Roush Fenway Ford driver beats out three-time pole sitter Kyle Busch

CONCORD, N.C.– Carl Edwards is living proof the Roush Fenway Racing team is making inroads on the intermediate speedways after a sluggish start to the season on RFR’s bread-and-butter tracks.
 
Edwards reeled off three lightning-quick laps, and his No. 99 Ford team contributed a flawless pit stop, as Edwards streaked to the pole position for Saturday night’s Sprint All-Star Race, the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series’ million-dollar dash for cash.
 
Edwards’ average speed for the three laps and the stop was 146.915 mph, significantly faster than anyone else in the 22-car field was able to manage.

With pit road speeds waived for Saturday evening’s time trials, Edwards had planned a relatively conservative entry, but as he approached pit road, he decided to throw caution to the wind.
 
"I had a plan to get to pit road, and I then I threw it completely out the window," said Edwards, who rocketed toward his pit stall but slowed the car in time to stop in the box. "I came onto pit road what I thought was entirely too fast. I thought I was going to run out in the grass.
 
"Fortunately, I got it all slowed down. The guys had a great pit stop. This is fun. I think I’m still shaking a little bit — it’s so intense."
 
Busch wasn’t completely pleased with any aspect of his qualifying effort for Saturday night’s Sprint All-Star Race, even though the cumulative effect was a front-row starting spot for the driver of the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.
 
"I left a little bit out there everywhere," Busch said after Saturday evening’s qualifying effort, and he was right.
 
Busch wasn’t fastest getting on or off pit road during the three-lap run. His crew had a little trouble with the left rear during the mandatory four-tire pit stop during the second lap.
 
The net effect was a total time of 111.118 seconds (145.791 mph), nearly a full second slower than the 110.268 seconds posted by Edwards.
 
Kevin Harvick qualified third, followed by the four Hendrick Motorsports cars of Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kasey Kahne.
 
Josh Wise, winner of the Sprint Fan Vote on Friday, qualified 19th.

READ MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE:
Get RaceView

Leads 31 of 90 laps, collects check for $1 million

RELATED: Full race results | Segment-by-segment recap | Sign up for RaceView today

CONCORD, N.C. — Streaking away from an intense battle with polesitter Carl Edwards to open the final 10-lap segment Saturday night at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Jamie McMurray won the Sprint All-Star Race — and the million-dollar-plus prize that goes with the victory — for the first time in his career.
 
McMurray held off fast-closing Kevin Harvick, who crossed the finish line .696 seconds behind the race winner.
 
Matt Kenseth ran third, followed by Dale Earnhardt Jr., Edwards and four-time Sprint All-Star Race winner Jimmie Johnson.
 
Earlier in the day, McMurray’s son carter had asked the driver what his plans for the day were.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

"He asked me what I was going to do today, so I asked him what he was going to do today," said McMurray, who has tallied two of his seven Sprint Cup victories in points races at Charlotte. "And he said, ‘Oh, I’m going to play in my sandbox. What are you going to do, Dad?’
 
"I said, ‘I’m going to race for a million bucks, Carter.’ It’s so cool that we were actually able to win."
 
The advantage McMurray opened after his breathtaking three-lap battle against Edwards gave him enough margin to hold off Harvick, who was closing fast in the final laps.
 
"It was three or four of the hardest laps I’ve ever driven in my racing career," McMurray said.
 
It was first-year crew chief Keith Rodden’s strategy, however, that put McMurray in position to win. After a pit stop on Lap 26, McMurray didn’t take four tires again until the break between the final two segments, and on that final stop, superb work by his crew got him off pit road second and in a position to challenge Edwards for the lead.
 
"Keith Rodden made some great calls tonight," said team owner Chip Ganassi, a Sprint All-Star Race winner for the first time. "The call was really made in segment 2 (the Lap 26 stop for tires) for him to be able to win the race."
 
