Rookie forced to evacuate with haste: ‘I had smoke in the cockpit’

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BROOKLYN, Mich. — Kyle Larson felt the right front tire of his No. 42 Chevrolet blow without warning, and he certainly felt the ensuing impact as his car crunched the outside wall in Turn 4.

After that unpleasant experience Larson used a pair of other senses to determine he might be in danger — sight and smell. It was impossible to miss the dark orange flames leaping out of his battered car as acrid smoke drifted into the cockpit, plugging Larson’s nose and throat.

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It was that final sensation that caused Larson to lower his window net and quickly climb from his car in an incident that provided the first test case of a rule NASCAR formalized Friday. It states, in part, that a driver cannot emerge from a wrecked vehicle until told it’s OK to do so by either the sanctioning body itself or track or safety officials. There is an exception made for instances of fire or smoke in the cockpit, and Larson had both.

So he radioed his team to declare he was climbing out, dropped the window net and emerged from his still-on-fire car and stood as far away from the on-track action as was safe.

"There was a little bit of a hesitation (to get out of the car), but I had smoke in the cockpit," Larson said after being checked and released from the infield care center. "I let my crew know I was going to get out. I don’t know if NASCAR listens to that stuff. Once I got out, I just stayed as close as I could to the car. But I had to get out with all the smoke in there." 

The 22-year-old rookie, who entered the day with three top-10s in his past four starts and a fast Chevrolet at the 2-mile Michigan International Speedway oval, was scored 37th when he emerged from the infield care center with the race halfway gone.

As cars that had previously wrecked either continued logging laps or exited the garage and got back on track, Larson was soon scored in last place. Considering his vehicle was blackened and out of the race at that point, it’s also where he finished.

The magnifications were massive, as Larson fell from 10th in the point standings to 14th, a precipitous drop that also knocked the rookie out of the current 16-driver Chase field.

"It’s a shame," Larson said. "We were up there in the points battle and we’ll just have to work even harder now on our Target Chevy to make the Chase. It sucks. … We’ve been working really hard to get back up in points after a couple of DNFs (this year). We’re going to try to get a win and not worry about points anymore."

His next opportunity is Saturday night at Bristol. Now that Larson is 24 points behind the current 16th-seeded driver Greg Biffle with three regular-season races remaining, a win becomes the sole focus of the No. 42 team.

"We did have a really good car this weekend, that’s why this is so disappointing," Larson said. "But we’ve been fast every weekend and we were really good at Bristol earlier in the year. So we just have to go back there and try to get a win. That’s all we can do at this point."

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No. 10 gets loose, triggering incident; Kenseth forced to garage

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BROOKLYN, Mich. — A nine-car wreck on a Lap 26 restart that was triggered by Danica Patrick getting loose sent three competitors to the garage early in Sunday’s Pure Michigan 400.

Battling for position with Jeff Burton, who is driving the No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet, Patrick got sideways and slid down the track in Turn 2, setting off a chain reaction.

Justin Allgaier rammed Patrick’s No. 10 Chevy, with Michael Annett and Trevor Bayne stacking up behind.

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Matt Kenseth, Martin Truex Jr., JJ Yeley and Travis Kvapil were also caught up in the incident, which produced the third caution flag of the day at Michigan International Speedway.

Kenseth, Bayne and Allgaier were forced to wheel their vehicles behind the wall for extensive repairs. Patrick and Truex stayed on pit road for their respective fixes.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. was one of multiple drivers to deftly avoid the pileup, driving his No. 88 Chevrolet down onto the apron to keep it clean. 

Kenseth, currently third in the points standings, went behind the wall just as Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Kyle Busch was rejoining the race after hitting the wall in an earlier incident.

Bayne and Truex Jr. both missed Friday’s opening practice and qualifying session and started from the rear of the field due to driver changes. Bayne also missed Saturday’s pair of practices while competing in the NASCAR Nationwide Series event in Mid-Ohio.

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Was running 19th when he hit wall on front stretch

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BROOKLYN, Mich. —  Kyle Busch‘s tough run of luck in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series extended to a third rocky week Sunday with an early scrape with the wall at Michigan International Speedway.

