Blown tire the culprit for both No. 11, No. 42 teams

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Denny Hamlin suffered his third consecutive finish outside the top 25 after he crashed early during Saturday night’s Quaker State 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Kentucky Speedway.

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"It looked like the tire just came apart," Hamlin said after exiting the care center. "A product of a green race track and we were one lap from getting that competition caution.

"My car really didn’t give me any indication we were burning up the right front (tire). I made sure I kept it under me the entire run. (It) just couldn’t last the 30 laps that we needed it to."

Hamlin was running third at the time of his accident, which occurred in Turn 4 on Lap 28. He was listed as 42nd on the rundown following his incident, the first car officially out of the race.

He entered Saturday night’s race 13th in points, with a win earlier this season at Talladega Superspeedway. His two starts coming into the Kentucky race resulted in finishes of 29th at Michigan and 26th at Sonoma. Prior to those races, he had been eighth in points.

"We needed that competition caution one lap sooner," he said. " … I just heard it pop and when it did it was very reminiscent of last year."

Hamlin wasn’t the only one to endure early misfortune — Chip Ganassi Racing driver Kyle Larson also collected the wall and retired from the race after 75 laps.

Larson said his No. 42 Chevrolet also blew a right front.

"This is the first time that’s ever happened to me in stock car racing," he said. " … We were hoping for a good points day to pad our points … before we go to Daytona where it’s a real crapshoot.

"It’s disappointing to have two weekends that didn’t end up very well the last couple of races."

Larson finished 28th last week at Sonoma. He was 10th in points before Saturday’s 40th-place result.

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Joe Gibbs Racing also extends Matt Kenseth’s contract

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SPARTA, Ky. — Dollar General will expand its role as primary sponsor of the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 20 Toyota driven by Matt Kenseth from 27 to 30 races beginning in 2015.
 
Dollar General chairman and CEO Rick Dreiling, JGR owner Joe Gibbs and JGR president J.D. Gibbs made the announcement Saturday at Kentucky Speedway, site of Saturday night’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Quaker State 400 presented by Advance Auto Parts.
 
JGR officials also announced that they had extended the contract of Kenseth for "multiple years."

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"I’d say that there is no greater testimony to our sport than the fact that we’re extending with Rick and his (Dollar General) team," Joe Gibbs said. “When you think about it, this is one of the best run, most successful companies in all of America.
 
"What this says is NASCAR works, it works for our sponsor partners. … Probably one of the most enjoyable things for us (at JGR) is the (business-to-business) opportunities that our sport offers. Think about the other partners DG is aligned with — we have Toyota … Mars, Coke, FedEx, Interstate Batteries … it’s great to see the way many of them have worked with Dollar General."
 
Dollar General currently shares primary sponsorship of the No. 20 Toyota with Home Depot. It is expected that the big box chain will not return as a primary sponsor for 2015.
 
"We know who that would be," Gibbs said of sponsorship for the remaining six Cup races not to be backed by DG, "but we can’t announce it. But we have a good partner for Dollar General."
 
The Goodlettsville, Tennessee-based retailer announced late last season that it was increasing sponsorship from 17 races to 27 for 2014.
 
"Last year was the second year we were with (Joe) Gibbs Racing," Dreiling said. "Obviously the combination of Joe, J.D. and Matt led to incredible results. This is very much a sport where the car has got to run up front. These three gentlemen have demonstrated that ability and that’s why we continue to be involved, and look for more involvement as we move through the years."
 
Kenseth joined JGR before the 2013 season and won a series high seven races. He entered Saturday night’s race winless on the season but fourth in points.
 
"It’s obviously been a great fit for me," Kenseth said. "I’ve really enjoyed getting to know the whole DG group; it makes it extra fun when their CEO is such a huge race fan, and such a great guy as well. I’m proud to represent the brand and proud to be driving for these guys sitting next to me and happy that we will be going forward."
 
Home Depot, which has been affiliated with JGR since 1999, provided primary sponsorship for 11 races this season.
 
Former JGR driver Tony Stewart won two Sprint Cup championships with Home Depot — in 2002 and 2005.

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Catch up quickly before the Sprint Cup Series race at Kentucky

MORE: Lineup for the Quaker State 400 presented by Advance Auto Parts
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What: 4th Annual Quaker State 400 presented by Advance Auto Parts.
Where:
Kentucky Speedway, Sparta, Kentucky.
When:
Saturday, June 28, 2014.
TV/Radio:
TNT, PRN.
Distance:
267 laps (400.5 miles).
Time:
7:30 p.m. ET.

