With transition looming, JRM driver and crew chief remain focused

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NEWTON, Iowa — When Chase Elliott and Greg Ives met for the first time since news broke of Ives’ departure to become Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s crew chief in 2015, it could have been intense. But the driver of the NASCAR Nationwide Series No. 9 NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet decided to turn things in a different direction.

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"I think he was kind of worried that I was going to be mad and what-not," Elliott said of his outgoing crew chief. "I was joking with him when I got here (to Iowa): ‘I knew you didn’t like me, but I didn’t know I was going to run you off that fast.’ It’s cool. It’s good to joke about. It’s nothing that is heated where we have to worry about us being mad at each other. I’m happy for him and he knows that."

Turned out it was a good ice-breaker and could be an important unifying moment as Ives attempts to help bring home a championship for Elliott, who is atop the standings and leads JR Motorsports teammate Regan Smith by four points entering Saturday night’s U.S. Cellular 250 Presented by New Holland (8 p.m. ET, ESPN).

But with the job as crew chief for NASCAR’s most popular driver looming, the word distraction did crop up, even if for just a brief moment in Chase’s mind.

"My first thought was I hope this isn’t a distraction for him," Elliott said, "but the more I sat back and thought about it and just being honest with myself, Greg’s the type of guy he’s a very professional guy and he’s not going to let that take his sights off what he knows is important and the rest of this season. So I have no doubt he’s going to continue to do his job to the best of his ability, and I don’t think we have anything to worry about there."

One might argue that, if anything, it’s an embarrassment of riches for Ives, who gets to work with one of the most sought-after young talents on the Nationwide Series, then move back to the Hendrick Motorsports garage to team up with Earnhardt Jr., who is enjoying one of his best seasons, having already clinched a spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

"You know, somebody asked me if I was nervous," Ives said. "Nervous to try to win races and the championship and be competitive every week and have a group of guys that … you know when they wake up in the morning they want to go to work for you, want you to be their leader?

"So I feel I have a big job right now, and that’s not going to change whether it’s Chase Elliott, Dale Earnhardt Jr., or well whoever may come after that, if there is somebody after that."

That job this season has added up to 13 top-10s in 19 races, including three victories for Elliott. With 14 races to go before a champion is crowned, another trip to Victory Lane might be needed before Chase is a champion.

Yet with big things perhaps on the horizon on more than one front, Ives isn’t letting off on his trademark intensity for the No. 9 team.

"There’s a start line for me, but there’s not a finish," Ives said. "I’m going after whatever I can go after. Two-thousand fifteen, yeah it’s a big deal, it’s a big job, but I feel like I put as much effort and as much emphasis on what we have going on with Chase and the NAPA 9 team to try to go out there and try to win races and championships." 

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‘The Biff’ has been better than Edwards since 2012

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LONG POND, Pa. — A week after Roush Fenway Racing announced Carl Edwards would move on at season’s end, Greg Biffle was asked whether he had thought about his role as the clear leader of the team.

"I was going to make joke and say I’ve always been the clear leader there," Biffle said.

But statistics since 2012 suggest "The Biff" might not be kidding.

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For the last two-and-a-half years, Biffle has a better average finish than Edwards (13.3 to 14.6), more laps led (943 to 908) and higher driver rating (88.8). While Edwards has more wins (4) over that timeframe, Biffle has more top-five finishes (18 to 16) and top 10s (39 to 37). He’s also completed 429 more laps than his soon-to-be former teammate. 

"After Matt (Kenseth) left we had that same thing, is it Carl or Greg, and what’s funny is we did an interesting analysis of my finishes and wins and performance over the last few years over his, and it’s a pretty interesting stat to look at, but Carl had been a great teammate and still brings a lot to our organization," Biffle said.

"I’ve won over 55 races driving there and 19 Cup wins, and I just felt like we can get this thing turned around so I made the decision to stay and be the anchor for Roush Fenway and do another three-year contract, regardless of sponsorship at that point. I made that commitment to stay and it’s been a tough eight weeks since then."

For those last eight races, Biffle only has one top-10 finish (9th at Sonoma) and one top-10 start (10th at Daytona), and Biffle offered an honest assessment 

"I think it’s pretty obvious for all of us that this has probably been one of our tougher seasons for our whole organization. It seemed like we were really far behind, or we were up until this point, and we really shed some light on where our whole organization was when we did a Michigan test prior to Indy, and found what I’m gonna call a tremendous amount of speed in our race cars."

Following a frustrating effort at Indianapolis, Biffle said a half-day of meetings on Monday helped shed light on what the the Roush Fenway Ford Fusions have been missing.

After first practice on Friday, Biffle indicated that the team may have rounded the corner at the three-turn Pocono Raceway.

"This is the fastest I’ve been this season when unloading off the truck," Biffle said. "We were third or fourth-quick, which is faster than a lot of guys in qualifying trim and we were in race trim so we’re really excited about how fast our car is here so far."

In addition to this newfound information after their cars, Roush Fenway also announced Thursday that Mark Martin will return to the team as a driver development coach. Biffle noted that his former teammate might have arrived just in time to take credit for the team’s recent speed gains.