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Busch’s Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 Toyota snapped loose and into the Turn 4 wall shortly after the start of Sunday’s Pure Michigan 400. His car then went high in Turns 1 and 2 to bring out the race’s first caution period in just the fourth of 200 laps.

Busch, who started 24th in the 43-car field, brought the car directly behind the wall to the garage. After debriefing with his crew, Busch jumped in with a drill to help the team with repairs.

Busch returned to the race in last place, 25 laps off the leader’s pace. He returned to the garage after the 160th lap.

After scoring runner-up finishes in three out of four races from late June to late July, Busch is looking at logging his third consecutive lackluster finish. He started this month with a 42nd place after engine failure at Pocono Raceway and followed it with a 40th-place effort after sustaining damage at Watkins Glen.

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Veteran driver holds slight lead over teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr.

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

Jeff Gordon regained the top spot in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Chase standings with Sunday’s win at Michigan International Speedway.

Gordon leads the premier series in points, and is one of four drivers with three Sprint Cup Series wins this season.

With a repeat winner at Michigan, drivers that already had one win clinched a spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, Aric Almirola, AJ Allmendinger and Kurt Busch are now locked into the 16-driver playoff field provided they attempt to qualify for the next three races.

In addition to those five drivers, Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jimmie Johnson, Brad KeselowskiKevin HarvickCarl Edwards and Joey Logano had already locked up spots.

Twelve drivers have combined to win the first 23 points-paying races of the season, and three races remain before the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup field is set. After the 23rd points race of NASCAR’s regular season, here is how the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup standings look:

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Gives impassioned plea for drivers to slow down during cautions

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BROOKLYN, Mich. — Carl Edwards rose from his seat during the Sunday morning driver’s meeting at Michigan International Speedway and issued a challenge to his fellow drivers in a short, passionate speech.

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After NASCAR officials discussed pit road speed (55 mph), caution car speed (65 mph), the competition caution at Lap 20 and the procedures for merging onto the track from pit road, Sprint Cup Series Race Director David Hoots opened the floor for questions.
 
"I’d just like to say, with our speeds up so high, we all appreciate what you’re doing safety-wise," Edwards said to NASCAR officials before turning his attention to the drivers and crew chiefs in the room. "I challenge everyone in here, myself included, to lay off the throttle when there’s a caution and lay back a little bit. I think we can all do a better job, myself included. Thank you."
 
Speeds have consistently topped 200 mph at the 2-mile oval this weekend, both in practice and in qualifying where Jeff Gordon laid down a 206.558 mph lap in winning the Coors Light Pole Award.
 
NASCAR on Friday announced a new addition to its rule book, requiring that drivers remain in their cars until they come to the attention of safety crews or track or series officials.
 
Sunday’s Pure Michigan 400 (1 p.m. ET) will be televised on ESPN.

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Get the on-track times for all three NASCAR national series at Bristol

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All times ET

ALTERNATE CHANNELS IN 15 MARKETS FOR THE SPRINT CUP RACE, SATURDAY, 7:30 P.M. ET: Find options for watching the race in the following markets — Austin, Texas; Charlotte, North Carolina; Casper, Wyoming; Cheyenne, Wyoming; Duluth, Minnesota; Harrisburg, Pennsylvania; Houston, Texas; Louisville, Kentucky; Nashville, Tennessee; St. Joseph, Missouri; San Antonio, Texas; Sioux Falls, South Dakota; Tulsa, Oklahoma; Washington, D.C.; Weslaco, Texas

TV LISTINGS/ BUY TICKETS FOR BRISTOL/ WEEKEND TRACK EVENTS

This week, the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, NASCAR Nationwide Series and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series all descend upon Bristol Motor Speedway for a tripleheader of NASCAR action.

