NASCAR Chairman and CEO addresses media before Coke Zero 400 at Daytona

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

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — In his annual midseason "State of the Sport" address Saturday at Daytona International Speedway, NASCAR Chairman Brian France gave a thumbs-up to the victory-focused new Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup championship format, discussed attendance issues, sponsorship interest, the $400 million Daytona Rising project and even talked a little World Cup.

But what caught the attention of many was an openness to adjusting the schedule for the 2015 season, if best for the industry.

Speaking to the press before Saturday night’s scheduled Coke Zero 400 (which was postponed to Sunday), France mentioned factors such as the new television partnership with NBC Sports, and multiple weather issues as playing a role in figuring out the best possible slate of races.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

"There will be robust discussion that will be for those reasons be a more comprehensive look at what the best schedule will look like,” France said. "I don’t have any of the details today. We’ll be releasing that in September but it’s fair to say that there’s a robust discussion with the stakeholders to come up with the best schedule that we can for 2015 and beyond.”

France made it clear, however, that moving the season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway was not among the possibilities.

"Historically we’ve liked … to do it in South Florida,” France said. "The weather is great that time of year obviously, it’s a good market for us and the track — and this is an important thing: by any definition (it is) the best mile-and-a-half track that the drivers believe that they have, that they can really race hard and compete hard. And that matters, too. It’s a very important thing.

"When you factor in all those things, we’re going to be in Homestead for the foreseeable future."

He said a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Iowa Speedway was not planned in the immediate future, but also said the series may be willing to venture internationally in coming years if the right situation occurred — an opportunity that NASCAR is continually evaluating.

"We’ve always liked when we’ve had opportunities to go to Montreal or Mexico City or even abroad for exhibition events, and when those opportunities present, we will certainly want to look at them.”

As for the on-track portion of the update, France was pleased with the competition and the response to the competition from both the drivers and the fans. The new elimination-style "playoff" among an increased field of 16 contenders has garnered a lot of attention and created the type of suspense and urgency NASCAR had hoped it would.

Qualifying for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup is now primarily based on race wins with the rest of the 16-driver field filled out by points positions.

"I think we can all see the benefits of changing the winning importance and it in fact has changed the racing on the track,” France said. "There’s no question about it. The drivers are telling us that. They’re taking different kind of chances. They’re going for wins when they would have played it safe otherwise and I think that’s just going to get more intense as we close in on Richmond and we seed the field here.”

Among other topics France discussed:

Cup drivers freelancing in the NASCAR Camping World Truck and NASCAR Nationwide Series, where they tend to dominate:

‘"That’s always a question,” France said. "When a Cup driver gets in and has a lot of success — Mark Martin did that for a long time — there’s always that balance. Where we usually come out on is that the younger drivers gain valuable experience even if somebody gets on a run and tends to win more events than normal.

"We tend to let the events unfold the way they unfold."

On attendance issues:

"Some markets are just more challenged,” France said. "Some are doing better than they did last year, so it’s a mixed bag a little bit. Balanced attendance is up …

"We like to think historically important events work themselves out over time and some of that is on us, too. We’ve got to constantly figure out how to make our racing tighter, better."

On television ratings:

"They’re down for obvious reasons,” France said. "… but when you go around and really look at it and look at all the digital interest that we have today on devices and that’s not obviously scored currently, we’re real pleased with that. When you combine it all up, we’re actually not off that much even with our challenges.”

On the overall state of the sport:

"We’re on a nice steady and ground and sponsorship is coming back for us thankfully. That was obviously a hard in in the recession. The business is sound and we’re going forward."

On a new engine package that has been discussed this year and the efforts serving as part of NASCAR’s plan to lower the barrier of entry into the sport:

"When we talk about the engine issue, which we’ve talked about lowering horsepower or whatever we’re going to do, we’re also talking about making sure that that engine is relevant to a new manufacturer. We’re not … lowering the cost of racing, getting parity where teams can come in and have success, and making ourselves more relevant to manufacturers and partners is all part of the NASCAR business model."

Contributing: Staff reports

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Race rescheduled for 11 a.m. ET on Sunday on TNT, MRN and Sirius XM NASCAR

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

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Saturday’s Coke Zero 400 at Daytona International Speedway was postponed by rain. The race is rescheduled for 11 a.m. ET on Sunday on TNT.