"I think he’s gonna look like a hero right now," Biffle said. "As has been well documented, we’ve not been where we wanted to be this season. 

"The last two weeks, we’ve closed in on this thing a huge amount when we unloaded here today and have that kind of speed. I haven’t driven a car like that in a year. The race isn’t over yet so Mark is just starting to get back into the swing of things."

Still seeking his first win of the season and a spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup for the sixth time in the last seven seasons, Biffle reaffirmed the underlying reason for NASCAR’s new win-and-you’re-in system for making the playoffs.

"That’s been the discussion all along is, ‘What would you do for a win?’ I would do anything for a win…" Biffle said. "If I’m running second at Richmond, the guy in front of me better watch out when it’s coming down to the end of it, if I can get to them."

But he may not have to wait that long. If he doesn’t earn his second Pocono win on Sunday (1 p.m. ET, ESPN), he likes his chances next week at Watkins Glen.

"It’s definitely a fun race track, and I’m excited about these next races coming up with how we’re running and how we feel like we’ve closed in on the competition, but I always look forward to going a road course," Biffle said. "That’s really been our best finish this year when we went to Sonoma, and we’re heads-up with the competition, so to speak, because we hadn’t got that car attitude and aero all figured out yet, so that was a nice change and I’m looking forward to going back to another road course."

With a positive attitude on and off the track, Martin’s addition may help leader Biffle move into this year’s Chase and move the organization forward in 2015.

"We’re really gonna turn our competition around from here to the end of the season, I think, and that could have Mark’s name on it actually from a 10,000-foot view. But he can still bring knowledge and information and I think an outside perspective can help us continue to try and focus on areas we need to work in."

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Emotional Chase ahead for No. 88 team in Letarte’s swan song

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LONG POND, Pa. — Upon landing at Pocono Raceway on Friday, a confident Dale Earnhardt Jr. tweeted he’s "lookin’ for a broom" to complete the season sweep at the triangle track. The confidence may come from his relief over Wednesday’s announcement that Greg Ives will be his crew chief in 2015.

"The one thing that I was probably most happy about or relieved about was to be able to make a decision and just get it done," Earnhardt Jr. said. "I didn’t want to be in the middle of choosing that guy. I kind of wanted to just sit back and watch."

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In the two days since Ives was revealed as Steve Letarte’s successor, positive feedback from inside the walls of Hendrick Motorsports has convinced Earnhardt Jr. that he has the right personnel to continue the success he has seen under Letarte.

"Number one, it was great to hear how confident Rick (Hendrick) and Doug (Duchardt, Hendrick Motorsports general manager) and Chad (Knaus, crew chief of the No. 48 car) and all them were in this particular choice," Earnhardt Jr. said. "That gets me excited. I can get right behind that. I already know how good Greg is, but just knowing that Chad and everybody believes in that decision and thinks that we will be even better off than we are today."

While his current crew chief has helped raise the No. 88 team to new heights in 2014 with two wins and Earnhardt Jr.’s best championship chance in years, the driver doesn’t want to rest on Letarte’s laurels as the organization looks to continue its strong momentum into next season.

"We are not trying to photocopy Steve and plug in a guy just like him," Earnhardt Jr. said. "We want to try to get better. I think we have in making this decision.

"I haven’t been able to really talk to the guys yet, but the ones that I have been able to talk with they feel like that is what we have done. We are going to be a better team for it once we get going next year."

As an owner, Earnhardt Jr. has gotten to know Ives, who has helped build JR Motorsports into title contender, finishing third last year in the NASCAR Nationwide Series championship with Regan Smith and leading the points this year with Chase Elliott.

"I mean it’s a big relief to get it off my shoulders and not worry about who we are going to be working with. What kind of personality he is going to be and whether or not we are going to get along or whether he is going to work and whether the chemistry is going to be good and the cars will be fast. I don’t have to worry about that. I feel good about it."

As a commissioner of two fantasy leagues, Dale Jr. is ready for some football, activating his leagues this week. However, the league he shares with Ives at Hendrick Motorsports, isn’t fired up yet.  

Perhaps it’s for the best as he hopes to savor his final 16 races with Steve Letarte and turn the No. 88 team’s two wins in 2014 into a storybook title run with his outgoing crew chief.

"There is a lot of emotion. Every race gets a little bit harder knowing this is Steve’s (Letarte) last year. I know that winding down into the Chase is going to get pretty emotional for both of us."

As Earnhardt Jr. seeks the second season sweep of a track in his career, he began the weekend taking things one step at a time with Letarte.

"Me and Steve talked about that particular thing is we want to try to get a little bit better in practice so that we have a little more confidence," Earnhardt Jr. said.

After spending time on top of the speed charts in Friday’s first practice before finishing the session as the top Hendrick car in ninth, the No. 88 team started the weekend on the right foot with a secure future heading into 2015.

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Hendrick counts on system to produce another winning crew chief

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LONG POND, Pa. — Greg Ives is at Iowa Speedway this weekend, working toward a NASCAR Nationwide Series championship with Chase Elliott, but he was top of mind in Pocono with his former No. 48 teammates ahead of his transition back to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.

