Kahne earns first victory — and Chase berth — with thrilling finish

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HAMPTON, Ga. — It was Tony Stewart’s return to racing that dominated the headlines before Sunday night’s Oral-B USA 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway, but it was Kasey Kahne who stole the show — and a berth in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

In a race that went 10 laps beyond its scheduled distance of 325 laps, Kahne surged past Matt Kenseth on the second attempt at a green-white-checkered-flag finish to win for the first time this year and the third time at the 1.54-mile speedway.

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Kenseth finished second and clinched a Chase spot on points, leaving just two of 16 positions in NASCAR’s 10-race playoff available in Saturday’s regular-season finale at Richmond International Raceway.

After streaking into the lead on a restart with 24 laps left, Kahne held the top spot until a caution for a fracas between Kyle Busch and Martin Truex Jr. slowed the field with less than two laps left.

On the first attempt at overtime, a multicar wreck in Turn 1 wiped out the dominant car of polesitter Kevin Harvick, requiring a second attempt at a two-lap shootout.

With four fresh tires to Kenseth’s two, Kahne overtook the No. 20 Toyota after he and Kenseth battled for a lap after the restart and pulled away to win the 17th race of his career by .574 seconds.

"We were all over the place during the race, but the guys stayed with me and worked hard," Kahne said. "On those restarts — I didn’t know what would happen, because I had great restarts all night, and I struggle with restarts a lot.

"That’s big, because that is one of the things you have to be good at, and it worked really well tonight."

It also took a huge weight off Kahne’s shoulders, as the end of the regular season approached.

"Yeah, we are locked in, and I hate that it comes down to this Atlanta or Richmond just about every year for me," Kahne said of the pressure to make the Chase. "Sometimes we are in, sometimes we are out. But thankful that now at HMS (Hendrick Motorsports), I’ve been in all three years now. We have the pressure all the way to Richmond, but we made it again–thankful for that."

Denny Hamlin ran third, followed by Jimmie Johnson and Carl Edwards. Danica Patrick finished sixth, beating by four positions the best previous finish by a female driver at Atlanta (Janet Guthrie was 10th in 1978).

The race that turned the season around for Kahne provided little solace for Stewart.

Starting a Cup race for the first time since his involvement in the fatal sprint car accident that took the life of Kevin Ward Jr. on Aug. 9 at Canandaigua (N.Y.) Speedway, Stewart charged forward from his 12th-place starting position and ran as high as fourth in the early going.

But Stewart’s race came undone moments after a restart on Lap 123, when Kyle Busch‘s Toyota pinched Stewart’s Chevy into the outside wall off Turn 2, significantly damaging both cars. On Lap 160 Matt Kenseth, then the leader, passed Stewart to put the No. 14 a lap down.

Twelve laps later, a blown right front tire sent Stewart hard into the Turn 2 wall, forcing him to the garage and out of the race. Credited with a 41st-place finish, Stewart has one more chance—on Saturday at Richmond—to take advantage of a NASCAR dispensation that kept him eligible for the Chase.

Having missed three races, Stewart must win at the .75-mile short track to qualify for NASCAR’s 10-race playoff.

After exiting his car, Stewart declined requests for interviews, but crew chief Chad Johnston spoke to reporters in the garage.

"I went into today with some pretty high hopes of finishing well and possibly coming out of here with a win, but it just didn’t work out in our favor," Johnston said. "We got into a little trouble with the 18 (Busch) and got into the outside wall, knocked the toe out of it, and a lot of heavy right side damage.

"We were just trying to fix that and salvage what we could out of the day but then we blew a right front there right before that caution came out."

If Stewart had issues on the track, so did one prominent driver on the Chase bubble. The shifter on Clint Bowyer’s No. 15 Toyota broke, preventing him from getting the car into high gear. Bowyer lost 22 laps in the garage as his team made repairs. He finished 38th, leaving his chances to make the Chase on points in dire jeopardy.

