JTG Daugherty team celebrates, but sends thoughts and prayers to family, Stewart

RELATED: Complete coverage of Tony Stewart incident

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — The theatrics and fireworks of NASCAR’s brand of road-course racing was omnipresent as usual at Watkins Glen International, but so was an underlying solemn tone of remembrance after the events of the night before.

While AJ Allmendinger celebrated his first Sprint Cup Series victory in the Cheez-It 355 at The Glen and the sealing of his postseason fate, a strong portion of his thoughts were clearly devoted to Kevin Ward Jr., the 20-year-old victim of a sprint-car incident involving Tony Stewart.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

"I think it’s one of those things that you look back at and it’s a tough time for everybody," said Allmendinger. "I said on TV after the race, this NASCAR community, as a whole we’re a family, and when anything like that happens, it’s something that you don’t just kind of erase and you forget about.  And all of our thoughts and prayers, and it may not seem like it, or I wish there was more to do, but it goes to the Ward family and what happened. It also goes to Tony because it’s not like he’s sitting there and forgetting about it. It’s a tough scenario.

"You just try to come together. That’s all you can do. You try to be thankful every day for the things that we have, the things that we’re able to share together, and you also know that there’s a lot less fortunate out there and there’s a lot of disasters, whether it’s in racing or not. You just try to keep that in perspective and always have your thoughts and prayers and do whatever you can to help out and be better with it."

Ward was declared dead on arrival at a local hospital Saturday night after he was struck while on foot by Stewart’s sprint car during a 25-lap main event for the touring Empire Super Sprints series at Canandaigua (N.Y.) Motorsports Park, a half-mile dirt track on the Ontario County Fairgrounds. The county sheriff’s office continue to investigate the incident and said Sunday that no criminal charges are pending. 

Stewart was absent at the track Sunday with NASCAR Nationwide Series regular Regan Smith replacing him in the Stewart-Haas Racing No. 14 Chevrolet. Several of Stewart’s fellow Sprint Cup drivers declined comment on the incident, with some saying details were too sparse to make an informed statement.

"Our thoughts and prayers are with the Ward family," said third-place finisher Kurt Busch, a first-year teammate to Stewart at the Stewart-Haas operation. "It was a tragedy. Our thoughts and prayers are with everybody involved. It’s a tough situation for the motorsports world. I’m not at liberty really to speak anymore of it."

While the mood of Allmendinger’s JTG Daugherty team was buoyant after that operation’s first win in NASCAR’s premier series, the organization’s brass was quick to temper their joy in light of the recent events.

"Obviously just a catastrophic evening last evening," said team co-owner Brad Daugherty, also an ESPN analyst. "Our sympathies go out to the family that lost the young man. And it’s been a difficult day for the Stewart‑Haas organization. We all recognize that and we all feel like we’re all family because we travel 36 weeks out of the year it seems like 100 years together. Our hearts go out to Tony, but specifically out to the family.

"It’s a tremendous loss, and I thought that Stewart‑Haas and Tony and those guys did the right thing by showing the appropriate respect to the situation as well as the family ‑‑ more importantly to the family by not racing today. We’ll see what unfolds of that, but our thoughts and prayers go out to that family."

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

The NNS veteran had not been in a Sprint Cup car in a year and a half

RELATED: Complete coverage of Tony Stewart incident

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — Regan Smith had been back home in North Carolina for less than 12 hours when his phone rang again. Seemingly as soon as he had left Watkins Glen International, he was headed back. 

The Sunday morning chain of events that saw Tony Stewart step aside from his Stewart-Haas Racing No. 14 Chevrolet made Smith a last-minute stand-in in the Cheez-It 355 at The Glen. The NASCAR Nationwide Series regular had an adventurous day before he ever set foot back at the race track, and that theme continued for much of the 90-lap race in the team’s 37th-place finish.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

By the time the early morning announcement had been made that Stewart had decided to sit out the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race out of respect to Kevin Ward Jr., the 20-year-old sprint car driver who was killed in a Saturday night incident with Stewart at a New York dirt track, Smith was already en route. 

"I saw it on social media (last night) probably like everybody else did," said Smith, who finished 17th in Saturday’s Nationwide Series event. "Actually before I went to bed last night, I saw it on FOX Sports or something like that. I didn’t know much about it at the time. I woke up this morning, obviously and heard more about it. I think it was 8:30, I got a call from my crew chief, Ryan (Pemberton), and said to get to the shop as quick as I could, so I did."

Smith’s helicopter landed at 11:55 a.m. ET in the additional section of the track known as "The Boot" used in other forms of motorsports and unloaded with his helmet and his own seat moldings. The No. 14 crew went to work at getting Smith comfortable in the car, hastily fitting the seat and helmet connections before the 1:20 p.m. ET green flag.

