Plenty of NASCAR action at Charlotte, Iowa and more over the next two weeks

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (May 15, 2014) – Engines will soon fire in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series garage at Charlotte Motor Speedway, signaling the start of an incredibly busy – and assuredly breathtaking – two weeks of NASCAR racing.

Dotted throughout the upcoming fortnight calendar are events that will tie NASCAR’s past, present and future into one thrilling package.

On the docket…

– Sprint Showdown at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Friday, May 16 at 7 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. The winner and second-place finisher of this all-or-nothing event will advance to the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race on Saturday. Immediately following the race, the winner of the Sprint Fan Vote will also be announced, filling out the 22-driver all-star field.

– NASCAR Camping World Truck Series North Carolina Education Lottery 200 at Charlotte, Friday, May 16 at 8:30 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. Rising stars Darrell Wallace Jr., Ryan Blaney, Ben Kennedy and German Quiroga take on veterans and double-duty drivers Kyle Busch, Brad Keselowski, Matt Crafton and Ron Hornaday Jr. under the lights for the first points race of "Charlotte Speedweeks."

– NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race at Charlotte, Saturday, May 17 at 7 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. The most exciting all-star event in all of sports celebrates a major milestone. This will be the 30th running of the annual non-points race, with NASCAR’s brightest stars battling under the lights for $1 million.

– The IMSA Ultra 94 Porsche GT3 Cup Canada season begins with a pair of 45-minute races Saturday, May 17, and Sunday, May 18 at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park.

– NASCAR K&N Pro Series combo race, the Casey’s General Stores 150 at Iowa Speedway. The 150-lap event is an annual clash between the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East and West, and features a large group of NASCAR’s rising stars, including nine members of the 2014-2015 NASCAR Next class. The race will be telecast via tape delay, on May 24 at 8:30 a.m. ET on FOX Sports 1.

– NASCAR Nationwide Series Get to Know Newton 250 presented by Sherwin Williams at Iowa on Sunday at 2 p.m. ET on ESPN, MRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. Future stars such as Chase Elliott – who will pull a different kind of double duty, flying back-and-forth between Georgia and Iowa for his high school graduation and the race – will usher in standalone season with this annually intense short track event.

– The Pinty’s presents the Clarington 200, on Sunday, May 18, will be the 2014 season-opening event for the NASCAR Canadian Tire Series presented by Mobil 1, and the first of two events at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park. The race will headline CTMP’s Victoria Day SpeedFest Weekend. Two-time series champion Andrew Ranger is back and looking to join Scott Steckly as three-time title winners. The NCTS opener will be one of a number of NASCAR touring series events scheduled during the next two weeks, including races at Kern County Raceway Park (NASCAR K&N Pro Series West), Stafford Motor Speedway (NASCAR Whelen Modified Tour), and Queretaro (NASCAR Mexico Toyota Series).

– NASCAR Hall of Fame Voting Day on Wednesday, May 21 at 4 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio and NASCAR.com. NASCAR America on NBC Sports Network will broadcast live from the NASCAR Hall of Fame at 5 p.m. ET. The NASCAR Hall of Fame Voting Panel will deliberate in Charlotte, N.C., to decide the five legends who will make up the 2015 NASCAR Hall of Fame class. In addition, the inaugural winner of the Landmark Award for Outstanding Contributions to NASCAR will be decided upon and unveiled.

– NASCAR Nationwide Series History 300 at Charlotte, Saturday, May 24 at 2:45 p.m. ET on ABC, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. Currently, only three points separate the top three drivers in the NASCAR Nationwide Series. Chase Elliott, Elliott Sadler and Regan Smith will all attempt to break up the logjam at the top of the standings during this Memorial Day Weekend opener.

– The IMSA Continental Tire SportsCar Challenge headlines Lime Rock Park’s traditional Memorial Day sports car weekend, running a pair of two-hour, 30-minute races for the Grand Sport (GS) and Street Tuner (ST) classes on Saturday, May 24. It is the ninth consecutive year the Continental Tire Challenge will race at Lime Rock and the first since 2011 on Memorial Day Weekend. Lime Rock hosted the Continental Tire Challenge season finale the past two seasons.

– NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte, Sunday, May 25 at 6 p.m. ET on FOX, PRN and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio. NASCAR’s most grueling test, the Coca-Cola 600 has featured some surprising outcomes – elevating the intrigue to a championship format which has put an unprecedented importance on winning. Will we see a surprising name added to the potential Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup list?

– The NASCAR Industry is a long-time supporter of the U.S. Armed Forces throughout the year, and with the NASCAR An American Salute platform, the industry kicks off a seven-week campaign to rally teams, tracks, fans and partners to collectively recognize and honor active and retired service men and women beginning with Memorial Day Weekend’s Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway and running through Independence Day Weekend’s Coke Zero 400 at Daytona International Speedway. The NASCAR community is encouraged to salute our service men and women by using the hashtag #NASCARSalutes on Twitter and Instagram and visiting NASCAR.com/Salute.

Along with the on-track activity listed above, watch for these special programs on FOX Sports 1 – all produced by NASCAR Productions – throughout the two weeks:

100,000 CAMERAS: THE NASCAR SPRINT ALL-STAR RACE, Thursday, May 22 at 9:30 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1. Produced by NASCAR Productions, the groundbreaking, 30-minute documentary will utilize fan- and driver-generated video to showcase the NASCAR Sprint All-Star race from fans’ points of view. Regardless of location, fans are encouraged to capture their All-Star race experiences on their cameras/mobile devices and upload the videos/images to their social media accounts using the hashtags #100KCams and #SprintAllStar for a chance to be included in the show. Visit www.foxsports.com/100KCams for more details.

EMPTY CUP:  QUEST FOR THE 1992 NASCAR CHAMPIONSHIP, Friday, May 23 at 8:00 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1. Produced by NASCAR Productions, the 30-minute special reflects on the highs and lows of Davey Allison’s 1992 season, including the final moments when the Robert Yates Racing team lost the championship bid.

THE 600: HISTORY OF NASCAR’S TOUGHEST RACE, Friday, May 23 at 9:00 p.m. ET on FOX Sports 1. Produced by NASCAR Productions, the 60-minute documentary looks back at the people and events that define the Coca-Cola 600. NASCAR legends Richard Petty, Darrell Waltrip and Jeff Gordon reflect on the event’s unorthodox history and the thrill of winning NASCAR’s longest race.

Log on to NASCAR.com for continuous coverage of the events mentioned above – and much more.

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Soggy forecast pushes back on-track activity for All-Star weekend

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CONCORD, N.C. — A nagging rain and the threat of more during the balance of the day canceled Thursday’s practice for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
 
A pair of two-hour practice sessions (4-6 and 7-9 p.m. ET) were scheduled ahead of Friday night’s North Carolina Education Lottery 200 (8:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1).

Rain had let up midday after the threat of severe storms and flooding Friday morning, and track-drying efforts seemed to make progress on the 1.5-mile trac kunder overcast skies. But a steady shower 45 minutes before the scheduled start of practice wiped out all on-track activity.
 
Final practice for the Camping World Truck Series was expanded one hour earlier Friday morning. It will now run from 10 a.m. to noon ET.

Keystone Light Pole Qualifying is scheduled for a 5:40 p.m. ET Friday start with television broadcast on FOX Sports 1.
 
Friday’s race is the fourth of the season for the truck tour. Defending series champion Matt Crafton — winner of the series’ round at Martinsville Speedway — holds an eight-point lead in the series standings over Timothy Peters and four-time champ Ron Hornaday Jr.

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At home or on the go, keep tabs on the Cup, Nationwide and Truck races this weekend

This weekend brings the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series to Charlotte Motor Speedway and the NASCAR Nationwide Series to Iowa Speedway

The Sprint Cup Series Sprint Showdown is Friday, May 16, at 7:15 p.m. ET with coverage on FOX Sports 1. The Showdown will be a format of two 20-lap segments.

The Sprint All-Star Race is Saturday, May 17, at 9 p.m. ET with coverage on FOX Sports 1. The All-Star Race format consists of four 20-lap segments, ending with a 10-lap run.

For more information about how the Sprint Showdown and All-Star Race are set up, see our breakdown of the formats

The Camping World Truck Series North Carolina Education Lottery 200 is Friday, May 16, at 8:30 p.m. ET with coverage on FOX Sports 1. 

