Teams, drivers and NASCAR.com writers keep you up to date with the latest from the track

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Get the latest from Dover International Speedway, where drivers, teams and fans are readying for the FedEx 400 Benefiting Autism Speaks (Sunday at 1 p.m. ET, FOX), the Buckle Up 200 Presented by Click It or Ticket (Saturday at 2:30 p.m. ET, ESPN), and the Lucas Oil 200 (Friday at 5:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1).

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Panel of experts examines hot topics in the world of NASCAR

Editor’s Note: Track Smack is a weekly feature that will showcase a panel of NASCAR.com experts providing their analysis from the previous week, while also looking ahead. In this edition, NASCAR.com’s David Caraviello, Kenny Bruce and Alan Cavanna examine whether more than 16 drivers will win races before the end of the regular season, whether the No. 4 Stewart-Haas Racing team will have the consistency to content for a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series title and who should replace Trevor Bayne at Wood Brothers Racing.

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1. Jimmie Johnson last weekend became the 10th different winner in the sport’s top series, and 14 races still remain until the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. Will we see more than 16 winners before the playoff arrives?

Alan Cavanna: All we have to do is look to last year. In the 14 races from Dover to Richmond, there were six drivers who got their first win of the season. So clearly it can happen. And with the caliber of drivers still looking for wins, I think it can.

David Caraviello: I’ve been with Carl Edwards with this one since the beginning — yes. With each passing week, I’m becoming more convinced that we’re going to see more than 16 winners in the regular season. I know the historical trends indicate otherwise, but circumstances are different this year. The racing is different. It’s going to be a sweet 17 (or more!) when we get done at Richmond on Sept. 6!

Kenny Bruce: We need six more winners? With guys such as Matt Kenseth, Kasey Kahne and Clint Bowyer still searching, it’s possible. But I don’t think it’s likely. We may see a few more — four, max. Still, I’ve been impressed with the variety we’ve had so far this season.

Caraviello: Kenny, you will not pour cold water on this. Kenseth has been running more than well enough to win, so has Kahne (in spots) and Brian Vickers. Clint’s coming around. Greg Biffle‘s got to get it together at some point. And we still have two road courses and one plate race left in the regular season, and anything can happen in those events.

Cavanna: Gotta be more than four, Kenny. Eight drivers who won last year have yet to win this year. I’ll add Clint Bowyer, Marcos Ambrose (at Watkins Glen) and a Kyle Larson win to the list. That’s 11 potential winners, not including a possible wild-card winner at Daytona. Six or seven of them can do it.

Bruce: There are guys that have won before this year … but based on the way they’ve run so far this season, I wouldn’t be surprised to see a handful among the 16 drivers who make the Chase end up winless this season. Alan, potential don’t pay for the groceries, my friend.

Caraviello: Alan does not buy his own groceries. He has a service for that.

Bruce: He parks in front of the door. I’ve seen his type. At some point, the drivers who haven’t yet won will stop swinging for the fences and just try to protect what they’ve got. Thus, no 16 winners.

Cavanna: Oh please, I don’t make Caraviello money. And I don’t think all 11 on my list will win. But certainly six of them can.

Caraviello: My cabbage is in the produce aisle. I think the key to all this may be Michigan and Pocono, and whether we see a sweep at each of those tracks. And goodness, we haven’t even mentioned Tony Stewart, who’s still out there in the goose-egg column. Then again, if Jimmie makes it two-for-two this weekend at Dover — watch out. All it’s going to take is one guy getting on a roll to bring all dreams of 17 to a halt.

Cavanna: Watkins Glen and Richmond will go to first-time winners. That leaves 12 races, and four drivers to get to 16. It’s happening. I know it like I know the layout of the supermarket.

2. A loose wheel at Charlotte relegated Kevin Harvick to his third runner-up finish in as many weeks. Can what seems the strongest team in the Sprint Cup Series manage enough consistency to win the title?

Cavanna: The loose wheel was the setback, but if he comes out of the pits a spot or two higher on the final stop, he has a much better shot at the win.

Caraviello: Speaking of teams that could get on a winning streak and make the previous topic a moot point — for all their struggles, the No. 4 team still seems like the leading candidate. Those guys are beasts every race, if something doesn’t bite them — be it a part failure, or a mistake like last weekend. I still think they’re perhaps the most potent program in the garage area, but can they make it last over 10 races when it counts?

