Engines will silence for much of NASCAR and the TUDOR Championship this weekend

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Five hundred miles at Darlington Raceway. It’s a challenging, exhausting endeavor — and on Saturday night, the Southern 500 needed overtime. Of course it did.

In a busy storybook weekend of NASCAR and TUDOR United SportsCar Championship racing, that was the necessary outcome.

Seven races were run in three countries and on two continents for a total of 989 laps and 1,169 miles. Victory belonged to 10 different drivers during the weekend, yet there was one clear winner above all: The fans.

They saw a little bit of everything during this memorable weekend…

In a green-white-checkered finish that extended the race seven laps past its scheduled distance of 367 laps, Kevin Harvick became the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season’s first two-time winner — not to mention the first to virtually lock-up a spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. His two wins guarantee him a place on the 16-driver Chase Grid, provided he finishes in the top 30 after race No. 26 and attempts to qualify for every race.

Rising star Chase Elliott won his second consecutive NASCAR Nationwide Series race, becoming the youngest winner in Darlington history. The 18-year-old’s navigation of the egg-shaped track reminded many of his championship-winning father, Bill Elliott, who himself won five times at Darlington.

Scott Pruett, arguably the greatest sports car driver in North America right now, won his second consecutive Prototype race of this TUDOR United SportsCar Championship debut season. With teammate Memo Rojas, from Mexico City, the pair followed its win at Sebring with a victory in Long Beach, Calif. It was Pruett’s 58th career victory, extending his lead on the all-time North American professional sports car racing win list.

In the GT Le Mans class of the TUDOR Championship at Long Beach, Jan Magnussen and Antonio Garcia teamed to capture the first win for the recently unveiled Chevrolet Corvette C7.R.

Ander Vilarino, who took home the championship in each of the NASCAR Whelen Euro Series’ two years of existence, was victorious in the second Elite 1 race of the Valencia NASCAR Fest weekend in Spain. Yann Zimmer, a 23-year-old and last year’s rookie of the year, won Saturday’s Elite 1 season opener in Valencia.

George Brunnhoelzl III scored his first victory in this "Drive for Five" season. The four-time NASCAR Whelen Southern Modified Tour champion led a race-high 69 laps Saturday at Langley Speedway in Hampton, Va.

Daniel Suárez continued his two-country success story, scoring his second win of the 2014 NASCAR Toyota Mexico Series season. Suárez, who also has two NASCAR K&N Pro Series East victories, won at the Súper Óvalo Chiapas in Tuxtla Gutiérrez.

And now, a break — sort of. Engines will silence for much of NASCAR and the TUDOR Championship this weekend, in observance of the Easter holiday.

But, there will be some on-track action for those needing a fix. The NASCAR Whelen Southern Modified Tour will race at Caraway Speedway in Sophia, N.C., on Saturday. For live updates throughout race day, log onto NASCARHomeTracks.com.

And for continuous coverage of the first portion of this storyline-rich season, visit NASCAR.com and IMSA.com.

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Joe Gibbs Racing driver has four wins, 12 top-five finishes in 18 starts at RIR

Chesterfield, Va.’s Denny Hamlin is considered to have a home-track advantage at Richmond International Raceway, but it’s Hamlin’s Joe Gibbs Racing teammate, Kyle Busch, who leads with four NASCAR Sprint Cup Series wins at RIR. Busch has an impressive 12 top-five finishes at RIR in 18 Cup starts, ranking him third all-time behind Jeff Gordon and Terry Labonte.

