RCR driver capitalizes after Logano loses tire with five laps left

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BROOKLYN, Mich. — Surprise gifts don’t get much better than this.

Paul Menard won Saturday’s NASCAR Nationwide Series Ollie’s Bargain Outlet 250 at Michigan International Speedway after leader Joey Logano was forced to pit four laps from the finish with a cut tire.
 
"Hate to wish bad luck on Joey," Menard said in Victory Lane, "but we’ll take it."

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Menard led 18 laps and won the only series race he’s entered this season and claimed the second Nationwide victory of his career. His first came at Milwaukee, his hometown track, in June 2006.
 
Logano was in front after the front-runners pitted with 44 laps to go and pulled away after the restart. He led Menard’s Chevy by more than a second late but pulled onto pit road on Lap 121 to replace a right-rear tire. Menard had smooth sailing from there and led Sam Hornish Jr., Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kyle Busch and Brian Scott to the checkered flag.
 
Menard thought he missed his shot on the final restart, when he was the third car into Turn 1 and lost several positions trying to take the lead.
 
"The last restart, I kind of thought I gave the race away getting three-wide," he said. "This is a brand-new car, a brand-new motor we’re trying out and it proved itself, I think."
 
Logano, seeking his 22nd Nationwide series win and first of the season, was the final car on the lead lap and ended the day a hard-luck 16th.
 
"I ran over something at some point. It pretty much sucks," he said after leading 43 laps. "I could tell it was going down on the back straightaway and had to take it in.
 
"I hate giving it away like that. The silver lining is we had a fast race car and should’ve won the race. You win some like that, you lose some like that."
 
Earnhardt also said he was losing a tire near the finish but kept the car on the track.
 
Dylan Kwasniewski and Trevor Bayne crashed between Turns 1 and 2 after contact on Lap 79 and the ensuing caution left front-runners free to pit and take on enough fuel to finish the race. The caution lasted 10 laps and made fuel economy a non-issue as the pack dashed to the finish.
 
Kyle Larson and Chase Elliott were strong in the early two-thirds of the race but were forced farther behind the lead pack after they opted to pit later in the final caution period. Elliott, the top rookie in the series points standings, ended the day sixth, two spots ahead of Larson, who led a race-best 46 laps.
 
"I felt really solid about our car all day," said Elliott, who remained third in the standings with the finish. "We put ourselves in a tight box and didn’t have much of a choice (after following Larson into the pits instead the rest of the leaders)."
 
Regan Smith was seventh and ended the race with a 14-point lead over Elliott Sadler in the series standings.
 
The race was slowed for 22 laps during four caution periods, the longest of which was for Kwasniewski’s crash. He was treated and released from the MIS medical center and took the blame for the incident after leaving there.
 
The day’s first yellow flag came less than two laps in after Hornish spun in Turn 4 but managed to avoid making contact with other drivers.
 
"We wanted to get (sponsor) Sun Energy 1 a lot of exposure so we started with some slow-motion replays," he cracked. "I got really lucky (no one hit me)."
 
Hornish has finished fifth, first and second in the three Nationwide races he’s entered this season. He said he’ll keep trying to put himself into part-time rides the rest of the season.
 
Busch set a track qualifying record of 193.242 mph Saturday morning to earn the Coors Light Pole Award, his third of the season.
 
The series heads to Road America at Elkhart Lake, Wis., next weekend. Saturday’s race kicked off a stretch of 18 straight weekends for Nationwide teams, which won’t get a break until they complete the Oct. 10 race at Charlotte.

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Visits Victory Lane for first time this season, second time in his career

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MADISON, Ill. – In the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series triumphant return to Gateway Motorsports Park, Darrell Wallace Jr. pulled off a thrilling win to earn his second career victory Saturday night in his 29th career start in the Drivin’ for Linemen 200.
 
Wallace Jr., a graduate of the NASCAR Drive for Diversity program and a NASCAR Next alum, scored his first win at Martinsville (Virginia) Speedway last October and he tweeted on Friday afternoon that he compared the 1.25-mile racetrack to the legendary Virginia paperclip. A day later, there’s light at the end of the tunnel for the Kyle Busch Motorsports driver after a frustrating start to 2014.
 
The win didn’t come easy for the Mobile, Alabama native. After dominating the early stages of the race, Wallace Jr. encountered problems during his first round of pit stops, when the jack went down instead of up accidentally, costing the KBM team valuable track time, especially under green flag conditions.
 
