park East Sales LLC Chevrolet
26 31 Ben Kennedy # Heater.com Chevrolet
27 20 Gray Gaulding # Gemini Southern/Krispy Kreme Chevrolet
28 05 * John Wes Townley Zaxby’s Toyota
29 13 Jeb Burton Estes/Carolina Nut Company Toyota
30 35 Mason Mingus # Call 811 Toyota

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See the order the drivers will roll off in (Saturday, 4:10 p.m. ET)

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# Car Driver Team
1 22 Michael McDowell(i) Discount Tire Ford
2 54 Sam Hornish Jr. Monster Energy Toyota
3 40 Matt DiBenedetto Curtis Key Plumbing Chevrolet
4 72 * John Jackson CrashClaimsR.us Chevrolet
5 11 Elliott Sadler OneMain Financial Toyota
6 43 Dakoda Armstrong # WinField Ford
7 60 Chris Buescher # Roush Performance Parts Ford
8 28 JJ Yeley Texas 28 Spirits Stage Dodge
9 42 Dylan Kwasniewski # Up & Up Chevrolet
10 52 Joey Gase Chevrolet
11 31 Chase Pistone(i) Chevrolet
12 44 Blake Koch Centershot Toyota
13 55 Jamie Dick Viva Auto Group Chevrolet
14 33 * Cale Conley(i) IAVA Chevrolet
15 01 Landon Cassill G&K Services Chevrolet
16 46 * Ryan Ellis Curtis Key Plumbing Chevrolet
17 19 Mike Bliss TriStar Motorsports Toyota
18 17 * Tanner Berryhill # NationalCashLenders.com Dodge
19 4 Jeffrey Earnhardt Bandit Chevrolet
20 13 * Carl Long OCR Gaz Bar Dodge
21 80 * Ross Chastain(i) ADVICS/CMW Toyota
22 93 Kevin Swindell JGL Racing Dodge
23 62 Brendan Gaughan South Point Chevrolet
24 14 Eric McClure Hefty Ultimate/Reynolds Wrap Toyota
25 87 Josh Reaume Lilly Trucking Ford
26 51 Jeremy Clements RepairableVehicles.com/AllSouthElectric.com Chevrolet
27 20 Justin Boston(i) Zloop Toyota
28 5 * Austin Theriault Maine Open for Business Chevrolet
29 74 * Mike Harmon WCIParts.com Dodge
30 6 Trevor Bayne AdvoCare Ford
31 99 James Buescher ToyotaCare Toyota
32 7 Regan Smith TaxSlayer.com Chevrolet
33 3 Ty Dillon # Bass Pros Shops Chevrolet
34 23 Carlos Contreras 38 Special/Voli Chevrolet
35 10 * Jeff Green SupportMilitary.org Toyota
36 16 Ryan Reed # ADA Drive to Stop Diabetes presented by Lilly Ford
37 39 Ryan Sieg # RSS Racing Chevrolet
38 9 Chase Elliott # NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet
39 2 Brian Scott Shore Lodge Chevrolet
40 70 * Derrike Cope youtheory Chevrolet
41 89 * Morgan Shepherd Courtney Construction Chevrolet

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See the order the Sprint Cup drivers will roll off (Friday, 4:40 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1)

