Change between No. 4, No. 14 teams effective immediately

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Stewart-Haas Racing officials announced major changes to the pit crew of the organization’s No. 4 Chevrolet with driver Kevin Harvick as the team prepares for this year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
 
According to SHR officials, Harvick will be paired with the over-the-wall crew previously teamed with three-time champion and SHR co-owner Tony Stewart.
 
Stewart, who did not qualify for the Chase, will compete in the season’s final 10 races with what is now Harvick’s former crew.

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"We made this change in the best interests of the entire organization," SHR Vice President of Competition Greg Zipadelli said. "Our primary goal is to win races and championships, and this pit crew swap provides championship experience to the No. 4 team and continued race-winning experience to the No. 14 team."
 
With the 10-race Chase kicking off this weekend as Chicagoland Speedway hosts the MyAFibStory.com 400 (ESPN, 2 p.m. ET), Harvick could be in the best position to capture his first Sprint Cup title. Mechanical issues that kept the 38-year-old outside the top 20 in points through the first eight races have been addressed and his team continues to bring one of the fastest cars to the track each weekend.
 
If there has been a soft spot in the system, it might be found on pit road. Harvick raced his way into the lead twice during the early stages of Saturday night’s race at Richmond, only to lose the position during subsequent pit stops.
 
"I can’t fix them, but it’s probably the biggest thing that we have to fix in order to contend for the championship," he said afterward. "I think our cars are as fast as they need to be. The guys do a great job of bringing fast cars every week. It’s just one mistake after another every week on pit road."
 
Harvick is making his eighth Chase appearance and his fifth in a row. His best points finish has been third, which he accomplished in 2010, ’11 and ’13 while competing for Richard Childress Racing.
 
He enters this year’s Chase seeded sixth among the 16 drivers in the field.
 
He was the first to win multiple races this season in NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series, making him the first to all but officially lock himself into the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
 
But Harvick’s No. 4 Chevrolet hasn’t been to Victory Lane since his victory at Darlington Raceway in April. Not that the team hasn’t been close. Harvick has finished second five times through this year’s first 26 races, the most of any driver. He also was the runner-up in the Sprint All-Star Race, a non-points event.
 
NASCAR measures how long teams spend on pit road during each race, and race winners typically are among the top five in the least amount of time. When he won at Phoenix, Harvick spent less time on pit road than any of the 43 drivers in the field. At Darlington, his total time was sixth best.
 
Sometimes a loss of track position on pit road, whether due to a driver or crew-induced penalty or simply a slow stop, can be overcome on the race track. Often, however, it creates a frustrating scenario in which a driver has to maneuver around other cars he or she had already worked around previously, or it puts the driver in greater danger of getting swept up in someone else’s troubles.
 
Such was the case for Harvick earlier this year at Sonoma Raceway. After leading twice for 23 laps, a slow stop in the second half of the race dropped him outside the top 10. A chain-reaction incident at Lap 82 collected the No. 4 entry, and Harvick was left to hobble home with a 20th-place finish.
 
He was dominant at Atlanta, leading 195 of 335 laps, but repeatedly lost the lead on pit road.
 
And although he rolls into this weekend’s race on the heels of a fifth-place finish at Richmond, he said at Richmond that the problems on pit road needed to be addressed before the Chase got under way.
 
"Hopefully they have a plan as to what they think they need to do in the shop with the two teams in the Chase, but that’s not my department," he said.
 
Now, it seems, that plan has been put into place.
 
The No. 4 team pit crew will now be:
Front Tire Changer:
Ira Jo Hussey | Hometown: Manchester, New Hampshire
Front Tire Carrier: Todd Drakulich | Hometown: Tucson, Arizona
Jackman: Mike Casto | Hometown: Proctor, West Virginia
Rear Tire Changer: Daniel Smith | Hometown: Concord, North Carolina
Rear Tire Carrier: Mike Morneau | Hometown: Oxford, Maine
 
All were members Stewart’s pit crew when he captured the 2011 Sprint Cup championship.

Moving over to the No. 14 team:
Front Tire Changer:
Bryan Jacobsen | Hometown: Honesdale, Pennsylvania
Front Tire Carrier: Brett Morrell | Hometown: Windham, Maine
Rear Tire Changer: Jonathan Sherman | Hometown: Monroe, Louisiana
Jackman: Getty Cavitt, Jr. | Hometown: Owensboro, Kentucky
Rear Tire Carrier: Josh Sobecki | Hometown: New Kensington, Pennsylvania
 
Harvick will be joined in the Chase by SHR teammate Kurt Busch, the 2004 Sprint Cup champion and a winner at Martinsville Speedway earlier this year. In addition to Stewart, SHR’s Danica Patrick also failed to qualify for the 16-driver postseason field.

