Bruce: Piecing together wins remains difficult, even at ‘similar’ tracks

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Who gets on a hot streak now? Jeff Gordon, winner of last week’s race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway? The Joe Gibbs Racing gang, which finished 2-3-4 at Indy? Or what about Kasey Kahne, who finally looked once more like a potential candidate for Victory Lane?

Momentum is a great thing to have in NASCAR. The only problem? It’s difficult to carry it from one week to the next. The perfect setup at one track rarely translates to the following venue. Some of it does, of course, but even those tracks that seem similar have their differences.

Of course, it’s not impossible. While Jimmie Johnson didn’t win in his first 11 attempts this year, the six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion promptly reeled off three wins in his next four starts.

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Others have been nearly as impressive, most notably the Team Penske duo of Brad Keselowski and Joey Logano. Keselowski, the 2012 Sprint Cup champion, took two of three, sandwiching wins at Kentucky and New Hampshire around this year’s second stop at Daytona. Logano snatched wins at Texas and Richmond, with a forgettable finish at Darlington in between.

Generally speaking, the 1.5-mile tracks are somewhat similar, as will the restrictor-plate tracks and the series’ two road courses. But none will be exactly the same. Conditions will never be exactly the same. Some teams will get better as the weeks unfold; others will struggle.

All of which make winning on a regular basis an irregular occurrence.

Now, as the series dusts off from last week’s stop at Indianapolis and heads to Pocono Raceway for Sunday’s GoBowling.com 400, will anything from last week prove to be beneficial this time around?

Both are huge 2.5-mile tracks, and it’s often said that strength at one will translate to the other. But not everything that works at one will work at the other, according to some in the garage.

"Nope," says Steve Letarte, crew chief for Hendrick Motorsports driver Dale Earnhardt Jr. "Not really."

It’s closer, he said, than if the series was traveling to a short track this week, such as Bristol, or a road course such as Watkins Glen where the teams will be in two weeks. "But Turn 1 (at Pocono) is very banked, so that limits what you can run for Turn 3."

The uniqueness of Pocono is that it features three drastically different turns. Indy’s four corners, on the other hand, are flatter, and there’s one more turn for teams to navigate.

That doesn’t mean everyone will toss out everything and start from scratch, or build based solely on notes from this year’s previous Pocono stop.

Earnhardt Jr. won at Pocono when the series visited there in early June while Gordon won last week at Indy. Hendrick teams have won the last four Pocono races. Before Earnhardt Jr.’s win, Kahne, Johnson and Gordon made trips to Victory Lane.

"Without a doubt I’m going to make sure I look at exactly what the 24 ran (at Indy) and see how far off it was from what we ran at Pocono, as fast as he’s been all weekend," Letarte said.

Alan Gustafson, Gordon’s crew chief, said there’s enough that will translate from one to the other that it can be beneficial in some ways.

"Really, if you rewind, we raced Pocono (where Gordon finished eighth), improved on that; now we went to Indy, and improved on that and go to Pocono. It’s a constant evolution. It can be applied everywhere.

"I think it will apply to Pocono probably the most. It can help a lot of places. … But I think Pocono is probably the track that will correlate the most."

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Dale Jr.: ‘If he can run well … we can think about running him some more.’

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Editor’s note: This week’s JRM 360 video is on Josh Berry and why the folks at JR Motorsports are so emotional about this weekend. Watch it below at the end of this article.

When Josh Berry raced against Dale Earnhardt Jr. online, the youngster never dreamed that it could lead to a chance to drive for the NASCAR Nationwide Series team owner and Sprint Cup competitor.

Yet that’s exactly what happened.

Berry, 23, is scheduled to make his Nationwide Series debut this weekend in the JR Motorsports No. 5 Chevrolet when the series travels to Iowa Speedway for Saturday night’s U.S. Cellular 250.

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"There’s a series, the Peak Antifreeze Series is what it’s called now, it’s the highest series on iRacing.com," Berry said of the sim-racing series. "That’s where we raced together. We kind of developed a friendship through there, just talking about different things. The racing part of it was not so much. It was just kind of the bridge for us to meet."

Berry was competing in Legends cars for his family-owned team in Nashville, Tennessee, at the time, "and it was just me and my dad," he said. Although he "had aspirations to race Late Model or something like that, we just didn’t have the financial means to make that possible." 