Chad Knaus, who helped raise Ives in the Hendrick system, called his return to crew chief the No. 88 team in 2015 "really a no-brainer."

"Greg is obviously a very good fit with me and the rest of the team at the 48/88 shop," Knaus said. "He worked his way up from a mechanic to a chassis set-up guy to the No. 48 lead engineer and won championships with us."

Knaus noted it’s a popular decision at the shop, which has seen Ives "come up as a young man, have kids, grow, turn into a crew chief, win races in the Nationwide Series, lead the points over there, so everybody is really excited to have him back."

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Ives’ main qualification for moving from the Nationwide Series pit box to the No. 88 Sprint Cup team is "he brings fast race cars," according to Knaus.

With past crew chiefs, including uncle Tony Eury and cousin Tony Eury Jr., Dale Earnhardt Jr. has had turbulent relationships. Knaus appeared to begin to address those concerns but stopped short when he said, "Dale’s matured enough now that he can handle … "

After acknowledging that Ives is a "good guy" and "a family man," Knaus reiterated, "When you have fast race cars, everything else seems to just take care of itself."

Both Knaus and six-time Sprint Cup Series champ Jimmie Johnson said current No. 88 crew chief Steve Letarte will be missed, but the strength of Hendrick Motorsports is that system, which has produced winners across the 48/88 and 5/24 shops.

"Look, we are sad that Steve (Letarte) is leaving, let’s be straight. We all like Steve, but much like Steve and (No. 24 crew chief) Alan (Gustafson) and myself, Greg has gone up through the system," Knaus said.

"Everybody knows him, everybody respects him. He understands the Hendrick way so it’s good. I think it’s going to be a great thing." 

A potential change in chemistry within the successful shop has been a concern for Johnson. While it appears to have been alleviated by the selection of Ives, Johnson noted a unique relationship between Knaus and Letarte that will be hard to match.

"It’s going to be hard to recreate the magic we’ve had with Steve and Chad to kind of take on different roles," Johnson said. "In a sense, it’s kind of been a good cop, bad cop in our shop where Chad will be tough on our guys and Steve will come by and smooth it out when it’s over. 

"But our shop works very well together and to protect that environment, there’s a very short list of guys to take over the 88 car crew chief role. I was hopeful that it would go Greg’s way, and I’m very happy that it did. He’s worked very hard to develop as a crew chief and an individual."

Johnson looks forward to seeing a familiar face in the shop from his first five championships.

"I went through so many years seeing him all the time and he was such an integral part of finding speed in our race cars, and it’s going to be nice to see him a lot more often now," Johnson said. "If you look at his stats and what he has accomplished there as a crew chief, you can say definitely he’s earned this opportunity."

Looking at those stats over the past two seasons since leaving the No. 48 team, Ives has five wins, 15 top-fives and 31 top-10 finishes in 51 Nationwide races with Regan Smith and Elliott.

Knaus doesn’t seem to be worried about recreating the magic as he shared the secret to the success of the two-car shop within the four-car team.

"Michael Landis, our team manager, and I spoke about it yesterday," Knaus said. "Greg understands how we work. We work with a three-person task force between the two crew chiefs and Michael Landis to make the decision and the directions that we go in our shop — what we do with our race cars and how we approach life."

While the two teams will continue to talk about working together next year with a new leader in charge of Earnhardt Jr.’s team, there’s a Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup to win. 

"Our goal is to keep that No. 88 car running up front, hopefully win the championship or finish second in the championship between us and the No. 88," Knaus said. "We have got to focus on that. We have to pay attention to what we are trying to do this year. Try to get the teams to stay together intact and move on to 2015 without any problems."

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NASCAR.com writers debate the hot topics of the week

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1. With two victories, a fifth Brickyard title, and the points lead, Jeff Gordon believes his team is the best in the Sprint Cup Series. Is it?

David Caraviello: It’s certainly in the argument. It probably says something that Jeff and the No. 24 guys were still able to win Sunday with a few slip-ups on pit road, including one instance where the fuel man lost his grip on the can. A fast car, though, makes up for a whole lot, and Jeff certainly had that Sunday.

Holly Cain: When you put it like that … hard to argue. Except there are a couple of other drivers that could make a good case. Jeff is where he needs to be right now — and in an enviable position — but I still think Jimmie Johnson and Dale Earnhardt Jr., plus Brad Keselowski are on their game, too.

Kenny Bruce: How do you define best? Week in and week out, I think the 24 team is superior, but there are weeks when a Kevin Harvick, Keselowski or Johnson goes out and just slays the field. The problem for those guys has been they haven’t done it practically every weekend. Gordon’s been by far the most consistent, and that’s the difference. 

Cain: I agree, Kenny. That’s what will make the Chase so interesting — the ability to win every week.

