Dillon’s victory marks the 11th straight NNS race with a different winner 

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INDIANAPOLIS — Ty Dillon held off a charging Kyle Busch in the closing laps of the Lilly Diabetes 250 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, but he had to win the first NASCAR Nationwide Series race of his career with a fuel cell approaching empty. 

Dillon grabbed the lead from Busch, the pole winner, moments after a restart on Lap 77 of 100. He soon opened a lead of one second over the most prolific winner in series history, but it wasn’t without some pinpoint calculations on the part of crew chief Danny Stockman. 

In what was a family affair of the first order, Mike Dillon, the driver’s father and spotter, told Ty Dillon to start backing up his corners with six laps left. Dillon promptly lost a third of a lead that had grown to more than 1.2 seconds. 

Team owner Richard Childress, Dillon’s grandfather, broke into the radio channel a lap later.

"You can’t give up that much to him," Childress said. "Go for it."

From that point on, Mike Dillon and Stockman kept repeating the same mantra, "Hammer down!" — and Dillon obliged, getting to the finish line .833 seconds ahead of Busch. Matt Kenseth ran third, and Kevin Harvick fourth.

"Boy, that was all I had," Dillon said. "When you’ve got the best in the business behind you, it’s tough. It’s tough to stay focused and not give up."

As the highest finisher among four eligible drivers for the Nationwide Insurance Dash 4 Cash Dillon pocketed an extra $100,000, but the important thing was his first win in the series.

"The car started getting a little tight, but we had speed all weekend," Dillon said. "We got out front, and she unleashed." 

Harvick led a race-high 33 laps but fell victim to the timing of a late debris caution on Lap 71. The five laps run under yellow before the final restart gave Dillon and Busch the margin they needed to get to the end of the race on fuel.

In Busch’s estimation, the outcome hinged on the Lap 77 restart.

"I gave it away on that last restart there in Turn 1," Busch said. "I got down in there, and the car never turned, and the car on my inside, Ty, drove right on by me. He got the lead, and it was over from there. 

"I tried to maintain with him and tried to do a few things to get by him the first few laps before I got tight. And as soon as I got tight, he distanced me, and that was it." 

Joey Logano finished fifth, followed by Paul Menard, Brian Scott, Kyle Larson and Trevor Bayne. Regan Smith ran 10th and trimmed the series lead of JR Motorsports teammate Chase Elliott, who came home 12th, to four points.

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SHR driver will lead the field to green in Crown Royal Presents the John Wayne Walding 400 at the Brickyard (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET, ESPN)

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INDIANAPOLIS — Suddenly the ace qualifier at Stewart-Haas Racing this year, Kevin Harvick dominated Saturday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series time trials at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, winning the pole for Sunday’s Crown Royal 400 in track-record speed.

Fastest in all three rounds of knockout qualifying, Harvick earned his fourth Coors Light Pole Award of the season, his second at the Brickyard and the 10th of his career.

Harvick established his credentials early in the first 25-minute session, covering the 2.5-mile distance in 47.647 seconds (188.889 mph), shattering the previous record speed of 187.531 mph set by Ryan Newman last year.

The record speed of his first lap surprised the driver of the No. 4 SHR Chevrolet.

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"After the first lap, I was probably more nervous than I have been in a while for qualifying," Harvick said. "I wasn’t really expecting to have the car run that fast. From there they are all looking at you, ‘All right, if you screw this up, it’s on you, buddy.’" 

In the second round, Harvick remained the only driver to top 188 mph, posting a lap at 188.281 mph to pace the 10-minute session. No other driver could reach even 187 mph in Round 2. 

In the final five-minute round, Harvick ran 188.470 mph to win the pole convincingly over Jeff Gordon, who will share the front row after a lap at 187.770 mph. Brad Keselowski (186.893 mph) qualified third, followed by 2013 Brickyard winner Ryan Newman (186.765 mph) and Brian Vickers (186.455 mph). 

The last time Harvick won the pole at Indy, in 2003, he won the race, and he acknowledged the advantages of starting up front.