NASCAR officials made the decision shortly before 9 p.m. Saturday.

"We had a tough day with rain most of the day and from a radar perspective, it was popping up around us. We (didn’t think) it was going to get this bad, this long," said Joie Chitwood III, president of Daytona International Speedway. "We worked with NASCAR as much as we could in terms of the timing. You reach a point right now where as it continues to rain, if we use an hour and 45 minutes to dry this track, which is a really short amount of time using Air Titan and the jets, typically we’d be well over two hours to dry the track. You start thinking about an 11 p.m. start which means you finish the event anywhere from 2 a.m. to a little bit later. You think about public safety, getting people home, all those things. …
 
"With the rain still around us and coming down, we would not be able to dry the track for a reasonable start time tonight."

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

Both series were able to complete one of the three scheduled rounds of qualifying, allowing officials to set the starting lineups based off those results.
 
The start of Friday night’s Subway Firecracker 250 Nationwide Series event was delayed by rain, but completed in its entirety with Kasey Kahne earning the win.
 
Front Row Motorsports driver David Gilliland will start on the Coors Light Pole in Sunday’s Sprint Cup race while Reed Sorenson (Tommy Baldwin Racing) will start second. Gilliland’s pole-winning run on Friday was his first since the 2007 season and the third of his career.
 
Series points leader Jeff Gordon (Hendrick Motorsports) will roll off the grid ninth while defending race winner and series champion Jimmie Johnson (Hendrick) will start fifth.
 
This weekend’s race is the fourth Sprint Cup event to be impacted by weather this season. The season-opening Daytona 500 was halted for more than six hours after 32 laps had been completed due to rain.

"We seem to have a little bit of bad luck right now. We had it in February; we have it now," Chitwood said. "But when I watched (a replay of) last year’s race, I thought ‘man, we really killed it last year.’ I think this is the right time. Typically with the afternoon thunderstorms, yes we have them but by 6-7 o’clock we’re good to go; maybe we’re delayed a little bit. It was really unusual for it to still be raining at 9 o’clock.
 
"If I have any more bad weather weekends, I might have to retire and hand the baton to the next person. But obviously it’s tough for our fans. Our fans are the ones who make the commitment, the investment to attend, traveling from far distances. So I really feel bad for delaying the event."
 
This year’s Food City 500 at Bristol Motor Speedway began an hour and 44 minutes later than scheduled because of rain and was stopped for 3 hours, 18 minutes when rain returned after 124 of the race’s 500 laps had been run.
 
Before the Coke Zero 400’s postponement, the only race to be run the following day due to rain this year was the Duck Commander 500 at Texas Motor Speedway.

Daytona International Speedway rewarded rain poncho-clad fans who remained on-hand with a fireworks display at 9 p.m. Saturday night.
 
Tickets for Saturday’s race will be honored Sunday. Grandstand gates will open at 9 a.m. and parking lots will open at 7 a.m.

The NASCAR Wire Service contributed to this report.

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Catch up quickly before the Sprint Cup Series race at Daytona

MORE: Lineup for the Coke Zero 400 powered by Coca-Cola | Full schedule
RELATED: Play NASCAR Fantasy Live | Sign up for RaceView today

What: 56th annual Coke Zero 400 Powered by Coca-Cola
Where:
Daytona International Speedway, Daytona Beach, Fla.
When:
Sunday, July 6 (postponed from Saturday, July 5)
TV/Radio:
TNT, MRN
Distance:
160 laps (400 miles)
Time:
11 a.m. ET

Pit Road Speed: 55mph
Caution Car Speed
: 70 mph
Competition Caution: Lap 20
Fuel Window: 42 laps

On The Front Row | Full Lineup
1. David Gilliland, Front Row Motorsports No. 38 Ford (199.322 mph)
2. Reed Sorenson, Tommy Baldwin Racing No. 36 Chevrolet (199.221 mph)

Failed To Qualify
Joe Nemechek
, RAB Racing No. 29 Toyota

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

Gillie’s Place
Pole winner David Gilliland ended the longest streak between poles among active Sprint Cup drivers with his No. 1 qualifying position. He had made 259 starts since his last pole, which came in 2007.