Caraviello: But the best team? There are a few things that might give me pause in that regard. Jeff drove like a bat out of heck Sunday, and he had the restart of his life to win it, but restarting as a whole is far from his strong suit. He’s down the list a bit in terms of top-fives and laps led. Jeff and the No. 24 guys are capable of taking advantage of any scenario presented to them. They have enough to get to Homestead. A large piece of the equation, though, is the power under the hood.

Bruce: Give me a driver that is average or better on restarts in a great car and the rest will take care of itself. Witness, as you said, DC, the team’s ability to overcome the pit road adversity Sunday. Shades of teammate Johnson there. Maybe Sunday was all about having a great car. But that aside, I still think their week-to-week performances put them at the top.

Caraviello: There’s clearly a top four right now — the teams of Gordon, Keselowski, Johnson and Earnhardt. You could throw a blanket over all those guys. Determining the best among them comes down to nitpicky little details, which at this level are all capable of making a difference.

Cain: I really believe that’s where the crew chief will be a major component too, David. I think strategy and handling championship pressure will be as key as horsepower. That is, all things being equal, of course.

Caraviello: Alan Gustafson had that car on rails at the Brickyard. It was perfect. He didn’t need to rely on strategy like so many others did. But the time will come when strategy plays a major part, and you’d think guys like Steve Letarte and Paul Wolfe would have the advantage in that regard, just because of what they’ve shown us on the past.

Bruce: That’s what was so interesting about the race. How many times have we seen teams use unusual, or unexpected strategy to put themselves in position to win? The 24 team was more concerned about putting the fastest car on the track. I’m sure they had a plan, but it was the fallback and not the focus.

Caraviello: Indeed, Kenny, it’s hard to argue with a team that’s led the points 13 of the last 14 weeks. And Indy is a statement victory in more ways than one — it’s where teams begin rolling out new cars with an eye on the Chase. And if Gustafson can keep rolling out cars like that — watch out.

Bruce: Right-oh on the new cars, DC. Strong folks at Indy will likely be strong down the road. Maybe the better question, even if we don’t all agree there, is — who’s No. 2? OK, some other time.

 

2. Roush Fenway Racing announced Sunday that Carl Edwards would not return next season. What is the 2015 outlook for Roush with a stable of Greg Biffle, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. and Trevor Bayne?

Caraviello: Lots of selfies, "Twilight" movies, and whatever else the 20-something kids are into these days, I would guess. It’s going to be a very different Roush team than what we’ve seen in the past. This used to be the most veteran-laden group on the circuit back in the EdwardsMatt KensethBiffle days, but clearly that won’t be the case anymore.

Cain: On paper, it looks like Roush has decided to focus on potential and is building for the future. However, in this sport, it’s all about what can you do now. Both Stenhouse and Bayne need to "bring it" and Biffle needs to regain the form he has shown in years past. He may really shine as the definitive leader and new chemistry could be a spark for this team.

Bruce: Crazy young, right DC? With the exception of Biffle, that’s a lot of youth. But having drivers you can mold isn’t bad thing, as long as you realize positive results might be delayed. Then again, it’s not as if Stenhouse (former Nationwide Series champ) and Bayne (former Daytona 500 winner) have never sat in a Cup seat before.

Caraviello: And all this doesn’t even include Nationwide drivers Chris Buescher and Ryan Reed, who are barely into their 20s. At competition meetings, Biffle is going to feel like the old dude who wandered into a rave.

Cain: Can you relate to The Biff on that?

Caraviello: No comment, Holly! Though I might own a few glow sticks.

Bruce: No one holds up lighters anymore, DC? I’m behind the times. But I think you have something there, Holly. Bringing drivers along is fine as long as you have someone in the group that’s got experience and can win races. Biffle doesn’t just want to be that guy — he has to be that guy.

Caraviello: Two years ago, this was a team that boasted three bona fide title contenders. Next year you’re looking at two young guys who are works in progress, and a veteran who’s coming off an uneven year. That’s a huge difference, and the expectations probably need to change as a result. What’s a reasonable expectation for Stenhouse or Bayne next year? Getting to that Austin Dillon/Kyle Larson level, you’d think, and staying competitive and on the fringes of playoff contention. Though who knows, Biffle may thrive in that mentor’s role.

Bruce: Biffle the mentor? I could see that. I think the expectation for Bayne and Stenhouse is to contend for top-10s. Make the Chase. For real. If you’re not one of the best 16 teams, what are you doing? If Bayne slides into what’s now the 99, and that groups remains intact, we know it can contend.

Cain: While those two younger drivers may have some time to figure it out, I think Greg feels more urgency. For the first time he will be the "lead" Sprint Cup driver at Roush and I’m betting he thrives in that role.

Caraviello: Well, at 44, who wouldn’t feel urgency in a competitive environment? Those windows in which any athlete can contend for championships don’t remain open forever. Unless you’re Jeff Gordon, evidently.

 

3. After another spectacular Camping World Truck Series race at Eldora Speedway, owner Tony Stewart argued it’s time for the Nationwide and Sprint Cup circuits to bang fenders at the dirt track. Is he right?