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# Car Driver Team
1 9 Marcos Ambrose Stanley Ford
2 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Ground Toyota
3 77 Corey Lajoie(i) Fochler Veterans Law Ford
4 32 Timmy Hill US Chrome Ford
5 36 Reed Sorenson American Muscle Driving Experience Chevrolet
6 66 Mike Wallace(i) Royal Teak Collection Toyota
7 13 Casey Mears Geico Chevrolet
8 42 Kyle Larson # Target Chevrolet
9 4 Kevin Harvick Budweiser Designate a Driver Chevrolet
10 55 Brian Vickers Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota
11 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s Chevrolet
12 43 Aric Almirola Smithfield Ford
13 41 Kurt Busch Haas Automation Chevrolet
14 27 Paul Menard Sylvania/Menards Chevrolet
15 10 Danica Patrick GoDaddy Chevrolet
16 47 AJ Allmendinger Bush’s Beans Chevrolet
17 14 Tony Stewart Code 3 Associates/Mobil 1 Chevrolet
18 99 Carl Edwards Aflac Ford
19 78 Martin Truex Jr. Furniture Row Chevrolet
20 38 David Gilliland Clean Harbors Ford
21 31 Ryan Newman Quicken Loans Chevrolet
22 40 Landon Cassill(i) Snap Fitness Chevrolet
23 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. EcoPower Oil Ford
24 51 Justin Allgaier # PlanBSales.com Chevrolet
25 5 Kasey Kahne Time Warner Cable Chevrolet
26 24 Jeff Gordon Drive to End Hunger Chevrolet
27 83 Travis Kvapil Burger King Toyota
28 18 Kyle Busch M&M’s Toyota
29 34 David Ragan Taco Bell Ford
30 23 Alex Bowman # Dr Pepper Toyota
31 15 Clint Bowyer 5-Hour Energy Toyota
32 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Diet Mountain Dew Chevrolet
33 98 Josh Wise Phil Parsons Racing Chevrolet
34 22 Joey Logano Shell Pennzoil Ford
35 26 Cole Whitt # Rinnai Toyota
36 3 Austin Dillon # Cheerios Chevrolet
37 2 Brad Keselowski Miller Lite Ford
38 33 David Stremme Little Joe’s Autos Chevrolet
39 16 Greg Biffle Ortho Ford
40 1 Jamie McMurray Belkin/WEMO Chevrolet
41 20 Matt Kenseth Dollar General Toyota
42 7 Michael Annett # Feed the Children/Golden Corral Chevrolet
43 93 Clay Rogers Iowa City Capital Partners Toyota

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Keselowski tops Cup practice; Crafton, Jones, Custer top Truck sessions

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Sprint Cup Series Practice 1 | RESULTS

Already in the hunt for his second straight win and a sweep of New Hampshire Motor Speedway for the season, Brad Keselowski topped opening Sprint Cup Series practice on Friday morning in Loudon, New Hampshire.

The Team Penske driver ran just 12 laps, but found enough speed in his No. 2 Ford on his final run around the Magic Mile to best the field with a speed of 138.421 mph.

The top 10 was chock-full of Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers, save for Chip Ganassi Racing teammates Jamie McMurray (137.890 mph) and Kyle Larson (137.631 mph), who both ran well at Chicagoland last week and placed second and fifth, respectively, in Friday’s opening session. After McMurray, 12 of the next 14 drivers on the chart were all postseason contenders, with the top five rounded out by Dale Earnhardt Jr. (3rd, 137.825 mph) and Kasey Kahne (4th, 137.661 mph).

Reigning champion Jimmie Johnson was the slowest Chase driver, pulling in 29th with a speed of 135.699 mph.

Just over 50 minutes into the session, practice was halted for debris on the track.

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Nationwide Series final practice | RESULTS

A Richard Childress Racing driver led final NASCAR Nationwide Series practice at Kentucky Speedway, just not the one most would have expected.

Rookie Cale Conley, on a part-time schedule this season, circled the 1.5-mile speedway at a clip of 175.404 mph to take top honors in the final 60-minute session. He also led the field with most laps run at 53.

RCR’s Brian Scott (175.075 mph), who drives the No. 2 Chevrolet, finished third in the standings after coming in second in the opening session. Scott is fifth in the standings, 56 points behind leader Chase Elliott.

A late push from Trevor Bayne put his No. 6 Ford into second on the speed chart (175.239 mph). Sam Hornish Jr. (174.944 mph) and Chris Buescher (174.419) rounded out the top five, with RCR’s Ty Dillon (174.323 mph) coming in sixth.

Elliott finished eighth (174.087 mph) with his JR Motorsports teammate Regan Smith in 16th. Smith trails Elliott in the standings by 18 points.

Next up is Coors Light Pole Qualifying, scheduled for 4:10 p.m. ET. The VisitMyrtleBeach.com 300 follows at 7:30 p.m. ET (ESPNEWS).

Nationwide Series practice 1 | RESULTS

Richard Childress Racing opened up the weekend strong, placing all three of its cars in the top four placers in opening Nationwide Series practice for the VisitMyrtleBeach.com 300 (Saturday, 7:30 p.m. ET, ESPNEWS) at Kentucky Speedway in Lexington, Kentucky.