"You can overcome a lot of things with your track position here," Harvick said. "To have the first pit stall, to have clean air to start the race—usually your problems will be a lot less than they are in traffic when you’re out front. Hopefully, we can put together a whole day. 

Nor is the history of the Brickyard lost on Harvick.

"There’s Daytona, and then there’s nothing quite like this place that we come to," he said. "It’s a unique race track with a lot of things that have to come together, a lot of history, and I’m excited to be here."

Keselowski certainly took notice of Harvick’s lap times and gave them their due.

"It’s always scary when Kevin’s fast in qualifying," Keselowski said. 

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See where each Nationwide Series driver will start

Pos

Car

Driver

Team

Time Speed

1

54

Kyle Busch(i)

Monster Energy Toyota

50.031 179.888

2

20

Matt Kenseth(i)

Resers Toyota

50.304 178.912

3

3

Ty Dillon #

Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet

50.448 178.402

4

5

Kevin Harvick(i)

Morton Buildings Chevrolet

50.460 178.359

5

9

Chase Elliott #

Napa Auto Parts Chevrolet

50.617 177.806

6

22

Joey Logano(i)

Discount Tire Ford

50.630 177.760

7

7

Regan Smith

TaxSlayer.com Chevrolet

50.795 177.183

8

60

Chris Buescher #

Roush Performance Parts Ford

50.845 177.009

9

33

Paul Menard(i)

Nibco/Menards Chevrolet

50.891 176.849

10

2

Brian Scott

Smokey Mountain Herbal Snuff Chevrolet

50.957 176.620

11

6

Trevor Bayne

AdvoCare Ford

51.024 176.388

12

11

Elliott Sadler

OneMain Financial Toyota

51.030 176.367

13

16

Ryan Reed #

ADA Drve to Stp Dbts prsntd by Llly Dbts Ford

50.912 176.776

14

42

Kyle Larson(i)

Nashville Outlaws Chevrolet

50.980 176.540

15

31

Dylan Kwasniewski #

FOE Chevrolet

50.980 176.540

16

98

David Ragan(i)

DnbsteHvyEqupmntRntl/CrrllShlbyEngne Ford

51.027 176.377

17

62

Brendan Gaughan

South Point Chevrolet

51.278 175.514

18

99

James Buescher

Rheem Toyota

51.478 174.832

19

93

Kevin Swindell

JGL Racing Dodge

51.691 174.112

20

39

Ryan Sieg #

Pll-A-Prt LLC Do-It-Yrslf UsdAtoPrts Chevrolet

51.870 173.511

21

43

Dakoda Armstrong #

WinField Ford

52.002 173.070

22

84

Chad Boat #

Front Row Tlgtng/CrvttePrts.nt Chevrolet

52.065 172.861

23

28

JJ Yeley

Texas 28 Spirits Stage Dodge

52.131 172.642

24

44

David Starr

Hard Hat Heroes/BYF.org Toyota

52.219 172.351

25

51

Jeremy Clements

Allsouthelectric.com/BRT Extrusions Chevrolet

52.123 172.668

26

46

Matt Dibenedetto

Curtis Key Plumbing Chevrolet

52.268 172.189

27

40

Josh Wise(i)

Curtis Key Plumbing Chevrolet

52.298 172.091

28

14

Eric McClure

Hefty Ultimate/Reynolds Wrap Toyota

52.391 171.785

29

19

Mike Bliss

Tweaker Energy Shot/Circle K Toyota

52.397 171.766

30

01

Landon Cassill

teamjdmotorsports.com Chevrolet

52.482 171.487

31

4

Jeffrey Earnhardt

teamjdmotorsports.com Chevrolet

52.544 171.285

32

55

Jamie Dick

Viva Auto Group Chevrolet

52.630 171.005

33

17

Tanner Berryhill #

NationalCashLenders.com Dodge

52.661 170.904

34

72

Carl Long

Crash Claims R Us Chevrolet

52.861 170.258

35

25

John Wes Townley(i)

Zaxby’s/The Identical Movie Toyota

52.917 170.078

36

70

Derrike Cope

Youtheory Chevrolet

52.925 170.052

37

87

Josh Reaume

Colonial Countertops Chevrolet

53.264 168.970

38

52

Joey Gase

Chevrolet

Owner Points

39

23

Robert Richardson Jr.