Pit road speed: 45 mph.
Caution car speed
: 55 mph.

On the front row | Full race lineup
1. Brad Keselowski, Team Penske No. 2 Ford (188.791 mph*).
2. Joey Logano, Team Penske No. 22 Ford (187.175 mph).

*Track qualifying record

Failed to qualify
None.

Rear of the field
Tony Stewart (had qualified 13th)

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Slow start for Earnhardt Jr.
Hendrick Motorsports
driver Dale Earnhardt Jr. will start 29th, the third time this season he has qualified outside the top 25. "We’ve been fighting the car all day and haven’t had any gains," he said. "… The car is just way too rough and has way too much movement and it’s hard to control it that way."

Fastest in practice
First practice: Kyle Larson, Chip Ganassi Racing No. 42 Chevrolet (183.549 mph).
Second practice: Brad Keselowski, Team Penske No. 2 Ford (183.101 mph).

Driver rating
Best driver rating average at Kentucky based on past three races:

1. Jimmie Johnson (125.9), Hendrick Motorsports No. 48 Chevrolet.
2. Kyle Busch (125.2), Joe Gibbs Racing No. 18 Toyota.
3. Matt Kenseth (109.3), Joe Gibbs Racing No. 20 Toyota.

Worst driver rating average at Kentucky based on past three races:
1. Joe Nemechek (30.8), Jay Robinson Racing No. 66 Toyota.
2. David Gilliland (47.5), Front Row Motorsports No. 38 Ford.
3. Travis Kvapil (47.8), Go FAS Racing No. 32 Ford.

And then there was one

Of the 23 tracks that host NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races, Kentucky is the only one where Jeff Gordon has yet to win. In three career starts, he has finished 10th, fifth and eighth. He has yet to lead a lap on the 1.5-mile track. 

Defending Quaker State 400 champion
Matt Kenseth, Joe Gibbs Racing No. 20 Toyota.

Former Kentucky winners in field
Matt Kenseth, Kyle Busch, Brad Keselowski (1).

Favorite or frustrating?
Chip Ganassi Racing driver Kyle Larson made his first career start in one of NASCAR’s three premier divisions when he competed in the 2012 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Kentucky. But that doesn’t mean it’s the Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate’s favorite stop. "It’s not really special to me," Larson said. "It’s kind of my least favorite (of the) mile and a halves. It’s a pretty frustrating track."

Going the distance
Nine drivers in the starting lineup have completed all 801 laps.

Fantasy sleeper, presented by Rotowire
Paul Menard. The driver of the No. 27 Chevrolet is on pace to blow away his 2013 performance for Richard Childress Racing. Menard has been solid everywhere the series competes, including the intermediate ovals. Finishes of third-, ninth-, 17th- and eighth-place has been his resume on the 1.5-mile tracks this season. That’s pretty impressive, reliable and safe from a fantasy racing standpoint.

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Can’t be at Watkins Glen International for the Sahlen’s Six Hours of The Glen (Sunday at 11 a.m ET, FOX Sports 1)? See what’s going on as if you were there with at-track updates from teams, drivers and more

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

All times ET

TV LISTINGS / BUY TICKETS / WEEKEND TRACK EVENTS

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This week the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and Nationwide Series head to Daytona International Speedway.

SUNDAY, JULY6

ON TRACK
— 11 a.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coke Zero 400 Powered by Coca-Cola (160 laps, 400 miles), TNT (Get results) (RESCHEDULED FROM SATURDAY)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— Post Sprint Cup Series race

SATURDAY, JULY 5

ON TRACK
— 7:30 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coke Zero 400 Powered by Coca-Cola (160 laps, 400 miles), TNT (Follow live) (POSTPONED BY WEATHER)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 4:30 p.m.: Midseason State of the Sport with NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France

THURSDAY, JULY 3:

ON TRACK
— Noon-2 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series final practice (Get results)
— 5-5:45 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 6:30 p.m-8 p.m..: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, FOX Sports 1-Canceled due to bad weather

