MWR’s No. 55 to pay tribute to 2013 BCS national champions

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Brian Vickers‘ car will sport a college football-themed look this summer at Daytona International Speedway, carrying a Florida State BCS national championship commemorative paint scheme in the Coke Zero 400.

Michael Waltrip Racing’s No. 55 Toyota and Vickers’ driver uniform will be awash in the school’s traditional garnet and gold colors for the July 5 race, carrying a special championship logo on the hood. The car will be officially unveiled, accompanied by a video message from Vickers, at the Seminoles’ April 12 spring football intrasquad scrimmage.

"Everyone in America knows about Florida State’s tradition of success, especially in athletics," Vickers said in a team release. "Aaron’s and I really want to continue that tradition at Daytona in July and give Seminole fans a chance to see their car and colors celebrate in Victory Lane. I’m excited to be representing my home state on the car for Daytona. We’re hoping it will give us a ‘home field’ advantage we need."

It’s not the first time MWR has honored college champions with new-look cars. Vickers drove a Louisville-themed car last season at Kentucky Speedway to honor that school’s NCAA basketball championship in 2013. The previous year, team owner Michael Waltrip drove a No. 55 entry in blue and white to honor the University of Kentucky’s basketball title that season.

The Waltrip team has also paid tribute to Alabama and Auburn football national championships at Talladega Superspeedway four times since 2009.

Florida State defeated Auburn 34-31 on Jan. 6 to complete a perfect 14-0 season.

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Crew chief remains confident despite recent run of misfortune

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Seven NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races won by seven different drivers. And six-time Cup champion Jimmie Johnson is not among the winners.

Crew chief Chad Knaus isn’t overly concerned. He has seen this movie before.

"I think we’re doing pretty good," Knaus said Wednesday morning following a speaking engagement with the Hood Hargett Breakfast Club held at the NASCAR Hall of Fame. "I think we had a car capable of winning (at Texas). We obviously had a car capable of winning Martinsville — we just came up a little bit short.

"Fontana, we had a car capable of winning there. Bristol, I think we had a car capable of winning there. So short a couple of tire failures and weird things, I think we’d be OK."
 
Johnson is seventh in points as he and his team prepare to head to Darlington Raceway for this weekend’s Bojangle’s Southern 500. After opening the season with finishes of sixth or better in the first three races, Johnson finished 19th or worse in three of the next four. In spite of the finishes, he led 44 laps at Bristol and 104 at Auto Club Speedway — where a tire issue cost him the lead with less than 10 laps remaining.
 
At Texas, a large piece of metal punched a hole in the front of the Hendrick Motorsports No. 48 Chevrolet and damaged the windshield. Johnson struck the debris after teammate Dale Earnhardt Jr. clipped the grass just off the racing surface on the frontstretch, then shot across the track and made hard contact with the wall.
 
Johnson’s crew made repairs, but a cut tire eventually put him two laps down. Unable to get back on the lead lap, he finished 25th.
 
"We’ve seen debris get scattered about, but man that was a pretty big piece of metal," Knaus said of the Lap 13 incident. "It really wasn’t the windshield that created debris for us. That was a bad thing, but the windshield actually did exactly what it was supposed to do — it deflected whatever the debris was and we moved on.
 
"Our biggest problem was the big hole we had in the nose (of the car). Whatever put the hole in the nose was lodged inside the car. While Jimmie was running around out there, it fell out and that’s what cut the right rear tire. That’s why we lost two laps. Otherwise I think we would have been OK."
 
Johnson, whose 66 career wins is No. 2 among active drivers, is a three-time winner at Darlington. He finished fourth in the race a year ago. Knaus said he is looking forward to returning to the track, often called the most difficult on the schedule.
 
Cup teams will have one day to do all of their on-track preparation — with two practices scheduled for Friday before qualifying at 6:05 p.m. ET.
 
"I like Darlington. It’s a tough track, it really is," he said. "The schedule is even more difficult the way they’ve got it laid out, but I’m looking forward to it.
 
"It’s a very difficult race track, a very intense race track. Five hundred miles around that race track is extremely difficult. You don’t have an opportunity to relax and catch your breath. So it’s very taxing on the driver, but from the team’s standpoint, it’s pretty difficult, too."

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See what tough drivers make the list and what they did to get them there

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No question the track is a cranky old thing, to the point where so much about Darlington Raceway seems equal parts myth and reality. But it’s all quite genuine, those black marks on the otherwise red and white walls emblematic of a reputation that’s endured for half a century. Times change and drivers change, but the challenge presented by this most original of NASCAR layouts remains eternal.

We certainly witnessed that a year ago, in the most unforgiving race of the 2013 Sprint Cup season — one in which long green flag runs on that egg-shaped surface allowed only the strong to survive, and previewed the championship showdown between Matt Kenseth and Jimmie Johnson. Despite double-file restarts, wave arounds, free passes and all those other mechanisms designed to level the playing field, Darlington remains plenty capable of tilting it on its head.