The Nationwide Series Get to Know Newton 250 presented by Sherwin-Williams is Sunday, May 18, at 2 p.m. ET with coverage on ESPN.

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

We know you may not have the time to watch the Sprint Cup and Truck Series action or Sunday’s Nationwide race without any interruptions, so if you’re on the go, here’s how to keep up at both Charlotte and Iowa.

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

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

We’ll also be sending race updates via Twitter through the official @NASCAR and @NASCARStats handles, as well as curating NASCAR tweets from the Twitter universe with a social timeline.

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

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

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

Scott’s message to Bayne: ‘I think you race like an idiot’

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Brian Scott was direct with — and had a few choice words for — Trevor Bayne when the two NASCAR Nationwide Series drivers discussed the implications of a multicar wreck at Talladega Superspeedway earlier this month.

Bayne, who initiated the wreck, accepted responsibility for it after driving too aggressively on Talladega’s famous high banks, an action which resulted in all Richard Childress Racing entries being collected.

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"It’s unfortunate when you’re a victim of stupidity," Scott said after the race, and he followed up with similar words the next day. Both Scott and Bayne confirmed they talked Sunday following the driver’s meeting for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Talladega.

"I’m a no bull(crap) kind of straightforward guy," Scott told the Cedar Rapids Gazette newspaper while in Newton, Iowa, to test at Iowa Speedway last week. "I don’t go around and say things behind people’s backs that I wouldn’t say right to them. So, when Trevor Bayne and I talked, I went right up to him and I said, ‘You know, I think you race like an idiot. And every time you’re around me you put us both in jeopardizing situations. … There’s no need for that.’ "

Cooler heads seem to have prevailed, though, and just in time for the series’ first stand-alone event of the year, the Get to Know Newton 250 scheduled for Sunday. The 0.875-mile Iowa track stands in stark contrast to the massive 2.66-mile oval at Talladega — and the short track fits the bill if Scott wanted to hand out a little retribution.

Bayne doesn’t expect that, though. In fact, the 23-year-old continues to own up to his mistake heading into the weekend.

"I think it’s over and done with," Bayne said during last week’s test session. "I made a mistake at Talladega and just didn’t give us enough room and got into Brian’s left rear and turned him and, unfortunately, took out a lot of race cars. It’s not something we’re happy about. We talked, and he and I have a long history of racing each other hard, and you’ll have that when you’re racing for the same position.

"We just wanted to make sure we cleaned that up so (at) Iowa, there’s no grudge or anything like that. Especially with both of us being where we are in the points (in the top six), we don’t need any more mishaps. And you don’t want any enemies out there. You want to apologize quickly and not let it carry on week to week."

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Chastain will pilot the No. 55 Viva Motorsports Chevrolet in the History 300

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Ross Chastain is scheduled to make his NASCAR Nationwide Series debut next weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway in the Viva Motorsports No. 55 Chevrolet, the team announced Thursday.

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Chastain, 21, will drive a Watermelon.org-sponsored car for team owners Jimmy and Jamie Dick on May 24th in the History 300 (2:45 p.m. ET, ABC). He will become the team’s fifth driver this season, joining Todd Bodine, Jamie Dick, Caleb Roark and Jimmy Weller. Roark is scheduled to make his Nationwide debut this Sunday in the Get to Know Newton 250 (2 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Iowa Speedway

"I want to thank Jamie Dick and everyone at Viva Motorsports for giving me this opportunity," Chastain said in a statement released by the team. "I’m looking forward to working with Bill (Henderson) and the crew as I’ll be leaning on them a lot." 

Chastain has competed in two of the three NASCAR Camping World Truck Series events this season for team owner Ricky Benton. He also participated in Preseason Thunder testing for ThorSport Racing at Daytona International Speedway.

The Alva, Fla., native enjoyed his greatest success in the Truck Series in 2013, when he won two pole positions and recorded a pair of runner-up finishes among his four top-five finishes in a part-time schedule for Brad Keselowski Racing.

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Second-year Truck Series driver looking to move up from ninth in the standings

CONCORD, N.C. — Darrell Wallace Jr. said Thursday that he’s thrilled to be at home for a weekend of racing. Why not, when a quiet evening in apparently means an all-nighter of "training" on the NASCAR ’14 video game while Ryan Blaney, FOX Sports broadcasters and a goat cavorting in your TV room.
 