Down, but not out, Wallace Jr. reassured crew chief Jerry Baxter and his team that they would get back to the front.
 
He did just that.

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"This Made In America Toyota Tundra was on a roll tonight," Wallace Jr. said. "We got into a little trouble the first pit stop, but a little adversity never hurts anybody. We come through. I’m so proud of my guys, they worked their tails off."
 
On Saturday afternoon, Haas Racing development driver Cole Custer scored his first career 21 Means 21 pole in just his third NCWTS start. Furthermore, the NASCAR Next driver became the youngest winning pole sitter in NASCAR National Series history at the age of 16 years old, 4 months and 22 days.
 
At the drop of the green flag, Wallace Jr. grabbed the lead from Custer and led the opening laps. Despite two early race cautions, green flag pit stops began on Lap 57 with Wallace electing to make his first trip to pit road on Lap 62, when German Quiroga Jr. inherited the top-spot.
 
While much of the leaders continued the cycle of the green flag pit stops, NTS Motorsports’ Gray Gaulding ran out of fuel while running inside the top-five, forcing the third caution of the race.
 
Meanwhile, John Hunter Nemechek, who slapped the wall in his opening laps of practice Friday grabbed the lead when Quiroga pitted. The yellow flag undoubtedly shuffled the running order, which put reining Truck Series champion Matt Crafton on the point for the Lap 73 restart.
 
A quick-caution for Ray Black Jr. on Lap 74 allowed the 11 waive-around trucks from the previous caution to catch the remaining lead lap trucks with Crafton in command.
 
On the restart, however, Nemechek made an impressive move around Crafton to retake the lead on Lap 78, Nemechek held the lead until Crafton was able to rundown the teenage sensation on Lap 122, but just three laps later, Crafton blew the right front tire slamming his No. 88 Ideal Door / Menards Toyota Tundra into the Turn 4 wall.
 
"The tire just popped," said Crafton, who came into the seventh race of the season as the point’s leader.
 
With the No. 88 team done for the night, the attention turned back to NEMCO Motorsports’ Nemechek, who led the field down pit road for what many expected to be the final stop of the night.
 
A quick 16.6-second stop by the No. 8 bunch kept the newly turned 17-year old in control of the field with Wallace Jr., Erik Jones, Timothy Peters and Quiroga inside the top-five.
 
The green flag flew with 27 laps remaining with Wallace Jr. making the move entering Turn 1 on Nemechek, by the time the trucks screamed out of Turns 3 and 4, three-wide racing ensued with Nemechek in the middle of a Kyle Busch Motorsports sandwich, with Jones also pedaling into the mix.
 
Through the controlled chaos, Wallace Jr. thundered his No. 54 Toyota Tundra into the spot ahead of teammate Jones, Nemechek and the Red Horse Racing duo of Quiroga and Peters.
 
With the KBM trucks riding 1-2, the best battle on the racetrack came from behind between Nemechek and Quiroga. Inside the final 15 circuits, while battling for that podium finish, Nemechek lost a left rear tire after contact with the No. 77, which spun him in Turns 3 and 4 with 13 laps remaining. Nemechek, after turning a lot of heads finished 15th, the final truck on the lead lap.
 
On the restart with seven laps remaining, the two KBM teammates battled hard, but a relentless Quiroga, who ran out of fuel during the first long-green flag run of the night made it three-wide on the frontstretch with Jones in control.
 
Jones’ time at the front would be short lived as a slight bobble sent him spinning off the front-bumper of Quiroga, yielding the event’s seventh caution.
 
The green flag flew for the final time with four laps remaining with Quiroga on the bottom and Wallace Jr. on the outside. Despite his best effort, Quiroga in his first start at Gateway was unable to fend-off his fellow Toyota teammate, even with some hard-door slamming racing.
 
With momentum, Wallace cleared the No. 77 Net10 Wireless Tundra and sailed to a 0.329 second victory over Quiroga to notch Kyle Busch Motorsports’ fifth NCWTS triumph of the season.
 
"This place is so cool, so different, here we can actually race and show what we’re about and have fun with it," Wallace Jr. said. "From the moment I got here, I was a little iffy about it, because I was way off the pace, took some pointers from (Matt) Crafton and figured it out fairly quickly. We were back and forth on the setup, but from the drop of the green flag, we didn’t have the take-off speed, but we had the long-run speed, but we stayed positive about everything and we came out with the victory."
 
