Nationwide rookie missed a shift, team changed engines in No. 9 car

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ELKHART LAKE, Wis. — In his opening season in the NASCAR Nationwide Series, Chase Elliott has enjoyed enough success to make spectators and insiders alike forget that he’s still an 18-year-old Sunoco Rookie of the Year Contender. When the track opened for practice Friday at Road America, an uncharacteristic early mistake offered a small reminder balanced against his already impressive body of work.
 
Elliott missed a shift on his warm-up lap on the 4.048-mile track, causing enough concern within the JR Motorsports camp that the team changed engines in its primary No. 9 Chevrolet. He will not be penalized with a starting position at the rear of the 38-car field because the change occurred before qualifying for Saturday’s Gardner Denver 200 Fired Up by Johnsonville (2:45 p.m. ET, ABC). Elliott hopes the lack of track time Friday won’t serve as a penalty either.
 
"I hope it’s not a setback. You can’t look at it like that," said Elliott, a two-time winner who ranks third in the series this season. "Sure, it would’ve been nice to get some practice laps, but at the same time, I don’t think it’s a huge deal. I think as long as I do my job right tomorrow, we’ll do just fine."

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Elliott does have some road-course experience in Elkhart Lake, finishing fourth here last season in an ARCA Series race. He also has shown prowess in going clockwise and turning right and left, claiming his first NASCAR Camping World Truck Series victory last year at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park.
 
Besides the small dose of experience, Elliott also has a veteran teammate at JRM in Nationwide Series points leader Regan Smith. When his on-track time was cut short Friday, Elliott stuck around in the garage to shadow Smith for pointers.
 
Smith said he’d be an open book to Elliott as he learns the ropes, but that the rookie’s talent stood on its own merit.
 
"He hasn’t made many mistakes," Smith said. "He is still a rookie. I think we forget that he’s a rookie, he’s 18 years old. He’s been so good that that sort of gets lost in the shuffle a little bit sometimes. Hell, I think my first 20 times at road courses and probably I’ll do it 10 times tomorrow, I’ve missed gears, I’ll grind gears and wheel-hop and do about everything wrong. … You name it. There’s so much that can happen at these places so he’ll be fine tomorrow."
 
Another new wrinkle for Elliott will be operating with a fill-in crew chief talking him through Road America. The move isn’t related to a performance or chemistry issue; with regular crew chief Greg Ives back home with his family after the Friday morning birth of the couple’s third child, Ernie Cope will slide into the role from the No. 5 JR Motorsports team, which is idle this week.
 
Even with a different face atop the pit box, Cope expects business as usual come Saturday.
 
"Our organization is strong," Cope said. "The easiest thing making it that way is that Greg and I have only been working together since December, but we just mesh really well. We’ve been good teammates to each other and we basically run cars the same way with the same philosophy. Like I say, this is his deal and we’re going to try to do the best we can."
 
Besides the potential adjustments to the early adversity and the personnel change, Elliott is also bracing for the possible pitfalls of a bruising finish. He faced some of that when he brushed aside Ty Dillon for his first national series win last year in Canada, and he clearly knows Road America’s history for late-race fireworks.
 
"I’m sure it’s going to be a rough race. It seems like it always is here and at a lot of road courses in general," Elliott said. "It’s so easy to want to out-brake the guy ahead of you and pull to the bottom. It’s very teasing, and it wants you to, a lot of times you probably shouldn’t."

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Open-wheel, sports car veteran last ran a Nationwide event in 2012

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ELKHART LAKE, Wis. — When Team Penske president Tim Cindric asked veteran road-racer Alex Tagliani about his availability for NASCAR Nationwide Series duty ahead of the 2013 season, Tagliani had to decline because of scheduling conflicts in other racing series.
 
When the opportunity came knocking again this season, Tagliani leapt at the chance and accepted without even checking his calendar.

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The open-wheel and sports-car veteran will try his hand again at stock-car racing in Saturday’s Gardner Denver 200 (2:45 p.m. ET, ABC), making his first Nationwide Series start since 2012. He’ll be doing so with the storied race team’s No. 22 Ford operation, which won 12 races in the series last season, including a sweep of all three road courses — two won by AJ Allmendinger and one by Brad Keselowski.
 
