Ford operation aims for double-barreled return to Chase

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Team Overview

— In 2013 Team Penske placed a driver in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup for the fifth consecutive season, but the team’s two race victories — one each for Joey Logano and Brad Keselowski — marked its lowest output in three years.

— Over the offseason changed the name of the former Penske Racing organization to Team Penske, bringing the NASCAR operation under the same umbrella as Roger Penske’s interests in open-wheel racing.

Sam Hornish Jr., who drove a full Nationwide Series season in addition to select Sprint Cup races for Penske, is no longer with the organization.

2014 Driver Lineup

Brad Keselowski, No. 2 Ford; Joey Logano, No. 22 Ford

Keselowski followed his championship campaign in 2012 with a trying season, one in which a pair of penalties — most notably, one for rear-end violations on both Penske cars last spring at Texas — and a late-summer slump combined to make him only the second reigning champ (after Tony Stewart in 2006) to miss the playoff. His lone victory came in Charlotte in the fall, after the playoff field had been determined.

That summertime slide stands at odds with much of Keselowski’s career at Penske, which has seen the driver join the ranks of the sport’s elite. Of his 10 career victories, nine have come in the past two and half years behind the wheel of the organization’s No. 2 car. Logano experienced a similar uptick in performance last season in his first year with Penske, winning at Michigan and making the Chase for the first time.

Crew chiefs Paul Wolfe (Keselowski) and Todd Gordon (Logano) both return, although Keselowski’s over-the-wall crew received a substantial overhaul for the 2014 campaign.

2014 Outlook

Keselowski ran well at both the start and finish to the 2013 campaign, and barring another major penalty there’s no reason he can’t return to the Chase in 2014. Both Penske cars ended last season strong, although rule changes on this year’s vehicle will test the team’s car development. Logano is as comfortable and confident as he’s ever been, and appears to be coming into his own.

Penske clearly has the wherewithal to get both its drivers into the Chase. The key may be improved car development and better overall performance for Ford, whose affiliated teams struggled a season ago. Race wins early in the year would be big for both drivers — one trying to rebound, and the other trying to back up a career year.

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Toyota team aims to build upon stability in 2014

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Team Overview

— Placed two of its three drivers in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup in 2013 and accumulated 12 combined race victories, the most ever for the organization in a single season. The team’s previous best had been 11 in 2010, when Denny Hamlin won eight times and Kyle Busch three.

— Hamlin missed all of four races, and most of a fifth in 2013 after breaking a vertebra in his lower back in a final-lap crash with Joey Logano in March at Fontana. The injury was partially responsible for Hamlin missing the Chase for the first time in his career.

Matt Kenseth‘s first season with the organization resulted in a career year, one in which he led the series and recorded a personal best with seven race victories. In his first season after leaving Roush Fenway Racing, he also led the standings late in the year and finished second, 19 points behind Jimmie Johnson, in the championship race.

2014 Driver Lineup

Matt Kenseth, No. 20 Toyota; Kyle Busch, No. 18 Toyota; Denny Hamlin, No. 11 Toyota

Kenseth’s first campaign in JGR equipment was a smashing success, and the veteran came 19 points short of being the first driver since 1981 to win a title in his debut season with a new team. He bonded quickly with crew chief Jason Ratcliff and felt immediately comfortable in JGR cars. The program’s only misstep was a setup whiff at Phoenix that allowed Johnson to build an insurmountable margin entering the final race of the year.

Kenseth’s good fortune rubbed off on Busch, who finished a personal-best fourth in final points and won four times, although he’s still searching for his first Chase race victory since his rookie season. Kenseth and Busch finished first and second, respectively, in each of the first two playoff races, and remained in the same positions in the standings until Busch crashed at Kansas.

Hamlin’s comeback from injury was stalled by setup issues and lingering back discomfort, which he said finally responded to treatment late in the year. He certainly looked better in the finale at Homestead, where he recorded a victory to keep alive his personal streak of winning a race every year.