JRM officials were looking for a driver to put in the organization’s Late Model program, and eventually Earnhardt Jr. made the offer.

"I told him that I had a Late Model and I’ve give him a race if he wanted to come race," Earnhardt Jr. said. "We’d test him first; if he tested well, then we’d race him, and if he raced well then we’d race him again … just one race after another.

"Then we ended up winning some races and won a (track) championship."

Regardless of how he does at Iowa, Berry said that initial opening has been "life-changing."

"It was kind of hard to believe how … it would work out," he said. "In talking to him, it just seemed so simple. ‘Oh yeah, you just come over and meet with us; we’ll go test,’ like (it was) nothing. And … it was a life-changing moment for me, a pretty big deal. ‘Holy cow, this is going down.’ "

Berry has held up his end of the bargain, winning the first championship for the organization in 2012 at Motor Mile Speedway near Radford, Virginia. He already has five wins this season at Hickory Motor Speedway and leads the track’s Late Model points standings.

"Every opportunity we give him, he’s done well, won races," Earnhardt Jr. said. "He works really hard. … He’s the guy working on the car. He’s working on it, learning himself.

"I just think he can do it. I think he’s really smooth. I think he understands what driving a car is all about, and hopefully we’ll see what kind of potential he’s got."

That he works on the car is a requirement, Earnhardt Jr. said. Berry started out working in the race shop for JRM, helping with post-race teardown and the assembly of the Nationwide cars during the week.

"And then we did the Late Model stuff at night," Berry said. "I’d say three quarters of the guys on the Nationwide team I’ve worked with here every day. 

"For the past couple of years I’ve just been working on the Late Model team. We added a second team last year so pretty much my responsibilities are to maintain and service my Late Model and help take care of the second car." 

Berry will join full-time JRM drivers Chase Elliott and Regan Smith at Iowa. Elliott, a three-time winner as a rookie this season, leads the points; Smith, who won the season-opening race at Daytona, is second. 

The No. 5 team, overseen by crew chief Ernie Cope, has won three times this season as well — twice with Sprint Cup drivers Kevin Harvick (at Richmond and Kentucky) and once with Kasey Kahne (at Daytona earlier this month). Austin Theriault made two starts, in the series’ first stop at Iowa and again at New Hampshire. Earnhardt Jr. has made four starts, with the car re-branded as the No. 88, although Cope was only on the pit box for two of those. 

The team’s success isn’t lost on Berry, but he said, "You’ll always feel … pressure because for someone like me, this is going to be my only shot.

"Without major sponsorship behind you or anything like that it really comes down to one race. So yeah, you’ve got to put some pressure on yourself; really all you can do … is prepare yourself the best you can, which I feel like I’ve done." 

For Iowa, Berry’s No. 5 entry will feature Tackle Grab, a leading online subscription box service that provides products to the recreational fishing industry. Tackle Grab has also launched a month-long social media campaign called "Rods, Reels and Racing," with the grand prize being a trip to Homestead for the championship weekend to meet the Earnhardts. (Get details here)

The team still has openings for future races in 2014, Earnhardt Jr. said, "and if we can get some people excited, we’d love to continue. If he can run well and not do anything totally disastrous, we can think about running him some more.

"It’s kind of like going back to that Late Model idea of ‘we’ll run you a race and see how you do, and if we can run you again, we’d love to do it.’ He’s part of our team and part of our team a long time. We’re going to try to take good care of him and try to give him the best opportunity we can."

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Rick Hendrick calls Ives his No. 1 pick to fill Letarte’s shoes

RELATED: Ives and Junior’s relationship started with smack talk | Earnhardt: Hendrick has ‘great plan’ for Elliott | Ives named Junior’s 2015 crew chief 

Through seven years and five championship runs, Greg Ives was the quiet man atop the No. 48 pit box. It was crew chief Chad Knaus who brought the steel, who could raise the tenor of his voice over the radio, who at times could even put the whip to his driver or pit crew. Then there was Ives, who as lead engineer helped shape the strategy that won all those titles, quiet and calculating and somewhat unknown even to Jimmie Johnson’s most ardent fans.

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That’s changed somewhat over the past two years, as Ives stepped out of the shadows and into a crew chief’s role of his own at Hendrick Motorsports’ Nationwide Series affiliate JR Motorsports, first for Regan Smith last year in a tight championship campaign and then for phenom Chase Elliott. And it will certainly escalate next year, when Ives steps into the most scrutinized crew chief’s position in NASCAR, and succeeds Steve Letarte on the No. 88 team of Dale Earnhardt Jr.