"For me, they’re a standard," Tagliani said Friday, the opening day for the series at the 4.048-mile track. "They’re very loyal, they have a lot of continuity in their program, they win wherever they go. To race for a team like this and the 22 car that’s been so competitive in this particular series, it’s like getting a ride for Ferrari in Formula One. That’s the way I see it. For me, these two road-course races, they’re my Indy 500 and I’m taking them very seriously."
 
Even though he isn’t competing full-time in any one series this year, the 40-year-old Canadian is doing plenty to stay busy. In addition to leading three laps in the late going and finishing 13th in the Indianapolis 500, Tagliani has also competed in the NASCAR Canadian Tire Series and the TUDOR United Sports Car Championship.
 
Racing cars with different grades of performance and weights has taken some getting used to, but Tagliani gladly accepts the variations.
 
"For a driver, you need to throw some challenges into your life or your career. If not, it gets boring," Tagliani said. "For me, when I drive a stock car, it doesn’t come natural. It takes a lot of control and when I get out of the car, I feel like, just, ‘I want more.’ Maybe that’s what keeps the spark in you to be in love with what you do."
 
Even though he’s turned plenty of laps at Road America in open-wheel competition, Tagliani said there’s no carry-over of experience with the track’s nuances from series to series. In fact, Tagliani said he’s had to relearn braking zones and turn-in points to find the proper feel for the heavier cars of the Nationwide Series.
 
"It’s a lot," he said. "You have to completely block everything that you’ve done here in an open-wheel car because if you don’t, you get in trouble very, very quickly, and it’s unforgiven."

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Test scheduled for day after second Cup race at two-mile track

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SONOMA, Calif. – NASCAR will begin initial on-track testing of its 2015 rules package for the Sprint Cup Series following the August race at Michigan International Speedway.
 
The series returns to the two-mile track Aug. 15-17. Approximately four teams from each of the automakers – Chevrolet, Ford and Toyota – are expected to remain an additional day to participate in the Aug. 18 test.
 
OEMs said while they have not been given any specific information concerning what the test would involve, they expect the focus to be on aerodynamics. Although NASCAR officials have spoken about a possible reduction in horsepower for the series, how that would be accomplished, if put into practice, has not been finalized.

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"They will come up with a matrix of parts and pieces we will bring and go through it with a systematic testing process," Dave Wilson, president and general manager for Toyota Racing Development (TRD) USA, said.
 
"I think it’s just the quest to further improve the quality of racing. On the whole everyone has been happy with the changes they made year over year. But by the same token I think everyone believes we could be better, the racing could still be better at certain venues. The ability to pass, to race side by side, all those things, there’s always room for improvement."
 
Both Wilson and Pat Suhy, manager, Chevrolet Racing, NASCAR Group Manager, said the timing of the test is a plus for the series. Although research and development work for this year’s package began earlier in the year, actual on-track testing by multiple teams didn’t take place until December.
 
"When you look at the lead time required for teams to begin implementing changes, the sooner you can begin working toward those (changes) the better," Suhy said.
 
Changes for 2014 consisted of statically setting the race car ride heights and eliminating pre- and post-race front ride height rules. A square leading edge was added to the splitter; adjustments were made to the rear fascia and side skirts and spoiler height was set at eight inches. The addition of 43-inch by 13-inch radiator pan rounded out the changes.
 
The focus this time is not expected to involve underbody additions or modifications, according to Suhy, although he said that such information has yet to be provided to those involved.
 
Gene Stefanyshyn, vice president of innovation and racing development for NASCAR said the Michigan test "will be a great opportunity to gather more information, help us validate much of the great research done by engineers in our sport and drive us one step closer to our 2015 package."
 
Aug. 19 has been set aside as a possible rain date, should inclement weather prohibit any on-track activities.
 
No specific teams have been chosen for the test. Wilson and Suhy said team participation would depend on the organization’s individual testing schedules. The series moves to Bristol Motor Speedway following the Michigan race.

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Officials offer findings for what caused Tony Stewart’s mishap in tire test

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SONOMA, Calif. — Officials with Goodyear said it was a combination of increased speed and heat buildup that led to Tony Stewart‘s crash on Tuesday at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
 
Stewart, a three-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion, was one of six drivers taking part in the two-day Goodyear tire test. According to a news release from Goodyear, Stewart’s No. 14 Chevrolet hit the wall after losing air in the right-front tire. Stewart was 17 laps into a 20-lap run.

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"Tony was approaching the end of a very strong 20-lap run," said Greg Stucker, Goodyear’s director of racing, "with his lap times as much as a second faster than what has become the norm at Indianapolis at that point of a run.
 
