Busch hopes to have Wallace Jr. full-time, Jones part-time in 2014

The Phoenix weekend hardly could have gone better for Kyle Busch, whose low point was a seventh-place finish in Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race.
 
On Saturday, Busch won his sixth NASCAR Nationwide Series race at the one-mile track. A day earlier, 17-year-old Erik Jones notched his first victory in a NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race in the No. 51 Toyota Tundra fielded by Kyle Busch Motorsports.
 
That marked the second time in three weeks a driver other than Busch himself had won in a KBM truck. With his victory on Oct. 26 at Martinsville, NASCAR Drive for Diversity graduate Darrell Wallace Jr. became the first African-American driver in nearly 50 years to win a race in one of NASCAR’s three national series.

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Both Jones’ and Wallace’s victories were welcome news to KBM, which is working to solidify its program for 2014.
 
"It shows that our team is capable of running up front, capable of winning with younger drivers, younger talent, not just Cup guys like myself or Denny [Hamlin]," Busch said after his NASCAR Nationwide win. "I think it proves our capabilities and what KBM is all about. We’ve understood and now recognize that the trucks is a capable playground for us that we can be competitive at.
 
"We feel like we have a good handle on the trucks, and that’s where we’re going to put our focus. We’re really looking forward to bringing Darrell back next year. It’s not final yet, but we’re close and looking to have two of those trucks."
 
Busch expects to run Wallace full-time next season and to split time with Jones, who can’t be approved for tracks longer than one mile, with the exception of road courses, until he turns 18 on May 30.
 
"My idea in the grand scheme of things, in a perfect world, would be me run 10-12 races and then Erik Jones fill in the other 10-12, whatever those race tracks are that he can run, mile and under and however the schedule lays out. Then, see Darrell full-time in the 54 truck."

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READ: Harvick rallies
for win at Phoenix

WATCH: Final Laps:
Harvick wins late

WATCH: Kenseth:
‘still one week left’

WATCH: Johnson’s
close call

Pastrana has four top-10s in his Nationwide career

RELATED ANALYSIS: Pastrana had speed but couldn’t harness it

Action sports star Travis Pastrana informed his fans Monday that he will not return to NASCAR racing in 2014.
 
In a thorough post on his Facebook fan page, Pastrana said he was grateful for the opportunity but cited a lack of sponsorship, subpar results and his wish to spend more time with his family as his reasons for leaving the sport. His announcement and shift in focus means Saturday’s season-ending Ford EcoBoost 300 at Homestead-Miami Speedway will likely be his final NASCAR Nationwide Series start.

"I hate to quit and I hate to fail, but sometimes things work out as they should," Pastrana said in his Facebook message. "I’ve never been able to figure out the finesse required in pavement racing and that is disappointing, but I’m looking forward to driving more rally and racing more off-road trucks and there will be some announcements on those fronts shortly."
 
Pastrana signed with team owner Jack Roush before the 2013 season, joining former Daytona 500 winner Trevor Bayne as a full-time teammate in his No. 60 Ford. Though known for his extreme two-wheeled acrobatics on motorcycles, Pastrana had climbed the ranks through the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East while driving for team owner Michael Waltrip.
 
Pastrana soldiered through much of this season without sponsorship and failed to finish six races because of crashes, managing just four top-10 finishes — his best, a ninth-place effort at Richmond International Raceway in April. His biggest highlight came one race later at Talladega Superspeedway, where he landed his only Coors Light Pole Award and led four laps before a wreck eventually ended his day.
 
In stepping away, Pastrana acknowledged the balance of family with a rigorous 33-race schedule on the Nationwide Series as another reason for his departure. Pastrana and his wife, Lyn-Z, welcomed an addition to the family with the birth of their first child, Addy, in September.
 
"My wife Lyn-Z has been more then supportive of my foray into NASCAR, often times being my biggest source of encouragement and support," Pastrana wrote. "But as my wife had to take a step back from being a professional skater to let me chase my goals in racing, I too need to take a step back and look at my situation as a father and husband."

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READ: Harvick rallies
for win at Phoenix

WATCH: Final Laps:
Harvick wins late

WATCH: Kenseth:
‘still one week left’

WATCH: Johnson’s
close call

Fuel mileage miscalculation costs Edwards a Phoenix sweep

RELATED: Full Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup coverage

AVONDALE, Ariz. — Carl Edwards, a winner here at Phoenix International Raceway earlier this year, nearly pulled off the double. 