Starting at the rear of the 43-car field because of the driver change was challenge enough, but finding the comfort level remained at a premium especially in the early stages. 

"It’s a race car," Smith said. "It’s my job to be able to drive a race car, and it took me a little longer to get acclimated than I hoped it would, and I felt like at the end there, we were finally starting to make some progress and I was able to get consistent with the car and understood the car a little better and what it was doing. These guys build fast race cars at Stewart-Haas, and I was thankful to get to get in one, but definitely not under the circumstances." 

Smith, who drove full-time in NASCAR’s top series for four seasons with parts of three others, last drove a Sprint Cup car in spring 2013 for the former James Finch-owned Phoenix Racing group. Since then, rules that ended restrictions on ride-height rules before the season threw Smith another curve. 

"Yeah, I haven’t been in a Cup car in a year and a half in an actual race," Smith said, "so these things are a lot different now than they were a year and a half ago, and there’s been a lot of changes to them."

Smith moved up consistently from his starting spot into the middle of the pack by the race’s midway point, thanks in part to pit strategy and in other aspects to his familiarity with the 2.45-mile course. But the 172nd start of his Sprint Cup career came to an early end in the next-to-last caution period, when Jimmie Johnson’s spinning No. 48 collected Smith’s car. He initially tried to limp away from the crash, but the damage was race-ending. 

Smith’s thoughtful perspective after the travel-heavy day outweighed the number in the results column.

"My day really doesn’t matter right now," Smith said. "There are a lot of people more important than me at the moment, so we’re thinking about all those people and our prayers are with them."

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Red flag period lasts for about an hour and 21 minutes

RELATED: Play NASCAR Fantasy Live | Sign up for RaceView today

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — A severe crash halted Sunday’s Cheez-It 355 at The Glen in the 57th of 90 laps, marking the latest in a series of chilling wrecks in recent years at Watkins Glen International. While the two principal drivers involved were uninjured after a mandatory visit to the infield car center, it prompted a spirited debate from both sides about safety at the 58-year-old road course.
 
When Ryan Newman‘s No. 31 Chevrolet spun into the guardrail on the short chute between Turns 5 and 6, the car rebounded violently back onto the racing surface where it was clipped by Michael McDowell‘s No. 95 Ford. The collision knocked the rear end housing from McDowell’s car and vaulted him toward the railing where the section of the course’s longer layout — called "the Boot" — rejoins the shorter NASCAR circuit.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

McDowell’s impact knocked out a section of guardrail, and jolted what was left of Newman’s car.
 
"I knew I was in trouble when I could see out the passenger door to the grass, and there was no door to the race car," McDowell said. "Still amazing to walk away from an accident like that."
 
McDowell said that the impact "knocked the wind out of me," and that he sat on the ground beside the car momentarily to collect his thoughts and take a breather. Though McDowell was thankful to emerge just shaken up, Newman bristled at the track’s use of guardrails and tire barriers in some areas instead of concrete walls reinforced by impact-absorbing SAFER Barriers.
 
"It was violent," Newman said. "My hit into the wall wasn’t that bad. It was the shot that I got from McDowell. Thankfully all of us are safe, but not at all where I wanted to be at the end of the day."
 
Robin Pemberton, NASCAR’s vice president of competition, said that he expected the repaired wall to be as fortified as its predecessor. While he reiterated that advancements in technology have made the sport less treacherous, he added that safety continues to be a moving target.
 
"(The accidents) all get reviewed, but it’s a constant improvement process," Pemberton said. "And as you know, many of the places that we go to, the facilities are multi-purpose, and we’re only here one weekend a year. And it’s busy throughout the rest of the year. We’re not the only series that races here. Watkins Glen has made great advancements in Turns 1 and 2 and all of that — moved grandstands and added SAFER Barriers, and that’s worked quite well for us. But not all places are places for SAFER Barriers. Different types of systems help slow the cars down. As you can see the incident with Cole Whitt earlier in the race down in Turn 1, it was good that the tire barrier was there.
 
"We do work year in and year out on all of these facilities. Every race, pre-race and post-race, we do a lot of inspections and look at places that need improvement. There’s a priority list as far as what turns and straightaways and things like that that you need to work on. It’s an ongoing process."
 
Kevin Harvick, who was 13th when the red flag was lifted after a total 1-hour, 21-minute, 49-minute delay, agreed with Pemberton and said the track had upgraded its facilities in recent years.
 