That call enabled McMurray to get by with two tires or to stay out between segments until the final stop.
 
"Keith did an unbelievable job," McMurray said. "He was a huge secret in the garage (as an engineer at Hendrick Motorsports), and I’m so glad that I get the opportunity to work with him. We’ve had good cars all year long. We had some bad luck.
 
"But this is one of those races that makes up for a lot of bad times."
 
But before McMurray took the checkered flag, fans at the 1.5-mile track saw an action-packed race with a multitude of twists and turns.
 
Halfway through the first 20-lap segment, Kyle Busch passed pole winner Carl Edwards for the lead and held it until the first scheduled caution, but that was the end of the highlights for the driver of the No. 18 Toyota.
 
Six laps into the second segment, Busch tapped the rear bumper of Clint Bowyer‘s Camry after Bowyer blocked Busch’s moved to the inside. Busch took evasive action, diving toward the apron, when Bowyer’s car got out of shape, but Bowyer’s Toyota clipped Busch’s and the No. 18 spun.
 
Joey Logano couldn’t avoid Busch and plowed into the spinning car, knocking both machines out of the race.
 
"We had a good run through (Turns) 1 and 2 and off (Turn) 2," Busch explained after the accident. "Kurt (Busch) got real bottled up on the outside and slowed down, so I knew I was clear to go to the bottom and swoop down and try to get underneath Bowyer.
 
"And when I did, he blocked me, and I hit him, and he got squirrely, and then I was still under him, and it hit me and turned me around the wrong way on the backstretch and got in the outside wall."
 
After the subsequent restart on Lap 31, AJ Allmendinger‘s Chevrolet nosed into the inside wall on the backstretch after contact with Brian Vickers‘ Toyota.
 
Kasey Kahne grabbed the lead for the first time on Lap 35 and pulled away to win the second segment. With four cars staying out between segments and two more changing just two tires, Kahne started eighth for segment No. 3, but on Lap 47 he passed McMurray (who had not changed tires) for the top spot.
 
By the time the third segment ended, Kahne was a comfortable 1.411 seconds ahead, with Harvick giving chase.
 
On the opening lap of the fourth segment, a mechanical failure in Jeff Gordon’s car sent the No. 24 Chevy into the outside wall in Turn 3, collecting the Chevrolet of Martin Truex Jr. and the Ford of Greg Biffle.
 
Kahne had two brushes with the wall in segment No. 4, ending his strong run with the sort of disappointment that has plagued him in points races all season long.
 
With the best average finish in the first four segments, Harvick entered pit road first for a mandatory four-time stop before the final 10-lap dash. McMurray, who made a huge track position gain by staying out between the third and fourth segments, was second onto pit road, followed by Johnson, Earnhardt Jr. and Edwards.
 
But Edwards used the No. 1 pit stall to advantage, winning the race off pit road over McMurray and Harvick. Kenseth started the final segment in the fourth spot, with Johnson and Earnhardt behind him in fifth and sixth.
 
Edwards, however, couldn’t keep McMurray behind him, and after watching replays of the battle, the driver of the No. 99 Roush Fenway Racing Ford was already second-guessing himself.
 
"Jamie just did a perfect job on the start," Edwards said. "I had him cleared for a minute. If I would have pulled in front of him in Turn 1, if I would have gone high, I think we would have won that race, but I was just so reluctant to give up the bottom.
 
"Jamie just did a perfect job. He ended up sweeping around the outside of me, dragging me down, and it was a drag race. My hat is off to him. He did a great job. He earned it. I drove as hard as I could while he was on the outside and he gave me just the right amount of room to not wreck me, but still beat me. If I had it to do over again, I’d do it differently but that’s racing. You’ve just got to make the best decision you can and move on. It’s a really tough one, though."
 
Though Edwards and McMurray inched ahead of each other at various junctures after then final restart, McMurray led at the finish line for each of the final 10 laps. Once he cleared Edwards three laps into the run, McMurray pulled away.