Fastest In Practice
First practice:
Jamie McMurray, Chip Ganassi Racing No. 1 Chevrolet (201.952 mph).
Final practice: Postponed due to rain.

Defending Coke Zero 400 Champion
Jimmie Johnson
, Hendrick Motorsports No. 48 Chevrolet.

Back To Back?
Dale Earnhardt Jr.
will attempt to become only the sixth driver to sweep both Sprint Cup races at Daytona in a single season. Those having accomplished the feat are: Jimmie Johnson (2013), Bobby Allison (1982), LeeRoy Yarbrough (1969), Cale Yarborough (1968) and Fireball Roberts (1962).

Former Daytona Winners In Field
Jeff Gordon
(6); Tony Stewart (4); Michael Waltrip, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jimmie Johnson (3); Matt Kenseth, Jamie McMurray, Kevin Harvick (2); Ryan Newman, David Ragan, Trevor Bayne, Greg Biffle, Kyle Busch (1).

Coming From Behind
Tony Stewart, a four-time winner of the July race at Daytona, holds the distinction of winning the race from deepest in the field. In 2012, he won despite starting 42nd.

Dark horse?
Denny Hamlin
won the series’ most recent restrictor-plate race at Talladega Superspeedway, and the Joe Gibbs Racing driver finished second in the season-opening Daytona 500. Hamlin will start 37th.

Fantasy sleeper, presented by Rotowire
Joey LoganoThe young Team Penske driver is carving out another fantastic season in the No. 22 Ford. Logano rides into Daytona weekend seventh in the overall driver standings, and with two victories to this point in the season. The good racing should continue for Logano this weekend at Daytona International Speedway. He sports some good finishing stats at the 2.5-mile superspeedway. He’s cracked the Top 10 in three of his last six Daytona races, and he’s often seen racing with the leaders at the series’ two monster ovals. Logano is poised to keep his Top 10 ways intact in the Coke Zero 400.

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Smith, Sieg, Reed and Clements the first participants of the season in Dash4Cash program

RELATED: Play NASCAR Fantasy Live | Dash4Cash

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Regan Smith, Ryan Sieg, Ryan Reed and Jeremy Clements became the first four drivers to qualify for this year’s Nationwide Series Dash4Cash program, thanks to top-10 finishes in Friday’s Subway Firecracker 250 at Daytona International Speedway.

Smith, Sieg and Reed finished second, third and fourth, respectively, in a typically wild green, white, checkered finish. Clements finished eighth while Sprint Cup Series regular Kasey Kahne won the race, edging Smith at the finish line.

"I know we’re racing for a lot of money come next week," Reed, driver of the Roush Fenway Racing No. 16 Ford, said on pit road. "It raises the stakes quite a bit.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

"I think it’s amazing what (Nationwide) is doing with the Dash4Cash. … I think it’s just a really special program."

During the next four weeks, the Dash4Cash program will award the highest finishing eligible Nationwide Series driver a $100,000 bonus at New Hampshire, Chicagoland, Indianapolis and Iowa Speedway, and qualify the driver or drivers for the following week’s round.

The top three finishing points-eligible drivers in each event will also qualify for the following week’s race.

If one driver wins three of the first four races that make up the program, he will earn an additional $600,000 bonus should he win the final of the four races at Iowa.

"It’s going to be new for me," Smith said. "I don’t think we were a part of any of them last year. …

"I like New Hampshire, it’s a track I look forward to going to. I’m just happy to be a part of it and happy to have a series sponsor like Nationwide that does the things that they do … for those four teams, we’re going to get to go out there and get a little extra attention and race for some extra money. For any of those four teams, that’s going to be a cool deal."

It might be especially cool for Sieg, as his underfunded RSS Racing team picked up just their second top-10 finish of the season at Daytona to qualify for the program.

The achievement caught notice of the race-winning owner of JR Motorsports — Dale Earnhardt Jr.  

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Current driver Trevor Bayne to drive full-time for Roush Fenway in 2015

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

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Eddie Wood still doesn’t know who will succeed Trevor Bayne behind the wheel of the No. 21 car next year. But he knows one thing — the next driver for Wood Brothers Racing needs to be able to put down a fast qualifying lap.

