Hendrick Motorsports driver paces field with fastest lap

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Sprint Cup Series Practice | Results

Faster than a speeding bullet, indeed.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. lived up to the standards set by the paint scheme adorned on his No. 88 Hendrick Motorsports ride this weekend — which is Superman inspired — by pulling the fastest lap by a wide margin in opening practice for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway on Thursday.

Earnhardt, who is looking for his first Charlotte victory in his 29th attempt, had a best speed of 193.264 mph on his first of seven laps around the 1.5-mile track. It was enough to beat Stewart-Haas Racing driver Kevin Harvick’s 192.164 mph. Hendrick teammate Jimmie Johnson pulled in the garage with a best speed of 192.014 mph, good for third, followed by Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (191.782 mph) and Martin Truex Jr. (191.775 mph) to round out the top five. Harvick is the defending race-winner.

Kurt Busch, who plans to run both the Indianapolis 500 and Coca-Cola 600 on Sunday, was eighth at 191.042 mph. Parker Kligerman is on standby if Busch should need a fill-in driver.

Danica Patrick, fresh off the best Sprint Cup finish of her career (seventh) at Kansas Speedway two weeks ago, placed ninth with a speed of 190.799 mph.

Brad Keselowski, who won at Charlotte last fall, finished 21st on the board at 189.500.

Saturday’s Sprint All-Star Race winner Jamie McMurray was 24th with a speed of 189.221 mph.

There was one caution for debris in an otherwise clean practice session.

Sprint Cup practice gets back underway on Saturday at 9:30 a.m. ET (FOX Sports 1).

Nationwide Series Practice 1 | Results

A week after ceding his No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota to a race-winning Sam Hornish Jr. at Iowa Speedway, everything started off well for Kyle Busch as he got back behind the wheel of his Nationwide Series ride in opening practice for the History 300 at Charlotte Motor Speedway on Thursday.

Busch’s speed of 178.524 mph was leading the charts halfway through the session before Richard Childress Racing’s Brian Scott topped him at 178.684 mph — and then matters got worse, as Busch got loose and wrecked along the inside wall, taking heavy front and rear damage. He is the defending race-winner, sweeping both events at Charlotte in 2013.

The wreck brought out the practice’s first caution and the veteran driver may be forced to a backup car, meaning that he could start at the back of the pack in Saturday’s History 300 (2:45 p.m. ET, ABC). FOX Sports 1 later reported that Busch was not going to a backup car, but that Joe Gibbs Racing would take the primary back to the shop and fix it there.

Scott managed to hold onto the top spot, while Busch’s teammate Matt Kenseth was third on the leaderboard at 178.241 mph, followed by Brad Keselowski (178.183 mph) and Kevin Harvick (177.725 mph).

Series points leader Chase Elliott (177.526 mph) and his JR Motorsports teammate Regan Smith (177.160 mph) were seventh and eighth, respectively.

A second caution was thrown late in the session for debris in Turn 2.

Final practice gets underway at 5:30 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1.

Nationwide Series Practice 2 | 5:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1 | Results

Chase Elliott led the final Nationwide Series practice at Charlotte Motor Speedway on Thursday, posting a high speed of 178.330 mph on his first lap.

The recent high school grad was seventh-fastest in the first practice session. 

Second-fastest was Brian Scott with a speed of 178.183 mph. Scott stole the lead position in the first practice after Kyle Busch spun and crashed. 

Following Scott was Regan Smith (177.346 mph), Dylan Kwasniewski (177.322 mph) and Kevin Harvick (177.247 mph), putting all three JR Motorsports drivers in the top five. 

John Wes Townley spun on the front stretch and brought out the only caution of the final session. 

Nationwide Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying will take place Saturday at 10:40 a.m. ET with coverage on ESPN2. 

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Crew chief Brian Pattie, 5-hour Energy also get extensions with team

MORE: Bowyers to welcome a son
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Clint Bowyer will be staying a while longer at Michael Waltrip Racing, which on Monday announced a multi-year contract extension for the Sprint Cup Series driver.

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MWR also signed No. 15 team crew chief Brian Pattie and primary sponsor 5-hour Energy to multi-year extensions, the team announced. The 5-hour Energy brand will appear on Bowyer’s car for 24 races each year beginning with the 2015 season.

"This is big news for all of us,” said Bowyer, an eight-time winner in NASCAR Sprint Cup competition. “It creates great stability and excitement about what the next few years can bring. MWR is my racing home and continuing this relationship with 5-hour Energy was a high priority. It’s time to put the paperwork in a drawer and focus on winning.”

Bowyer, Pattie and 5-Hour Energy all joined MWR in 2012, and have since scored three race victories and earned two berths in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. Bowyer finished as runner-up in final points in 2012. He is currently 18th in the standings after Sunday’s third-place finish at Talladega Superspeedway. This weekend his 300th career Sprint Cup start comes at his home track, Kansas Speedway, in a race also backed by the 5-hour Energy brand.
 
“Since the first day 5-hour Energy, Clint and Brian showed up at MWR, we have been a contender for wins and championships. I am so thankful that we get to continue and add to what we have built,” team co-owner Michael Waltrip said. “I am most happy for the employees of MWR who are the foundation of everything we do.”

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Agreement extends RV/camping firm’s run as entitlement sponsor to 14 years

RELATED: NASCAR official release

In racing terms, it might have qualified as a jumped start when Camping World Chairman and CEO Marcus Lemonis let slip in March that a long-term extension of his company’s entitlement sponsorship with NASCAR’s truck series was in the works. His explanation now makes it hard to knock his eagerness.
 
"Why not tell someone you want to renew your vows if the marriage is good?" Lemonis said.
 
The renewal, a seven-year extension of the company’s sponsorship, was officially announced Monday morning, meaning the tailgate tour will remain the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series through 2022. The extension affirms the RV and camping company’s commitment, continuing a relationship as title sponsor that dates back to 2009.
 
"(It) is a long time, but as I told somebody earlier, I don’t want to be one of those companies that is a fly-by-night advertiser," Lemonis told NASCAR.com. "You see a lot of people show up on a car or sponsor a race, and they’re in for a year or two and then they’re gone. They make a huge splash, and then they’re gone. I want the fans to know, and I want NASCAR to know, that’s just not us. We’ve paid our dues and now we’re here to stay."

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The dues Lemonis mentions pre-date the truck series’ entitlement. By his count, Camping World has sponsored 19 NASCAR drivers, most notably four-time truck series champion Ron Hornaday Jr., and has participated as a race entitlement sponsor 14 times across all three NASCAR national series.
 
In the time since Camping World increased its buy-in to the sport, Lemonis’ company has enjoyed significant growth. Camping World has opened 35 new stores to bring its total to 100 and has expanded its reach to a younger demographic, widening the low end of its average customer age from 45 to 35 years old.
 
"For me, it really just comes down to economics and I always tell people that the numbers don’t lie," Lemonis said. "When I look at the return on investment that I’ve gotten over the last five, six, seven years, with my association with NASCAR, I don’t want to call it a no-brainer, but it was a very easy decision."
 
Lemonis gave an early indication of his decision in March before the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series‘ second race of the season, sponsored by the CNBC show he hosts — "The Profit." The 40-year-old businessman said later that he merely wanted to curb fruitless speculation about the partnership’s direction.
 
"I felt like we needed to put an early rubber stamp of commitment and endorsement on a business," Lemonis said. "I wanted people to know that we fully support it, and I didn’t need to create some sort of unneeded drama or an uneasiness."
 
The deal comes with added incentive for Lemonis’ other business interests. Good Sam Roadside Assistance and two of Lemonis’ newer acquisitions — CarCash and AutoMatch USA — will be among official NASCAR partners.
 
While the renewal comes as a strong show of stability, Lemonis is fully aware of NASCAR’s recent wave of change. From last season’s introduction of the Gen-6 car to this offseason’s switches to a revamped Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup postseason and multi-car qualifying, the sport’s top series has undergone dramatic changes. But the Camping World Truck Series has seen its share of freshening, too, from this season’s new body styles to the infusion of new driver talent.
 
The openness to try new company strategies, Lemonis said, was another persuading factor in reaching Monday’s agreement.
 
"I always worry when I do business with anybody or partner with them if they believe in the status quo," Lemonis said. "I think we all know that the status quo is the formula for extinction, and I think NASCAR, the teams and the manufacturers realize that in order for this business to survive, but more importantly flourish, it has to evolve.
 
"Of course, in any business we’re going to try things, and not everything is going to work. I think the willingness to admit when they don’t work and fix them is the right thing, but I’d rather die trying than wait for something to happen."


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Driver will run 12 Camping World Truck Series races in 2014

Turner Scott Motorsports announced Monday that Tayler Malsam will compete in 12 races this season in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series.
 
Malsam, 25, will drive the team’s No. 32 Outerwall Inc. Chevrolet starting this weekend at Kansas Speedway. He’ll work with veteran crew chief Mike Hillman Jr., winner of two truck championships atop the pit box for Todd Bodine in 2006 and 2010.

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Malsam, a Seattle-area native, has a resume of 39 starts in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series with a best finish of fifth place at Gateway in 2009. He last competed in the series in 2011, but ran 26 of 33 races in the NASCAR Nationwide Series in 2012.
 
"It’s great to be back in the NASCAR garage and back on track with the truck series," Malsam said in a team-issued release. "I can’t thank Outerwall and Turner Scott Motorsports enough for their support and for giving me this opportunity."
 
Five drivers have taken the wheel for Turner Scott Motorsports this season in the truck series. Ryan Truex, a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series regular, drove the team’s No. 32 truck to a fourth-place finish in the Daytona season-opener. Ben Rhodes, a 17-year-old driver in the NASCAR Next program, piloted the truck to an eighth-place finish in the series’ second race, at Martinsville Speedway.
 
Malsam will balance racing sprint cars with his truck slate.

His 2014 truck schedule:
 
— May 9, Kansas Speedway
— May 16, Charlotte Motor Speedway
— June 6, Texas Motor Speedway
— June 14, Gateway Motorsports Park
— June 26, Kentucky Speedway
— July 11, Iowa Speedway
— Aug. 16, Michigan International Speedway
— Sept. 12, Chicagoland Speedway
— Sept. 27, Las Vegas Motor Speedway
— Oct. 18, Talladega Superspeedway
— Oct. 31, Texas Motor Speedway
— Nov. 14, Homestead-Miami Speedway

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Agreement extends RV/camping firm’s run as entitlement sponsor to 14 years

RELATED: NASCAR official release

In racing terms, it might have qualified as a jumped start when Camping World Chairman and CEO Marcus Lemonis let slip in March that a long-term extension of his company’s entitlement sponsorship with NASCAR’s truck series was in the works. His explanation now makes it hard to knock his eagerness.
 
"Why not tell someone you want to renew your vows if the marriage is good?" Lemonis said.
 
The renewal, a seven-year extension of the company’s sponsorship, was officially announced Monday morning, meaning the tailgate tour will remain the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series through 2022. The extension affirms the RV and camping company’s commitment, continuing a relationship as title sponsor that dates back to 2009.
 
"(It) is a long time, but as I told somebody earlier, I don’t want to be one of those companies that is a fly-by-night advertiser," Lemonis told NASCAR.com. "You see a lot of people show up on a car or sponsor a race, and they’re in for a year or two and then they’re gone. They make a huge splash, and then they’re gone. I want the fans to know, and I want NASCAR to know, that’s just not us. We’ve paid our dues and now we’re here to stay."

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The dues Lemonis mentions pre-date the truck series’ entitlement. By his count, Camping World has sponsored 19 NASCAR drivers, most notably four-time truck series champion Ron Hornaday Jr., and has participated as a race entitlement sponsor 14 times across all three NASCAR national series.
 
In the time since Camping World increased its buy-in to the sport, Lemonis’ company has enjoyed significant growth. Camping World has opened 35 new stores to bring its total to 100 and has expanded its reach to a younger demographic, widening the low end of its average customer age from 45 to 35 years old.
 
"For me, it really just comes down to economics and I always tell people that the numbers don’t lie," Lemonis said. "When I look at the return on investment that I’ve gotten over the last five, six, seven years, with my association with NASCAR, I don’t want to call it a no-brainer, but it was a very easy decision."
 
Lemonis gave an early indication of his decision in March before the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series‘ second race of the season, sponsored by the CNBC show he hosts — "The Profit." The 40-year-old businessman said later that he merely wanted to curb fruitless speculation about the partnership’s direction.
 
"I felt like we needed to put an early rubber stamp of commitment and endorsement on a business," Lemonis said. "I wanted people to know that we fully support it, and I didn’t need to create some sort of unneeded drama or an uneasiness."
 
The deal comes with added incentive for Lemonis’ other business interests. Good Sam Roadside Assistance and two of Lemonis’ newer acquisitions — CarCash and AutoMatch USA — will be among official NASCAR partners.
 
While the renewal comes as a strong show of stability, Lemonis is fully aware of NASCAR’s recent wave of change. From last season’s introduction of the Gen-6 car to this offseason’s switches to a revamped Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup postseason and multi-car qualifying, the sport’s top series has undergone dramatic changes. But the Camping World Truck Series has seen its share of freshening, too, from this season’s new body styles to the infusion of new driver talent.
 
The openness to try new company strategies, Lemonis said, was another persuading factor in reaching Monday’s agreement.
 
"I always worry when I do business with anybody or partner with them if they believe in the status quo," Lemonis said. "I think we all know that the status quo is the formula for extinction, and I think NASCAR, the teams and the manufacturers realize that in order for this business to survive, but more importantly flourish, it has to evolve.
 
"Of course, in any business we’re going to try things, and not everything is going to work. I think the willingness to admit when they don’t work and fix them is the right thing, but I’d rather die trying than wait for something to happen."


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Patrick offers apology to Keselowski for any wrongdoing

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TALLADEGA, Ala. — Danica Patrick offered an apology, but admitted she didn’t know if it was necessary.
 
The Stewart-Haas Racing driver was involved in an early incident with 2012 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Brad Keselowski during Sunday’s running of the Aaron’s 499 at Talladega Superspeedway.
 
Paul Menard was on the outside, Keselowski in the middle and Patrick pulling the low line battling for the lead as the field headed toward the start/finish line on Lap 14 of the 188-lap event. The cars of Keselowski and Patrick made contact as Keselowski surged ahead, sending Keselowski spinning down onto the apron.
 
His Ford shot back up on the track, barely avoiding heavy contact from Trevor Bayne.
 
Patrick was able to continue without damage to her No. 10 Chevrolet.
 
"I was running the bottom and feeling like I was about to get hung out; he went up to the outside and I was looking in my mirror to see if I was clear of the 24 (of Jeff Gordon) to slot in," Patrick said following her 22nd-place finish. "I was moving up to get in that lane to clear it. I thought the 2 (of Keselowski) had enough momentum to be gone past me."

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Not having seen a replay of the incident, Patrick said she didn’t know "if it was just me coming up — it very well could have been. I don’t know if it was him coming down. I’m not 100 percent sure.
 
"But I do know I was looking in my mirror trying to get up behind the 2 and in front of the 24; just about to slot into that spot," she said. "And that’s when it happened. My apologies if it was all my fault. … That by no means is anything I was trying to do. I’m not out here to make enemies, especially on speedways."
 
Keselowski lost several laps while his team made repairs in the garage. After returning to the race, he was involved in a second incident, spinning on Lap 137 and igniting a 14-car incident in Turn 4.
 
"We … made a really aggressive move to take the lead and then it all just kind of bottlenecked from there," Keselowski said of the initial incident. "I don’t know if I cut somebody off or got ran over, but just enough to get spun out and tear up the car. … Obviously there was some kind of contact, but I don’t know what happened."

Keselowski’s crew chief Paul Wolfe took any blame off the No. 10 as he radioed his driver following the contact.

"We weren’t clear enough to make that," he said "I’ll just call it at that. We weren’t clear enough to make that move."
 
Patrick became the first female racer to lead laps at Talladega when she got past Menard on Lap 6 to lead two laps. After Gordon took the point, Patrick battled back to lead four more circuits.
 
"It was nice to lead a lot of them, or more than one that you just get pushed by the line," she said. "I think that shows that we’ve improved our cars and it makes me look forward to Daytona (in July), and think real hard about how to stay up front because you’ve just got to be there. It’s not that easy to go from 25th to the lead. It takes some help; it takes some luck. That little bit of strategy is what I’ve got to figure out."
 
Overheating issues eventually forced Patrick out of line and as a result, the No. 10 car dropped to the back half of the field.
 
"It was definitely hot," she said. "That’s the point in time where I started to struggle with it. I was really limited to the bottom lane a lot of the time just because that’s where I could get some clean air.
 
"The power was good and the car was good. It was just really about some track position and keeping that thing cool so you go where you needed to go. Most importantly, run tight to people and be a good helper in the line and push it. But when you’re hot you can’t run super tight because there’s no air then."
 
The end result was that the team was "going to roll it up on the truck," which is more than a lot of cars can say after leaving a speedway.
 
"It was a fast, fast car … we’ll be happy to take this thing to Daytona," Patrick said.

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Get To Know Newton 250 scheduled for May 18 at Iowa Speedway

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TALLADEGA, Ala. — Five NASCAR Nationwide Series teams will participate in a test session Tuesday at Iowa Speedway as the track prepares to host the Get To Know Newton 250 on Sunday, May 18. 

Brian Scott (Richard Childress Racing No. 2 Chevrolet), Trevor Bayne (Roush Fenway Racing No. 6 Ford), Chase Elliott and Austin Theriault (JR Motorsports No. 9 Chevrolet), Brad Keselowski (Team Penske No. 22 Ford) and Sam Hornish Jr. (Team Penske No. 54 Toyota) will be on hand.

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"It’s basically a confirmation test for the track," Wayne Auton, NASCAR Nationwide Series director, said. "There are a couple of areas we want to look at and, if necessary, address before we get into the race week.

"We told the teams they can bring as many drivers as they want, but we limited them to just the five cars. There’s an open test on Friday of race week, so we believe everyone will have (adequate) track time." 

According to track officials, fans are welcome to attend Tuesday’s test, which is scheduled to run from 10 a.m.-12 p.m. and 1-6 p.m. Backstretch viewing will be available.

Following the open test on Friday, May 16, Nationwide teams will qualify Saturday (May 17) with the race scheduled to get underway Sunday, the 18th, at 2 p.m. ET.

The race will be the first time the series has visited Iowa Speedway since it was purchased by NASCAR late last year.

"It’s an attractive asset in a region of the country that is very NASCAR centric," NASCAR CEO Brian France said in December. "They run multiple events for multiple series and they’ve had a lot of success. 

"We’ve got a lot of talent through our system that we’ll be able to deploy to promote, run, operate and execute that facility and we’ll do our best to position it."

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Winless in 2014, Joe Gibbs Racing driver is a favorite to win on the 1.5-mile track

Matt Kenseth won a career-high seven Sprint Cup races last season, but he’s yet to visit Victory Lane through the first 10 races of 2014. That could change Saturday night when Kenseth competes in the 5-Hour Energy 400 at Kansas Speedway. Kenseth has won two of the last three Sprint Cup Series races at Kansas. He won the pole in record time there last spring, and led 110 of the first 111 laps on his way to the win. Kenseth has six top-5 finishes in his 16 career starts on the 1.5-mile track. Of the 12 poles he’s won over his 518 career races in the premier series, two of them have come at Kansas.

 

The Truck Series returns to action at Kansas

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Entry # Driver Owner Crew chief Manufacturer Sponsor

1

0

Ryan Ellis(i)

Kenneth Grimes

Joe Cobb

14 Chevrolet

Grimes Irrigation & Construction

2

02

Tyler Young

Randy Young

Bryan Berry

13 Chevrolet

Randco/Young’s Building Systems

3

5

John Wes Townley

Richard Wauters

Richard Wauters

14 Toyota

Zaxby’s Real Chicken

4

7

Brian Ickler

Tom Deloach

Chris Carrier

14 Toyota

Bullet Liner

5

07

Jimmy Weller III

Ken Smith

Jason Miller

14 Chevrolet

Polaris

6

08

Todd Shafer

Bobby Dotter

Doug Weddle

14 Chevrolet

Thunder Exhaust

7

8

Joe Nemechek

Sidney Mauldin

Jerry Babb

14 Toyota

pelletgrillusa.com-SWM

8

9

Brennan Newberry

Joe Denette

Gere Kennon

14 Chevrolet

Qore-24

9

10

Jennifer Jo Cobb

Jennifer Jo Cobb

Steve Kuykendall

14 Chevrolet

Mark One Electric

10

13

Jeb Burton

Duke Thorson

Dennis Connor

14 Toyota

Carolina Nut Co.

11

17

Timothy Peters

Tom Deloach

Marcus Richmond II

14 Toyota

Red Horse Racing

12

19

Joey Logano(i)

Brad Keselowski

Doug Randolph

14 Ford

Reese Towpower

13

20

Austin Dillon(i)

Bob Newberry

Jeff Hensley

14 Chevrolet

NTS Motorsports

14

21

Joey Coulter

Maurice Gallagher Jr

Jeff Stankiewicz

14 Chevrolet

VERTX

15

23

Spencer Gallagher

Maurice Gallagher Jr

Ryan London

14 Chevrolet

Allegiant Travel

16

29

Ryan Blaney

Brad Keselowski

Chad Kendrick

14 Ford

Cooper Standard

17

30

Ron Hornaday Jr

Steve Turner

Shannon Rursch

14 Chevrolet

Rheem

18

31

Ben Kennedy

Steve Turner

Michael Shelton

14 Chevrolet

TBA

19

32

Tayler Malsam

Harry Scott Jr

Mike Hillman Jr

14 Chevrolet

Outerwall

20

35

Mason Mingus

Kevin Cywinski

Mark Rette

14 Toyota

Call 811

21

136

TBA

Beverly Mittler

Michael Mittler

14 Chevrolet

TBA

22

142

Charles Lewandoski

Rebecca Young

William Sandlin

13 Chevrolet

Randco/Young’s Building Systems

23

50

T J Bell

Mark Beaver

Randy Dean II

14 Chevrolet

America’s Linemen

24

51

Kyle Busch(i)

Kyle Busch

Eric Phillips

14 Toyota

ToyotaCare

25

54

Darrell Wallace Jr

Kyle Busch

Jerry Baxter

14 Toyota

Toyota Time Sales Event

26

57

Norm Benning

Norm Benning

Kevin Dargie

14 Chevrolet

TBA

27

63

Justin Jennings

Michael Mittler

Michael Mittler

14 Chevrolet

TBD

28

* 166

TBA

Chris Baluch

TBA

14 Ford

TBA

29

74

TBA

Mike Harmon

TBA

14 Chevrolet

TBA

30

77

German Quiroga

Tom Deloach

Butch Hylton

14 Toyota

OtterBox

31

88

Matt Crafton

Rhonda Thorson

Carl Joiner

14 Toyota

Goof Off-Menards

32

98

Johnny Sauter

Mike Curb

Eugene Wachtel

14 Toyota

Nextant Aerospace-Curb Records

33

99

Bryan Silas

Chris Baluch

Gary Cogswell

14 Chevrolet

TBA

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