GARAGECAM PRESENTED BY MOBIL 1
— 11:30 a.m.: Nationwide Series GarageCam (Watch live)
— 3:30 p.m.: Sprint Cup Series GarageCam (Watch live)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 2:30 p.m.: Brian Vickers
— 2:45 p.m.: Elliott Sadler
— 3 p.m.: Jimmie Johnson
— 3:15 p.m.: Dale Earnhardt Jr.
— 5:50 p.m.: Carl Edwards
— 6:15 p.m.: Michael Annett and Reed Sorenson

FRIDAY, JULY 4:

ON TRACK
— 3:10 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 5:10 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 9 p.m.: Subway Firecracker 250 Powered by Coca-Cola, ESPN2 (100 laps, 250 miles) (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 2:15 p.m.: NASCAR Hall of Fame Squier-Hall Award announcement
— Approximately 6 p.m.: Post Sprint Cup Series qualifying
— Approximately 10:45 p.m.: Post Nationwide Series race

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Things to consider as NASCAR looks to reduce horsepower in its Cup cars

Now that the Gen-6 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series car has undergone some tweaks to make it handle better, NASCAR is thinking about taking away some of its horsepower.

Is that a good idea? The racing has been good, the cars are quick and they look great, they handle better and are providing the kind of excitement on the track that NASCAR and its fans want to see. Taking away some of the 900 horsepower the engines currently generate is bound to change that.

How it changes things depends on what is done.

The choices on how to go about this reduction in power are a tapered spacer, which is essentially a thicker restrictor plate; a new throttle body that would restrict fuel flow; and a reduction in cubic inches from the current 358.

Each solution would do what NASCAR intends and limit the horsepower the cars have available. As with any change like this, however, the costs must be considered.

Any kind of reduction in horsepower means that the engine suppliers — TRD for Toyota, Roush-Yates for Ford and Hendrick and Earnhardt Childress for Chevrolet — might look for more horsepower elsewhere. That’s what racers do, after all. 



Second, a horsepower reduction means the cars will likely have more speed in the center of the corner.

During tire testing in April at Michigan, Trevor Bayne did laps with a tapered spacer in his Ford. His center-of-the-corner speeds picked up by 10 miles per hour.

That’s good in a way and creates problems in a couple of others, according to six-time champion Jimmie Johnson.

"I am not sure those (added) miles an hour through the center of the corner is going to allow us to run comfortably through the corner side-by-side," Johnson said at Richmond. "Now we have picked up a lot of speed through the corners, and are the tires going to hold up? Is the suspension going to hold up? It costs a lot of money to even put a tapered spacer on the car. We are going to go and work to change all the internals to maximize the role that the engine performs. So I sympathize with NASCAR because there isn’t an easy way to go about things."

Johnson brings up a good point. Goodyear has to design tires that will deal with the additional loads through the center of the corners. Typically, the cars are off the gas in the center until they can get back to the gas, and by getting on the gas earlier, they’ll use up the tires more. There’s a suspension component, too, with more time under acceleration while in a corner.

The idea behind reducing horsepower is to start cutting engine costs by making the engines able to complete more than one race. In the Nationwide and Camping World Truck Series, engines are run for two races, not one.

"It’s as much getting more use out of engines as it is (reducing) horsepower," NASCAR Vice President of Competition and Racing Development Robin Pemberton told FOXSports.com. "They kind of feed off of each other. There’s no guarantee horsepower may or may not do anything for the quality of racing, but it will allow us to do other things."

Team owner Jack Roush had definitive thoughts on the process and made it clear what he prefers.

"The race teams can only afford to change so many things at a time," he said in April. "With the expanding technology and the engineering costs that everybody has with the pressure for sponsorship and investment in the sport, a dramatic or unnecessary engine change would not be welcome in my world."

A reduction in RPM would be the way to go, Roush said. "(That) would be less hard on the engine, and a requirement that you use the engine for two races."

A reduction on the intake side through the throttle body opening would be easier and less painful for the teams to implement, Roush said.

The question is, how long will it be before those anticipated cost savings overcome the initial rush of R&D around the changes? If it’s a throttle body change, it wouldn’t take long. An engine is basically a very expensive air pump. Air goes in at the top of the engine, is mixed with aerated fuel droplets and is burned after being injected into the combustion chamber.

From there, unused fuel/air mixture goes out the exhaust valve and out through the headers. Air in, power out. Reducing the amount of air in reduces the amount of power, and it all depends then on how much air you let in to be mixed with the fuel. There is no other change to the process.

Reducing horsepower on its own is a good idea, both for cost and possible competition uses. How NASCAR does it will be interesting to see.