"Well, it’s changed a lot through the years," Harvick said. "They have spent a lot of money on sand traps and moving walls back and there’s been a lot of changes after we had the wreck off of Turn 1. So, obviously, as drivers, we want to see the safest barrier as possible put in. What that is in this particular instance, I don’t know. I know we’ve seen Jimmie Johnson pile in headfirst all the way into the barriers and get out of his car and walk away and we’ve been in a lot of pretty big wrecks here. We’ve seen everybody walk away. So, you always want to see them evolve and I don’t really know the exact circumstances.
 
"I know that I’d rather hit that Armco (guardrail) over there rather than a solid concrete wall. So, it’s just all about the circumstances that you’re in."

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Three-time Sprint Cup champion was racing at Canandaigua Motorsports Park

RELATED: Complete coverage of Tony Stewart incident

A sprint car racing incident involving NASCAR driver Tony Stewart left another driver with fatal injuries at an upstate New York dirt track Saturday night.
 
Ontario County (New York) Sheriff Philip C. Povero confirmed the news early Sunday morning to local news reporters, saying the other driver was declared dead on his arrival to a local hospital. The sheriff identified Stewart but did not issue the other driver’s name as family members were being notified.

A YouTube video of the incident showed Stewart racing to the low side of Kevin Ward Jr., of Port Leyden, New York. The two cars made contact, sending Ward’s No. 13 car bounding off the Turn 2 wall.
 
After Ward spun to a stop with a flat right-rear tire, the driver quickly dismounted to confront Stewart, walking out onto the track and pointing at the veteran driver’s No. 14. Stewart’s car revved and fishtailed, catching Ward with its right-rear tire and sending him a sizable distance from the crash site.
 
Ward was prone and motionless on the track as safety workers came to his aid. Povero said that, "people that witnessed it were horrified. They were extremely shocked."

The cause of Ward’s death was determined to be massive blunt trauma.
 
Povero said that both Stewart and track officials were "cooperating fully" with the ongoing investigation. According to the sheriff, no charges are pending. He said Stewart "is very upset and confirmed his continuing cooperation."

Watch Ontario County (New York) Sheriff Philip C. Povero’s news conference below:

A Stewart-Haas Racing spokesperson issued the following statement that read: "A tragic accident took place last night during a sprint car race in which Tony Stewart was participating. Tony was unhurt, but a fellow competitor lost his life. Our thoughts and prayers go out to his family and friends. We’re still attempting to sort through all the details and we appreciate your understanding during this difficult time."

ABC News in Rochester, New York reported that Ward’s parents released the following statement: "We appreciate the prayers and support we are receiving from the community, but we need time to grieve and wrap our heads around all of this."

Canandaigua Motorsports Park promoter Jeremie Corcoran had the following to say via the track’s Facebook page: "First and foremost I offer my sincerest and deepest condolences to the Ward family. Kevin Ward Jr was a spirited competitor and loved by so many. This is a tremendous loss to this family and the racing family as well."
 
Stewart, a three-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion, lined up 12th in the 22-car field for the 25-lap "A" Main for the touring Empire Super Sprints series. Ward started sixth. First place paid $1,500.
 
Canandaigua Motorsports Park, a half-mile dirt track on the Ontario County Fairgrounds, said through its Facebook page that the remainder of Saturday night’s program had been canceled. The track is approximately 50 miles north-northwest of Watkins Glen International, site of Sunday’s Cheez-It 355 at The Glen for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.
 
Stewart returned to sprint-car racing July 18 at Tri-City Motor Speedway in Auburn, Michigan with a win nearly a year after a season-ending crash at Southern Iowa Speedway on Aug. 5 severely injured his right leg, which required multiple surgeries.
 
Contributing: Alan Cavanna

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Salutes former team as he continues quest to make the Chase

RELATED: Play NASCAR Fantasy Live | Sign up for RaceView today

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — Third-place finisher Kurt Busch had a front-row seat as AJ Allmendinger and Marcos Ambrose beat and banged for a victory on Sunday at Watkins Glen International and a berth in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

When asked what strategy Ambrose should have employed in the final laps of the Cheez-It 355 at the Glen, Busch said, "He should have wrecked Allmendinger."

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

Sounding like "The Intimidator from Down Under," Ambrose said, "I tried to rattle his cage and couldn’t shake him. We raced fair and square to the end there. It was a tough couple laps but it was fair. We were both giving it to each other pretty hard. No harm, no foul. We just came up a little short."

Ambrose had too much respect for his competitor, the No. 47 team and racing in general to spin and win. The Australian driver spent two full seasons with Allmendinger’s JTG Daugherty Racing before moving to his current team, Richard Petty Motorsports, in 2011.

"They are good friends over there," Ambrose said. "I drove for those guys a long time, and I was never able to seal the deal with a win for them. I am pleased that they were able to get a win, and I am thrilled for AJ too, that is a big win."