That’s why Harold Brasington’s quirky track continues to stand out, because it continues to present one of the sport’s preeminent challenges. They call it too tough to tame, and it certainly can be. But Darlington isn’t the only thing in NASCAR to have developed something of a reputation due to its irascible nature.

There are plenty of competitors at NASCAR’s highest levels who have proven a handful in their own right, drivers who have been as tough to tame as that ribbon of asphalt in South Carolina cotton country.

You know who they are. Some of them have left stripes of the metaphorical variety on car owners or other competitors. Some of them have flaunted rules, others moved from team to team like a nomad, leaving burned bridges in their wake. There are some drivers who have proven every bit as unbridled as the track that on Saturday night will host NASCAR’s premier series for the 111th time, and here are the top 10.

10. Dale Earnhardt

Tame the Intimidator? Please. The notion in and of itself is laughable given that on the final weekend we ever saw him race, Dale Earnhardt put the bumper to Eddie Cheever Jr. in an IROC race to once again show that side of him that made the seven-time champion so loved and loathed all at once. Let’s be fair — Earnhardt was as dependable as bedrock for Richard Childress Racing, steered clear of off-track trouble, and provided just the kind of racing icon the sport needed in its formative years. But he wasn’t shy about voicing his opinion to NASCAR, and he raced by his own code. That wasn’t some kid rattling Terry Labonte’s cage in 1999 — it was a 48-year-old man. That was Earnhardt.

9. Kevin Harvick

Like his predecessor, Kevin Harvick was a rock for Richard Childress, bringing a large degree of stability to a team in a very difficult time. But it wasn’t always easy, and that’s putting it mildly. There were several times when it seemed Harvick and RCR were finished with one another, and somehow they patched things up again. Even after Harvick was parked for rough driving in one Camping World Truck Series race, or forced to apologize after berating Childress’ grandson in another. A headstrong driver and a headstrong owner made for a sometimes combustible combination. But as rough as it sometimes got, they kept it together for 13 seasons, because nothing was as bad as 2001.

8. Tony Stewart

These days, the three-time champion is a team co-owner who can close sponsorship deals on the strength of his name and reputation. But there were times when Tony Stewart tussled with other drivers and media members and even NASCAR, and was a complete handful who regularly tested the patience of former car owner Joe Gibbs. Age and responsibility have tempered Smoke somewhat, but this is still a guy who remains unapologetic about living and racing on his terms — as we witnessed last year with his insistence on competing in sprint-car events. It certainly helps that away form the track, the guy is a complete teddy bear. But in the garage area? Even now, don’t get in the dude’s way.

7. Jack Ingram

During the course of a career that would ultimately earn him a place in the NASCAR Hall of Fame, you simply did not mess with Jack Ingram on a short track. The tireless and dogged Ingram won two championships in what is now the Nationwide Series and three more titles its precursor, but he might have added a sixth crown had he not been suspended two races by NASCAR for ramming another driver in a race in Asheville, N.C., in 1986. Even on the night he was inducted into the NASCAR Hall, he ranted on reporters whom he believed gave drivers like Dick Trickle and Mark Martin more credit. If that was a taste of what it was like to run afoul of the Iron Man, you certainly didn’t want to experience it on the track.

6. Kurt Busch

The 2004 champ seems to have found a degree of peace these days, thanks to his association with car owner Gene Haas and work with the Armed Forces Foundation. But early on, Busch could be incorrigible with the best of them, particularly over the radio when his car wasn’t performing well. He had some epic run-ins with reporters, including one in 2011 that led to a fine from NASCAR and preceded his split with Penske. Another a year later earned him a suspension. Although a cleaner racer than he gets credit for, he’s never backed down from other drivers, as his feud with Jimmy Spencer would attest. Busch has shown a great deal of humility during his climb back to the sport’s elite, although his history still lingers in the minds of many.

5. Jimmy Spencer

You can’t have one side of one of the more infamous driver feuds in recent history without having the other, right? Often chomping on his omnipresent cigar, Jimmy Spencer gave off an air that some found ingratiating and others saw as arrogant. His nickname, "Mr. Excitement," stemmed from the fact that he wasn’t shy about putting the fender to someone, a characteristic that made him even more polarizing. Although Spencer enjoyed a long stretch with Travis Carter, he bounced around early in his career, and later on lost a ride with Morgan-McClure following a run-in with police. Through it all, Spencer was always candid and quotable, which made him a natural for a second career in television — even if he always did it his way.

4. Darrell Waltrip

These days he is one of the sport’s foremost ambassadors, a three-time champion and Hall of Fame member who has become NASCAR’s best-known analyst on television. Back in the day, though, Darrell Waltrip could redefine the concept of stubborn. In his younger years he took plenty of flak from veterans who didn’t think he showed enough respect to the more seasoned drivers on the circuit. He left one team over a contract dispute, said he was "getting off an old nag and onto a thoroughbred" after moving on to another. His brash comments made him a favorite of reporters but made enemies in the garage, one reason Cale Yarborough labeled him "Jaws." You think ‘ol D.W. is controversial how? You have no idea.