David Caraviello: What a timely topic, given that we discussed the merits of weeknight Sprint Cup races just last week. Hey, it would be all kinds of fun. But as long as the playoff format at NASCAR’s highest level maintains a win-to-get-in component, not sure a points race on dirt would exactly be fair.

Kenny Bruce: Nope. Are we regressing here? Didn’t we just get rid of dirt a couple of years (OK, decades) ago? Teams are already tasked with building road course cars and restrictor plate cars that aren’t used anywhere else. Why ask them to build cars for a single dirt race? I love the idea, but the reality of it is it’s not the direction the sport needs to go in at this time. 

Cain: Seems like — while a great idea in theory — the teams may not welcome the extra preparation that one-off would mean. However, a race in the dirt this year would put Tony in the Chase!

Bruce: How’s that, Holly? Do promoters earn a Chase spot?

Cain: Just thinking Tony would be pretty hard to beat in the dirt.

Caraviello: He’d have to get past Kyle Larson first.

Cain: And that would get pretty interesting.

Bruce: Two words: Norm. Benning.

Cain: Point. Taken.

Caraviello: Listen, this kind of thing sounds tailor-made for the Nationwide Series. Invite all the interloping Cup drivers you want. Have a big ‘ol time. Get Kyle Busch and Larson and a bunch of other guys out there to mix it up at a standalone. But not Sprint Cup, not with a win-and-in playoff format. As Kenny suggested, that would seem a backward step.

Cain: I like that David. Great idea.

Bruce: Because the Nationwide Series teams have so much more money to throw around (said Mr. Fuddy Duddy).

Caraviello: I mean, clearly Eldora could handle it. They’ve done a masterful job with the Truck race, and I’d think they’d do just as well with a Nationwide event. Of course, as Mr. Fuddy Duddy points out, cost seems more an issue on the Nationwide side than in another other national series, so you might find some resistance to the idea in the garage.

Cain: I think the benefits and buzz could outweigh the concerns.

Caraviello: I just want somebody to give Eldora the $25 million so Tony can build a dome over the place. Might get a little dusty in there, but hoo boy, would that be a scene.

Cain: How about a retractable roof?

Bruce: No doubt, Eldora folks have exceeded everyone’s expectations as far as putting on the event. Better than some in Nationwide and, yes, even Cup. But outside of the uniqueness of such an event, I don’t see the gains.

Caraviello: I’m about to throw one of my glow sticks at Mr. Fuddy Duddy.

Cain: I think the Nationwide Series should have one race a year that’s wholly unique and this would fit that bill. Race on a new road course another season, etc. … spice it up, create interest and challenge the Cup guys that drop in.

Caraviello: Good idea, Holly. Let’s send them someplace like Montreal. Oh, wait …

Bruce: An "all-star" Nationwide race, perhaps? Bring your dirt car, and your own glow sticks.

Cain: I was thinking more like a racing-starved market. I have a couple in mind. And for you, David, we can hold a rave in the infield the night before.

Caraviello: The Biff and I have on matching tank tops and skinny jeans and are ready to go!

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In honor of three-turn Pocono, a list of the best triples

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As those old Saturday morning educational cartoons used to teach us, three is indeed the magic number. Of course, the folks at Pocono Raceway didn’t need "Schoolhouse Rock" to tell them that — they’ve known it since 1971, when the big 2.5-mile triangular track first opened, and today it remains the lone facility with just three turns hosting NASCAR’s premier series.

So yes, they’re well familiar with the number three in the mountains of northeast Pennsylvania, where Pocono’s trio of turns are modeled after corners from tracks in Trenton, New Jersey, Indianapolis and Milwaukee, respectively. Sunday the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series returns to the facility for the 74th time, and Dale Earnhardt Jr. will attempt to sweep both annual races at Pocono for the first time since Denny Hamlin did it eight years ago.

But Pocono is far from the only thing in NASCAR where the number three looms large. No, we’re not talking about that No. 3 — easy, Dale Earnhardt die-hards and Austin Dillon fans — but three-peats and triples and accomplishments being recorded for a third time. Seven, the championship benchmark Jimmie Johnson is attempting to equal this season, may stand as the sport’s greatest milestone. But three remains magical for reasons beyond the digit on the Intimidator’s door panel. In honor of another trip to three-turned Pocono, here are the top 10.

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10. Three times for Ingram

Jack Ingram was the "Iron Man" because he competed tirelessly on short tracks around America en route to a Hall of Fame career. He won two titles in what is now the NASCAR Nationwide Series, but Ingram was a feared short-track racer well before that circuit was formed. The pride of Asheville, North Carolina, was a terror on NASCAR’s former Late Model Sportsman circuit, which would later become the Nationwide tour. Ingram won three straight titles in that series, claiming championships in 1972, 1973, and 1974, and building the foundation of a career that would one day place him alongside the sport’s greats.

9. Richmond in Pocono

Before there was Tom Cruise and Robert Duvall, there was Tim Richmond and Harry Hyde. Together they owned Pocono in the mid-1980s, sweeping three straight races there over a period that saw the emergence of Richmond’s health problems. But in 1986 they were every bit the "Days of Thunder" duo at Pocono, winning for Rick Hendrick first in the rain, and then in the fog. The next spring, after a stay in the hospital and amid rampant rumors about his health, Richmond returned to the triangular track and led the final 46 laps en route to a victory that left him in tears. It would prove the penultimate win of a career that would end prematurely, soon after that day in the Poconos.

