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

NASCAR.com will not have live leaderboards availabke for qualifying 

RELATED: Play NASCAR Fantasy Live

Entry Car Driver Sponsor
1 20 Michael McDowell(i) Pizza Ranch Toyota
2 6 Trevor Bayne AdvoCare Ford
3 70 * Derrike Cope YOUTHEORY Chevrolet
4 5 Austin Theriault SPY/Dirty Mo Radio Chevrolet
5 17 * Tanner Berryhill # NationalCashLenders.com Dodge
6 23 * Carlos Contreras voli 38 Special Chevrolet
7 44 Hal Martin American Custom Yachts Toyota
8 4 Jeffrey Earnhardt Flex Seal Chevrolet
9 93 Carl Long JGL Racing Dodge
10 42 Dylan Kwasniewski # Up & Up Chevrolet
11 3 Ty Dillon # WESCO Chevrolet
12 40 Matt Dibenedetto Curtis Key Plumbing Chevrolet
13 10 * Jeff Green Supportmilitary.org Toyota
14 62 Brendan Gaughan South Point Chevrolet
15 76 * Tommy Joe Martins # Riessen Construction Ford
16 74 * Mike Harmon Dodge
17 22 Ryan Blaney(i) Discount Tire Ford
18 19 Mike Bliss Tweaker Energy Shot Toyota
19 87 Tim Schendel JD Motorsports Chevrolet
20 84 * Chad Boat # Billy Boat Performance Exhaust Chevrolet
21 43 Dakoda Armstrong # Winfield Ford
22 16 Ryan Reed # ADA Drive to Stop Diabetes presented by Lilly Ford
23 9 Chase Elliott # NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet
24 7 Regan Smith TaxSlayer.com/Great Clips Chevrolet
25 99 James Buescher Rheem Toyota
26 60 Chris Buescher # Ford EcoBoost Ford
27 52 Joey Gase Iowa Donate Life Chevrolet
28 01 Landon Cassill G&K Services Chevrolet
29 33 * Cale Conley(i) Chevrolet
30 14 Eric McClure Hefty Ultimate/Reynolds Wrap Toyota
31 28 JJ Yeley JGL Racing Dodge
32 98 * Ryan Gifford Carroll Shelby Engine Co./Mikeroweworks Foundation Ford
33 11 Elliott Sadler OneMain Financial Toyota
34 54 Sam Hornish Jr. Monster Energy Toyota
35 55 Caleb Roark(i) Chevrolet
36 31 Chase Pistone(i) Chevrolet
37 51 Jeremy Clements RepairableVehicles.com Chevrolet
38 46 * Ryan Ellis Curtis Key Plumbing Chevrolet
39 2 Brian Scott Smokey Mountain Snuff Chevrolet
40 39 Ryan Sieg # RSS Racing Chevrolet

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

17-year-old has won two of his last three races

RELATED: Play NASCAR Fantasy Live

NEWTON, Iowa — The only thing missing for Ben Rhodes was a burnout. But he even executed that plan perfectly.

With a car that performed wonderfully on a track that changed as the temperatures dropped, Rhodes followed orders and saved his tires once he took the lead in Saturday night’s K&N Pro Series race at Iowa Speedway, allowing drivers to close in on him but not get close enough to pass. Once he took the checkered flag for his second win in the past three races, he got a message on the radio.

"Oh man, I really wanted to do one," Rhodes said after his win in the Casey’s General Store 125. "On the radio they said ‘Don’t burn the motor down. You do not do a burn out.’ They told me I can do one if I win the championship later in the year, so I have to earn it.

"I’ve actually never done one before, ever. The first burnout is going to be a little tricky. I have to figure out how to do it."

Time’s running out, because Rhodes looks to be a championship contender in the K&N Pro Series East. His Saturday victory was the second in six races this season for the 17-year-old, who is one of 12 members of the NASCAR Next Class of 2014. Rhodes now has two wins and a runner-up finish in the past three races, which has allowed him to take theK&N Pro Series East points lead through six of 14 races.

The high school junior was fittingly greeted in Victory Lane by a jubilant team — who promptly sprayed the driver with bottles of cider.

"Coming off the turns, I didn’t think anyone can catch me — you get so much momentum at this place," Rhodes said. "I felt like we had such a good car, that if I saved my stuff no one could catch me as long as I kept them off my bumper."

Nick Drake finished second and Scott Heckert finished third, career-high showings for both drivers.

David Mayhew finished ninth overall, but it goes down as a series victory for him — he was the highest finishing driver from the K&N Pro Series West, and Saturday’s event was a combined K&N Pro Series race with drivers from both the East and the West in the field.

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

Chase Elliott attends high school graduation and Iowa practice, qualifying all in one day

RELATED: Play NASCAR Fantasy Live

NEWTON, Iowa — He awoke at home and put on dark khakis, a purple tie and a black graduation cap. His day ended in a blue NAPA fire suit nearly 900 miles away at a race track surrounded by corn. 

Chase Elliott has spent his entire life on the NASCAR circuit, whether it was tagging along with his famous father Bill Elliott or competing on the track himself. Saturday might have been the most unique day yet.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

The 18-year-old NASCAR Nationwide Series rookie is no longer a high school senior. He’s a high school graduate following a 9:30 a.m. ceremony at Kings Ridge Christian School in Dawsonville, Georgia, the town he grew up in and the town made famous by the elder Elliott. After a few hours of celebration, Elliott hopped on a plane and flew back to Iowa Speedway.

"It was an early morning, and it’s been a long day," Elliott said at the track. "But it was cool to be able to go home, and I’m glad the weather was good enough for us to get back. I think it was worth going home and being a part of that and making the effort. That’s the type of thing you only get to do once. It’s definitely memories I won’t forget."

Neither will those closest to him. Elliott’s mom, Cindy, posted pictures throughout the day — of Chase receiving his diploma, of her son raising his cap high into the air while surrounded by cheering classmates. It made Elliott suspiciously look a lot like an average 18-year-old.

There’s absolutely nothing average about Elliott’s efforts this year, though. Or his back-to-back wins in which he outdueled the likes of Kevin Harvick and Dale Earnhardt Jr. at Texas, then courageously outgunned similar competition over the final two laps at Darlington. Perhaps a Twitter message from his high school said it most clearly: "KRCS graduate Chase Elliott starts (his) full-time job today."

Elliott was very much in business mode upon his return to Iowa. And while he was happy to discuss his graduation morning, he was more focused on qualifying his No. 9 Chevrolet in the following hour — which he steered to a sixth-place starting spot despite not practicing in the morning session.

"You go about your business the same way you always do," Elliott said. "Just because I wasn’t here this morning doesn’t mean I’m going to go about it any differently. It was definitely weird to be here Friday (for practice) and then gone, and then be back for qualifying. It’s a little odd. But our team will still try to do our best job, as always."

With Elliott out for Saturday’s 90-minute practice session, the No. 9 team opted not to use a backup driver. Elliott had six hours of seat time in the car on Friday, and crew chief Greg Ives and his crew kept tweaking at the setup while everyone else was circling the track.

Practice for Sunday’s Get to Know Newton 250 presented by Sherwin-Williams (2 p.m. ET, ESPN) began early Friday, and the temperature was in the high 30s. On Saturday, it rose to more than 60 degrees — it’s expected to be warmer on Sunday for the race, so Ives and his crew know the track will handle differently.

"Anytime you’re away, you kind of take a chance of somebody getting better," Elliott said. "We knew we needed to get the car better. But a lot of times, putting the thing on jack stands in practice is a good thing. I know Greg made some adjustments, so hopefully we made the right ones."

Talking shop — about his car, the track, anything racing — puts the teenager at ease. It’s not that he minds talking about graduation. He’ll gladly discuss his morning, his friends, his life away from NASCAR. It’s just that he’d much rather be racing, or talking about racing, or discussing anything that has four wheels and a motor.

The race track is where his greatest triumphs lie. So, yes, Chase Elliott is happy he left for half-a-day to attend his high school graduation. It’s one of the defining moments of his life up to this point. Just don’t ask him to compare graduating with, say, winning at Darlington.

"Oh not even close. Darlington trumps graduation," Elliott said with a grin. "It’s not even a contest. Yeah, definitely Darlington for sure."