For Mexico native Quiroga, his career-best finish in the NCWTS came at a track that reminded him of a track he’s scored multiple wins at in his home country. 
 
"I wish it was first and not second," Quiroga said, who dedicated the finish to Carlos Pardo, who lost his life in a racing accident five years ago in Mexico. "We were really strong, we ran out of fuel, we came through the field, but it was good, my truck was really, really fast. I’m really happy for everyone at Red Horse Racing. This was good for our comeback for championship points. Everyone got really excited at the end, we were defending our position, I saw an opportunity to win my first race and I didn’t want to let it go, so I drove as hard as everyone else. We’re getting there, getting closer to a win."
 
Behind Wallace Jr. and Quiroga, Red Horse Racing teammate Peters was third followed by Johnny Sauter and Ron Hornaday Jr. to round out the top-five.
Pole sitter Custer was sixth.
 
Sauter took control of the point’s lead, switching places with his ThorSport Racing teammate Crafton by 10 points (261 points to 251).

Next up for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series is a Thursday night showdown at Kentucky Speedway for the running of the UNOH 225 on June 26.

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Veteran driver has a win and three top-five finishes in three starts for JGR

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BROOKLYN, Mich. — In most sports, when an athlete is away from his craft for weeks at a time, a bit of rust can be expected when he or she steps back onto the playing field, court, or, in NASCAR’s case, gets back behind the wheel and onto the race track.

Then again, NASCAR isn’t just another sport. And Sam Hornish Jr. isn’t just another driver.

Last season’s Nationwide Series runner-up, running a partial schedule for Joe Gibbs Racing‘s No. 54 and No. 20 teams, has proven through his first three races this season that rust just isn’t a factor when he gets back out there. The veteran has finished fifth (Talladega), first (Iowa) and now second in Saturday’s Ollie’s Bargain Outlet 250 at Michigan International Speedway, coming in fresh to every race and making the most of his opportunities to win in some of the fastest cars the series has to offer.

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"I just feel like the opportunities that I’ve been given this year — I’m really blessed to have those, so the fact is that it’s not really a knocking off the rust thing," said Hornish, 34. "I’m at the shop every week talking to whether it’s Kevin (Kidd, No. 20 NNS crew chief) or Adam Stevens (No. 54 NNS crew chief) — whoever I happen to be racing for that week, I’m talking to them and I’m trying to figure out what we’re going to be doing or even the things that I saw that happened or asking questions about what they felt like needed to be better. I feel like I’m keeping from being rusty by the amount of things I’m doing as far as that."

Rust or not, Hornish did have to overcome an early race spin that forced him to work his way back from the tail of the field. If you want an example of Hornish’s obvious veteran savvy at work, watch a replay of his spin — it’s not a coincidence that he kept his No. 20 Sun Energy 1 Toyota out of harm’s way on one of NASCAR’s fastest tracks.

Hornish said he’s also done a bit of testing and the added track time is clear. That said, he fully acknowledges the superior Toyota Camrys that the JGR shop supplies him with every week have just as much to do with his ability to compete for victories each time he goes out as his actual driver ability.

Still, for a driver who very much hopes to once again sit in a full-time, competitive Sprint Cup Series ride — he was full-time with Team Penske‘s Sprint Cup Series program from 2008-10 —  his limited 2014 results certainly aren’t hurting Hornish Enterprise’s stock value.

"I’ll be looking at a shot for a good Cup ride until I hang up my driver’s gloves, but I feel like at this point in time I continue to — the best way I can put it without sounding too spoiled — is that I enjoy my time with my wife and my family and if I’m going to be away from them I want to be able to hopefully have an opportunity to win a race and so far in the three races that I’ve been scheduled to do this year we’ve got a win and a second and a fifth," Hornish said.

"I feel like it’s productive when I’m away from home and away from my family and I’ll keep continuing to try to put myself in rides, even if I have to be part-time.

"My overall goal is to be in something full time that I can compete for wins in whether that’s on the Nationwide side or the Cup side. That’s where I want to be so I’m probably a little choosy at this point in my career, but I also know what my objectives are to go out there. I don’t necessarily need to have ‘driver’ beside my name, I just want to have the opportunity when I do go out there and drive to win races."