SATURDAY, AUGUST 23

ON TRACK
— 7:30 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series IRWIN Tools Night Race (500 laps, 266.5 miles), ABC (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES
(Watch live)
Approx. 11 p.m.: NSCS post-race press conference

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20

ON TRACK
— 11:45 a.m.-1:30 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Final Practice (Get results)
— 4:40 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 8:30 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series UNOH 200 Presented by ZLOOP (200 laps, 106.6 miles), FOX Sports 1-POSTPONED UNTIL THURSDAY

THURSDAY, AUGUST 21

ON TRACK
— 10 a.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series UNOH 200 Presented by ZLOOP (200 laps, 106.6 miles), FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 1:30 p.m.-2:40 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series practice (Get results)
— 3 p.m.-4:30 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series final practice (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live
Approx 11:45 a.m. ET: NCWTS post-race press conference
Noon: Chase Elliott  
12:30 p.m.: Trevor Bayne 
12:50 p.m.: Chris Buescher

FRIDAY, AUGUST 22

ON TRACK
— 11 a.m.-1 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 1:30 p.m.-2:20 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 3:40 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 5:40 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, ESPN2 (Get results)
— 7:30 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series Food City 300 (300 laps, 159.9 miles), ESPN  (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
9 a.m.: AJ Allmendinger 
9:15 a.m.: Roush Fenway Racing announcement with Greg Biffle
9:45 a.m.: Matt Kenseth
2:45 p.m.: Leavine Family Racing announcement with Michael McDowell
3 p.m.: Joey Logano
3:15 p.m.:  Austin Dillon
4:45 p.m.: Brett Jewkes, NASCAR VP/COO
Approx. 6 p.m.: NSCS post-qualifying press conference
Approx. 9:30 p.m.: NNS post-race press conference

GARAGECAM (Watch live)
— 10:30 a.m.: Sprint Cup Series GarageCam

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No. 22 driver hopes battle with Gordon shows he is competition for the title

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BROOKLYN, Mich. — Joey Logano was as upbeat as he could manage Sunday after leading the most laps and coming up just short of Victory Lane at Michigan International Speedway.
 
Logano possessed perhaps the only car capable of competing on even footing with eventual Pure Michigan 400 winner Jeff Gordon‘s No. 24 Chevrolet. Though his missteps on the race’s final restart left him lowest on the podium, he said the third-place effort still sent a strong message.
 
"That we can win a championship," Logano said. "I really feel we can do that. That’s the message I want to put out there; I want to put out for my team that we’re strong enough to do that. I think we showed that today. We’ve got to find a little bit more speed to keep up with one car today. (The) 24 car was the best, only because he was good on the long run. We weren’t as good on the long run."

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"Yeah, we’re close. You know, we’ve still got to keep working hard. We’ve got to find that next level here, in three weeks now, to be this strong in the Chase. But right now we’re in the hunt. We’re doing what we’ve got to do."
 
Logano started the day second alongside Gordon, the Coors Light Pole Award winner, and promptly led the first 21 laps. From there, his Team Penske No. 22 Ford was a fixture at or near the front, staying first on the scoreboard until Gordon got the better of him on the race’s last restart.
 
Logano inched ahead at the final drop of the green, but Gordon pulled even and then clear of Logano through Turns 1 and 2 to lead the 184th of 200 laps. But the following lap, Logano made another bid for the top spot by driving to the low side in close proximity to Gordon’s car, surprising the four-time Sprint Cup champ.
 
"I thought it was over," Gordon said. "We got the lead, it’s over. But his car is so strong. The way the front end turned into the corner the first few laps, that’s why he pulled away from me so much on restarts when he was out front. When he was behind me, he just drove in there and it stuck. Mine just didn’t. I couldn’t drive in as deep as he could. He got to my left rear and got me loose. That’s when he got underneath me. I thought it was over, I really did."
 
But Logano lost momentum, allowing Gordon to roar away and lead the final 17 laps of his 91st career win. His stalled progress allowed eventual runner-up Kevin Harvick to scoot past and let Paul Menard race up to third place. Logano eventually grabbed third back from Menard with a side-by-side contest for the spot on the final lap.
 
"I won every single restart," Logano said. "I was on the front row except the last one, so here I am. It’s kind of frustrating."
 