8. Three is enough

For all his accomplishments on the track, David Pearson remains something of an enigma, because he still leaves us wondering what he might have been capable of had he run the full season more often. No question those 105 career wins stand on their own, and the Silver Fox’s greatness is undisputed. Still — this is a driver who really only attempted the full schedule three times, and he won championships in every year he did. Those crowns in 1966, ’68 and ’69 only stoke the imagination over how many more titles Pearson might have claimed had he not been content to run a limited slate. But he was, and for the king of Spartanburg, South Carolina, three evidently was enough.

7. Busch’s tripleheader

Kyle Busch has never been shy about driving anything with wheels, and often he drives straight to Victory Lane. As a Sprint Cup star who regularly also competes in companion events, sometimes Busch finds him driving in all three legs of a tripleheader weekend — with the intention of winning every one. After a handful of near misses he finally achieved it at Bristol in 2010, when he became the first driver to sweep a tripleheader since NASCAR’s national division was expanded to a third series in 1995. He led 116 laps to win the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race from the pole, led 116 more en route to a Nationwide Series victory, and capped it with a dominating performance in the Sprint Cup Series event, where he led 283 laps to write his own chapter of history.

6. DEI at Daytona

When it came to restrictor-plate racing in the early 2000s, there was no organization better than Dale Earnhardt Inc. DEI was the favorite from the moment the hauler doors dropped, and the team backed it up in an amazing stretch of plate-track dominance. The team founded by Dale Earnhardt saved its best for NASCAR’s biggest event, claiming three Daytona 500 titles in a four-year stretch, a feat equaled only by the Petty Enterprises juggernaut of the 1970s. Michael Waltrip broke through on that dark day in 2001 when we lost the Intimidator, backed it up in a rain-shortened event two years later, and then in 2004 Dale Earnhardt Jr. claimed a triumph that left grown men in tears. DEI is gone, but at Daytona, its legacy lives on.

5. 3+2=1

It was 2006, and the Jimmie Johnson dynasty seemed over before it even started. He had fallen into a huge points hole after being inadvertently wrecked at Talladega, and was still 41 behind Matt Kenseth after a victory at Martinsville. What came next was an amazing stretch that essentially won Johnson his first championship, without him needing to visit Victory Lane the rest of the way. Johnson recorded three consecutive runner-up finishes, at Atlanta, Texas and Phoenix, to leap into the points lead and take a healthy 63-point advantage into the finale, where he easily secured the title. That stretch run in 2006 remains a hallmark to consistency, and proof that Johnson would be a contender regardless of the championship format.

4. Waltrip sees triple

Darrell Waltrip won back-to-back titles in 1981 and ’82 driving for Junior Johnson, and narrowly missed another the following year. Still, his third career championship in 1985 stands as something of a landmark, given that Waltrip was arguably the best driver in one of the most competitive eras in NASCAR history, a time that saw fading legends like Cale Yarborough and Richard Petty still gunning for victories, while the likes of Earnhardt, Rusty Wallace, Mark Martin, Terry Labonte and others were making their names. Waltrip bridged that gap, fighting off rivals both old and new in the process, a fact which makes his three titles stand out even though he didn’t claim them consecutively.

3. A pair of threes

As the 2000s drew to a close, there was no driver better on road courses than Jeff Gordon, who simply dominated opponents on tracks which required right turns as well as left. He didn’t just win three straight at Sonoma Raceway. He didn’t just win three straight at Watkins Glen International. He unleashed those concurrent road-course three-peats at the same time, combining them to form a six-race win streak on serpentine circuits that hasn’t been duplicated since. From 1997 at Watkins Glen through 2000 at Sonoma, Gordon won every road-course race at NASCAR’s top level, taking three straight at each facility. Gordon remains a threat on road courses today, but even he would be hard-pressed to replicate that feat. 

2. Tony’s trifecta

Tony Stewart came to Martinsville Speedway in the fall of 2011 ranked fourth in Sprint Cup points, and with time running out. What happened next is the stuff of NASCAR legend, a combination of driving talent and mental gamesmanship that resulted in a third career championship for the driver called "Smoke." And he blew plenty of it, especially after winning at Martinsville, where he lodged himself inside point leader Carl Edwards’ head and refused to budge. He won again the next week at Texas, effectively taking control of the title race even though Edwards led the points. And two weeks later at Homestead, the masterpiece — a third victory in four races, which earned him a third title in a tiebreaker.

1. Cale’s triple crown

How had no one ever done it? Looking back, it seems almost incomprehensible — how had the great Richard Petty, driving for the most dominant team of his era, never won three consecutive premier-series championships? How had David Pearson not done it? Lee Petty? Ned Jarrett? Tim Flock? It took a bulldog of a man from South Carolina tobacco country to kick down that door, and he did it with force. Cale Yarborough claimed three straight titles from 1976-78 driving for Junior Johnson’s powerhouse, a feat that was unprecedented at the time, and wound stand on its own for another three decades. Jimmie Johnson matched and then surpassed it, of course, his five straight titles comprising the current record. But in his era, and for long afterward, Cale Yarborough stood tall.