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

JR Motorsports driver says he regrets never qualifying for last season’s contest

RELATED: Follow on-track action in Iowa

NEWTON, Iowa — Ten months later, Regan Smith can talk about it with a smile.
 
But there certainly was no grinning after last year’s NASCAR Nationwide Series race at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, when Smith turned Elliott Sadler during the final green-white-checkered restart. The two later exchanged heated words in the garage, punctuated with Sadler jabbing his finger into Smith’s face and declaring "You will not win this championship, mark my words."
 
It was a rare burst of anger from one of the calmer drivers on the circuit, directed at not only a driver with whom Sadler had never had an issue, but was the series points leader at the time.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

At Iowa Speedway on Saturday morning following an announcement for this year’s Dash 4 Cash race lineup, Smith used that example to illustrate how intense the racing can get during the sweepstakes.
 
"I think we saw last year there’s a lot of passion in this, not only qualifying for the races but as well as potentially winning the Dash 4 Cash races and being the highest finisher as a Nationwide Series regular — I think New Hampshire was a prime example of that last year," Smith said. "Myself and Elliott decided to discuss that after the event. It brings out the best in everybody. I don’t think that will be any different this year. I think you’re going to see a lot of passion coming out."
 
Although he’s got Sunday’s Get to Know Newton 250 presented by Sherwin-Williams to get through first — not to mention the five races that follow Iowa — Smith said the Dash 4 Cash schedule is already on his team’s radar.
 
The 30-year-old went out of his way to point out that not qualifying to be eligible for the $100,000 bonus in any of last year’s four races still perturbs him. And it was during that promotion last year that Smith’s hold on the series points lead went from ironclad to non-existent following his summer swoon.
 
Smith went into the 2013 D4C qualifying race at Kentucky with a 28-point lead. Five races later, once the D4C event had ended, he was second to Austin Dillon and never led the points standings again that year.
 
Entering Sunday’s race, Smith is third in the standings, three points behind leader and JR Motorsports teammate Chase Elliott and two points behind second-place Sadler. He won the season-opening race at Daytona and has nine top-10s in nine races.
 
Smith has put himself in good points position just as the stand-alone season begins and the D4C stretch looms. This time, he intends on staying there.
 
"The four Dash 4 Cash races were like our Achilles’ heel last year," Smith said. "That’s something we’ve highlighted. That particular stretch in the schedule was really difficult on our team.
 
"So yeah, it bothered me not being (in the mix) last year. We’ll look forward to having a fan sitting on our pit box and cheering us on this year at the final race."

 

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView

NASCAR Nationwide teams prep for Sunday’s Get to Know Newton 250

RELATED: How to follow Iowa action | Practice results | Race Center

Keep updated all day with a timeline of at-track updates from NASCAR Nationwide Series activity at Iowa Speedway ahead of Sunday’s Get to Know Newton 250:

SATURDAY

8:10 p.m. ET (Full qualifying results)

NEWTON, Iowa — Ten races, 10 polesitters.

The season-long trend of a new driver on the pole for every NASCAR Nationwide Series race continued Saturday at Iowa Speedway. Ryan Blaney, who missed all of Friday’s track time, won the 21 Means 21 Pole for the first time in the Nationwide Series with a best speed of 136.081 mph. 

Blaney’s run comes less than 24 hours after the driver was caught up in a wreck in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Charlotte. He flew out to Iowa followingthat event, landing at approximately 4 a.m. He was in the car for the firstpractice, which started at 12:30 p.m. ET. 

"I haven’t had the best two to three weeks," Blaney said. "I’ve been caught up in wrecks, and been in some that were my fault. It’s been tough. But you have to put that behind you right away and focus on the task at hand. I can think about Friday night all I want, but it’s kind of irrelevant to keep thinking about it. I can’t change it."

Sam Hornish Jr. jumped up to the second spot after taking his first qualifying lap with one minute left in the final 10-minute session, posting a speed of 136.062 mph. 

Rounding out the top five is Michael McDowell (135.963 mph), Regan Smith (135.665 mph) and Dylan Kwasniewski (135.525 mph).

The performances from Hornish and McDowell give Joe Gibbs Racing two cars in the top three on the grid. Neither is the full-time driver of his respective car. Sunday’s Get to Know Newton 250 presented by Sherwin-Williams will be McDowell’s first series race of the year — Hornish has one start in the No. 54, a fifth-place run at Talladega.

"With my Sprint Cup program, I come into this opportunity and don’t ask a lot of questions," McDowell said. "It is tough to plug in with a new team and a new series, but when the car unloads that well, it makes my job a loteasier, for sure."

Chase Elliott was the first one out of his stall for the final session, but he waited on pit road for three minutes before getting onto the track. Those who followed Elliott — Smith, Brian Scott and Blaney initially — stayed on pit road for another two minutes. Blaney finally pushed off at the halfway point of the 10-minute session, and he surpassed Elliott’s time. It was a mark that wouldn’t be topped.

Elliott, who graduated high school earlier Saturday, qualified sixth with a speed of 135.437 mph.

7:45 p.m. ET 

NEWTON, Iowa — Ryan Ellis called it the hardest hit of his life, and he’s got a massive black bruise on the right side of his body to prove it.

In Friday night’s NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Ellis blasted the outside wall practically head-on after getting hit from behind by Jake Crum on the backstretch with no othertrucks around.

"I’m still a little groggy," Ellis said just before Saturday’s qualifying for the NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Iowa Speedway. "I got an hour of sleep before I had to go to the airport to fly to Iowa, then we had practice this morning. Pretty much everything on my body hurts, but the best remedy to pain is a steering wheel and a pedal."

Crum’s shot sent Twitter ablaze with commentary (Dale Earnhardt Jr. even chimed in) on what looked like an outright dump. 

Have Ellis and Crum talked since the incident? 

In reply, Ellis whips out his cell phone — the same one on which he was texting his mom before qualifying — and showed his call log. Crum’s name was listed multiple times, both for missed calls and in instances in which the drivers connected. 

"He had gotten into the wall earlier, and he said it affected his truck," Ellis said. "He said it had gotten really darty. He meant to side draft off me. There are no hard feelings." 

Ellis, who has eight career Nationwide Series starts, did not advance past the first 30-minute round of group qualifying into the final 10-minute round. 

That honor went to, in order: Brendan Gaughan, Brian Scott, Landon Cassill, Chase Elliott, Regan Smith, Michael McDowell, Elliott Sadler, Ryan Blaney, Sam Hornish Jr., Chris BuescherDylan Kwasniewski and Chase Pistone.

Gaughan went from out of the final round to first on the board in the final two minutes. Rookie Chase Pistone also slipped in late, knocking Elliott out of the top 12 momentarily before the No. 9 Chevrolet turned the fourth-best lap of the session in the final minute. 

Ty Dillon and James Buescher, at 13th and 14th, just missed the cut.

5 p.m. ET

NEWTON, Iowa — No one has improved on the track more over the past 30 hours at Iowa Speedway than James Buescher.

The 2012 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series champion — who has a Truck Series win at Iowa to his credit – was 20th out of 27 drivers in Friday’s opening session with a car that didn’t do anything the way he wanted. There was a reason for that unpredictability, though.

"We brought a brand-new car that had never been on the race track, and it took us all day to get it where we wanted it," crew chief Chris Rice said. "We had to regroup last night, and then changed a bunch of things. We’re way better now."

Buescher was actually worse in Friday’s second practice — 21st — but made gains in the third session, finishing 11th. With the changes to his unfettered vehicle, Buescher climbed to eighth in Saturday’s final practice. More important than simply getting faster, Buescher feels more comfortable behind the wheel of his No. 99 Toyota.

Good thing, too, because the team’s goals have changed with this being the first stand-alone of the season.

"Every week we go into a race wanting to be top-10," Rice said. "Here this week, we want to be top-five."

Group qualifying for Sunday’s race is scheduled for 7:10 p.m. ET.

3:35 p.m. ET

NEWTON, Iowa — Joey Gase was a starry-eyed kid when the first bulldozer moved dirt at a site that would eventually become Iowa Speedway. Considering Gase lived just 90 minutes away in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, the 0.875-mile oval became a racing mecca in his mind.
 
"I remember when I was little kid and they were starting to build this track, and I was so excited that NASCAR would be coming to my home state," Gase said Saturday in the media center at Iowa Speedway. "I always thought how cool it’d be to race here."
 
Now, he is. Again.
 
Sunday’s Get to Know Newton 250 presented by Sherwin-Williams would be Gase’s sixth career NASCAR Nationwide Series start at the track. Not bad for a 21-year-old.
 
Driving the No. 52 Iowa Donate Life Chevrolet, Gase is coming off his career-best finish. Two weeks ago at Talladega Superspeedway, he finished 11th — nearly notching the first top-10 of his Nationwide Series career.

"Not a whole lot of time to celebrate," Gase said. "We’ve been working with some sponsors and doing some work back in Iowa."

2:10 p.m. ET | Practice 4 results

NEWTON, Iowa — One day after Dylan Kwasniewski improved his performance in three consecutive NASCAR Nationwide Series practices, the 18-year-old rookie made another leap — all the way to the top of the leaderboard.
 
In the No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet, Kwasniewski led Saturday’s final practice session with a best speed of 135.077 mph around Iowa Speedway. He hit that mark on a mock qualifying run, which came on his 45th of 46 laps, and ousted Ty Dillon from the top.
 
Dillon, who led most of Saturday’s practice, finished the session second with a speed of 134.088 mph around the 0.875-mile oval.

It was the first practice of the day for Nationwide Series drivers, but the fourth over the past two days. It came in advance of group qualifying scheduled for 7:10 p.m. ET.

Austin Theriault, who will make his Nationwide Series debut Sunday in the Get to Know Newton 250 presented by Sherwin-Williams (2 p.m. ET, ESPN), finished third with a speed of 133.764 mph. Trevor Bayne (133.713 mph) and Chad Boat (133.480 mph) completed the top five, which had four Chevrolets.
 
James Buescher (132.648 mph) was the fastest Toyota and came in eighth on the leaderboard.
 
Chase Pistone (133.254 mph), driving the No. 31 Turner Scott Motorsports Chevy in place of Kwasniewski, continued his strong weekend by placing sixth. Brian Scott (132.872 mph, seventh), Ryan Reed (132.632 mph, ninth) and Ryan Sieg (132.531 mph, 10th) rounded out the top 10.
 
Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney, who missed Friday’s three practice sessions due to driving in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series event in Charlotte, North Carolina, was 20th on the leaderboard. His top speed was 131.667 mph in the No. 22 Ford.
 
One notable name missing from the leaderboard: Chase Elliott, the series points leader who led two of three practices Friday and was second in the other. The 18-year-old graduated from high school this morning, but is expected back in Iowa for qualifying.

1:15 p.m. ET

NEWTON, Iowa — Iowa Speedway President Jimmy Small thinks ending the Dash 4 Cash program at the 0.875-mile track on Aug. 2 is a no-brainer.

It’s part of a plan, the 28-year-old said Saturday morning, for the speedway to continue to promote the NASCAR Nationwide Series as its "number one product."

"Iowa Speedway is the place for Nationwide Series drivers to win," Small said during the event announcement at the track. "This is where we want to make names, where we want the Nationwide Series to be on a pedestal.

"It’s another example of our commitment to the state of Iowa and to the city of Newton. To host the finale for the Dash 4 Cash program is something we’ve been working for."

That announcement was the first item on a busy daily docket. Final Nationwide Series practice began at 12:45 p.m. ET. Qualifying is at 7:10 p.m. ET, with K&N Pro Series practice and qualifying in between. The K&N Pro Series also has a combined East Series and West Series race tonight at 9 p.m. ET.

FRIDAY

6:15 p.m. ET

Some final observations from Friday’s three-practice day at Iowa Speedway: 

• He’ll miss Saturday’s practice due to high school graduation, but Chase Elliott looks to have the car to beat. He finished first in the first and third practices, and second in the middle two-hour session. His top speed in the third practice, 135.566, was the fastest of the day.

• Seven drivers finished in the top 10 of all three practice sessions, which combined to last slightly more than six hours — Elliott, Brian Scott, Regan Smith, Chase Pistone, Elliott Sadler, Michael McDowell and Brendan Gaughan.

• Two drivers ran more than 50 laps in every session — Scott and Cale Conley. Scott’s 74 laps in the final 80-minute practice was the most among any session. 

• Driving the No. 7 Chevrolet, Regan Smith was seventh in every practice.

• The cleanest car in the garage was the Team Penske No. 22 Ford. Ryan Blaney will pilot the car come Sunday, but on Friday he was qualifying and racing his full-time NASCAR Camping World Truck Series ride in Charlotte, North Carolina. Rather than use a backup driver, the No. 22 simply stayed off the track. 

• Three drivers improved their final position in each consecutive practice: Dylan Kwasniewski (13th, 11th, fourth), Ryan Gifford (19th, 18th, 17th) and Jeffrey Earnhardt (22nd, 19th, 15th).

4:15 p.m. ET

It took more than five hours, but someone finally knocked Chase Elliott off the top of Friday’s practice leaderboards.

Brian Scott, in qualifying trim, unseated the JR Motorsports rookie from the top position late in the second of three practices at Iowa Speedway. Scott held on for the top speed of the two-hour practice at 134.811 mph, ahead of Elliott’s mark of 134.656 mph. 

Elliott Sadler (134.100 mph), Michael McDowell (134.077 mph) and Trevor Bayne (133.951 mph) comprised the top five. 

The second two-hour practice session was stopped twice due to caution, but both instances were brief. The first came when light rain peppered the track for approximately 90 seconds before dissipating. The second was approximately three minutes for debris. 

There were no major incidents in either practice. Dylan Kwasniewski’s No. 42 Chevrolet scraped the outside wall during the second session, but the damages were cosmetic only — the backup car was in no danger of coming out of the hauler.

3 p.m. ET

Brian Scott drives the No. 2 Chevrolet for Richard Childress Racing. In Friday’s first practice, he was second on the speed chart.

And in the 60 minutes that separated the opening three-hour practice session at Iowa Speedway from the second two-hour session, Scott made an announcement that again concerns that number — only this had much greater significance than anything on the track.

Scott and his wife, Whitney, are expecting their second child in November, the driver announced on Twitter (see the tweet below).

How did he celebrate such a momentous announcement? By climbing back into his car, thanking his crew for working on the car during the break and getting back onto the track.

Oh, and he quickly posted the second-fastest time of the session — although at the halfway point, Scott was seventh (133.277 mph). Chase Elliott, who led the first session, was out front midway through the second session with a speed of 134.656 mph.



2 p.m. ET

Ty Dillon will try his luck in a sport other than racing Friday evening.
 
The Richard Childress Racing driver and diehard Atlanta Braves fan will attend the Iowa Cubs Triple-A baseball game in Des Moines, Iowa, and throw out the ceremonial first pitch prior to the game against the Round Rock Express.
 
And, he said, being at the track all day won’t prohibit him from hurling a strike.
 
"Oh, I can wing it," Dillon said with a laugh. "I can throw a baseball."
 
Perhaps the biggest impediment to Dillon’s task of throwing an acceptable first pitch — one that stays out of the dirt, for example — is the weather. Windy and cold early Friday morning, the temperature is expected to be in the upper 40s by the time Dillon goes to the mound.
 
The 22-year-old wore a parka into the media center Friday afternoon and kept it in for the duration of his interview, despite being inside. Keeping his pitching arm warm?
 
"Nah, I’ve been warming my arm up all day," Dillon said with a laugh, circling his arm off to the side. "Did a little bowling last night to warm up. I’m ready for it."

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

1:15 p.m. ET


From start to finish, 18-year-old Chase Elliott was the guy to beat in the NASCAR Nationwide Series opening three-hour practice session at Iowa Speedway. And no one could do it.
 
Elliott posted the fastest time as soon as he steered his No. 9 JR Motorsports Chevrolet onto the 0.875-mile oval, and his mark of 134.690 mph stood up throughout the duration of the practice.
 
In fact, there was little movement over the final 90 minutes. The top five remained the same with Brian Scott (134.546 mph) posting the second-best speed, followed by Sam Hornish Jr. (134.506 mph), Trevor Bayne (134.283 mph) and Elliott Sadler (134.277 mph).
 
Chase Pistone, 20, jumped into the top 10 late in the session with a speed of 133.001 mph, good for eighth place. He’s driving the No. 31 Turner Scott Motorsports Chevrolet in place of Dylan Kwasniewski, who’s in the No. 42 Chip Ganassi Racing Chevrolet. Pistone, who will make his first Nationwide Series start Sunday, logged 64 laps.
 
Michael McDowell (133.974 mph) and Regan Smith (133.175 mph) were sixth and seventh, respectively, followed by Pistone, Brendan Gaughan (132.883) and Ty Dillon (132.833 mph).
 
It was the start of a long day of practice at Iowa. Following the first three-hour session, cars are back on track from 2-4 p.m. ET and then again from 4:30-5:50 p.m. ET.

12:15 p.m. ET

Sunday’s Get to Know Newton 250 presented by Sherwin-Williams race for the NASCAR Nationwide Series is the first national series event at Iowa Speedway since the sanctioning body purchased the track in late November.
 
And while the foundation of the 0.875-mile track and surrounding facilities hasn’t changed much, there are subtle upgrades.
 
Something that had folks in the garage grinning is the addition of personalized placards over every garage stall. With the Iowa frontstretch and grandstands serving as the backdrop, the mounted signs have the driver’s car number on the left and last name on the right.
 
No typos, either, which is impressive considering the field has drivers with last names such as Theriault and Kwasniewski.
 
And no, there’s not a need for a double take over stalls 35 and 36. That’s just cousins James Buescher and Chris Buescher, ranked 13th and 14th in owner points, respectively, in close proximity.

11:30 a.m. ET

A slow start gave way to a flurry of on-track activity Friday as teams took advantage of a scheduled three-hour long practice session to make multiple changes to their setups.
 
Richard Childress Racing drivers Brian Scott and Ty Dillon, in particular, visited the garage several times for tweaks. In one instance, Dillon came in after posting the 11th-fastest time, got some adjustments on his No. 3 Chevrolet and went back out to post the eighth-fastest speed of the session. He returned for more work after just eight laps.
 
Scott, too, frequently brought his No. 2 Chevy in for service but remained just behind session leader Chase Elliott (134.690 mph).
 
Elliott was one of the first drivers to hit the track, and his time has yet to be topped, although Scott (134.546 mph) has come closest. Rounding out the top five midway through the first session are Sam Hornish Jr. (134.506 mph), Trevor Bayne (134.283 mph) and Elliott Sadler (134.277 mph). No other driver broke the 134-mph mark.
 
With rain in the area Thursday and a cold spell that had temperatures in the upper 30s Friday, the cold, hard track produced fast speeds. Hornish, for example, waited nearly 90 minutes before taking his No. 54 Toyota onto the track but immediately produced the third-quickest time.
 
Michael McDowell (133.974 mph), Regan Smith (133.175 mph), Brendan Gaughan (132.883), Dillon (132.727 mph) and Dylan Kwasniewski (132.576 mph) completed the top 10 midway through the first practice.

10:50 a.m. ET

NASCAR Nationwide Series teams were afforded the luxury of time Friday morning at Iowa Speedway.
 
With six hours of practice scheduled for the first day of the series’ first stand-alone of 2014, the scheduled 10 a.m. ET start time came and went with no real rush to get onto the 0.875-mile track.
 
Drivers such as Brian Scott and Dylan Kwasniewski were milling around in jeans and sunglasses five minutes before the track officially opened as teams prepped — and warmed up — their rides. Austin Theriault, on the other hand, presented the other side of the spectrum. At age 20, he’ll compete in his first Nationwide Series race on Sunday in the No. 5 JR Motorsports Chevrolet — and he was eager to begin, pacing around in his fire suit as his car was detailed.
 
JR Motorsports veteran Regan Smith was the first driver on the track at approximately 10:34 a.m. ET, with teammate Theriault following after Smith had completed seven laps.
 
Forty-five minutes into the first practice, rookie Chase Elliott — who is set to graduate from his Georgia high school on Saturday — had assumed the top spot on the leaderboard with a speed of 134.690 mph. Trevor Bayne, the defending race winner, was second with a speed of 132.749 mph.
 
The first practice is scheduled to run until 1 p.m. ET, followed by a second session from 2-4 p.m. ET and a third from 4:30 p.m.-5:50 p.m. ET.

MORE:

READ: Latest
NASCAR news

WATCH: Latest
NASCAR video

PLAY: NASCAR
Fantasy Live

FOLLOW LIVE: Get
RaceView