The succession of late-race restarts that preceded the final go sparked some tension between Logano and Gordon, with each driver filing complaints with their crews about the gamesmanship involved. Logano asked his crew to mention the issue to NASCAR, but said afterward that he’d like either a reminder or clarification about restart procedures.
 
"I mean, the rule is you’re not supposed to lay back. They tell us in the driver’s meeting every week and he’s two car-lengths behind me and then they get mad at me for brake-checking," Logano said with a laugh. "Well, of course I’m going to slow down because I don’t want him to be two car-lengths behind me and get a huge run. I’m going to talk to NASCAR and figure out what the actual rule is, what we’re supposed to do because I think we’re both confused. I feel like he knows why I slowed down, but just got to figure out what the rules are."
 
Said Gordon, who lamented the small size of the restart box at most tracks: "As the leader, the other cars around you can anticipate when you’re going to take off. So Joey, as we rolled up to some of the restarts, as guys were starting to anticipate it, he was slowing down. When he slowed down, everybody got bottled up. NASCAR warned him about it.
 
"The last one, I thought he had a good start. But I had a good one, too."
 
The effort continued a steady stream of solid performances for Logano, who carries finishes of fifth, third, sixth and third again this week into Saturday night’s race at Bristol Motor Speedway. That four-race swing has helped Logano, a two-time winner this year with his postseason berth in hand, climb from ninth to fourth in the Sprint Cup standings.
 
Though the single-digit finishes have marked a pleasant trend for the sixth-year driver, Logano said filling up the win column was what prompted him to race Gordon so hard near the finish.
 
"I said this after Pocono, finished third. I said it doesn’t matter because wins are the only thing that matters right now," Logano said. "Yes, we like the momentum. That’s a good thing to go into the Chase with the momentum we got. A lot of top-five, top-10 finishes. Moves us up in the points, but doesn’t matter unless you have wins."

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Veteran driving SHR No. 14 Chevrolet in place of Tony Stewart

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BROOKLYN, Mich. — Jeff Burton emerged from the cockpit far earlier than expected Sunday afternoon at Michigan International Speedway, smelling strongly of smoke and fumes. The broken tailpipe that turned his car into a smoky mess, however, was far from the greatest adversity he faced as a substitute in just his third start of the year. 

The veteran’s day as a fill-in for the grieving Tony Stewart hit a snag just before the halfway point in Sunday’s Pure Michigan 400, forcing the team out of victory contention with extended garage time for repairs.

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"This was a hard week," said Burton, who rejoined the race on Lap 102, 24 laps down in 38th place. "This is honestly one of the hardest weeks I’ve ever spent in coming here on Friday not knowing what to expect." Burton would finish in 37th-place.

Burton jumped into Stewart-Haas Racing‘s No. 14 Chevrolet as a late substitute on the opening day at the track Friday, one day after the team announced that Stewart would sit out for the second straight week as the mourning process continued for the three-time Sprint Cup champion. Stewart has not competed since a sprint-car incident involving Stewart fatally injured short-track driver Kevin Ward Jr. last weekend at a New York dirt track.

While Burton had toadjust quickly to an unfamiliar team and a new-to-him car, the biggest source of angst for the 47-year-old driver was hearing rampant speculation about the nature of last weekend’s tragedy or Stewart’s future.

"I think just … these are people that we’re talking about," Burton said. "You have a lot of conversations about what-ifs and all this, but at the end of the day, these are real people that are human beings that have feelings and I think a lot of times, we forget that. We talk about people like they’re robots and they’re not. They’re human beings. And just listening to the misinformation and people speculating about stuff, I just thought was a travesty in a lot of ways. Ultimately, all that really weighed on me, knowing that we had two families — at least two families — just in agonizing pain and really not being able to do anything about it."

Burton pitted in the 81st of 200 laps when he noticed a burning smell in the cockpit. By the time he pulled the No. 14 Chevy to a stop, smoke began to emanate from the car. 