3. Curtis Turner

For all their flaws, some of these rascals are downright lovable. Such is the case with Curtis Turner, whose antics off the race track were more sensational than his exploits between the guardrails. He made fortunes, squandered them, and then made them again. He could be wanted by the Federal Aviation Administration and the Highway Patrol at the same time. He once plowed into Fred Lorenzen at Darlington, destroying his own car, because he was unhappy with how his rival had raced him. He was once banned by NASCAR for trying to form a union. "I don’t really think I’d be happy if I wasn’t in some sort of trouble," he said in the biography "Full Throttle" written by Robert Edelstein. He never had difficulty finding it.

2. Jacques Villeneuve

He may have started only 20 national-series events in NASCAR, but Jacques Villeneuve certainly left a mark. The former Formula One champion and Indianapolis 500 winner wasn’t shy about trading paint — or taking someone out. His Sprint Cup debut at Talladega in 2007 drew howls of protest from regular drivers in the midst of title contention. His full-time hopes were permanently derailed the next year when he triggered a crash in a Daytona qualifying race. And then there was Road America in 2012, when he took out Danica Patrick on the final lap of a Nationwide race. In open-wheel racing, Villeneuve’s record is impeccable — all of which makes his wrecking-ball stock-car exploits so disappointing.

1. Robby Gordon

The off-road star won three premier-series events — one on an oval — over the course of his NASCAR career. But Gordon was also a handful, clashing with owners, officials, and other drivers on a regular basis. His 2003 win at Sonoma came after he passed Harvick — his teammate at the time — under yellow. "A cheap move," Harvick called it. Gordon burned through plenty of car owners before hanging out his own shingle. And then there was his infamous tantrum in a Nationwide event at Montreal, where he punted Marcos Ambrose, refused to serve a penalty, and was disqualified even though he crossed the line first. That didn’t stop him from doing a victory burnout, though. Robby Gordon was one of a kind. Thankfully.

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Tuesday, April 8
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub re-air, FOX Sports 2
 
Wednesday, April 9                                                         
2:30 a.m., NASCAR Now, ESPN2
Noon, NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network

6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub re-air, FOX Sports 2

Thursday, April 10
2:30 a.m., NASCAR Now, ESPN2
Noon, NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1
6 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub re-air, FOX Sports 2
 
Friday, April 11                                                 
2 a.m., NASCAR Now, ESPN2
3 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Race at Texas re-air, FOX Sports 1
11 a.m., FOX Sports 1 on 1: Jimmie Johnson re-air, FOX Sports 1   
11:30 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Practice, FOX Sports 1
1 p.m., NASCAR Live, FOX Sports 1
2 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Final Practice,FOX Sports 1
4 p.m., NASCAR Nationwide Qualifying, FOX Sports 2
6 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Qualifying, FOX Sports 1
7:30 p.m., NASCAR Nationwide Countdown, ESPN2
8 p.m., NASCAR Nationwide Race at Darlington, ESPN2
 
Saturday, April 12
3 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Practice re-air, FOX Sports 1
3:30 a.m., NASCAR Nationwide Race at Darlington re-air, ESPN2
4:30 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Qualifying re-air, FOX Sports 1
5 p.m., NASCAR RaceDay, FOX Sports 2
6 p.m., TUDOR United SportsCar Championship Race at Long Beach, FOX Sports 1
6 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Pre-Race Show, FOX
6:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Race at Darlington, FOX
8 p.m., TUDOR United SportsCar Championship Post-Race Show, FOX Sports 1
8 p.m., How It’s Made: NASCAR Engines, Science Channel
11 p.m., How It’s Made: NASCAR Engines, Science Channel
              
Sunday, April 13
2 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Race at Darlington, FOX Deportes
2:30 a.m., NASCAR Victory Lane, FOX Sports 1
4 a.m., NASCAR Nationwide Race at Darlington re-air, ESPN Deportes

Monday, April 14
3 a.m., How It’s Made: NASCAR Engines, Science Channel

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With wins for Keselowski and Logano, Team Penske can concentrate on Chase

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FORT WORTH, Texas – With the depth of competition and height of talent in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, it’s really not too surprising that there have been seven different winners in the first seven races.


That Jimmie Johnson, Matt Kenseth, Jeff Gordon, Kasey Kahne and Denny Hamlin are not among the victors is a little perplexing, however. These are the drivers who have won the most in recent seasons, yet they are still looking for a win in the season when it means most.


And while there is a pervasive feeling of when, not if, for this marquee crew of serial winners, it’s interesting to see what already hoisting a trophy can mean strategically-speaking.