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Winner of 40 races, championship discusses new role with Roush

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Jimmy Fennig, the crew chief for the No. 99 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series team for Carl Edwards and Roush Fenway Racing, will leave the pit box at season’s end, according to an ESPN report during the Oral-B USA 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway.

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With two wins this season at Bristol Motor Speedway and Sonoma Raceway, Fennig will end his career with a shot at the championship as part of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. Those victories have brought his career total to 40.

Fennig began his career as a crew chief in 1986 with Mark Martin and was Martin’s pit boss from 1997-2001 before working with Kurt Busch for four seasons, including a championship campaign in the first Chase in 2004.

The Milwaukee native earned his first two career wins with NASCAR Hall of Famer Bobby Allison in 1987 and 1988. He won 14 races with Martin and 14 more with Busch. Before teaming with Edwards last season, Fennig worked with fellow Wisconsin racer, Matt Kenseth, for three years and six wins.

The ESPN report indicated Fennig was speaking with the Roush Fenway Racing about a new role within the organization.

Team president Steve Newmark said at Indianapolis last month that Fennig’s future wouldn’t be discussed until later in the year.

"All of our crew chief decisions, engineer decisions, as you guys know, they’re made much later in the fall when Robbie Reiser and Jack (Roush) sit down with those guys and they have a dialogue about what 2015 will look like," Newmark said.

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See who is in NASCAR’s playoffs with one race to go

MORE: Full race results | Updated series standings
RELATED: Full coverage of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup format changes | Official news release | Changes explained | Chase Facts and FAQ

In the Oral-B USA 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway, Kasey Kahne clinched his spot in the Chase Grid with a win, and Matt Kenseth clinched based on points as they qualify for the final regular season race at Richmond International Raceway in the Federated Auto Parts 400 (Sept. 6, 7:30 p.m. ET, ABC).

Heading into Sunday night’s race, 12 drivers had clinched spots in the 2014 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup:

AJ Allmendinger, Aric AlmirolaKurt Busch, Kyle Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Carl EdwardsJeff GordonDenny Hamlin, Kevin HarvickJimmie Johnson, Brad Keselowski and Joey Logano    

After the 25th points race of NASCAR’s regular season, here is how the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup standings look:

2014 Chase Grid Outlook

 
Pos.
Drivers
Wins
Points
Chase Bonus Pts
1
 Jeff Gordon
3
872
9
2
 Dale Earnhardt Jr.
3
851
9
3
 Joey Logano
3
791
9
4
 Brad Keselowski
3
782
9
5
 Jimmie Johnson
3
766
9
6
 Carl Edwards
2
755
6
7
 Kevin Harvick
2
748
6
8
 Kasey Kahne
1
708
3
9
 Kyle Busch
1
657
3
10
 Denny Hamlin
1
636
3
11
 Kurt Busch
1
614
3
12
 Aric Almirola
1
594
3
13
 AJ Allmendinger
1
590
3
14
 Matt Kenseth
0
794
0
15
 Ryan Newman
0
747
0
16
 Greg Biffle
0
728
0
Outside Looking In
17
 Clint Bowyer
0
705
0
18
 Kyle Larson
0
704
0
19
 Paul Menard
0
675
0
20
 Austin Dillon
0
674
0
21
 Jamie McMurray
0
666
0
22
 Brian Vickers
0
650
0
23
 Marcos Ambrose
0
628
0
24
 Casey Mears
0
583
0
25
 Martin Truex Jr.
0
561
0
26
 Tony Stewart
0
540
0
27
 Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
0
538
0
28
 Danica Patrick
0
500
0
29
 Justin Allgaier
0
443
0
30
 Michael Annett
0
393
0
 
Green = Locked into the Chase, provided they attempt to qualify for the remaining four races
 
Orange = No wins, Inside the current Chase Grid’s top 16 – Currently in the Chase, not locked in
 
Red = Inside the current top 30 in points, outside of the Chase cutoff

 

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Kentucky entrepreneur founded company in 1966, also owned raceway

David Garvin, the founder of Camping World, died Saturday at his home after an accidental fall, according to a report in the Bowling Green (Kentucky) Daily News.