Brian Scott was at the helm, leading the charge with a best speed of 173.980 mph to finish second fiddle to practice topper Chris Buescher (174.701). Brendan Gaughan (173.210) and RCR rookie Ty Dillon (173.205) were right behind Scott.

Sam Hornish Jr., filling in for Kyle Busch in the No. 54 this weekend, placed fifth on the charts at 173.082.

Nationwide Series points leader Chase Elliott was eighth overall at 172.629, while Michael McDowell, driving the defending race-winning No. 22 Ford, was 11th overall at 172.348.

Camping World Truck Series Practice 1 | RESULTS

Rookie driver Erik Jones paced the first of three Camping World Truck Series practices at New Hampshire Motor Speedway on Friday morning in Loudon, New Hampshire.

The Kyle Busch Motorsports driver posted a best speed of 131.925 mph on his 35th of 36 laps around the Magic Mile. Jones ousted reigning champion Matt Crafton from the top of the leaderboard in the closing seconds of practice, besting the ThorSport driver’s speed of 131.035 mph.

Sixteen-year-old Cole Custer, set to make just his seventh NASCAR National Series start in Saturday’s UNOH 175 (1 p.m. ET, FS1), was third on the leaderboard with a speed of 131.031 mph — 0.001 seconds off Crafton’s pace.

Joey Coulter (130.999 mph) and Ryan Blaney (130.864 mph) rounded out the top five.

Positions six through nine were occupied by Toyota drivers in Darrell Wallace Jr. (130.846 mph), Johnny Sauter (130.260 mph) and Red Horse Racing teammates Timothy Peters (129.754 mph) and German Quiroga (129.648 mph).

Camping World Truck Series practice 2 | RESULTS

In the second of three scheduled Camping World Truck Series practices, reigning champion Matt Crafton topped the leaderboard on Friday at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in Loudon, New Hampshire.

Crafton’s late-session best speed of 132.347 mph shot him past Cameron Hayley, who placed second with a best speed of 131.433. Gray Gaulding (131.180 mph), Joey Coulter (131.044 mph) and Timothy Peters (130.815 mph) rounded out the top five.

First session leader Erik Jones was ninth at 130.385 mph.

Camping World Truck Series final practice | RESULTS

LOUDON, N.H. — NASCAR Next driver Cole Custer cruised to the top of the speed charts in final NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice Friday afternoon at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

Custer, 16, turned a lap of 133.226 mph in the Haas Racing Development No. 00 Chevrolet in preparation for Saturday’s UNOH 175 (1 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1). Custer, who is scheduled to make just the seventh Truck Series start of his career here, also won the pole position in June at Gateway Motorsports Park, a track of similar length with similar short-track characteristics.

Ryan Blaney, 20 years old and third in the series standings, was second-fastest in the Brad Keselowski Racing No. 29 Ford at 133.007 mph. Erik Jones, another NASCAR Next class member at age 18, ran the most laps (63) and was third-best at 132.924 mph, just ahead of Kyle Busch Motorsports teammate Darrell Wallace Jr., a two-time winner this season. Tyler Reddick completed the top five in another Keselowski-owned truck.

Points leader Matt Crafton, the defending series champion, was ninth-fastest of the 26 drivers who participated in the 85-minute finalsession.

Saturday’s Keystone Light Pole Qualifying is scheduled for a 10:10 a.m. ET start, broadcast on FOX Sports 1. The race is the 17th Truck Series event hosted by New Hampshire, but the first for the 1.058-mile track since 2011.

— Zack Albert

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RPM driver shows gratitude to Ambrose for contributions to organization

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LOUDON, N.H. — Aric Almirola has plenty of pressure to perform the next two weekends to keep his Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup postseason hopes alive. One thing he’s scratched off the list of things to worry about — the livelihood of his Richard Petty Motorsports team.

Despite his last-place position in the 16-driver playoff, Almirola was almost all smiles Friday at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, two days after his team reaffirmed its commitment to remain a two-car operation in 2015. It’s the sort of long-term vote of confidence in the wake of teammate Marcos Ambrose‘s impending departure that can at least soothe some of the opening-round heartbreak that visited The King’s famed No. 43 last weekend at Chicagoland.