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16-year-old becomes youngest pole winner in NASCAR history

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Cole Custer became the youngest pole winner in NASCAR history by turning in the best lap for tonight’s Camping World Truck Series Drivin’ for Linemen 200, being run at Gateway Motorsports Park (Saturday, 8:30 p.m. ET on Fox Sports 1).

Custer, who turned 16 in January, took the pole for the 160-lap race with a track record qualifying speed of 136.426 mph. The Haas Racing Development driver barely beat out Darrell Wallace Jr. (136.401 mph). Erik Jones, Gray Gaulding and Chase Pistone also qualified in the top five.

"It’s awesome," Custer said. "We expected to run this good at the start of the year. We expected to get poles and contend for wins, so I think it was just a matter of time. It’s awesome to be the youngest pole winner."

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Custer, making his third start in the series, also had the best lap in the final practice (136.786). His previous finishes in trucks races are 12th and 14th.

Matt Crafton, the Camping World Truck Series points leader, qualified 11th.

Crafton won last week’s Winstar World Casino & Resort 400, marking his second victory of the season. Crafton enters tonight’s race with four top-five finishes in six starts.

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Kyle Busch picks first pit pick for Ollie’s Bargain Outlet 250, 2 p.m. ET, ESPN

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Coors Light Pole Award winner Kyle Busch set a NASCAR Nationwide Series track record at Michigan International Speedway on Saturday morning.

The lap earned his No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing team the right to make the first pick of pit stall for the Ollie’s Bargain Outlet 250 (Saturday, 2 p.m. ET, ESPN). The team chose the first stall off of pit road into Turn 1.

Ty Dillon picked the first stall with an opening in front of it, the 13th box. Across the opening from him is Dylan Kwasniewski in the 11th stall.

The second opening finds Trevor Bayne in the 24th stall with Roush Fenway Racing teammate Chris Buescher across the opening from him in the 22nd stall.

The final opening at stall 38 has Regan Smith with Ryan Sieg across the opening at stall 37.

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Chase Pistone, Darrell Wallace Jr. make up top three ahead of Keystone Light Qualifying

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Cole Custer made a late charge to the top of the leaderboard in the final practice for the Drivin’ for Linemen 200 at Gateway Motorsports Park, his lap of 136.786 winning him the top spot. Saturday’s race (8:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1) will be Custer’s third start in the series.

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Chase Pistone‘s speed of 136.562 mph was just short of the fastest lap, putting the rookie in the second spot. Darrell Wallace Jr. ran third-fastest, with a lap at 136.542 mph.

Matt Crafton, the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series points leader, finished with the seventh-quickest lap (135.820 mph). Ron Hornaday Jr., who is the only driver in the field with a win at the track, was ninth-fastest.

Gray Gaulding picked up where Justin Lofton left off in the No. 20 Krispy Kreme/Gemini Southern Chevrolet, finishing fifth with a speed of 136.046 mph. Gaulding flew overnight from Pensacola, Florida, where he was fifth in the K&N Pro Series East race at Five Flags Speedway.

Also pulling double duty was John Wes Townley, who was back in the No. 5 Zaxby’s Toyota and finished 16th with a speed of 134.108 mph after placing fourth in the ARCA race on Friday at Michigan International Speedway.

Keystone Light Pole Qualifying is set for 5:10 p.m. ET (FOX Sports 2), followed by the Drivin’ for Linemen 200 (160 laps) at 8:30 p.m. ET (FOX Sports 1).

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Track-record lap foils Elliott, Menard for top spot at Michigan

RELATED: Nationwide Series qualifying results

Kyle Busch landed the Coors Light Pole Award for the NASCAR Nationwide Series’ Ollie’s Bargain Outlet 250 in Saturday morning qualifying at Michigan International Speedway.

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Busch, driving the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota, posted a track-record lap of 193.242 mph around the 2-mile track. It was his third pole of the season, 39th of his career and first at Michigan.

Rookie Chase Elliott will start second in Saturday’s 250-miler (2 p.m. ET, ESPN). Ty Dillon, Kyle Larson and Paul Menard completed the top five.

Menard, who led both of Friday’s practices, topped both early sessions in the three-round multicar qualifying, but did not have the same speed in the final five-minute group. He turned a 191.571-mph lap to lead the opening session, then upped his speed to 193.138 mph in the second group, but managed just a 192.195 mph lap in the last session.