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Veteran holds off Brad Keselowski, Kyle Busch for victory

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SPARTA, Ky. – A late-race pass on Kyle Busch on the final restart of the night awarded Kevin Harvick of JR Motorsports the win Friday night at Kentucky Speedway in the running of the John R. Elliott HERO Campaign 300 presented by Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over.
 
Harvick, though should thank Brad Keselowski for the trophy after Keselowski foiled late in the race with a speeding penalty on Lap 148, which put him behind and opened the door for a classic shoot-out between two former Nationwide Series champions.
 
"All in all, it was a very strange night," said Harvick, who noted that they weren’t racing tonight three weeks ago. "In the beginning our car wasn’t that bad, we needed some adjustments, had some things happen on some pit stops, so we pitted and put four tires on and everything kinda of fell our way. We were able to get a little bit of a tire advantage there at the end and Ernie (Cope, crew chief) made a really good adjustment to the race car that allowed us to really take off and run the best we had all night."

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Winning his third pole of the season in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series just an hour before race time, Keselowski led the 40-car starting field to the green flag and quickly drove away from outside pole sitter Busch.
 
While the top-10 shuffled near the rear of the deck, Keselowski continued to stretch his lead by Lap 20 and 10 laps later, the Team Penske driver extended his lead to 2.6 seconds.
 
13 laps later the caution flag fell for the first time of the night for debris on the backstretch. Under the yellow, the lead pack elected to come to pit road for tires, fuel and adjustments. Quick work by Richard Childress Racing surged Paul Menard from third to first, leading Keselowski, Matt Kenseth and Harvick off pit road. Busch entered second, but lost several positions after overshooting his pit stall.
 
Menard was able to hold the lead on the initial restart, but Keselowski throttled forward a lap later and reassumed control on Lap 48.
 
Twelve laps later, Keselowski had grown his lead to 1.7 seconds over Menard. He remained in control until Lap 83 when the caution flew for debris in Turn 4. Under the yellow, Ryan Sieg turned Jeremy Clements in Turn 1, emotions rolling over — stemming from some alleged light contact exiting Turn 4 the lap before.
 
Meanwhile, the leaders pitted with teams utilizing varying strategies. A two-tire stop for Elliott Sadler and Regan Smith moved them ahead of Keselowski, Road America winner Brendan Gaughan and Busch as they came off pit road.
 
Sadler would be overtaken by Smith on the restart, but his time at the front was short-lived as he would prove to be no match for a thundering Keselowski, who reclaimed first on Lap 90.
 
The Rochester Hills, Michigan native would continue to lead through the halfway point, until Kenseth crashed on Lap 102 bringing out the event’s third caution. A majority of the leaders decided to stay out under the yellow, knowing that they could not make it to the finish.
 
On the restart, Keselowski, the 2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion continued his race dominance and by Lap 135 was able to maneuver a 1.9-second gap.
 
Green flag pit stop began on Lap 138 with Keselowski bringing his No. 22 Discount Tire Ford Mustang to pit road on Lap 148, but after a solid stop, the Team Penske pilot would be tagged with a speeding ticket and have to serve a pass-thru penalty.
 
Meanwhile, Harvick took the lead when Keselowski pitted on Lap 149 with a 3.1 margin over Gaughan, until the caution waived on Lap 156 for debris.
 
Needing to make a pit stop, the leaders came to pit road with Harvick leading the parade off pit road, though not as the leader as Busch, Menard and Ryan Blaney remained on the racetrack, holding the top-three spots. Harvick found himself fourth for the impending restart.
 
With 39 Laps to go, Busch led the Nationwide train back to the green flag and despite some controlled chaos racing behind, Busch held a steady lead ahead of Harvick, but Keselowski, who took a waive-around under the prior yellow flag had roared from 17th to ninth in just five green flag laps and set his sights forward.
 
Keselowski needed a caution to close the gap and that came on Lap 168 when Ryan Reed and Smith made contact on the backstretch, which sent Smith’s No. 7 into the wall.
 
When racing resumed, Harvick attempted to take the lead from Busch, with Keselowski lurking from behind in fifth, but Dakoda Armstrong wrecked on the backstretch on Lap 176, it stacked the field back together.
 
With 21 laps to go, racing resumed with intense side-by-side racing between Busch and Harvick, with Menard, Gaughan and Keselowski stalking from behind. With 16 Laps to go, Busch cleared Harvick and built a small cushion between him.
 
A late race caution on Lap 192 for an incident involving Trevor Bayne and Chase Elliott bunched the field back together for a five-lap shootout.
 
On the restart, Harvick powered using the low-line to pass Busch for the lead, with Keselowski attacking his prey and moving into second and setting his sights on the No. 5 Chevrolet of Harvick.
 
Keselowski though would run out of time and Harvick soared to his second NASCAR Nationwide Series win of the season. It was the fifth win of the year for JR Motorsports (Chase Elliott, 2, Kevin Harvick, 2 and Regan Smith, 1).
 
JR Motorsports co-owner Dale Earnhardt Jr. spoke about how proud he was of his Mooresville, North Carolina-based team.
 
"Kevin (Harvick) just had enough opportunity on the restart," Earnhardt said. "I was real surprised it worked out. We’re having a lot of fun winning some races and it’s definitely going to benefit our company in the long run and I can’t thank Kevin enough for coming to be a part of it."
 
Keselowski took responsibility for the slip in the race, but was equally proud of the recovery.

"We had a great Discount Tire Ford and I definitely put us behind and was just one spot away from catching back up," offered Keselowski post-race. "You still have to give credit to Kevin at the end there. He drove by and took the lead, so he was really good."
 
As for Busch, who saw his second win of the weekend evaporate in the waning laps said he shouldn’t be disappointed with third, but he was.
 
"We didn’t have the car to beat so shouldn’t be upset with a third, but there at the end we had the opportunity to win the race and through the middle part of the race I passed the 5 (Kevin Harvick) car and just didn’t have enough on the final restarts unfortunately. Just not enough there to hold Kevin (Harvick) off.  He just flat drove right by me on the restart."
 
Busch finished third with Menard fourth and Blaney in fifth. Richard Childress Racing claimed sixth through eight with Gaughan, Ty Dillon and Brian Scott with Kyle Larson and new points leader Sadler comprising the top-10.
 
Sadler grabbed the NASCAR Nationwide Series points lead exiting Kentucky. He has a slim four point gap over Elliott. Smith is third (-8), Dillon fourth (-29) and Scott fifth (-47).
 
Next up for the NASCAR Nationwide Series is their final restrictor plate race of the season from Daytona International Speedway on Independence Day (July 4) next Friday night for the running of the Subway Firecracker 250.

The Nationwide Series will be back in action next week with the Subway Firecracker 250 powered by Coca-Cola at Daytona International Speedway on July 4.

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Third pole of the season for driver of the No. 2; teammate Logano on front row

Related: Lineup for the Quaker State 400 presented by Advance Auto Parts

With a new track record Friday at Kentucky Speedway, Brad Keselowski became the fourth different Coors Light Pole Award winner at the 1.5-mile speedway for tomorrow night’s Quaker State 400 presented by Advance Auto Parts. 

With a lap of 28.603 seconds at 188.791 miles per hour, Keselowski in his No. 2 Miller Lite Ford Fusion knocked Team Penske teammate Joey Logano from the top-spot with under three minutes remaining in the final five-minute session. The previous track record held by Dale Earnhardt Jr. in 2013 at 183.636 miles per hour was beaten by 23 drivers.

Kentucky marks the Rochester Hills, Michigan native’s third pole of the season. The 30-year old has already matched his career total coming into this season. Team Penske also recorded their third joint front-row start of the season. The 2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion also won this event in his championship season after starting eighth. 

Earlier Friday, Keselowski also recorded his 15th career pole in the NASCAR Nationwide Series.

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"The last few years we’ve been awful in qualifying, so ying and yang, it’s balancing back out,” said Keselowski. "It’s a huge morale booster for us and we’ve got to make it count on race day. Qualifying is great, but on Monday nobody talks about who won the pole — they talk about who won the race. We want to be that guy."

Logano, who paced both the first and second knockout sessions respectively made a last minute effort to try and bump Keselowski, but came up nearly two-tenths short for his fourth second-place starting spot of the year.

"We won the first two sessions and I’m like, ‘Man, isn’t it going to rain?’" Logano said. "It didn’t rain and we came in second. … We keep winning the wrong session." 

Hendrick Motorsports’ Jeff Gordon was third followed by Joe Gibbs Racing’s Denny Hamlin and Stewart-Haas Racing’s Kevin Harvick rounded out the top-five.

Gordon though despite starting from the inside of row-two, was extremely satisfied with his effort.

“Oh my gosh you never want to be satisfied unless you are on the pole or in Victory Lane, but this sort of feels like a victory for me because that first run was not pretty,” said Gordon. "I don’t know the car just didn’t do what I wanted it to do. That was a pretty wild session for the Drive to End Hunger Chevrolet, but those last two or three runs were just so solid. That is a great place to start this race.”

Kyle Larson was sixth ahead of Ryan Newman, Jamie McMurray, Kurt Busch, Danica Patrick, Clint Bowyer and Paul Menard comprised the remainder of the top 12. 

Team Penske ended the second session in reversal roles with Clint Bowyer, Kurt Busch and Kyle Larson inside the top-five. In the first knock-out qualifying session, Joey Logano led the way ahead of Danica Patrick, Jeff Gordon, Brad Keselowski and Jamie McMurray to close out the top-five. The intensity roared from near the bubble line, which shifted within the last couple minutes of the session. 

Jimmie Johnson in his No. 48 Lowe’s Chevrolet SS went out late and bumped himself inside the top-24, but a rally by Carl Edwards knocked the reigning champion out. He’ll start 25th.

The other surprise?

Two-time 2014 winner Dale Earnhardt Jr. only maneuvered the 29th quickest lap overall in his No. 88 Chevrolet SS after three runs.

No one failed to qualify for the seventeenth race of the season.

The Quaker State 400 presented by Advance Auto Parts will air live on TNT tomorrow (Saturday) night, June 28 beginning at 7:30 p.m.

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Smith loses his Nationwide Series points lead to Elliott Sadler

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SPARTA, Ky. — With expectations in check knowing Kentucky Speedway is among his worst tracks, Regan Smith entered Friday night’s John R. Elliott HERO Campaign 300 presented by Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over as the Nationwide Series points leader and surrendered that distinction to Elliott Sadler after a 28th place result to continue his Kentucky curse.

The worst part? The result came along with a wrecked No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet and a fiery Mike Wallace getting in his face on pit road.

With 30 laps to go, a mix-up with Ryan Reed and Kyle Larson put the No. 7 into the wall. If you ask Wallace, it might’ve been a bit of karma.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

While Smith was cooling down at his car after the race, Wallace stormed over, pointed to the portable televisions showing footage of Smith’s wreck with 30 laps to go, and said "Good job. Pay attention when they’re trying to show the replay."

Smith attempted to smooth things over and asked Wallace to come back so they could finish talking about their issues, but Wallace initially declined.

A few minutes later, the pair crossed paths again and things heated up.

"You deserved every bit of that, man. You don’t need to run my door like that," Smith said, referring to a period earlier in the race when he chose to gesture to Wallace a very specific finger when Wallace ran half a lap with his No. 93 Dodge brushing against Smith’s ride.

"What the (expletive) you running into the back of me for?," Wallace said, describing when Smith hit Wallace’s rear while he and two others were three-wide going into the corner. "You know what? If I ran as bad as you in as good of equipment as you have, I’d be pissed too."

"You’ve done it for years, Mike. You’ve done it for years, buddy."

"Hey, Regan, doesn’t it hurt to get (expletive) beat by the 5 (of JRM teammate Kevin Harvick) every time he shows up? You (expletive) wreck because you’re a dumb (expletive)?"

When asked to give his side of what, exactly, happened, the JGL Racing driver — who finished 25th — didn’t back off his comments.

"There’s no side to my story, he ran into the back of me when we were three-wide getting into the corner and I ran him for a half lap and he had to stick his finger out the window and flip me off the whole lap.

"It was funny, because then he wrecked himself going down the back straightaway turning up in front of the 16 car (of Reed).

"He’s a nice guy, he’s got great freaking equipment. The best equipment. And he gets beat so bad by the 5 every time he shows up part-time and then he just (expletive), you know? It’s alright. It’s cool. That’s why he’s back here (in the Nationwide Series), you know?"

For Smith, this race was exactly what he didn’t need. It’s his second consecutive finish outside of the top 10 — his only two of the season — after he finished 13th at Road America last week, giving up his points lead around the same time he did last year. He knows that two-race stretch is difficult for him, even quipping, "I think I’m going to take these two weeks of the schedule off if that’s possible next year."

Next week offers the veteran an excellent chance to right the ship, however, when the series shifts to Daytona International Speedway — where he won the season-opening DRIVE4COPD 300.

"We’ll go to Daytona and fight hard," he said. "Not the two weeks we wanted, but that’s racing.”

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Roush Fenway driver: ‘I think we’ve missed it as a team’ in 2014

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SPARTA, Ky. — Flipping the calendar back a few months to mid-March, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. had reason to believe 2014 was the year he’d take the next step forward in his NASCAR Sprint Cup Series career, building off his Sunoco Rookie of the Year campaign with his eyes set on one of the 16 available Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup spots in the newly expanded format.

A runner-up finish at Bristol Motor Speedway — widely viewed as one of the more difficult tracks on the circuit, particularly for younger drivers — gave the No. 17 Roush Fenway Racing team a boost of confidence that it would be in the Chase conversation come September, especially considering it was his second top-10 finish in four races to open the season after notching just three all of last year.

A dozen races later, things aren’t looking so swell.

"We’ve been struggling as of late … I think we’re missing a lot of things," said Stenhouse Jr., currently 27th in points. "The problem is that it’s not just one thing that we’ve missed it on, but everybody at the shop is working really hard. We’ve changed a lot."

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Over the course of the five races following Bristol, Stenhouse averaged a finish of 31.6 before recovering slightly at Talladega Superspeedway with a 10th-place result. It wasn’t exactly the momentum booster the No. 17 team had hoped for, however, as the 26-year-old quickly sunk back into mediocrity and has averaged a finish of 27th since, including last week’s 31st-place result at Sonoma.

It’s been strange to see Stenhouse regress in 2014 after a promising rookie campaign, especially given the success that Cup newcomers Kyle Larson (10th in points) and Austin Dillon (18th) have enjoyed through their first 16 races in a full-time premier series ride.

"I think we’ve missed it as a team, as a 17 team, at race tracks," Stenhouse Jr. said. "I’ve missed it as a driver when we’ve had decent cars. At Michigan I thought we had a pretty fast car and I got in the wall early, so I think that kind of ruined a chance there. Last week we had a pretty fast car at Sonoma, which last year I was 37th the whole race, and we were inside the top 10 at times, so I think at times we’ve got the right pieces and we’ve just got to put them all in our race car and make sure we don’t make mistakes."

There’s still ample time to go on a summer run and right the Roush Fenway ship — which had been listing as a whole before Carl Edwards‘ win at Sonoma — but after this weekend’s Quaker State 400 (7:30 p.m., TNT) at Kentucky Speedway, the series will be in single-digit territory in terms of races left before the Chase field locks.

Kentucky weekend hasn’t gotten off to a great start for Roush Fenway, seeing Stenhouse, Edwards and Greg Biffle all finish outside the top-25 in opening practice and outside the top-20 in final practice. Stenhouse didn’t exactly help himself out when he spun and brushed the wall in the opener, either.

Still, despite his early struggles this weekend, Kentucky’s 1.5-mile layout may offer a chance at redemption for Stenhouse where other tracks might not. Strictly speaking in terms of average start, Stenhouse Jr.’s best seven tracks are all intermediates, including Kentucky. Sooner or later, you’d have to think that a good starting position will eventually translate into a good finishing spot.

"I think looking at Jack (Roush)’s history on the mile-and-a-halves it’s pretty strong, but I really enjoy the mile-and-a-halves," Stenhouse Jr. said. "We did really well with them in the Nationwide Series and the speed that they have is a lot of fun, and I enjoy that. Normally at these mile-and-a-halves there are so many lanes that you can pick from, so I enjoy racing on them. The mile-and-a-halves are just a lot of fun and carry a lot of speed. It’s all about keeping your momentum up, so I really enjoy them.”

But it’s going to be difficult to just get things going all of a sudden. The team hasn’t led a lap in 2014 after being out front for 35 of them a season ago and has finished on the lead lap in just six of 16 races. Stenhouse and crew are clearly still determined, but sometimes if it’s not your year, it’s just not your year. Determination can only carry a group so far, but Stenhouse made it clear his team is not rolling over heading into the summer stretch.

"Jack is definitely working really hard at making sure that the pieces that we’re bringing to the race track are better than they have been," Stenhouse said. "We thought we had it back earlier in the season when we had a really good car that turned right off the truck at Bristol. We all had really good runs, so we’re looking to bring fast race cars to the race track, but everybody from (engine builder) Doug Yates to our body shop to our chassis shop, everybody is working really hard and they have their heads down digging as hard as they can."

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