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"It’s really important," Almirola said. "You see most or all of the top teams in this sport are multi-car teams and that’s important to have that resource of teammates and more information. I think any time you do things with just one person it becomes really easy to get stuck in your ways and not be able to see outside the box, but as soon as you get more information, more teammates, more heads thinking on the same thing, it opens your eyes to a lot of different opportunities as far as setups and people and ways to go about setting your cars up and processes in the shop.

"So I think anytime something like this is going down, it’s important for the guys and first and foremost for the guys at the race team to know that, ‘Hey, you’re OK, you’re safe. We’re not shutting the car down. We’re gonna have two cars and we’re gonna go racing.’ So that’s first and foremost of the importance to let those guys know that they’re OK, but on top of that for everything that we’ve built over the last four or five years to this point and being a winning race team and a Chase-contending race team, to let everybody know that’s still our goal and we’re not backing down from that."

Carrying over the status quo isn’t necessarily the worst thing that could happen to a team that’s seen its share of ownership changes over the years. Mergers and partnerships with principals such as Ray Evernham, Robert Yates and George Gillett made the team a cauldron of uncertainty throughout the previous decade as it shrank from a four-car conglomerate to a two-car stable, but the past three years have marked a period of relative stability in both the ownership and driver lineup.

The smooth seas at RPM took on more than a ripple last weekend with Ambrose’s announcement that he’d return to his native Australia, leaving Petty’s No. 9 Ford with a prominent vacancy for 2015 in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series garage. While Almirola, who signed a three-year contract extension with RPM back in January, awaits the team’s next chapter, he expressed his gratitude for Ambrose’s legacy and lasting contributions.

"He was there a year before me, so he was there at probably its darkest hour with the Gillett split and bankruptcy and Richard putting a lot of his own money to keep the team alive, and going from four cars down to two," Almirola said. "Marcos has seen a lot of that company and helped build it to where it is today, and I’m extremely appreciative of that because I get to reap the benefits of that. I feel like I was a big part of that, but I came in a year later. He’s probably been one of the best teammates that I’ve ever worked with. He’s such a fun guy and a lot of fun to be around, and he’s an extremely good race car driver."

For the shorter term, Almirola and Co. need to regroup — and fast — to make their imprint in the Contender Round, the next three-race cut in the new-look Chase. Reaching that goal means turning it on in this Sunday’s Sylvania 300 (2 p.m. ET, ESPN) and following up strong the next weekend’s race at Dover International Speedway.

While Almirola said he didn’t think he’d need a win-or-else approach over the next two races to advance, he also knows a repeat of the 41st-place finish outside the Windy City last weekend would be devastating. The Chicago setback hasn’t stopped the 30-year-old from crunching the numbers to see how he’ll avoid being one of the four eliminated drivers after Dover.

"All the guys on my team and myself included know that we’ve got to go out and for our best shot — without winning, for our best shot to transfer we have to run top-five the next two weeks," Almirola said. "There’s no doubt about it and we’ve got to hope that the guys that are already down in points run 20th-25th. I think right now we’re 23 points out of 12th, so if we run fifth and Carl (Edwards) runs 20th, that’s 15 points and that puts us within seven going to Dover. That makes it a reality getting to Dover, but we’ve got to take a big chunk out here."

While it’s small consolation now, Almirola said that engine builder Doug Yates pinpointed the broken exhaust valve that caused his No. 43 car to go up in smoke just 37 laps from the finish last weekend, saying that similar trouble befell fellow Ford drivers Joey Logano at Kentucky and Ambrose at Atlanta earlier in the year.

Almirola was heartened by the fact that it was just his first engine-related failure to finish in his three years with the Petty group, but that the timing of the misfortune could not have been worse.

"Of all weekends for it to happen the first race of the Chase," Almirola said, "Why could it have not happened at Atlanta or Richmond or wherever else, but it is what it is. It just wasn’t meant to be. The stars didn’t line up right for us at Chicago, but we’ll rebound."

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After close call at Chicagoland, rookie driver has momentum on his side

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LOUDON, N.H. — A lot of folks figure Kyle Larson will wind up in Victory Lane this season in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.

The Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender is among them.

"I think it’s coming," Larson, 22, said Friday morning at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, site of Sunday’s Sylvania 300 (ESPN, 2 p.m. ET). "I hope it’s before the end of this year. But if not, we won’t be too disappointed because we’ve been running well all season long."