Cornboard Chevrolet

Owner Points

40

10

Blake Koch

M&W Logistics Toyota

52.973 169.898

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JGR driver will lead field to green in Lilly Diabetes 250 (4:30 p.m. ET, ESPN)

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Kyle Busch picked up his 40th career Nationwide Series Coors Light Pole and second consecutive at the Brickyard, topping the field during qualifying for the Lilly Diabetes 250 (4:30 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Saturday.

The JGR driver led the third and final round of group qualifying with a best speed of 179.888 mph, beating out teammate Matt Kenseth (178.912) at the last second, to capture the pole and the right to lead the field to green in today’s 250-mile event on the 2.5-mile speedway.

Busch will be joined on the front row by Kenseth, with first round winner Ty Dillon and Kevin Harvick lining up behind them. Spots five through 10 are filled by Chase Elliott, second round winner Joey Logano, Regan Smith, Chris Buescher, Paul Menard and Brian Scott, respectively.

Ryan Reed and Kyle Larson failed to race into the final session and will start 13th and 14th respectively.

 

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Air Titans dry track to allow for extended practice

Practice for the Sprint Cup Series will begin shortly after 10:15 a.m. ET and continue until 11 a.m. ET.

Thunderstorms over Indianapolis Motor Speedway delayed the start of the final Sprint Cup Series practice at the track. Teams and fans were asked to take shelter due to lightning shortly before the 9 a.m. ET practice was scheduled to begin, with my teams using the time to take pictures of the wet garage.

There are 20 Air Titans on the scene at Indy.

The practice was originally scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. ET and run until 10:50 a.m. ET. The next on-track event is Nationwide Series qualifying, which is set to begin at 12:10 p.m. ET (FOX Sports 1).

Stay tuned to NASCAR.com for the latest. When practice resumes, you can follow it live with NASCAR.com’s leaderboard.

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Hendrick Motorsports places three drivers in top five

RELATED: Practice results | Indy Race Center

Looking for his record fifth Brickyard 400 victory, Jimmie Johnson appears to have the right car under him to win Sunday’s Crown Royal Presents the John Wayne Walding 400 at the Brickyard after topping a rain-shortened final Sprint Cup Series practice Saturday morning at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

The session, which was originally set to run from 9-10:50 a.m. ET, got underway after the track was dried by a team of 20 Air Titans shortly before 10:30 a.m. and ran until 11 a.m.

Johnson paced the field with a best speed of 189.298 mph, achieved on his first of five total laps. A trio of Hendrick Motorsports drivers landed in the top five, with fellow four-time Brickyard winner Jeff Gordon (187.856) and Dale Earnhardt Jr. (187.758) placing fourth and fifth, respectively. The series’ most recent winner Brad Keselowski (188.494), in second, and Kevin Harvick (188.363), in third, completed the top five.

Spots six through 10 were occupied by Juan Pablo Montoya (187.688), Friday’s practice leader Matt Kenseth (187.512), Kyle Larson (187.013), Kyle Busch (186.796) and Greg Biffle (186.691).

Last year’s Brickyard winner Ryan Newman placed 19th with a best speed of 186.154 mph. Richard Childress Racing teammate and former Indy winner Paul Menard (185.701) ran 22 laps, while Brian Vickers (184.873) ran a session-high 23.

Coors Light Pole Qualifying gets underway at 2:10 p.m. ET with coverage on ESPN. Watch the Crown Royal Presents the John Wayne Walding 400 at the Brickyard Sunday at 1 p.m. ET on ESPN.

 

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Driver compares Indianapolis track to a road course

SPEEDWAY, Ind. — With two wins under his belt, 13 top-10 finishes and a second-place position in the points standings, it might seem as if Dale Earnhardt Jr. is primed for his best shot at a victory here at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
 
But the Hendrick Motorsports driver, speaking to the media following Saturday’s final practice session at the 2.5-mile track, said that isn’t the case.
 