Cavanna: Consistency and unity need to be the focus of the summer for the 4 team. You have to keep the driver happy. He’s doing his part. But when Harvick is publicly complaining about the crew each week, it can go either way. Either the crew gets its stuff together, or it gets worse. These same issues in September will cost him a title.

Bruce: Here’s where I would be concerned if I was part of the 4 team: Once the Chase begins, you need a win or top finishes to continue to advance out of each three-race segment. One misstep can end your title chances at that point. Of course, the same holds true for everyone in the field. Based on what they’ve accomplished of late, that might not be a problem for Harvick and his team. So I’ve basically said they could exit surprisingly early, or win it all.

Caraviello: I cannot imagine the 4 team being the kind of group prone to implode — Harvick and Rodney Childers are just too professional, and too good at what they do, for that. But I’m with Kenny — the elimination factor looms large here given what we’ve seen from these guys to this point. All it would take is one issue in those first three Chase races to knock them out altogether. That’s got to be a concern as they build toward the Chase. Who’s good enough to win the title? That’s one thing. Who’s consistently strong enough to prevent getting eliminated? That’s another.

Cavanna: The easy answer is just go out and win a Chase race in each round. The 4 car is capable of that. But they’re leaving wins, not just top fives, on the table.

Caraviello: But given all the laps they’ve led this year, if they button down the details — man, could those guys be a beast. They already are, but they’re showing double-digit win potential without the issues.

Bruce: The good thing for that group is they’ve got all summer to iron out any issues. And the problems they have had from time to time aren’t that bad. They’ve made mistakes, which can be corrected. They aren’t looking for speed or out to lunch in terms of what they need to catch up to the competition.

Caraviello: To be fair, Alan, how many teams could you point to right now saying, they could win a race in each Chase round? Maybe the 4, the 24, the 48, and the 22? And everyone else is knocking on the door?

Cavanna: There’s no "fair" in Track Smack!

Caraviello: You’re telling me!

3. Trevor Bayne will move to Sprint Cup full time next season with Roush Fenway Racing. Who should be his replacement in the Wood Brothers’ part-time No. 21 car?

Bruce: David Pearson. OK, maybe the Silver Fox isn’t ready to climb back behind the wheel. Just a thought.

Caraviello: When it comes to Trevor Bayne’s tenure with the Woods, that Daytona 500 victory will always stand out above everything else. But underrated has been his ability to consistently get a part-time team into races. They had to make it on speed every time, and Trevor made it look like no sweat. That’s not easy, and that’s what they’ll need from their next driver, assuming they remain part time.

Cavanna: With manufacturer loyalty in play, the most obvious choice seems like Ryan Blaney. It gets him some great experience. But, maybe Blaney gets his own Cup deal for next year somewhere else.

Caraviello: It’s got to be somebody who can jump in the car and show speed. This isn’t a full-time team with the luxury of points for a less-experienced driver to fall back on. Jack Roush mentioned his Nationwide Series rookies Chris Buescher and Ryan Reed, but I don’t know if either of them could keep the No. 21 as consistently competitive with the full-time teams in qualifying as Bayne did.

Cavanna: If they don’t go with another prospect driver, why not go with Sam Hornish Jr.? He’s got the experience, and will still have a desire to prove himself. I think a driver who uses the No. 21 ride as an audition for Cup will produce positive results.

Caraviello: The Woods are very faithful to Ford, which is what suggested they go part-time in the first place. So I’d think Bayne’s successor would come from within the Ford camp, which currently does not include Sam Hornish Jr. Of course, who knows what changes in the offseason.

Bruce: If there’s a pipeline from Ford, it probably begins over at Roush Fenway Racing. Chris Buescher? He’s been pretty impressive in Nationwide this year. You want to give a guy Cup experience, get him ready to move up at some point. I think he fits that particular template.

Caraviello: As much as we’d all love to see Pearson back behind the wheel and his five pieces of gum taped to the dashboard, I’m with Alan here. Ryan Blaney is the no-brainer, assuming he’s headed for a full Nationwide deal with Team Penske next season. That would allow the Woods to use him for their limited schedule, and he would almost certainly pick up right where Bayne left off. That is, unless Roger Penske has bigger immediate plans for him.

Bruce: I don’t see the Penske tie-in, guys. Always got the impression that there was more of a Roush Fenway/Wood Brothers relationship there. But that could be due to the Bayne situation.