Ambrose led 19 circuits from Lap 33 through Lap 51 and never fell below second place over the final 20 laps, running side-by-side with Allmendinger down the stretch. With four laps to go, Ambrose and Allmendinger were within .003 seconds of each other at the start/finish line.

The turning point for Ambrose came on the sixth and final yellow flag at Lap 88 when Denny Hamlin spun into the barrels at the entrance to pit road. The race to the field being frozen under caution was on and Allmendinger won it.

"I can’t remember much of it, but I know there was a lot of door banging going on and a lot of corners where we were side by side," Ambrose said. "I got my tires really hot during that and slid coming off Turn 11 after I got the lead and he got it back before the caution dropped.

"That was probably the difference between winning and losing. If I could have had the lead when the caution came out I probably would have had the advantage on the restart and probably would have been able to fend him off. That is just racing. That is what it is all about. You try to take a couple chances, and I am just pleased we got through the esses side by side without wrecking the whole field. It could have easily happened."

On Saturday, Ambrose earned his fourth NASCAR Nationwide Series win at Watkins Glen with a Richard Petty Motorsports research and development team. On Sunday, he liked his chances of completing the first weekend sweep at the facility with his full-time No. 9 Sprint Cup team, which used a precious test at the Glen to get a win and join the No. 43 team and Aric Almirola in the Chase.

"I am just really proud of my Stanley team," Ambrose said. "We put a lot of effort into this race and really tried to win it. We won yesterday and came up one short today."

With four races to go until the Chase, his focus remains on winning his way into NASCAR’s playoffs, but he’s also aware of his points situation heading into Michigan, Bristol, Atlanta and Richmond.

"Man, I just finished the closest race of my life," Ambrose said. "I haven’t thought about points or anything. I will look at it Monday. 

"We are decent in the championship position. I think we are 16th or something. We need to score points, but we really need to focus on winning."

Ambrose is indeed 16th in points, 50 markers behind Clint Bowyer, who holds the last provisional spot on points.

But the win was the thing for Ambrose, who enjoyed rubbing and racing with Allmendinger, just not as much as he did when he and Brad Keselowski slam-danced their way to the start/finish line in 2012.

Was Sunday’s run was as exciting as that epic dash to the checkered flag two years ago? 

"Not for me personally," Ambrose said.

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Stewart-Haas Racing VP of Competition: ‘He’s a brother to me’

RELATED: Complete coverage of Tony Stewart incident

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — Stewart-Haas Racing VP of Competition, Greg Zipadelli, announced Sunday morning that Tony Stewart will not race in Sunday’s Cheez-It 355 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series event at Watkins Glen International.

Stewart was involved in a sprint car racing incident on Saturday night that left driver Kevin Ward Jr. with fatal injuries at Canandaigua Motorsports Park, a half-mile dirt track on the Ontario County Fairgrounds.

"We know that it’s just an unbelievable tragedy," Zipadelli said. "Our hearts go out to obviously Kevin and his family, thoughts and prayers. This is a very tough, very emotional time for everybody, his family, our family at Stewart-Haas, Tony Stewart. 

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

"So with that being said, we feel that as a group, Tony will not drive today. Regan Smith is on his way up."

Smith, who finished 17th in Saturday’s NASCAR Nationwide Series Zippo 200 at The Glen, had returned home to the Charlotte area. The JR Motorsports Nationwide championship contender ran six Sprint Cup races last year. In four previous Cup starts at the Glen, he has a best finish of ninth in 2012.

"NASCAR has approved for him to get in the race car today," Zipadelli said. "They’re going to do everything they can to help us expedite getting his seat, (getting) him comfortable. So that’s what we’ve been working on this morning and trying to get executed. Get Regan here and obviously anything we can do for Tony and everybody else is just like I said, it’s an emotional time right now."

After a hectic morning, Smith arrived at about 11:55 a.m. ET, flying up with Hendrick Motorsports owner Rick Hendrick.

"I was actually at home in North Carolina," Smith said. "I went back after the Nationwide race yesterday. Got up and then got a call from my crew chief Ryan Pemberton, said they may need some help up here today and went to the shop as soon as I knew that. So left the shop at probably 9:30. Fortunate enough that Mr. H. was still coming up here and (I) was able to hitch a ride up here with him and get up here on time. That was pretty much the events of the morning."

Prior taking his current role at Stewart-Haas Racing in 2012, Zipadelli joined NASCAR’s premier series in 1999 as a crew chief for a rookie Stewart at Joe Gibbs Racing. Over 10 seasons together, Stewart and Zipadelli won 33 races and two series championships in 2002 and 2005. Zipadelli joined Stewart’s organization after three seasons and a win with Joey Logano.