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Short-term focus is maintaining integrity of No. 9 team’s run at NNS title

RELATED: Greg Ives named Earnhardt Jr.’s 2015 crew chief | Ives to benefit Dale Jr. in more ways than one

Crew chief Greg Ives may be leaving Chase Elliott‘s team after this season to move up to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, but Dale Earnhardt Jr. has no concerns about the future of his NASCAR Nationwide Series phenom.

"Mr. Hendrick has a great plan for Chase going forward that we all believe in, and those particulars will be filtering out and announced whenever they’re ready to be announced. But now’s not the time," Earnhardt said Wednesday, referring to Rick Hendrick, with whom he and sister Kelley Earnhardt Miller co-own the JR Motorsports Nationwide Series team where Elliott currently competes.

"But we definitely have a lot of things that we’re very, very excited about for Chase. We feel like he’s got a great opportunity, not only in (2015) to have a great, successful season with whomever’s his crew chief, but also this year with Greg and what they have remaining this year. I’m excited to get that information out there, and will do that when the time comes."

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Ives, who will take over Earnhardt’s No. 88 program next year, has won three Nationwide races this season with Elliott, the 18-year-old son of NASCAR Hall of Fame selection Bill Elliott. The younger Elliott leads the Nationwide standings by four points over JRM teammate Regan Smith, whom Ives worked with last season, and led to two race victories.

Earnhardt has said he would prefer that Elliott run two seasons in Nationwide, though no formal plans for next season have been revealed. Although many assumed that Ives would help to shepherd Elliott up to NASCAR’s premier series when that move inevitably occurred, Hendrick Motorsports general manager Doug Duchardt said no such plan was in place.

"Greg’s career path began before we had Chase as a driver in the 9 car," Duchardt said. "Greg had shown an interest in being a crew chief, and Rick and (Hendrick competition director) Ken Howes and myself had sat down and talked about what we thought was the best path for him, and we ran that by Dale and Kelley to make sure they were supportive of bringing Greg over to JRM. So that’s what we did in 2013."

Things changed in January of this year, when Earnhardt’s current crew chief, Steve Letarte, announced plans to leave after the season to become a television analyst for NBC Sports. "It became evident pretty quickly that this would be the right person for the job," Duchardt said of Ives, whose pairing with Elliott "wasn’t really part of the consideration as we looked at it," he added.

While Hendrick finalizes its plans for Elliott for next year and beyond, the short-term focus is in maintaining the integrity of the No. 9 team’s run at the Nationwide title. "During this whole process, especially when we introduced Greg’s name into the mix, we definitely have respected the situation with Chase, with Greg, and they’re racing for a championship this year," Earnhardt said.

At the same time, there have already been discussions about Ives staying over for the Sprint Cup race on companion weekends, so he can sit atop the No. 88 box with Letarte and get a head start on understanding his future driver’s terminology and preferences inside the car.

"I expect that we’ll definitely protect his current situation where he’s racing for a championship on the Nationwide side with Chase," Earnhardt said. "And we’ll respect that to the utmost. But if possible, if he’s able to stay over on Sundays, it would be beneficial to give him the ability to be on the box with us. If that’s an option for us to do that, if he can give us that kind of time, we’ll do that."

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Just when Dale Jr. thought he was the best smack-talker, he met his match

RELATED: Greg Ives named Junior’s 2015 crew chiefIves to benefit Dale Jr. in more ways than one

Dale Earnhardt Jr. thought he was going to run roughshod over Greg Ives.

Of course, NASCAR’s most popular driver thought he was going to run roughshod over everyone when he was first invited to join "Hendrick Honchos," the Hendrick Motorsports in-house fantasy football league comprised mostly of executives, engineers and crew chiefs.

"When it comes to fantasy football, I’ve got a little bit of a potty mouth and do a little smack talking," Earnhardt remembered. "I thought I was just going to grab the reins and run the league with my jaw."

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And he planned to treat Ives, then an engineer on Jimmie Johnson’s race team, no differently. What followed was, shall we say, a somewhat original first encounter between Earnhardt and Ives, whom Hendrick announced Wednesday would take over as crew chief for the No. 88 team when current signal caller Steve Letarte departs after this season to become a television analyst for NBC Sports.

When it came time for Earnhardt’s team to meet Ives’ undefeated fantasy squad, the game was on.

"I guaranteed a win, and he ended up destroying me," Earnhardt said. "Not only on the gridiron, or the fantasy make-believe gridiron, but also on the message board as well. I found out that I wasn’t the best smack talker in the league, Greg was. So we became buddies after that, and joked around and picked. That seems like such a long time ago. But it’s pretty funny now that we’re going to be working together. We started off on an really odd foot, I’ll say that."

From those strange beginnings, a friendship grew. Ives served as Johnson’s engineer for seven seasons, and during the latter part of his tenure Hendrick paired the 88 and 48 teams in the same building. When it came time for JR Motorsports — the Nationwide Series team founded and co-owned by Earnhardt — to hire a new crew chief for Regan Smith prior to the 2013 season, the call went to Ives. When JRM needed a steady hand to oversee the rookie season of Nationwide driver Chase Elliott, Ives moved to the No. 9 team.

And when Hendrick Motorsports went looking for a successor to Letarte, despite what general manager Doug Duchardt termed overwhelming interest from the garage area, NASCAR’s top organization once again looked within to find another person with strong ties to Earnhardt, and many of the same qualities as the No. 88 team’s outgoing crew chief.

"It may not be so obvious, Greg and Dale’s relationship," Duchardt said. "But I remember that their relationship began in our fantasy football league with Dale and Greg actually having one of the best smack-talk competitions we’ve ever had in our league. That’s how I knew they had a good rapport. It started back then, and they worked very well together when Greg was team engineer and Dale was driver. And then obviously that relationship grew as Greg was crew chief at JRM and Dale was owner."

Ives, part of five championship campaigns with Johnson, called Earnhardt "one of the greatest drivers I’ll get to work with." Earnhardt’s friendship with his future crew chief is rooted in professional respect.

"I have known Greg a long time, admired his understanding of the sport and how he’s inspired to move along in his career and take the necessary steps to be successful and get to where he wants to go as a crew chief. That’s why I was really excited about his opportunity to be a part of JR Motorsports and get that first opportunity as a crew chief," Earnhardt said.

"I’ve always admired his knowledge of how a car works, and his attention to detail is very, very important. His demeanor and personality is very easy going. I find him a fun guy to be around. Real easy to talk to. We’ve had a great working relationship for several years. The best part about it, though, is he knows the culture of the 48/88 shop. He knows what that shop’s all about. … Not only is he the most talented candidate for the job, it’ll also be the most seamless transition."

Just as long as smack talk over fantasy football doesn’t get in the way.

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Wheeler will start at Pocono, where Hamlin has won four times

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Mike Wheeler has been named interim crew chief of Joe Gibbs Racing’s No. 11 Toyota, starting this weekend at Pocono Raceway in place of the suspended Darian Grubb. 

Wheeler, a team engineer who joined the Gibbs organization before the 2003 season, will call the shots for Denny Hamlin in Sunday’s GoBowling.com 400 (1 p.m. ET, ESPN) while Grubb begins serving a six-race suspension as part of the team’s P5 penalty for infractions found in a post-race inspection the previous weekend at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

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JGR officials said Wednesday that Wheeler, a native of Southold, N.Y., would be the No. 11 interim crew chief, a move confirmed Thursday morning with a revision to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series entry list for Pocono. Wheeler also indicated via Twitter that former car chief Chris "Spider" Gillin — listed on his Twitter bio as JGR’s power train development manager — will be back on the road to offer assistance this weekend. 

NASCAR officials served Joe Gibbs Racing’s No. 11 team with the heaviest penalties issued thus far under the new deterrence system, which was implemented in the offseason. In addition to Grubb’s six-race ban, NASCAR officials docked the team 75 points in both the car owner and drivers’ standings and fined Grubb $125,000. Officials also suspended car chief Wesley Sherrill for six races and placed him and Grubb on NASCAR probation for six months. 

Pocono ranks among Hamlin’s best tracks. Of his 24 career Sprint Cup wins, four have come at the Tricky Triangle. His Pocono victory total is matched only by his four wins at Martinsville Speedway.

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Four drivers eligible to clinch at Pocono

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

Drivers with multiple wins and who cannot fall out of the top 30 in points have clinched a spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, assuming they attempt to qualify for the remaining races. After Indianapolis, six fit this category.

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Jeff Gordon (who earned his second win last Sunday), Jimmie Johnson, Carl Edwards and Joey Logano all locked up spots at Indianapolis, assuming they attempt to qualify for the remaining six regular-season races. They joined Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Brad Keselowski, who both clinched a Chase spot in New Hampshire.

Matt Kenseth has clinched a top-30 spot, but is not yet guaranteed a Chase spot, as he remains winless.

At Pocono Raceway in Sunday’s GoBowling.com 400, the following drivers with wins this season can clinch a Chase spot by completing the pairing of mulitple wins and a clinched top-30 spot: Kevin Harvick, Denny Hamlin, Kyle Busch and Aric Almirola.

Harvick’s two wins mean he needs only to clinch a top-30 spot. He needs to score only eight points at Pocono to do so — and that’s if 31st-place David Gilliland wins and leads the most laps. Busch has clinched a top-30 spot, but needs another win to clinch a Chase spot. Hamlin has yet to clinch a top-30 spot. He would clinch with a win and some help in the points standings.

Almirola would need to win this weekend to clinch, and have good luck in the points standings to also lock up a top-30 spot.

The magic number for a top-30 clinch: 241. Any driver 241 points ahead of 31st place leaving Pocono will clinch a top-30 points position.

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