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

The No. 5 Chevrolet and No. 18 Toyota finished 14th and 21st, respectively

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

CONCORD, N.C. — Race-winner Jamie McMurray may be $1 million richer, but a pair of cars that didn’t come close to Victory Lane in Saturday night’s Sprint All-Star Race at Charlotte Motor Speedway established themselves as front-runners for next Sunday’s Coca-Cola 600 at the same track.

Yes, despite the No. 5 Chevrolet and No. 18 Toyota’s respective finishes of 14th and 21st, the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup title contenders Kasey Kahne and Kyle Busch can take respite knowing that they have potential race-winning cars sitting back at their shops waiting to be unleashed for 600 miles a short seven days from now — when points count.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

Busch and crew chief Dave Rogers brought a fast Camry to the track this weekend, grabbing a front row starting position during qualifying and quickly passing pole-winner Carl Edwards to lead the first segment of the five-segment race. Things quickly turned for the 18 in segment two after contact with Clint Bowyer ended Busch’s day, but it was enough to know he’ll have a significant shot to improve upon his 38th-place finish in last year’s 600 and finally break through for an elusive Charlotte win.

That said, with that much money on the line, Saturday’s result was still a disappointment.

"Hate that we’re out this early, but you’re trying to race hard and protect that average finish that you’re supposed to have for the last segment," the Joe Gibbs Racing driver said. "Trying to pass as many cars as you can and I was going to have two right there getting into Turn 3. Those are the opportunities you have to take in the All-Star (Race)."

With Busch out of the race, Kahne took over.

The Hendrick Motorsports driver owned the next two segments and looked set to be the one cashing in a seven-figure check before hitting an oil spill and getting into the wall. He wound up finishing the race after extensive work on pit road, but again, the precedent for next week was already set.

"I had the strongest car here," Kahne said. "The Time Warner Cable Chevy was so quick and maneuverable in traffic, I could drive right through the field. We’re just building on what we have here. We had a great engine, had a really fast car and another one sitting in the garage over at HMS that’ll be ready to go. I feel good about next week and felt great about tonight. We could go at will, so it was nice to be really fast here."

While Saturday had a silver lining to a rough finish for Busch, he’s third in the standings, trailing leader Jeff Gordon by just 21 points. Next Sunday isn’t as important for him, especially since his ticket to the Chase is already virtually punched with his Fontana win.

But for Kahne, 16th in points with his first top-five finish coming last week — 11 races into the season — the All-Star Race was about much more.

The No. 5 team struggled throughout the first quarter of the season, and it knew it. Through the season’s first eight races, the team had averaged a finish of 21.25 and wasn’t even on the Chase map. Changes were necessary, so Kahne and crew chief Kenny Francis tested at Kansas, which seemed to turn on the proverbial light switch.

Kahne has improved his finishing position in each race since, culminating with his top-three last week at Kansas. If Saturday’s speed was any indication, things don’t seem to be slowing down.

"Four weeks ago we wouldn’t have run well at either (Charlotte or Kansas)," Kahne said. "We just didn’t have the speed, so we did some testing prior to Richmond. Went to Richmond and were top five in both practices; ran in the top seven throughout the entire race. Ended up in the back because of other things on pit road, not because of the car at all."

And "the back" that Kahne is referring to? A respectable — compared to how he’d been doing — 14th-place finish.

With a trio of Coca-Cola 600 trophies already sitting at home, the most recent of which came just two years ago, Kahne appears primed to add a fourth to his collection.  

Even if he doesn’t become the season’s 10th winner next Sunday, the team is making the strides it needs to in order to get back on track and establish itself among the elite in the Sprint Cup Series and ensure that a quarter of the Chase field belongs to Hendrick Motorsports, the way it has the past two years.

"We just made gains as a team on some things I needed to feel better in the car and we found those things and it’s helped a lot. The pit crew stepped up and everybody stepped up all at the same time. It’s a little bit of everything but the car is definitely driving faster; driving better than what it was a month ago."