Cavanna: None of us has mentioned a veteran or experienced driver. Do we all agree that’s the wrong way to go?

Bruce: Under the current circumstances, Alan, I don’t see the payoff for putting a veteran driver in the car. If the team were to run the full schedule, it would make sense. But with a limited number of races, it’s the perfect place to groom an up-and-coming driver.

Caraviello: As far as an older driver — who? Someone out of Nationwide? From the lower-level Cup ranks? The younger drivers just seem to provide better options. And Alan, once being an up-and-coming driver himself, surely you understand that. After all, he’s the only guy we know who drives a quarter midget to the grocery store.

Bruce: Is that where the phrase "clean up in aisle four" originated?

Cavanna: Champions live forever! (Even New England quarter-midget champions.)

Caraviello: That still doesn’t give you the right to park at the curb at the Whole Foods.

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Wallace Jr. is currently 54 points behind points leader Matt Crafton

DOVER, Del. — During an extended rain delay that canceled all but about 10 minutes of practice Thursday afternoon, Ryan Blaney "trapped" his good friend and Camping World Truck Series competitor Darrell "Bubba” Wallace Jr. in a port-a-potty in the Dover International Speedway infield.

The two had a good laugh and exchanged Twitter photos and jabs. But the practical joke may actually be good strategy for Blaney and the rest of Friday’s Lucas Oil 200 field.

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It may be the only way to slow Wallace down at The Monster Mile.

The 20-year old Kyle Busch Motorsports driver has won the pole position in his last four trips to Dover – twice in NASCAR K&N Pro Series races (2011-12), once in the Nationwide Series (2012) and last year in the Truck Series.

He won the 2011 K&N race from pole and finished 12th in the Nationwide race the next day in only his fourth NNS start. Last year, he led 119 laps in the Truck race and finished 10th.

So while an abbreviated practice session Thursday may be costly to his competitors, Dover is one place on the schedule Wallace already feels absolutely prepared.

"This is definitely one I’ve been thinking about for a long time, like Martinsville, where everyone’s asking if we’re going to win," Wallace said waiting out a rain delay Thursday in the lounge of the KBM transporter.

"I’ve got that attitude again and I’m ready to get on track. This is one of the tracks I come to and after having a rough season like we’re having, I know it’s a place we can get it turned around, move forward and come out of here on a high note."

It is definitely a fortuitous point in the schedule for Wallace, who was fourth-fastest in the No. 54 ToyotaCare Toyota Tundra during Thursday’s brief practice.

Because of Thursday’s mostly-rained out practice sessions, NASCAR opted to determine the lineup by the rule book, which sets the starting field by owners points. Wallace will start Friday’s race 15th, while his team owner Busch will start on pole. 

It’s been a minefield of a season despite high hopes and championship predictions. He’s ranked 10th in the championship – 54 points behind leader Matt Crafton – with a season best runner-up showing at Martinsville, Va. and a midpack 15th place at Kansas book-ended by accidents in the season-opener at Daytona and two weeks ago at Charlotte.

"We keep saying we’re going to start over," Wallace said smiling. "After Kansas, we said we’re going to start over. Then Charlotte came about.

"It is early, but with the schedule, we only have 18 races left. We’re so far back in the points – 54 points now – that’s like three or four races those guys have to finish in the back like we’ve been finishing.

"We just have to go out there and not worry about the last three races we’ve had and focus on what we did at Martinsville and ran second.

"If we can do that, we’ll be fine. Hopefully we’ll get in a rhythm here and get this turned around.”

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Lineup to be determined by rule book; final practice set for Friday

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Rain washed out all but 10 minutes of Thursday’s NASCAR Camping World Truck Series practice at Dover International Speedway, forcing race officials to set the starting lineup for the series’ fifth race of the season by the rule book.

A 60-minute and a 90-minute session were originally scheduled at the Monster Mile ahead of Friday’s Lucas Oil 200 (5:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1), but heavy rain at Thursday’s 1:30 p.m. ET scheduled start of on-track activity forced race officials to abbreviate the schedule to just one 75-minute practice.

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The NASCAR Air Titan track-drying system prepared the mile-long concrete oval, but only 26 of the 35 trucks entered got on the track in the approximately 10-minute window before more rain washed away the rest of the day’s schedule.

As a result of minimal practice time on the track Thursday, Keystone Light Pole Qualifying was canceled and that time will now serve as final practice for the Truck Series.