Warren County deputies responded to a call to his Bowling Green home after Garvin slipped while working on his roof. The 71-year-old was pronounced dead at the scene, and authorities considered the death accidental.

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At the age of 23 in 1966, Garvin started a small store and mail-order business that sold camping products and supplies. He grew the mailing list to nearly 7 million names and eventually opened 100 stores with 5,000 employees.

Garvin and his family also owned the Beech Bend Park and Raceway, hosting carnival rides as well as motorcycle and auto races.

NASCAR released the following statement on the passing of Camping World founder Gavin:

"NASCAR offers its deepest condolences to David Garvin’s family and friends. An innovator well ahead of his time, Garvin started Camping World as a small local store, and grew it into an enormous business. Camping World is a valued NASCAR partner, and our thoughts are with its thousands of employees."

"I am stunned," Marcus Lemonis, the Camping World CEO, told RV Daily Report. "In my opinion, he was one of the greatest pioneers in the RV industry."

Of the 2009 inductee into the RV Hall of Fame, Lemonis also tweeted:

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All times ET

TV LISTINGS / BUY TICKETS FOR RICHMOND /WEEKEND TRACK EVENTS

This week, the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and NASCAR Nationwide Series head to Richmond International Raceway.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6:

PRE-RACE SCHEDULE
— 5:30:00 p.m.: NSCS Driver/Crew Chief Meeting (Tent)
— 6:00:00 p.m.: Pre Race Concert by: The Silver Bullets (40 mins)
— 7:00:00 p.m.: NSCS Drivers Introductions with NASCAR Special Awards
— 7:27:00 p.m.: Team Fastrax Skydive Team lands in the ballfield
— 7:27:30 p.m.: Intro Pledge of Allegiance
— 7:27:45 p.m.: Pledge of Allegiance: Wounded Warriors
— 7:28:15 p.m.: Intro God Bless America
— 7:28:30 p.m.: God Bless America: Gary Coggin
— 7:30:30 p.m.: Intro Presentation of Colors by: Ft. Lee Color Guard
— 7:30:45 p.m.: Invocation by: Tom Potter
— 7:31:15 p.m.: Intro National Anthem
— 7:31:30 p.m.: National Anthem: TRADOC Herald Trumpets (Army National Guard to unfurl American Flag)
— 7:33:10 p.m.: Flyby TOT: Four T-6’s from turn 1 to turn 4
— 7:38:00 p.m.: "Drivers, Start Your Engines" by: Chris Clair, Lead Technician, Clair’s Service Station
— 7:43:30 p.m.: Green Flag – Federated Auto Parts 400 (400 Laps, 300 Miles)

ON TRACK
— 7:30 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Federated Auto Parts 400 (400 laps, 300 miles), ABC  (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (
Watch live)
— 11:15 p.m.: Post Sprint Cup Series race


THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4:

ON TRACK
— 1-2 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series practice (Get results)
— 2:30-4 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series final practice (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 11:15 a.m.: Chase Elliott
— 11:45 a.m.: Elliott Sadler
— 12 p.m.: Ryan Blaney
— 4:15 p.m.: Matt Kenseth
— 4:30 p.m.: Kyle Larson

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5:

ON TRACK
— 9 a.m.-noon: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice (Get results)
— 1-2:20 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, ESPN2 (Get results)
— 3:40 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, ESPN2 (Get results)
— 5:40 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, ESPN2 (Get results)
— 7:30 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series Virginia529 College Savings 250 (250 laps, 187.5 miles), ESPN2 (Get results)