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Popular NASCAR Nationwide Series event begins with Daytona qualifier

Rookies and veterans alike will have money on the mind as "Dash 4 Cash" returns to the NASCAR Nationwide Series for a sixth consecutive year.  Designed to highlight the unique competition between the series’ regulars, "Dash 4 Cash" kicks off with its qualifier at Daytona International Speedway, concluding its four-race program with a finale at Iowa Speedway.

There will be more than just fireworks at Daytona as the track becomes the qualifier for the beginning of "Dash 4 Cash," the popular NASCAR Nationwide Series program that could result in $1 million awarded to one talented driver. Daytona determines the four eligible drivers that will then compete for one of four $100,000 payouts beginning July 12 at New Hampshire.

Following New Hampshire, the next three series races are Dash 4 Cash (D4C) events: Chicagoland Speedway (July 19), Indianapolis Motor Speedway (July 26) and Iowa Speedway (August 2).

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Last August, Brian Vickers was the highest-finishing points-eligible driver in the final D4C race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway — which paid him and his fan partner, Santa Cruz, Calif., native Pam Nabors, $100,000 each.  

"Everybody wants to be a part of Dash 4 Cash," said Elliott Sadler, currently second in the NASCAR Nationwide Series standings. "It brings a lot of attention to each and every team that’s involved in it. It is an amazing program that Nationwide Insurance has put in place for us to race. I’ve been very fortunate enough to win a couple of the bonuses the last couple of years and hopefully we’re in the battle again."

Here’s how the Dash 4 Cash (Twitter – #Dash4Cash) program works:

·       The top-four finishers in the Daytona race who are eligible to receive NASCAR Nationwide Series championship driver points will qualify for the first D4C race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

·       The highest finisher of those four drivers at New Hampshire — he or she does not have to win the race — will win the first $100,000 D4C award and automatically qualify for the next event at Chicago. The remaining three highest finishing points-eligible drivers at New Hampshire will qualify for the race at Chicago.

·       Those rules will apply for the remaining three events. If one driver wins the first three D4C awards and then wins the Iowa race outright, Nationwide Insurance will award the driver an additional $600,000 bonus, bringing the total payout to $1 million.

Fans can apply to be a part of the action starting tomorrow by entering the NASCAR Nationwide Series $100,000 Sweepstakes at www.nascar.com/Dash4Cash. Four lucky individuals and a guest will receive an all-expenses paid trip to the final D4C event at Iowa Speedway. The four fans will be randomly paired with the four eligible D4C drivers for that race, and the fan whose driver wins the D4C award will also go home with a check for $100,000.

"To end the program at a standalone event, which is usually all Nationwide Series drivers, at a great race track that always puts on a heck of a show says a lot for what NASCAR really is intending for the series," Sadler said.  "For us, ending in Iowa seems to be the right thing to do."

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Moments that changed the course of the 30th annual all-star race

KAHNE HITS THE WALL TO END HOPES OF WIN
Kasey Kahne grabbed the lead for the first time on Lap 35 and pulled away to win the second segment. With four cars staying out between segments and two more changing just two tires, Kahne started eighth for segment No. 3, but on Lap 47 he passed Jamie McMurray (who had not changed tires) for the top spot.
 
By the time the third segment ended, Kahne was a comfortable 1.411 seconds ahead, with Harvick giving chase.
 
On the opening lap of the fourth segment, a mechanical failure in Jeff Gordon‘s car sent the No. 24 Chevy into the outside wall in Turn 3, collecting the Chevrolet of Martin Truex Jr. and the Ford of Greg Biffle.
 
Kahne had two brushes with the wall in segment No. 4, ending his strong run with the sort of disappointment that has plagued him in points races all season long.