"We need another guy that can lay down a lap," the Wood Brothers co-owner said Friday at Daytona International Speedway. "You think about (potentially missing the race). You think about it, oh yeah. You can do this or that, but you’ve got to lay down that lap before you get to race."

Bayne will move into the Sprint Cup Series full-time next season to pilot the No. 6 car for Roush Fenway Racing. Although his tenure with the part-time Wood Brothers operation is best-known for his 2011 victory in the Daytona 500, Bayne has been underappreciated for his ability to get the No. 21 car into races on speed. It wasn’t long ago that the Woods missed races with frustrating regularity — but since Bayne’s arrival, many have taken for granted that the No. 21 car will compete in every event it’s entered.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

No one is more aware of that than Eddie Wood, who certainly doesn’t take making races for granted. "Trevor does lay down the lap," he said. "Knock on wood, you can always count on him to do that. You don’t really notice that."

Given that the Woods will undertake another part-time schedule again next season, Bayne’s successor in the No. 21 car will inherit the burden of ensuring one of NASCAR’s most legendary vehicles can get into events. The summertime 400-miler at Daytona is one of 12 races selected this season by a team that plays to its strengths — typically restrictor-plate tracks and fast intermediate ovals — but whose part-time status also leaves it without a guaranteed spot in the field.

Since first joining with the Woods at Texas late in the 2010 season, Bayne has never failed to get the No. 21 team into events on speed. That’s a far cry from 2008, when a Wood Brothers team attempting to run the full schedule was often sent home early. No wonder, then, that qualifying still weighs heavily on the team’s mind, particularly under the group format being used now at NASCAR’s national level.

"I’m sitting here thinking about it while we’re talking," Wood said. "You get up on the truck and watch it happen, and just hope you get to make that lap. What they’re doing now is exciting, but it’s hard on you. It’ll wear you out."

And with another part-time schedule on the horizon in 2015, that stress will surely be there again next season — even though Bayne will be driving another car. As for Bayne’s successor in the famed No. 21, the Wood Brothers say no decisions have been made.

"We’re not in a hurry," Eddie Wood said. "Same ol’ line everybody uses — we’re concentrating on right now. And right now the most important thing to us is qualifying, and then tomorrow night’s race. That’s kind of the way we look at it. We’ll look at it in due time."

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

40,000 new seats to be available for Daytona 500 in 2015

RELATED: Photos: Take a tour of the new Daytona
MORE: Play NASCAR Fantasy Live | Sign up for RaceView today

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Joie Chitwood III stood atop one seating area of the Daytona Rising project and looked down — yes, down — at the light poles that illuminate his race track, and the entire scope of the massive renovation project hit home.

"We are looking down at the current light poles," the president of Daytona International Speedway said Friday. "For me, that’s the perspective on how mammoth this project is. We’re looking down at light poles that light the race track. That describes it in a nutshell for me."

Indeed, the true extent of this $400 million undertaking is beginning to take shape, as the framework of new seating, concourse and entrance areas gradually envelops the existing structure. Friday marked the one-year anniversary of the project’s groundbreaking, and the endeavor has gone so well that 40,000 new seats will be available for the Daytona 500 in 2015.

And what seats they are — wider, with armrests and cup holders, serviced by three flights of escalators and more expansive concourse areas, and towering above the current highest row of the existing grandstands. Taking reporters on a tour of the project Friday, Chitwood pointed out not only sweeping views of the 2.5-mile oval but also the infield road course.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

Chitwood said he always hoped to have some new seats available for February of 2015, almost a full year before the full 101,000-seat project is due to be completed.

"It started evolving that way," he said. "We thought we would have some of the section open. We weren’t sure if we would get it completely built, or if we would give it back (to construction). We’re planning to get it and maintain it then for the duration. We were looking at a situation where it might have been just a temporary for that event, and a give-back to construction. But the schedule’s gone so well … it’s worked out."

The section to be open in 2015 will offer a glimpse of the project as a whole, one with easier access to grandstand seating areas, and a clear separation between spectators and service workers. Getting up and down the grandstands, Chitwood said, was the top concern among fans surveyed before the project. When workers attempted to install the first escalator early on a Sunday morning a few months ago, Chitwood said "it was like the moon shot."