The video that surfaced Wednesday shows the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series driver wearing a strand of purple feathers, which he was quick to insist was a prop and not a personal effect from his wardrobe.
 
"I didn’t even know it was called a boa," Wallace admitted. "I thought a boa was a snake."

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Having shed his party garb from the video, the 20-year-old driver was back to business Thursday at Charlotte Motor Speedway ahead of Friday night’s North Carolina Education Lottery 200 (8:30 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1). Mother Nature didn’t exactly cooperate, washing away Thursday’s two practice sessions.
 
The newly compressed Friday schedule means just one practice session, qualifying and the race all in the same day. His Kyle Busch Motorsports operation did not participate in a recent test session at the 1.5-mile track, but Wallace predicts his team is ready to make up for lost time.
 
"Limited track time is always tough especially when we race at night here and the next practice schedule if the rain keeps up would be (Friday) morning," Wallace said, just an hour before NASCAR officials canceled the Thursday schedule. "Everybody complains about how turn three and four is so different and one and two are pretty similar from night to day — maybe a little different, but three and four you can’t even get through during the day and then all of the sudden during the race it’s the fastest corner we go to. We’ll be all right — we have a good baseline of what we had last year."
 
Wallace indicated last week at Kansas Speedway that his No. 54 Toyota team was ripe for a streak of top-five finishes, a desire he reiterated Thursday at Charlotte. He attributed his "horrific" — his words — 15th-place result last week at Kansas to a swing and a miss on the setup with this year’s new rules package — gremlins he hopes are worked out come Friday night.
 
It’s still early in the 22-race season, but Wallace clearly has higher aspirations than his current ninth-place rank in the series standings. Friday’s slate offers Wallace a chance to make substantial gains, something more concrete than virtual video-game laps in a house party setting.
 
"Whenever we really get on track … that’s when we really have to show everybody what our program is about," Wallace said. "At Kansas we were OK — a little bit off, but that was a test session for us because we really didn’t know how our stuff would be on a mile-and-a-half (track) with all the new changes that came over the offseason. Now we have an idea of where we need to be and everybody wants to be first so, playing a little catch-up to get there.
 
"I strongly believe we can get up there throughout the season. Just make smart choices on the track and be ahead of the ball each and every weekend when we unload."

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Two years removed from last competition, crews await next shot at spotlight

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It’s the week of the Sprint All-Star Race, hosted once again by the folks at Charlotte Motor Speedway, and for those of you keeping count, that’s 27 in a row and 28 of 29.

The race that "could be moved around to other facilities" hasn’t, at least not since 1986 in Atlanta.

But that’s OK. With the majority of NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series teams housed nearby, allowing CMS to continue to host the non-points event works. It works from a scheduling standpoint and it works from a location standpoint.

So what’s wrong with the All-Star weekend?

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For the second consecutive year, there will be no pit crew competition leading up to Saturday night’s main event.

An eight-year run at Time Warner Cable Arena ended in 2012 when Sprint, which has sponsored the event, decided to move its dollars to Daytona in February for what is now known as the Sprint Unlimited.

Perhaps sponsoring the annual pit crew competition as well as the actual All-Star Race was a bit of overkill for the series’ sponsor. That’s understandable.

But for the event to go away entirely due to a lack of sponsorship does a great disservice to those who often spend their entire careers toiling away in the background.

The Sprint Pit Crew Challenge certainly wasn’t the first program to recognize the efforts of those that go over the wall each week. For more than three decades, a similar program was held at Rockingham (North Carolina) Speedway. That particular program went away when the track’s fall event was removed from the race schedule.

Those on the pit crews do their various jobs time after time, knowing their efforts will likely go unnoticed. But that’s OK, too. Great pit stop? No problem, now let’s get back to the race leader.

Except for those occasions when there is a problem, of course. Then it’s "what happened to those guys? Here, let’s take a look."

The race winner is interviewed after the race. The crew chief gets interviewed after the race. And in most cases, the team owner is interviewed after the race.

But the members of the winning pit crew? After a few brief photos in the winner’s circle, they likely can be found packing up equipment and heading off to the airport, out of sight and out of mind.