To be certain, this moved seemed a possibility from the beginning, given that — as was the case with Knaus and Letarte — it’s Hendrick policy to promote from within. Still, there were good reasons to believe the car owner would look elsewhere. Here is a relatively young crew chief who has clearly built a bond with his young driver, as Elliott has evidenced by winning three times thus far on the Nationwide circuit. When Ives was switched from the team of Smith to Elliott prior to this season, the reasoning seemed clear — here were two competitors who could progress together, all the way up to the Sprint Cup Series when that day inevitably came.

At least, that was the thinking until Wednesday, when Hendrick zigged when everyone else expected a zag, and indeed named Ives as the successor to Letarte, who will move into the television booth for NBC Sports beginning next year. "Greg was our No. 1 choice," Hendrick said in the release announcing the move, and it’s easy to see why. Ives’ pending promotion not only provides Earnhardt with another crew chief he’s very comfortable with — heck, as an owner of JRM, he’s even Ives’ boss at the moment — but it further strengthens the bonds between the 88 and 48 teams, enhancing a relationship that’s been as central to Earnhardt’s turnaround as anyone else.

But first, Ives. When I first interviewed him in early 2013 after he had taken the reigns of Smith’s team at JRM, the expectation was of a Knaus clone — accommodating enough, but guarded and maybe even hesitant. Instead, the now 36-year-old proved affable and easy to talk to, much like the man he will be replacing on the No. 88 team at the end of this season. He spoke at length about growing up in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, about driving late models while working as his own crew chief, about originally envisioning a career as a pediatrician until his father convinced him his future was in motorsports.

"From that point, it became a passion," Ives said then. "It became something I had to work hard toward, just because I wasn’t in the nucleus of North Carolina. I was in Michigan. I was an outsider. I had to do something that made me a little bit different, and not just a mechanic. Not just a driver. Not just an engineer. I was a combination of all of three. I was able to climb the ladder and have doors open in the right fashion for me to be able to walk through."

He set the goal of getting to Hendrick in 10 years, and made it in nine. A cousin’s son-in-law working as a mechanic on Jeff Gordon’s program passed his resume along to team manager Brian Whitesell, and Ives was hired as a tear-down mechanic shortly after graduating from Michigan Tech in 2003. Two years later, he was a setup engineer for Gordon. Prior to the 2006 campaign, Knaus asked him to become No. 48 team engineer — on the same day Ives discovered his wife was pregnant. His first race was the 2006 Daytona 500. He finished that day in Victory Lane.

So yes, though Ives has never worked as a crew chief at NASCAR’s highest level, the resume is ironclad — championship DNA from years with Johnson’s team, five victories and counting in less than two seasons on the box in the Nationwide Series, an approachable manner that Letarte has proven works for Earnhardt over the radio in the heat of competition. During his time with Ives, Smith raved about his crew chief’s ability to keep him calm during tense moments, which will be a point of emphasis with Earnhardt. And perhaps just as importantly, Ives next year will reunite with his old boss Knaus in Hendrick’s 48/88 shop, the two of them standing as equals, and no doubt strengthening the bonds between the two most symbiotic programs in NASCAR today.

Letarte’s arrival in late 2010 coincided with Hendrick’s decision to rearrange his team pairings, and place the 88 and 48 programs under the same roof. That raised some eyebrows at the time given that it broke up the wildly successful combination of the 24 and 48 teams, the former of which was established when the latter came along, and played a major role in helping get Johnson and Knaus quickly up to speed. But for 2011 it was the No. 48 team’s turn to help lift a counterpart, in this case the No. 88 program of Earnhardt that had lingered in the 20s in final points the previous two seasons.

Everything clicked. Letarte provided Earnhardt with the accountability and positive reinforcement the driver had lacked, while the confidence and winning culture created by Johnson and Knaus permeated the No. 88 program. Ever since, we’ve witnessed notable improvement in Earnhardt’s results, not to mention success for both programs along parallel tracks. When Johnson has a strong car, Earnhardt often does as well. The six-time champion may win more often, but his team has also helped Earnhardt find his stride, and this year NASCAR’s most popular driver is in the midst of his best season in a decade.