And like any launch, there were hiccups. "Who knew escalator installation was so delicate?" Chitwood said. Strong winds forced the installation to be delayed for several days, one of the few speed bumps the project has encountered.

"A year ago, none of this existed — none of the concrete, none of the steel, none of it," Chitwood said while standing in one of the new concourse areas. "All we had were the old grandstands."

Which, over the next year and a half, will gradually be phased out. The new, 40,000-seat Daytona Rising grandstand section will open for Speedweeks next year. In late 2015, the existing backstretch grandstand will be removed and relocated to another International Speedway Corp. property yet to be determined. By the completion of the project in January of 2016, all of the old seats will be gone — fans will have the opportunity to purchase them — and be replaced by 101,000 new seats, which will mark the renovated facility’s capacity.

"It’s fantastic. I think it’s great," said Brian Vickers, a three-time race winner in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. "We’ve seen so many sports complexes around the country as they either get built new or get rebuilt, refurbished and just kind of continually step up the quality for the fans, I guess you could say. The quality of entertainment or quality of seating — like escalators, for instance — something you don’t really see at a lot of NASCAR tracks, but you see it everywhere else. I think it’s fantastic what ISC is doing here at Daytona, and I can’t wait to see it at more facilities."

And the rebuilt track won’t be limited to racing — Chitwood said entertainment companies have already looked at the property, and he anticipates a music festival at some point. There have been talks with the Jacksonville Jaguars NFL team, and conversations about potentially hosting college football, soccer and UFC. Other tracks have undertaken similar initiatives — Bristol Motor Speedway is slated to host a 2016 college football game between Virginia Tech and the University of Tennessee, and for the past three years Dover International Speedway has hosted the Firefly Music Festival.

Chitwood said the Daytona ball field — the grass area inside the tri-oval — will accommodate a football field and goalposts, and that Bethune-Cookman University played games there in the 1970s. But he cautioned that any other activities would have to be scheduled so they don’t conflict with the track’s busy and growing slate of annual racing events.

"We believe we will have more content here. I can’t tell you which just yet," Chitwood said. "We want to make sure when we add an event, it’s done right. We’ve got to make sure the time of the year fits. Racing is still our primary sport, and we’ve got to make sure whatever act we put in, it fits with the schedule. Meaning, it would be very difficult to do new content during Christmastime, because were prepping for January, February and March."

But when the renovated track does ultimately find those new events, Chitwood believes the setting will be a spectacular one.

"I’ve seen football at Yankee Stadium. I’ve seen soccer friendlies at Fenway Park. I can’t imagine we won’t do a bang-up job for one of those events at Daytona International Speedway," he said. "The picture alone would just be fantastic in terms of how unique that would be."

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Official partner refreshes active military and veterans on holiday weekend

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

Capping a seven-week salute to U.S. troops, NASCAR and Coca-Cola has debuted The Troops Welcome Center, a respite located in the Daytona midway. And the large tent has provided more than a thank you to active troops and military veterans and their families. It’s provided a much-appreciated oasis from the heat and occasional rain.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

"We think it’s fantastic," said Lester Kyle, 74, a Marine from 1956-59, who now lives in Vero Beach, Fla. "The sodas and the waters and the snacks for us to have are great. I think I got to the track around 10:30, and I’ve been in here three or four times."
 
In addition to Coca-Cola beverages and snacks, racing simulators, games, prizes and the display of "thank you" walls signed by thousands, the venue is giving servicemen and families the chance to meet NASCAR drivers and legends. Dale Jarrett, Darrell Wallace Jr., Casey Mears and Aric Almirola were among the celebrities to greet the troops on Friday. Greg Biffle, Leonard Wood and Daytona International Speedway president Joie Chitwood III are scheduled for appearances on Saturday.
 
"The fact that (NASCAR and Coca-Cola) have taken their resources to do this is awesome," said John Freed, 21, a senior cadet from the Emory-Riddle Army ROTC program which assisted in operating the activities under the tent at Daytona. "It’s incredibly hot outside, and this gives everyone a chance to cool off for a second. Usually you don’t see this kind of thanks given back to the troops. It’s been awesome to be able to help out, talk to the veterans and hear their stories."
 