Two cautions slowed the opening 25-minute session of multicar qualifying. Jeffrey Earnhardt crashed at approximately the seven-minute mark, smacking the Turn 2 wall with the right-rear fender of the No. 4 JD Motorsports Chevrolet. Matt DiBenedetto’s No.46 Chevrolet suffered engine failure at the 16-minute mark, forcing a stoppage two minutes later.

DiBenedetto, Morgan Shepherd, and Tommy Joe Martins failed to qualify for the 40-car field.

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Chevrolet sweeps leaderboards in both Saturday Sprint Cup sessions

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PRACTICE 2 RESULTS | FINAL PRACTICE RESULTS

Rookie Kyle Larson set the pace in final NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice Saturday at Michigan International Speedway, turning a 198.424 mph lap as speeds subsided somewhat in the afternoon heat.

Larson, in the No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet, continued his strong showing at the 2-mile track. While he qualified just 12th in the 43-car field, he was also fourth in the next-to-last practice for Sunday’s Quicken Loans 400 (1 p.m. ET, TNT).

Jeff Gordon was second-fastest for the second straight session at 198.265 mph in the Hendrick Motorsports No. 24 Chevy. Coors Light Pole Award winner Kevin Harvick was third with next-to-last practice leader Jimmie Johnson fourth in a 1-2-3-4 sweep of the leaderboard by Chevrolets.

Brian Vickers again was the fastest non-Chevy, claiming fifth in the Michael Waltrip Racing No. 55 Toyota.

Joey Logano, the defending race winner, continued to lag in 22nd place on the leaderboard.

David Stremme, slowest of the 43 cars to participate in final practice, slowed with a minute left in the 50-minute session with mechanical trouble in the No. 33 Circle Sport Racing Chevrolet.

Johnson tops penultimate practice at Michigan

With almost half of the field surpassing the 200-mph mark, speeds continued to be high at Michigan International Speedway in preperation for Sunday’s Quicken Loans 400 (1 p.m. ET, TNT). Jimmie Johnson took the top speed of the morning, with a fastest lap of 202.054 mph in his No. 48 Chevrolet.

Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jeff Gordon followed on the leaderboard, his lap of 201.726 mph putting the No. 24 second on the leaderboard. A slew of Chevrolets followed, with Kevin Harvick (201.556 mph), Kyle Larson (201.489 mph), Kasey Kahne (201.354 mph) and Tony Stewart (201.106 mph) taking third through sixth.

Brian Vickers‘ Toyota was the first non-Chevrolet on the leaderboard in seventh.

The red flag flew about seven minutes into practice, when Brett Moffitt spun out in Turn 2. He was in the seventh-fastest position when the incident occured. Moffitt’s No. 66 Toyota didn’t hit the wall, saving the team from having to move to a backup car. Moffitt ended the session 15th-fastest.

Defending race-winner Joey Logano struggled again in practice, his 199.077 mph lap putting him in the 31st spot on the leaderboard. He finished 26th-fastest in the first practice session of the weekend but will start the race in the top 10.

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Earnhardt eyes back-to-back wins; Harvick looks to use blistering speed to nab victory

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BROOKLYN, Mich. – Dale Earnhardt Jr. is going for back-to-back wins, and that’s all some folks need to know about the Quicken Loans 400 at Michigan International Speedway.
 
There are, of course, more story lines that will play out on the two-mile track located in the Irish Hills.
 
But the fortunes of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series’ most popular driver are certainly a hot topic. Made even hotter by his most recent win, which came just at week ago at Pocono Raceway.
 
It was his second victory of the 2014 season, and matched his total win output since donning the Hendrick Motorsports logo in 2008.
 
He has only two seasons with more than two wins, both while racing for Dale Earnhardt Inc. In 2001, he won three times and he took six checkered flags in ’04.

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In a season that’s seen no one team break out and dominate, can the son of a seven-time champion exceed his fans’ heavy expectations?
 
"Definitely, that’s new," the 39-year-old Earnhardt Jr. admitted on Friday at MIS. "That’s the new conversation topic for us, but I just want to win the next one.
 
"We have so much fun winning and going to Victory Lane, and last week was so much fun with the feeling that you have inside and that you have for several hours after that.
 
"It’s like the best feeling ever. And I want to do it again; I want to do it now, this weekend."
 