 

Plan your NASCAR weekend with these on-track times for Richmond

All times ET

TV LISTINGS / BUY TICKETS / WEEKEND TRACK EVENTS

SATURDAY, APRIL 26:

RACE-DAY RUNDOWN
— 5 p.m.: Driver/crew chief meeting
— 6:20 p.m.: NASCAR Green presentation
— 6:23 p.m.: NASCAR Contingency Special Awards (Sprint Vision)
— 6:24 p.m.: Official welcome by Dennis Bickmeier, president, Richmond International Raceway
— 6:27 p.m.: Honorary pace car driver, Robert Griffin III, quarterback for the Washington Redskins
— 6:28:30 p.m.: Intro Honorary Starter, Ernest Moniz, Secretary of Energy
— 6:29 p.m.: Intro Grand Marshal, Dakota Meyer, honored veteran and Toyota owner
— 6:29:30 p.m.: Intro Miss Sprint Cup, Madison Martin
— 6:30 p.m.: Driver introductions
— 6:56 p.m.: Skydiving team lands
— 6:56:30 p.m.: Intro Pledge of Allegiance
— 6:56:45 p.m.: Pledge of Allegiance: Zachary Shaver
— 6:57:15 p.m.: Intro God Bless America
— 6:57:30 p.m.: God Bless America, Sara Taylor
— 7 p.m.: Intro Presentation of Colors by United States Armed Forces Color Guard from Ft. Lee, Va.
— 7:00:15 p.m.: Invocation by The Rev. Tom Potter
— 7:00:45 p.m.: Intro National Anthem
— 7:01 p.m.: National Anthem, VMI Regimental Band
— 7:02:15 p.m.: Fly-by, World War II B-25 bomber
— 7:07 p.m.: Command given by Dakota Meyer
— 7:14 p.m.: Green flag, Toyota Owners 400 (400 Laps, 300 Miles)

ON TRACK
— 9 a.m.: NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race (Delayed from Friday)
— 7 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Toyota Owners 400 (400 laps, 300 miles), FOX (Follow live)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 1 p.m.: Post-race K&N Pro Series East interviews
— 1:45 p.m.: Washington Redskins QB Robert Griffin III
— 3 p.m.: Goodyear Gives Back Announcement
— Approx 10:30 p.m.: Post Sprint Cup Series race

——————-

THURSDAY, APRIL 24:

ON TRACK
— 1-2 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series practice (Get results)
— 2:30-4:30 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series final practice (Get results)
— 4:10-5:30 p.m.: NASCAR K&N Pro Series East practice

PRESS CONFERENCES
(Watch live)
— 12:15 p.m.: Daniel Suarez
— 12:30 p.m.: Brian Scott
— 4:45 p.m.: Chase Elliott

FRIDAY, APRIL 25:

ON TRACK
— 9-9:50 a.m.: NASCAR K&N Pro Series East final practice
— 10 a.m.-noon: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 1-2 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 2:05 p.m.: NASCAR K&N Pro Series East qualifying
— 3:10 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series qualifying, ESPN2 (Get results)
— 5:10 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series qualifying, FOX Sports 1 (RAINED OUT-Lineup for Toyota Owners 400)
— 10:30 p.m.: NASCAR Nationwide Series ToyotaCare 250 (250 laps, 187.5 miles), ESPN2 (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES (Watch live)
— 8:45 a.m.: Kevin Harvick
— 9 a.m.: Clint Bowyer
— 9:15 a.m.: Jimmie Johnson
— Noon: NASCAR Next announcement
— 2:15 p.m.: Carl Edwards
— 2:30 p.m.: Denny Hamlin
— Approx 5:45 p.m.: Post Sprint Cup Series qualifying
— Approx 9:30 p.m.: Post Nationwide Series race

GARAGECAM PRESENTED BY MOBIL 1
— 9:30 a.m., Sprint Cup Series

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Runner-up finish at ‘Lady in Black’ a bittersweet result

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DARLINGTON, S.C. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. doesn’t want to hear it.

"Everybody was telling me that I had a 15‑car‑length lead, and I don’t want to hear about that," the two-time Daytona 500 champion said Saturday night. "I’m going to hear about it all day tomorrow, man: ‘You almost won it.’ They said we had it won with a 15‑car‑length lead coming into that last white flag when the caution came out on the back straightaway."

The yellow flag flew for the 11th and final time at NASCAR’s oldest superspeedway when Clint Bowyer got into the back of Kurt Busch, turning the No. 41 car hard into the outside wall and forcing a second attempt at a green-white-checkered finish in the Bojangles’ Southern 500. That meant Earnhardt would have to hold off Kevin Harvick on a third restart to close the race, knowing that the driver behind him had four fresh tires to his two, not to mention the most dominant car in the race.

In the end, Harvick’s four tires made the difference, as the Stewart-Haas Racing driver stormed by just before the white flag dropped for his second victory of the season. Earnhardt was left with a runner-up finish that proved his best career result at Darlington Raceway, a place where he’d never previously been better than fourth.

"He was pretty fast," Earnhardt said of Harvick. "I think he was going to drive the (expletive) out of it and try to get there. I was trying not to look in the mirror, just try to run as hard as I could. I didn’t know how much speed the car had — we were on two tires, it was late in the night. You want to drive the car as hard as you can without pushing …  and we just were running some laps a lot different than we’d been running all night, really. But feels good to be close."

Particularly since Earnhardt once loathed Darlington, to the point where early in his career the track staff presented him with a seashell trophy — meant to represent the facility’s coarse surface at the time — as kind of a tongue-in-cheek tribute. Even today, NASCAR’s most popular driver considers Darlington one of his worst tracks, a sentiment he voiced over the radio once again after the checkered flag fell Saturday night.

"Y’all carried me at one of my worst tracks," he told his team. It certainly didn’t seem that way Saturday, when Earnhardt was near the front all night and was a serious threat to win here for the first time in his career. Earnhardt had twice placed fourth at Darlington, most recently in 2008, and has suffered through some long stretches of difficult finishes on Harold Brasington’s quirky egg-shaped oval.

But if you think he was patting himself on the back Saturday night, think again. A 15-car-length lead is tough to get past.

"It’s a little disappointing to come that close, because I know I don’t really run that well here and the opportunities to win are going to be very few compared to other tracks," Earnhardt said. "It hurts a little bit to come that close because we worked so hard to try to win races. Running second is great, but nobody is going to really remember that. But we’re proud of it. We’re proud of it. And (crew chief) Steve (Letarte), I know he’s very proud.

"They did a great job giving me a really good car to be able to run that well here. The car was phenomenal. Really proud of those guys’ effort. Even though they know where my shortcomings are, they worked their guts out to try to get us the best. Sometimes if I admittedly say this isn’t my best track, it’s easy to sort of back off, but those guys really push the pedal and give me everything I can to give me the best chance to finish as best I can. They did that tonight. That was a great example of that."

The pivotal moment came under what proved to be the third-to-last caution in the race, when yellow flew for fluid on the track with nine laps remaining. Letarte called for two tires, and the No. 88 car came out second behind Jimmie Johnson. Harvick took four tires and restarted third. The race was forced into a green-white-checkered finish after another caution for debris, and after again restarting second Earnhardt jetted out to the lead. He might have stayed there if not for the final caution, which ultimately allowed Harvick to reel him in.

"It took three restarts for him to get there. I don’t think he wins the first one or the second one with what I consider the best car all night," Letarte said of Harvick. The crew chief also stuck by his two-tire call. "People want to say there’s a right or wrong answer, but unless you can say how many guys are going to do it and exactly how many restarts you’re going to have, there’s never a right or wrong answer."

Winning crew chief Rodney Childers said that last caution certainly helped his team’s cause. "We got a little bit fortunate there with the caution coming out," he said. "If that wouldn’t have happened, we probably wouldn’t have won the race. It’s hard to say. It’s always easy to go back and think about that stuff and what you should have done and shouldn’t have done. I think we could have won the race on two tires, and we still won it on four."

On a night when Harvick led 238 laps, it was difficult to argue. Just as it was difficult to believe that Darlington is one of Earnhardt’s worst tracks, especially after he came so close to winning.

"I love this place. I was raised by Jeff Gordon, and he loves this place," said Letarte, a longtime member of Gordon’s No. 24 team before taking the reins of Earnhardt’s program. "It’s a place where we’ve come and run well, but never put together a whole race. So it felt really good to put together a whole race. And (Earnhardt) is way better here than he gives himself credit for."

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SHR driver dominates much of race, but needs late pass for first Darlington win

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Bojangles’ Southern 500 info: Results | Updated standings | NASCAR Nation reacts to epic race

DARLINGTON, S.C.—The 2014 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season has been one of feast or famine for Kevin Harvick—and on Saturday night at Darlington Raceway, Harvick enjoyed the delectable taste of victory.
 
Passing Dale Earnhardt Jr. on the next-to-last lap of the second attempt at a green-white-checkered-flag finish, Harvick won Sunday’s Bojangles’ Southern 500 and all but locked himself into the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup as the first two-time winner in the series this year (he still needs to finish in the top 30 in points after race No. 26 and attempt to qualify for every race).
 
In the second race of the season, Harvick dominated in winning at Phoenix, before a spate of mechanical issues waylaid him in four of five subsequent events.

On Saturday at Darlington, he was the class of the field again, leading 238 of 374 laps in a race that went seven circuits past its scheduled distance. Nevertheless, it took a four-tire call in the pits and a late caution to give Harvick a final chance to beat Earnhardt, who had streaked to a 15-car-length lead on two fresh tires in the first attempt at a green-white-checker.
 
But Kurt Busch’s wreck on the backstretch brought out the 11th caution on Lap 369 and snatched the victory from Earnhardt’s grasp. Restarting on the outside of the front row after powering past Jimmie Johnson on the first attempt at overtime, Harvick prevailed with a superior car on superior tires.
 
The victory was Harvick’s first at Darlington and the 25th of his career. It was the series-best third win of the season for Stewart-Haas Racing.
 
After the race, Harvick, the pole winner, revealed he had been keeping a tactic in reserve for just the sort of moment that arose Saturday night at the 1.366-mile speedway.
 
"We were able to hang on there at the end, and I knew I had that high line I hadn’t showed it to them all night on the restarts, and I wanted to save it until the very end," Harvick said. "I kind of learned that last night as we were in the Nationwide race. It was a good tool in your tool bag to have there at the end."
 
In fact, Harvick passed Earnhardt to the outside through Turns 3 and 4 on the penultimate lap.
 
Earnhardt finished second, .558 seconds back. Johnson ran third, followed by Matt Kenseth and Greg Biffle. Kyle Busch, Jeff Gordon, rookie Kyle Larson, Tony Stewart and Ryan Newman completed the top 10.
 
"Everybody was telling me that I had a 15 car length lead, and I don’t want to hear about that," Earnhardt said. "I’m going to hear about it all day tomorrow; ‘Man; you almost won it.’ They said we had it won with a 15 car length lead coming into that last white flag when the caution come out on the back straightaway (for Kurt Busch’s wreck off the nose of Clint Bowyer’s Toyota).
 
"But (Kevin) was pretty fast. I think he was going to run the (heck) out of it and try to get there. I was trying not to look in the mirror, just try to run as hard as I could. I didn’t know how much speed the car had. We were on two tires … But feels good to be close."
 
Nothing could thwart Harvick’s domination of the first two-thirds of the race. A dropped lug nut on a pit stop on Lap 222 relegated him to ninth for a restart on Lap 227. But by the time NASCAR threw the seventh caution on Lap 247, Harvick was running fourth.
 
Four laps after a restart on Lap 252, Harvick was back in the lead, passing Brian Vickers for the top spot.
 
After Paul Menard hit the outside wall for the second time on Lap 271, Harvick ran over a piece of Menard’s brake rotor—twice—but his No. 4 Chevrolet was unaffected. Biffle took the lead on pit road with a two-tire stop, but Harvick regained the point on the restart lap (279) and quickly pulled away to a two-second advantage over Gordon and Earnhardt in second and third.
 