NASCAR: An American Salute began on Memorial Day weekend, and Daytona International Speedway paid tribute to four Congressional Medal of Honor recipients from the Vietnam War with a luncheon on Friday.
 
Major General Bernard "Burn" Loeffke will serve as Honorary Pace Car Driver. The general retired from the Army in 1992 and now serves on medical missions in war-torn and impoverished areas such as Bosnia, Haiti, Kenya, Iraq, Niger, Darfur, and the Amazon jungles.

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

JR Motorsports driver passes Regan Smith just before the finish line

RELATED: Play NASCAR Fantasy Live  | Full Subway Firecracker 250 results | Updated standings

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Kasey Kahne and Ryan Sieg were non-factors for much of Friday night’s Subway Firecracker 250 at Daytona International Speedway.
 
Kahne, sitting 12th for a restart with three laps remaining, hadn’t won a NASCAR Nationwide Series race since August 2007. Sieg, a rookie running 14th, had never finished better than ninth in 19 previous Nationwide starts.
 
But when it came to the final push, there they were — Kahne charging from eighth during a green-white-checkered finish and Sieg nudging him past Regan Smith for the victory.
 
"Ryan Sieg was pushing me hard, letting off and bumping and that was the reason we were able to win," Kahne said. "Sieg hit me from behind and hit me hard. I just kept getting more momentum coming to the line."
 
The victory by just 0.021 seconds (third closest in the series at Daytona) was the second Nationwide triumph in a row for JR Motorsports and owner Dale Earnhardt Jr., who won at Kentucky Speedway last week with Kevin Harvick driving the No. 5 Chevrolet.
 
Earnhardt couldn’t lose in the photo finish. He also owns the car of Smith, who was denied a 2014 Nationwide Series sweep at Daytona.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

"It’s been a while since I’ve been in any Victory Lane. It felt great," said Kahne, who said he felt "kind of trapped" in mid-pack for much of the race.
 
"We just kind of sat there through most of the race. I was kind of at the wrong place at the wrong time. Then, the last half-lap I had tons of momentum. The cars in front of me moved in the right direction. Ryan Sieg was pushing and letting off and bumping and hitting me good and hard. That was kind of the whole reason we were able to win."
 
On the final restart, Smith, who led a race-high 47 laps, had his hands full fending off Kyle Larson, who was being pushed by Ryan Reed. Meanwhile, Smith was getting help on his rear bumper from Joey Logano, who battled back from an early-race speeding penalty and finished sixth.
 
"I didn’t even know the 5 (Kahne) had a run until we were past the start-finish line," said Smith, who has excelled at restrictor plate tracks this season with his victory at Daytona and third-place finish at Talladega. "I knew he had so much momentum when he went past me, I kind of figured he nipped me. I had enough time to look at the (scoring) pylon real quick and it had already adjusted, so I knew, right there.
 
"It’s amazing at the end of these races," Smith added. "We hit each other all race long and every time somebody touches you in the middle of the corner it’s ‘Oh, man, don’t do that.’ It feels like the car is dancing around. Then we get out there at the end and we just blast the back bumpers off each other and somehow make it back to the stripe."
 
Sieg, driving the Pull-A-Part Used Auto Parts Chevrolet for RSS Racing, not only earned his best career finish (third) but praise from both Kahne and Earnhardt, who said he noticed how hard he raced earlier in the season at Dover despite less-than-top equipment.
 
"It was crazy," Sieg said of the finish. "Kasey got clear and I just pushed him a little harder at the end. He wasn’t squirrely or nothing, so I kept going."
 
"(Sieg) does a great job," Kahne said. "It’s tough to run with the JR team and Gibbs and Penske and Roush and Turner Motorsports. He does a good job with what they have, and if he keeps it up, he’ll get more opportunities."
 
What had been a nearly-clean race turned chaotic with two crashes in the final seven laps, the second of which involved Elliott Sadler as he tried to rally from 11th place. Like Sadler, contenders Kyle Busch and Chase Elliott also required pit stops before the final restart.
 
Smith regained the Nationwide Series points lead, taking a 12-point advantage on Sadler, who led 28 of the first 35 laps but was forced to return to the pits after the first round of pit stops left him with a wheel vibration. Sadler dropped all the way to 27th, a lap down, and finished 21st after his incident on the restart with three laps remaining.
 