2014 Outlook

Hendrick Motorsports may have another championship trophy and the new additions at Stewart-Haas Racing may have generated all the offseason headlines, but with everyone healthy JGR remains a serious contender for the most potent lineup in the sport. All three drivers return along with their respective crew chiefs, looking to build upon one of the best seasons in team history.

Can they top 2013? Kenseth, as steady it gets, gives no reason to believe he’ll take a step back. Hamlin’s back is a concern, but improved performance at the end of last season offered promise for 2014. And Busch, as talented as it gets, is overdue for another breakout season on par with his eight-win campaign in 2008. Stability is not an issue, and getting all three drivers into the Chase should be just the beginning.

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2010 Rolex 24 at Daytona winner adds another accolade to his resume

RELATED: Drivers hospitalized after major wreck (Video) | Larson stays even in debut

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — It’s a given in the Rolex 24 at Daytona that the winning team has to survive a day-long grind that tests the mettle of man and machine.
 
But Joao Barbosa, Christian Fittipaldi and Sebastien Bourdais had to overcome much more than that to put their No. 5 Action Express Corvette DP into Victory Lane in the 52nd running of the Rolex 24 — and the first as part of the new TUDOR United SportsCar Championship.
 
On Saturday night, Bourdais and John Martin, who was driving the third-place finishing No. 9 Action Express team car, narrowly avoided contact in the "Bus Stop" chicane near the end of the backstretch of Daytona International Speedway‘s 3.56-mile road course, when Martin closed the door on his fellow Corvette driver.
 
Early Sunday morning, a 70-second penalty to Barbosa for overly aggressive driving after a restart further impeded the No. 5’s progress.

And finally, the 16th caution of the race with 21 minutes left — ill-timed from the Action Express perspective — forced Barbosa to outrun the second-place No. 10 Wayne Taylor Racing Corvette DP driven by Max Angelelli in a nine-minute shootout to the finish.
 
"I was really surprised by that caution, but it’s racing, and we just had to deal with it," said Barbosa, who won the overall Rolex 24 title for the second time (the first in 2010). "When they did the wave-by, I saw that there was a car between me and Max (for the restart).
 
"I saw that there was quite a bit of opportunity, considering how the rules are at this point, that I could have an advantage there, and I took it. I was able to build enough cushion — I don’t say (I knew) it was going to be easy — but at least I had enough margin to maneuver, so I had quite a comfortable gap at the end."
 
In the first race since the merger of the GRAND-AM Rolex Series and the American Le Mans Series produced the TUDOR Championship, Corvette DP entries swept the top four spots overall, but the winning team had to overcome yet another obstacle: pressure from car owner Bob Johnson, who told his drivers at a pre-race dinner that he expected to win.
 
"Bob was convincingly, absolutely dead sure that we were going to win it, and I was scared to death," Bourdais said, "because we had the team dinner on Wednesday night, and he shows up, and he’s like, ‘We’re going to win this thing.’
 
"And I’m like, ‘Oh, my God, here he goes.’ Last time he did that we probably didn’t make first hour. I was like, ‘This is like bad, bad, bad — but he was right. The guys were prepared. Everybody was on top of things. Everybody knew exactly what to do and how to do it, and the execution was perfect."
 
Angelelli thought he would have a chance to challenge for the victory in the final four laps, but Barbosa pulled away and crossed the finish line 1.461 seconds ahead of the No. 10, disappointing owner Wayne Taylor, who came out of a four-year retirement to run the race with Angelelli and sons Ricky Taylor and Jordan Taylor.
 
"I can tell you, I tried everything, adjust all I had in the car, to settle the car, to find a good balance, a good run," Angelelli said. "… But I did not have enough for him."
 
The late caution also tightened the battle for the win in the factory-backed professional GT Le Mans class, with Patrick Pilet taking the checkered flag for a Porsche 911 RSR team that included Richard Lietz and Nick Tandy.
 