Zipadelli said Stewart sitting out of Sunday’s race was a group decision, and he expressed his support for his driver, owner and friend. 

"It was a few of us that were in there, just supporting him," Zipadelli said. "He’s a brother to me. He’s way more than a boss. He’s going through a tough time. It’s emotional for him. We as a group support him, feel like he’s doing the right thing and we’ll move on from this. I support Tony Stewart. I think I’ve shown that over the last 18 years."

With five races to go until the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup starts, Stewart has yet to win and clinch a spot in NASCAR’s playoffs. As the all-time win leader at Watkins Glen with five, Sunday’s race appeared to be a good chance for him to go to Victory Lane. Zipadelli said that neither the Chase nor Stewart’s success on the road course factored into Stewart’s decision to sit out the event.

"…honestly that is the furthest thing from our minds right now," Zipadelli said. "We’re thinking of Kevin’s family and Tony and the people at our company. That’s something that when we get home on Monday, we’ll have to look at, evaluate and go through that and make decisions. Today is all about doing what we can today. To get through today and do it the best we can as a group and try to do it in the right way so we haven’t even crossed the bridge yet."

By qualifying for the Cheez-It 355 at the Glen, Stewart is still eligible to make the Chase if he returns to the No. 14 ride next week at Michigan International Speedway.

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Plan your NASCAR weekend with these on-track, live interview times

All times ET

TV LISTINGS / BUY TICKETS FOR MICHIGAN /
BUY TICKETS FOR MID-OHIO / WEEKEND TRACK EVENTS

RELATED: Play NASCAR Fantasy Live | Sign up for RaceView today

This week the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series head to Michigan International Speedway while the NASCAR Nationwide Series will run a standalone race at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course.

SUNDAY, AUGUST 17:

PRE-RACE SCHEDULE
— 11:00:00 a.m.: NSCS Driver/Crew Chief Meeting
— 12:25:00 p.m.: NSCS Drivers Introductions w/ NASCAR Special Awards
— 1:00:00 p.m.: Intro Canadian Anthem
— 1:00:15 p.m.: Canadian Anthem by: Scott Fulford
— 1:02:00 p.m.: Presentation of Colors: Michigan State Police
— 1:02:20 p.m.: Invocation by: Father Geoff Rose   
— 1:02:45 p.m.: Intro National Anthem
— 1:03:00 p.m.: National Anthem by: Kate Collier & Chloe Sprague, Members of Midnight Blue, an a capella group from University of Michigan
— 1:04:30 p.m.: Flyover TOT by:  4 T-34s from the Hooligans Flight Team  (Turn 3 to Turn 1) 

— 1:09:30 p.m.: "Drivers, Start Your Engines" command by: Charlie White & Meryl Davis, 2014 Olympic Champion ice dancing team and Michigan natives (command will be given from Gatorade Victory Lane)
— 1:18:00 p.m.: Start of the Pure Michigan 400 (200 Laps, 400 Miles)

ON TRACK
— 1 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Pure Michigan 400 (200 laps, 400 miles), ESPN (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 9 a.m.: Michigan International Speedway and Consumers Energy
— 10 a.m.: Olympic gold medalists Meryl Davis and Charlie White
— 4:20 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series post-race news conference

FRIDAY, AUGUST 15:

ON TRACK
— Noon-1:20 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 1:30-2:30 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series practice (Get results)
— 1:30-2:30 pm.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 3-4:25 pm.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series final practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 3-4:30 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series final practice
 (Get results)
— 4:40 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 9 a.m.: Robin Pemberton, NASCAR VP of Competition and Racing Development
— 10 a.m.: Jeff Burton, Brett Frood (SHR Executive Vice President) and Greg Zipadelli (SHR Vice President of Competition)
— 10:30 a.m.: Kyle Larson
— 10:45 a.m.: Wood Brothers team announcement
— 11 a.m.: Jimmie Johnson
— 11:15 a.m.: Matt Kenseth
— 1:30 p.m.: Carl Edwards
— 1:45 p.m.: AJ Allmendinger
— 2:30 p.m.: Jeff Gordon
— 6 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series post-qualifying news conference

SATURDAY, AUGUST 16:

ON TRACK
— 8:30-9:20 a.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, ESPN2 (Get results)
— 9:40 a.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, ESPN2 (Get results)
— 9:40 a.m. NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Keystone Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 11-11:55 a.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, ESPN2 (Get results)
— 12:30 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Careers for Veterans 200 (100 laps, 200 miles), FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 2:45 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series Nationwide Children’s Hospital 200 (90 laps, 203.22 miles), ESPN (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 9:20 a.m.: Race 4 Domestic Violence Prevention announcement with Jennifer Jo Cobb and Ben Kennedy
— 2:40 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series post-race news conference

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Sprint Cup regular now has sweep hopes going into Sunday’s event

Related: Full race results

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y.– Recovering from an early spin after contact with Kyle Busch’s Toyota, Marcos Ambrose held off Busch in the closing laps of Saturday’s Zippo 200 at the Glen to win the series-best fifth road course race of his Nationwide Series career.