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Seven will relay information to teams in the postseason

Photo credit: Tony Gibson’s Twitter account (@TonyOldman10)

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Seven NASCAR Sprint Cup Series drivers who are not a part of this year’s 16-team Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup field are taking part in a Goodyear tire test today at Homestead-Miami Speedway.

Per NASCAR, drivers that qualified for this year’s 10-race Chase are not allowed to take part in the one-day test.

As a result, the following drivers will take part in the test:

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Justin Allgaier (HScott Motorsports) is testing for Hendrick Motorsports. All four HMS drivers — Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kasey Kahne — qualified for this year’s postseason;

Ryan Blaney, currently third in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series points standings with Brad Keselowski Racing, is testing for Team Penske drivers Brad Keselowski and Joey Logano, who are both in the Chase;

Austin Dillon (Richard Childress Racing) is on hand to test for RCR Chase participant Ryan Newman and the No. 31 team;

Sam Hornish Jr., competing in a limited number of NASCAR Nationwide Series races this season for Joe Gibbs Racing, is representing JGR drivers Matt Kenseth, Kyle Busch and Denny Hamlin;

Stewart-Haas Racing, which saw drivers Kevin Harvick and Kurt Busch qualify for the Chase, is represented by Danica Patrick;

Roush Fenway Racing‘s two Chase participants, Carl Edwards and Greg Biffle, have teammate Ricky Stenhouse Jr. handling testing duties for the RFR group and are expected to share information with the Ford team of Aric Almirola of Richard Petty Motorsports;

Rounding out the drivers on hand is Martin Truex Jr., of Furniture Row Racing, representing the single-car operation of JTG Daugherty Racing and Chase driver AJ Allmendinger.

Homestead will host the fourth and final round of this year’s Chase, the Championship Round, in which four drivers, pared down from the initial 16, will battle for the series’ championship.

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Six-time series champion will be in New York City on Wednesday to promote the Chase

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MORE: Full rundown of where each driver will be for Chase Across North America

Jimmie Johnson didn’t compete in his foundation’s triathlon Sunday morning, but that appears to be the only alteration to the schedule this week for the six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion.

Before leaving for New York City on Tuesday, Johnson said his team did find an issue that could have been related to how he felt following his eighth-place finish at Richmond International Raceway.

"The team found an issue with the cooling system for my helmet," Johnson said in a Chicagoland pre-race team release. "Basically, it was blowing warm air. It’s nice to have a good idea as to what went wrong and why I got so hot in the race car. It’s a newer system that we’ve implemented, so we’re just going back to our old faithful system that’s worked for years and years. We should have the problem rectified."

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On Monday, Hendrick Motorsports
officials said that Johnson was expected to fulfill his duties as one
of 16 participants in this year’s Chase Across North America that kicks
off Wednesday. As part of the media tour promoting the 10-race Chase,
Johnson is scheduled to be in New York City where he will appear on
NBC’s "Today" show, NBC’s "The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon," the
nationally syndicated talk show "Live! with Kelly and Michael" as well
as "Power Lunch" on CNBC.

The 38-year-old Johnson spent approximately 90 minutes in the infield care center at Richmond International Raceway following Saturday night’s Federated Auto Parts 400, where he was treated for dehydration.
 
Sunday, the health-conscious Johnson attended The Jimmie Johnson Foundation’s latest wellness challenge, the Lake Davidson Sprint Triathlon. While he did not compete in the event, he was on hand to greet and mingle with the participants.
 
Johnson, the defending Sprint Cup Series champion and a winner of three Sprint Cup races this year, finished eighth at Richmond. He climbed from his car on pit road without assistance, but was suffering cramps in his legs.
 
"I sat in the car and was talking to my guys about the run and having a good race," Johnson said Saturday night after exiting the care center. "I started to cramp a little bit in my legs, so I figured I would just get out of the car and as I climbed out … the cramping got far worse.
 
"Then standing outside the car I got kind of dizzy so I wanted to sit down. Once I sat down the cramping got worse."
 
Each of the remaining 15 Chase drivers will be visiting 15 different cities (one driver per city) including Mexico City and Toronto on Wednesday for the Chase Across North America promotion. Every Chase market will feature one of the drivers, with additional appearances in San Antonio, Los Angeles, New York and Bristol, Conn., headquarters of ESPN.
 