On longer runs, Gordon’s Chevy was the equal of Harvick’s, but Gordon had a miserable time on restarts and repeatedly dropped back so far on the initial green-flag laps that he couldn’t make up the ground during the course of a fuel run.
 
But it was Johnson who chased Harvick lap after lap after a cycle of green-flag pit stops ended on Lap 323. Johnson got as close as .601 seconds back before Harvick began to pull away. But caution for fluid from Joey Logano’s Ford scrambled the field on divergent pit strategies and set up the wild finish.
 
Harvick restarted fifth on Lap 363 as the first driver on four new tires and gained the third position before NASCAR called a debris caution on Lap 365 to necessitate the first attempt at overtime.
 
Notes: Gordon retained the series lead by one point over Kenseth, but neither has a victory this season. … Rookie Kyle Larson scored his fourth top 10 in eight races this season. … Harvick is the first polesitter to win at Darlington since Dale Jarrett accomplished the feat in 1997.

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Catch up on everything that has happened halfway through the Sprint Cup Series race

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Race Info: Race Center | Live Leaderboard
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Jimmie Johnson started the race in 26th and wasn’t able to improve his position much through the first 75 laps or so. He and crew chief Chad Knaus were going back and forth on the radio trying to figure out how to fix the No. 48 Chevrolet, but seemed bewildered as to what to do. That doesn’t happen often, but as the sun went down the No. 48 started to stabilize and gain positions fast. He’s now closing in on the top five.

On the Lap 59 caution, Aric Almirola, Matt Kenseth and Denny Hamlin all took two tires to see how their cars might respond to such a change later in the race. Kenseth shot to the lead, Hamlin hung around in the top five and Almirola dropped like a rock.

As expected, Darlington is eating up the rookies. All but Kyle Larson and Austin Dillon are down at least one lap. Ryan Truex is out of the race completely.

Race Outlook: The fact that Johnson has been able to creep back into this race with a struggling race car — and his exquisite track history — suggest we could be looking at the No. 48 as our eighth winner of the year. That said, his teammate Jeff Gordon — a Darlington wiz in his own right —  has also looked like he could be behind the wheel of a race-winning car. Out of all the cars on the track through the midway point, however, Kevin Harvick looks the strongest.

Time Elapsed: 1 hour, 50 minutes.

Lap leaders:
Joey Logano, Laps 1-37
Jeff Gordon, Laps 38-42
David Ragan, Lap 43
Jeff Gordon, Laps 44-45
Kevin Harvick, Laps 46-60
Denny Hamlin, Laps 61-63
Matt Kenseth, Laps 64-75
Kevin Harvick, Laps 76-179
Brad Keselowski, Laps 180-183

Lead changes as of Lap 184: 9
Record at Darlington Raceway: 41, achieved in in fall 1982

Cautions:
Laps 40-47 (Ryan Truex cut a front right tire and got into the wall in Turn 1.)
Laps 58-63 (Travis Kvapil got into the Turn 3 wall.)
Lap 92-99 (Michael Annett slammed hard into the wall for a Darlington stripe.)
Lap 124-130 (Cole Whitt smacked the wall in Turn 1.)

Best lap: Joey Logano | 27.708 seconds | 177.479 mph

Average speed: 136.715 mph

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Pole winner passes Earnhardt Jr. in green-white-checkered finish

MORE: Full race results | Series standings
RELATED: Full coverage of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup format changes | Official news release | Changes explained | Chase Facts and FAQ | Chase Grid (PDF)

Kevin Harvick practically locked up a bid in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup after winning his second race of the season on Saturday.

Harvick dominated the Bojangles’ Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway, leading 238 of the 374 laps, but had to pass Dale Earnhardt Jr. in a green-white-checkered finish to earn the victory.

Combined with his win at Phoenix, Harvick has all but assured himself one of the 16 spots in the new postseason format. As long as he finishes among the top 30 in points and attempts to qualify for every race, his ticket is punched.

Earnhardt Jr. placed second on Saturday, marking his fifth top-three finish in eight races this season.

Jimmie Johnson, Matt Kenseth and Greg Biffle completed the top five Saturday, while Kyle Busch, Jeff Gordon, rookie Kyle Larson, Tony Stewart and Ryan Newman were among the top 10.

Gordon held on to the series points lead with 297, just one ahead of Kenseth — both have six top-10 finishes this season, but neither has a win.

Carl Edwards, who placed 13th, is third in the points standings (278), followed by Earnhardt Jr. (271) and Johnson (270).

Joey Logano, who won at Texas the week before, led the first 37 laps but had tire trouble late and finished 35th. He dropped four spots to eighth in the points standing, but has the win to fall back on when it comes to the Chase standings.

Logano is one of six drivers seeking a second win this season, along with Kurt Busch (Martinsville), Kyle Busch (Fontana), Brad Keselowski (Las Vegas), Edwards (Bristol) and Earnhardt Jr. (Daytona).

Drivers with one win through the first 26 races, and a top-30 ranking in the points standings, could also potentially qualify for the Chase.

After the eighth race of NASCAR’s regular season, here is how the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup standings look:

Pos. Driver Chase berth
1. Kevin Harvick Winner: Phoenix, Darlington
2. Carl Edwards Winner: Bristol
3. Dale Earnhardt Jr. Winner: Daytona
4. Kyle Busch Winner: Fontana
5. Brad Keselowski Winner: Las Vegas
6. Joey Logano Winner: Texas
7. Kurt Busch Winner: Martinsville
8. Jeff Gordon Points leader
9. Matt Kenseth 2nd in points
10. Jimmie Johnson 5th in points
11. Ryan Newman 9th in points
12. Austin Dillon 10th in points
13. Greg Biffle 11th in points
14. Tony Stewart 12th in points
15. Brian Vickers 13th in points
16. Kyle Larson 14th in points


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Two-tire pit stop had Johnson on verge of victory

RELATED: Full race results | Series standings

DARLINGTON, S.C. — The caution flag giveth and the caution flag taketh away.

Jimmie Johnson, chasing race-leader Kevin Harvick with the laps winding down in Saturday night’s Bojangles’ Southern 500, used a two-tire pit stop under a late yellow flag to grab the lead and seemingly set the stage for a surprising comeback on the difficult 1.366-mile track.

But a pair of subsequent yellow flags pushed the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race into overtime, and gave the speedy Harvick just enough of an opportunity to race his way back to the front.

It was a green-yellow, green-white-checkered finish that extended the series’ eighth race of the season an additional seven laps. A race ending that didn’t exactly unfold — it was more like an explosion.
 
"We had to gamble to kind of take a shot at getting a win," Johnson said after the third-place finish, "and Chad (Knaus, crew chief) played it right. We were in the right position, but just got two cautions there at the end and that kept us from getting to Victory Lane."
 
Johnson said he had no qualms about the two-tire call — it was the right decision under the circumstances.
 
"Things were really going our way there when we took two tires and got the restart under control and had a good lead there," he said of a Lap 363 restart. "Then the caution came out and I knew that (being) on two tires, we were probably in big trouble — the 4 (of Harvick) had worked his way up through there. … It seemed like the fastest car all night long."
 
Given the way his race began, it was something of a surprise to find Johnson contending for the win, if that can ever be said of a team that seemingly wins with ease. Early handling issues left both Johnson and Knaus in a state of uncertainty, unsure what changes to make to the No. 48 Chevrolet as Johnson attempted to maneuver his way through the field from his 26th-place starting spot.
 
By Lap 120, however, the six-time champion was inside the top 10.
 
Johnson called it a "solid performance," in spite of the end result.
 
"We struggled the first run or two of the race, but we got the car turning for me and came to life and really did it the old‑fashioned way and kind of drove up through the field before the last pit stop," he said.
 
Although winless this season, Johnson’s results have been admirable enough — Saturday night’s finish was his fifth top-10 and third top-five. He’s fifth in points heading into the season’s first break.
 