The Australian driver has won four consecutive NNS starts at 2.45-mile Watkins Glen International, having triumphed in three straight from 2008 through 2010 and this year after a three-race hiatus from competition at the Glen.

Though Ambrose knows full well the big prizes — a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victory in the Cheez-It 355 at the Glen (1 p.m. ET on ESPN) and a berth in the Chase — will be contested on Sunday, he was eager to savor the NNS win.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

"I just want to enjoy today," Ambrose said. "You get to victory lane, and it’s special. I would love to repeat, but it’s a lot of work tomorrow. I want to think about this and get a good night’s rest and come attack them tomorrow."

During an exchange of pit stops with 32 of 82 laps left, Ambrose surged past Joey Logano as the driver of the No. 12 Team Penske Ford exited pit road. When the sequence of stops cycled through, Ambrose, who had pitted one lap earlier than Logano, held the lead, with Logano running second.

Ambrose kept the top spot after a restart on Lap 63 that followed the fifth and final caution of the race. With five laps left, Busch roared past Logano but couldn’t get to the bumper of Ambrose’s No. 9 Richard Petty Motorsports Ford in time to make a move for the win.

Logano came home third, followed by pole winner Brad Keselowski and Matt Kenseth. Rookie Chase Elliott ran sixth and extended his series lead to 12 points over JR Motorsports teammate Regan Smith, who finished 17th.

The way Logano saw it, losing the spot to Ambrose during the cycle of green-flag stops was crucial.

"That was definitely a key moment," Logano said. "If I was able to get in front of him there… all I needed was three-tenths of a second probably, and that would have been enough position into that corner to beat him through the esses and get position. I felt like, if I got clean air and ran hard, that I could have gapped him.

"I think at the end of the race, he would have caught me and the 54 (Busch) also. It would have been close. I’m not going to say we would have won the race. It would have been close. Our car was good on the short run. Marcos was steady all the way through and the 54, late in the run, was really fast. If I didn’t run so hard and had clean air and didn’t burn the tires off, would I have lasted longer? Yeah. 

"Would it have been enough to beat him? We’ll never know. But I feel it would have been closer for us, for sure."

Ambrose agreed. 

"I think if I hadn’t cleared him right there, he would have been gone," Ambrose said. "Maybe I could have stalked him a little bit and got him in traffic, but we had a fast enough car to lead like that, but it would have been really tough to pass."

Before the battle with Logano was even a consideration, Ambrose had to recover from a Lap 6 spin in the bus stop chicane after he and Busch collided near the entrance. 

"He ducked out late, and then the spotter was late," Ambrose said. "I was already committed to that line, and he thumped my left rear there. It wasn’t intentional. I’ve got no malice against him whatsoever—he spun out, too."

Busch wasn’t quite as charitable in his assessment of the mishap. 

"We didn’t qualify as well as we needed to and tried to make a move on somebody who didn’t give a crap, and then he just turned into me and spun us out, so that put us behind," Busch said. "We came back and got second."

In a quirky sort of way, the accident may have helped both drivers. Both Ambrose and Busch brought their cars to pit road for fuel and fresh tires under caution on Lap 13. Knifing his way through traffic, Ambrose worked his way back to fifth before pitting again under green on Lap 20, covering stops made by Keselowski (Lap 18) and Logano (Lap 19).

"If you’d told me that’s how we were going to do the race, I would have said that’s a bad strategy," Ambrose quipped. "But it worked out for us—first and second. For two guys doing pirouettes in the bus stop, that’s pretty cool.

"And it just shows you how these races are never over. You can’t quit. Just because you’re in the grass backwards doesn’t mean your race is done."

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

The King stayed across street from NASCAR VP’s family restaurant

RELATED: Play NASCAR Fantasy Live | Sign up for RaceView today

As NASCAR’s Vice President of Competition and Racing Development, Robin Pemberton is the sport’s point man for research and development and is responsible for integrating the latest technology. He is the face of the sport’s competition department, which is tasked with maintaining fair-play and spirited racing. And he is occasionally the enforcer, doling out penalties to those drivers and team members who push the rules too far.

In a career that has now spanned 35 years, Pemberton learned the ropes working for some of the most legendary drivers and teams in NASCAR history from Richard Petty and Bobby Allison to Jack Roush, Roger Penske and Rusty Wallace.

But what most people don’t realize is that the 57-year old Pemberton’s start in the sport is as every bit as remarkable as his ascension.

It all began when Pemberton was a 12-year-old busboy at his parents’ restaurant outside Saratoga Springs, New York and made fast friends with a famous diner who was in town to race big-time stock cars at the local short track.

It’s something Pemberton remembers fondly as he spends time this weekend back in his native Upstate New York for Sunday’s Cheez-It 355 at Watkins Glen International.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

"I don’t think a lot of people know how much racing actually takes place in all of New York, and those stock cars of that day — the Sprint Cup series of the ’60s and ’70s — were really alien to us because everything else around there was modified dirt cars,” Pemberton recalled of the early 1970s when NASCAR’s big leagues made two trips in 1970 and 1971 to the half-mile Albany Saratoga Speedway — a few miles from Pemberton’s hometown, Malta, New York. Both races were won by The King.

"Richard Petty used to stay at the motel across the street from our family’s restaurant, and he’d have his car at the speed shop by the gas station up the road.

"A bunch of us kids would ride up on our bicycles and watch them working on their cars, and I remember Richard was just sitting there in a director’s chair outside and we just rolled up there and started talking to him.

"He let us climb up on the doors and peek in the car, and I was like, ‘Man, there are no door handles on it.’ I remember him saying, ‘Well, guess I got too close to the wall and knocked the door handles off.’ We didn’t know any better.

"We spent hours, I mean hours, with him and he just never quit talking, and I still have a postcard he signed to me when he had the Plymouth Superbird,” Pemberton recalled.

"Richard remembers, too, and we talk about it all the time."

Pemberton still chuckles, reflecting on the humble and unorthodox beginnings to his career in racing. His life’s course — and perhaps those of his younger brothers Randy (a NASCAR broadcaster), Ryan (a crew chief at JR Motorsports) and Roman (spotter for Cup driver Brian Vickers) — would have been far different if not for Pemberton’s curiosity, a strong sense of adventure and a deep-rooted love of cars and what makes them fast.

Otherwise he would most likely have taken over the family business, running his parents’ home-style restaurant, "Dunsters" — a popular, seasonal establishment just off New York’s Interstate 87, about halfway between Montreal, Canada and New York City.

"When I was 16 or so, I was doing all the hiring, the firing, ordering the food, cooking,” Pemberton said. "I worked seven days a week even as I went through high school."

After graduating from high school, Pemberton even attended a special restaurant management college in preparation to take over the business one day.

However, Pemberton’s heart was already tugging in a different direction and his fateful encounters with Petty proved to provide all the opportunity he needed.

"I was always a fan from a young age because my grandmother and mother took us to races and I saw that’s pretty cool, you can actually make a living working on race cars,” Pemberton said. "And from that point on, even though I worked in the restaurant business and went to school to learn to be a restaurateur, I always wanted to work on cars and work on race cars."

Having befriended Petty and his crew, Pemberton got a no-second thoughts opportunity at age 22 to join the race team as a "fabricator" working on the car’s sheet metal.

Pemberton remembers breaking the news to his dad that he was leaving the family business. "That didn’t go over well,” Pemberton recalled with a slight laugh.

One of his childhood friends from Upstate New York, Steve Hmiel, joined him at the Pettys, and they immersed themselves in the racing life, essentially doing everything and anything to make themselves valuable, from carrying toolboxes to working on the cars.

"I think in those days, you had to have a lot of heart and want to learn. It wasn’t always what your resume was to get in the door,” Pemberton said. "You had to have a desire to learn and to work on the cars, and the Pettys would teach you how to do things their way. The saying was: ‘There’s a right way, a wrong way and a Petty way to do things.’

"It’s true. It’s not just doing it right, but doing it perfect, the best you could.

"The King was all about detail and he told us early on, ‘You’re not going to win every race so therefore you need to look your best and conduct yourself the best you can, and the cars need to look good. You need to look good in defeat as well.’

"How you conducted yourself was very important to Richard.”

It was part of the Petty education Pemberton earned working for the family-owned team during a particularly historic run that included Petty’s seventh championship in 1979. Among the highlights and good times, Pemberton recalls driving a van with a young Kyle Petty and crew members from the shop in Level Cross, North Carolina across the country to races in places such as Riverside, California. In those days before super-transporters and jets, there was plenty of bonding time driving to each race.

After a valuable and memorable time (1979-1984) working with the Pettys, who gave him his first opportunity at being a crew chief, Pemberton was ready to venture out again and took a job working with Bobby Allison briefly before getting a telephone call in 1987 from a gentleman who wanted to start a NASCAR team.