Team Penske’s Brad Keselowski, whose teammate Joey Logano won Monday at Texas Motor Speedway, didn’t mince words about the immediate and long-term impact of already having both Penske drivers essentially Chase qualified only two months into the schedule.


"It’s huge, absolutely huge," said Keselowski, who won at Las Vegas and trailed only Logano in laps led at Texas.


He smiled after the race Monday and suggested maybe his late race speeding penalty off pit road heading to a green-white-checkered final restart was a result of the his and/or the team’s change in mentality — the luxury of having secured an early season win.

"It’s all about stacking up wins now and that’s what we’re reaching for," Keselowski said, adding with a laugh. "Maybe we reached a little too aggressively today, but that’s the benefit of being in the position we’re in."

But he agreed that in the bigger picture having both drivers with victories fundamentally and enviably changes the way they go about business.

"This allows us to dedicate our approach to [season finale] Homestead and the Chase races," Keselowski explained. "We’re very fortunate we haven’t burned any of our team tests yet and now that we have both cars in the Chase we can just burn through those on Chase tracks so that’s a pretty healthy advantage.


"It puts us in a really great position."

The two-car Penske operation is the only team "all-in" in terms of likely spots in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup postseason.


The only other team with multiple winners in 2014 isn’t Hendrick Motorsports, Joe Gibbs Racing or Roush-Fenway Racing, as many might have guessed. 
It’s Stewart-Haas Racing, who despite all the extra challenges of adding a fourth team and having three new driver/crew chief pairings this year, has already gotten wins from both its newcomers, Kevin Harvick (Phoenix) and Kurt Busch (Martinsville.).


But with two cars in and two to go, SHR doesn’t have the same ability for a full shift in direction as Team Penske. It’s focus after winning twice is sharing that information to get at least one of their other two teams in the Chase – a goal team owner-driver Tony Stewart said this preseason he fully expected to meet.


For the winners so far, getting a victory isn’t just a feeling of joy and celebration but of relief and re-focus. The whole game has changed with the new elimination-style postseason format debuting this year.


Logano conceded Monday that his team had been a bit worried about how, when and where to use their team tests if he remained in the winless column for much longer.

"We were concerned enough to talk about it Saturday after practice for a while," Logano said. "It was definitely a concern, trying to plan out how we’re going to use these tests. Now that we’re in the Chase we can use these tests a little differently than what we were thinking.

"It’s big. The way you strategize to build the racecars, what you need to do for when it comes Chase time, it allows you to go the right direction and be able to really focus on later in the season at this point.


"I’m not saying we’re not going to work hard to win races later in the year.  Like [crew chief] Todd [Gordon] said, we need to run well and win some more races because you want to go into the Chase with momentum. As far as updating specs, stuff like that, we can start to focus on Chase stuff."

As the 23-year old Logano spoke he glanced over at his veteran crew chief Gordon, who is tasked with balancing strategy and tempering emotion – mindful that there are still 19 races to set the 16-driver Chase field.


"You can’t be stupid about it," Gordon said smiling briefly. "But it does open up your box to be a little bit more aggressive on how you call a race. You can be a little bit more aggressive on how you tune a race. It allows you to be a little more explorative.


"But we can’t get too far out of that box of what’s been successful for us. It allows us to be a little more aggressive and maybe try a few things. You don’t want to throw everything away and be reckless with it, but it does allow you to be a little more aggressive."

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Get a sneak peek at the new looks for this weekend’s NASCAR action

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SPRINT CUP SERIES PAINT SCHEMES | Entry List


Jamie McMurray will drive the No. 1 CESSNA/Beechcraft Chevrolet.

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Kasey Kahne will drive the No. 5 Great Clips Chevrolet.

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Denny Hamlin will drive the No. 11 Sport Clips Toyota.

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Greg Biffle will drive the No. 16 3M/Red Cross Ford.

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Alex Bowman will drive the No. 23 Dr. Pepper Toyota Camry.

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Paul Menard will drive the No. 27 Certain Teed/Menards Chevrolet.

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David Ragan will drive the No. 34 CSX Ford.

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David Gilliland will drive the No. 38 A&W All American Food Ford.

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Kyle Larson will drive the No. 42 Target Chevrolet.

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Aric Almirola will drive the No. 43 Fresh From Florida Ford.

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AJ Allmendinger will drive the No. 47 Clorox Chevrolet.

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Justin Allgaier will drive the No. 51 AWX Performance Plus Chevrolet.

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Carl Edwards will drive the No. 99 Ford EcoBoost Ford.

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Matt Kenseth will drive the No. 20 Game Stop Toyota.

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Joey Logano will drive the No. 22 Snap-On Ford.

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Chris Buescher will drive the No. 60 Mustang 50 Years Ford.

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James Buescher will drive the No. 99 RUUD Toyota.