The presence of Ives, who sat so long at Knaus’ side as the No. 48 team racked up one title after another, will only enhance that combination, only increase the odds of Johnson and Earnhardt both arriving at the track with stout vehicles from the drop of the transporter door. They may have different personalities, but Ives and Knaus are both fierce competitors and proven winners, with mentalities that can encourage the best from their drivers. For the No. 88 team, there was really no other choice. No wonder, then, Hendrick called Greg Ives his No. 1 pick.

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Comparing Edwards’ exit to others in recent Sprint Cup history

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Carl Edwards witnessed the best-case scenario firsthand. Matt Kenseth was the points leader when news broke in June 2012 that the former champion would leave Roush Fenway Racing — the only home he’d ever known at NASCAR’s top level — at the end of that year. With the shadow of the transition hanging constantly over him, Edwards’ former teammate won twice late in the season to rebound from a rough start to the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. Kenseth didn’t leave with the title, but he left Roush with his head held high.

Of course, then there’s the other end of the spectrum, which we witnessed in 2007 after Dale Earnhardt Jr. announced he was leaving Dale Earnhardt Inc. for Hendrick Motorsports at the end of the year. It wasn’t the best of seasons anyway for NASCAR’s most popular driver, but it got worse — over the final 22 races Earnhardt suffered six DNFs, most of them engine failures that sparked whispers of sabotage given the strained relationships within the organization at the time. Earnhardt crashed in two of his final four starts and limped out of Homestead a distant 16th in final points.

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So yes, for the lame-duck driver, it can go either way. Roush officials announced Sunday at Indianapolis that Edwards would not be back with the organization next year, leaving the two-time championship team with a younger lineup pairing Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Trevor Bayne along with veteran Greg Biffle. While Edwards divulged no details about his next destination — "there are a lot of moving parts," he said — he did tell reporters at the Brickyard that his next deal is done.

So now everyone waits to see where that next deal will take him, and Edwards begins a 16-race finishing stretch that will essentially define his final season with Jack Roush. Although he’s won twice, the No. 99 team is somewhat emblematic of Roush as a whole in that it struggles to maintain consistency, something evident in Edwards’ results since his most recent victory at Sonoma. No question he wants to cap his 11-year run at Roush with the championship that to this point has eluded him, though the past indicates he’ll more likely have to settle for something less.

Throughout NASCAR’s long history, there’s never really been a case of a driver winning a premier-series title, and then leaving an organization that was still active the following season. The closest was 1956, when Buck Baker won the championship as part of a powerhouse team fielded by Carl Kiekhaefer, the Mercury Marine founder whose NASCAR program enjoyed an incredible two-year run that netted 52 victories and consecutive titles with Tim Flock and Baker. After Baker’s title, NASCAR implemented rule changes to level the playing field, and Kiekhaefer — concerned that more mediocre results would harm his boat engine business, which he used racing to promote — pulled out.

Baker went on to win the title again in 1957, racing half the season for owner Hugh Babb and the other half in a car the driver fielded himself. But that example requires a notable asterisk, given that the team Baker left behind was shutting down, and the move occurred in an era when drivers ran regularly for multiple car owners in a single season. For Edwards, or anyone, to do it in an age when drivers are so reliant upon crewmen and mechanics who may feel their own divided loyalties — not to mention race teams which are apt to reallocate resources, or shut lame-duck competitors out of strategic meetings as the season wanes on — would be a gigantic feat indeed.

Given what we’ve seen from Roush this year, that’s probably a stretch anyway, Edwards’ two victories on the season not withstanding. But there’s every reason to believe he can finish strong, just as Kenseth did two years ago, and others in similar situations did before that. The timing of the Roush announcement also fits with a bevy of previous moves revealed in high summer, all of them coming with a substantial chunk of the season still remaining — enough time to allow the teams and drivers involved to slip back into familiar routines despite the transition awaiting them.

That was certainly the case for Kenseth, whose departure was announced with 20 races still to go. Back in June of 2007, Hendrick Motorsports confirmed Kyle Busch’s pending release with 22 events still remaining — a domino effect of Earnhardt’s addition — and the former driver of the No. 5 car finished top-10 in 13 of them to secure a fifth-place standing in final points that stood as the best of his career until last season. Ryan Newman discovered last July that he wouldn’t be returning to Stewart-Haas Racing the following year, and he won the next week at Indianapolis and scored 10 top-10s in his final 17 starts.