The finishing order was also significant because the top four finishers among full-time Nationwide Series drivers (Smith, Sieg, Reed, who finished fourth, and Jeremy Clements, who rallied for eighth), qualified for the Nationwide Insurance Dash4Cash program which will pay at least $100,000 to top performers in each of the next four races.
 
Busch, no worse than fourth in any of his previous 12 Nationwide starts this season, seemed poised for another strong finish. He led seven laps but settled for 17th after his late pit stop. Joe Gibbs Racing was dominant early with Sadler, Busch and Darrell Wallace Jr. (seventh) running 1-2-3 in front of Trevor Bayne and pole sitter Dakoda Armstrong for much of the early going.
 
Armstrong earned the pole in rain-shortened qualifying and was in contention for much of the race before falling to 19th. Jeffrey Earnhardt, driving despite a broken collarbone, gave way to relief driver Matt DiBenedetto on the way to a 33rd place showing.

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Front Row Motorsports driver tops chaotic, rain-shortened Daytona qualifying

RELATED: Coors Light Pole Qualifying results | Play NASCAR Fantasy Live | Sign up for RaceView today

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — No one knew what to expect when knockout NASCAR Sprint Cup Series qualifying came to Daytona International Speedway for the first time on Friday.
 
But no one could have predicted what transpired in a chaotic qualifying session for the Coke Zero 400.
 
David Gilliland, who has finished no better than 20th in 17 starts this season, captured his third career Coors Light Pole (second at Daytona) when rain forced cancellation of the second and third rounds.
 
The surprises didn’t end with Gilliland capturing the first-ever pole for Front Row Motorsports in the Love’s Travel Stops Ford.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

Joining Gilliland on the first row will be Reed Sorenson, who has been no better than 21st for Tommy Baldwin Racing since finishing 16th in this year’s Daytona 500. Sorenson, winless in 206 career Cup starts, last recorded a top-10 finish in 2010.
 
The third-fastest qualifier was Landon Cassill, who has yet to have a top-10 finish in 132 career Cup starts and whose best finish this season is an 11th at Talladega.
 
Also on the second row will be 2000 premier series champion Bobby Labonte, driving the Thunder Coal Chevrolet for Phoenix Construction. Labonte, 50, owns 21 career wins in 23 seasons, but his last victory was in 2003 at Homestead.
 
What does it all mean that some of this season’s top qualifiers, including Brad Keselowski (26th) and Joey Logano (28th) would have been shut out of a second qualifying round if rain had not halted the proceedings? What about  Denny Hamlin, Kyle Busch and Kurt Busch, among seven drivers who relied on owner’s points to make the 43-car field?
 
For one thing, it means that drivers are still figuring out the best ways to handle NASCAR’s new qualifying format on superspeedways, especially when teamwork and drafting partners can be as important as raw speed.
 
Strategies varied as drivers attempted to find drafting partners while some cars slowed and others sped up on the 2.5-mile track. At times drivers rolled through the pits or paused on pit lane, trying to pick that perfect time to pair with a partner or find open racing room on the track.
 
"I ain’t never seen anything like it," said Dale Earnhardt Jr., who teamed with Jimmie Johnson (fifth) and Jeff Gordon (ninth) to get in a fast lap midway through the session and qualified seventh. Earnhardt said watching the various strategies unfold with rain on the horizon "the funniest thing I ever seen."
 
Not every driver found it humorous.
 
"That was pretty dumb," said Logano, who had 14 top-10 starts in the season’s first 17 races. "Sometimes (drivers) are lifting, sometimes going. It is very difficult to figure out what is going on there. Before you know it, you are stopped on the race track and asking yourself what you are supposed to do."
 
It had already been an eventful week for Gilliland, who lost his wedding ring while swimming in the Atlantic. Moments after he’d won the pole, his 11-year-old daughter joked tweeted that maybe the ring was bad luck.
 
Gilliland prefers to think that his "Support Our Military" camouflage paint job on his No. 38 Ford, signed by Medal of Honor recipients Friday morning is "the secret to the extra speed in the car."
 