After exiting the car in the garage, Burton initially attributed the trouble to an electrical issue, but the team discovered a diagnosis of a broken tailpipe, which led to hot exhaust starting to melt the car’s heat shields.

Before the trouble, Burton was able to maintain steady performance, but said his limited schedule this year hurt his ability to adapt to race conditions. Though Burton is a veteran of 20 full-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series seasons, Sunday marked just his third start of the season in a part-time schedule before he transitions to the broadcast booth for NBC Sports as an analyst in 2015.

"I thought everybody did a really good job and put a great effort out there, and I did a terrible job on restarts," Burton said. "Once we got in clean traffic, we were maybe a tenth (of a second) off the leader. We had really good pace, the car drove well, I was really encouraged by the one change we made and the car was fast. We were running 16th or 17th or something, but we had a much faster car than that. Just my inexperience in traffic hurt us."

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‘Six-Time’ shows some spunk with top-10 finish

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BROOKLYN, Mich. — After four wrecks in the preceding five races, Jimmie Johnson needed a jolt, a silver lining … anything to register a positive as the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoffs draw near. What he got Sunday was the solid top-10 finish he needed, but the roundabout way he arrived there made for a rough ride.

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Johnson rallied past a heavy helping of obstacles for a ninth-place finish in the Pure Michigan 400, overcoming a broken shifter just before the halfway point and a frenzied battle with Ryan Newman in the race’s final stages. The former required clamping a tool in place mid-race for a makeshift level; the latter issue prompted a testy post-race meeting between the two drivers.

Johnson snatched a spot among the top 10 finishers after a handful of instances of contact between his No. 48 and Newman’s No. 31. Newman faded to an 11th-place effort and declined comment after hastily walking from the Sprint Cup garage to a waiting SUV.
 
"Everyone that’s ever been in a race car out there understands the frustration that comes along with racing Ryan. Just normal Ryan stuff," Johnson said. "And I don’t want to take away anything from what this awesome race team did. Granted, we put ourselves in a bad position with the shift level breaking off and were able to rally back and get ourselves a good finish. Unfortunate we didn’t get any further up in the field, but still salvaged a lot today."

Johnson’s whole weekend was a self-contained comeback in its own right. Despite claiming his first Michigan win in June, the six-time Sprint Cup champ mustered just the 39th-fastest speed in Friday’s opening practice and followed that with a 30th-best effort in Coors Light Pole Qualifying. Saturday’s ranks of 13th and eighth in practice offered hope for improvement, but any gains would have to come from deep in the field.
 
Johnson steadily worked his way up to take the lead as alternate pit strategies unfolded, but radio-ed to his crew on Lap 45 of 200 that his shifter had fallen off shortly after a restart for the race’s fourth caution period. He didn’t stop again until the 76th lap, but by then crew chief Chad Knaus had already hatched a game plan for the team to hand Johnson wire-cutters and vice grips to rig a stopgap shift lever.
 
Johnson lost the lead and plenty of ground after the four-tire change and a push off pit road to get the car going led to a sluggish return to speed. Though chances of a Michigan season sweep suddenly grew dim, the effort to salvage a solid result was already under way. After getting the upper hand in the late-race fight over racing room with Newman, the comeback was as complete as the 400-mile distance would allow.
 
"I think what they show is they can battle back, figure out a way not to lose with the shifter broken in the car, not to lose laps, then Chad focuses on trying to get him back on the lead lap, get him in position with tires at the end of the race to maybe even get a top five," said team owner Rick Hendrick. "I think that’s just calling a great race and Jimmie not giving up. Hopefully we have all the bad luck behind us now. They’ll be able to go to the next race feeling great."
 
Johnson faced a similar rough patch in the schedule last year, when he closed out the regular season with four finishes of 28th or worse. He rallied then to notch his sixth championship in the Chase, in another show of perseverance.
 
All things considered, a reprise of 2013 wouldn’t be all that bad.
 
"Yeah, we have fast cars, it’s just unfortunate that we’ve got to dig out of holes each weekend," Johnson said. "At least we were able to leave under the checkered flag today and get a decent finish out of it, with a ton of adversity thrown at us."