"It appears that increased, sustained speed over that run generated a significant amount of heat, which eventually caused the right-front to go down. Those are the conditions we have to consider in making the right decisions for the race."
 
Stewart, a two-time winner of the Brickyard 400, was not injured.

"We blew a tire," Stewart said Friday at Sonoma Raceway, site of Sunday’s Toyota/SaveMart 350. "It destroyed the car, so it was a good hit."

Stewart said he was unsure of the cause, "but that’s part of tire testing. 

"That’s why you go to the test," he said. "I’m sure they’ll learn something from it and go on."

Also taking part were drivers Greg Biffle (Roush Fenway Racing Ford), Clint Bowyer (Michael Waltrip Racing Toyota), Kyle Busch (Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota),Joey Logano (Team Penske Ford) and Ryan Newman (Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet).
 
The Sprint Cup Series returns to IMS on July 27 for the John Wayne Walding 400 at the Brickyard.

"Our test speeds were extremely fast at Indianapolis," Stucker said. "Like a lot of race tracks we’ve been to this year with this new car package, it appears the race pace can be significantly faster than it’s been in the past. Because of that, we have to make sure we come back with a recommendation that is robust enough for the conditions we’ll have in the race.
 
"The weather conditions during the test were exactly what we have to come to expect during the race weekend in late July — pushing 90 degrees and sunny. That enabled us to evaluate the tires we brought under the proper conditions."

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Hamlin will roll off first for Coors Light Pole Qualifying (Sat., 1:40 p.m. ET, FS1)

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# Car Driver Team
1 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Freight Toyota
2 9 Marcos Ambrose DeWalt Ford
3 15 Clint Bowyer 5-hour Energy Toyota
4 1 Jamie McMurray Cessna Chevrolet
5 38 David Gilliland Love’s Travel Stop Ford
6 47 AJ Allmendinger Kingsford / Clorox Chevrolet
7 43 Aric Almirola Nathan’s Famous Ford
8 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. EcoPower Oil Ford
9 7 Michael Annett # Pilot / Flying J Chevrolet
10 24 Jeff Gordon Panasonic Chevrolet
11 22 Joey Logano Shell Pennzoil Ford
12 66 Tomy Drissi MightyHercules.com Toyota
13 41 Kurt Busch Haas Automation Chevrolet
14 10 Danica Patrick GoDaddy Chevrolet
15 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Kelley Blue Book Chevrolet
16 20 Matt Kenseth Dollar General Toyota
17 4 Kevin Harvick Outback / Budweiser Folds of Honor Chevrolet
18 16 Greg Biffle 3M Ford
19 55 Brian Vickers Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota
20 44 JJ Yeley(i) Phoenix Warehouse Chevrolet
21 40 Landon Cassill(i) carsforsale.com Chevrolet
22 33 Alex Kennedy Media CAST Chevrolet
23 95 Michael McDowell K-LOVE Radio Ford
24 34 David Ragan Long John Silver’s Free Fish & Fries Ford
25 2 Brad Keselowski Alliance Truck Parts Ford
26 78 Martin Truex Jr. Furniture Row Chevrolet
27 13 Casey Mears GEICO Chevrolet
28 3 Austin Dillon # Dow Chevrolet
29 31 Ryan Newman Caterpillar Chevrolet
30 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s Chevrolet
31 51 Justin Allgaier # Brandt Professional Agriculture Chevrolet
32 14 Tony Stewart Mobil 1 / Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet
33 23 Alex Bowman # Dr Pepper Toyota
34 27 Paul Menard Richmond / Menards Chevrolet
35 98 Josh Wise Dogecoin / Reddit.com Chevrolet
36 42 Kyle Larson # Target Chevrolet
37 83 Ryan Truex # Burger King Toyota
38 5 Kasey Kahne Great Clips Chevrolet
39 36 Reed Sorenson Theme Park Connection Chevrolet
40 32 Boris Said Seven-11 / Amerigas Ford
41 18 Kyle Busch M&M’s Pretzel Toyota
42 26 Cole Whitt # Rinnai Tankless Water Heaters Toyota
43 99 Carl Edwards Aflac Ford

* Required to qualify on time, (i) Ineligible for driver points in this series

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Each week an expert will answer a tech question on GarageCam presented by Mobil 1

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Each week the host of NASCAR.com’s GarageCam presented by Mobil 1 will take an automotive technology question and get it answered by the experts in a NASCAR garage.