GARAGECAM

— 12:30 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series (Watch live)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 8:15 a.m.: Jimmie Johnson
— 12:30 p.m.: Darlington Raceway announcement
— 2:30 p.m.: Carl Edwards
— 2:45 p.m.: Ryan Newman
— 3 p.m.: Kasey Kahne
— 3:15 p.m.: Greg Biffle
— 4:45 p.m.: Dale Earnhardt Jr.
— 6:30 p.m. ET: Post Sprint Cup qualifying
— 10:15 p.m.: Post Nationwide Series race

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In first race since Pocono, Stewart exits with blown tire

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HAMPTON, Ga. — The hand-scrawled messages of encouragement left by fans on the wall alongside the No. 14 car’s pit stall told the story with dozens of notes with well-wishes heralding Tony Stewart‘s comeback to competition. "Welcome back, Smoke," "Glad you’re back," and "Go get ’em, Tony!" were among the most frequent refrains, etching the barrier in front of the Stewart-Haas Racing team’s war wagon with doting graffiti.
 
If Sharpie on concrete didn’t spell out the overwhelming fan reaction, the roaring ovation for Stewart as his name was called in driver introductions made it loud and clear.

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On a muggy Sunday night at Atlanta Motor Speedway that featured a little bit of everything — a cat or squirrel or both on the race track in the early going — Stewart returned to the sport after a three-week absence, marking his first competition since he was involved in a sprint-car incident that claimed the life of 20-year-old driver Kevin Ward Jr. The night ended in early dejection with two bouts of on-track trouble near the race’s halfway point, the latter a fender-shredding blown tire that sidelined him to stay.
 
"It’s very disappointing," crew chief Chad Johnston said after Stewart pulled his Chevrolet back to the garage for a 41st-place finish. "It’s obviously his first week back; we were hoping for bigger things. Qualified well and had good speed in practice and had good speed at the beginning of the race. Definitely not the outlook we were looking for."
 
Friday, Stewart made his first public appearance since the fatal accident that dark night in Canandaigua, New York, saying in a self-prepared statement that the tragedy would affect his life forever. While still shaken by the incident, this weekend he took his first steps toward finding a new normal, even as the authorities’ investigation into the accident continues, turning his mind toward returning to work in the Labor Day 500-miler.
 
The biggest cheer for any of the 43 drivers in the field for the next-to-last race of the regular season was reserved for Stewart, who offered a wave as he walked across the driver introduction stage during pre-race ceremonies. Once back at the car before the command to fire engines, Stewart took a moment of prayer in a circle with his team alongside Johnny Morris, founder of sponsor Bass Pro Shops, and Rusty Rush, chairman and CEO of Rush Truck Centers, another Stewart backer, before loading in.
 
During the formation laps, Johnston gave his driver a final pep talk via in-car communication: "Nice and smooth, all day long. You know how this place is. Take care of our stuff and we’ll see if we have something for them at the end."
 
Stewart keyed his radio: "Guys, be careful. Be safe down there. Appreciate everything."
 
The therapeutic effect that Stewart was seeking was accompanied by performance early on as he bolted from the 12th starting position in the Oral B USA 500 up to seventh place in the first two laps and further up into the top five by Lap 14 — a lap matching his car number that also coincided with a planned show of support from fans. But the early gains turned into a fight against his handling and escalated to a Lap 121 smack of the wall after a run-in with Kyle Busch on a jammed-up restart.
 
"We just got run over, big time," Stewart said over the radio back to his crew after Busch’s No. 18 drifted up the track to make contact. "Yeah, that was pretty hard there."
 
After Stewart reported to Johnston that the steering wheel was knocked an inch to the left, Johnston had him come in for multiple stops to fix the scraped-up car’s alignment. He resumed the race in 20th place, the next-to-last driver on the lead lap.
 
From there, Stewart pressed on with a damaged race car, eventually falling a lap down just before the halfway point in the 325-lap race. Not long after he was lapped, his ill-handling car blew a right-front tire on Lap 172, shedding sheet metal to bring out the race’s fifth caution period and remove him from contention. He wound up 41st in the final order with a car that Johnston said was too damaged to repair.
 
Just as the fans in attendance were overwhelmingly pleased to have Stewart back in the field, the team was just as happy to welcome back their quarterback after fielding cars for interim super-subs Jeff Burton and Regan Smith the previous three weeks.
 
"It’s been awesome to have him back all weekend long," Johnston said. "He’s the owner, he’s the leader and he’s the driver, but more importantly, he’s the leader. We all look at him to lead us and to guide us. It was good to have him back. We look forward to going on to the rest of the year and getting it back to Victory Lane."
 
If that goal were to happen Saturday in the regular-season finale at Richmond International Raceway, Stewart would seal a last-ditch clinch into the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoffs, thanks to an exemption from NASCAR officials because of the unique circumstances of his absence. Stewart remains mired deep in the Sprint Cup standing, but a regular-season win would punch his postseason ticket.
 
The goal of finishing Sunday’s race in Atlanta ended with disconcerting results, but the team has its leader back. The development that was met with a warm embrace from supportive fans, who got one of their favorites back on a warm night in Atlanta.
 
"Definitely, we’ll be in Richmond and we’ll see if can’t win Richmond and get in the Chase at the last moment," Johnston said. "It’ll be exciting."

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Catch up quickly before Sunday’s Oral-B USA 500 (7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN)

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What:
 55th annual Oral-B USA 500.

Where:
Atlanta Motor Speedway, 1.54-mile oval in Hampton, Georgia.
When:
 Sunday, Aug. 31, 7:30 p.m. ET.
TV/Radio:
 ESPN, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.
Distance: 
325 laps; 500.5 miles.

Pit road speed: 45 mph.
Caution car speed:
55 mph.
Fuel window:
50-55 laps.

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On the front row
1. Kevin Harvick, Stewart-Haas Racing No. 4 Chevrolet (190.398 mph).
2. Brad Keselowski, Team Penske No. 2 Ford (190.058 mph).

Fastest in practice
First practice:
Carl Edwards, Roush Fenway Racing No. 99 Ford (192.855 mph).
Second practice:
Joey Logano, Team Penske No. 22 Ford (189.351 mph).
Final practice:
Matt Kenseth, Joe Gibbs Racing No. 20 Toyota (188.251 mph).

Driver rating
Best driver rating average at Atlanta based on past 15 races:

Jeff Gordon, 105.6; Jimmie Johnson, 104.8; Tony Stewart, 100.2; Carl Edwards, 100.0.

Last year’s winner
Kyle Busch, Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 Toyota.

They said it I: "A lot of guys have gone in and out making adjustments. We still have a lot of gains to make on our car, and it’s already pretty good. I love racing here and expect to do well. We’ll hammer down on it (Saturday)." — Dale Earnhardt Jr., on trying to get his No. 88 Chevrolet in race mode for Sunday.

They said it II: "Fontana’s pretty worn out, but this place is on a whole other level of worn-out. It’s pretty crazy, but kind of frustrating, too, because you slow down so much every lap." — Kyle Larson, who finished a career-best second at similarly well-worn Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, California, earlier this season.

They said it III: "Once the tires start to wear out, the better car will prevail eventually. It might take a little bit of time, but eventually it will be the best. That’s why everyone is trying to make their car good on the long run." — Joey Logano, last week’s winner at Bristol Motor Speedway.

Chase picture: A quartet of drivers without regular-season wins have a tenuous grip on the last four provisional berths in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup postseason — Matt Kenseth, Ryan Newman, Clint Bowyer and Greg Biffle. While their position in the standings has them tentatively in the playoff mix, a victory in Sunday’s 500-miler or next Saturday’s regular-season finale at Richmond International Raceway would take the guesswork out of the equation. Kyle Larson, Kasey Kahne, Austin Dillon and Paul Menard currently rank as the first four out.

Making the list: Jeff Gordon leads active NASCAR Sprint Cup Series drivers with five victories at Atlanta. His tally is still shy of Dale Earnhardt’s nine Atlanta wins, the most on the all-time list.

History lesson: NASCAR Hall of Famer Fireball Roberts won the first race in NASCAR’s premier series at what was then called Atlanta International Raceway on July 31, 1960. The track has seen several changes over the years, starting life as a 1.5-mile oval and reconfiguring midseason in 1997 to a 1.54-mile track, flipping the start/finish line to the north straightaway and adding a dogleg.

Former Atlanta winners in the field: Jeff Gordon (5); Kurt Busch, Carl Edwards, Jimmie Johnson, Tony Stewart (3); Kyle Busch, Kasey Kahne (2), Dale Earnhardt Jr., Denny Hamlin, Kevin Harvick (1).

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Team’s test serves them well at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park

Related: See the full race lineup

BOWMANVILLE, Ontario, Canada — When the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series rolled in to Canadian Tire Motorsport Park for the first time last year, drivers weren’t sure what to expect from the track. ThorSport Racing’s Johnny Sauter was looking to rebound from three finishes of 19th or worse in four races, a streak that sent him out of the top five in standings. Teammate Matt Crafton hoped to tighten his hold on the series points lead.

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The 2.459-mile road course didn’t play well with those plans. Sauter suffered from a gas line issue, completing just 34 of the race’s 64 laps. Crafton fought for a 10th-place finish, only to have standings runner-up James Buescher narrow his deficit.

Things are a little different this year. Sauter is the one in the lead now, with Crafton eight points behind him. Their third teammate, Jeb Burton, has a steady hold on 10th in points. And they know what to expect.

"We were really off where we needed to be last year, but we have a pretty good grasp of where we need to be this year," Crafton said. "We actually got the opportunity to go shake our truck down at a little road course up in Ohio on Monday, so I think we will be ready to put on a good show in Canada this weekend."

With all three ThorSport drivers looking for redemption in their return to the track, that show may become one of in-fighting after strong practice results across the board, a result of both having raced at the track before and setups fine tuned during a test at Nelson Ledges Road Course, a 2-mile track an hour east of Cleveland.

"There’s a couple of turns there that are really long right hand corners, very similar to what you have here, but this place is unique to itself, it’s so fast, its really hard to find a place to test for a place like this," Sauter said of the session. "So I think from a driver’s perspective, you just try to go there and just get familiar with turning right and left and shifting and braking, and just doing all those things.

"The setup was a little bit different than what we ran here last year, so I think those were a couple things we were trying to play with a little bit, figure those things out, and I think the truck handles good, I just need to figure out how to go a little faster."

Though Sauter is admittedly not the strongest driver off the paved ovals, his improvement at Eldora and so far in Canada show he’s becoming more comfortable at non-conventional tracks. He finished 29th at the dirt track last year after a crash on Lap 120 of 153, and followed that up with an eighth-place finish in his return to Eldora this year. If he can build on last year’s experience at CTMP, another strong result could be the reward for his eighth national series road course start.

"I didn’t think I was the greatest and I still don’t think I’m the greatest road racer, but I’ve had some decent days on road courses in the past, so if we unload pretty decent, then I think we’ll be in good shape," Sauter said.

With an 11th-place starting position, Sauter improved last year’s qualifying result by five spots. Crafton will start in eighth and Burton qualified 17th.

Somewhat removed from his teammates’ battle for the points lead, Burton’s results have been quietly hinting he’s a contender in this weekend’s Chevrolet Silverado 250. Last season, he took on a double duty weekend to gain extra laps in his first trip to the track.

"2013 was my first time on a road course, and after running the Canadian Tire race prior to the Truck Series race, I felt like I had a good grasp on the track," he said. "Overall I believe I did pretty well. I had a top-five truck, but unfortunately I went laps down early when I had to go behind the wall for my team to fix a broken transmission. I feel like if we didn’t have that issue, I could have put up a fight."

Burton was the fastest ThorSport driver in the early practice session and the only one in the top 10 with the fifth-fastest speed of the morning. Crafton was 11th-fastest and Sauter 13th-fastest. Roles reversed in the final session, with Crafton and Sauter finishing seventh and 10th respectively, and Burton 12th. In the points standings, Burton is 94 points back from Sauter. Crafton, eight points back from the leader, can strike at any time — something his teammate is aware of, if not happy about.

"I’ll be honest with you: If I can’t win the championship, I want my teammate to win it," Sauter said. "You know, it’s obviously for ThorSport. Having said all that, you still want to win the championship, and nobody wants to win it more than I do, but it’s going to be tight all the way down to the wire.

"If you’re a team owner like Duke and Rhonda Thorson, this is your dream season. … We’re just going to race each other hard, and whoever comes out on top comes out on top. My mentality is, at the end of the day, if you can look back and say, ‘Hey, I gave it 100 percent, did all I could,’ and you come up short, you come up short."

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Get race details, storylines and quotes ahead of Sunday’s race (1:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1)

What: Second annual Chevrolet Silverado 250
Where:
Canadian Tire Motorsport Park, Bowmanville, Ontario, Canada
When:
Sunday, Aug. 31 at 1:30 p.m. ET
TV/Radio:
FOX Sports 1, MRN
Distance:
64 laps, 157.37 miles

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On the front row
1. Alex Tagliani, No. 19 Brad Keselowski Racing Ford (109.889 mph)
2. Gray Gaulding, No. 20 NTS Motorsports Chevrolet (109.301 mph)

Failed to qualify
None

Fastest in practice
First practice:
German Quiroga, No. 77 Red Horse Racing Toyota (108.967 mph)
Second practice:
Andrew Ranger, No. 53 NDS Motorsports Dodge RAM (109.614 mph)

Inaugural winner
Chase Elliott

Former winners in the field
None. Darrell Wallace Jr. has the best finish among drivers competing in the race. He was fourth place last year.

Double duty: Three drivers — Alex Tagliani, Andrew Ranger and Ray Courtemanche Jr. — will compete in both the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and Canadian Tire Series events this weekend.

Try, try again: "You know, the biggest thing, I think, is just taking care of your equipment — making sure you don’t shift when you’re not supposed to and burn the brakes off the thing, and ultimately just finish this race. I’ve never claimed to be a road race expert, so having said all that, I just need to keep all four tires on the asphalt all day and I think we’ll come away with a better finish than what we think we can." — Johnny Sauter

Road course compliments: "Road course racing is a blast. It’s a lot of fun turning left and right, plus shifting." — John Hunter Nemechek on racing at CTMP

Applied experience: "It will be kind of new, but with all the data acquisition, simulation and all the other stuff we use these days, I don’t know if you are ever truly going to a race track for the first time." – No. 51 crew chief Eric Phillips on both he and driver Erik Jones racing at Mosport for the first time

Collaborative effort: "(Friday), I was going around with the Ford safety truck with Matt Crafton and Ben Kennedy … and Matt was pretty nice to give us some tips of what he felt last year around the track. I think as a driver, you have to feel the beast that you’re going to be driving, and then it makes more sense once you’re in the truck. So all the things that he was saying to us while we were driving out there, they were very valuable and then they all made sense because when I went out, what he was saying, it really kind of applied on what the truck was doing out there. So it was quite nice of him to give us all those tips before we went out." — Alex Tagliani

Whew!: "I’d say one … trying to push it into 5 A and B, back in the corner there, I’d gotten in a little too hot, and you’ve always gotta have a couple of those or you’re not driving it hard enough." — Cameron Hayley on whether he’d had any nervous moments Saturday.

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