"Our strong point is definitely the speedway racing," said Gilliland, who sat on the pole in 2007 for his first Daytona 500 start. "Some of it’s been circled on our calendar and I feel like we put a lot of emphasis in. The restrictor plate tracks are a great equalizer. I think David Ragan (teammate, qualified eighth) and I both have good enough cars to win, so that’s an exciting feeling – something myself and my teammates don’t have every week.
 
"Obviously, starting on the pole and having the No. 1 pit stall is going to help. I feel like we have 100 percent as good a chance as anybody to win."
 
But Gilliland, who also earned a berth in the 2015 NASCAR Sprint Unlimited with his pole performance, acknowledges that the current qualifying format at restrictor plate tracks is a "crapshoot."
 
"At Talladega, for two weeks in our competition meetings, we said we’re going to do this, do that. We’re going to stick together. We had Eric McClure driving a third car, who had to make the race on speed. David Ragan and I were probably 35th on back and just never could make it happen. It was soooo frustrating.
 
"This week we said, look, we’re not going to have a plan. We know what we need to do to make a fast lap – position yourself right. But you can’t plan it. You can try to get in a groove and do this or that, but then you have people slowing down because you don’t want other people to make run. You just know what you need to do to try to make a fast lap and try to make it happen."
 
Sorenson, driving the Golden Corral Chevrolet, and Cassill, in the Newtown Building Supplies Chevrolet, said the strong starting positions should facilitate their approach Sunday.
 
"It will be good to stay in that first group and keep all that (potential) trouble behind us," Sorenson said.
 
"We’d like to run up front the entire race if we can," said Cassill, who turns 25 on Monday. "We don’t have the reputation of being fast, week in, week out. But, actually we have equipment for this race is as good as anybody’s. We just need to show people how good the car is."

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Front Row Motorsports driver’s misfortune results in first pole in seven years

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

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Even before David Gilliland arrived for his pole-winner news conference Friday evening at Daytona International Speedway, his 11-year old daughter had explained on social media what she felt was the real key to her dad’s first pole in seven years. And it had nothing to do with horsepower or aerodynamics.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

According to his wife Michelle Gilliland’s Twitter account: 

 

Gilliland was unaware of the comment when he walked into the Daytona Media Center and had a good laugh when asked about it.

"We were staying at a condo at the beach, and were swimming in the ocean and felt like something was underneath my wedding ring and I went to touch it and it popped off,” Gilliland said laughing. "All of us looked for it for like an hour and a half to two hours, but it’s like looking for a needle in a haystack, so obviously we didn’t find it. That’s funny she would say that." 

Rain canceled qualifying for Saturday’s Coke Zero 400 after the 25-minute first session Friday, resulting in a few surprises at the front of the grid. 

This is Gilliland’s first pole since he led the field in the 2007 Daytona 500. It’s the first ever for his Front Row Motorsports team, whose other car, the No. 34 driven by David Ragan, earned an eighth-place start.

Tommy Baldwin Racing’s Reed Sorenson will start his No. 36 Golden Corral Chevrolet on the outside of the front row and Landon Cassill will start third in the Hillman Racing Chevrolet.

Hendrick Motorsports drivers Jimmie Johnson and Daytona 500 winner Dale Earnhardt Jr. were fifth and seventh fastest. Sprint Cup Series points leader Jeff Gordon will roll off ninth.

And while the starting lineup may feature some different names up front, those drivers seemed confident in their cars and their chances for Saturday’s Coke Zero 400.

"I think Front Row Motorsports, our strong point is definitely speedway racing,” Gilliland said. "It is something that is circled on our calendar from the start of the year. We put a lot of emphasis on it. We have good speedway cars. The restrictor plate tracks are a good equalizer. David Ragan and I both have cars good enough to win tomorrow and that is an exciting feeling. It is something myself and my teammate don’t have every week."

Then he revealed what he thought was the real reason to Friday afternoon’s success.

"Our Support Our Military camo paint job is very special and a lot of veterans have signed the hood and some Medal of Honor recipients signed it this morning, I think that is the secret to the extra speed in the car,” Gilliland said. "I am proud and honored to drive the car and feel like we have 100 percent as good a chance as anyone to win tomorrow night."

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView