Check out this weekend’s new looks presented by NASCAR ’14

SPRINT CUP SERIES PAINT SCHEMES | Entry list

Denny Hamlin will drive the No. 11 FedEx Freight Toyota.

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Greg Biffle will drive the No. 16 Meguiar’s Ford.

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Jeff Gordon will drive the No. 24 Axalta Chevrolet.

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David Ragan will drive the No. 34 Dockside Logistics Ford.

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David Gilliland will drive the No. 38 Long John Silver’s Ford.

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Carl Edwards will drive the No. 99 Kelloggs/Frosted Flakes Ford.

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Austin Dillon will drive the No. 3 Bad Boy Buggies/Realtree Chevrolet.

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Kasey Kahne will drive the No. 5 Farmers Insurance Chevrolet.

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Danica Patrick will drive the No. 10 GoDaddy-Get Found Chevrolet.

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Cole Whitt will drive the No. 26 Speed Stick Gear Toyota.

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Paul Menard will drive the No. 27 Richmond/Menards Chevrolet.

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Parker Kligerman will drive the No. 30 Swan Energy Toyota.

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Ryan Newman will drive the No. 31 Quicken Loans Billion Dollar Bracket Challenge Chevrolet.

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Landon Cassill will drive the No. 40 Hillman Racing Chevrolet.

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AJ Allmendinger will drive the No. 47 Bush’s Grillin’ Beans Chevrolet.

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Jimmie Johnson will drive the No. 48 Kobalt Tools Chevrolet.

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Justin Allgaier will drive the No. 51 SEM Products Chevrolet.

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Dale Earnhardt Jr. will drive the No. 88 National Guard Chevrolet.

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NATIONWIDE SERIES PAINT SCHEMES | Entry list

Ty Dillon will drive the No. 3 Yuengling Light Lager Chevrolet.

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Kevin Harvick will drive the No. 5 Armour Vienna Sausages Chevrolet.

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Matt Carter will drive the No. 13 Toyota.

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Matt Kenseth will drive the No. 20 GameStop Toyota.

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Ryan Blaney will drive the No. 22 Discount Tire/SKF Ford.

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Kelly Admiraal will drive the No. 29 Swan Rentals Toyota.

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Cale Conley will drive the No. 33 Okuma Chevrolet.

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Dakoda Armstrong will drive the No. 43 Fresh From Florida Ford.

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Team is concerned after stumbling out of the gate, but know there’s a lot of season left

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It’s only three races into the season.

And while Tony Stewart might be a little ticked, his Stewart-Haas Racing team a bit frustrated, it’s way too early for full-blown panic over what’s been mostly a hard knocks start for the organization. 

Of the four Stewart-Haas Racing drivers, team newcomer Kevin Harvick has a victory at Phoenix and leads the organization in the standings (14th) heading to Bristol, Tenn., this week while the three-time Cup champ Stewart sits well back, 27th in points. The team’s second 2014 addition, Kurt Busch, is ranked 28th and Sprint Cup Series sophomore Danica Patrick is 33rd.

Is the team concerned? Probably. Panicked? No way.

Between Harvick’s success, a new championship format that rewards a single win, and the team’s greatest intangible asset — the team owner side of Stewart — things are going to be OK.

For a while in Sunday’s Kobalt 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway — the first of 11 visits to 1.5-mile tracks — Harvick looked like he was going to at least be in position to back up his Phoenix win with another. He led twice for 23 laps in the No. 4 Jimmy John’s Chevy whose “Freaky Fast” logo has been the ultimate truth in advertising the past two weeks.

But a left front hub problem just before the 200-lap mark sent Harvick to the garage and relegated him to a 41st-place finish, 30 laps down.

After the race, team members from all four SHR teams were huddled together looking over Harvick’s car and then moving on to discuss the troubles Stewart’s famous No. 14 Mobil 1/Bass Pro Shops Chevy experienced.

A lot of head shaking and pointing at the cars ended with pats on the back and unmistakable, "We’ll get ‘em next week" looks. It was a full-on team effort and that’s exactly why Stewart, Harvick, Busch and Patrick can have confidence that the early struggles aren’t indicative of future potential.

"We’ve just got to keep doing what we are doing and everything will be fine with cars like that," said Harvick, who has unquestionably led the way for SHR thus far in 2014.

SHR Vice President for Competition Greg Zipadelli — crew chief on two of Stewart’s championship seasons at Joe Gibbs Racing — looked concerned while discussing the day’s outcome with his crew chiefs in the garage.

But he also cautioned about drawing conclusions only three weeks — and three very different tracks — into a 36-race schedule.

"It’s disappointing," Zipadelli acknowledged. "We had a really good race car and had a mechanical failure. We need to go home and look at it and make sure we don’t have it happen again obviously. My hat’s off to them. They did a great job, they were hauling the mail for a little bit."

As for the rest of the team? The fact that Harvick’s car is running so well bodes well for everyone.

"We thought we made a lot of gains (in practice), but the track was just so different we certainly didn’t get where we needed to be," Zipadelli said, obviously encouraged by Harvick’s showings but troubled by the other three drivers being so far off pace and unable to do much about it during the race.

Patrick led SHR with a 21st-place finish, while Busch started 23rd and finished 26th, three laps down. Stewart was 33rd and none of them finished on the lead lap.

At one point during the race, Stewart’s new crew chief Chad Johnston apologized to the driver saying he felt he had let him down this week. He told the team not to touch anything on the car after the race so they could bring it back and do meticulous analysis of what led to the disappointing day.

Stewart would only say, "Something wasn’t right," after the race.

But it’s these kind of challenging situations where Stewart has previously shown that his ability to motivate his team equals his talent behind the wheel. The people that work for him would go to war for him. And he for them.

Certainly SHR has all the resources — including Hendrick Motorsports engine support — that a driver could want. But with Stewart as an owner and driver, there is a passion and commitment he provides unique to any other team in the Sprint Cup Series. That’s what lured perennial championship contender Harvick there and attracted 2004 Cup champ Busch, as well as Patrick.

The questions swirling around about SHR’s slow start bring back memories of Stewart’s first win of 2013 — at Dover last spring — when Smoke took the opportunity during his winner’s news conference to reprimand the media who had speculated that his team was in disarray and jobs on the line because he hadn’t won yet.

That afternoon in Dover fresh from his Victory Lane celebration, Stewart was adamant.

"Everybody has to get on board the ship and one guy has to steer the ship and we all have to go in that direction," Stewart said, acknowledging that his role as the owner and the leader of his namesake team is perhaps more important when times are tough, than when basking in the spotlight as he had just minutes earlier.

"My job as a car owner is to go down there and keep the morale of the guys good. Everyone’s frustrated and everybody’s agitated. But it’s for good reasons. They are not just happy just having a job and collecting a paycheck. They want the same thing we want and that’s to be sitting here in the media center at the end of the day talking to you guys about what are we doing to make it better.

"I’ve done this enough and been in the Chase enough that being in the Chase is not a novelty for me. I don’t care about being in the Chase unless I have an opportunity to win the championship.

"To me, it’s a bigger deal to our program turned around to where if we have the opportunity to get in the Chase, our goal is not just to make it, but to be championship contenders."

Stewart went on to reel off top-five finishes in the next two races, including a runner-up in the July race at Daytona. The mini-streak led to his climb up to 11th in the standings before he broke his leg in a sprint car race that August. Before his season was ended, he was looking a very reasonable Chase for the Sprint Cup contender.

Meanwhile, his former SHR teammate Ryan Newman went on to dramatically claim the Brickyard 400 victory — from pole — that July and did make the Chase field.

This year Stewart has repeatedly said he fully expects at least three of his four cars to qualify for the Chase. A win any Sunday accomplishes that. Any of them are capable of that — and Harvick has already punched his ticket into the Chase thanks to his Phoenix victory.

"I know we are all committed to getting better than what we showed today," Busch said on Sunday. "There may be some long days ahead, but I’m confident we’ll get it figured out."

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Keselowski took the win from Dale Jr., but Earnhardt still holds No. 1; Do you agree?

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First Four Out

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Enhancements made to help make an exciting format even better

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Daytona Beach, Fla. (Mar. 11, 2014) — NASCAR notified its teams this afternoon that effective immediately the following modifications apply to all elements of its national series qualifying including the breaks:

•    One cool down unit connected through either the left side or right side hood flap/cowl flap is allowed to cool the engine
•    The hood must continue to remain closed
•    Plugging in the generator will not be allowed
•    Two crew members will be allowed over the wall to support the car and driver
•    No cool down laps will be permitted

NASCAR instituted a new group qualifying format for its three national series in January and has continued to evaluate the process through the first three races of the season. The new format has been well-received by fans, competitors, race tracks and other key stakeholders. NASCAR believes that the modifications announced today should help make the qualifying even better and more compelling.

"The qualifying is new to all of us and as we have said over the past several weeks, we are looking at it from all aspects," said Robin Pemberton, vice president of competition and racing development. "Following discussions, both internally and with others in the garage area, we moved quickly to make a few revisions that will be effective starting with our two national series events at Bristol Motor Speedway this weekend. We believe this will only enhance and improve what has demonstrated to be an exciting form of qualifying for our fans, competitors and others involved with the sport. Moving forward we will continue to look at it and address anything else that we may need to as the season unfolds."

Fans can tune in to the following NASCAR racing action this weekend at Bristol Motor Speedway:

Friday, Mar. 14
4:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Saturday, Mar. 15
10 a.m. – NASCAR Nationwide Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, ESPN2
2 p.m. – NASCAR Nationwide Series Race, ESPN2, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

Sunday, Mar. 16
1 p.m. – NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Race, FOX, PRN Radio, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio

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Race winner Team Penske among teams penalized for infractions

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NASCAR officials announced penalties Tuesday for three teams in the NASCAR Nationwide Series after last weekend’s racing at Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

Brad Keselowski prevailed in Saturday’s Boyd Gaming 300, but NASCAR officials confiscated the right-rear shock from the winning No. 22 Team Penske Ford for further review at the NASCAR Research & Development Center in Concord, N.C. After additional inspection, NASCAR found that the shock absorber exceeded the maximum gas pressure. It was classified as a P2 penalty under NASCAR’s new deterrance system. Crew chief Jeremy Bullins was fined $5,000 and placed on probation through Dec. 31.

Rookie Chase Elliott finished a career-best fifth, but his No. 9 JR Motorsports Chevrolet was found to be too low in the front during a post-race inspection. It’s a P2 penalty for the team, and crew chief Greg Ives has been placed on probation until Dec. 31.

The No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota for driver Elliott Sadler failed opening-day inspection in Las Vegas for carrying unapproved weight — a P3 penalty. Crew chief Chris Gayle has been fined $10,000 and placed on NASCAR probation until Dec. 31. Car chief Todd Brewer has also been placed on NASCAR probation until Dec. 31.

There were no points penalties — below is a chart that explains the level of penalties.

The series’ next race is scheduled Saturday at 2 p.m. ET (ESPN2) at Bristol Motor Speedway.

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Reutimann has two Sprint Cup Series wins in his career

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David Reutimann will drive for Front Row Motorsports at Bristol Motor Speedway this weekend in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series‘ Food City 500.

Reutimann will drive the No. 35 Ford, sponsored by MDS Transport, in his first start of the 2014 season.

“Driving for Front Row Motorsports is a great opportunity with a great organization,” Reutimann said in a release. “I miss being at the track on Sundays so I’m really looking forward to it. I think it’s pretty cool and can’t wait to get to Bristol.”

Reutimann is also looking forward to participating in the new knockout style qualifying. 

"Qualifying is going to be wild. It’ll be my first time taking a crack at it with this new knock-out procedure. It looks like it’s been pretty eventful at the tracks so far this year, and Bristol is a completely different animal. I’m going to try not to think about it too much. Just get a good lap in that gets the car in the show and then hopefully not have to worry about it anymore."

Last season, Reutimann drove for BK Racing and finished 33rd in the point standings. He has two career Sprint Cup Series wins (one at Charlotte in 2009 and one at Chicagoland in 2010). 

Eric McClure and Blake Koch have also driven in that car this year. McClure failed to qualify for the Daytona 500 in the Budwesier Duels, while Koch finished 37th at Phoenix and did not qualify at Las Vegas.

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Cooling units allowed for all three series; cool-down laps banned

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NASCAR will allow the use of external cool-down units to help cool engines during qualifying in all three of its national series, beginning with this weekend’s doubleheader at Bristol Motor Speedway.
 
Teams in the Sprint Cup, Nationwide and Camping World Truck Series were notified of the changes Tuesday afternoon.

Cooling-down laps, used previously this season to speed up the process of lowering the temperature of the car’s engine, will no longer be permitted.
 
The specific changes are:
 
• The use of one (1) cool-down unit per car, connected through either the left- or right-side hood flap/cowl;
 
• Two crew members may enter the pit area for car and driver support;
 
• Cool-down laps are no longer allowed;
 
Unchanged, but still enforced, will be the following regulations:
 
• The hood must remain closed at all times;
 
• Plugging the car in to an external source (generator) will still not be allowed.

NASCAR officials said this past weekend that they wanted to give teams more time to work through some of the issues before making any tweaks to the format.
 
But Robin Pemberton, vice president of competition and racing development for the sanctioning body, said Tuesday that "we got some pretty good feedback over the course of the weekend, as people got a chance to download with us."

Cooling issues have been a hot topic surrounding the new qualifying format, which debuted earlier this year.
 
During qualifying runs, teams tape up the front grille of their cars to create more downforce. Because the tape limits the amount of air reaching the engine, teams remove the tape after their initial run. Drivers then return to the track and run at a much slower speed to force air into the engine compartment to assist with the cooling.
 
That strategy has led several drivers to describe the new format as dangerous, as cars at full speed have dramatically closed on slower cars in some instances.
 
"It’s not safe," Richard Childress Racing driver Ryan Newman said after last week’s qualifying session at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. "That’s an easy answer; it’s not safe."
 
With the series moving to BMS, a short, .533-mile venue for this weekend’s events, such concerns were amplified.
 
"You’ve got a half-mile race track and you’re going to have all these cars out there," said Joey Logano, last week’s Coors Light Pole winner at Las Vegas. "… That’s going to be tight."

According to Pemberton, the timing of the move wasn’t forced by this week’s race locale.
 
"I think it was pretty much about the complexities of going coast-to-coast," he said. "Between (returning from) Las Vegas and Bristol, then back to Auto Club Speedway (in Fontana, Calif.), the feeling was we need to get something out there for the teams … so they could better prepare. We felt like sooner than later was better."
 
NASCAR officials will police the use of the cool-down units, which may be used throughout the entire qualifying session.
 
"It’s just something we’ll have to do, that’s all," Pemberton said. "It’s just another part of being at the track."
 
While some have said prohibiting teams from taping up the front grille before qualifying would solve the problem, others weren’t so sure.
 
Paul Wolfe, crew chief of the Team Penske No. 2 Ford with driver Brad Keselowski, said during a Tuesday morning teleconference that safety seemed to be the bigger issue.
 
"I think guys are concerned about maybe the safety aspect of the cars obviously running around slow on the race track while others are at speed," Wolfe said. "I know at this point from what I’ve heard that’s probably the biggest concern. I know guys would like to see cool‑down machines being able to be used. That just introduces a whole other thing when you start bringing cool‑down machines out to pit road."
 
Keselowski won both the Nationwide and Cup Series races this past weekend at Las Vegas. He and teammate Logano have swept the front row starting spots in the last two Cup races, at Phoenix International Raceway and LVMS.
 
"As far as the 2 car over the last two weeks, there’s only one instance really where we needed to go out and cool down," said Wolfe. "I think it’s those guys that are right on the edge that need to make multiple runs."
 
NASCAR moved to group qualifying this season after years of using single-car runs to determine the starting lineup for its races.
 
The new format consists of three rounds at tracks greater than 1.25 miles in length and two rounds for those less than 1.25 miles.
 
On the larger tracks, all teams have 25 minutes to post a qualifying time in the opening segment. The fastest 24 then advance to a second round (which lasts 10 minutes), with the fastest 12 advancing to a third and final round of five minutes in length.
 
Only two sessions are used to determine the lineup on tracks less than 1.25 miles in length – a 30-minute opening session for all competitors with the fastest 12 advancing to a final 10-minute session.
 
NASCAR officials said this past weekend that they wanted to give teams more time to work through some of the issues before making any tweaks to the format.
 
Qualifying for the Food City 500 race for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series is scheduled for Friday, March 14 (4:40 p.m. ET) at BMS while qualifying for the Nationwide Series‘ Drive to Stop Diabetes 300 is set for Saturday (10:10 a.m. ET).
 
The Camping World Truck Series will be back in action Saturday, March 29 at Martinsville Speedway.

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Team owner Roger Penske: ‘The combination of Joey and Brad is super’

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It’s been a strong start for Team Penske drivers Brad Keselowski and Joey Logano, with only one finish outside the top five after the first three NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races of 2014.

Keselowski, Sunday’s winner in the Kobalt 400, finished third in the season’s first two races, at Daytona and Phoenix, while Logano has logged finishes of 11th, fourth and fourth in the three events. 

No, Team Penske isn’t the only multicar team to start off the year strong — Hendrick Motorsports currently has three teams in the top five — but the Penske start is impressive just the same.

"The combination of Joey and Brad is super," team owner Roger Penske said after Keselowski swooped in to take the win from Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s gas-starved Chevrolet. "When you look at their ages (Keselowski is 30, Logano 23) … they’re talking every day. Last night they were going over the changes on their cars.  But even more important, I think (crew chiefs) Todd Gordon and Paul (Wolfe) have really bonded together."

Not only have the group’s race results been convincing, but the two teams seem to be the first to take full advantage of the series’ new group qualifying format, locking in the front two starting positions both at Phoenix and again this past weekend at Las Vegas.

The fast-out-of-the-gate start isn’t unusual for Keselowski, driver of the team’s flagship No. 2 Ford, and the 2012 Sprint Cup champion. A year ago, he began the season with four consecutive top-five finishes and seven top-10s in the first eight races.

Logano, on the other hand, started slow, eventually heating up a bit later in the year (he had only three top-five finishes in the first 11 races).

But fortunes turned, and by the time the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup had arrived, Logano was in and Keselowski, less than a year removed from his title, was on the outside.

Points penalties levied after the spring Texas race — both drivers lost 25 points for rear-end housing issues — certainly played a role in the organization’s 2013 efforts, but Penske said Sunday that the penalties also served as a rallying call for his group.

"We all had to pull together and say we’re going to move forward out of this," Penske said. "To me, that really set the stage.

"… We’re one group. The cars are the same; you can see how well they run, they’re qualifying very close together, and I think it’s an open book, and to me that makes the difference. So I’m thrilled with where we are, and I think we’ve got a great runway for us long‑term."

Wolfe, Keselowski’s crew chief since 2011, said he believes the two Team Penske groups "probably work more closely than anyone in the garage."

"And I think … that’s why you see the cars qualifying on the front row together, why we run well when one runs well, and that’s key," he said. "With only having two cars, we need to work closely together. When one runs good, the other runs good, and vice versa. That’s important to be able to move forward, as tough as this sport is, to be able to have someone to lean on if you’re having a bad day or you’re off a little bit."

The cars themselves are so identical, he said, "you can take a 22 (of Logano) or a 2 (of Keselowski) and just change the paint scheme on it and bring it to the race track. I don’t think there are many teams that can say that. I think that’s a big reason for a lot of the success we’ve had, and we’ll continue to work that way moving forward and hopefully continue the success."

That "one organization, one team" approach isn’t new — although on many occasions it’s proven difficult for a single organization to field several competitive entries simultaneously. Few car builds are exactly the same, and few drivers like the same feel behind the wheel.

The key going forward, Penske said, is to stay "consistent."

"Joey and Brad have built a great relationship, and believe me, the way (Logano) ran … and came from the back there was strong right at the end," he said. "I think we’re going to see him in Victory Lane, too, so that’s our goal now — whatever it takes, get him a victory."

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See where and when to tune in for shows, on-track activity

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Monday, Mar. 10                                          

Noon, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Race at Las Vegas re-air, FOX Sports 1     

3 p.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1

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

5 p.m., NASCAR K&N Pro Series West Race at Phoenix re-air, FOX Sports 2

5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network

6:30 p.m., NASCAR’s The List – Memorable Moments, NBC Sports Network

Tuesday, Mar. 11

3:30 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

Wednesday, Mar. 12                                                          

2 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, Mar. 13

11 a.m., NASCAR Race Hub, FOX Sports 1

4:30 p.m., NASCAR’s The List – Fights & Feuds, NBC Sports Network

5 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network

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

Friday, Mar. 14                                                  

2 a.m., NASCAR Now, ESPN2

Noon, NASCAR Sprint Cup Practice, FOX Sports 1    

1:30 p.m., NASCAR Nationwide Practice, FOX Sports 1

2:30 p.m., NASCAR Live, FOX Sports 1

3 p.m., NASCAR Nationwide Series Final Practice, FOX Sports 1

4 p.m., NASCAR America, NBC Sports Network

4:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole Qualifying, FOX Sports 1               

Saturday, Mar. 15

9 a.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Practice, FOX Sports 1

10 a.m., NASCAR Nationwide Series Qualifying, ESPN2

10 a.m., TUDOR United SportsCar Championship Race at Sebring, FOX Sports 1

Noon, NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Final Practice, FOX Sports 2

1 p.m., NASCAR K&N Pro Series Race at Phoenix re-air, FOX Sports 2

1:30 p.m., NASCAR Nationwide Series Countdown, ESPN2

2 p.m., NASCAR Nationwide Series Race at Bristol, ESPN2              

Sunday, Mar. 16

3 a.m., NASCAR Nationwide Series Race re-air, ESPN2

4 a.m., NASCAR Nationwide Series Race re-air, ESPN Deportes

8 a.m., FOX Sports 1 on 1: Jimmie Johnson re-air, FOX Sports 1

8:30 a.m., TUDOR United SportsCar Championship Race at Sebring, FOX Sports 1

11:30 a.m., NASCAR RaceDay, FOX Sports 1

12:30 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Pre-Race Show, FOX

1 p.m., NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Race at Bristol, FOX

6:30 p.m., NASCAR Victory Lane, FOX Sports 1

7 p.m., NASCAR K&N Pro Series Race at Phoenix re-air, FOX Sports 1

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