UPS


HARVICK LOSES LEAD ON PIT ROAD

With the best average finish in the first four segments, Kevin Harvick entered pit road first for a mandatory four-time stop before the final 10-lap dash. McMurray was second onto pit road, followed by Jimmie Johnson, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Carl Edwards.
 
But Edwards used the No. 1 pit stall to advantage, winning the race off pit road over McMurray and Harvick. Matt Kenseth started the final segment in the fourth spot, with Johnson and Earnhardt behind him in fifth and sixth.
 
Edwards, however, couldn’t keep McMurray behind him, and Harvick couldn’t catch the No. 1 car.

PIT STRATEGY HELPS MCMURRAY WIN

Streaking away from an intense battle with polesitter Carl Edwards to open the final 10-lap segment Saturday night at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Jamie McMurray won the Sprint All-Star Race — and the million-dollar-plus prize that goes with the victory — for the first time in his career.
 
McMurray held off fast-closing Kevin Harvick, who crossed the finish line .696 seconds behind the race winner.
 
Matt Kenseth ran third, followed by Dale Earnhardt Jr., Edwards and Jimmie Johnson.
 
But before McMurray, who made a huge track position gain by staying out between the second and third segments, delivered the first victory in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series non-points race to team owner Chip Ganassi, fans at the 1.5-mile track saw an action-packed race with numerous twists and turns before McMurray took the checkered flag.

NASCAR News Wire contributed to this story.

Edwards looks back on the final restart that cost him the win

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

CONCORD, N.C. – Carl Edwards was in the perfect position to run away with Saturday night’s NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race and collect a $1 million paycheck. 

Out front on a restart with 10 laps remaining at Charlotte Motor Speedway, in a car that had been more than capable for much of the night.

But Edwards couldn’t hold off Jamie McMurray, then began to slip back as the final laps of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race played out, eventually finishing fifth in the non-points event.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

"Can we talk about anything else?" Edwards said, only half-joking, as he emerged from his Roush Fenway Racing hauler. "Man, that’s frustrating."

Edwards spent several minutes after the race watching replays of the final restart, trying to determine what, if anything, he could have done differently.

McMurray, the race winner, "just did a perfect job on the start," he said. "I had him cleared. If I had pulled in front of him in Turn 1, if I had gone high, I think we would have won that race. But I was just so reluctant to give up the bottom. 

"Jamie just did a perfect job; he ended up sweeping around the outside, dragging me down and it was a drag race. … I drove as hard as I could while he was on the outside and he gave me just enough room to not wreck me but still beat me." 

The 2011 winner of the All-Star Race, Edwards started Saturday’s 90-lap event on the pole after posting the fastest speed during a three-lap qualifying effort — one that included a four-tire pit stop. 

After leading the first nine laps, he was fifth at the end of the first 20-lap segment, and restarted sixth after his pit stop. 

Edwards regained the top spot at lap 34, and led nine laps, but had slipped to third at the end of segment No. 2. The end of the third segment found him 13th, but emerged from the pits in eighth. 

His No. 99 Ford was 10th at the end of the fourth and final 20-lap segment. Based on average finishing position of the completed segments, he entered the pits for the final time in fifth. 

He came out with the lead. Followed by McMurray, Kevin Harvick, Matt Kensethand Jimmie Johnson.

"It was an awesome job by my guys," Edwards said. "If I had to do it over again, I’d do it differently, but that’s racing. You’ve just got to make the best decision you can and move on. It’s a really tough one, though. 

"Our restarts had been great all night, and I wouldn’t have even been in that position if it weren’t for my crew. We went from fifth to first in the pits, so my … guys did perfectly. They did a great job on pit road. Jimmy (Fennig, crew chief) made great calls." 

Once he lost the lead to McMurray, Edwards said it was questionable whether he could maintain his position. Eventually Harvick made the move around him, as did Kenseth and Dale Earnhardt Jr

"Our car was not that fast back in traffic, but I think out front we could have held them off," he said. "I was really looking forward to leading after that restart. I don’t know if they would have gotten by us, but that’s easy to say. I wouldn’t have been in that position if it weren’t for my pit crew. I just hate that I wasn’t able to take what they did … and turn it into a win."