It was July 2008 when Tony Stewart announced he would be leaving Joe Gibbs Racing to become part-owner of what was then called Haas-CNC Racing, and the future three-time champ enjoyed a strong late-summer stretch and won at Talladega before a slump in the Chase relegated him to ninth in final points. Clint Bowyer waited until October 2011 before he announced that he was leaving Richard Childress Racing for Michael Waltrip Racing, and in his final eight starts of that season recorded five top-10s and a victory.

And then there’s the mother of all farewell tours orchestrated by Kevin Harvick, who remained with RCR more than a year after it was assumed that he would be leaving for SHR following the 2012 campaign. Regardless, Harvick went on to have one of his best seasons in the Childress fold, winning four times and finishing third in final points for the third time in four years. No question, some drivers experience tumultuous lame-duck seasons, as Earnhardt did in 2007, and as Kurt Busch did during his Roush finale two years earlier. But the weight of historical evidence would seem to indicate otherwise, suggesting that Edwards and his No. 99 team may not be done yet.

The fact that Kenseth was in almost this identical situation, with the same organization involved, certainly bodes well. The folks at Roush know the drill. Kenseth was able to win races and contend down the stretch in what had to be a season more emotional than the stoic Midwesterner would let on. Now there’s another Roush driver from the heartland, another competitor who doesn’t share his feelings easily, walking down the same path at the same time of year. Given what we know of Carl Edwards, anything less than a renewed focus on the finish line would be a surprise.

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Alfalla made a welcome return to victory lane at the Brickyard.

After a rocky start to his 2014 season, Ray Alfalla dominated at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and made his long-awaited return to victory lane in the NASCAR PEAK Antifreeze Series Powered by iRacing. The 2011 and 2012 series champion showed he can still get it done by winning the pole and leading a race-high 40 of 100 laps en route to the win.

“Feels amazing to win at Indy again.” — Ray Alfalla

Chad Laughton was second, nearly two seconds behind Alfalla after battling with the winner for much of the race. Chris Overland came home third followed by Michael Conti. Bryan Blackford finished an impressive fifth after taking two tires on his first pit stop and hanging tough the rest of the way.

The win also bolstered Alfalla’s hopes for a third title . . . and delivered an emphatic statement about the strength of TeamSlipAngle.

“Everyone in the team finished in the top six, great effort,” Alfalla said. “Feels amazing to win at Indy again.”

From the drop of the green flag it was apparent Alfalla had a strong car but it seemed no one was going to be able to touch Nick Ottinger, who started second and sprinted out to an early lead before the yellow flew on Lap 12.

When the ensuing pit stops were complete, Alfalla found himself at the front again with Ottinger second. To make matters worse for Ottinger, he made a poor restart and fell to third as the field entered Turn One.  Desperate not to let any more cars pass him, Ottinger pushed a bit too hard coming off the corner and pancaked the right side of his car against the wall. The damage was severe enough to knock him half a second off the pace and, in a race with only two cautions, he had no time to fix his car. Adding injury to insult, his engine expired four laps shy of the checkered flag, relegating him to a thirty-second place finish.

With Ottinger out of the picture Alfalla’s only real competition was Laughton, who hounded him for most of the race. Laughton may have been quicker on the short run but Alfalla was clearly better once the tires got worn and even with help from the draft Laughton could not keep up.

Laughton knew he had to try something strategy-wise to get the lead and decided to pit before Alfalla on his last stop, hoping an extra lap on fresher tires would put him in front of the race leader. The plan ended failed as Alfalla had a stellar pit stop and emerged from the pits in front of Laughton and led the rest of the way.

Alfalla’s win combined with Ottinger’s bad finish helped tighten the points with only five races remaining. Alfalla now leads the standings by two points over Conti with Laughton five markers back in third. Ottinger fell from first to fourth with his run and is now 21 points out of the lead. Overland is a new face in the top five, though with 32 points to make up he has some work to do if he wants to contend for the title.

It would be easy to say the twelfth event of the 2014 NASCAR PEAK Antifreeze Series season is just another race, but it figures to be anything but as the series makes its road course debut on the fast but technical Watkins Glen International race course. Grip will likely be at a premium as road courses are known to be extremely slick with the Gen 6 cars.

