New, improved windshields keep drivers safer, don’t affect vision

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Ever had a rock kicked up by a car in front of you impact the windshield of your car? Scares the heck out of you, doesn’t it?

Imagine the object impacting your wind screen weighing more than a pound and traveling at, oh, 200 mph or so.

That’s what NASCAR drivers face every time out — an unwelcome passenger could at any moment climb aboard through the windshield, and depending on the angle, could do more than that.

"I grew up racing on dirt," said Tyler Reddick, who drives the No. 19 Ford for Brad Keselowski Racing in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. "I’m not even used to having a windshield. On dirt, you see a lot of stuff flying into the car with you, like brake rotors and other parts, and even dirt clods big enough to break your bones."

NASCAR, with the introduction of the Generation-6 car for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series last year, also upgraded the Lexan windshields in the top division along with all the other changes. This year, it expanded the use of the new, thicker material into the NASCAR Nationwide Series and Truck Series.

Lexan is a polycarbonate, which means it is layered and compressed into a single sheet with more tensile strength than regular glass. Think of it as clear plywood.

The old windshields were comprised of Lexan and about a quarter-inch thick. That’s enough for good structural integrity, both from aerodynamic forces and objects striking it, but NASCAR thought it could do better.

Enter NASCAR safety guru Tom Gideon and a pneumatic cannon, full cans of soda and a bunch of machined metal slugs.

Gideon, who for years was on the cutting edge of automotive safety while at General Motors, used the cannon (which uses compressed air to accelerate projectiles) to pulverize windshields until the proper recipe was reached.

Instead of the single-piece plastic Lexan windshield, NASCAR’s new laminate shields are built in two stages.

The old shields were .236 inches of Lexan. The new one takes .118-inch slabs of Lexan and separates them with a polymer film. Heat them up and press them together to form the chemical bond, and you have a much stronger piece that is just 30-thousandths of an inch thicker than the old one.

According to the website www.buildingspeed.org, the film is about as thick as eight "really good quality heavy-duty trash bag" plies.

Gideon, the technician’s technician, set up the testing by first building frames for the windshields and setting them up at various angles. A single sheet of Mylar tear-off was applied to both test windshields.

Once the metrics were arranged, he unlimbered his test cannon at the NASCAR R&D Center in Concord, N.C., and started hurling full cans of soda at both the old and new windshields. None penetrated either shield, but the existing windshield did fracture.

One problem with the soda cans was that once they hit, they tended to spew their contents all over the place.

 Once that test was over, Gideon brought out the heavy ammo.

Slugs made of bar steel, 2.5 inches long and weighing nearly a pound (0.86 pounds, to be exact), were fired at the old windshield with somewhat predictable results. Designed to simulate a car part traveling at up to 200 mph, they arrived with nearly 1,150 foot-pounds of kinetic energy and some of them got through.

Once they penetrated, the slugs were still traveling at 110 feet per second, according to a report by the Society of Automotive Engineers, and that translates to 161.6 foot-pounds of energy. That’s enough to ruin anyone’s day, even though the energy was reduced more than seven times.

The same shot at the new windshield did not penetrate, a fact that Reddick appreciates.

"I’ve seen a lot of guys get hit with stuff, and that can trouble you a little bit," he said. "This new windshield doesn’t let anything through. At only about five-hundredths of an inch in thickness, that’s amazing."

"NASCAR is always looking to make the trucks safer and they really did with this," he added. "You never want to have anything in the truck with you."

Any piece of plastic — tough, stable plastic like a windshield — is subjected to conditions on the race track. Grit, trash and bits of stuff that accumulate will hit it. That can result in some pitting, and if you’re racing at Phoenix or Las Vegas or Sonoma, you can add sand-blasting as well.

When you thicken up a piece of polycarbonate and add a flexible film, it can cause the optics to suffer. There is a point of reduced benefit, in other words.

According to SAE’s report on the tests, "acceptable optical clarity becomes increasingly more difficult to achieve as material thickness increases."

Reddick says that he has not noticed any difference in the vision from his seat, and that’s the only one that matters.

"I don’t see a big difference, to tell the truth," he said. "Of course, I haven’t really driven anywhere there’s been sand yet, but I don’t think it’s going to be a problem."

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Crew chief Brad Parrott discusses what it takes to win at Vegas

Editor’s note: Brad Parrott, a 19-time winner in NASCAR national series competition, has joined NASCAR.com as a guest writer for the 2014 season. Here is his first-person analysis ahead of Sunday’s Kobalt 400 for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series at Las Vegas Motor Speedway:

What happens in Vegas might stay in Vegas for most. But for NASCAR crew chiefs, what they learn in Vegas can forecast success in plenty of different locations.

NASCAR has a test day scheduled on Thursday, so that gives the teams an extra day to run their race setup all day. Then on Friday, they can concentrate on nothing but qualifying runs. This past weekend at Phoenix, they had to run their race setups early because no one knew if the weather was going to wash out practice on Saturday or not.

The qualifying format, which expands to three rounds this weekend, is going to force crew chiefs to be very strategic in terms of knowing how many laps you can run. A fast car in the top 12 is going to go out and make one solid run in that first 30 minutes. I don’t see anybody going out for their second run in that first session and landing in the top 12.

It’s drastically different than Phoenix, where you ran two or three laps to get your fastest lap. Jamie McMurray went out on his third run at Phoenix and moved into the top 12 and then actually got higher up in qualifying because he had older tires. Vegas is all about running 200 mph down into the corners and the grip level is going to be there, but the tires will go away faster. It’s worn in so well now. The fast cars are going to go to the top.

You’re going to have drivers going out and making just one qualifying run because their heart can’t stand two. You’ll see everyone going all-out. It’s hard for a driver to make that many runs in a row doing nothing but mashing the gas and letting off, not even using a whole lot of brake. You may see more accidents in qualifying because that guy going out for his second or third attempt might not realize how much grip level that the tires have lost. 

New tires are always the key to being fast there, but again, you’ve got a different downforce package this year. It may help somebody that messed up their first lap to be able to go out and run another lap. 

I think the test that teams had in Charlotte last December is going to be another key to who’s fast in Vegas. The Stewart-Haas Racing cars were strong then; the Chip Ganassi Racing cars were also strong — those guys will have a slight advantage going into Vegas, but you have a full day of testing for other teams to catch up. 

There’s a lot of items that are going to be thrown out on the table, a lot of engineers set up, a lot of work. Instead of being in the casino Thursday night, they’re going to be sitting down at their hotels rooms and going over data to bring back to their team on Friday morning.

Leading into Saturday, it’s going to be a crapshoot as far as who can get their car handling the best. A lot of the springs they ran at Phoenix, they’ll also run at Vegas because that keeps the car on the ground and gives them max downforce.

The wind really plays havoc in Vegas. It really depends where the storms are on the West Coast. We’ve had a 20- to 30-mph wind blowing into Turn 3 at Vegas on some days. With the new package these days, the wind does pick up the cars and toss them around a little more. Everything will go as planned as long as the temperatures are right and the weather is right. 

Ultimately, a lot of the race weekend will come down to who comes out of this Thursday test the best. Some of these guys will know where they are based off their Charlotte test in December. As you might expect, the teams that have put the most time in over the winter will rise to the top. 

In terms of favorites, Dale Earnhardt Jr. — with a win and a second-place right off the bat, combined with the way he finished last season — he’ll carry that momentum into Vegas. The whole Hendrick organization has the momentum on their side — their gas gauge is reading "full" right now. 

Ten years ago, Las Vegas might’ve been loaded with distractions for the drivers because every single driver didn’t have a motorhome. Every driver who will finish in the top 20 Sunday, their motorhome is at the race track to keep them out of the casinos. They’ll be going down to The Strip for autograph sessions and everything, but as far as the true gamblers in our sport, that was 10 years ago. Now drivers know their concentration level’s got to be not on blackjack, not on roulette, but on four springs, four shocks and air pressures on their race cars. 

It’s an adult playground, for sure. But for our drivers, it’s a business trip.

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Sadler heads to Las Vegas third in the standings

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After finishing runner-up in the NASCAR Nationwide Series standings in 2011 and ‘12, Elliott Sadler ran most of 2013 outside of the championship conversation, ultimately finishing fourth.

This season, after only two races and with the series headed to Las Vegas for Saturday’s Boyd Gaming 300 (4:15 p.m. ET on ESPN2), Sadler is third in the series standings, six points behind leader Regan Smith.

In the season-opening race at Daytona, the Virginia native finished fifth after starting in the same position. The following week at Phoenix, Sadler posted a sixth-place finish from a starting position of sixth 

Sadler has run in seven Nationwide races in Vegas, finishing a personal-best third in 2012, one of three top 10s he has at the track. Outside of his first series start at the track, he has never finished lower than 14th. In the 2013 race, he placed fifth. His average finishing position is a respectable 12.1. Also, in 12 starts in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series at the 1.5-mile speedway, Sadler has one top-10 finish (sixth in 2004).

"The biggest thing for Las Vegas is maintaining speed all the way around the track," said Sadler, whose car will be sponsored by longtime Joe Gibbs Racing partner Interstate Batteries. "At Las Vegas, you have bumps in the center of [turns] one and two and then bumps off (turn) four, so I think you fight trying to keep the car turning and working through the bumps because it upsets the car a lot." 

Sadler returns to the No. 11 Toyota for the second consecutive season, and he’s confident the stability he has in 2014 will pay dividends. 

"There was quite a bit of a learning curve we were dealing with last year for me with a new team, new manufacturer … just getting used to everybody and everything," Sadler said. "This year, everything is the same. It’s been probably five or six years since I’ve been able to say that, but this year everyone is the same – same crew chief, same guys working on the car."

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Six-time Sprint Cup Series series champion has four victories at Las Vegas

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By the end of Sunday’s KOBALT 400 (3 p.m. ET on FOX) at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, don’t be surprised if a familiar face is front-and-center.
 
That would be Jimmie Johnson.
 
When NASCAR revamped the criteria to qualify for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup during the offseason — all but guaranteeing a spot in the playoff format to race winners — analysts and fans alike assumed Johnson would be one of the drivers to punch a ticket to the postseason.

Many believe that Johnson will lock up a spot for the Chase sooner than later – and Las Vegas is the perfect track to do so. Five times, Johnson has logged his first win of a season during the first three races. The latest Johnson has gone in a season before winning was in 2003 when he won both the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race and the Coca-Cola 600 on consecutive weekends in late May at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
 
Johnson and his team, and the rest of the series, arrive in Las Vegas Thursday for testing. The No. 48 KOBALT Chevrolet team in particular is looking forward to getting in the additional track time at a 1.5-mile speedway; intermediate tracks such as LVMS are peppered throughout the schedule.
 
"We didn’t participate in the test sessions that took place at Charlotte on the 2014 package," Johnson said. "We knew it would hurt us a little bit at the start of the year and there’s a little bit of that there. So, as you can imagine we are really looking forward to the test."
 
For Johnson and Knaus there is a heightened commitment to win Sunday because the race’s sponsor, KOBALT Tools, is also the primary sponsor for the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet in Vegas.
 
After the first two races of 2014 in which he has posted fifth- and sixth-place finishes and 100-plus driver ratings, the six-time champion heads to Vegas where he has a series-high four victories. Three of those victories came in three consecutive seasons (2005-07), with a fourth trip to Victory Lane in 2010.
 
In the 2006 race, Johnson led only the last lap to beat Matt Kenseth to the finish by 0.045 seconds, the closest margin of victory in series history at Las Vegas. In last year’s race, Johnson finished sixth after starting third and leading 66 laps. Johnson and Kenseth are the only two drivers to have led laps in 10 series events at LVMS.
 
Without a doubt, the "Diamond in the Desert" is one of Johnson’s most dominant tracks. Over the past nine NASCAR Sprint Cup races in Vegas, the California driver sits in the top five of most loop data categories. He ranks first in eight of them: driver rating (112.3), average finish (9.0), average running position (9.6), laps led (408), fastest laps (316), green flag speed (170.622 mph), speed in traffic (169.603 mph) and fastest early in runs (172.901 mph).   

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Count down the worst hands dealt in NASCAR history ahead of Las Vegas weekend

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She can be a fickle mistress, that Lady Luck.

Nowhere is that more known than in Las Vegas, the city hosting the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series at the palatial 1.5-mile speedway north of town this weekend. The denizens of Sin City are more than familiar with a bad card from the dealer, a horse that pulls up in the stretch run, a roll of the dice coming up snake eyes. It’s a town where luck — or the concept of it — is as much a part of the atmosphere as the dry desert air or the neon glow at night.

And so it can be in motorsports, where events occasionally hinge on the whims of an engine cylinder, that piece of debris in the racing groove, or things that go bump in the car. Luck is as much a part of racing as the Sunoco signs on either end of pit road, sometimes as much a determining factor as a driver’s skill behind the wheel. Some don’t believe it in, preferring the much more rational notion that everything has a cause, likely rooted in human error. Yet the prospect of luck raises its head every time ignition switches are flipped.

From a NASCAR perspective, luck has become embedded in the lore. The sport’s history is rife with tales of tires, engines or other circumstances gone awry that conspired to keep a car out of Victory Lane. There is no kind of luck but bad luck, some will tell you, and in NASCAR that often seems the case. So to borrow a Vegas phrase on this race weekend of showgirls and slot machines, here are NASCAR’s top 10 bad beats.

Jeb Burton still trying to piece together full-time ride after TSM fallout

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Jeb Burton, who had a championship-caliber ride pulled from beneath him on the eve of the 2014 season, will continue his association with ThorSport Racing in the upcoming NASCAR Camping World Truck Series event at Martinsville Speedway.

ThorSport announced Thursday that Burton would drive the team’s No. 13 entry at Martinsville. The Sandusky, Ohio-based organization signed Burton prior to Speedweeks after the Virginia native lost his ride with Turner Scott Motorsports because a sponsor defaulted on payment. Burton’s entire program was shut down as a result.

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ThorSport, which won the Truck Series championship last season with driver Matt Crafton, put Burton in its No. 13 ride for the season opener at Daytona International Speedway, where the 21-year-old finished seventh. Burton — son of former Daytona 500 champion Ward Burton, and nephew of veteran racer Jeff Burton — stands fifth in points heading into the next scheduled race at Martinsville, a track close to his family’s roots.

"Martinsville is a special place to me, whether it was racing a late model stock car, making my first start in the Truck Series and for sure, winning that first pole last year," Burton said. "That race track has meant a lot to my career, and the fan support my entire family has gotten there has been really special to not only myself, but also my dad and my uncle, too."

ThorSport driver Johnny Sauter won last spring’s event at Martinsville, while Burton won the pole and led 154 laps before finishing third. ThorSport is still seeking sponsorship for Burton’s ride.

"We were really impressed with Jeb, his ability to mesh with the team and the way he worked his way through that first race and had a respectable finish, which isn’t easy at Daytona," ThorSport team manager David Pepper said. "We hope we can continue to build on the excitement Jeb and our team created at Daytona, because we really need to get more support to continue racing this Tundra. At this point, we know Jeb will be driving our No. 13 Toyota and crew chief Dennis Connor will be leading his team. We’re working extra hard to get something to put on the side of that truck."

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Stefanyshyn: Performance at Las Vegas is first step in process

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LAS VEGAS — The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series teams participating in Thursday’s four-hour test from 3-7 p.m. ET at Las Vegas Motor Speedway are not only weighing their chances for Sunday’s race there, but also exploring their odds for the longer season at the type of 1.5-mile track that dominates the schedule.

This weekend marks the first time NASCAR’s tech team will see if its 2014 intermediate track rules package looks to be a winning combination. The test and Sunday’s Kobalt 400 will give NASCAR its first full deck to play with in terms of assessing the chassis and aerodynamic changes to the cars on the style of track and in the sort of conditions they were designed to impact most.

But, NASCAR Vice President for Innovation and Racing Development Gene Stefanyshyn cautioned, don’t expect the payout until the series has visited at least three of the intermediate tracks for which this setup is designed.

"What we want to do now since Las Vegas is our first intermediate track, we wanted to give them some time to get comfortable with that package," Stefanyshyn said. "That’s basically what the testing is about. This chassis package at higher speeds provides more stability and that’s where you get the benefit. So Phoenix last week was a bit of a peek into it, but because of the nature of that track, it didn’t really get us the full picture as will Las Vegas.

"But we shouldn’t hang any conclusions on one race. We need to get at least three races under our belt, let the teams get dialed in. It is a fairly significant change for them, and there is a lot of learning for the teams. We need to watch carefully but not jump prematurely and draw a lot of conclusions with minimal data points and understanding. There is a learning curve effect here and people need to get the learning curve and stabilize, then we’re in a better position."

Although Cup teams tested in December at the Charlotte 1.5-mile oval, the final rules package came later and was a culmination of what was learned at that Charlotte test along with input from teams and drivers. Stefanyshyn said his group tried five different combinations in the Charlotte test and "came up with this one from there."

The biggest changes to the Gen-6 cars for 2014 were aerodynamically and to the chassis, which essentially had its ride-height rule relaxed. That allows teams to use the same springs in the race that they do in inspection.

"The springs in the front of the car were more for inspection than for racing before,’" Stefanyshyn said. "A lot of effort and energy went into spring work for inspection purposes and had little value for the racing on track. We essentially said, all right guys, why don’t you set up your spring package for how you want to race.

"What that means is they’ve gone to stiffer springs. What I think will happen … when they get at higher speeds the cars will be more stable, therefore the drivers will have more confidence and the theory is they’ll drive closer together."

Stefanyshyn said NASCAR has been happy with the cars’ performance at the first two races. This intermediate package, however, isn’t used on the Daytona and Talladega superspeedways and Phoenix’s 1-miler didn’t showcase the potential either because the low speeds never gave the new aero design a chance to affect things.

Kevin Harvick‘s dominating Sunday at Phoenix was more a combination of two variables than an indictment on the car’s real potential, Stefanyshyn said. The second through 10th place cars at Phoenix were tightly grouped and their finishes decided by smaller fractions of a second.

"It’s a strong track for Harvick, he’s always done well there and they did seem to demonstrate in Charlotte in December that their team had this chassis package figured out, they seemed to have chassis changes figured out early on," Stefanyshyn said.

It is a glimpse of what to expect this week at Las Vegas, and at the 2-mile Fontana, Calif., track and then again at the 1.5-mile Texas Motor Speedway high banks.

"What we’ll probably see, is the aero changes are essentially the same for everybody so there isn’t a lot of room for the teams to play around in there," Stefanyshyn said. "That piece is mostly the drivers finding the limit of the aero and getting comfortable driving at that limit."

NASCAR’s tech department has its eye on the big prize. And even then, Stefanyshyn says, the big jackpot will likely be next season when NASCAR’s plans to tweak the cars again in its effort to further facilitate the kind of close, exciting racing for which the sport is famous.

"Going into 2015 we’ll press harder on the aerodynamics and see if we can make bigger changes and also work on the engine and tire area," he said. "We’ll determine how this 2014 package is going and if we’re right and the stars align, it could be everything is wonderful with the aero package we won’t necessarily make changes to 2015 if we don’t think they’re needed.

"We have to start working now with an eye that if we find more improvements we’ll get them in time for 2015."

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Kevin Harvick fastest, SHR teammate Danica Patrick fifth-best in four-hour session

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Pos Car Driver Team Time Speed Lap # # Laps -Fastest -Next
1 4 Kevin Harvick Jimmy John’s Chevrolet 28.399 190.148 42 42 —.— —.—
2 3 Austin Dillon # Cheerios Chevrolet 28.490 189.540 55 56 -0.091 -0.091
3 21 Trevor Bayne(i) Motorcraft/Quick Lane Tire & Auto Center Ford 28.629 188.620 34 38 -0.230 -0.139
4 31 Ryan Newman Caterpillar Chevrolet 28.662 188.403 41 43 -0.263 -0.033
5 10 Danica Patrick Aspen Dental Chevrolet 28.686 188.245 33 35 -0.287 -0.024
6 26 Cole Whitt # Speed Stick GEAR Toyota 28.705 188.121 7 17 -0.306 -0.019
7 47 AJ Allmendinger Kingsford Charcoal Chevrolet 28.728 187.970 29 29 -0.329 -0.023
8 15 Clint Bowyer 5-hour Energy Toyota 28.752 187.813 58 58 -0.353 -0.024
9 66 Jeff Burton Let’s Go Places Toyota 28.897 186.871 29 29 -0.498 -0.145
10 20 Matt Kenseth Dollar General Toyota 28.988 186.284 42 47 -0.589 -0.091
11 98 Josh Wise Ambient Edge HVAC Chevrolet 29.002 186.194 18 18 -0.603 -0.014
12 95 Michael McDowell WRL General Contractors Ford 29.008 186.156 13 47 -0.609 -0.006
13 27 P.Menard/ M.Crafton(i) Quaker State/Menards Chevrolet 29.016 186.104 35 67 -0.617 -0.008
14 22 Joey Logano Shell Pennzoil Ford 29.022 186.066 80 113 -0.623 -0.006
15 55 Brian Vickers Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota 29.067 185.778 16 35 -0.668 -0.045
16 41 Kurt Busch Haas Automation Chevrolet 29.106 185.529 39 39 -0.707 -0.039
17 2 Brad Keselowski Miller Lite Ford 29.138 185.325 32 59 -0.739 -0.032
18 48 Jimmie Johnson Kobalt Tools Chevrolet 29.144 185.287 34 42 -0.745 -0.006
19 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Mountain Dew Kickstart Chevrolet 29.146 185.274 50 63 -0.747 -0.002
20 1 Jamie McMurray Cessna/Bad Boy Buggies Chevrolet 29.150 185.249 57 77 -0.751 -0.004
21 5 Kasey Kahne Farmers Insurance Chevrolet 29.159 185.192 59 63 -0.760 -0.009
22 9 Marcos Ambrose DeWalt Ford 29.174 185.096 36 46 -0.775 -0.015
23 18 Kyle Busch M&M’s Toyota 29.190 184.995 29 73 -0.791 -0.016
24 42 Kyle Larson # Target Chevrolet 29.204 184.906 95 99 -0.805 -0.014
25 13 Casey Mears GEICO Chevrolet 29.206 184.894 41 41 -0.807 -0.002
26 78 Martin Truex Jr. Furniture Row Chevrolet 29.229 184.748 39 49 -0.830 -0.023
27 99 Carl Edwards Aflac Ford 29.260 184.552 34 39 -0.861 -0.031
28 24 Jeff Gordon Axalta Chevrolet 29.262 184.540 25 42 -0.863 -0.002
29 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Zest Ford 29.315 184.206 34 48 -0.916 -0.053
30 14 Tony Stewart Mobil 1/Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet 29.326 184.137 32 42 -0.927 -0.011
31 43 Aric Almirola Farmland Ford 29.349 183.993 28 34 -0.950 -0.023
32 30 Parker Kligerman # Aria Hotels/Black Clover Toyota 29.371 183.855 19 37 -0.972 -0.022
33 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Ground Toyota 29.424 183.524 35 35 -1.025 -0.053
34 16 Greg Biffle Red Cross Ford 29.478 183.187 30 36 -1.079 -0.054
35 35 Blake Koch(i) MDS Transport Ford 29.500 183.051 7 13 -1.101 -0.022
36 33 Timmy Hill LittleJoesAutos.com Chevrolet 29.549 182.747 24 24 -1.150 -0.049
37 77 Dave Blaney Ford 29.564 182.655 10 13 -1.165 -0.015
38 32 Travis Kvapil Ask More-Get More Ford 29.614 182.346 10 19 -1.215 -0.050
39 87 Joe Nemechek(i) Morris-Hardwick-Schneider/Smart Ben Toyota 29.645 182.156 8 18 -1.246 -0.031
40 83 Ryan Truex # Borla Exhaust Toyota 29.727 181.653 45 55 -1.328 -0.082
41 51 Justin Allgaier # Brandt Professional Agriculture Chevrolet 29.885 180.693 27 37 -1.486 -0.158
42 34 David Ragan Taco Bell Ford 29.964 180.216 15 32 -1.565 -0.079
43 38 David Gilliland Love’s Travel Stops Ford 29.996 180.024 11 28 -1.597 -0.032
44 7 Michael Annett # Pilot/Flying J Chevrolet 30.023 179.862 19 31 -1.624 -0.027
45 23 Alex Bowman # Dr.Pepper Toyota 30.050 179.700 13 61 -1.651 -0.027
46 40 Landon Cassill(i) Chevrolet 30.057 179.659 18 19 -1.658 -0.007
47 36 Reed Sorenson Chevrolet 30.386 177.713 6 8 -1.987 -0.329
48 44 JJ Yeley Phoenix Warehouse of NJ/CA Chevrolet 30.956 174.441 5 5 -2.557 -0.570

Best 10-consecutive lap average

Pos Car Driver From Lap To Lap Avg Speed
1 27 P.Menard/ M.Crafton(i) 35 44 184.371
2 4 Kevin Harvick 27 36 184.134
3 1 Jamie McMurray 68 77 183.915
4 5 Kasey Kahne 47 56 183.789
5 42 Kyle Larson # 83 92 183.765
6 22 Joey Logano 86 95 183.314
7 18 Kyle Busch 60 69 182.863
8 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. 22 31 182.022
9 95 Michael McDowell 32 41 178.245

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Jimmie Johnson tops list of playoff-clinching contenders, including Tony Stewart

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Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kevin Harvick have punched their tickets to the 2014 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup with wins in the first two races of the season at Daytona International Speedway and Phoenix International Raceway.

Harvick and new crew chief Rodney Childers’ performance in December at the Charlotte Motor Speedway intermediate track test could bode well for back-to-back wins for the No. 4 car. Unlike Phoenix, where he’s the all-time winner and has the top Driver Rating, Harvick has yet to win a Las Vegas Motor Speedway NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race and is eighth on the Driver Rating list, one spot ahead of Earnhardt Jr. who is also winless in Cup at Las Vegas.

Looking forward to adding a third driver to the 16-person Chase Grid, here are some favorites who stand a good chance of winning their way into the Chase on Sunday at 3 p.m. ET on FOX.

Jimmie Johnson: With four wins, Johnson is atop the career Cup victories list at the track. He also has the best average finish among Cup drivers at 9.5 in 12 starts. His 112.3 Driver Rating is nearly nine points ahead of second place. Johnson hasn’t won at the venue since 2010, part of a current string of five consecutive races with a different winner at the track. The last time Johnson was in Las Vegas, he was celebrating his sixth NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship. A win this weekend would put him on the road to a record-tying seventh title.

Matt Kenseth: The defending race winner could put a stop to the recent trend of different victors by winning on Sunday before his birthday on Monday. His win last March gave him six top-five finishes, tied with Jeff Gordon, Mark Martin and Tony Stewart for most at the track. He’s led more laps in Las Vegas than any other Cup driver (513), and he’s had to move through the field to lead those laps. In his three wins at the racy facility, his best starting position is 17th.

Tony Stewart: If not for late-race pit strategy in 2011 that saw Carl Edwards’ two-tire stop beat Stewart out of the pits, Smoke would have two of the last three wins at this track. His date with Victory Lane was deferred a year, and it was his first at the track, first of his championship season and first with crew chief Steve Addington. On Sunday, Stewart seeks his first win with Chad Johnston. His 103.4 Driver Rating is third-best at Las Vegas with the third-fastest Average Green Flag Speed of 170.371 mph.

Carl Edwards: Three consecutive top-five finishes and two wins at Las Vegas make Edwards a contender for a win and a Chase spot. Along with Johnson, Edwards is the only active driver with a top-10 average finish at the facility (9.7). He’s sixth-best in Driver Rating (98.8) on the strength of being second-best in Green Flag Passes (571) and Quality Passes (344). Jack Roush also has more Vegas wins than any other Cup owner with seven trips to Victory Lane.

Kyle Busch: The Las Vegas native has five top-five finishes in 10 starts at his home track. He also has the best average start among all Cup drivers with 7.1. Busch’s one Cup win came from the Coors Light Pole in 2009. He’s one of five drivers with a Driver Rating over 100 at the track at 103.0.  Busch and Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Kenseth also will attempt to get their first NASCAR Nationwide Series win on Saturday.

Jeff Gordon: Starting a season with two top-five finishes for the first time in 17 years, Gordon brings momentum to a track where he’s second on the Driver Rating list at 103.8. He’s tied for most top-five finishes with six. Gordon’s lone Las Vegas win came during his last championship season, 2001.

Go deeper: Check out NASCAR’s Las Vegas Statistical Analysis for more stats and notes for Sunday’s Kobalt 400

Heading into the third 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. Kevin Harvick Winner: Phoenix
3. Brad Keselowski 2nd in points
4. Jeff Gordon 3rd in points
5. Jimmie Johnson 5th in points
6. Joey Logano 6th in points
7. Matt Kenseth 7th in points
8. Denny Hamlin 8th in points
9. Carl Edwards 9th in points
10. Greg Biffle 10th in points
11. Casey Mears 11th in points
12. Jamie McMurray 12th in points
13. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 13th in points
14. Kyle Busch 14th in points
15. Ryan Newman 15th in points
16. Austin Dillon 16th in points

MORE:

READ: Harvick dominates
in Phoenix win

WATCH: Patrick, Allgaier
initiate wreck

WATCH: Post-race
reactions from Phoenix

READ: Official Phoenix
Sprint Cup race results

Dale Jr. enjoying strong run of success to open 2014 Sprint Cup Series season

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LAS VEGAS — Dale Earnhardt Jr. said his No. 88 team has run as well as that of teammate Jimmie Johnson, but he doesn’t appear ready to stake his claim to being the best under the Hendrick Motorsports banner.
 
"I think the last 10 races we’ve ran, we’ve been on par with Jimmie," Earnhardt Jr., 39, said of the six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion. "He’s obviously been the lead horse in the organization for a long time in performance.
 
"I feel like in the last 10 races or so we’ve been on par with him if not a little bit better; obviously in the last 10 races or so we’ve been better, but just in results."

For the bulk of his Cup career, which began in earnest in 2002, Johnson has not only been the barometer by which Hendrick teams are measured, but by how all teams in the series are gauged.
 
In addition to his six championships, Johnson has posted multiple wins for 12 consecutive seasons, including a career-best 10 in 2007.
 
Earnhardt Jr., who joined the Hendrick organization in 2008, by his own admission has "sort of been all over the board, really."
 
"I think in the last seven years we’ve been at the bottom, we’ve been the third, second, first. We’ve been all over," he said Thursday before a four-hour test session for Cup teams at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.
 
"More often we’ve been in the back half of the four cars (at HMS). We haven’t performed as well as our other three teammates throughout 2009 and 2010, and 2011 we started getting a little bit better."
 
A strong finish to the 2013 season left Earnhardt Jr. fifth in points — his best showing with the team and his best overall since 2006 when he also finished fifth while driving for Dale Earnhardt Inc., the organization founded by his father.
 
A furious start to the 2014 season has seen him win once (he captured his second career Daytona 500 title) and finish second a week later at Phoenix International Raceway.
 
The Daytona 500 victory virtually assures him a spot in this year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup while the combined early-season results send him into this weekend’s Kobalt 400 at Las Vegas with the points lead.

Johnson, fifth and sixth in the opening two races, is fifth in the standings while teammates Jeff Gordon and Kasey Kahne sit third and 18th, respectively.
 
"You can’t sleep on Jimmie," Earnhardt Jr. warned. "He’ll get it going."

For Vegas, Dale Jr. will have spotter TJ Majors back this weekend after a one-race absence. Until Majors returns Saturday, Earnhardt will have some help from Regan Smith and former Cup champion Bill Elliott.

 
Much was expected when he made the move to Hendrick, yet it’s been a difficult stretch for the sport’s most popular driver. He went through two crew chiefs — cousin Tony Eury Jr. and Lance McGrew — before finally being paired with current crew chief Steve Letarte.
 
Wins have been rare — before this year’s 500 victory Earnhardt had only two victories with Hendrick — and consistency had been an issue. That no longer appears to be the case.
 
"It’s a very, very competitive group (at HMS)," Earnhardt Jr. said. "Kasey’s as fast as anybody. Jeff’s got four championships and tons of experience, and (he) wins races.
 
"They raise your game; it’s good to have people pushing you and they definitely push me to be better as a driver and I learn a lot from all three of them."
 
It’s been a busy couple of weeks for Earnhardt Jr., who said he hasn’t been home since winning at Daytona nearly two weeks ago. He’s joined the social media platform Twitter, taken a week-long media tour as part of his Daytona victory. On Wednesday night in Las Vegas, he took part in a sponsor event for Mountain Dew to unveil a new Kickstart paint scheme on his No. 88 Chevrolet.
 
"Everything seems to be (moving) in a positive direction right now," he said, "so (we’re) just having fun with that. The fans are really enjoying it. … I think that drives us and motivates us when people are happy with how you are doing and want to see you do well, and want to continue to see you do well.
 
" … I’m not working to get more popularity, I’m just trying to go win races and trying to have fun doing it."

MORE:

READ: Harvick dominates
in Phoenix win

WATCH: Patrick, Allgaier.
initiate wreck

WATCH: Post-race
reactions from Phoenix

READ: Official Phoenix
Sprint Cup race results