The Nationwide Series returns to action at Texas Motor Speedway

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Entry # Driver Owner Crew chief Manufacturer Sponsor

1

01

Landon Cassill

Johnny Davis

Dave Fuge

14 Chevrolet

G&K Services

2

2

Brian Scott

Richard Childress

Phil Gould

14 Chevrolet

Shore Lodge

3

3

Ty Dillon

Richard Childress

Danny Stockman Jr

14 Chevrolet

WESCO

4

4

Jeffrey Earnhardt

Gary Keller

Perry Mitchell

14 Chevrolet

Flex Seal

5

5

Kevin Harvick(i)

Rick Hendrick

Ernie Cope

14 Chevrolet

Hunt Brothers Pizza

6

6

Trevor Bayne

Jack Roush

Chad Norris

14 Ford

AdvoCare

7

7

Regan Smith

Kelley Earnhardt-Miller

Ryan Pemberton

14 Chevrolet

TaxSlayer.com

8

9

Chase Elliott

Dale Earnhardt Jr

Greg Ives

14 Chevrolet

NAPA AUTO PARTS

9

10

Blake Koch

Mark Smith

Todd Myers

14 Toyota

Supportmilitary.org

10

11

Elliott Sadler

J D Gibbs

Chris Gayle

14 Toyota

GameStop-Lego Hobbit

11

13

Matthew Carter

Derek White

Kevin Eagle

14 Toyota

TBA

12

14

Eric McClure

Mark Smith

Wes Ward

14 Toyota

Hefty Ultimate / Reynolds Wrap

13

16

Ryan Reed

Jack Roush

Seth Barbour

14 Ford

ADA Drive to Stop Diabetes presented by Lilly Diabetes

14

17

Tanner Berryhill

Adrian Berryhill

Benny Gordon

14 Dodge

BWP Bats

15

19

Mike Bliss

Mark Smith

Paul Clapprood

14 Toyota

TriStar Motorsports

16

20

Matt Kenseth(i)

Joe Gibbs

Kevin Kidd

14 Toyota

GameStop

17

22

Ryan Blaney(i)

Roger Penske

Jeremy Bullins

14 Ford

Discount Tire

18

23

Robert Richardson Jr

Robert Richardson Sr

George Church

14 Chevrolet

Willbros

19

24

Jason White

Jason Sciavicco

George White Jr

14 Toyota

Be/More Friday Night Tykes

20

28

Derek White

James Whitener

David Goulet

13 Dodge

TBA

21

31

Dylan Kwasniewski

Steve Turner

Patrick Tryson

14 Chevrolet

Rockstar

22

39

Ryan Sieg

Rod Sieg

Kevin Starland

14 Chevrolet

RSS Racing

23

40

Josh Wise(i)

Curtis Key Sr

Gary Showalter

14 Chevrolet

Curtis Key Plumbing

24

42

Kyle Larson(i)

Harry Scott Jr

Scott Zipadelli

14 Chevrolet

Cartwheel

25

43

Dakoda Armstrong

Richard Petty

Philippe Lopez

14 Ford

WinField

26

44

David Starr

Mark Smith

Greg Conner

14 Toyota

Whataburger

27

46

Matt Dibenedetto

Curtis Key Sr

TBA

14 Chevrolet

Curtis Key Plumbing

28

51

Jeremy Clements

Tony Clements

Ricky Pearson

14 Chevrolet

TBD

29

52

Joey Gase

Jimmy Means

Tim Brown

14 Chevrolet

BBB

30

54

Kyle Busch(i)

J D Gibbs

Adam Stevens

14 Toyota

Monster Energy

31

55

Jamie Dick

Jimmy Dick

William Henderson

14 Chevrolet

Viva Auto Group

32

60

Chris Buescher

Jack Roush

Scott Graves

14 Ford

Roush Performance Parts

33

62

Brendan Gaughan

Richard Childress

Shane Wilson

14 Chevrolet

South Point

34

70

Derrike Cope

Mary Louise Miller

Fred Wanke

14 Chevrolet

CharliesSoap.com

35

74

Mike Harmon

Mike Harmon

Gary Ritter

12 Dodge

TBA

36

76

Tommy Joe Martins

Tommy Joe Martins

Joey Jones

14 Ford

TBA

37

184

Chad Boat

Billy Boat

Dan Deeringhoff

14 Chevrolet

RedFest Music Festival Chevy

38

87

Joe Nemechek(i)

Andrea Nemechek

Steven Gray

14 Chevrolet

TBD

39

88

Dale Earnhardt Jr(i)

Dale Earnhardt Jr

Mike Bumgarner

14 Chevrolet

Ragu

40

93

J J Yeley

Gregg Mixon

Steve Plattenberger

13 Dodge

TBA

41

99

James Buescher

Robby Benton

Chris Rice

14 Toyota

Rheem

(i) equals ineligible for driver championship points

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The Sprint Cup Series’ seventh stop of the season is at Texas Motor Speedway

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Entry # Driver Owner Crew chief Manufacturer Sponsor

1

1

Jamie McMurray

Felix Sabates

Keith Rodden

14 Chevrolet

Bell Helicopter

2

2

Brad Keselowski

Roger Penske

Paul Wolfe

14 Ford

Miller Lite

3

3

Austin Dillon

Richard Childress

Gil Martin

14 Chevrolet

Dow

4

4

Kevin Harvick

Tony Stewart

Rodney Childers

14 Chevrolet

Jimmy John’s

5

5

Kasey Kahne

Linda Hendrick

Kenny Francis

14 Chevrolet

Time Warner Cable

6

7

Michael Annett

Tommy Baldwin

Kevin Manion

14 Chevrolet

Accell Construction

7

9

Marcos Ambrose

Richard Petty

Drew Blickensderfer

14 Ford

STANLEY

8

10

Danica Patrick

Tony Stewart

Tony Gibson

13 Chevrolet

GoDaddy/Get Found

9

11

Denny Hamlin

J D Gibbs

Darian Grubb

14 Toyota

FedEx Office

10

13

Casey Mears

Bob Germain

Bootie Barker III

14 Chevrolet

No. 13 GEICO Chevrolet SS

11

14

Tony Stewart

Margaret Haas

Chad Johnston

14 Chevrolet

Mobil 1/Bass Pro Shops

12

15

Clint Bowyer

Rob Kauffman

Brian Pattie

14 Toyota

Willie’s Duck Diner

13

16

Greg Biffle

Jack Roush

Matt Puccia

14 Ford

3M/Give Kids a Smile

14

17

Ricky Stenhouse Jr

John Henry

Michael Kelley

14 Ford

Ford Ecoboost

15

18

Kyle Busch

Joe Gibbs

Dave Rogers

14 Toyota

Interstate Batteries

16

20

Matt Kenseth

Joe Gibbs

Jason Ratcliff

14 Toyota

Dollar General

17

21

Trevor Bayne(i)

Glen Wood

Donnie Wingo

14 Ford

Motorcraft/Quick Lane Tire & Auto Center

18

22

Joey Logano

Walter Czarnecki

Todd Gordon

14 Ford

Shell Pennzoil / Hertz

19

23

Alex Bowman

Ron Devine

Dave Winston

14 Toyota

Dr. Pepper Toyota Camry

20

24

Jeff Gordon

Rick Hendrick

Alan Gustafson

14 Chevrolet

Axalta / Texas A&M School of Engineering

21

26

Cole Whitt

Anthony Marlowe

Randy Cox

13 Toyota

Speed Stick

22

27

Paul Menard

Richard Childress

Slugger Labbe

14 Chevrolet

Quaker State / Menards

23

30

Parker Kligerman

Brandon Davis

Steve Lane

13 Toyota

Swan Energy

24

31

Ryan Newman

Richard Childress

Luke Lambert

14 Chevrolet

Caterpillar

25

32

Travis Kvapil

Frank Stoddard Jr

Daniel Stillman

14 Ford

TBA

26

33

David Stremme

Joe Falk

Mark Hillman

14 Chevrolet

Little Joe’s Autos

27

34

David Ragan

Bob Jenkins

Jay Guy

14 Ford

TACO BELL

28

35

David Reutimann

Jerry Freeze

Todd Anderson

14 Ford

MDS TRANSPORT

29

36

Reed Sorenson

Allan Heinke

Todd Parrott

14 Chevrolet

TBA

30

38

David Gilliland

Brad Jenkins

Frank Kerr

14 Ford

Love’s Travel Stops

31

40

Landon Cassill(i)

Michael Hillman

Mike Abner

14 Chevrolet

Hillman Racing

32

41

Kurt Busch

Gene Haas

Daniel Knost

14 Chevrolet

Haas Automation

33

42

Kyle Larson

Chip Ganassi

Chris Heroy

14 Chevrolet

Target

34

43

Aric Almirola

Richard Petty

Trent Owens

14 Ford

Eckrich

35

47

A J Allmendinger

Tad Geschickter

Brian Burns

14 Chevrolet

Bush’s Beans

36

48

Jimmie Johnson

Jeff Gordon

Chad Knaus

14 Chevrolet

Lowes "Spring is Calling"

37

51

Justin Allgaier

Harry Scott Jr

Steve Addington

14 Chevrolet

BRANDT Professional Agriculture

38

55

Brian Vickers

Michael Waltrip

Billy Scott

14 Toyota

Aaron’s Dream Machine

39

66

Joe Nemechek(i)

Jay Robinson

Scott Eggleston

14 Toyota

Land Castle Title

40

77

Dave Blaney

Randy Humphrey

Peter Sospenzo

14 Ford

TBA

41

78

Martin Truex Jr

Barney Visser

Todd Berrier

14 Chevrolet

Furniture Row

42

83

Ryan Truex

Ron Devine

Dale Ferguson

14 Toyota

Borla Exhaust Toyota Camry

43

88

Dale Earnhardt Jr

Rick Hendrick

Steve Letarte

14 Chevrolet

National Guard

44

95

Michael McDowell

Bob Leavine

Wally Rogers

14 Ford

TWD

45

98

Josh Wise

Mike Curb

Gene Nead

13 Chevrolet

Phil Parsons Racing

46

99

Carl Edwards

Jack Roush

James Fennig

14 Ford

Fastenal

(i) equals ineligible for driver championship points

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

MORE: NASCAR TV schedule for Week of March 31-April 6
All times ET / BUY TICKETS / WEEKEND TRACK EVENTS

THURSDAY, APRIL 3:

ON TRACK
— 6-7 p.m. ET: NASCAR Nationwide Series practice (Get results)
— 7:30 p.m.-9 p.m. ET: NASCAR Nationwide Series final practice (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES
— 4:45 p.m. ET: Ty Dillon
— 5 p.m. ET: Trevor Bayne
— 5:15 p.m. ET: Matt Kenseth

FRIDAY, APRIL 4:

ON TRACK
— 4:10 p.m. ET: NASCAR Nationwide Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 6-7:50 p.m. ET: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)
— 8:30 p.m. ET: NASCAR Nationwide Series O’Reilly Auto Parts 300 (200 laps, 300 miles), ESPN2 coverage begins at 8 p.m. ET (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES
— 2:30 p.m. ET: Robin Pemberton, NASCAR vice president of competition and racing development and Greg Stucker, Goodyear director of race tire sales
— 3:30 p.m. ET: Joey Logano
— 4 p.m. ET: AJ Allmendinger
— 5:15 p.m. ET: Dale Earnhardt Jr.
— 5:30 p.m. ET: Jimmie Johnson
— 11 p.m. ET approx.: NNS post-race press conference

GARAGECAM PRESENTED BY MOBIL 1
— 5:30 p.m. ET, Sprint Cup Series (Watch live)

SATURDAY, APRIL 5:

ON TRACK
— 10:30 a.m.-noon ET: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series final practice, FOX Sports 1 (Get results)

– 3:10 p.m. ET: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 2 (Get results)

PRESS CONFERENCES
— 1 p.m. ET: Jeff Gordon
— 4:45 p.m. ET approx.: Post-Sprint Cup Series qualifying press conference

MONDAY, APRIL 7:

ON TRACK
— Noon ET: NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Duck Commander 500 (334 laps, 501 miles), FOX, coverage starts at 11:30 a.m. ET on FOX Sports 1 (Get results) RESCHEDULED FROM SUNDAY

PRESS CONFERENCES
— 3 p.m. ET approx.: NSCS post-race press conference

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Notebook: Bowyer’s frustrations boil over after late swoon

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — If you want to find a driver who isn’t particularly thrilled with Kurt Busch’s victory in Sunday’s STP 500 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Martinsville Speedway, look no farther than the No. 2 Team Penske garage stall.

Brad Keselowski felt he had a potential race-winning car, but his chances disappeared early in a pit-road collision with Busch.

Keselowski took his Ford to the garage and lost 31 laps while his crew made repairs. He finished 38th.

After the race, Keselowski questioned Busch’s judgment in driving aggressively on Lap 42 of 500.

"If you’re going to be aggressive, wreck yourself, don’t wreck me," Keselowski said. "I’ll remember that when it’s Lap 50 and he needs a break, and he’ll find his ass turned around in the wall. Just like he tore my car up.

"Once or twice when it happens, you start to go, ‘Hey, it happens,’ but when it happens repeatedly, you just realize who the person is who’s at fault, and you just got to make sure you show them you’re not going to take that, and I’m not going to take it, and I know the 2 team’s not going to take it."

Busch was surprised at the vehemence of Keselowski’s reaction to the incident, especially after Keselowski tried to exact payback on the track.

"Yeah, I can’t believe he overreacted and he’s as upset as he is," Busch said. "The 5 car (Kasey Kahne) was trying to pull into his box. Brad ran into the back of him. I steered right to go around Brad and then he clobbers our left-side door, and it’s like, OK, accidents happen on pit road. It’s congested.

"It’s not a place to race, because of all the pit crew guys down there and I didn’t think much of it, and then once we were back out running, he targeted us. He was aiming for us. He tried to flatten all four of my tires. That’s a no-fly zone. That’s a punk-ass move and he will get what he gets back when I decide to give it back."

UPDATE: Keselowski later said on Twitter that there would be no carryover at Texas and that he didn’t blame Kurt Busch for the pit road accident. He blamed him for not lifting and making it worse.

SOLID RUN FOR EARNHARDT

In all honesty, Dale Earnhardt Jr. finished as high as he could have hoped in Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Martinsville — third.

Earnhardt had the best seat in the house for the decisive battle between race winner Kurt Busch and runner-up Jimmie Johnson, but he didn’t have enough left to mount a challenge at the end of the race.

The key to Earnhardt’s success was self-restraint.

"You had to just discipline yourself to not use the throttle," said Earnhardt, who regained the series lead by nine points over second-place Matt Kenseth. "I think we’ll have a lot of fun looking at the throttle trace on some of the runs, because I was quarter-throttle at the max. …

"I was real patient all day, saving the left rear and just waiting till the end to see where we’d be. Inside 38 laps to go, I thought everybody was going to go like hell, and we all did and ended up running third."

As the laps wound down, Earnhardt’s car began to fade.

"I was losing my car pretty fast the last five laps, so I didn’t have anything else to get there (to Busch and Johnson)," he said. "I got a couple of lapped guys give the outside instead of the inside. That’s their right, but that cost me a little time and maybe some wear on my tires.

"I thought when we passed the 22 (Joey Logano, for third) we might be able to roll up there and get in the middle of the race for the win, but, no, those guys’ cars, they were pretty good."

MORE FRUSTRATION FOR BOWYER

With 50 laps left in Sunday’s STP 500, Clint Bowyer grabbed the lead, but a subsequent caution and a mistake on pit road proved his undoing.

After Carl Edwards spun on Lap 459 to bring out the 14th caution of the afternoon, Bowyer led the field to pit road. But a problem with the right rear tire led to a slow stop that mired the driver of the No. 15 Michael Waltrip Racing Toyota in 10th place for a restart on Lap 466.

“Disappointed,” Bowyer said. "We had the lead there at the end and had trouble in the pits and came out 10th. We just didn’t have enough laps to make it up.

"Just really disappointed. Felt we could have had the win there."

Last week at Auto Club Speedway, Bowyer was running second when he blew a left-rear tire with less than three laps left in the Auto Club 400. Bowyer is 17th in the series standings, with just one top 10 in six starts.

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Sauter earns second top-five finish of the season

RELATED: Full race results | Series standings

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — In fading sunlight, in the second race of a Sunday doubleheader at Martinsville Speedway, Matt Crafton beat polesitter Darrell Wallace Jr. to the start/finish line to win the Kroger 250 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series event under yellow because of a last-lap accident.

The reigning series champion sealed the victory on the second attempt at a green-white-checkered-flag finish in a race that went six laps past its scheduled distance at the 0.526-mile short track.

The win was Crafton’s first of the season, his first at Martinsville and his fourth in 318 career starts. To secure it, Crafton had to survive a series of late restarts that tested both his talent and his patience.

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Rookie Ben Kennedy ran third in a race that produced a record 17 lead changes. Johnny Sauter was fourth, followed by Ryan Blaney.

The Kroger 250, postponed from Saturday because of rain, was run after the conclusion of Sunday’s STP 500 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race.

Crafton’s No. 88 Toyota started out sluggish but benefited from successful adjustments throughout the race.

"At the beginning of the day, we were terrible," said Crafton, who led 47 laps. "I’m not going to lie. We were terrible. We were really, really tight from the center (of the corner) off. I didn’t think we were going to get it right there on those first two runs, but that’s just the way these guys never give up.

"We made track bar adjustment, another track bar adjustment, air pressure adjustment and finally we got that thing going."

Crafton grabbed the lead from Timothy Peters on Lap 208 and held the top spot until a caution for debris on the frontstretch slowed the field on Lap 225.

The lead-lap trucks already had visited pit road under caution on Lap 193 for the final stops, and all the contenders stayed out on the track under the Lap 225 yellow and took the green for a restart on Lap 232, with Crafton leading the field to the stripe.

Moments later, former series champion Ron Hornaday Jr., who had led 62 laps, slammed the wall between Turns 3 and 4 after contact from the Toyota of German Quiroga.

Crafton retained the lead after the subsequent restart, and after Peters and Wallace settled second place, with Peters prevailing on Lap 239, the No. 17 Toyota began chasing the No. 88 Tundra of the race leader.

Gray Gaulding’s spin off Turn 2 on Lap 243, however, caused the eighth caution and set up the overtime finish. Erik Jones spun on the backstretch after contact from Sauter to foil the first attempt at a green-white-checkered.

Note: NASCAR officials announced that suspension parts from the trucks of Darrell Wallace Jr., Ben Kennedy and Johnny Sauter would be taken to the NASCAR Research & Development Center in Concord, N.C., for further evaluation.

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Busch snaps 83-race winless streak with Martinsville victory

MORE: Full race results | Series standings

MARTINSVILLE, Va. – On Sunday at historic Martinsville Speedway, the driver known as "The Outlaw" committed highway robbery.
 
Bullying his way past six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson with 11 laps left in Sunday’s STP 500 at the .526-mile short track, Kurt Busch held on to edge Johnson by 0.263 seconds, denying Johnson a ninth Martinsville victory.
 
A Martinsville winner in 2002, Busch added a second victory at Sprint Cup’s oldest current venue to his resume. Busch’s 25th career victory was his first triumph in the No. 41 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet and the first victory as a Sprint Cup crew chief for Daniel Knost.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. finished third in a race that produce a record 33 lead changes and a sixth consecutive different winner to open the 2014 season. Joey Logano ran fourth, followed by Marcos Ambrose and Matt Kenseth.
 
Kevin Harvick, Aric Almirola, Clint Bowyer and Paul Menard completed the top 10.
 
Busch stole the victory from Johnson, despite an earlier collision with Brad Keselowski’s Ford that cost Keselowski 31 laps.
 
"We’re done," Busch said tersely after running into the back of the No. 2 Team Penske Ford, a car Busch drove for much of his career, to date.
 
That was far from the truth. Busch worked his way back into contention and restarted third on Lap 466 after caution for Carl Edwards spin in Turn 2. On Lap 473, he got the nose of his car under Johnson’s No. 48 Chevy and grabbed the lead.
 
Ten laps later, Johnson — who led 296 of the 500 laps — regained the top spot with a slight nudge to Busch’s bumper, but Johnson fought a loose handling condition the rest of the way and couldn’t keep the Stewart-Haas Chevy behind him.
 
Busch, like Johnson, was driving a Hendrick Motorsports chassis powered by a Hendrick engine.
 
"I didn’t know if we’d be able to do it," Busch said. "The 48 car is king here, him and the 24 (Jeff Gordon, who also has eight Martinsville wins). This is the old theory ‘If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em.’ I had a Hendrick chassis prepared by Stewart-Haas Racing, a Hendrick motor. So thanks to those guys and Chevrolet.
 
"I’ve been on this journey for a while, and every time you come to Martinsville, you kind of draw a line, like ‘There’s no way I’ll be able to challenge those Hendrick guys or be up in the top 10.’ These Stewart-Haas guys gave me a car to do it."
 
Johnson, who has been having uncharacteristic difficulty closing out races of late, did everything possible to keep Busch at bay.
 
"That’s all I had," Johnson said. "I ran the rear tires off the car. I flipped every switch and knob I could to get front brake and turn fans off to try to help bring the balance back. But it was still too loose to get the win."

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Moments that changed the course of the sixth race of the season

BUSCH BULLIES JOHNSON FOR THE WIN

On Sunday at historic Martinsville Speedway, the driver known as "The Outlaw" committed highway robbery.
 