As for who is a favorite for the win, this race ranks close to Daytona in unpredictability. With their road racing backgrounds on iRacing, Jake and PJ Stergios figure to factor into the conversation, along with Conti who always looks impressive turning left in stock cars. However, one wrong move could lead to a visit with the powder blue guardrails, so even the best will have to be on their toes. Of all the races so far, this is the one not to miss so be sure to catch all the action from Watkins Glen on iRacing Live!

No. 59 driver Kyle Martel will lead ‘Go Pink @ Pocono 3’

Bill Martel Racing announced Wednesday that the team is hosting "Go Pink @ Pocono 3," a benefit track walk for the Pennsylvania Breast Cancer Coalition on Saturday, August 2 at Pocono Raceway. The event will follow the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Pocono Mountains 150, which is scheduled to begin at 1 p.m. ET.

Kyle Martel, driver of the No. 59 Chevrolet, will participate in the Truck Series race as well as leading the post-race walk.

 

"Walking with three hundred fans last year was so much fun," Martel said. "I’m confident we can double it this year. It’s also the perfect opportunity for fans to walk for a great cause and take pictures on a NASCAR track — for which we thank Pocono and NASCAR."

To register for the Go Pink @ Pocono 3, fans can visit the BMR tent located under the main grandstand (start/finish line) on Aug. 1 from noon until 3:30 p.m. ET and Aug. 2 from 8 a.m. until the conclusion of the Truck Series race. The cost to walk is a $10 donation, $5 for ages 12 and under. A $20 donation includes a commemorative Go Pink t-shirt while supplies last.

"This year we are offering a limited edition Pink Ribbon Race Decal for a $25 donation — which will be customized and affixed to our NASCAR truck by Kyle Martel. A pink ribbon that goes 200-mph is a great way to honor a breast cancer survivor or loved one on race day," Rob Ziemba of the public relations team said.

Proceeds from the event will go toward the Pennsylvania Breast Cancer Coalition. Information on how to sponsor a walker and a complete listing of sponsors can be found at www.kylemartel.com.   

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Sickler: ‘Whatever you put into life you will to get out of it’

Someone once said, "it’s not where you start, but where you finish."

Considering the path to his current career in motorsports, that person could have been talking about Jonathan Sickler.  

For the last four years, Sickler has been an integral part of Rev Racing in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East, where he serves as a finish fabricator and drives the team rig that hauls the Toyota race cars.

All those miles on the road and hours in the garage could take a toll on a person, but not Sickler.

"If you’re passionate about what you do and enjoy it, it doesn’t seem like work," Sickler said.

Even if it doesn’t seem like work, the time and effort he and his team put in this year was well worth it.

In 2012, Rev Racing with driver Kyle Larson captured the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East crown using engines built by current Universal Technical Institute (UTI) students in the Spec-Engine Program. That victory marked the first NASCAR touring championship for Rev Racing and NASCAR’s Drive for Diversity initiative.

This season, Rev Racing has already scored three wins in the competitive NASCAR K&N Pro Series East division.

More than a decade ago, when Sickler was installing car stereos in Pinellas Park, Florida, NASCAR championship trophies were not exactly top of mind. However, as he worked more with cars, he developed a passion for them beyond the stereo component.

Taking on the same tasks, day after day, he was ready for a change, and knew that expanding his knowledge of cars was the first step.

At 25, Sickler packed up his belongings, drove across the country and enrolled at UTI-Avondale, completing the 51-week Core Automotive Program. With a solid mechanical foundation, Sickler was ready for more, and "Race City, USA" and NASCAR Tech was his next pit stop.

"The curriculum was really strong and I was at the age where I was mature enough to understand what I wanted to do and how I was going to get there," said Sickler, who graduated from NASCAR Tech in 2003. "The school provided a platform for me to accomplish my goals."

At 27, Sickler was not deterred from reaching the pinnacle of the racing world, proving that no matter your age, a career in the automotive industry is possible.

"Shops and race teams are looking for qualified, skilled and passionate individuals," said John Dodson, community/NASCAR team relations director at NASCAR Tech. "Those are the types of graduates we turn out, and they get the job done."

"You have to have an education in automotive technology to get into racing," said Sickler. "It’s really competitive and hands-on experience is the differentiator race teams are looking for."

Sickler realizes how fortunate he is to be in this position and wants others to know that all things are possible.