This week, Jamie McMurray, driver of the No. 1 Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates Chevrolet answers the Mobil 1 Tech Question of the Week.

Watch the video above to hear McMurray explain the impact that a road course, like Sonoma Raceway, can have on not only a driver but the car as well.

Be sure to tune in to GarageCam presented by Mobil 1 next week at Kentucky Speedway and see another question answered.

Camping World Truck Series GarageCam, presented by Mobil 1: 10 a.m. ET, Thursday, June 26. (Watch here)

Sprint Cup Series GarageCam, presented by Mobil 1:
10 a.m. ET, Friday, June 27. (Watch here)

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Rookie Dylan Kwasniewski will roll off first (Saturday, 11:40 a.m. ET, ESPN2)

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# Car Driver Team
1 42 Dylan Kwasniewski # Up & Up Chevrolet
2 39 Ryan Sieg # RSS Racing Chevrolet
3 17 * Tanner Berryhill # NationalCashLenders.com Dodge
4 55 Andy Lally Viva Auto Group Chevrolet
5 43 Dakoda Armstrong # WinField Ford
6 54 Sam Hornish Jr. Monster Energy Toyota
7 4 Jeffrey Earnhardt teamjdmotorsports.com Chevrolet
8 01 Landon Cassill G&K Services Chevrolet
9 62 Brendan Gaughan South Point Chevrolet
10 87 Stanton Barrett barcodemedia.net Ford
11 3 Ty Dillon # Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet
12 22 Alex Tagliani Discount Tire Ford
13 28 JJ Yeley Texas 28 Spirits Stage Dodge
14 79 * Tim Schendel Cobblestone Inn Chevrolet
15 52 Joey Gase Cobblestone Hotels/DB Equipment Sales Chevrolet
16 51 Jeremy Clements AllSouthElectric.com/RepairableVehicles.com Chevrolet
17 76 * Tommy Joe Martins # Cross Concrete Construction Dodge
18 15 * Carl Long Lilly Trucking Chevrolet
19 10 * Jeff Green Supportmilitary.org Toyota
20 44 Carlos Contreras 38 Special/Ingersoll Rand/VOLI Toyota
21 60 Chris Buescher # Roush Performance Ford
22 6 Trevor Bayne AdvoCare Ford
23 93 Kevin Lepage JGL Racing Dodge
24 23 Kevin O’Connell Shania Kids Can Chevrolet
25 74 * Bobby Reuse www.bapihvac.com/www.wciparts.com Chevrolet
26 7 Regan Smith TaxSlayer.com Chevrolet
27 14 Eric McClure Hefty Ultimate/Reynolds Wrap Toyota
28 46 * Matt Dibenedetto Curtis Key Plumbing Chevrolet
29 40 Josh Wise(i) Curtis Key Plumbing Chevrolet
30 19 Mike Bliss TriStar Motorsports Toyota
31 11 Elliott Sadler OneMain Financial Toyota
32 70 * Derrike Cope YOUTHEORY Chevrolet
33 16 Ryan Reed # ADA Drive to Stop Diabetes presented by Lilly Diabetes Ford
34 31 Justin Marks SOL Republic Chevrolet
35 2 Brian Scott Shore Lodge Chevrolet
36 9 Chase Elliott # NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet
37 20 Kenny Habul Sun Energy 1 Toyota
38 99 James Buescher # Rheem Toyota

* Required to qualify on time, (i) Ineligible for driver points in this series

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Follow what’s happening at the track with live updates from teams, drivers and NASCAR.com writers

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Can’t be at the track for the Toyota/Save Mart 350 (Sunday at 3 p.m. ET, TNT), Gardner Denver 200 Fired up by Johnsonville (Saturday at 2:45 p.m ET, ABC)? See what’s going on as if you were there with at-track updates from teams, drivers and NASCAR.com reporters.

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Gordon has eight consecutive top 10s at his hometown track

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If Hendrick Motorsports wishes to extend its three-driver, five-race winning streak, Jeff Gordon needs to be Jeff Gordon.

The undisputed King of the Road Course has nine career wins on road courses, a robust record considering the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series turns left-then-right-then-left-again only twice a year.

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And though both Jimmie Johnson and Kasey Kahne each have a win at Sonoma Raceway — site of Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350 (3 p.m. ET on TNT) — Gordon remains Hendrick’s best bet to tie a Modern Era record for the longest win streak by a team.