This year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup gets underway Sunday at Chicagoland Speedway with the running of the MyAFibStory.com 400 (ESPN, 2 p.m. ET).
 
Johnson is fourth in the standings following the resetting of points after the Richmond race. Brad Keselowski, the 2012 champion, is the points leader.

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Preview: New Hampshire

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at the halfway point

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Week 18

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from New Hampshire, Iowa

 

Get the full lineup of NASCAR programming for the week

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All times ET

Monday, September 8
4:30 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
6 p.m., The 10 NASCAR’s Most Outrageous Moments (re-air), FOX Sports 2
6:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2

Tuesday, September 9
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network
6:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2
7:30 p.m., The 10 NASCAR’s Greatest Finishes (re-air), FOX Sports 2

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Wednesday, September 10
Noon, NASCAR Race Hub Special (re-air), FOX Sports 1
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network
6:30 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2
7:30 p.m., The 10 NASCAR’s Greatest Race (re-air), FOX Sports 2
8 p.m., NASCAR K&N Pro Series Race at Kern (re-air), FOX Sports 2

Thursday, September 11
5 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network
7 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub (re-air), FOX Sports 2
1 a.m. (Fri.), NASCAR’s The List: Iconic Cars (re-air), NBC Sports Network
1:30 a.m. (Fri.), NASCAR’s The List: Tracks (re-air), NBC Sports Network
2 a.m. (Fri.), NASCAR’s The List: Dale Earnhardt Sr. Moments (re-air), NBC Sports Network

Friday, September 12                                
11 a.m., NASCAR K&N Pro Series Race at Kern (re-air), FOX Sports 1
Noon, NASCAR Nationwide Series Practice, FOX Sports 1
1 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Practice, FOX Sports 1
2:30 p.m., NASCAR Live, FOX Sports 1
3 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Nationwide Series Final Practice, FOX Sports 1
6::30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, ESPN2
8 p.m., NCWTS SetUp, FOX Sports 1
8:30 p.m., NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Race at Chicagoland, FOX Sports 1
3 a.m. (Sat.), The 10 NASCAR’s Most Bizarre Moments (re-air), FOX Sports 1

Saturday, September 13
10 a.m., NASCAR K&N Pro Series Race at Kern (re-air), FOX Sports 1
11 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Practice, FOX Sports 1
Noon, NASCAR Nationwide Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 2
1:30 p.m., NASCAR Live, FOX Sports 2
2 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Final Practice, FOX Sports 2
3:30 p.m., NASCAR Nationwide Series Race at Chicagoland, ESPN2

Sunday, September 14

9 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Final Practice (re-air), FOX Sports 1
Noon, NASCAR RaceDay, FOX Sports 1
1 p.m., NSCS Countdown, ESPN
2 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Race at Chicagoland, ESPN
TBA, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Race at Chicagoland, ESPN Deportes
7 p.m., NASCAR Victory Lane, FOX Sports 1
11:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Race at Chicagoland (re-air), ESPN2
3 a.m. (Mon.), NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Race at Chicagoland (re-air), FOX Sports 1
5:30 a.m. (Mon.), NASCAR Victory Lane, FOX Sports 1

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See where each driver finished at Richmond and what put them there

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MORE: Gallery of 2014 winners | Best Richmond photos

1. Brad Keselowski, No. 2 Ford, Team Penske. The Coors Light Pole Award winner led a career-high 383 laps, eclipsing his previous high of 232 from when he won at Bristol in 2012. With his victory, the 2012 champ clinched the top overall seed in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup and showed Saturday that his No. 2 team is among the heavy favorites to win it all. Watch Keselowski’s post-race interview.

2. Jeff Gordon, No. 24 Chevrolet, Hendrick Motorsports. Gordon fell short of his fourth win of 2014 — and with it, the No. 1 overall seed — but his No. 24 team showed again at Richmond how fast they’ve been all season. He started and finished on front row, never falling lower than fifth at any point in the race. Watch the final laps here.

3. Clint Bowyer, No. 15 Toyota, Michael Waltrip Racing. Heartbreak for Bowyer, who missed the Chase after turning in perhaps his best performance of the season. Unfortunately, the No. 15 team all but needed a win to make it in and it finished two spots short. MWR put no cars in the Chase and will have to take the next 10 races to reassess and regroup in hopes of coming back strong in 2015. Watch Bowyer’s post-race interview.

4. Jamie McMurray, No. 1 Chevrolet, Chip Ganassi Racing. Much like Bowyer, McMurray fell just short of fulfilling his 2014 Chase dreams, despite racing with feeling and coming up with one of his best results of the season. McMurray raced his way through the field in an event that didn’t see much passing, starting 15th and finishing fourth. It was a valiant effort, but again, not enough.