"I think I’ve had some pretty good cars here in the past," said Earnhardt Jr., who will be making his 15th career start at the legendary track. "I’ve had chances to win in the past and didn’t even know it.
 
"I think the first time we came here, we ran in the top three for the first half of the race. We just didn’t anticipate — didn’t realize — the potential we had."
 
Instead, he finished 13th. That was back in 2000. Since then, he’s finished better (he was fourth in ’12 and sixth last year), and he’s finished worse (in ’05, he was credited with a 43rd-place finish after getting punted on a restart).

While often compared to Poconowhere Earnhardt Jr. won last month — because of its size and relatively flat layout, Earnhardt says it requires a road-course mentality when formulating a game plan at Indy.
 
"You’ve got to kind of pit the car like a road course," he said. "The left-side tries are very, very hard, so we probably won’t change (them) that much. We need to sort of plan our strategy to where we are on pit road the least amount of time on that last stop … your strategy may be more geared toward what you do at a road course where you go ahead and get inside the (fuel) window and get on pit road … get your pit work done and then be done for the rest of the race … try to be the guy that’s out front at the end when everybody else comes on down pit road to get their stuff done.”
 
His point, he said, "is we’ve had good cars in the past and just didn’t do the strategy just right. Somebody did it better than us or somebody made it on fuel and won the race or what have you. But we’ve had some good cars here."
 
Matt Kenseth (Joe Gibbs Racing) and Jimmie Johnson (Hendrick) were fastest in the two practice sessions here this weekend as teams made preparations for Sunday’s Crown Royal Presents, the John Wayne Walding 400 at the Brickyard (Sunday, 1 pm. ET, ESPN). Earnhardt Jr. was 24th in the opening session and fifth fastest during an abbreviated final practice.
 
"I think the car is pretty good, it’s just real easy to overdrive the car here," he said. "We made a run and it was great, and then the next couple of runs I over-drove the car and we weren’t great, so (I’ve) just got to try to be patient with the throttle and try not to push the car into the corner and get the … front tires sliding too much.
 
"If you’re just a little bit tight, you add all that up all the way around the lap and that’s a lot of time. You make one little mistake on the straightaways — they’re so long here — and you can’t recover until you get to the next corner. It’s costly here if you over-drive the corners."
 
Patience will be the key, he said, and his patience will be put to the test after qualifying 23rd.

"This morning, we went out and the track was perfect," Earnhardt Jr. said after failing to advance out of the second knockout qualifying session. "That’s why we ran such a good lap. When we run on a track like we got right now, we’re just not as fast as we need to be. Cars real, real tight and slow.

"Haven’t been real happy all weekend. Qualifying’s been a problem lately, especially the last couple months for us so just real frustrated, man. We’ve got to run better than this. We’ve got to figure out what’s going on, and we’ve got to run better than this. It’s getting really frustrating with not turning."
 
• Earnhardt Jr. said talk about who will replace departing crew chief Steve Letarte continues, but to date there’s been no "real serious discussion about it.
 
"But I think the people involved in the decision-making have some great ideas, and the conversations are starting to happen, so we’ll see how that sort of works itself out," he said.
 
Letarte announced in January that he would be departing at year’s end to take a race analyst role with NBC Sports when the network begins its NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race coverage in 2015.
 
The two have won three races together, including this year’s Daytona 500.
 
A Brickyard victory would be special, Earnhardt Jr. said, but so would any victory.
 
"Any race I win with Steve this year is very special because of (it being) his last year," he said. "So yeah, we’ll take … a win anywhere.
 
"He’s one of … the best on the box when it comes to strategy and this style of race and the way the tires are going to come into play into that, this is right in his wheelhouse.
 
"I think he’s going to give us a great opportunity."