It’s the nature of the sport, and everyone accepts that.

That’s what made the pit crew competition, regardless of where it was held, special. It might have taken place only once a season, but it was a time that the crews could be recognized and applauded for their efforts, often in front of friends and family, while going head-to-head with their fellow crew members.

Sure, they do it every week, but so too do the drivers. This is All-Star week. No points, no pressure. It was competitive, yes, but it was also a lot of fun for those involved.

After Sprint shifted its sponsorship dollars away from the Pit Crew Competition, NASCAR officials said they hoped to secure funding for the program. A year later, they’re still searching.

There were rumors of a new group undertaking the program, and moving it to ZMax Dragway, which is located outside the speedway. Unfortunately, that project failed to get off the ground.

Throughout the course of a season, there are various opportunities for different groups to be recognized for their efforts, from those that build the engines to those that driver the transporters.

The pit crew competition was the perfect opportunity to recognize a special group of individuals that too often go unnoticed.

The shame of it is that they apparently weren’t special enough.

Here’s hoping that changes by the time the 2015 All-Star Race rolls around.

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NASCAR.com’s leaderboards will not be available for NNS Coors Light Qualifying

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With so much on-track action at both Charlotte Motor Speedway and Iowa Speedway this weekend, NASCAR.com is unable to support access to the Nationwide Series leaderboard for Friday’s practice and Saturday’s qualifying. But NASCAR.com will still provide coverage of those events with live updates from our reporter at the track. You can find those updates here.

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Plus, NASCAR.com will provide access to the live leaderboards during the Nationwide Series final practice on Saturday at 12:30 p.m. ET — and for the race, the Get to Know Newton 250 presented by Sherwin-Williams on Sunday at 2 p.m. ET (TV coverage on ESPN). Saturday brings Nationwide Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying at 7:10 p.m. ET, with updates from NASCAR.com here

You can also follow @NASCAR_NNS on Twitter as they keep fans informed of on-track action and NASCAR.com content. 

Fans can check out the Nationwide Series’ new looks at Iowa Speedway in this week’s Paint Scheme Preview and get information on tickets, track details, event results and more in the Race Center for the Get to Know Newton 250 presented by Sherwin-Williams.

For a complete breakdown of this weekend’s events, visit the full weekend schedule.

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2014 “Dash 4 Cash” Schedule:

  •        Daytona International Speedway (July 4) – “Dash 4 Cash” Qualifier

  •        New Hampshire Motor Speedway (July 12) – “Dash 4 Cash” Race No. 1

  •        Chicagoland Speedway (July 19) – “Dash 4 Cash” Race No. 2

  •        Indianapolis Motor Speedway (July 26) –  “Dash 4 Cash” Race No. 3

  •        Iowa Speedway (August 2) – “Dash 4 Cash” Race No. 4

 

Eligible Drivers:

  •        The top four highest-finishing NASCAR Nationwide Series drivers to receive championship driver points at Daytona will qualify for the first “Dash 4 Cash” event at New Hampshire.  

  •        The highest-finisher of the qualified drivers at New Hampshire will win the “Dash 4 Cash” award and automatically qualify for the next event at Chicagoland.  The three highest-finishing drivers to receive championship driver points also will qualify for the next event at Chicagoland.

  •        These rules carry into the remaining events at Indianapolis and Iowa.

Nationwide Insurance also will award additional bonus money ($600,000) to an eligible driver if he/she can win the three previous “Dash 4 Cash” awards and wins the race outright in the final “Dash 4 Cash” event at Iowa (potential $1,000,000 payout). 

Who can stop ‘Six-Time’ from making it a three-peat?

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Editor’s note: The following drivers are ranked according to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series standings. Driver Reports includes the top 16 in the points standings and drivers currently in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup field.

1. Jeff Gordon (No. 24)

Hendrick Motorsports, Chevrolet 

Standing: Gordon leads the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series standings with 394 points.
Past five races: 1st at Kansas, 39th at Talladega, 2nd at Richmond, 7th at Darlington, 2nd at Texas.
Season stats: 1 win, 5 top-fives, 8 top-10s.
Event history: Gordon’s average finish is 12.4 and his average running position is 8.8 over the past nine Sprint All-Star Races. He has three wins, six top-fives and nine top-10s in the event.
Quick hit: While Gordon hasn’t logged a top-10 in the Sprint All-Star Race since 2006, he ought to be considered among the favorites this year. The series points leader for five consecutive weeks, Gordon is coming off a win at a 1.5-mile track and has a runner-up showing at another mile-and-a-half (Texas) already this year.