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Bass Pro Shops returns to the ride where it started 16 years ago

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Austin Dillon’s Sunoco Rookie of the Year season with the No. 3’s return to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series will welcome a familiar Richard Childress Racing sponsor to the fold as a primary sponsor.

In the upcoming races at Talladega Superspeedway and Daytona International Speedway, Bass Pro Shops will adorn the Chevrolet SS with the famous slanted No. 3. The nation’s No. 1 outdoor retail leader began its association with RCR on Dale Earnhardt’s No. 3 in 1998, including a spot on the hood in that year’s NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race.

"All of us at Bass Pro Shops are excited about continuing our friendship and business relationship with our long-time friend Richard Childress and sponsoring Austin Dillon during his rookie season in the Sprint Cup Series," said Bass Pro Shops founder Johnny Morris. The No. 3 car is where we got our start so it’s great to see it back in action."

It’s not the first time that Dillon has run a Bass Pro Shops paint scheme in NASCAR. He won the 2011 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series title with the the company as a sponsor. His brother, Ty, has been sponsored by the company in the Camping World Truck Series and the NASCAR Nationwide Series.

"Johnny Morris and everyone at Bass Pro Shops have been alongside me for a majority of my racing accomplishments," said Dillon. "I have photos of a giant Bass Pro Shops logo on the hood of my first Bandolero car when I was just starting out racing."

"They’ve been featured on my dirt late model and Bass Pro Shops was the primary sponsor of my truck when we won the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Championship. I have countless memories of growing up hunting and fishing with Johnny and his son, John Paul. They are true friends so it means so much that they can be a part of my rookie season in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, especially at tracks like Talladega Superspeedway and Daytona International Speedway that have so much history with RCR."
 
Bass Pro Shops also serves as a major associate sponsor throughout the 2014 season, joining Dow, Cheerios, Realtree Outdoors, American Ethanol and the University of Northwestern Ohio as RCR supporters associated with the No. 3 Sprint Cup Series entry this season.

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Dale Jr. slips after Texas tangle; Do you agree? Show us your vote!

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First Four Out

Note: These rankings have been determined by a poll that included writers Kenny Bruce, Holly Cain, David Caraviello and Zack Albert, and video host Alan Cavanna. The H/L marks a driver’s highest and lowest rank during the 2014 season.

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A statistical look ahead to this weekend’s Sprint Cup Series race at Darlington

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (April 8, 2014) – Below is a look at some of the top statistical performers at Darlington Raceway in Darlington, South Carolina going into the Bojangles’ Southern 500 on April 12.

DARLINGTON-SPECIFIC STATISTICS
 
Greg Biffle (No. 16 3M/ Red Cross Ford)
·         Two wins, two top fives, five top 10s; two poles
·         Average finish of 13.9
·         Average Running Position of 10.3, fifth-best
·         Driver Rating of 107.5, third-best
·         Series-high 286 Fastest Laps Run
·         452 Green Flag Passes, 10th-most
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 159.878 mph, fifth-fastest
·         2,441 Laps in the Top 15 (73.7%), fifth-most
·         291 Quality Passes (passes of cars in the top 15 under green), third-most
 
Kyle Busch (No. 18 M&M’s Toyota)
·         One win, two top fives, five top 10s
·         Average finish of 14.4
·         Average Running Position of 9.0, third-best
·         Driver Rating of 106.2, fifth-best
·         230 Fastest Laps Run, third-most
·         492 Green Flag Passes, fifth-most
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 159.996 mph, third-fastest
·         2,790 Laps in the Top 15 (84.3%), second-most
·         Series-high 337 Quality Passes
 
Dale Earnhardt Jr. (No. 88 National Guard Chevrolet)
·         Three top fives, eight top 10s
·         Average finish of 14.9
·         Average Running Position of 12.2, eighth-best
·         Driver Rating of 91.4, 10th-best
·         547 Green Flag Passes, second-most
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 159.451 mph, 11th-fastest
·         2,277 Laps in the Top 15 (68.8%), eighth-most
·         273 Quality Passes, fifth-most
 
Carl Edwards (No. 99 Ford EcoBoost Ford)
·         Three top fives, seven top 10s
·         Average finish of 12.5
·         Average Running Position of 12.8, 10th-best
·         Driver Rating of 93.4, ninth-best
·         151 Fastest Laps Run, seventh-most
·         480 Green Flag Passes, seventh-most
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 159.593 mph, ninth-fastest
·         2,248 Laps in the Top 15 (67.9%), ninth-most
·         279 Quality Passes, fourth-most
 
Jeff Gordon (No. 24 Drive To End Hunger Chevrolet)
·         Seven wins, 19 top fives, 22 top 10s; three poles
·         Average finish of 11.5
·         Series-best Average Running Position of 8.1
·         Series-best Driver Rating of 111.8
·         194 Fastest Laps Run, fifth-most
·         Series-best Average Green Flag Speed of 160.130 mph
·         Series-high 2,982 Laps in the Top 15 (90.1%)
·         272 Quality Passes, sixth-most
 
Denny Hamlin (No. 11 Sport Clips Toyota)
·         One win, four top fives, seven top 10s
·         Average finish of 5.4
·         Average Running Position of 8.6, second-best
·         Driver Rating of 108.9, second-best
·         182 Fastest Laps Run, sixth-most
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 159.977 mph, fourth-fastest
·         2,488 Laps in the Top 15 (84.6%), fourth-most
·         266 Quality Passes, seventh-most
 
Jimmie Johnson (No. 48 KOBALT Tools Chevrolet)
·         Three wins, eight top fives, 11 top 10s
·         Average finish of 8.8
·         Average Running Position of 9.9, fourth-best
·         Driver Rating of 107.5, fourth-best
·         233 Fastest Laps Run, second-most
·         485 Green Flag Passes, sixth-most
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 160.069 mph, second-fastest
·         2,504 Laps in the Top 15 (75.6%), third-most
·         252 Quality Passes, eighth-most
 
Kasey Kahne (No. 5 Great Clips Chevrolet)
·         Three top fives, four top 10s; four poles
·         Average finish of 14.2
·         Average Running Position of 10.4, sixth-best
·         Driver Rating of 99.1, sixth-best
·         217 Fastest Laps Run, fourth-most
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 159.655 mph, eighth-fastest
·         2,318 Laps in the Top 15 (70.0%), seventh-most
 
Matt Kenseth (No. 20 Home Depot Husky Toyota)
·         One win, two top fives, nine top 10s; one pole
·         Average finish of 16.7
·         Average Running Position of 14.3, 12th-best
·         Driver Rating of 90.9, 11th-best
·         113 Fastest Laps Run, ninth-most
·         469 Green Flag Passes, eighth-most
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 159.346 mph, 12th-fastest
·         223 Quality Passes, 12th-most
 
Ryan Newman (No. 31 Caterpillar Chevrolet)
·         Seven top fives, 10 top 10s; one pole
·         Average finish of 12.3
·         Average Running Position of 11.6, seventh-best
·         Driver Rating of 95.8, seventh-best
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 159.708 mph, seventh-fastest
·         2,425 Laps in the Top 15 (73.3%), sixth-most
 
Tony Stewart (No. 14 Mobil 1/Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet)
·         Four top fives, 11 top 10s
·         Average finish of 12.0
·         Average Running Position of 13.9, 11th-best
·         Driver Rating of 89.6, 12th-best
·         105 Fastest Laps Run, 10th-most
·         Series-high 563 Green Flag Passes
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 159.535 mph, 10th-fastest
·         2,144 Laps in the Top 15 (64.8%), 11th-most
·         300 Quality Passes, second-most
 
Martin Truex Jr. (No. 78 Furniture Row Chevrolet)
·         One top five, three top 10s
·         Average finish of 11.4
·         Average Running Position of 12.4, ninth-best
·         Driver Rating of 94.8, eighth-best
·         125 Fastest Laps Run, eighth-most
·         510 Green Flag Passes, fourth-most
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 159.745 mph, sixth-fastest
·         250 Quality Passes, ninth-most
 
Darlington Raceway Data
Season Race #: 8 of 36 (04-12-14)
Track Size: 1.366-miles
Banking/Turns 1 & 2: 25 degrees
Banking/Turns 3 & 4: 23 degrees
Banking/Frontstretch: 6 degrees
Banking/Backstretch: 6 degrees
Frontstretch Length: 1,229 feet
Backstretch Length: 1,229 feet
Race Length: 367 laps / 501.3 miles
 
Top 10 Driver Ratings at Darlington
Jeff Gordon………………………… 111.8
Denny Hamlin………………………. 108.9
Greg Biffle………………………….. 107.5
Jimmie Johnson…………………… 107.5
Kyle Busch…………………………. 106.2
Kasey Kahne………………………… 99.1
Ryan Newman……………………….. 95.8
Martin Truex Jr.……………………… 94.8
Carl Edwards………………………… 93.4
Dale Earnhardt Jr.………………….. 91.4
Note: Driver Ratings compiled from 2005-2013 races (nine total) among active drivers at Darlington Raceway.
 