Then his fuel cell ran dry with the white flag in the air in the AdvoCare 500 and the Roush Fenway Racing driver was left to ponder what might have been. 

"We played the strategy very well," said Edwards, whose No. 99 Ford fell from first to 21st when the fuel mileage misjudgment took place. "We did a good job, but we just needed a little more fuel. We must have miscalculated. I thought we were a lap to the good." 

Instead, Edwards found himself circling the track slowly on the apron as car after car sped past. Kevin Harvick shot past for the lead — and eventually the victory. Kasey Kahne, Jimmie Johnson and Dale Earnhardt Jr. rocketed by the Roush Fenway Racing driver as well. And on and on.

"I was saving just a little bit of fuel, but obviously not enough," Edwards said. "I don’t know if I could have saved a lap and kept Kevin behind me in hindsight, but that’s a tough way to lose one there. We haven’t run out of fuel in a long time."

Now 13th in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup standings, Edwards led twice for 36 laps in the 312-lap event. A winner here as well as Richmond in the fall, he said while it seemed many drivers had trouble passing on the 1-mile circuit, "this was a fun race, I had a really good time.

"It’s just going to take me a little while to get over this one." 

Edwards almost found himself in the middle of a Chase altering incident, making contact with points leader Jimmie Johnson just before a caution at Lap 164. 

"I definitely did not mean to hit him," Edwards said of the contact. "He did a heck of a job saving it and I’m just glad (he did). I did not want to be part of the championship in that manner."

It’s been a forgettable Chase for Edwards, who two years ago headed to Homestead in the midst of a heated battle with Tony Stewart for the title. This time around, he’s finished outside the top 15 four times. A sour engine only a week earlier left him 37th at Texas. It’s a difficult pill to swallow for the driver who led the points before the Chase got underway. 

"We … just didn’t calculate the fuel correctly and I’m as big a part of that as anyone," he said. "We’re all in this together, so we’ll just go to Homestead and win it."

MORE:

READ: Harvick rallies
for win at Phoenix

WATCH: Final Laps:
Harvick wins late

WATCH: Kenseth:
‘still one week left’

WATCH: Johnson’s
close call

See who’s who in the season-ending Ford EcoBoost 200

Click here for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series entry list for the season finale.

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READ: Harvick rallies
for win at Phoenix

WATCH: Final Laps:
Harvick wins late

WATCH: Kenseth:
‘still one week left’

WATCH: Johnson’s
close call

See who’s who in the season-ending Ford EcoBoost 300

Click here for the NASCAR Nationwide Series entry list for the season finale.

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for win at Phoenix

WATCH: Final Laps:
Harvick wins late

WATCH: Kenseth:
‘still one week left’

WATCH: Johnson’s
close call

Sprint Cup Series heads to Homestead for finale

Click here to see the entry list

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READ: Harvick rallies
for win at Phoenix

WATCH: Final Laps:
Harvick wins late

WATCH: Kenseth:
‘still one week left’

WATCH: Johnson’s
close call

Joe Gibbs Racing driver can’t find his footing in the desert, trails Johnson by 28 points

RELATED: Race results | Standings | Championship scenarios | Full Chase coverage

AVONDALE, Ariz. — This is how bad it got Sunday for Matt Kenseth: As the final circuits wound down at Phoenix International Raceway, the best he could hope for was a free pass back onto the lead lap. And he was struggling to overtake Bobby Labonte and David Gilliland to put himself in position to receive that.

"I can’t believe I can’t even pass these two cars," Kenseth lamented over the radio.

It was that kind of afternoon, that kind of race for a Joe Gibbs Racing driver who came to the Valley of the Sun in a tight championship battle with Jimmie Johnson, and left needing a miracle next weekend in the season finale. From poor track position to an excruciatingly long pit stop to adjustments that simply didn’t work, the No. 20 team suffered through not only its worst performance of this Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, but arguably also its worst of the season that didn’t involve a crash or mechanical failure.

The end result was painful for a program that set the bar this season in terms of both race victories and consistency. Kenseth finished 23rd Sunday while Johnson overcame a few early close shaves to place third, and now all the Hendrick Motorsports driver needs is a finish of 23rd or better at Homestead-Miami Speedway to clinch his sixth championship at NASCAR’s highest level.