2. Matt Kenseth (No. 20)

Joe Gibbs Racing, Toyota 

Standing: Kenseth is second in the standings with 379 points.
Past five races: 10th at Kansas, 37th at Talladega, 5th at Richmond, 4th at Darlington, 7th at Texas.
Season stats: 3 top-fives, 8 top-10s, 1 pole.
Event history: Kenseth’s average finish is 6.7 and his average running position is 8.7 over the past nine Sprint All-Star Races. He has one win, five top-fives, 10 top-10s and two poles in the event.
Quick hit: Kenseth’s All-Star Race consistency is among the best in the sport. He’s one of just three drivers with both an average running position and average finish of less than 10.0, and he has seven consecutive top-10s. This could be the race to jumpstart a No. 20 team that has been consistent, but not spectacular.

3. Kyle Busch (No. 18)

Joe Gibbs Racing, Toyota 

Standing: Busch is third in the standings with 373 points.
Past five races: 15th at Kansas, 12th at Talladega, 3rd at Richmond, 6th at Darlington, 3rd at Texas.
Season stats: 1 win, 3 top-fives, 5 top-10s, 1 pole.
Event history: Busch’s average finish is 11.3 and his average running position is 6.5 over the past nine Sprint All-Star Races. He has three top-fives, four top-10s and three poles in the event.
Quick hit: Busch seems due for his first All-Star win. He’s finished second, fourth and third over the past three years. Last year’s third-place run came after a dominant showing that enabled him to start first in the final segment. With an average running position that ranks first in the series in the loop data era, expect another race of Busch running up front.

4. Dale Earnhardt Jr. (No. 88)

Hendrick Motorsports, Chevrolet

Standing: Earnhardt Jr. is fourth in the standings with 368 points.
Past five races: 5th at Kansas, 26th at Talladega, 7th at Richmond, 2nd at Darlington, 43rd at Texas.
Season stats: 1 win, 6 top-fives, 7 top-10s.
Event history: Earnhardt Jr.’s average finish is 9.3 and his average running position is 11.0 over the past nine Sprint All-Star Races. He has one win, four top-fives and 11 top-10s in the event.
Quick hit: The hometown driver is a crowd favorite every time he comes to Charlotte Motor Speedway, and nothing would delight the North Carolina crowd more than seeing Junior win the event 14 years after conquering it as a rookie. Junior’s recent success means the driver doesn’t have to compete in the Sprint Showdown for the second consecutive year, and he’s perhaps in a better position to challenge for a win than any time in the past five-plus years.

5. Carl Edwards (No. 99)

Roush Fenway Racing, Ford 

Standing: Edwards is fifth in the standings with 367 points.
Past five races: 6th at Kansas, 30th at Talladega, 9th at Richmond, 13th at Darlington, 14th at Texas.
Season stats: 1 win, 2 top-fives, 6 top-10s.
Event history: Edwards’ average finish is 11.1 and his average running position is 10.4 over the past nine Sprint All-Star Races. He has one win, three top-fives, five top-10s and one pole in the event.
Quick hit: Edwards’ performance in the All-Star Race mimics his season in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. The driver won the 2011 All-Star Race and nearly won the Cup title that year — and his disappointing 2012 follow-up season came with a 23rd-place finish in the non-points event. So wherever Edwards finishes, it could tell the story of how the rest of his season plays out.

6. Joey Logano (No. 22)

Team Penske, Ford 

Standing: Logano is sixth in the standings with 346 points.
Past five races: 4th at Kansas, 32nd at Talladega, 1st at Richmond, 35th at Darlington, 1st at Texas.
Season stats: 2 wins, 6 top-fives, 6 top-10s, 1 pole.
Event history: Logano’s average finish is 4.3 and his average running position is 8.4 over the past nine Sprint All-Star Races. He has two top-fives and three top-10s in the event.
Quick hit: Want another favorite? Consider that Logano and Team Penske are hands-down the most dominant team on 1.5-mile tracks so far this year. Then add that in three All-Star Race appearances, Logano has finished eighth, third and second. He’s among the drivers who rises to the occasion under the lights and may be the biggest threat to Jimmie Johnson’s three-peat.