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The Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates driver is coming off a third-place finish last weekend at Chicagoland, his sixth top-five of the season. He led 20 laps in his red and white No. 42 Chevrolet, and battled with Kevin Harvick, eventual race winner Brad Keselowski and Jeff Gordon down the stretch for position.

He finished second earlier this year at Auto Club Speedway and also had top-five results at Texas. Pocono, Watkins Glen and Loudon.

"Every race I’ll sit in the motorhome, watch TV, flip through Twitter and everybody always says, ‘This is your weekend.’ And I believe them," he said.

"It kind of sucks when you don’t win. I definitely feel like we’re really close. We’ve been close a couple of times this year. Just a little bit off from winning (at Auto Club); I thought we had the best, maybe the first- or second-best car last week. If I could have done things right, we could have two wins this season."

In spite of his third-place result here at Loudon earlier this year, the former sprint car standout doesn’t consider the 1.058-mile track one of his favorites.

"But I seem to run pretty well here whenever I’ve been here in three different types of cars (Sprint Cup, Nationwide and K&N Pro Series).

"We finished third here earlier in the year so hopefully we can improve on that or still end up in the top five. I thought we were a seventh- or eighth-place car (in July) and were able to luck out on the pit strategy things and have enough fuel to make it to the end. It would be nice to get a win."

It’s more likely that success might surface at the 1.5-mile venues remaining on the schedule. Such tracks are closer, he said, to the three-eighth and half-mile stops from his sprint car background where the momentum carried into the turns and the constant search for a faster line around the track is so crucial.

"I think Kansas will be a good one for us as well as Texas may be our best shot," he said. "(We were) right in the top five pretty much the whole race, finished the whole race earlier in the year. And then Homestead is my favorite track. You run the wall there similar to how you do at Chicago, so hopefully if I can keep it off the wall I can be up front.

"Those three. Charlotte I think we will be pretty good at; we were surprised I wasn’t very good during the 600, but I feel like Charlotte is a good track for me."

New Hampshire and Martinsville are more difficult, he said, "because it’s different than what I’ve ever done."

Braking and track position are key on such tracks. Momentum and multiple racing grooves typically take a backseat.

"You have to get on the brakes and you just run the same line the whole time and I just think a lot of guys that grew up racing Bandoleros and Legends and Late Models … everything they did was on short tracks where you have to learn how to get your car around the bottom as quick as you can and get off the corner," he said.

"I think I’m getting better … but not where I need to be for sure."

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Six-time champion knows there are no guarantees in postseason

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LOUDON, N.H. — Jimmie Johnson knows the capabilities of his No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports team. And he knows its current status.

The two are not the same.

Often the yardstick by which others measure their own progress, Johnson and his team are currently showing more signs of vulnerability than dominance as the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup moves into week No. 2 of 10 here at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

No one’s writing the team off, but neither is anyone conceding wins to the six-time Sprint Cup champion.

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"Truthfully, we’re not the dominant car right now," Johnson said Friday at NHMS. "We’re a good car. We still have nine weeks to get our act together; especially the way the Chase lays out, if we continue to get the most our of our good car and have a dominant car at Homestead, if we’re in that position, then we can get seven (championships).

"If" isn’t typical for the team, which has normally been in more of a "when" mode by now.

With the opening race out of the way (Johnson finished a pedestrian, for him, 12th at Chicagoland Speedway), he enters this weekend’s race eighth in points. Johnson and crew chief Chad Knaus haven’t lost their way, but it’s clear that others have improved.

"This is a tough industry," said Johnson, who turned 39 earlier this week. “And we’re working as hard as we can and I’m happy to see my teammates with speed.

"And then there are a couple of guys out there that aren’t in our camp that we’re chasing and just trying to out-race them. But they’re amazing race teams and drivers as well."

Among them — 2012 champion Brad Keselowski, winner of the last two Sprint Cup races. His Team Penske teammate, Joey Logano, has been no slouch, finishing fourth and sixth.

Keselowski won here in July, and Johnson expects the No. 2 team to be no less of a threat this time around. Keselowski went on to finish first in the opening practice, while Johnson finished 29th.