5. Kevin Harvick, No. 4 Chevrolet, Stewart-Haas Racing. In the few short periods of time when Brad Keselowski was not leading this race, Harvick was. However, as has been the case for much of the season, it was Harvick’s pit crew that continued to cost him the lead, as he entered the pits as the leader twice in the race but came out with Keselowski leading on the ensuing restart. Watch Harvick drive down Keselowski.

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6. Joey Logano, No. 2 Ford, Team Penske. Logano showed that teammate Brad Keselowski wasn’t the only one with speed at Richmond — the whole Penske stable had it. The 24-year-old started fifth and dropped to eighth on Lap 60, but never fell below seventh the rest of the way. He enters the Chase as the No. 5 overall seed.

7. Kurt Busch, No. 41 Chevrolet, Stewart-Haas Racing. Overall, Saturday’s race was a great showing for the No. 41 team. After starting 21st and finishing 23rd at Richmond earlier this year, they’ll certainly take a race in which they started ninth and finished seventh to build a little momentum entering the Chase as the No. 10 overall seed.

8. Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Chevrolet, Hendrick Motorsports. After his top-10 finish, Johnson had to be treated for dehydration after the conclusion of the Federated Auto Parts 400. The six-time and defending champion was given five liters of fluids in the infield care center. Despite this, Johnson’s eighth-place result has him rolling into the Chase on a much better note than last year’s 40th-place effort. Watch more on Johnson’s post-race condition.

9. Ryan Newman, No. 31 Chevrolet, Richard Childress Racing. Even though his Chase status was still up in the air entering the night, Newman was on pretty firm ground unless a new race-winner was crowned. Since it was the Blue (White?) Deuce of Brad Keselowski that ended up in Victory Lane while Newman secured his 10th top-10 finish of the season, he’s in for the second straight year. Watch Newman’s post-race interview.

10. Aric Almirola, No. 43 Ford,  Richard Petty Motorsports. Almirola notched his second consecutive top-10 finish and sixth of the season, matching his entire total from 2013. RPM would’ve loved to have put both of their cars in the Chase, but in the meantime it’s still a huge step in the right direction for the organization.

11. Kyle Larson, No. 42 Chevrolet, Chip Ganassi Racing. Larson will certainly be bummed after missing the Chase, but he still exceeded the already lofty expectations many had for him heading into his rookie season. He spent a good amount of time in the top 10 during Saturday’s race —  a race in which there were several veterans looking for Chase spots behind him in the field — so the future is clearly bright for this young driver.

12. Dale Earnhardt Jr., No. 88 Chevrolet, Hendrick Motorsports. Earnhardt hasn’t fared particularly well at Richmond since his third win there in 2006, but Saturday’s race showed how well his No. 88 team has been in 2014 at taking a car that doesn’t qualify well — he started 24th — and working on it throughout the race to move up in the field. More often than not, these adjustments put him in position to battle for the win, which will be crucial in the Chase.

13. Brian Vickers, No. 55 Toyota, Michael Waltrip Racing. Vickers missed the Chase, but remains on pace for his best Sprint Cup Series finish since placing 12th overall in 2009. He battled back from running 26th on Lap 60, nearly picking up his eighth top-10 finish of the year. For a driver that has only finished one full-time season since 2009, there are still plenty of positives for Vickers to take away from 2014.

14. Kyle Busch, No. 18 Toyota, Joe Gibbs Racing. While it certainly wasn’t the momentum-builder that the No. 18 team was hoping for as it looks to finally make some noise in the Chase, the 14th-place showing was Busch’s best since the Brickyard all the way back in July. He’ll take the No. 8 overall seed into Chicagoland.

15. Tony Stewart, No. 14 Chevrolet, Stewart-Haas Racing. Getting a few normal races under his belt is crucial for Stewart right now, but the SHR driver desperately needed to win the Federated Auto Parts 400 to make the Chase. He finished on the lead lap, but will not have a chance to earn his fourth Sprint Cup Series title for the second year in a row. To subscribe to RaceView and get uncensored in-race audio, click here.

16. Danica Patrick, No. 10 Chevrolet, Stewart-Haas Racing. Improvement has been clear regarding Patrick’s 2014 regular season, but she missed the postseason for the second year in a row after not winning Saturday’s race at Richmond. Still, she was running on the lead lap for most of the race — the same can’t be said about plenty of the series’ stars who also finished at least a lap down — but SHR would’ve loved to have all four cars in the Chase. Instead, they just got two.