7. Jimmie Johnson (No. 48)

Hendrick Motorsports, Chevrolet

Standing: Johnson is seventh in the standings with 340 points.
Past five races: 9th at Kansas, 23rd at Talladega, 32nd at Richmond, 3rd at Darlington, 25th at Texas.
Season stats: 3 top-fives, 6 top-10s.
Event history: Johnson’s average finish is 5.7 and his average running position is 6.9 over the past nine Sprint All-Star Races. He has four wins, eight top-fives and eight top-10s and one pole in the event.
Quick hit: No one has ever won three consecutive All-Star Races, but Jimmie Johnson, who won this race in 2012 and 2013, has done things in NASCAR no one else has. With history at hand Saturday night, expect the No. 48 team to perform as it always does under pressure — with purpose.

8. Ryan Newman (No. 31)

Richard Childress Racing, Chevrolet 

Standing: Newman is eighth in the standings with 332 points.
Past five races: 11th at Kansas, 18th at Talladega, 8th at Richmond, 10th at Darlington, 16th at Texas.
Season stats: 4 top-10s.
Event history: Newman’s average finish is 10.3 and his average running position is 9.5 over the past nine years. He has one win, three top-fives, seven top-10s and one pole in the event.
Quick hit: Newman has driven in 12 consecutive All-Star Races, a testament to his longevity. He is one of 10 former All-Star Race winners in the field, but it’s not likely Newman will be the seventh driver to win at least two All-Star Races — he hasn’t finished better than 10th since 2008.

9. Greg Biffle (No. 16)

Roush Fenway Racing, Ford

Standing: Biffle is ninth in the standings with 328 points.
Past five races: 16th at Kansas, 2nd at Talladega, 15th at Richmond, 5th at Darlington, 6th at Texas.
Season stats: 2 top-fives, 4 top-10s.
Event history: Biffle’s average finish is 12.9 and his average running position is 10.5 over the past nine Sprint All-Star Races. He has two top-fives and three top-10s in the event.
Quick hit:
Biffle has finished outside the top 10 in two consecutive events — 22nd in 2012 and 15th last year. If he pulls the upset and wins Saturday night, he would give team owner Jack Roush his fifth win in the event and become the fourth different driver to win the All-Star Race for Roush Fenway Racing.

10. Brian Vickers (No. 55)

Michael Waltrip Racing, Toyota 

Standing: Vickers is 10th in the standings with 327 points.
Past five races: 14th at Kansas, 4th at Talladega, 12th at Richmond, 26th at Darlington, 4th at Texas.
Season stats: 2 top-fives, 4 top-10s.
Event history: Vickers’ average finish is 8.0 and his average running position is 11.1 over the past nine Sprint All-Star Races. He has one top-five and one top-10 in the event.
Quick hit: Vickers has three All-Star Race starts to his credit. He qualified for this year’s event based on his win last year as a part-time driver for Michael Waltrip Racing, a victory that he’s parlayed into a full-time opportunity and a strong start to this season.

11. Brad Keselowski (No. 2)

Team Penske, Ford 

Standing: Keselowski is 11th in the standings with 326 points.
Past five races: 13th at Kansas, 38th at Talladega, 4th at Richmond, 17th at Darlington, 15th at Texas.
Season stats: 1 win, 4 top-fives, 4 top-10s, 1 pole.
Event history: Keselowski’s average finish is 13.2 and his average running position is 15.3 over the past nine Sprint All-Star Races. He has one top-five and two top-10s in the event.
Quick hit: Keselowski logged just two laps last year before exiting the race with a busted transmission. That last-place finish bloats his averages a bit — he was runner-up in the event in 2012, and his average finish not counting last year’s debacle is 11.0. Given his strength on 1.5-mile tracks, count the 2012 series champion as a dark horse to win.