"For us it’s just unloading closer," he said when asked about issues that might be addressed during the off-week. "We seem to find a way come race time to get a good finish and honestly have a shot to win some races.
 
"But showing up at the track a little bit closer is key for us. We’re really just trying to get a grasp on these (new) rules, and we go home with what we’ve learned from a previous race, bring a new mousetrap, and unfortunately we’ve had to continue to work on it each week. That’s really our goal is to show up closer."

 
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Get all the info you need for the Bojangles’ Southern 500

RELATED: Race lineup | Pit stall assignments | Series standings

What: 65th annual Bojangles’ Southern 500
Where
: Darlington Raceway
When
: Saturday, April 12
TV/Radio
: FOX Sports; MRN
Distance
: 367 laps; 501.3 miles
Time
: 6:30 p.m. ET

Pit road speed: 45 mph
Caution car speed
: 50 mph

On the front row
1. Kevin Harvick, Stewart-Haas Racing No. 4 Chevrolet (183.479 mph)
2. Joey Logano, Team Penske No. 22 Ford (183.049 mph)

Failed to qualify
David Reutimann, Front Row Motorsports No. 35 Ford

Eight for eight: Harvick became the eighth different pole winner through eight races. It is his seventh pole in 474 races.

Fastest in practice
First practice: Kevin Harvick, Stewart-Haas Racing No. 4 Chevrolet (177.665 mph)
Final practice: Ryan Newman, Richard Childress Racing No. 31 Chevrolet (179.167 mph)

Too Tough to Tame? Two drivers, rookies Austin Dillon and Kyle Larson, earned their first "Darlington stripe" Friday, bouncing off the wall during the opening practice. Dillon’s car was repaired; Larson was forced to go to a backup.

 It’s crowded out here: The 1951 Cup race at Darlington, won by Herb Thomas, featured a field of 82 cars.

Week-off blues: "We’ve sucked at Richmond lately. Is that where we show back up to after vacation? Great." — Six-time Cup champion Jimmie Johnson

Defending Bojangles’ Southern 500 Champion
Matt Kenseth, Joe Gibbs Racing No. 20 Toyota

Former Darlington winners in field
Jeff Gordon (7), Jimmie Johnson (3), Greg Biffle (2), Kyle Busch (1), Denny Hamlin (1), Matt Kenseth (1)

Fantasy sleeper
Tony Stewart. With top-10 finishes in three of his last four events, we have to pay close attention to ‘Smoke’ for this week’s race. The No. 14 team has been solid the last month. This past week’s pole position and 10th-place finish at Texas were one of the few highlights in 2014. Stewart and the SHR team should have no problem keeping their momentum at Darlington tonight.

It’s not too late to play NASCAR Fantasy Live

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Dale Earnhardt Jr. on his JR Motorsports rookie: ‘I like to call him the New Elvis’

RELATED: Full race results | Series standings

DARLINGTON, S.C. — It took a mere seven days, but Chase Elliott has already made a great leap forward. Last week, he did the unlikely. Friday night, he did the impossible.

The NASCAR phenom continued to break new ground, this time at perhaps the most challenging track the series has to offer. Mired in sixth place on a final restart with two laps remaining, the 18-year-old Elliott made a series of aggressive moves to get back to the lead, and then made jaws drop across South Carolina cotton country by becoming the youngest driver ever to win a NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Darlington Raceway.

And how he did it will have them talking in barbecue shacks from Manning to Myrtle Beach. The son of Bill Elliott — who earned his Million Dollar Bill nickname here in 1985 — Chase found the sparest of openings off the final restart and pounced, wedging his way past one NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver after another and within sight of leader Elliott Sadler, who had taken two tires on the final stop. Elliott didn’t bump Sadler, but he didn’t need to — the No. 11 car was loose and wiggling, allowing the JR Motorsports rookie to squeeze by and seize his second consecutive victory.