The lineup will be set by the rule book meaning Kyle Busch, whose No. 51 Kyle Busch Motorsports Toyota is atop the team owners points, will start from the pole in Friday’s race. Busch, who was fastest in the limited practice time at 156.488 mph, won the 200-miler last year and has three wins this season in the series.

Current points leader and defending series champion Matt Crafton will start second alongside Busch on the front row. Red Horse Racing teammates German Quiroga Jr. and Timothy Peters will share the second row in third and fourth, respectively, and Tyler Reddick completes the top five starters.

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Race coverage to feature All-Access Pass, Toyota Camry Test Car

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NASCAR on TNT returns with all-access coverage on Sunday, June 8 at Pocono Raceway, the first of six consecutive race weeks during the NASCAR Summer Series.

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A new addition for 2014, the Toyota Camry Test Car, will be driven by TNT analysts and former NASCAR Sprint Cup Series drivers Kyle Petty and Wally Dallenbach who will take viewers into turns and down the straightaways before every race. A third returning analyst, former crew chief Larry McReynolds, will use the car during the race to outline performance and mechanical challenges.

Each week, TNT will follow a driver and a team as they travel and prepare for the upcoming race. Coverage will begin when the driver leaves the previous track and continue throughout the network’s next NASCAR Summer Series telecast. Featured drivers will include Kyle Larson (Pocono), Austin Dillon (Michigan) and AJ Allmendinger (Daytona), among others. These all-access pieces will air during the pre-race Countdown to Green served by Sonic show.
 
In its 32nd consecutive year of exclusive NASCAR Summer Series coverage, TNT will broadcast six consecutive races, featuring a diverse blend of tracks — ovals with three turns (Pocono); the first road race of the year (Sonoma); a long track (Michigan) and a short track (New Hampshire) — which have led to unpredictable outcomes.
 
Along with analysts Petty, Dallenbach and McReynolds, play-by-play announcer Adam Alexander returns to the broadcast booth as well as host of the network’s 60-minute Countdown to Green served by Sonic. Veteran pit reporters Ralph Sheheen, Marty Snider, Matt Yocum and Chris Neville will bring viewers comprehensive coverage and access prior to and during each race.
 
Fans engaging via social platforms during TNT’s NASCAR coverage are encouraged to use @BR_NASCAR.

TNT’s 2014 NASCAR Summer Series Schedule:
(All Times Eastern)

Date/Time Pre-race Show/Race
Sunday, June 8  
Noon-1 p.m. ET Countdown to Green served by Sonic
1-4:30 p.m. ET NASCAR Sprint Cup Series from Pocono (Pocono Raceway, Long Pond, Pennsylvania)
Sunday, June 15  
Noon-1 p.m. ET Countdown to Green served by Sonic
1-4:30 p.m. ET Quicken Loans 400 (Michigan International Speedway, Brooklyn, Michigan)
Sunday, June 22  
2-3 p.m. ET Countdown to Green served by Sonic
3-6:30 p.m. ET Toyota/SaveMart 350 (Sonoma Raceway, Sonoma, California)
Saturday, June 28  
6:30-7:30 p.m. ET Countdown to Green served by Sonic
7:30-11 p.m. ET NASCAR Sprint Cup Series from Kentucky presented by KFC (Kentucky Speedway, Sparta, Kentucky)
Saturday, July 5  
6:30-7:30 p.m. ET Countdown to Green served by Sonic
7:30-11 p.m. ET Coke Zero 400 powered by Coca-Cola (Daytona International Speedway, Daytona Beach, Florida)
Sunday, July 13  
Noon-1 p.m. ET Countdown to Green served by Sonic
1-4:30 p.m. ET NASCAR Sprint Cup Series from New Hampshire (New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Loudon, New Hampshire)

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Nashville-based NeXovation purchases property with new business plan for facility

Dover Motorsports Inc. announced Thursday that a definitive agreement is in place to sell Nashville Superspeedway to technology companyNeXovation, Inc.
 
The 1.333-mile concrete track and its accompanying equipment and assets will be sold for $27 million in cash. The new owners will also assume a debt balance of $18.8 million in insfrastructure revenue bonds for the facility near Lebanon, Tennessee. The deal is expected to close by September.

"This is a great deal for all concerned insofar as we can transfer an under-utilized, high quality asset to NeXovation, who will create and implement a new business model and re-activate Nashville Superspeedway for the benefit of everyone in the area," said Dover Motorsports CEO Denis McGlynn. "We wish them the best and we thank all those in Middle Tennessee who made us feel welcome during our time there."
 