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See the complete starting lineup for Sunday’s race (1 p.m. ET, ESPN)

Pos Car Driver Team
1 4 Kevin Harvick Jimmy John’s Chevrolet
2 24 Jeff Gordon Axalta Chevrolet
3 2 Brad Keselowski Miller Lite Ford
4 31 Ryan Newman Quicken Loans Chevrolet
5 55 Brian Vickers Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota
6 14 Tony Stewart Mobil 1/Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet
7 41 Kurt Busch Haas Automation Chevrolet
8 12 Juan Pablo Montoya Penske Truck Rental Ford
9 22 Joey Logano Shell Pennzoil Ford
10 5 Kasey Kahne Time Warner Cable Chevrolet
11 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s/Kobalt Tools Chevrolet
12 18 Kyle Busch Snickers Toyota
13 20 Matt Kenseth Dollar General Toyota
14 10 Danica Patrick GoDaddy Chevrolet
15 42 Kyle Larson # Target Chevrolet
16 15 Clint Bowyer RK Motors Charlotte Toyota
17 3 Austin Dillon # Dow/Mycogen Seeds Chevrolet
18 99 Carl Edwards Fastenal Ford
19 16 Greg Biffle 3M Safety Ford
20 21 Trevor Bayne(i) Motorcraft/Quick Lane Tire & Auto Center Ford
21 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. EcoPower Oil Ford
22 9 Marcos Ambrose Stanley Ford
23 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. National Guard Chevrolet
24 1 Jamie McMurray Cessna Chevrolet
25 78 Martin Truex Jr. Furniture Row Chevrolet
26 13 Casey Mears GEICO Chevrolet
27 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Express Toyota
28 95 Michael McDowell K-Love Ford
29 27 Paul Menard Moen/Menards Chevrolet
30 98 Josh Wise Curb Records/Lee Brice Chevrolet
31 51 Justin Allgaier # Collision Cure Body Werks Chevrolet
32 83 Ryan Truex # Burger King Toyota
33 7 Michael Annett # Pilot/Flying J Chevrolet
34 38 David Gilliland Love’s Travel Stops Ford
35 23 Alex Bowman # Dr. Pepper Toyota
36 47 AJ Allmendinger Kingsford Charcoal Chevrolet
37 40 Landon Cassill(i) Carsforsale.com Chevrolet
38 34 David Ragan MDS Ford
39 26 Cole Whitt # Speed Stick Gear Toyota
40 32 Travis Kvapil KeenParts.com/tryandrozene.com Ford
41 43 Aric Almirola Eckrich Ford
42 36 Reed Sorenson Zing Zang Chevrolet
43 37 Bobby Labonte Accell Construction Chevrolet

Did Not Qualify: # 66 Brett Moffitt; # 33 David Stremme; # 29 Matt Crafton(i).

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Kevin Harvick earned his fourth Coors Light Pole of the season and second at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Harvick won the 2003 Brickyard 400 from the pole.

The No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing team took the first pit stall for Sunday’s Crown Royal Presents, the John Wayne Walding 400 at the Brickyard (1 p.m. ET, ESPN).  Teammate Kurt Busch, who qualified seventh, will pit next door in the second stall at the end of pit road heading into Turn 1.

Qualifying second, Jeff Gordon chose the 17th stall right at the start/finish line with an opening in front of him. Across the opening will be the fifth qualifier, Brian Vickers, in stall 16. The third-fastest qualifier, Brad Keselowski, picked the 10th stall, the first on pit road with an opening in front of him.

Defending Brickyard winner Ryan Newman qualified fourth and will pit across the opening from Keselowski in the ninth stall.

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Joe Gibbs Racing drivers Kyle Busch and Matt Kenseth will start Saturday’s Lilly Diabetes 250 (4:30 p.m. ET, ESPN) on the front row, and their teams will pit next to each other as well.

The No. 54 team chose the second stall, which is the first off of pit road into Turn 1. The No. 20 team will pit in the third stall.

Richard Childress Racing’s Ty Dillon, who qualified third, picked the ninth stall, the first with an opening to the rear, on pit road. Across the opening from him is JR Motorsports’ Kevin Harvick and the No. 5 team in the 10th stall.

Harvick’s JR Motorsports’ teammate, Chase Elliott, will go for $100,000 as the top-finishing Nationwide Dash 4 Cash car from the fifth starting position and the fourth pit stall, right next to Kenseth.

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