But the level of amazement that accompanied Elliott’s victory Friday night far exceeded that of even his breakthrough a week earlier at Texas Motor Speedway. With its odd layout and up-against-the-wall racing groove, Darlington has for ages been the domain of more established drivers, even in NASCAR’s No. 2 series. Entering Friday, the last full-time Nationwide driver to win at Darlington was Brian Vickers back in 2003, when the track had two NASCAR events and one was on Labor Day weekend. Every Nationwide winner since had been a moonlighting Sprint Cup driver, just as it had been years earlier when the likes of Harry Gant, Darrell Waltrip and Dale Earnhardt would step down and clean up.

So all the odds favored one of the Sprint Cup drivers lined up between Sadler and Elliott on that final restart — Kyle Larson, Kyle Busch, Matt Kenseth or Kevin Harvick — celebrating in Victory Lane. Elliott defied it all, passing one after another in the two laps remaining, and in the process becoming just the fourth driver to win his national series debut at Darlington — joining inaugural Southern 500 champion Johnny Mantz in 1950, Hall of Famer Herb Thomas in 1951 and Dick Rathmann in 1952.

"Nothing really rattles him," said his car owner, Dale Earnhardt Jr. "When it came down to the end there and it was time to really get after it, he had his composure and did what he needed to do and made it work. That’s going to be tough to contend with for many years."

Particularly if he continues to race as assertively as he did Friday night. There wasn’t much of a gap between Kenseth and Harvick on the backstretch after the final restart, and it wasn’t open for very long. But Elliott pounced on it, nudging his way past the two Daytona 500 winners and somehow shooting up to second as the cars approached the white flag.

"There was a little bit of an opening," Elliott said. "I think Matt was on the bottom, and we had a pretty good run and I was pretty committed. If he was going to slide up in front, he had about .0001 seconds to do it, or the hole wasn’t going to be there. Again, I was pretty well committed at that point to try to roll the top. That was the only option I had to win the race."

We’ve seen aggression from Elliott before — everyone remembers how he won his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series event — but Friday night he competed almost fearlessly, whether it was going door-to-door with Larson earlier in the event or slinging his way past established Sprint Cup stars at the end. Speed plus nerve are a potent combination, as Elliott showed under the lights at NASCAR’s older major speedway.

"It’s surprising to see that he makes those moves and his instincts are correct," Earnhardt said. "There’s some guys that get indecisive because they’ve never been there, and they don’t know whether the car can do it, and they don’t know whether they need to do it. You can see guys get indecisive in those situations, and he just seems to be able to pull the trigger and drive it in there. He’d got a lot of confidence in his car to be able to do those things."

To Elliott, it was just what he had to do to win the race.

"It was one of those situations where you come down to the last two laps of the race, and you have a choice to make whether you want to win the race or give somebody a break," he said. "I don’t think anybody’s going to give somebody a break, as far as letting somebody in line at the end of a race like that. So I feel like I made the same decision anybody else would have in that situation."

The last man standing between Elliott and Victory Lane was Sadler, who on two tires was barely holding on.

"I was so loose anyway," Sadler said. "And when I was coming down the hill coming down Turn 2, I was trying to stay in it, because I knew he was coming on four tires. I just got really loose and about wrecked. I actually thought I was going to spin to the inside. I actually closed my eyes for a minute. Chase did a good job of staying in the gas and getting on the outside of me. Once he got on the outside of me going into (Turn) 3, I knew it was going to be tough to hold him off."

It was, and a celebration like nothing old Darlington Raceway has ever seen — and this track, opened in 1950, has seen just about everything — began to unfold. Earnhardt knew Elliott was comfortable on slick tracks like Darlington from the younger driver’s super late model days on similar venues. And he knew Elliott had the demeanor, having seen the unflappable manner in which his driver has handled all his sudden success.

"His personality, I like to call him the New Elvis," Earnhardt said. "He’s the full package, man. He just has it all. The sky’s the limit with that kid."

And just wait until that kid actually grows up. "He ain’t even focusing on racing 100 percent. He’s still in school," Earnhardt added. "Wait until he graduates, he’s going to be real trouble for those boys."

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