Nashville Superspeedway hosted 21 NASCAR Nationwide Series races and 13 events for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series from 2001 to 2011. The track has been used as a test facility for NASCAR teams since it ceased hosting major-league motorsports events.
 
NASCAR has enjoyed a long history in Middle Tennessee before the superspeedway’s creation. The Nashville Speedway at the state fairgrounds hosted NASCAR’s premier series from 1958 to 1984. The .596-mile track continues as a host of regular events for the NASCAR Whelen All-American Series.

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Matt Kenseth, in Nashville last week for a visit to the headquarters of sponsor Dollar General, told The Tennessean that he hoped racing would return to the track. He also lobbied for a rotation of facilities for the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race from Charlotte Motor Speedway to tracks where NASCAR’s top series does not regularly race.
 
"There are so many facilities that are capable of having races, that had races and don’t anymore, like Nashville, Milwaukee, St. Louis," Kenseth told the Nashville, Tennessee newspaper. "There’s all these tracks that are equipped and ready, yet they don’t have an 80,000-seat grandstand. Still, you could get 25,000 or 35,000 people in there, plus camping and all that stuff."

The NASCAR Camping World Truck Series will return to St. Louis for the Drivin’ for Linemen 200 at Gateway Motorsports Park (Saturday, June 14, 8:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1).
 
Dover Motorsports promotes and hosts NASCAR-sanctioned events at Dover International Speedway, host of all three NASCAR national series this weekend at the mile-long Delaware track. NeXovation, a global innovation conglomerate based in Nashville, also submitted a $150 million bid in the sale of the historic Nurburgring circuit in Germany.

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At home or on the go, keep tabs on all three races this weekend

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This weekend brings the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, NASCAR Nationwide Series and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series to Dover International Speedway.

The Sprint Cup Series FedEx 400 benefiting Autism Speaks is Sunday, June 1, at 1 p.m. ET with coverage on FOX.

The Nationwide Series Buckle Up 200 presented by Click It or Ticket is Saturday, May 31, at 2:30 p.m. ET with coverage on ESPN.

The Camping World Truck Series Lucas Oil 200 is Friday, May 30, at 5:30 p.m. ET with coverage on FOX Sports 1.

For more information on track times, press conferences and GarageCam, you can check out this weekend’s schedule. For TV times check out this week’s TV schedule.

We know you may not have the time to watch the race action without any interruptions, so if you’re on the go, here’s how to keep up at Dover.

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NASCAR.com’s live Cup leaderboard, Nationwide leaderboard and Truck leaderboard update in real-time and offer constant text updates of lead changes, cautions, strategies, strong runs and everything in between. On the go? Download the NASCAR Mobile app to follow the leaderboards live from your device.

Lap-by-Lap will keep you caught up even if you can only take a peek here and there. Check in now and then to read back through all the laps you’ve missed, or keep an eye on the feed for real-time race updates.

For an interactive experience, join crew chief Chris Rice for in-race analysis as he chats with readers about the FedEx 400 benefiting Autism Speaks.

We’ll also be sending race updates via Twitter through the official @NASCAR and @NASCARStats handles.

Haven’t tried RaceView yet? If you sign up, you’ll get virtualized video of cars on the track from various angles and hear what your favorite team is saying over the radio. Use it as a second screen or as your only screen. Just want to scan the radios? You can have that too with RaceView Audio. On a mobile device? Get RaceView Mobile here.

If you want to be more involved in the on-track action, you can manage your own fantasy team on NASCAR.com and follow your team’s performance in NASCAR Fantasy Live. Mobile users can also download NASCAR Connect, a game from OneUp Sports that allows users to play other fans with race predictions, for some off-track competition while drivers battle it out on the track.

Live Press Pass streams will keep the NASCAR action rolling even after the winner rolls in and out of Victory Lane. Catch interviews with the top finishers immediately following the checkered flag, and stay tuned to NASCAR.com throughout the week for the latest news.

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Bruce: Who are we to object to ‘Smoke’ racing sprint cars

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Tony Stewart‘s return to the cockpit of a winged sprint car this week generated quite a bit of attention in the racing community because it was a sprint car accident last August that nearly ended his driving career.
 
Stewart shattered his right leg when he crashed while racing in Iowa. Months of rehabilitation followed. He missed the final 15 races of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season, and fell from 11th in points to 29th.
 
After 521 consecutive starts, the Indiana native suddenly found himself on the sidelines.
 
Throughout his recovery, Stewart remained steadfast in his belief that he would be competing in NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series when the 2014 season unfolded in February, and that he would eventually return to racing winged sprint cars.
 
He’s accomplished the first and appears closer to completing the second.

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The allure of the sprints, light weighing rockets that are heavy with horsepower, is easy to understand. They’re the backbone of Stewart’s racing career, and the lessons they taught him is one of the reasons for his success in other series.
 
Sprint cars are fighter jet fast and rumble like thunder. When everything is working correctly, they don’t race out of the turns so much as they launch out of them.
 
When things arent going so well, a driver can feel as if he or she has lassoed a tornado.
 
Few people have ever handled them better than Stewart.
 
The list of reasons why Stewart, 43, shouldn’t be back in a sprint car is a long one and it’s filled with stuffy, yet necessary terms, such as sponsorship obligations, personal appearances and other financial considerations.
 
He is co-owner of Stewart-Haas Racing, which fields four cars in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.
 
He is the driver of the organization’s No. 14 Chevrolet, with primary sponsorship from Bass Pro Shops, Mobil 1, Rush Truck Centers and Code 3 Associates.
 
His other business ventures include, but certainly are not limited to, ownership of USAC and World of Outlaw teams, race tracks (among those in his portfolio is Eldora Speedway, which in 2013 hosted the first NASCAR national series event on dirt in 43 years), a public relations firm and real estate and trucking companies. Not to mention the Tony Stewart Foundation, merchandising company and branded foodstuffs.
 
Competing outside the NASCAR bubble carries a certain amount of risks, but Stewart has never been one to put his fate in the hands of others.
 
Two years removed from winning the Indy Racing League’s championship in 1997, and several more from tearing up the USAC ranks, Stewart began scoring wins and contending for the title in NASCAR’s Cup Series. He became the first rookie to win three races during his debut season.
 
After winning 33 races and two championships with Joe Gibbs Racing, he was presented an unexpected opportunity – half ownership in what is now Stewart-Haas Racing.
 
Haas Racing, as it was previously known, had managed just one top-five finish in 284 attempts following its debut in 2002.
 
Since Stewart’s arrival, the organization has won 22 times, including 15 by Stewart, who added a third series championship in 2011.
 
Now, with one-third of this year’s Cup schedule complete, he is still searching for the setup and circumstances that will take him back to Victory Lane. It’s been a year since he last beat everyone to the checkered flag – the win coming at Dover International Speedway, site of this weekend’s FedEx 400 benefiting Autism Speaks.
 
Stewart has won at least one Cup race each season since he began racing Cup. Admittedly, a notoriously slow starter, he has registered his first win of the season only four times before the calendar turns to June.
 
In the meantime, the sprint cars are calling.
 
Maybe Stewart, who enters this weekend’s race 22nd points, should focus on getting his Cup team up to speed. Maybe he has no business getting back in a sprint car.
 
But it’s his decision to make. And that’s all that matters.
 
He doesn’t golf and he doesn’t garden. Tony Stewart races.
 
Whatever and whenever he chooses.

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21-time Cup winner running limited schedule as he prepares for move to TV booth

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Jeff Burton, easing off the throttle of his NASCAR driving career as he prepares to move into the broadcast booth for NBC Sports, found himself back inside a race car this week, testing for Michael Waltrip Racing at Pocono Raceway on Tuesday.
 
He won’t be competing at the 2.5-mile track when the Sprint Cup Series hits to the uniquely shaped three-turn layout next month (the Pocono 400 is scheduled for June 8), but will make his second appearance of the season at Michigan the following week.
 
"I haven’t done any mile-and-a-half testing recently, so coming here is probably the first time I’ve been at a big track since … late February or early March," Burton, 46, said. "So it’s taken me a little while to get up to speed."

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The Michigan start, which will be his second Cup start of the season, was penciled in "because we decided to go somewhere that wasn’t very fast and I could ease into it," he joked.
 
The two-mile Michigan International Speedway layout features multiple racing grooves and produces some of the highest speeds seen on a non-restricted NASCAR track. MWR teammate Clint Bowyer hit 217 mph during a Goodyear tire test there in April. Joey Logano (Team Penske) set the MIS track qualifying record last August with a lap of 203.949 mph.
 