"I would expect him to be in a similar position for two reasons," said Johnson. "One, he had so much more pace than the rest of the field here in the spring race that it’s hard to believe that everybody could cover that gap and get back to him. And then when we went to Richmond, which wasn’t too long ago … and they had that form there, too. So I’d definitely say those guys are tough to handle."

By themselves, Johnson’s 24 Chase victories alone would rank in the top 10 among active drivers’ total wins. And there are tracks ahead where Johnson will be expected to excel. Next week’s stop at Dover? He’s won nine times there. Martinsville? Eight victories. Charlotte? Seven career wins, including this year’s Coca-Cola 600.

But he’s taking nothing for granted.

"It’s awesome to have tracks that you love and tracks that you’ve had success at in the Chase," he said. "I feel like seven or eight of them have been historically awesome tracks for us. That part is great.

"Stats are nice to look at, but you’ve got to live in the present. So just because we’ve been good at those tracks before doesn’t guarantee us anything going back."

A winner of three races in a four-race span earlier this season, Johnson hopes the team can rediscover the magic.

"We’ve had one hot spot in the middle of the year … and we’ve kind of been lukewarm on the other sides," he said. "I’m hoping we heat up. I’m hoping we get to that hot spot again."

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Find out who can clinch and who needs to rebound at New Hampshire

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Though unlikely, drivers can mathematically clinch a spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Contender Round without a win this weekend at New Hampshire Motor Speedway in the Sylvania 300 (Sunday, 2 p.m. ET, ESPN).

If a Chase driver other than Brad Keselowski wins, anyone who has at least a 45-point lead on the 10th highest winless Chase driver would advance to the next round. If a non-Chase driver or Keselowski wins, the potential clinching driver needs to lead the 11th highest winless Chase driver by at least 45 pts.

Conversely, for a driver to be in a must-win situation at Dover, they would have to be 45 points or more behind the ninth-ranked winless driver if there’s a Chase winner that’s not Keselowski; or 45 points or more behind the 10th-ranked driver if there’s a non-Chase winner or Keselowski wins.

Rebound Time: Bottom Four Attempt To Stay In The Chase Hunt
Luckily for Ryan Newman, AJ Allmendinger, Greg Biffle and Aric Almirola, the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup’s Challenger Round does not end after one race. The revamped playoff system keeps all drivers in the hunt until the very last lap at Dover.

Thank goodness. The four stumbled at Chicagoland and currently reside in spots 13-16 in the Chase standings. Sunday’s race presents vastly different outlooks for each driver as they try to make the cut after the third Chase race at Dover:

Ryan Newman: The most successful driver of the four at New Hampshire, Newman has to like his chances to advance to the Contender Round. He owns a track-record seven Coors Light Pole Awards and ranks tied for first among all entrants with three wins. His last checkered flag at Loudon came in 2011, and he posted a fifth-place finish in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series‘ first visit there this season.

AJ Allmendinger: In 11 starts at New Hampshire, Allmendinger has one top-10 finish and an average running position of 23.6.

Greg Biffle: Biffle entered the Chase with a string of consistent performances, locking himself into the last spot with five top-10 finishes in his last six regular-season races. In 24 starts at New Hampshire, Biffle owns one win (2008), six top-fives and nine-top 10s.

Aric Almirola: Perhaps the biggest underdog going into the Chase, Almirola was running sixth at Chicagoland until his engine blew with 36 laps to go. The setback caused him to finish 41st. Almirola finished fifth at Loudon in 2013. Otherwise, he hasn’t posted a showing better than 18th in seven other starts there.

2014 Chase Grid

Pos.
Drivers
Season Wins
Chase Points
1
5
2,059
2
3
2,052
3
3
2,049
4
2
2,047
5
3
2,042
6
1
2,041
7
1
2,041
8
3
2,041
9
1
2,039
10
0
2,034
11
1
2,034
12
2
2,030
13
0
2,029
14
1
2,025
15
0
2,021
16
1
2,007
Green = In position to move to the next round of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup
Orange = In position to possibly be eliminated from the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Challenger Round
Red = Eliminated from the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup

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After thought, driver concluded ‘timing was right’ to make move

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Marcos Ambrose readily concedes it was an offer too good to pass up: The enviable opportunity to return his young family home to Australia combined with the chance to drive for Roger Penske.

Explaining that he had made the decision this summer to return home — in large part to raise his 8- and 6-year-old children — Ambrose, 38, acknowledged this week that the stars aligned from both a personal and professional perspective.

Team Penske announced this week the former two-time Australian V8 Supercar champ Ambrose will return to the series in 2015 with a Penske-led Dick Johnson Racing Team Penske entry.

After a winning nine-year NASCAR career in the states Ambrose was ready for a change in scenery. And the timing has proven impeccable.

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In a teleconference with the international media this week, Ambrose again stressed that his motive has primarily been family-based. He will base the family in his native Tasmania — near immediate family close to the very neighborhoods he and his wife were raised.

"I had come to that conclusion leading into the summer that the timing was right for me personally to return to Australia at the end of this season for personal reasons,” Ambrose said. "My kids are 6 and 8. I want them to enjoy and experience Australian life as well, so when they grow up they can make their own choices in life where they want to be.

"I have one American that was born here and I have an Australian, Tabitha, who’s 8 who has an Australian passport. I think the timing for me personally was right."

And having earned a pair of NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victories along with five NASCAR Nationwide Series wins, Ambrose conceded it felt like his tenure in NASCAR had reached its natural conclusion.

"My career in NASCAR has flattened off, and I always said that when I felt like I wasn’t going to be able to either keep progressing or wasn’t going to be able to achieve what I came here to do, which was to win a championship, then I needed to look at my options, and that’s exactly what I’ve done," Ambrose said. "I’ve achieved a lot in NASCAR. Getting an opportunity to drive in the Sprint Cup Series for Richard Petty is incredible, but I felt like my opportunities were getting narrower, and certainly my results had flattened off. I mean, it’s just a fact of life.

"I felt like it’s a good time for me to return the family to Australia. I’ve certainly scratched the itch of NASCAR, and I’m really proud of what I’ve achieved, but I’m happy to return to Australia and go to the next chapter in my racing career."

Ambrose will work with at least two other team leaders with NASCAR experience. Jeff Swartwout, who worked with Penske’s Nationwide Series program, will serve as team manager and Nick Hughes, who served as technical director on Michael Waltrip Racing teams, will work in the technical department.

And with Penske’s broad reach in motorsports, there was immediate talk about crossover between the series. Asked if one of his other drivers might do a one-off V8 Supercar race, Penske joked, "I told Marcos maybe we’d get (Juan Pablo) Montoya who said he likes to run on road courses to come down and join him, but that was only a joke. Please don’t print that. That’s just a joke."

Penske Racing President Tim Cindric added with a laugh, "We’ll have a long line out the door with Helio (Castroneves) and Will Power and the rest of them asking why they didn’t get to go. There’s a long list."

In converse, Penske didn’t close the door on whether Ambrose might make a return to NASCAR either.

"I think that if there were reasons that we wanted to run Marcos, whether it’s an oval or a NASCAR road race, we would have to look at the schedule and to be sure we had the proper funding to do it,” Penske said. "I think as far as he’s concerned, he’s made the decision to come with us in Australia, and I think those opportunities he’d have to really look at one at a time."

In the meantime, Ambrose said he is committed to seeking another title in the V8 Supercar championship.

"It will be a challenge for me personally, there’s no doubt about that. It’s been nearly 10 years since I’ve driven a V8 Supercar. I don’t take that challenge lightly,” Ambrose said. "I know it’s going to take some time to get integrated back into the series with the way they like to race, with the rules they have in place, and also the technical aspect of these cars, but I know what I’ve done in the past, and I know what I’m capable of, and it’s not like I’ve been sitting around a beach.

"I’ve been racing 36 NASCAR Sprint Cup races every season. I’ve had plenty of racing miles under my belt. I’m looking forward to the change. I’m looking forward to bringing my family back to Australia, and just can’t wait to get started."

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First Canadian driver to win a race in NASCAR’s premier series

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – "NASCAR extends its condolences to the family and friends of Earl Ross, a true racer whose considerable on-track success helped grow the sport internationally.

"Ross was the first Canadian driver to win a race in what is today known as the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, and he did it at one of NASCAR’s most historic tracks for one of NASCAR’s most historic owners. His 1974 win at Martinsville for Junior Johnson helped lay the foundation for the sport’s tremendous growth in Canada, and beyond."

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