Pemberton laughed telling the story. In a state of career flux, he was mowing the lawn one day — "whether it needed it or not," he explains — when his wife told him there was someone on the phone for him. Three times an irritated and stubborn Pemberton asked her to simply take a message, but the caller was insistent.

"He says his name is Jack Roush,” Pemberton remembers his wife saying. Pemberton immediately went inside to take the call and ended up joining his buddy Hmiel again as they started Roush’s Sprint Cup team with driver Mark Martin.

After five years with Roush, Pemberton got a call from his old friend Kyle Petty, who was going to be driving for owner Felix Sabates and needed a crew chief. Pemberton took the job and in 1992-93 guided Petty to three premier series victories, four poles — including the 1993 Daytona 500 pole position — and back-to-back fifth place finishes in the championship standings.

In 1995, Pemberton moved to Roger Penske’s Cup team, working with Wallace. The combination resulted in 15 wins, 18 poles and Wallace ranked in the top-10 of the championship standing all seven of their seasons together — the longest tenure for Pemberton and a driver.

Yet even the NASCAR Hall of Famer Wallace didn’t know about Pemberton’s early background and chance start in the sport from busboy to NASCAR executive.

"I had no idea,” Wallace said incredulously. "That’s pretty unbelievable."

Wallace is, however, a strong believer that NASCAR tabbed the right man for the job of leading the competition department when it hired Pemberton from Ford Motor Company in 2004.

"Robin has so much car knowledge,” Wallace said, "so I thought he’s the perfect guy to do it. He understands the limits you need to push, the rules. He just understood all of NASCAR. He has fit into that role really good. He’s a straight shooter. The teams and drivers really like him.

"Timing is everything, but he’s been there, done that and knows what’s doing.”

And Pemberton would agree wholeheartedly that timing has been on his side.

"When I left New York for North Carolina, I had $62 in my pocket. …and I have just a little more than $62 in my pocket now, not much,” Pemberton joked.

Then, he added after a long reflective pause, "Other than Richard Petty who has the best snapshot of racing, I really have enjoyed the 35 years I’ve had in the Cup garage. I’ve seen some pretty cool things happen. To be here with Pearson and Petty, and Earnhardt, here for the Tim Richmond days, and see an upstart owner Rick Hendrick come in and Jeff Gordon coming along. … it’s been good times."

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Driver will lead field to green in Sunday’s Cheez-It 355 at The Glen (1 p.m. ET, ESPN)

RELATED: Race lineup | Cheez-It 355 race center

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. — When the second and final round of qualifying ended on Saturday at Watkins Glen International, Jeff Gordon climbed onto the window ledge of his No. 24 Chevrolet and raised his arms in triumph.

Gordon had just won the pole for Sunday’s Cheez-It 355 at the Glen (1 p.m. ET, ESPN), the 22nd NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race of the season.

In winning his third Coors Light pole award at the 2.45-mile road course and the 75th of his career, Gordon had beaten odds-on favorite Marcos Ambrose for the top starting spot in Sunday’s race.

Gordon went out late in the 10-minute second session to post his lap at 129.466 mph (68.126 seconds). After Gordon made his pole-winning run, Ambrose didn’t have time to get back to the start/finish line and start another qualifying run before the clock ran out on the session.

After setting a track qualifying record at 129.491 mph in the 30-minute first round, Ambrose ran 129.138 mph in the final round to secure the outside of the front row. Jimmie Johnson, using a setup supplied by Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s No. 88 team was third in time trials at 128.968 mph, followed by Kevin Harvick (128.859 mph), Kurt Busch (128.816 mph) and AJ Allmendinger (128.701 mph).

Gordon’s late run in the second round wasn’t a strategic decision per se. It was a simply a matter of cooling his car after making two runs in the first round to ensure his advancement to the top 12.

“We have to make two runs in that first session, so when we made that second run, there was only a few minutes left in that session,” Gordon said. “We just had to cool everything down. There were two factors into when we went — cooling everything down, the tires and the engine, and then getting a clean lap.

“It just happened to work out that, when we were done cooling, it was a great time to go. There were no cars on the track.”

Gordon said he was surprised at how strong his lap was.

“I’ll be honest, I was real surprised with the lap (Ambrose) laid in the first session, so you can only imagine how surprised I was when I saw the lap time I had,” Gordon said.

Gordon’s lap also seemed to shock Ambrose, who was timed out before he could start a final run. But the Australian road course ace was gracious in giving the four-time champion his due.

“He’s a fantastic road racer, and I have watched a lot of races here where he dominated,” Ambrose said. “He’s having a standout year. You can’t discount anybody out there. Anyone in that top-12, if they had gotten the pole, I wouldn’t have been surprised.”.

 

READ MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE:
Get RaceView