Pilet, who recorded Porsche’s 76th win in the Rolex 24, withstood a late charge from runner-up Joey Hand, driving for a No. 55 BMW Z4 GTE team that included Bill Auberlen, Andy Priaulx and Maxime Martin.
 
A last-lap judgment call by International Motor Sports Association (IMSA) officials ostensibly made winners of Audi drivers Spencer Pumpelly, Markus Winkelhock, Nelson Canache Jr. and Tim Pappas in the GT Daytona class.
 
Winkelhock appeared to have been forced off the track in the infield by No. 555 Ferrari F458 Italia driver Alessandro Pier Guidi as the cars streaked through the infield. Though the Ferrari was first to the checkered flag, IMSA initially imposed a stop-plus-75-second penalty on the No. 555, enough to give the victory to the No. 45 Audi.
 
But after further review, IMSA reversed the ruling and awarded the win to the Ferrari team, which also included Scott Tucker, Jeff Segal, Townsend Bell and Bill Sweedler. The Audi team was relegated to second place.
 
Scot Elkins, IMSA’s vice president of competition and technical regulations, provided the following statement regarding the decision.
 
"A full post-race review of the incident on the last lap of the 52nd Rolex 24 At Daytona was completed by IMSA Supervisory Officials. The decision has been made to reverse the decision by the race director, rescind the penalty against the No. 555 Level 5 Motorsports Ferrari 458 Italia team, and reinstate drivers Scott Tucker, Bill Sweedler, Townsend Bell, Jeff Segal and Alessandro Pier Guidi as the GT Daytona class winners. We regret the confusion following the race, and appreciate the patience by our fans, drivers, teams and the media so we could properly review and subsequently report this decision."
 
Former NASCAR driver Colin Braun led the No. 54 team (with Jon Bennett, James Gue and Mark Wilkins) to a win from the pole in the Prototype Challenge class.
 
Scott Pruett’s bid for a record sixth overall Rolex 24 trophy unraveled during the night. With Pruett behind the wheel shortly after midnight, the No. 01 Chip Ganassi Racing Ford EcoBoost/Riley snapped loose unexpectedly in the Bus Stop and smacked the wall, costing the defending race winners more than 30 laps in the garage to effect repairs.
 
Ultimately, the No. 01 retired in the 23rd hour because of an engine issue and finished 43rd overall. The No. 02 Ganassi Ford fell out in the final hour.
 
Though he was mystified as to the cause of the spin in the chicane, Pruett took responsibility for the mishap.
 
"We were coming through there, punched out of there and all of a sudden the car was sideways and in the fence," Pruett said. "From a driver’s standpoint, you just cannot imagine the weight that is on you from doing something like that.
 
"I think I may have had one crash here … ever … maybe … in this race. I don’t know what happened. There’s a saying you have in racing: where you hit the fence and you’re going ‘Dang, I just can’t put it together what happened.’ …
 
"Again, I take responsibility, and I just feel real bad for the team and the guys and my teammates."
 
One of the most violent crashes in recent Rolex 24 history interrupted the race before nightfall on Saturday. The No. 62 GTLM Ferrari driven by Matteo Malucelli slowed dramatically in the "kink" following the "International Horseshoe" in the infield portion of the course.
 
Memo Gidley, driving the pole-winning No. 99 GAINSCO Corvette DP, pulled out to pass a slower car and collided with Malucelli’s car, knocking he Ferrari into the guard rail and leaving the crippled Corvette in the middle of the track.
 
Both drivers were transported to Halifax Health Medical Center, where Gidley underwent surgery on his left arm and leg. A bulletin Sunday morning also noted an unstable fracture in Gidley’s back that will require surgery before he can be released.
 
Malucelli was described as "resting comfortably" but was held in the hospital for further observation.


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Larson, McMurray still upbeat about the experience

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — The Rolex 24 at Daytona was NASCAR Sprint Cup rookie Kyle Larson‘s first sports car race. But he and fellow Cup drivers Jamie McMurray and AJ Allmendinger had to feel right at home even if they didn’t figure into the overall win this year.

After 23 hours of racing, a caution flag bunched up the field with less than 20 minutes remaining and the ensuing final laps featured lots of door-slamming contact, daring passes — and even a controversial penalty — all prompting comparisons to the competitive and aggressive brand of racing in NASCAR.

Competitors say that bodes well for the future of the inaugural TUDOR United SportsCar Championship season.

"It made people think of NASCAR because it came down to the last little bit, and it was a cool finish because all the classes were really close," said Larson, whose first Rolex experience came in a Team Ganassi Ford that contended for the win but retired in the final hour with severe body damage.

The other Ganassi car also retired early (with engine woes) — the first time owner Chip Ganassi can remember that neither of his cars made it to the finish.

"It’s part of it, part of the game of racing — it’ll happen and now we’ll move on to the next race," said Ganassi, whose team had five wins and two runner-up finishes in the previous eight Rolex 24 races.

Larson and McMurray, teammates in Ganassi’s Sprint Cup, were tabbed to co-drive in the Rolex 24 with an all-star two-car team of IndyCar champs and sports car veterans. Larson, whose three Nationwide Series road course races last season were the extent of his road course experience, finished 15th overall. McMurray finished 43rd in his sixth Rolex start.

"I honestly still don’t know what exactly happened, when I woke up at 4:30 or so this morning to come get back in the car, I noticed we were quite a few laps down," said McMurray, whose best finish is runner-up in 2011. "I know we got into the wall, had some starter issues. But I got back in and did my two and a half, three hours and I got out, took a shower and now I’m back to just hang out.

"It’s really disappointing, but that’s what I think makes this race so great if you can finish it. It’s extremely hard to do. I’ve had a really good time."

JTG Daugherty driver Allmendinger, the 2012 Rolex 24 overall winner, finished 47th overall, his No. 60 Michael Shank Racing prototype suffering from mechanical problems.

But while the current NASCAR drivers were shut out — only the second time since 2006 there were no full-time NASCAR drivers on the podium — the overall winning Chevrolet prototype did have several NASCAR connections.

Former NASCAR executive Gary Nelson is the team manager of Action Express Racing, and former NASCAR driver Elton Sawyer is the director of competition. And the team uses Earnhardt Childress Racing (ECR) Chevy engines, something team owner Bob Johnson credited with being a difference-maker.

The sport was also represented in Victory Lane by British sports car driver Nick Tandy, who considers himself a huge fan of American stock car racing.

Tandy, who won the GT LeMans class in the Rolex 24, said he watches every Sprint Cup, Nationwide and Camping World Truck Series race and has for years.

He grew up a big Dale Earnhardt fan and is now appreciative of Kyle Busch’s talent.

"It was so cool when I got the chance to come here and race in Daytona because I’ve been such a fan for 20-odd years," Tandy said "I haven’t missed a race on TV in years, and I mean all 36 races each season. I’m a huge fan."

"Everyone has something they are passionate about and not that I’m not passionate about my own racing, but as a sports fan, NASCAR is kind of my game."

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Single-car squad in position to make significant gains with new RCR tech alliance

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Team Overview

— Like several teams this year, Germain Racing is changing manufacturers. After two years using Ford power, the team will be using Chevy engines in 2014 and is the third team to form a technical alliance with Richard Childress Racing.
 
— Germain collected its first top-10 with driver Casey Mears in 2013, a ninth-place finish in the summer Daytona race.

2014 Driver Lineup

Casey Mears, No. 13 Chevrolet
 
After eight top-20 finishes in the first 18 races, Mears struggled in the second half of the season, cracking the top 20 only one more time. He finished 24th in points, however, a five-position improvement from 2012. Bootie Barker returns as crew chief and that continuity along with a technical alliance with Richard Childress Racing — where Mears worked in 2009 — has already produced encouraging results. The team was sixth quickest overall during the January Daytona test and fastest of the single car runs.
 
2014 Outlook
 
Joining Furniture Row and JTG Daugherty in a technical alliance with RCR creates a support system that should benefit this single-car Germain team. Mears, who won the 2007 Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte while driving for Hendrick Motorsports, has proven himself top-10 caliber in past years, and this new partnership with RCR should pay off sooner rather than later.

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2014 season could spell redemption for Allmendinger, new team

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Team Overview

— This could be a breakout year for the single-car team, which made significant changes during the offseason and brings a new driver — AJ Allmendinger — on board.

2014 Driver Lineup

AJ Allmendinger, No. 47 Chevrolet
 
The team essentially got a full makeover for the 2014 season, from hiring Allmendinger, to switching from Toyota to Chevrolet, to forming a technical alliance with Richard Childress Racing. This will be the first full-time Cup job for Allmendinger since 2012, as he replaces 2000 Cup champ Bobby Labonte, who drove for the team since 2011 with a best showing of fourth place in the 2011 Daytona 500. Allmendinger earned the new position after a solid nine races for the team late last year, highlighted by a 10th-place finish at Watkins Glen, N.Y. — the team’s only top-10 of the year.
 
2014 Outlook
 
Allmendinger thinks his situation is a perfect storm of opportunity. He’s grateful and eager to be back full-time in Sprint Cup, and the team hopes he will lead the organization to the next level of competition and contend for race wins. The technical alliance at RCR, which includes engines and engineering support from Earnhardt-Childress Racing, was a huge show of financial commitment and competitive intention for Allmendinger, who says now it’s time to do his part. The question is how long will it take to see the results.

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MWR hoping to rebound, re-establish credibility in crucial 2014

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Team Overview

— Michael Waltrip Racing hopes to regain reputation and form in 2014 after a headline-making 2013 season. Although MWR did earn two wins, there was plenty of unwanted attention because of penalties, a suspension and sponsorship issues to start the Chase.
 
— The team will field two full-time cars this year, for 2012 championship runner-up Clint Bowyer and Brian Vickers, who scored one of the 2013 wins (at New Hampshire) despite driving part-time for the team.

2014 Driver Lineup

Clint Bowyer, No. 15 Toyota; Brian Vickers, No. 55 Toyota
 
Bowyer qualified for the Chase and finished seventh, although he did not reach Victory Lane in 2013 after a three-win 2012 campaign. He ranked among the top-three in the championship for much of the midpoint of the season. After his involvement in the controversy at the Richmond, Va., regular-season finale, Bowyer managed only a pair of top-fives in the 10-race Chase. Crew chief Brian Pattie returns and the team is eager to start fresh in 2014.
 
After competing in the Nationwide Series last year for Joe Gibbs Racing, Vickers, who has three career Cup wins, will get his first full-time Cup opportunity since 2011. However, in the weeks after he was introduced by Waltrip to drive the No. 55 Toyota, Vickers suffered a blood clot in his right calf and was forced to get out of the car. It’s the second time he’s missed parts of a season with health-related issues. In 2010, he suffered from blood clots and additionally had to have surgery to repair a hole in his heart. He is expected to be in the car for the Daytona 500, however, and encouraged about his potential with a full season of competition after winning for the team in a part-time role. Billy Scott, who served as the team’s lead engineer the past two years, will move into the crew chief position.
 
2014 Outlook
 
Bowyer has proven himself a legitimate title favorite and will benefit from putting the distractions of 2013 behind him. In a season with so many new crew chief/driver pairings, the continuity and relationship he has with Pattie may prove a big advantage for the team.

While Vickers is optimistic about his health situation, there is naturally some concern. That said, he has shown himself capable of winning in a part-time capacity with the team, so he must feel good about his chances with a full-time position.

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SHR brings stable of huge personality, talent into promising 2014 campaign

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Team Overview

— Change will be the overwhelming theme of the 2014 season for this organization, which added a fourth team with driver Kurt Busch. There will be two new drivers in all — Kevin Harvick and Busch join team namesake Tony Stewart and Danica Patrick.
 
— Stewart is returning to competition after missing the last four months of 2013, sidelined with a broken right leg he injured in a sprint car racing accident.
 
— Patrick and crew chief Tony Gibson are the only pairing retained from last season. Stewart, Harvick and Busch will have new crew chiefs.
 
— With Stewart’s injury and Patrick’s rookie learning curve, Ryan Newman was the sole SHR driver to make the Chase. He finished 11th and won one of NASCAR’s crown jewels, the Brickyard 400 from the pole.

2014 Driver Lineup

Tony Stewart, No. 14 Chevrolet; Danica Patrick, No. 10 Chevrolet;  Kevin Harvick, No. 4 Chevrolet; Kurt Busch, No. 41 Chevrolet.
 
Stewart is hoping to get medical clearance to race in time for The Sprint Unlimited non-points race during Daytona Speedweeks. However, the three-time champ has cautioned he won’t be completely back to form in the early portion of the season. Last year he and the whole SHR organization got off to a slow start figuring out the new Gen-6 car. But he had just turned the corner — winning at Dover and finishing runner-up in the summer Daytona race in the weeks before his injury. Chad Johnston, who worked previously with driver Martin Truex Jr., will be Stewart’s new crew chief, replacing Steve Addington.
 
Patrick started her rookie campaign in historic fashion, becoming the first woman to win the Daytona 500 pole. However, her eighth-place finish in the race was her only top-10 in a season of expected hard knocks and learning curves. She considers her 12th place at Martinsville, Va., to be a highlight as well, considering the difficulty of that race. She will benefit from the continuity of working with the veteran Gibson again, who, like Patrick and team owner Stewart, is committed to keeping expectations realistic even as they raise for her second full season.
 
Harvick disproved any lame duck conspiracy theories by turning in a high-performing final year at Richard Childress Racing in 2013 after a 13-year tenure with the team. He won four races, including two in the Chase, and was in contention for the Sprint Cup championship right up to the final race in Homestead, Fla. He ultimately finished third behind Jimmie Johnson and Matt Kenseth and comes to SHR motivated and eager to take the next step in his career and finally hoist the Cup. He will be working with crew chief Rodney Childers, who, like Johnston, comes from Michael Waltrip Racing.
 
Busch completes the all-star lineup and, as with Harvick, comes to SHR fresh off a high-achieving, head-turning season. The 2004 Cup champ all but promised to land the small Denver-based No. 78 Furniture Row Racing team in its first Chase, and midway through the schedule, it was apparent, he would make good on that. Although he didn’t win a race, he scored 11 top-five finishes with season best runner-up finishes at Richmond, Va., and Kansas. He finished 10th in points, scoring only three top-10s in the 10 Chase races. He’ll be paired with crew chief Daniel Knost.
 
2014 Outlook
 
This team has high-wattage personality to match its talent level. And that is a key unknown variable when it comes to how the team will perform with essentially four "lead" drivers.
 
How will Stewart race after recovering from such a serious injury? Will Patrick show marked improvement, even win a race? How long will it take Harvick and Busch to feel at home with their new team? And how will all the new crew chief combinations pan out?

 

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Reigning Cup-winning organization shows no signs of slowing in 2014

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Team Overview

— Team owner Rick Hendrick added to his record collection of NASCAR championships in 2013 with an 11th NASCAR Sprint Cup Series title — the sixth for driver Jimmie Johnson.
 
— 2013 marked the second consecutive year all four Hendrick drivers qualified for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

2014 Driver Lineup

Jimmie Johnson, No. 48 Chevrolet; Jeff Gordon, No. 24 Chevrolet; Dale Earnhardt Jr., No. 88 Chevrolet; Kasey Kahne, No. 5 Chevrolet
 
A championship this year for Johnson would give the driver seven titles and tie him with NASCAR Hall of Famers Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt. He and crew chief Chad Knaus have proven themselves the winningest combination in the modern era and perhaps all-time. Johnson — who won six races in 2013, including his second Daytona 500 — goes into the season the strong championship favorite.
 
After being added to the Chase as the 13th driver, four-time champ Gordon made the best of the opportunity, posting his best championship finish (sixth) since 2009. He won a race and a pole during the 10-race Chase and seems to feel like things are clicking with crew chief Alan Gustafson.
 
Earnhardt Jr. turned in his best championship performance in nearly a decade, finishing fifth in points and proving himself a legitimate contender even if he still came up short of a win. This will be his last year with crew chief Steve Letarte, who is leaving the team to work on NBC Sports race broadcasts next season. Both men have committed to making their final season together memorable and victorious. Earnhardt has only one win since 2009.
 
After finishing a career-best fourth in the 2012 championship, Kahne and his team had high expectations for last season, but ultimately fell short — ranking 12th, despite winning two races. Nine times he finished 30th or worse. He and longtime crew chief Kenny Francis remain together and are hoping to regain the contender form that has long been expected of that team.
 
2014 Outlook
 
All four teams in this organization remain solidly intact for this season and should expect their greatest obstacle to a championship to be one of their teammates.
 
How will Johnson handle the extra attention and outside pressure all season while on the verge of a historic accomplishment? While others keep asking Gordon when he’s going to retire, the 42-year-old is more concerned with making another serious run at a fifth title. With one last year paired with Letarte, will Earnhardt be able to focus on the season at hand with all the distractions and speculations that come with the impending change? And will Kahne make the legitimate championship challenge that so many have expected out of him for years?

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Wreck leads to first red flag since 2004; drivers under observation at area hospital

RELATED: Action Express Racing wins overall title

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. —  A high-speed collision between the pole-sitting No. 99 GAINSCO Racing prototype and a GT-class Ferrari about three hours into the Rolex 24 at Daytona brought out the first red flag in the race since 2004.

It took several minutes for rescue workers to extricate Memo Gidley from the No. 99 Bob Stallings Chevrolet Corvette, which suffered massive front end damage. He and Matteo Malucelli, driver of the No. 62 Risi Competizione Ferrari F458, were transported to an area hospital.

IMSA released a statement later Friday evening saying both Gidley and Malucelli were admitted to the hospital and were "awake and communicating."

IMSA officials released a statement early Sunday morning saying that Gidley had surgery on his left arm and left leg overnight and has an "unstable fracture in his back" which will require additional surgery before he can be released.


Malucelli also remained hospitalized Sunday for further evaluation. A further update on his condition will be given later Sunday.

"The biggest concern is that Memo is OK," Gidley’s co-driver Darren Law said shortly after the accident. "Obviously, they haven’t given us a lot of indication of what’s going on other than they are taking him to the hospital and skipping the infield care center.

"I really don’t know what happened; I looked up at TV and saw the crash."

While preparing to exit the infield road course portion of the 3.56-mile course and transition to the high banks, Gidley ran directly into the back of Malucelli’s car. Gidley was in sixth place overall at the time of the accident.

"Conditions were really really hard," Christian Fittipaldi said. "The sun was setting and basically there were two points on track you couldn’t see anything, one was the start-finish line and the other was coming out of the kink. He probably couldn’t see anything at all and just nailed the car in front of him.

"I’m 200 percent sure that’s what happened to Memo. I hope he is well because when I went by it seemed to be a pretty big one."

Team owner Bob Stallings and lead driver Alex Gurney left the pits at Daytona International Speedway to head to the hospital.

This was the same car that six-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Jimmie Johnson co-drove in the Rolex 24 from 2008-2011, and the champ offered "thoughts and prayers to Memo Gidley and my Gainsco Racing family" via Twitter.

The race was back underway after nearly a 90-minute delay.

 

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