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Catch up quickly before Sunday’s Pure Michigan 400 (1 p.m. ET, ESPN)

MORE: Pure Michigan 400 lineup | Ryan Truex out of race
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What: 45th annual Pure Michigan 400.
Where: Michigan International Speedway, 2-mile oval in Brooklyn, Michigan.
When: Sunday, Aug. 17, 1 p.m. ET.
TV/Radio: ESPN, MRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio.
Distance: 200 laps, 400 miles.
 
Pit road speed: 55 mph.
Caution car speed: 65 mph.
Fuel window: 40 laps.
 
On the front row | Full lineup
Jeff Gordon, Hendrick Motorsports No. 24 Chevrolet (206.558 mph).
Joey Logano, Team Penske No. 22 Ford (206.381 mph).

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Fastest in practice
First practice:
Joey Logano, Team Penske No. 22 Ford (204.545 mph).
Second practice: Kevin Harvick, Stewart-Haas Racing No. 4 Chevrolet (203.183 mph).
Final practice: Jeff Gordon, Hendrick Motorsports No. 24 Chevrolet (200.156 mph).
 
Driver rating
 (Best driver rating average at Michigan based on past 19 races):
Greg Biffle, 107.8.
Matt Kenseth, 104.5.
 
Last year’s winner
Joey Logano, Team Penske No. 22 Ford.
 
They said it I: "We’ve talked about confidence in the past. You can’t just have all this confidence and not have the car to go along with it. You’ve got to have the whole package. And right now, I feel like we’re bringing the whole package." — Four-time champion Jeff Gordon, a two-time winner this season
 
They said it II: "To be able to this year kind of look at it differently, have a different perspective, but to be able to say as a whole as a race team that we are winners in the Sprint Cup Series, which is hard to do, that has probably been the most enjoyable thing. Waking up each day knowing that I don’t have to have you guys ask me when I’m going to win again, or ‘are you going to be the next first-time winner.’ I don’t have to do that any more. I’m good with that now." — AJ Allmendinger, who scored the first Sprint Cup victory of his career last weekend at Watkins Glen International
 
They said it III: "I think it is safe to say that is the fastest lap I have ever made in a race car. I am not sure but I think it is. You can’t argue with the time sheet." — Carl Edwards, after registering a lap at 204.111 mph in opening Sprint Cup practice. He qualified third at 206.115.
 
Longevity and success: Jeff Gordon leads active NASCAR Sprint Cup Series drivers with 43 career starts and 18 top-five finishes at Michigan International Speedway. In the track’s all-time record books, Bill Elliott (61 Michigan starts) and Cale Yarborough (21 top-fives at MIS) top those lists; both are NASCAR Hall of Fame inductees.
 
Girl power: Four women have competed in NASCAR’s top division at Michigan — Janet Guthrie (four starts), Danica Patrick (three), Robin McCall (two) and Shawna Robinson (one). Guthrie hold the distinction of having the best finish among the four — 10th in August 1977. Patrick’s best effort was 13th in her Michigan debut in 2013. McCall, who later married former driver and current TV commentator Wally Dallenbach Jr., competed in both Michigan races in 1982 for the only NASCAR starts of her career. Robinson’s lone 2001 start at MIS was her first race in NASCAR’s premier series.
 
History lesson: Michigan International Speedway opened in 1968 with a D-shaped layout designed by Charles Moneypenny, who also helped design Daytona International Speedway.  The facility first hosted NASCAR’s top series the following year. Cale Yarborough won the track’s inaugural stock-car event — the 1969 Motor State 500 — in the Wood Brothers’ No. 21 Mercury after a fierce last-lap battle with LeeRoy Yarbrough. Since then, it’s hosted 89 more races for the Cup series.
 
Former Michigan winners in the field: Greg Biffle (4); Kurt Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Carl Edwards, Jeff Gordon, Denny Hamlin, Matt Kenseth, Ryan Newman (2); Kyle Busch, Kevin Harvick, Jimmie Johnson, Kasey Kahne, Joey Logano, Brian Vickers (1).

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