Heading into this weekend’s Autolite Iridium XP 150 NASCAR K&N Pro Series race at Iowa Speedway, Sickler reminds us it is hard work and dedication that lead to success in racing — and in life.

"Whatever you put into life you will to get out of it," he said. "If you work hard and believe in what you’re trying to accomplish, you can do it."

Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc., sponsors second race this year

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Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc., the official cardiovascular partner of NASCAR, will serve as the title sponsor for the first Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup race of 2014. The MyAFibStory.com 400 takes place at Chicagoland Speedway and concludes a tripleheader weekend.

The race name is in recognition of National AFib Awareness Month, which runs through September. Atrial Fibrillation, or AFib, is a condition caused by an irregular heartbeat that impacts nearly three million Americans. 

"The first race in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup provides a unique and elevated stage within the sport, one that delivers an excellent opportunity to raise awareness of atrial fibrillation with the MyAFibStory.com 400," Chicagoland Speedway President Scott Paddock said in a track release. "We are proud to be partnering with Janssen, and we have a number of events and activation opportunities planned to educate and encourage race fans on AFib, risks and warning signs and treatment for the condition."

Janssen sponsored a NASCAR event earlier this year, the TreatMyClot.com 300 at Auto Club Speedway. It also sponsored Brian Vickers‘ No. 55 Toyota in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at the same facility.

"Millions of Americans are living with AFib, and could have an increased risk for an AFib-related stroke if it is not being treated properly," Janssen Group Product Director Gregg Ruppersberger said in the release. "That’s why we and Chicagoland Speedway are partnering to educate people about the risk factors and warning signs for AFib, stroke, blood clot prevention and treatment options."

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At home or on the go, keep tabs on Cup, Nationwide and Truck Series races this weekend

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This weekend brings the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series to Pocono Raceway, while the NASCAR Nationwide Series will be at Iowa Speedway.

The Sprint Cup Series GoBowling.com 400 is Sunday, Aug. 3 at 1 p.m. ET with coverage on ESPN.

The Nationwide Series U.S. Cellular 250 presented by New Holland is Saturday, Aug. 2, at 8 p.m. ET with coverage on ESPN.

The Camping World Truck Series Pocono Mountains 150 is Saturday, Aug. 2, at 1 p.m. ET with coverage on FOX Sports 1.

For more information on track times, press conferences and GarageCam, you can check out this weekend’s schedule. For TV times, see this week’s TV schedule.

We know you may not have the time to watch the race action without any interruptions, so if you’re on the go, here’s how to keep up at with the action at Pocono and Iowa.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

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Standings
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NASCAR.com’s live Cup leaderboardNationwide leaderboard and Truck Series leaderboard update in real-time and offer constant text updates of lead changes, cautions, strategies, strong runs and everything in between. On the go? Download the NASCAR Mobile app to follow the leaderboards live from your device.

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series RaceBuddy is back on NASCAR.com and NASCAR Mobile. Get 10 live high-definition feeds, including views of pit road and battle cams.

Lap-by-Lap will keep you caught up even if you can only take a peek here and there. Check in now and then to read back through all the laps you’ve missed, or keep an eye on the feed for real-time race updates.

We’ll also be sending race updates via Twitter through the official @NASCAR and @NASCARStats handles.

Haven’t tried RaceView yet? If you sign up, you’ll get virtualized video of cars on the track from various angles and hear what your favorite team is saying over the radio. Use it as a second screen or as your only screen. Just want to scan the radios? You can have that too with RaceView Audio. On a mobile device? Get RaceView Mobile here.

If you want to be more involved in the on-track action, you can manage your own fantasy team on NASCAR.com and follow your team’s performance in NASCAR Fantasy Live. Mobile users can also download NASCAR Connect, a game from OneUp Sports that allows users to play other fans with race predictions, for some off-track competition while drivers battle it out on the track.

Live Press Pass streams will keep the NASCAR action rolling even after the winner rolls in and out of Victory Lane. Catch interviews with the top finishers immediately following the checkered flag for the Sprint Cup Series and Camping World Truck Series, and stay tuned to NASCAR.com throughout the week for the latest news.

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Ives, current crew chief to Chase Elliott, will return to Hendrick Motorsports

RELATED: Ives to benefit Earnhardt in more ways than one | Ives and Junior’s relationship started with smack talk | Earnhardt: Hendrick has ‘great plan’ for Elliott

Greg Ives is going home.