Qualifying/Race Data
2013 Coors Light pole winner:
Kurt Busch, Chevrolet
181.918 mph, 27.032 secs. 05-10-13
 
2013 race winner:
Matt Kenseth, Toyota
141.383 mph, (03:32:45), 05-11-13
 
Track qualifying record:
Kurt Busch, Chevrolet
181.918 mph, 27.032 secs. 05-10-13
 
Track race record:
Matt Kenseth, Toyota
141.383 mph, (03:32:45), 05-11-13
 
At Darlington Raceway:
History
·   Darlington Raceway was built as a 1.25-mile paved superspeedway in 1949-1950.
·  Darlington Raceway hosted the first 500-mile race in NASCAR history and the first on asphalt on Sept. 4, 1950. – won by Johnny Mantz.
·      The track was re-measured to 1.375 miles in 1953.
·   The track was re-configured to 1.366 miles following the spring race in 1970.
·       The track was repaved in 1995.
·       The 2005 race was the first Saturday night race at Darlington.
·       The track was repaved again prior to the 2008 season.
Notebook
·   There have been 110 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races at Darlington Raceway. The 1.366-mile track has hosted the fourth most NASCAR Sprint Cup Series points paying races.  
·      702 drivers have competed in at least one NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Darlington Raceway; 426 in more than one.
·       NASCAR Hall of Famer Richard Petty leads the series in starts at Darlington with 65. Jeff Gordon leads all active drivers with 33 starts; followed by Joe Nemechek with 27.
·       Curtis Turner won the inaugural Coors Light pole at Darlington in 1950 with a speed of 82.034 mph. 
·   47 drivers have Coors Light poles at Darlington, led by David Pearson with 12. Kasey Kahne leads all active drivers with four.
·    Nine drivers have won consecutive Coors Light poles at Darlington. David Pearson holds the record for most consecutive poles at Darlington with five (1975 – 1977).
·   Youngest Darlington pole winner: Kurt Busch (09/02/2001 – 23 years, 0 months, 29 days).
·     Oldest Darlington pole winner: David Pearson (09/06/1982 – 47 years, 8 months, 15 days).
·    46 different drivers have won at Darlington Raceway, led by David Pearson with 10. Jeff Gordon leads all active drivers with seven.
·    Youngest Darlington winner: Kyle Busch (05/10/2008 – 23 years, 0 months, 8 days).
·     Oldest Darlington winner: Harry Gant (09/01/1991 – 51 years, 7 months, 22 days).
·   Hendrick Motorsports has the most wins at Darlington in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series with 14.
·    11 different manufacturers have won in the NSCS at Darlington; led by Chevrolet with 40 victories; followed by Ford with 28.
·  19 of the 110 (17.2%) NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races at Darlington have been won from the Coors Light pole; the most recent was Dale Jarrett in 1997. NASCAR Hall of Famer David Pearson has won from the pole four times at Darlington – the series’ most. 
·   The Coors Light pole starting position is the most proficient starting position in the field, producing more winners (19) than any other starting position at Darlington. The outside front row (second-place) has produced the second most wins (17).  
·   36 of the 110 (32.7%) NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races at Darlington have been won from the front row: 19 from the pole and 17 from second-place.
·     95 of the 110 (86.3%) NASCAR Sprint Cup races at Darlington have been won from a top-10 starting position.
·   Six of the 110 (5.4%) NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races at Darlington have been won from a starting position outside the top 20.
·   The deepest in the field that a race winner has started at Darlington was 43rd by Johnny Mantz in 1950 – the inaugural NSCS event.
·     Buddy Baker and Richard Petty are tied for theseries most runner-up finishes at Darlington with eight each. Jeff Gordon leads all active drivers in second-place finishes at Darlington with four.
·        Richard Petty leads the series in top-five finishes at Darlington with 25. Jeff Gordon leads all active drivers with 19. 
·       Bill Elliott leads the series in top-10 finishes at Darlington with 35. Jeff Gordon leads all active drivers with 22.
·      Jeff Gordon leads all active drivers in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series in average starting position at Darlington with a 6.758.
·       Denny Hamlin leads all active drivers in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series in average finishing position at Darlington with a 5.375.
·      Two active NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers have an average finish in the top 10 at Darlington: Denny Hamlin (5.3) and Jimmie Johnson (8.8).  
·  13 drivers in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series have posted consecutive wins at Darlington; Dale Earnhardt (1989-1990)and Jeff Gordon (1995-1996)are tied for theseries lead in consecutive wins at Darlington with three each. 
·    All six active NASCAR Sprint Cup Series winners at Darlington Raceway participated in at least two or more races before visiting Victory Lane. Among active drivers, Kyle Busch won at Darlington in the fewest previous appearances (three).   
·       Matt Kenseth competed at Darlington Raceway 19 times before winning last season; the longest span of any the six active NASCAR Sprint Cup Series winners.
·      Joe Nemechek leads the series among active drivers with the most NASCAR Sprint Cup Series starts at Darlington without visiting Victory Lane at 27.
·     Since the advent of electronic scoring the closest margin of victory in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series at Darlington Raceway was the (03/16/2003) race won by Ricky Craven with a MOV of 0.002 second – the MOV is tied with the 2011 Talladega race as the closest finishes in the NSCS using electronic scoring. 
·     There have been three NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races resulting with a green-white-checkered finish at Darlington Raceway: 2005 (367/370), 2011 (367/370) and 2012 (367/368).
·    Eight of the 110 races at Darlington Raceway have been shortened due to weather conditions; the most recent was the fall race of 2000. 
·    Qualifying has been cancelled due to weather conditions in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series at Darlington Raceway five times; most recently was the fall race of 2004. 
·    Terry Labonte (09/04/1978) made his series debut at Darlington Raceway.
·   Ken Schrader (03/29/1987), Kurt Busch (09/02/2001) and Clint Bowyer (05/13/2007) posted their first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light poles at Darlington.   
·     Regan Smith (05/07/2011) and Terry Labonte (09/01/1980) posted their first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series wins at Darlington. 
·      Jeff Gordon leads all active drivers in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series in laps led at Darlington with 1,736 laps led in 33 starts.
·      Three female drivers have competed at Darlington Raceway in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series:
Driver
Starting Position
Finishing Position
Date
Race Name
Janet Guthrie
26
16
9/5/1977
Southern 500
Shawna Robinson
42
42
3/17/2002
Carolina Dodge Dealers 400
Danica Patrick
38
31
5/12/2012
Bojangles’ Southern 500
Danica Patrick
40
28
5/11/2013
Bojangles’ Southern 500
 
NASCAR in South Carolina
·         There have been 220 NASCAR Sprint Cup races among 10 tracks in South Carolina.
Track Name
City
NSCS
Darlington Raceway
Darlington
110
Columbia Speedway
Columbia
43
Greenville-Pickens Speedway
Greenville
29
Piedmont Interstate Fairgrounds
Spartanburg
22
Rambi Race Track
Myrtle Beach
9
Coastal Speedway
Myrtle Beach
2
Lancaster Speedway
Lancaster
2
Gamecock Speedway
Sumter
1
Hartsville Speedway
Hartsville
1
Newberry Speedway
Newberry
1
·     133 drivers in NASCAR national series history have their home state recorded as South Carolina.
·     11 drivers from South Carolina have won at least one race in NASCAR’s three national series; eight have won in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.
Driver
NSCS
NNS
NCWTS
David Pearson
105
1
0
Cale Yarborough
83
0
0
Rex White
28
0
0
Cotton Owens
9
0
0
Tiny Lund
5
0
0
James Hylton
2
0
0
Johnny Allen
1
0
0
Joe Eubanks
1
0
0
Larry Pearson
0
15
0
Jason Keller
0
10
0
Butch Lindley
0
6
0
 

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No. 48 team remains win-less after fighting through issues in Texas

RELATED: Knaus’ comments on win-less start | Play NASCAR Fantasy Live | Sign up for RaceView today

FORT WORTH, Texas — Dale Earnhardt Jr. didn’t see the edge where the Texas Motor Speedway asphalt gave way to the infield. And when Junior’s car drilled the grass, sending his No. 88 Chevrolet into the wall — and into flames — he wasn’t the only Hendrick Motorsports car affected.

The misfire also caught Jimmie Johnson‘s No. 48, spraying grime over the nose of his vehicle, denting the windshield and damaging the left front.

It was the final point that sent Johnson into the pits multiple times early in Monday’s Duck Commander 500 at Texas Motor Speedway in an effort to salvage his day. The six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion would finish 25th and two laps down.
 
"It’s kind of surreal what happened," Johnson said. "Junior hit the grass there and something off his car like a splitter or something just destroyed my windshield, and then something hit the nose of the car, too."
 
Crew chief Chad Knaus devised a strategy that got Johnson back into contention, albeit briefly. Needing to get the charred No. 88 off the track, the caution period lasted 11 laps (from 14-24). Knaus called for Johnson to come down pit road multiple times.
 
The team sent extra men over the wall to fix the damaged front with tape and Bondo, and Johnson sped down pit road every time — there were no other cars or crew members in his way after the first pit stop, and he was already 42nd in the race so the ensuing penalty didn’t affect him.
 
Over the scanner, Knaus asked Johnson if he could drive with the dented windshield — the damage would not affect his car in anyway.
 
"Yes, I just don’t want to eat it," Johnson replied.
 
He didn’t. The green flag dropped on Lap 25, and by Lap 34 Johnson was up to 25th place.
 
On Lap 39, however, Johnson blew a right rear tire that ruined his day for good.
 
"We were in a good position and were running decent lap times when the right rear blew," Johnson said. "I’m glad Junior is alright, and hats off to my guys. We played around with some strategy at the end. They never gave up."
 
The late-race attempts to get back on the lead lap were well conceived, but didn’t work out.
 
During a debris caution on Lap 255, Johnson took the wave around knowing he’d need to pit soon. If he had lucked out with a caution flag — and if the leaders all pitted to take tires, a likelihood due to Texas’ aging surface — Six-Time would have gained a lap and put himself in position to be the beneficiary on the next caution.
 
It was Johnson’s second finish outside the top 20 this season. Both came, in part, due to tire issues. He was leading the Auto Club 400 late before blowing a tire with seven laps to go.

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