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Ryan Blaney earns first Nationwide pole, pit pick

RELATED: Play NASCAR Fantasy Live

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Fastest in qualifying, Ryan Blaney earned the first pit pick and chose the second stall which is the first off of pit road.

Regan Smith chose the ninth stall, the first with an opening in front. Sam Hornish Jr., who earned a Coors Light Pole in his first outing with Joe Gibbs Racing at Talladega, has the second-fastest lap in qualifying. He chose the seventh stall with an opening behind him.

Ryan Reed is in the 42nd stall, the first at the entrance to pit road.

The Get to Know Newton 250 Presented by Sherwin-Williams from Iowa Speedway gets underway Sunday at 2 p.m. ET on ESPN.

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Carl Edwards gets first pit pick at end of pit road

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

Enter Article’s Top Body

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

With the fastest lap in NASCAR Sprint All-Star qualifying comes first pit pick, and Carl Edwards and the No. 99 team picked the first pit stall at the end of pit road.

With only 22 cars in the race, approximately half of the field in a regular 43-car points race, every car and team gets a stall between itself and the next crew.

Here’s the full rundown:

Third stall: Kyle Busch

Fifth stall: Kevin Harvick

Seventh stall: Jeff Gordon

Ninth stall: Jimmie Johnson

13th stall: Kasey Kahne

15th stall: Matt Kenseth

19th stall: Joey Logano

21st stall: Jamie McMurray

23rd stall: Martin Truex Jr.

25th stall: Brad Keselowski

27th stall: Greg Biffle

31st stall: Brian Vickers

33rd stall: AJ Allmendinger

35th stall: Kurt Busch

37th stall: Josh Wise

39th stall: David Ragan

41st stall: Ryan Newman

43rd stall: Denny Hamlin

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

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

RELATED: Mobil 1 Technology Center

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 the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series garage.

This week, Rich "Haskell" Lavalette, crew member for the No. 1 team of Jamie McMurray, talks about the effect a $1 million prize has on strategy in the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race.

Watch the video above to hear the answer, and be sure to tune in to GarageCam presented by Mobil 1 next week at Charlotte and see another question answered.

Sprint Cup Series GarageCam, presented by Mobil 1:
2 p.m. ET, Thursday, May 22. (Watch here)

Camping World Truck Series GarageCam, presented by Mobil 1: 5 p.m. ET, Thursday, May 22. (Watch here)

 

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

A segment-by-segment recap of the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race

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

SEGMENT 1: 20 LAPS

TOP 5: Kyle Busch, Jeff Gordon, Kevin Harvick, Kasey Kahne, Carl Edwards (pole sitter).

LAP LEADERS:
Carl Edwards (1-9), Kyle Busch (10-20).

STORY LINES: Kyle Busch used speed in the middle lane in Turns 3 and 4 to gain on Edwards and eventually take the lead. … Good battles early between Kasey Kahne and Matt Kenseth for seventh place and Jeff Gordon and Kevin Harvick for third place. Kahne used a cross-over move to go to the bottom and stay ahead of Kenseth. … Gordon passed Edwards on Lap 14 for second place and appeared to have a strong car to challenge Busch. … Average finish in the first four segments will help determine how cars line up for the final segment. … Pit stop is optional following this segment.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

Latest news
Standings
Schedule

SEGMENT 2: 20 LAPS

TOP 5: Kahne, Harvick, Edwards, Greg Biffle, Kurt Busch.

LAP LEADERS:
Denny Hamlin (21-25), Edwards (26-34), Kahne (35-40).