"That’s going to be an interesting deal because it’s so much throttle and the grip level is so high," Burton said of the Michigan race. "What’s hard about those tracks is you have a lot of grip right up until the time that you don’t. There’s just no margin. But the only way to go fast is just lay it out there and hope it sticks.
 
"That’s going to be a pretty big transition for me. … I’m a little nervous about it. It’s so important to understand the car and understand where the limit of the car is, because you have to drive it to the limit. And when you haven’t been in the car a lot, it’s hard to know where that limit is. … That’s the key.
 
"When you’re in the car all week, all the time, you find that limit quickly. But for me here (at Pocono) it’s taken me four or five runs to get myself to where I was running as hard as I needed to run. That’s going to be a transition for me going to Michigan."
 
When he’s not been in the car, either competing or taking part in tests for MWR, Burton, a 21-time winner in Cup, has been getting acclimated to life on the other side of the camera.
 
"My first live interview was with Clint Bowyer," he said. "That’s all that has to be said, really."
 
Burton ran the entire 36-race schedule in 2013 and will make a handful of starts this year, giving him a solid base of knowledge about the current teams as well as the machinery within the series.
 
His only 2014 start so far this season came at Las Vegas, where he qualified 19th and finished 17th in the No. 66 MWR Toyota. Other starts beyond the Michigan race are likely, although no schedule has been announced.
 
"I haven’t been long out of the car so I still kind of understand what they deal with and I think that’s a good perspective," he said. "I think it’s good to have people that are recently out of the car – I think that’s good for all of us.
 
"There is going to be a day when there’s a whole new group of drivers (in the garage). Staying current with them and staying current with what’s going on in the sport, that’s the biggest challenge.
 
"Now I can talk about it pretty well, pretty fluently and understand what I’m talking about. But three years from now, that might not be the case."

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Kyle Busch will lead off the start of the Lucas Oil 200 at Dover

Entry No. Driver Sponsor
1 51 Kyle Busch(i) BettyJaneFranceHumanitarianAward Toyota
2 88 Matt Crafton Rip It Energy Fuel/Menards Toyota
3 17 Timothy Peters Red Horse Racing Toyota
4 77 German Quiroga NET10 Wireless Toyota
5 19 Tyler Reddick # Reese Towpower Ford
6 98 Johnny Sauter Nextant/Curb Records Toyota
7 8 John Hunter Nemechek Hard Rock Energy Toyota
8 30 Ron Hornaday Jr. Rheem Chevrolet
9 32 Ben Rhodes Alpha Energy Solutions Chevrolet
10 31 Ben Kennedy # Click It or Ticket Chevrolet
11 5 John Wes Townley Zaxby’s Toyota
12 13 Jeb Burton Estes Toyota
13 20 Gray Gaulding # Gemini Southern/Krispy Kreme Chevrolet
14 29 Ryan Blaney Cooper Standard Ford
15 54 Darrell Wallace Jr. ToyotaCare Toyota
16 9 Brennan Newberry Qore-24 Chevrolet
17 21 Joey Coulter Allegiant Chevrolet
18 08 Jimmy Weller III # GenevaLibertySteel/IntegratedMetalProd Chev
19 10 Jennifer Cobb Driven2Honor.org RAM
20 50 TJ Bell America’s Linemen Chevrolet
21 99 Bryan Silas Bell Trucks America Inc. Chevrolet
22 57 Norm Benning Chevrolet
23 63 Justin Jennings Mittler Bros. Machine & Tool Chevrolet
24 35 Mason Mingus # Call 811 Toyota
25 07 Jake Crum Thunder Exhaust Chevrolet
26 92 * Scott Riggs BTS Tire/Goodyear Fleet HQ/Wynns Ford
27 02 * Tyler Young # Randco/Young’s Building Systems Chevrolet
28 00 * Cole Custer Haas Automation Chevrolet
29 33 * Brandon Jones Exide Chevrolet
30 0 * Ryan Ellis(i) Grimes Irrigation & Construction Chevrolet
31 42 * Charles Lewandoski Randco/Young’s Building Systems Chevrolet
32 56 * Raymond Terczak Jr. Chevrolet
33 36 * Blake Koch(i) Mittler Bros. Machine & Tool RAM
34 40 * Todd Peck Arthritis.org Chevrolet
35 39 * Ryan Sieg(i) Pull-A-Part Used Auto Parts Chevrolet

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