Home being the 48/88 shop that overlooks the vast Hendrick Motorsports complex located near Charlotte Motor Speedway, that is.

Ives, 34, will step into the role of NASCAR Sprint Cup Series crew chief for driver Dale Earnhardt Jr. and the No. 88 HMS team beginning in 2015.

He will give up his crew chief role in the Nationwide Series, where he is currently paired with Chase Elliott at JR Motorsports, to replace Steve Letarte, who is departing for the role of race analyst with NBC Sports next season.

EARNHARDT JR.’S CREW CHIEF ROSTER
Year
Chief
Races
Wins
1999
Tony Eury Sr.
5 0
2000
Tony Eury Sr.
34 2
2001
Tony Eury Sr.
36 3
2002
Tony Eury Sr.
36 2
2003
Tony Eury Sr.
33 2
2003
Tony Eury Jr.
3 0
2004
Tony Eury Sr.
36 6
2005
Pete Rondeau
11 0
2005
Steve Hmiel
15 1
2005
Tony Eury Jr.
10 0
2006
Tony Eury Jr.
36 1
2007
Tony Eury Jr.
23 0
2007
Tony Gibson
13 0
2008
Tony Eury Jr.
36 1
2009
Tony Eury Jr.
12 0
2009
Brian Whitesell
1 0
2009
Lance McGrew
23 0
2010
Lance McGrew
36 0
2011
Steve Letarte
36 0
2012
Steve Letarte
34 1
2013
Steve Letarte
36 0
2014
Steve Letarte
20 2

Totals: Eight crew chiefs, 21 wins

The Hendrick compound is familiar territory for Ives, who served as race engineer on the No. 48 team with driver Jimmie Johnson and crew chief Chad Knaus during Johnson’s record-setting five-year championship run.

"(It’s) a place I have the ability to go back to and people understand my mentality and my work ethic," Ives said during a teleconference following Wednesday’s announcement. "They already know what to expect out of (me)."

Earnhardt Jr., twice a winner this season with Letarte and currently second in the points standings, said he and Ives have had "a great working relationship for several years." 

"Not only is he the most talented candidate for the job," Earnhardt Jr. said, "but it will be the most seamless transition. I don’t see how it could go any smoother being that he has that … history.

"The best part about it … is he knows the culture of the shop … he knows what that shop is about and how the work goes on, the mentality there. He has a great rapport with not only Chad but (also) a lot of the employees that are working there. He’s worked with all those guys in the past."

Team owner Rick Hendrick noted that Ives has "proven that he can win races, and he has all the tools to do big things."

At JR Motorsports, Ives guided Regan Smith to a pair of wins and a third-place points finish a year ago. Elliott has three victories through 18 races this season and currently leads the Nationwide points standings.

That time spent at JRM, and what the organization has been able to accomplish, helped prepare him for the move to becoming a Sprint Cup crew chief, Ives said.

"It has prepared me from levels that I couldn’t have learned as a race engineer on the Cup side," he said. "From managing people, managing budgets, everything that goes into a smaller team that you have to have your hands in. …

"It’s helped me kind of be a stronger individual and gave me a learning curve a little steeper trying to understand the crew chief side of things."

Earnhardt Jr. said he doesn’t expect Ives to mimic Letarte’s positive reinforcement style of support, but noted "everybody enjoys that every once in a while.

"He understands working with different people you deal with them different ways. … Nobody is going to be like Steve; nobody’s going to be like Chad. No crew chiefs are going to be identical," he said.

"I think a driver likes to hear positive reinforcement. I’m sure Greg and I will learn how to … give and take that. I’m sure he wants to hear it as well. …

"When I look back over the years working with Steve, his cheerleading has sort of gotten less and less and less as the confidence built. The more confident I got in what we were doing, the less cheerleading he had to do, to where it’s almost nowhere near as repetitive as it used to be. … 

"I’ve gotten my mojo back. My confidence is up there and I’ve got such good belief in my team. I believe in Greg and … the decisions we’re making."

In the meantime, Ives will focus on trying to guide Elliott and the No. 9 team to the Nationwide title. His plans for next year are already in place. 

"It’s a great feeling to know that hard work does pay off in the end," he said. "It’s something that doesn’t happen overnight.

"The loyalty and trust that Mr. Hendrick has put into his organization and his people – when he talks about It’s all about the people, it definitely shows and it makes me feel good just to be part of it."

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