STORY LINES: Denny Hamlin started the segment in first place because he decided not to pit after the first segment. … Kyle Busch nearly got into the outside wall on the fourth lap of this segment. Then, he did get into the outside wall in Turn 3 on Lap 26 after contact with the tail of Clint Bowyer’s car. Busch got out of his banged-up car, pounded his fist atop it, and walked along the apron. … Joey Logano got caught up in the Busch wreck and had to exit the race. … On the fifth lap of this segment, Carl Edwards and Brad Keselowski touched but kept their cars on the track. Keselowski lost some momentum after the near-miss. … AJ Allmendinger got loose on Lap 31, slid down the track and slammed hard into the inside wall. He had to exit the race. … Dramatic three-wide scenario saw Dale Earnhardt Jr. drop back. Meanwhile, Hamlin’s car slowed late in the run and he was fighting to stay on lead lap because of a right-side tire problem.

SEGMENT 3: 20 LAPS

TOP 5: Kahne, Harvick, Jamie McMurray, Keselowski, Kenseth.

LAP LEADERS:
McMurray (41-46), Kahne (47-60).

STORY LINES:
Jamie McMurray started on the inside with the lead with Kenseth to the outside. McMurray got a good start after the green flag and held the lead early in the run. … Three-wide racing with Gordon, Brian Vickers and Kurt Busch on the fourth lap of this segment. … Kahne passed Keselowski on the fifth lap of this segment and made a run at McMurray but then dropped behind Kes for a bit before regaining the second spot. … Kahne pulled away from the field midway through the run, holding nearly a 1-second lead over McMurray. … Harvick took a strong position in second place with five laps left, but he was still 1.39 seconds behind Kahne. … Jimmie Johnson made a move late to take sixth place from his Hendrick Motorsports teammate Earnhardt Jr. … As after the first two segments, drivers had the option of a a pit stop following the third segment.

SEGMENT 4: 20 LAPS

TOP FIVE: Harvick, McMurray, Keselowski, Kurt Busch and Vickers.

LAP LEADERS: McMurray (61-75), Harvick (75-80).

STORY LINES: The top five on the restart was made up of McMurray, Keselowski, Johnson, Kurt Busch and Kahne. … A crash into the outside wall in Turn 3 on the second lap of this segment involved Gordon, Biffle and Martin Truex Jr. and sent all three of those drivers to the garage. … Kurt Busch touched the outside wall on the ninth lap of this segment, wobbled but was able to keep control. … Harvick pressured McMurray on Lap 13, pulling right up on the back bumper. Meanwhile, Kahne got a piece of the wall and was struggling to recapture his earlier magic. … Harvick got by McMurray on Lap 75, pressuring him from close behind, then moving to the low side and powering past for the lead. … Ryan Newman caught the wall and had to visit pit lane late in the run. … There was a mandatory four-tire stop after this segment. Average position in the first four segments would help determine the running order for the final segment. … Kahne got into the wall in Turn 2 after the checkered flag dropped, doing damage to his car. He came to pit road too early and was penalized to 15th place heading into the money pit stop despite having an average finish of second in the first four segments.

SEGMENT 5: 10 LAPS

TOP 5: McMurray, Harvick, Kenseth, Earnhardt Jr., Edwards.

LAP LEADERS: McMurray (81-90).

STORY LINES: Average finish in the first four segments placed Harvick first heading into the mandatory four-tire pit stop. … However, Edwards picked up four spots during the pit stop and emerged as the leader coming off of pit road with McMurray in second, Harvick third, Kenseth fourth and Johnson fifth. Hamlin also picked up four spots on the pit stop to jump up to sixth place. …  McMurray dueled with Edwards on the first lap, claimed the lead and powered away early in the run, building a two-second advantage. … Harvick closed on McMurray to within 1.20 seconds mid-way through the segment, but McMurray was still looking strong. … Edwards continued to slip to fifth late in the run as Earnhard Jr. passed him. … With two to go Harvick closed to within less than a second behind McMurray. … McMurray won the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race.


MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView