Three-time champion, rookie phenom set pace on 1.5-mile track

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KANSAS: 5-hour Energy 400 entry list | Sprint Cup Series standings

Practice 1 | Results

Rookie Kyle Larson set the early pace Friday afternoon at Kansas Speedway, topping opening practice for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.

Larson, driving the No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet, turned a fast lap of 189.076 mph on the 1.5-mile track. He clocked the fast time in the 20th of the 61 laps he ran — second-most of any driver — in the 90-minute session.

Aric Almirola was second-fastest (188.620 mph) in the No. 43 Richard Petty Motorsports Ford in preparation for Saturday night’s 5-hour Energy 400 (7:30 p.m. ET, FOX). Clint Bowyer, Dave Blaney and Kasey Kahne completed the top five on the speed chart.

Sprint Cup points leader Jeff Gordon — a two-time Kansas winner — posted the ninth-fastest lap in the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevy. Defending race winner Matt Kenseth was just 28th-fastest in the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota.

Ryan Blaney, attempting to make his Sprint Cup debut Saturday, turned the 17th-fastest lap in the Team Penske No. 12 Ford.

Coors Light Pole Qualifying for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series is scheduled at 6:40 p.m. ET (FOX Sports 1).

Practice 2 | Results

Tony Stewart bumped hometown favorite Clint Bowyer from the No. 1 spot on the leaderboard to lead final NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice at Kansas Speedway.

Stewart, in the No. 14 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet, turned a fast lap at 192.809 mph on the 1.5-mile track in preparation for Saturday night’s 5-hour Energy 400 (7:30 p.m. ET, FOX). He was among five drivers faster than the track qualifying record of 191.864 mph set by defending race winner Matt Kenseth here last spring.

Bowyer, in the No. 15 Michael Waltrip Racing Toyota, settled for second place at 192.321 mph after Stewart clocked his fast time at the end of the 50-minute session. Defending series champ Jimmie Johnson, a two-time winner at Kansas, was third-fastest at 192.239 mph in the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet.

Rookie Kyle Larson backed up his fast time in opening practice with a fourth-best performance in the final practice. Kevin Harvick, Stewart’s teammate and a two-time winner this season, completed the top five.

Sprint Cup points leader Jeff Gordon was sixth-fastest. Kenseth replicated his position on the leaderboard from early practice — 28th. Rookie Ryan Blaney, aiming to make his Sprint Cup debut Saturday night, did the same with the 17th-fastest lap.

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SHR driver to start first in Saturday’s 5-hour Energy 400 (7:30 p.m. ET, FOX)

KANSAS: 5-hour Energy 400 lineup | Paint Scheme Preview

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Kevin Harvick capitalized on all the speed to be found during NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Award qualifying at Kansas Speedway on Friday.

The Stewart-Haas Racing driver smashed the former track qualifying record of 191.864 mph set by defending race winner Matt Kenseth in the second round with a speed of 194.658, and then blazed the 1.5-mile oval at a 194.252 clip in the final round to pick up his second pole of the season. Last fall, Harvick won the race at Kansas from the pole. It’s his eighth career pole in the Sprint Cup Series.

"My qualifying record hasn’t been great, but the team has really done a good job at getting our qualifying stuff situated after the first four or five weeks to the season to come here and sit on the pole," Harvick said. "I thought I had screwed it up. I felt like I got through (Turn One and Turn Two) all three laps pretty good, but three and four was a little bit too tight. I got a little bit concerned, but all in all it worked out OK."

Joey Logano (193.910) will start alongside Harvick on the front row, followed by a pair of Fords in Team Penske teammate Brad Keselowski (193.507) and Missouri native Carl Edwards (193.188).

"We were fortunate to have some fast Fords out there," Keselowski said. "I didn’t think we were very fast for much of the day and our first run we weren’t, but this knockout qualifying gives us an opportunity to work on it and get better and that is what we did with our second, third and fourth runs."

Rookie Kyle Larson (193.050) starts fifth, while SHR’s Kurt Busch (193.043) is sixth.

All four Hendrick Motorsports cars were knocked out in the second round, as Jeff Gordon, Jimmie Johnson, Kasey Kahne and Dale Earnhardt Jr. will start 13th, 14th, 17th and 22nd, respectively. Hometown hero Clint Bowyer — set to make his 300th career Sprint Cup start — and Kyle Busch were also knocked out and will start 23rd and 24th, respectively.

Notable drivers who did not make the cut following the first session included defending pole and race-winner Matt Kenseth, his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate and last week’s winner at Talladega Denny Hamlin, Martin Truex Jr. and AJ Allmendinger. Dave Blaney, who needed to qualify 36th or better to make the race lineup, will be the odd man out come race time after clocking the 40th-fastest time. His son, Ryan Blaney, qualified 21st and will make Sprint Cup debut Saturday night.

"It feels good to make it," Ryan Blaney said. "It is a shame my dad couldn’t make it. it sucks. I really did want to race out there with him. It would have been really cool but hopefully we will get another chance."

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Six-time champion is winless in 2014, but confident that the victories will come

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KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Expectations have yet to merge with reality, but Jimmie Johnson arrived at Kansas Speedway this week no less confident in his team or his chances at returning to the winner’s circle.
 
"Successful teams can sometimes be their own worst enemy," the six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup champion said prior to Friday’s first practice for Saturday night’s 5-hour Energy 400 Benefiting Special Operations Warrior Foundation.
 
"We have been through dry spells before. A 10-12 race dry spell isn’t a very long one. We have set an expectation that is less than that. I get it. I understand."
 
Johnson, the defending Sprint Cup champion, isn’t the only driver still looking for that first victory of 2014. His absence from Victory Lane, however, is easily the most noticeable. In a career that began 14 seasons ago, Johnson has 66 wins to go with his six championships. He’s won three or more races every season save for one (2011). And he’s won five or more in a single season eight times, including a career-best 10 in 2007.

When Johnson isn’t winning, people notice. But Johnson also knows that his team has had its chances this year, finishing in the top five three times and the top 10 on five occasions. He was dominant at Martinsville, leading 296 laps, and strong at Auto Club Speedway, where he led 104.
 
"If we didn’t have any looks at wins this year I would have a much different opinion," Johnson, 38, admitted. "I still feel that we are extremely competitive and I feel as an individual I’m a better race car driver today than I was last year."
 
The longest he’s gone without pulling the familiar blue and white Lowe’s Chevrolet into Victory Lane? Twenty-one races, a drought that lasted through the summer and spilled over into the fall of 2011.
 
He broke it at Kansas Speedway.
 
"Everything is there," he insists. "We just need to own this new rules package and find the No. 48 set-up in it. That is what we are searching for.
 
"Some tracks we have been close; others not so much, but our drive to compete — it really exists within Chad (Knaus, crew chief)  … and me. That hasn’t changed one bit. We are still as hungry as we have ever been."
 
He enters this weekend’s race seventh in points, and is a two-time winner at the 1.5-mile track. He’s finished no worse than ninth in his last 10 starts here.
 
Matt Kenseth, also winless thus far this year, is the defending race winner.
 
"There is no guarantee that success will be as it was in the past, but we are going to show up and give 100 percent each week," Johnson said. "I know we will win our fair share of races.
 
"We will make Chases and certainly be a threat for championships."

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See how the Sprint Cup Series drivers will line up on pit road

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The pit stall assignments are out for Saturday’s 5-hour Energy 400 (7:30 p.m. ET, FOX) at Kansas Speedway.

Polesitter Kevin Harvick naturally selected the stall closest to the pit road exit. He’ll have no one in front of him, and is closest to the end of pit road. Harvick won the pole last fall at Kansas, took the first stall and won the race.

Harvick’s Stewart-Haas Racing teammate, Kurt Busch, selected the eighth stall, which has an opening in front of it. He qualified sixth. Brad Keselowski (qualified third), Jamie McMurray (qualified 11th) and Kyle Larson (qualified fifth) all have openings in front of their respective stalls as well.

Carl Edwards will line up fourth in the race, and he has the stall closest to the pit road entrance.

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Harvick will lead the start of the 5-Hour Energy 400 benefiting Special Operations Warrior Foundation

Entry No. Driver Sponsor Time
1 4 Kevin Harvick Jimmy John’s Chevrolet
2 22 Joey Logano AAA Insurance Ford 27.848
3 2 Brad Keselowski Wurth Ford
4 99 Carl Edwards Aflac Ford 27.952
5 42 Kyle Larson # Target Chevrolet
6 41 Kurt Busch Haas Automation Chevrolet 27.973
7 31 Ryan Newman Kwikset Chevrolet
8 14 Tony Stewart Bass Pro Shops/Mobil 1 Chevrolet 28.045
9 10 Danica Patrick GoDaddy Chevrolet
10 16 Greg Biffle 3M Novec Ford 28.128
11 1 Jamie McMurray McDonald’s Chevrolet
12 43 Aric Almirola Farmland Ford 28.372
13 24 Jeff Gordon Axalta Coatings Chevrolet
14 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s Chevrolet 27.973
15 55 Brian Vickers Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota
16 27 Paul Menard Shrock/Menards Chevrolet 27.995
17 5 Kasey Kahne Farmers Insurance/Thankmillionteachers Chevrolet
18 51 Justin Allgaier # Brandt Professional Agriculture Chevrolet 28.007
19 3 Austin Dillon # Dow Chevrolet
20 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Zest Ford 28.032
21 12 Ryan Blaney(i) SKF Ford
22 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. National Guard Chevrolet 28.089
23 15 Clint Bowyer Cherry 5-hour Energy Special Op sWarrior Toyota
24 18 Kyle Busch Snickers Toyota 28.463
25 9 Marcos Ambrose DeWalt Ford
26 78 Martin Truex Jr. Furniture Row Chevrolet 28.160
27 13 Casey Mears GEICO Chevrolet
28 20 Matt Kenseth Dollar General Toyota 28.197
29 47 AJ Allmendinger Kingsford Charcoal Chevrolet
30 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Freight Toyota 28.265
31 83 Ryan Truex # Burger King Toyota
32 98 Josh Wise Phil Parsons Racing Ford 28.399
33 23 Alex Bowman # Dr. Pepper Toyota
34 7 Michael Annett # Accell Construction Chevrolet 28.520
35 44 JJ Yeley(i) Phoenix Warehouse Chevrolet
36 26 Cole Whitt # Iowa Chop House Toyota 28.550
37 36 Reed Sorenson Chevrolet
38 34 David Ragan Taco Bell Ford Owner Points
39 38 David Gilliland Long John Silver’s Ford
40 40 Landon Cassill(i) Carsforsale.com Chevrolet Owner Points
41 32 Travis Kvapil Mechanical Protection Plan Ford
42 33 Timmy Hill Little Joe’s Autos Chevrolet Owner Points
43 66 Joe Nemechek(i) Kansas Farm Bureau Toyota

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Kyle Busch will lead the field to green for the SFP 250 at Kansas Speedway

Entry No. Driver Sponsor
1 51 Kyle Busch(i) ToyotaCare Toyota
2 29 Ryan Blaney Cooper Standard Ford
3 98 Johnny Sauter Nextant Aerospace/Curb Records Toyota
4 7 Brian Ickler Bullet Liner Toyota
5 19 Joey Logano(i) Reese Towpower Ford
6 13 Jeb Burton Carolina Nut Co. Toyota
7 20 Austin Dillon(i) NTS Motorsports Chevrolet
8 17 Timothy Peters Red Horse Racing Toyota
9 88 Matt Crafton Goof Off/Menards Toyota
10 21 Joey Coulter VERTX Chevrolet
11 5 John Wes Townley Zaxby’s Real Chicken Toyota
12 9 Brennan Newberry Qore-24 Chevrolet
13 32 Tayler Malsam Outerwall Chevrolet
14 30 Ron Hornaday Jr. Rheem Chevrolet
15 02 Tyler Young # Randco/Young’s Building System Chevrolet
16 8 Joe Nemechek MDAndersonCancerCtr/smokeandsear Toyota
17 77 German Quiroga OtterBox Toyota
18 35 Mason Mingus # Call 811 Toyota
19 23 Spencer Gallagher Allegiant Travel Chevrolet
20 07 Jimmy Weller III # Geneva-Liberty Steel/Polaris Chevrolet
21 54 Darrell Wallace Jr. Toyota Time Sales Event Toyota
22 99 Bryan Silas Bell Trucks America Inc. Chevrolet
23 08 Todd Shafer Thunder Exhaust Chevrolet
24 50 TJ Bell America’s Lineman Chevrolet
25 42 Charles Lewandoski Randco/Young’s Building System Chevrolet
26 63 Justin Jennings Mittler Bros. Machine & Tool Chevrolet
27 10 Jennifer Jo Cobb Mark One Electric Chevrolet
28 0 Ryan Ellis(i) Grimes Irrigation & Construction Chevrolet
29 57 Norm Benning BoedeckerConstruction/GPC Chevrolet
30 31 Ben Kennedy # ALS Association Chevrolet
31 36 Scott Stenzel Mittler Bros. Machine & Tool Chevrolet

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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, Rodney Childers, crew chief for the No. 4 team of Kevin Harvick, talks about tire strategy at Kansas Speedway.

Watch the video above to hear Childers’ take on tires, 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:
1:20 p.m. ET, Friday, May 16. (Watch here)

Camping World Truck Series GarageCam, presented by Mobil 1: 9:30 a.m. ET, Friday, May 16. (Watch here)

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Larson to roll off first for Coors Light Pole Qualifying, 6:40 p.m. ET (FS1)

# Car Driver Team
1 42 Kyle Larson # Target Chevrolet
2 24 Jeff Gordon Axalta Coatings Chevrolet
3 10 Danica Patrick GoDaddy Chevrolet
4 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s Chevrolet
5 26 Cole Whitt # Iowa Chop House Toyota
6 2 Brad Keselowski Wurth Ford
7 15 Clint Bowyer Cherry 5-hour Energy for Special Ops Warrior Foundation Toyota
8 51 Justin Allgaier # Brandt Professional Agriculture Chevrolet
9 9 Marcos Ambrose DeWalt Ford
10 41 Kurt Busch Haas Automation Chevrolet
11 47 AJ Allmendinger Kingsford Charcoal Chevrolet
12 33 Timmy Hill Little Joe’s Autos Chevrolet
13 18 Kyle Busch Snickers Toyota
14 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Freight Toyota
15 32 Travis Kvapil Mechanical Protection Plan Ford
16 27 Paul Menard Shrock/Menards Chevrolet
17 3 Austin Dillon # Dow Chevrolet
18 12 Ryan Blaney(i) SKF Ford
19 7 Michael Annett # Accell Construction Chevrolet
20 4 Kevin Harvick Jimmy John’s Chevrolet
21 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Zest Ford
22 31 Ryan Newman Kwikset Chevrolet
23 55 Brian Vickers Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota
24 36 Reed Sorenson Chevrolet
25 40 Landon Cassill(i) Carsforsale.com Chevrolet
26 66 Joe Nemechek(i) Kansas Farm Bureau Toyota
27 78 Martin Truex Jr. Furniture Row Chevrolet
28 43 Aric Almirola Farmland Ford
29 20 Matt Kenseth Dollar General Toyota
30 99 Carl Edwards Aflac Ford
31 34 David Ragan Taco Bell Ford
32 77 Dave Blaney Ford
33 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. National Guard Chevrolet
34 44 JJ Yeley(i) Phoenix Warehouse Chevrolet
35 22 Joey Logano AAA Insurance Ford
36 1 Jamie McMurray McDonald’s Chevrolet
37 13 Casey Mears GEICO Chevrolet
38 5 Kasey Kahne Farmers Insurance/Thankamillionteachers.com Chevrolet
39 16 Greg Biffle 3M Novec Ford
40 23 Alex Bowman # Dr.Pepper Toyota
41 98 Josh Wise Phil Parsons Racing Ford
42 38 David Gilliland Long John Silver’s Ford
43 83 Ryan Truex # Burger King Toyota
44 14 Tony Stewart Bass Pro Shops/Mobil 1 Chevrolet

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Panel of experts examines hot topics in the world of NASCAR

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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, Holly Cain and Alan Cavanna examine whether winless drivers including Jimmie Johnson should be concerned, if Dale Earnhardt Jr. made the right move at Talladega and how the Nationwide Series championship could shake out.

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1. Should Jimmie Johnson — or any driver without a race win, for that matter — be getting worried given how fast those Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup berths appear to be filling up?

Holly Cain: It’s hard to imagine worrying about Jimmie Johnson making the Chase. He doesn’t seem to be, and made a point last week in Talladega to say that he’s in based on points right now anyway.

David Caraviello: Worried? Maybe not. Slightly anxious? Perhaps. He’s rarely gone this deep into a season without a race victory, and the longer he goes, the more the pressure to get one is going to build. So maybe right now it’s not bothering him. But if we get through Dover, and he’s still 0-fer — then it might be time to get really concerned.

Alan Cavanna: Depends on what your name is. Johnson, Matt Kenseth and Jeff Gordon shouldn’t be worried. I still think they all get wins and easily fall back on points position. But if you’re a smaller team who is hoping to be a Cinderella, you just missed a big opportunity in Talladega.

Cain: Not having a win that late into the season — Dover — would definitely be new ground for Johnson. Kenseth and Gordon have faced those late-season questions before. They are all in good position points-wise, ironically in a season rewarding wins.

Caraviello: OK, but gang — are points going to be enough? Everybody except for Carl Edwards seems content that some guys are going to make the Chase on points. But race wins have never been this valuable. Guys have never gone after them this hard, this early. The whole dynamic has changed, which makes me wonder if we can really use history as a barometer here. Just because we’ve never had 16 winners in 26 races doesn’t mean we can’t this season. Not with the way guys are going at it right now.

Cain: Not history. Just talent and reasonable expectation. The wheels haven’t fallen off those teams. It’s just a matter of time.

Caraviello: No question, the 48 car is still strong every week. Jimmie is a contender over and over. But, those guys are also perfectionists and champions, and I guarantee you being winless is bothering them a lot more than they let on. And having good cars week after week and still coming up short — that’s got to grate on you.

Cain: I do believe there will also be a surprise winner at some point. A small team or a rookie!

Cavanna: More than 16 winners? I’ll believe it when I see it. Even in a crazy world where we have 15 winners and Six-Time isn’t one of them, the quality of team he’ll be competing against for that last points spot won’t even be close.

Caraviello: I’m already a believer, Alan! I think the new winners will continue to come. It’s like a campaign motto: 17 in ’14!

Cavanna: The No. 48 team has earned its reputation, but out of 10 races they have four finishes of 24th or worse. Fortunately, they can pair that with five top-10s.

Caraviello: In a win-and-in format, I’m not sure about pinning your playoff hopes on top-10 finishes. The era of the good points day is over.

Cavanna: Gordon and Kenseth seem to be doing just fine at the moment.

Cain: For me, the questions are about some of the other winless drivers — like Tony Stewart and Kasey Kahne. There is a whole long list of those who we fully expect to win, but haven’t yet.

Caraviello: Good point, Holly. Perhaps those guys, who haven’t shown the week-to-week strength, are the ones who should be truly concerned — right now.

2. Dale Earnhardt Jr. dropped to the back late at Talladega anticipating an accident, and finished 26th. Did he make the right move?

Cain: Moves at Talladega are always calculated risks. It’s called strategy, and sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn’t.

Caraviello: Let’s be honest, Dale Jr. was right — there was plenty of calamity near the front of the field. Unfortunately for Earnhardt, there was too much of it, and it gummed up the finish and didn’t allow anyone enough of an opportunity to make a move to the front. So he wasn’t wrong — he just didn’t get the chance to prove he was right.

Cavanna: He got exactly what he was planning for. He didn’t get caught in the big accident. Unfortunately for Junior Nation, he didn’t have the good finish he wanted.

Cain: I’ve seen too many races where the winner passes half the field in the final few laps. It just didn’t work out that way Sunday. I don’t believe he gave any less than 100 percent, it was simply a matter of circumstance and not enough time to get back up there.

Caraviello: People love Talladega because of the craziness and the unpredictability. But you get too much of that near the end, and nobody can make a move. As great as it was to see some of those lesser-funded teams up there, they were slowing up some of the lines of traffic. All those accidents at the end made it impossible for anyone to do anything.

Cain: Wow. I’m agreeing with David!

Caraviello: The universe must be out of balance or something!

Cain: Well, when Dale Jr. doesn’t challenge for a win at Talladega, it clearly is.

Cavanna: The decision to pit by the No. 88 team was more detrimental than the decision to hang back. Yes, fuel may have been an issue, but we saw in the Daytona 500 that being up front was the place to be. Winner Denny Hamlin again proved that on Sunday. Plate racing isn’t about huge surges from the back anymore.

Caraviello: Dang, look at the former New England Quarter Midget champ laying down the law on plate racing! Strong words, AC! Though I will agree, from my extensive racing experience on PlayStation 3, the front of the pack is always where I prefer to be.

Cavanna: Things have changed, DC! Track position played a huge factor on Sunday.

Cain: Maybe the marker Jimmie Johnson threw at Alan in the garage last weekend jarred something.

Cavanna: Knocked some sense into me! Remember that the next time you want to ask him about not winning yet.

Caraviello: So basically, I’m going to get an impact wrench tossed at my melon after my opinion on topic No. 1.

Cain: Not from Jimmie. That sounds more like Chad Knaus.

Cavanna: I wouldn’t walk near you in the Kansas garage. That’s all I’m saying.

3. Which driver is a more serious threat for the Nationwide Series championship — phenom and standings leader Chase Elliott, or veteran and Talladega winner Elliott Sadler, who is one point behind in second?

Cavanna: I’m sticking with Chase until we see more checkered flags from Sadler. Chase has proved to be such a quick learner that I have no problem picking a rookie.

Cain: That JR Motorsports team is certainly on a huge roll right now. Question is whether this will come down to experience. They both want this very, very badly for different reasons!

Caraviello: Congrats to Elliott Sadler for winning at Talladega, a track that’s flipped him up the air so many times, it seemed like the place held a personal grudge against him. Given his history there, was very happy to see him win. But he may need a few more victories if he’s going to knock off young Chase.

Cain: I loved Sadler’s answer that now maybe fans will ask him about his win at Talladega instead of his flip.

Cavanna: Sadler is guy not afraid to show his emotions, whether it be the highs or the lows. He went far too long at Joe Gibbs Racing without a win. Maybe this starts a turnaround.

Caraviello: And let’s not forget about Elliott’s JRM teammate Regan Smith, who’s three points back in third. You could throw a blanket over that top trio right now.

Cain: And every driver in that third JRM car has been right alongside them in the front! Good stuff happening there right now.

Caraviello: Elliott and Sadler are basically in a dead heat statistically, except for the fact that Chase has one more win. I keep waiting for some inexperience to show on Chase’s part — and to this point, it hasn’t. If anything, his youth has almost benefitted him, given some of the aggressive moves he made to win at Texas and Darlington.

Cavanna: Sadler should have the driving advantage given his experience. But I think Chase has the organizational advantage right now with the way the JRM cars are running.

Caraviello: Sadler said before the season that he thought this was his time to finally win a championship, and it’s easy to see why the guy feels that way. He’s been after this Nationwide title for a while, and keeps coming up short. I’m fully convinced he’ll be in it until the end this year. Will it come down to the JRM cars — which, let’s face it, are basically Hendrick Motorsports cars — just being that little bit better? We shall see.

Cain: And with high school graduation coming, Chase will have sole focus on his racing. No finals to study for. He’ll have bigger tests ahead.

Cavanna: I think it’s great we’re talking about Nationwide championship contenders who’ve won races. That’s not a knock on Austin Dillon last year, but it’s far more exciting when these Nationwide regulars are one-upping each other for checkered flags.

Caraviello: Of course, none of this means Ty Dillon, Trevor Bayne, or any of those guys a little further down the standings are out of it. By no means. This deal is still completely wide open, even if Chase has been the story of the season to date.

Cain: I do love the dynamics at play in the NNS championship, though. Something for everyone.

Caraviello: How will Chase handle the adversity when it inevitably comes? That may be the moment of truth. Sadler’s been there before and seen it all. Chase hasn’t. If Elliott handles the tough times as well as he’s handled the success, watch out. But at some point, you’d think Sadler would have an opportunity to use his experience as an advantage.

Cain: I say an "Elliott" will win the title.

Caraviello: Really going out on a limb there, Holly …

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One of ride’s founders, former NASCAR mechanic has seen it all

BEAUMONT, Texas — Don Tilley is the Yoda of the Kyle Petty Charity Ride Across America.

Tilley, one of several founders of the ride 20 years ago, is 78 years old and has been in the lead group of every ride since Petty began the event in 1995. A former stock car racer, NASCAR mechanic and motorcycle racer, Tilley owns Harley-Davidson dealerships in Statesville and Salisbury, North Carolina.

Tilley has ridden motorcycles on seemingly every interstate and back road in the United States. He is the ride’s unofficial road atlas.

Better to ride through downtown Houston or take the interstate loop around the city? Tilley knows. Best scenic roads in the West? Tilley knows.

And he has stories.

Day 6 recap

Started: Beaumont, Texas.
Finished:
New Orleans.
Miles traveled:
290.6.

"We got up one morning in Colorado and had to go over a pass in the Rockies that day," he said. "Somebody said, ‘We can’t go. There’s a foot of snow across the mountains.’ Kenny Schrader said, ‘I’m not going. I’m not going. I’ve never ridden in the snow.’

"I convinced Kyle that the people there knew how to handle the snow with plows and such and that we should go on instead of backing up and going 40 miles in the other direction. Everybody was shaking in their boots. But we got to the top, and it was beautiful. About three feet of snow. Everything was white.

"People on the ride still talk about that one."

Ride director Morgan Castano, Petty and Tilley map out the ride route each year. It’s not an easy task. Fuel stops must be timed appropriately. Driving in or around large cities in rush-hour traffic is a no-no. And a certain amount of eye-popping scenery is a must.

"This thing has always been an adventure," Tilley said. "I absolutely love it. When this one is over, I could go out there and do it again. I love it that much."

Tilley is one of only 10 riders who have participated in all 20 rides. Tough as beef jerky, he shows no signs of letting go.

Tilley’s connections to the Petty family pre-date the ride by many years. He worked as a racing mechanic for Lee Petty, Kyle’s grandfather, in the early 1960s before driving in several NASCAR Sprint Cup Series events himself.

His days working for the often-irascible Lee Petty provided some interesting travel experiences. Although most drivers now fly to race sites, in the 1960s many hit the road with their race cars in tow.

These trips produced more than a few wild stories over the years. Tilley often traveled with Lee Petty because, he said, most of the others on the road crew generally declined. "Most guys didn’t like to drive with Lee because he smoked cigars, and he’d throw the butts in the floor," he said. "He wouldn’t put them out, and they’d get to stinking and he’d pour a drink on them."

So it was Tilley and Petty together on the long ride back from a race in Riverside, California.

"We had a box truck in front of us with a trailer and race car on it," Tilley said. "I was driving Lee’s Chrysler 300 with a trailer and a race car on it.

"We got to Mississippi, and the trailer started swaying back and forth. I tried to hold it, but it finally got to the point where the trailer was coming around so bad that I could see it swing from one side to the other. Lee said I’d better lock it down because there was a pretty bad curve coming up. I did, and the trailer came around and hit the quarter-panel of the car and slid us around to a stop.

"All it did was bend the quarter-panel. Dale Inman (long-time Petty crew chief) was driving the truck in front. He still tells that story. As he puts it, ‘You’re the only man alive who’s spun Lee Petty around on a Mississippi highway.’ "

Day 6 recap

Started: Beaumont, Texas.
Finished:
New Orleans.
Miles traveled:
290.6.

Notes: Big crowds greeted the ride at fuel and rest stops in small Texas towns. One fan showed up in a nicely aged T-shirt from Kyle Petty’s Sprint Cup days driving for Sabco Racing. … Best sign of the ride to date is at a restaurant in a crossroads hamlet in Texas: More Than 3 Dozen Served. … Rain sprinkled the start of the ride Thursday, but cooler weather was celebrated.

Friday’s route: New Orleans to Slidell, Louisiana; to Daphne, Alabama; to Ponce de Leon, Florida; to Tallahassee, Florida.

Donate: The Kyle Petty Charity Ride raises money for the Victory Junction Gang Camp, a summer camp for chronically ill children. To donate, victoryjunction.org.

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