17. Kasey Kahne, No. 5 Chevrolet, Hendrick Motorsports. It’s a good thing Kahne secured his Chase berth with his win at Atlanta last week, because he didn’t even finish on the lead lap at Richmond. Still, it was the first race he hasn’t led a lap in since Pocono, so things could still be trending in a positive direction for the HMS driver.

18. Paul Menard, No. 27 Chevrolet, Richard Childress Racing. Menard has now completed the most successful regular season of his eight-year full-time Sprint Cup Series career, but even that wasn’t enough to make the 2014 Chase. The Richard Childress Racing driver has led the most laps — 45 — of his entire team this year, but failed to even finish on the lead lap Saturday.

19. Greg Biffle, No. 16 Ford, Roush Fenway Racing. Biffle’s race at Richmond was certainly nothing to jump for joy over, but as a driver that needed to race his was into the Chase, he did just that. The RFR driver remained cautiously passive throughout the race, knowing that as long as now-four-time 2014 winner and Ford stablemate Brad Keselowski was running the show, he could afford to take less risks and maintain his position. Watch Biffle’s post-race interview.

20. Austin Dillon, No. 3 Chevrolet, Richard Childress Racing. So much for seeing the No. 3 in contention for the 2014 Sprint Cup Series title. Dillon needed to win Saturday’s race at Richmond, but failed to finish on the lead lap. Overall, his regular season had a few highlights — most notably the Daytona 500 pole — but his absence from Victory Lane cost him a chance at the postseason.

21. Denny Hamlin, No. 11 Toyota, Joe Gibbs Racing. Richmond used to be one of Hamlin’s best venues, if not the best, but he hasn’t finished in the top 10 at the short track since 2012. Saturday again proved he’s been slipping there after he qualified 11th and finished outside the top 20 for the third consecutive race at the track. Still, Hamlin is in the Chase by virtue of his Talladega win.

22. Carl Edwards, No. 99 Ford, Roush Fenway Racing. As Edwards pointed out on the broadcast after the race, he won this event last year but did not enjoy the same success during last season’s Chase, so he’s hopeful that his crummy showing Saturday night will result in a solid Chase run in 2014. Who knows if that logic will end up working out, but in the meantime Edwards has 10 races to go in his Roush tenure and he’s sure to make them memorable.

23. AJ Allmendinger, No. 47 Chevrolet, JTG Daugherty Racing. Well, Allmendinger definitely showed his consistency at Richmond, starting and finishing 23rd. He was as high as 20th on Lap 60, as low as 26th on Lap 120 and finished smack-dab in the middle. That consistency will pay off in the Chase — if he’s able to make passes.

24. Reed Sorenson, No. 36 Chevrolet, Tommy Baldwin Racing. While a 24th-place finish certainly isn’t a huge victory for a smaller organization, you have to give Sorenson some credit. For the eighth time in a row, he’s finished at least four spots ahead of where he started.

25. Martin Truex Jr., No. 78 Chevrolet, Furniture Row Racing. A disappointing regular season comes to a close for Truex Jr., who experienced Richmond heartbreak for the second year in a row. Last year it was being removed from the Chase after the Michael Waltrip Racing race manipulation scandal, while this year he just failed to qualify completely in his first season with one-car organization Furniture Row Racing. A pit road speeding penalty on Lap 239 certainly didn’t help matters much, either.

26. Ricky Stenhouse Jr., No. 17 Ford, Roush Fenway Racing. Stenhouse is two years removed from winning the Nationwide Series title, but has yet to make many moves on the Sprint Cup Series side of things, missing the Chase for the second consecutive year. To make matters worse, his finishing position of 26th was a far cry from his starting position of seventh.

27. Marcos Ambrose, No. 9 Ford, Richard Petty Motorsports. The Australian driver once again misses the Chase after his disappointing Richmond finish. After placing second at Watkins Glen — perhaps the road course ace’s best shot at a win — the writing was on the wall, but the RPM driver still held out hope until the end of the Federated Auto Parts 400.

28. Justin Allgaier, No. 51 Chevrolet, HScott Motorsports. Allgaier didn’t move too far from his starting spot of 27th throughout the race, but he couldn’t seem to make any passes, either — which he did in the spring when he started 31st and finished 21st.

29. David Gilliland, No. 38 Ford, Front Row Racing. Not much to take away from Gilliand’s race — he started 30th and finished 29th — but he did pick up the fastest lap once during the race, so there’s at least that to hang his hat on.

30. Cole Whitt, No. 26 Toyota, BK Racing. Of the three BK Racing entries, Whitt finished best at Richmond and remains the highest (33rd) in the Sprint Cup Series standings.

31. Casey Mears, No. 13 Ford, Geico Racing. No, Casey Mears didn’t make the Chase with his 31st-place finish, but at least he escaped Richmond this time without getting punched in the face by Marcos Ambrose.

32. Josh Wise, No. 98 Chevrolet, Phil Parsons Racing. For Wise and his small-organization team, every small gain has to be counted, and for a team that started and finished 39th at Richmond in the spring, starting 36th and finishing 32nd Saturday night can be considered a success.

33. David Ragan, No. 34 Ford, Front Row Motorsports. Ragan may have timed his Talladega victory a year early, as he would have made the Chase last year under this year’s rules. That said, he didn’t exactly put himself in position much this year, with no top-15 finishes — including Saturday’s 33rd-place result at Richmond.

34. Landon Cassill, No. 40 Chevrolet, Hillman Racing. Cassill’s 34th-place showing was his worst finish since finishing 41st at Pocono last month. It’s also a downgrade from his solid 26th-place result after starting 43rd last time out at Richmond.

35. Mike Bliss, No. 37 Chevrolet, Tommy Baldwin Racing. For Bliss, it’s his best finish of the season. His previous best among the four races he’s competed in this year was 41st at Kentucky.

36. David Stremme, No. 90 Chevrolet, Circle Sport. Stremme’s 58 green flag passes ranked him among the race leaders in the category. Unfortunately, they didn’t get him very far.

37. Michael Annett, No. 7 Chevrolet, Tommy Baldwin Racing. Early in the race, Annett improved his position by 10 spots, moving up from 40th to 30th by Lap 60, but he steadily fell back down to finish a disappointing 37th.

38. Alex Bowman, No. 23 Toyota, BK Racing. Richmond marked the third consecutive race that Bowman finished worse than he qualified, which is not the direction the Sprint Cup Series rookie wants to be trending this late in the season.

39. Travis Kvapil, No. 32 Ford, FAS Lane Racing. Kvapil finished 39th for the third time this season in 16 starts. It was also the first time in five races that the driver of the No. 32 Ford did not improve on his starting position with his end result.

40. Joe Nemechek, No. 66 Toyota, Jay Robinson Racing. Nemechek improved one spot on his starting position, but overall it was his fifth finish of 40th-or-worse this season in 14 Sprint Cup races. For the spring Richmond race winner in 2003, it was also his sixth finish of 40th-or-worse in his last 10 races at the 0.75-mile track.

41. Matt Kenseth, No. 20 Toyota, Joe Gibbs Racing. On Lap 120, Kenseth briefly lost control of his No. 20 Toyota, but it was enough to send his ride sailing into the outside wall. After incurring extensive suspension damage during the incident that sent him to the garage for repairs, Kenseth got back out on the track to complete 330 laps, but remains winless in 2014. Watch Kenseth’s early pit stop.

42. Ryan Truex, No. 83 Toyota, BK Racing. It’s a disappointing race when a driver finishes 42nd. It has to be even more disappointing to run a race and move up only a single spot from the lowest possible qualifying position of 43rd.

43. J.J. Yeley, No. 93 Toyota, BK Racing. A brakes issue forced Yeley from the race just over 30 laps into the race. It’s his worst finish of the season and the second time he’s finished 43rd at Richmond (April 2011).

NASCAR.com’s RJ Kraft contributed to this article.

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See who is set to compete in the 15th race of NCWTS season

Entry # Driver Owner Crew chief Manufacturer Sponsor

1

0

Caleb Roark

Kenneth Grimes

Michael Stewart

14 Chevrolet

Grimes Irrigation & Construction

2

02

Tyler Young

Randy Young

Bryan Berry

14 Chevrolet

Randco/Young’s Building Systems

3

05

John Wes Townley

Tony Townley

Mike Beam

14 Toyota

Zaxby’s

4

6

Norm Benning

Norm Benning

Kevin Dargie

14 Chevrolet

TBA

5

07

Todd Shafer

Ken Smith

Rusty Ebersole

14 Chevrolet

ThunderExhaust.com

6

08

Ray Black Jr

Bobby Dotter

Jason Miller

14 Chevrolet

ScubaLife/NASE Worldwide

7

8

Joe Nemechek

Sidney Mauldin

Jerry Babb

14 Toyota

Jewel Osco

8

9

Brennan Newberry

Joe Denette

Ryan McKinney

14 Chevrolet

Qore-24

9

10

Jennifer Jo Cobb

Jennifer Jo Cobb

Steve Kuykendall

14 Chevrolet

Driven2Honor.org

10

112

Ted Minor

Joseph Cefalia

Garry Stephens

14 Chevrolet

FindIT.net

11

13

Jeb Burton

Duke Thorson

Jeriod Prince

14 Toyota

Estes-Carolina Nut Company

12

17

Timothy Peters

Tom Deloach

Marcus Richmond II

14 Toyota

Duke of Oil/Valvoline

13

19

Tyler Reddick

Brad Keselowski

Doug Randolph

14 Ford

Reese Towpower

14

20

Austin Dillon(i)

Bob Newberry

Christopher Rice

14 Chevrolet

RHEEM

15

21

Joey Coulter

Maurice Gallagher Jr

Jeff Stankiewicz

14 Chevrolet

Allegiant Travel

16

29

Ryan Blaney

Brad Keselowski

Chad Kendrick

14 Ford

Cooper Standard

17

31

Ben Kennedy

Steve Turner

Michael Shelton

14 Chevrolet

Heater.com

18

32

Tayler Malsam

Harry Scott Jr

Mike Hillman Jr

14 Chevrolet

Red Box

19

35

Mason Mingus

Kevin Cywinski

Mark Rette

14 Toyota

Call 811

20

136

Scott Stenzel

Beverly Mittler

Michael Mittler

14 Chevrolet

Mitler Bros/Ski Soda

21

40

Todd Peck

Michael Peck

Keith Wolfe

14 Chevrolet

Horizon Pharma/Arthritis Foundation

22

50

T J Bell

Mark Beaver

Ken Evans

14 Chevrolet

Dedicated to Electrical Linemen

23

51

Kyle Busch(i)

Kyle Busch

Eric Phillips

14 Toyota

Dollar Genereal

24

54

Darrell Wallace Jr

Kyle Busch

Jerry Baxter

14 Toyota

ToyotaCare

25

63

Justin Jennings

Michael Mittler

Michael Mittler

14 Chevrolet

LG Seeds/Mittler Bros Machine & Tool/Ski Soda

26

74

Mike Harmon(i)

Mike Harmon

Scott Stolzenberg

14 Chevrolet

MHR

27

77

German Quiroga

Tom Deloach

Butch Hylton

14 Toyota

NET10 Wireless

28

88

Matt Crafton

Rhonda Thorson

Carl Joiner

14 Toyota

Splash-FVP/Menards

29

98

Johnny Sauter

Mike Curb

Jeff Hensley

14 Toyota

Nextant/Curb Records

30

99

Bryan Silas

Chris Baluch

Cal Boprey

14 Chevrolet

TBA

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See who will be participating in the NNS Chicagoland race

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Entry # Driver Owner Crew chief Manufacturer Sponsor

1

01

Landon Cassill

Johnny Davis

Dave Fuge

14 Chevrolet

G&K Services

2

2

Brian Scott

Richard Childress

Phil Gould

14 Chevrolet

Shore Lodge

3

3

Ty Dillon

Richard Childress

Danny Stockman Jr

14 Chevrolet

T.B.D.

4

4

Jeffrey Earnhardt

Gary Keller

Gary Cogswell

14 Chevrolet

TeamJDMotorsports.com

5

5

Kevin Harvick(i)

Rick Hendrick

Ernie Cope

14 Chevrolet

Jimmy John’s

6

6

Trevor Bayne

Jack Roush

Chad Norris

14 Ford

AdvoCare

7

7

Regan Smith

Kelley Earnhardt-Miller

Ryan Pemberton

14 Chevrolet

AmericasPower.org

8

9

Chase Elliott

Dale Earnhardt Jr

Greg Ives

14 Chevrolet

NAPA AUTO PARTS

9

10

Blake Koch

Mark Smith

Todd Myers

14 Toyota

Supportmilitary.org

10

11

Elliott Sadler

J D Gibbs

Chris Gayle

14 Toyota

OneMain Financial

11

14

Eric McClure

Mark Smith

Wes Ward

14 Toyota

Hefty Ultimate / Reynolds Wrap

12

16

Ryan Reed

Jack Roush

Seth Barbour

14 Ford

ADA Drive to Stop Diabetes presented by Lilly Diabetes

13

17

Tanner Berryhill

Adrian Berryhill

Daniel Stillman

14 Dodge

NationalCashLenders.com

14

19

Mike Bliss

Mark Smith

Paul Clapprood

14 Toyota

Tweaker Energy Shot

15

20

Denny Hamlin(i)

Joe Gibbs

Kevin Kidd

14 Toyota

SportClips

16

22

Ryan Blaney(i)

Roger Penske

Jeremy Bullins

14 Ford

Discount Tire

17

23

Robert Richardson Jr

Robert Richardson Sr

George Church

14 Chevrolet

Lilly Trucking/38 Special Filtered Cigars

18

28

J J Yeley

James Whitener

Steve Plattenberger

13 Dodge

Texas 28 Spirits Stage

19

29

Daniel Suarez Garza

Robby Benton

Keith Hinkein

14 Toyota

Arris

20

31

Dylan Kwasniewski

Steve Turner

Shannon Rursch

14 Chevrolet

Rockstar

21

33

Paul Menard(i)

Richard Childress

Nick Harrison

14 Chevrolet

Tarkett / Menards

22

39

Ryan Sieg

Rod Sieg

Kevin Starland

14 Chevrolet

StationDigital.com

23

40

Josh Wise(i)

Curtis Key Sr

Gary Showalter

14 Chevrolet

Curtis Key Plumbing

24

42

Kyle Larson(i)

Harry Scott Jr

Scott Zipadelli

14 Chevrolet

Colgate

25

43

Dakoda Armstrong

Richard Petty

Philippe Lopez

14 Ford

WinField

26

44

Will Kimmel III

Mark Smith

Greg Conner

14 Toyota

Ingersoll Rand

27

46

Matt Dibenedetto

Curtis Key Sr

Kyle Symington

14 Chevrolet

Curtis Key Plumbing

28

51

Jeremy Clements

Tony Clements

Ricky Pearson

14 Chevrolet

Allsouthelectric.com/Value Lighting

29

52

Joey Gase

Jimmy Means

Tim Brown

14 Chevrolet

TBA

30

54

Kyle Busch(i)

J D Gibbs

Adam Stevens

14 Toyota

Monster Energy

31

55

Brennan Newberry(i)

Jimmy Dick

Jason Miller

14 Chevrolet

Qore24

32

60

Chris Buescher

Jack Roush

Scott Graves

14 Ford

Roush Performance Parts

33

62

Brendan Gaughan

Richard Childress

Shane Wilson

14 Chevrolet

South Point

34

70

Derrike Cope

Mary Louise Miller

Bobby Burrell

14 Chevrolet

YOUTHEORY

35

172

John Jackson

James Carter

Richard Garcia

14 Chevrolet

Crash Claims R US

36

74

Mike Harmon

Mike Harmon

Gary Ritter

12 Dodge

TBA

37

180

Ross Chastain(i)

Shigeaki Hattori

Bruce Cook

14 Toyota

Goodyear

38

87

Joe Nemechek(i)

Andrea Nemechek

Steven Gray

14 Chevrolet

TBD

39

89

Morgan Shepherd

Morgan Shepherd

Kevyn Rebolledo

14 Chevrolet

Courtney Construction

40

190

Martin Roy

Michelle Gosselin

Mario Gosselin

14 Chevrolet

TBA

41

93

Mike Wallace

Gregg Mixon

David Goulet

13 Dodge

JGL Racing

42

98

Aric Almirola(i)

Fred Biagi

Jon Hanson

14 Ford

Smithfield Foods

43

99

James Buescher

Robby Benton

Matthew Lucas

14 Toyota

Rheem

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Six-time series champion has two Coors Light Pole Awards at 1.5-mile track

Jimmie Johnson has the most Coors Light Pole Awards at Chicagoland Speedway with two. Johnson took the pole position for the 2005 and 2012 races at the 1.5-mile track. In both instances he finished in the top three. The six-time Sprint Cup Series champion has a strong history at the track despite having yet to win a race there. He has seven top-five finishes, 10 top-10 finishes and an average finish of 8.9 in 12 starts.

 

Miss Sprint Cup to chat with all 16 Chase drivers, Thursday 2 p.m. ET

RELATED: Play Perfect Chase Grid Challenge for chance at $100,000 prize
MORE: Full coverage of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup format changes | Official news release | Changes explained | Chase Facts and FAQ

Excitement is building for the start of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, and you can be part of the action.

Submit a question to Miss Sprint Cup via Twitter at the hashtag #AskMSC, and she could use it when she chats with all 16 Chase Grid drivers on Thursday, starting at 2 p.m. ET in Chicago.

Ask away and then come back on Thursday to watch the live chat at 2 p.m. ET. It figures to be a fun way to get the first Chase weekend underway.

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