Owner Rick Hendrick’s drivers have won five consecutive races — Gordon at Kansas, Johnson at Charlotte and Dover, Dale Earnhardt Jr. at Pocono and Johnson again at Michigan. That streak is one short of the Modern Era record of six consecutive victories by an owner, set by Hendrick during the 2007 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. That year, Gordon won two in a row followed by a four-victory streak that carried Johnson to his second-consecutive series championship.

The Modern Era is considered to have begun in 1972, when the number of races in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season was drastically reduced, from 48 to 31. The all-time record for consecutive car owner victories is an incredible 16 by Carl Kiekhaefer in 1956. Kiekhaefer, like Hendrick, owned a multi-car team that dominated NASCAR’s top series in 1955-56. Four different drivers won for Kiekhaefer during his streak: Buck Baker, Tim Flock, Herb Thomas and Speedy Thompson.

But first thing’s first — and that’s a sixth straight win. And Gordon, who has scored eight consecutive top 10s at Sonoma, is the team’s best bet.

"I grew up in Vallejo — which is a few miles from the track in Sonoma — but I was always racing on ovals or dirt tracks as a kid," Gordon said. "It was much later before I turned my first lap at Sonoma while in a driving school preparing for my first Cup start there. I immediately saw the challenges and the fun of racing at Sonoma and on road courses. We’ve worked hard as a team to be competitive on road courses and we’ve had a lot of success at Sonoma. But it’s not an easy track to conquer."

The only Hendrick driver without a Sonoma victory is Earnhardt, whose current momentum could change a shaky past at the track. In 14 previous Sonoma starts, Earnhardt has yet to finish in the top 10.

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Stewart was critical of a move Larson made at Michigan

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SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. – During a luncheon with local media in San Francisco’s famed Gharadelli Square on Thursday, Sprint Cup Series rookie Kyle Larson downplayed that any drama existed between him and veteran Tony Stewart after an on-track exchange last week at Michigan.

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However fellow Cup driver Brian Vickers seized the opportunity to offer advice to the 21-year-old first-year Cup driver having had his own on-track "issues" with Stewart several years ago at this week’s Sonoma Raceway road course.

"There is no right or wrong answer to your problem, but there are consequences," Vickers said, inciting loud laughter from those in the room and getting a big grin from Larson and 2012 Cup champ Brad Keselowski as the three conducted a news conference in advance of Sunday’s Toyota/Save Mart 350.

Last week at Michigan, the three-time Cup champ Stewart was critical of Larson’s driving during a restart and pulled alongside him at one point to express his frustration.

After the race, Stewart said of his 11th place finish: "We got the nose damage when the 42 (Larson) got impatient there and blocked us."

Asked for his take after the race Larson – who finished eighth in the No. 42 Target Chevy – explained the situation as "Tony just being Tony" in reference to the famously feisty champ, who shares an open-wheel background with Larson and has often praised the Chip Ganassi Racing team rookie.

Larson offered a more detailed version of the events on Thursday.

"On the restart he lined up behind me and I was mirror driving and saw him go to the right so I went to right, felt him hit me and thought, ‘Tony’s going to be pissed,’ so I pulled up top, let him by and drove around him a couple corners later," Larson said. "When the (next) caution came out, I knew what was going to happen and I knew he was going to pull next to me and show me he wasn’t happy."

Egging on the recollection, Keselowski asked Larson, "How did he show he wasn’t happy?"

"His middle finger," Larson replied, smiling.

"In sprint car racing, blocking is a little more normal so I don’t know if he gets as angry in that as he does with blocking in stock cars. Anyway, a guy like Tony Stewart probably respects you more if you don’t back down.

"Coming to a place like Sonoma, I’m sure we’ll be around each other and we’ll see what happens. But I don’t feel like I’ve done anything dirty so I’m not going to do anything to make the situation worse and I hope he doesn’t."

Larson insisted Thursday throughout questioning that he wasn’t worried about things going forward. He’s ranked eighth in the Cup standings and Stewart is 16th – both still looking for their first victory in 2014.

"It’s not as if I did something real bad to him," Larson said. "I’m real good friends with Tony, but it doesn’t matter on the race track, we all know how super competitive he is. I’m not too worried about it.

"Maybe he’s just trying to intimidate me or treat me (like the new kid.) I get that. I understand that.

"It’s really not a big deal yet. We haven’t wrecked each other or anything major. I really don’t think it’s a big deal."

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