12. Denny Hamlin (No. 11)

Joe Gibbs Racing, Toyota 

Standing: Hamlin is 12th in the standings with 318 points.
Past five races: 18th at Kansas, 1st at Talladega, 22nd at Richmond, 19th at Darlington, 13th at Texas.
Season stats: 1 win, 2 top-fives, 3 top-10s, 1 pole.
Event history: Hamlin’s average finish is 11.6 and his average running position is 10.2 over the past nine Sprint All-Star Races. He has two top-fives and four top-10s in the event.
Quick hit: Hamlin finished sixth last season while in the midst of a slump, and he has four top-10s in the past five All-Star Races. The Joe Gibbs Racing program’s perplexing struggles on intermediate tracks, though, seems to indicate Hamlin won’t be near the front when the white flag falls.

13. Kyle Larson (No. 42)

Chip Ganassi Racing with Felix Sabates, Chevrolet  

Standing: Larson is 13th in the standings with 318 points.
Past five races: 12th at Kansas, 9th at Talladega, 16th at Richmond, 8th at Darlington, 5th at Texas.
Season stats: 2 top-fives, 5 top-10s.
Event history: Larson has zero All-Star Races appearances.
Quick hit: Kyle Larson has two ways of making the big show Saturday night — win the Sprint Fan Vote, or finish in the top two of the Sprint Showdown — and it feels like he’ll be racing Saturday one way or the other. Given his success this year, he may be the favorite in Friday night’s primary.

14. Austin Dillon (No. 3)

Richard Childress Racing, Chevrolet  

Standing: Dillon is 14th in the standings with 306 points.
Past five races: 19th at Kansas, 15th at Talladega, 27th at Richmond, 11th at Darlington, 21st at Texas.
Season stats: 1 top-10, 1 pole.
Event history: Dillon has zero All-Star Races appearances.
Quick hit: Would it really be shocking to have two Sunoco Rookie of the Year contenders make the Sprint All-Star Race? Don’t be surprised if that happens, with Dillon joining fellow freshman Kyle Larson as a favorite in Friday night’s Sprint Showdown.

15. Kevin Harvick (No. 4)

Stewart-Haas Racing, Chevrolet 

Standing: Harvick is 15th in the standings with 302 points.
Past five races: 2nd at Kansas, 7th at Talladega, 11th at Richmond, 1st at Darlington, 42nd at Texas.
Season stats: 2 wins, 3 top-fives, 5 top-10s, 2 poles.
Event history: Harvick’s average finish is 8.8 and his average running position is 11.2 over the past nine Sprint All-Star Races. He has one win, two top-fives and seven top-10s in the event.
Quick hit: With two wins this season and one of the top crew chiefs in the garage, Harvick could very well get his second career All-Star victory — and oversized winner’s check. Should that happen, it’d be the first All-Star win for Tony Stewart as a team owner, as well.

16. Kasey Kahne (No. 5)

Hendrick Motorsports, Chevrolet

Standing: Kahne is 16th in the standings with 294 points.
Past five races: 3rd at Kansas, 8th at Talladega, 14th at Richmond, 37th at Darlington, 11th at Texas.
Season stats: 1 top-five, 4 top-10s.
Event history: Kahne’s average finish is 12.0 and his average running position is 10.9 over the past nine All-Star Races. He has one win, two top-fives, four top-10s and a pole in the event.
Quick hit: Kahne’s coming off his best finish of the year just in time for his best track. While his success at Charlotte hasn’t transferred into overwhelming All-Star success, Kahne does have a win in the event and two consecutive top-10s.

28. Kurt Busch (No. 41)

Stewart-Haas Racing, Chevrolet

Standing: Busch is 28th in the standings with 211 points.
Past five races: 29th at Kansas, 33rd at Talladega, 23rd at Richmond, 31st at Darlington, 39th at Texas.
Season stats: 1 win, 2 top-fives, 2 top-10s.
Event history: Busch’s average finish is 10.9 and his average running position is 8.7 over the past nine years. He has one win, five top-fives, seven top-10s and a pole in the event.
Quick hit:
Busch nearly stole the show in last year’s race while driving for the one-car Furniture Row Racing team. You’d think he’d be in contention to top last year’s fifth-place showing with a more competitive car, but it’s been a tough year for ‘The Outlaw.’ He hasn’t logged a top-20 in nine of 11 races this season, and has five finishes of 30 or worse — something which suggests a systemic problem more than just a slump.

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