Earnhardt will start third. He is one of 14 drivers in the 43-car field that have won at Michigan. Also among them is Kevin Harvick, who set a blistering pace with a track qualifying record lap of 204.557 mph on Friday.
 
But fast cars haven’t always resulted in success for Harvick, competing out of the Stewart-Haas Racing camp. Twice a winner this season (at Phoenix and Darlington), Harvick’s No. 4 Chevrolet has been slowed on several occasions this season by one issue or another.
 
If the setbacks are wearing on the driver, he’s been able to keep it to himself.
 
"In my career, I’ve won a lot of races that I probably shouldn’t have … and lost a lot that (I) should have won," Harvick said.
 
"But you just have to keep plugging along week by week."
 
Both the good and the bad are only temporary.
 
"Monday morning, you’d better forget what you did last week because you’ve got to worry about the week coming," he said.
 
The top of the starting lineup is heavy with teams carrying the General Motors banner – four of the top five and six of the top 10. But Michigan’s long been considered a Ford track, a fact to which even the GM brass will occasionally, if somewhat grudgingly, admit.
 
The last three races here have seen Ford drivers in Victory Lane. Joey Logano of Team Penske won the last time out, while Roush Fenway Racing driver Greg Biffle won the August stop in 2012 and the June race of ’13.
 
Ford and, for a time Mercury, drivers have won more than half of the 89 Cup races contested at MIS.
 
Brad Keselowski, the 2012 series champ, Team Penske teammate Logano and Roush Fenway Racing’s Carl Edwards have put Ford in the winner’s circle this year.
 
"Certainly the Penske guys are running well with very similar cars," Roush Fenway Racing co-owner Jack Roush said Friday, "and we’ve just got to get back to where we need to be.
 
"This business cycles. We’ve had times when we’ve been the cars to beat for an extended period of time to everybody’s frustration, and now we’re just struggling to get back to where we need to be."
 
Richard Petty Motorsports’ Aric Almirola had the fastest Ford in qualifying, and will start fourth.
 
Toyota drivers, winless since Denny Hamlin‘s victory at Talladega, will take the green flag from a bit deeper in the field, with Brian Vickers (Michael Waltrip Racing) leading the charge from 10th. Joe Gibbs Racing‘s Matt Kenseth, second in points, will start 21st.

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Strategy leads to third top-five finish in four Nationwide starts in 2014

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BROOKLYN, Mich. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. called it a good day. Said it was a good finish for the No. 88 JR Motorsports Chevrolet team at Michigan International Speedway.  

"That was the way to go," NASCAR’s 11-time Most Popular Driver said of a fuel-only pit strategy during the latter stages of Saturday’s NASCAR Nationwide Series Ollie’s Bargain Outlet 250.  

Earnhardt Jr. finished third. Had restarted second. And looked like he would finish fourth. Until race leader Joey Logano had a flat tire.

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The tires "weren’t wearing out," according to Earnhardt Jr., thus the call for fuel only during the final pit stop of the day with less than 40 laps remaining.
 
Differing pit strategy at that point shook up the running order of the race. Logano and Earnhardt Jr. were among those bypassing the tire rack on the last stop. Kyle Larson, who was dominant for a good portion of the race, took tires and restarted 15th; Kyle Busch did the same and was 17th; Chase Elliott fell back to 16th.
 
Those three rallied, but didn’t have the time, or the laps, to contend for the win.
 
"The tires were tough, real durable," Earnhardt Jr. said. "We didn’t have to put a lot of fuel in the car, so no need to waste time putting tires on. And we got a ton of track position — went from like ninth or eighth to second.
 
"That was a big deal."
 
The third-place finish was Earnhardt Jr.’s third top-five in four starts this season. Besides an 11th-place result at Daytona in February, he finished fourth at Las Vegas and fifth at Texas.
 
"(The car) didn’t have the balance that we had yesterday," he said. "But (we had) real good strategy, and it was a good finish for us.
 
"It just runs so much slower here compared to the (Sprint) Cup car," he said of the Nationwide entry. "Like at Charlotte, I don’t think there’s that big of a margin between the speeds; here it was almost two seconds during practice. It’s just so underpowered; you just drive it right through the corner.
 
"We were running wide open through (turns) three and four today. It just drives easier. The Cup cars seem to be a little bit trickier to balance, to get a good feel."
 
Earnhardt Jr. will start third in Sunday’s Quicken Loans 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race (1 p.m. ET, TNT) at MIS.

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