Bullying his way past six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson with 10 laps left in Sunday’s STP 500 at the .526-mile short track, Kurt Busch held on to edge Johnson by 0.263 seconds, denying Johnson a ninth Martinsville victory.
 
A Martinsville winner in 2002, Busch added a second victory at Sprint Cup’s oldest current venue to his resume. Busch’s 25th career victory was his first triumph in the No. 41 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevrolet and the first victory as a Sprint Cup crew chief for Daniel Knost.

UPS


KESELOWSKI CAUGHT BY KURT ON PIT ROAD

Busch stole the victory from Johnson, despite an earlier collision on pit road with Brad Keselowski’s Ford that cost Keselowski 31 laps.

"Kurt just accelerated and drove through us," Keselowski said. "Absolutely drove through us."
 
“We’re done,” Busch said tersely after running into the back of the No. 2 Team Penske Ford, a car Busch drove for much of his career, to date.
 
That was far from the truth. Busch worked his way back into contention and restarted third on Lap 466 after caution for Carl Edwards spin in Turn 2. On Lap 473, he got the nose of his car under Johnson’s No. 48 Chevy and grabbed the lead.

MCMURRAY’S DAY ENDS EARLY AFTER DALE JR. SPIN

Running for seventh place at Lap 199, Dale Earnhardt Jr. got into Jamie McMurray in Turn 2 to bring out the sixth caution of the race.

"He (Dale Earnhardt, Jr.) barely got into me and you hope that wouldn’t happen and he would get off of you, but he didn’t," McMurray said. "I went around and got into the wall pretty hard."

The contact spun the No. 1 car into the wall, ending a run that saw the car in the top 10 for most of the race after starting ninth. McMurray was able to get back on track, but the damage left him with a 42nd-place finish.
 
"There was a lap car holding up our pack. I thought the No. 88 would be a little more patient with me. I had gotten by him in lap traffic. Then he got on my inside. 

"When he got into me, it was like it couldn’t get off and spun me around and just got into the wall there."

The NASCAR Wire Service contributed to this report.

No. 1 driver seeking third top-10 of the season sees day end early

MORE: Full race results
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Running for seventh place at Lap 199, Dale Earnhardt Jr. got into Jamie McMurray in Turn 2 at Martinsville Speedway during the STP 500. It brought out the sixth caution of the race.

"He barely got into me and you hope that wouldn’t happen and he would get off of you, but he didn’t," McMurray said. "I went around and got into the wall pretty hard." 

The contact spun the No. 1 car into the wall, ending a run that saw the car in the top 10 for most of the race after starting ninth. McMurray was able to get back on track, but the damage left him with a 42nd-place finish.
 
"There was a lap car holding up our pack," McMurray said. "I thought the No. 88 would be a little more patient with me. I had gotten by him in lap traffic. Then he got on my inside. 

"When he got into me, it was like it couldn’t get off and spun me around and just got into the wall there."

McMurray had a season-best sixth-place finish last Sunday at Auto Club Speedway. It was his second top-10 finish of the season after notching a 10th-place result at Phoenix International Raceway in the second race of the year.

"Really unfortunate, had a good car, every race we’ve had good cars," McMurray said. "You just wish you weren’t racing for points because that is the hardest part to swallow is the points loss. It’s fun to run well, but that is what you will think about for the next five days."

McMurray has only led a lap in one race this season at Bristol Motor Speedway, where he had a 38th-place finish. That result was his previous worst finish of the season before finishing next-to-last on Sunday at Martinsville.

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‘The Outlaw’ becomes sixth winner in first six races

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)

A week after his brother’s win at Fontana, Kurt Busch joined the likely field in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup by winning the STP 500 at Martinsville Speedway on Sunday.

Busch wrestled the lead from six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson twice in the final 27 laps for the thrilling victory. Johnson was seeking his ninth win at Martinsville.

Stewart-Haas Racing has now won two of the first six Sprint Cup Series races of the season, including Kevin Harvick‘s victory at Phoenix.

Busch, 35, won for the 25th time in his Sprint Cup career and ended an 83-race winless streak.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. regained the points lead after placing third on Sunday. Earnhardt Jr. now has four top-five finishes this season, including his win in the season opener at Daytona.

Matt Kenseth is second in the standings, nine points behind Earnhardt Jr., followed by Carl Edwards, Jeff Gordon and Johnson. Of those four drivers, only Edwards has a victory this year (at Bristol).

Kyle Busch moved up a spot to sixth after placing 14th on Sunday, and Brad Keselowski, who won the race at Las Vegas, dropped three spots to seventh in the standings with his 38th-place finish at Martinsville.

If Kurt Busch, Kyle Busch, Edwards, Keselowski, Harvick or Earnhardt Jr. win at least one more time this season, they would be guaranteed a spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

Drivers with one win through the first 26 races must rank among the top 30 in the points standings to qualify for the Chase.

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

Pos. Driver Chase berth
1. Dale Earnhardt Jr. Winner: Daytona
2. Carl Edwards Winner: Bristol
3. Kyle Busch Winner: Fontana
4. Brad Keselowski Winner: Las Vegas
5. Kurt Busch Winner: Martinsville
6. Kevin Harvick Winner: Phoenix
7. Matt Kenseth 2nd in points
8. Jeff Gordon 4th in points
9. Jimmie Johnson 5th in points
10. Joey Logano 8th in points
11. Austin Dillon 9th in points
12. Ryan Newman 10th in points
13. Paul Menard 11th in points
14. Denny Hamlin 12th in points
15. Brian Vickers 13th in points
16. Marcos Ambrose 14th in points

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Peters, Quiroga exchange hard bumps after checkered flag

RELATED: Full race results | Series standings

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Two chaotic attempts at a green-white-checkered finish for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series seemed to be a fitting climax for a hectic day full of 750 — make that 756 — laps of racing at Martinsville Speedway. By the time the second race of the NASCAR doubleheader ended at dusk Sunday, a pair of teammates were just two of the drivers with burbling tempers amid the crumpled truck bodies.

Matt Crafton roared away to claim his cherished first grandfather clock trophy in the Kroger 250, but mayhem was stirring behind him at the checkered flag. German Quiroga barreled to a seventh-place finish, but used a power move at the expense of his Red Horse Racing teammate Timothy Peters in the final turn of the final lap of the nightcap.

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Peters expressed his displeasure by pushing Quiroga’s No. 77 Toyota toward the first-turn retaining wall. The two teammates exchanged more hard bumps on the backstretch before finally parking their damaged trucks.

"I don’t know what happened with Timothy," said Quiroga, a Mexico native in his second full season in the Truck Series. "He pushed me all the way against the wall (after the finish), and I wanted to make clear that we’re teammates. I even let one of my teammates go in front of me in the middle of the race, so I don’t get it. I think we’re going to fix that very easy."

For Peters, a 10-year veteran who claimed the first of his seven career Truck Series wins at Martinsville, the post-race actions were the culmination of an unfortunate series of events in the final two-lap shootout. Lined up second for the final restart in the less-preferred outside lane, Peters was pushed out of shape by eventual runner-up Darrell Wallace Jr. and kept losing spots in the traffic jam.

The final coming-together with Quiroga cost him a shot at his second straight top-five finish to open the season.

"He’s got a lot to learn," said Peters, who led a race-high six times for 49 laps but settled for sixth place. "I’ve been in this deal long enough that I need some respect and he’s definitely got a lot to learn. I don’t care if he’s my teammate or not, he’s going to respect me."

Peters wasn’t the only driver upset with Quiroga. Early leader Ron Hornaday Jr. collided with Quiroga early in the race, forcing the four-time series champ to rally from his late-race spin.

The two have a history of confrontation, with Quiroga claiming he owed Hornaday retaliation after their run-in last season at the series’ inaugural race at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park. But Quiroga said that Sunday’s contact was unintentional, relaying that to Hornaday when the two faced off in the garage after the race.

"Was that a payback, or what was it?" Hornaday asked.

"It wasn’t a payback," Quiroga said. "It’s just a race. … Whatever, Ron."

Quiroga, making just his third start at the 0.526-mile track, got sage advice from a crewmember after the dust settled: "It’s Martinsville, everybody leaves mad." But Quiroga seemed satisfied with the result, even though it took several tense late-race moments to achieve it.

"We were a little bit off at the start of the race, but we had the truck," he said. "I was coming pretty decent and they started pushing and hitting me, so I started defending myself. So what can I say? It’s tough. Everybody’s trying very hard. You can see wrecks everywhere, but at the end, it’s like you can’t let go. Everybody’s pushing everybody else, so it’s not like I’m going to let everybody go. … I just defended myself and we did the right calls."

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