"Of course, I’m disappointed," said Kenseth, now 28 points behind Johnson. "We go there basically without a shot to win. Obviously disappointed, but on the other hand, I couldn’t be happier and more proud of my team. It’s been the best year of my racing career, really. It’s been an awesome season. You’re going to have days like this. Of course we wanted to finish off the last couple of weeks. But you can’t really just grab one race. There’s 10 races (in the Chase) and they all pay the same. We just do the best we can every week."

And yet, Kenseth had done very well in the previous eight Chase events, winning two of them, his only real bobble a 20th-place result at Talladega when he couldn’t find enough help to draft his way to the front. Two weeks ago, he and Johnson were tied atop the standings. After the No. 48 team won last Sunday at Texas, Kenseth was still only seven points back.

Phoenix, though, was another story altogether. Kenseth lagged behind Johnson in the first two practice sessions as well as qualifying, and very early in the race it was clear the No. 20 car wasn’t its usual self. Crew chief Jason Ratcliff tried different adjustments, but nothing took. The vehicle didn’t just fail to respond to the changes, it got worse, forcing Kenseth to sacrifice early track position so his team could attempt still more changes.

No dice. "It’s just so bad," Kenseth reported while running 23rd. "We’re just going to have to keep pitting out of sequence and see if we can get there. I don’t even know what to tell you."

After the race, Ratcliff was at a loss. On a late pit stop, the crew chief said he threw everything from spring rubber to packer to wedge to air pressure adjustments at the car all at the same time, hoping to see some signs of life. "Looking at the lap times, it didn’t look like it moved the needle at all, for whatever reason," he said.

"Everybody was fighting the same stuff today, so we should have been able to go out there and do a better job of executing and making our car better," he added. "So for whatever reason, we just really missed it today. It’s unfortunate — we were that close to possibly winning a championship. We’ve just got to go to Homestead next week and put our best foot forward like we always do."

Ratcliff kept trying to boost his driver’s spirits, believing the car’s performance might improve if it ever got in clean air. But it never really got the chance to get there, given that either the extra pit stops robbed Kenseth of track position, or his old tires were no match for the rest of the field when he stayed out. He kept moving in the same direction, backward, and his fate was effectively sealed when confusion over whether to take two or four tires led to a stop that was 25 seconds long.

Ratcliff took full responsibility for that glitch, just one of several the No. 20 team faced on an uncharacteristically difficult afternoon in the greater Phoenix area. "Just missed it pretty bad today," the crew chief said. "Missed it all weekend."

This from the team that led NASCAR’s premier series with seven race victories, and led the Chase for six of the first nine weeks. Now, Kenseth not only needs a miraculous turn of events to have a shot at the title, but he’s also suddenly trying to hold off Kevin Harvick — who is just six points behind him after Sunday’s victory — for second place.

"We haven’t had a day like this all year," Kenseth said. "I can’t say I was overly confident about what we had. We had some runs where we were OK in practice and all that. But man, Jason and that group is just awesome. They always put it together, and when we took off, our first run was reasonable today. It wasn’t great, but it was about where we were in practice. … Man, once we got off, we got off, and losing track position just compounded all our problems, and we could never overcome them."

Through it all, the 2003 series champion was his usual composed and professional self, even though the sting of Sunday’s finish was evident in his tightly clenched jaw. Now all he and his No. 20 team can do is try to win the finale at Homestead — where Kenseth has won once before, with Roush Fenway Racing in 2007 — and see what happens.

"You’ve got to look at this season as a whole," Ratcliff said. "And when you do that, it’s been a remarkable season. I think you can ask anybody in this garage — hey, would you take a bad day like today at Phoenix for the rest of the season? They’d jump all over it. I think we have to look at it that way."

Kenseth certainly does. "I’m a pretty lucky guy," he said. "… It’s been a great season. Still got a week to go. Hopefully (we’ll) go down there to Homestead and contend for a win."

MORE:

READ: Harvick rallies
for win at Phoenix

WATCH: Final Laps:
Harvick wins late

WATCH: Kenseth:
‘still one week left’

WATCH: Johnson’s
close call

NASCAR national series championship table set for Homestead-Miami Speedway

RELATED: Full Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup coverage

Jimmie Johnson leads Matt Kenseth by 28 points in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series standings, going into Ford Championship Weekend at Homestead-Miami Speedway.
 
Regardless of any other driver’s finish, Johnson will clinch his sixth NASCAR Sprint Cup championship with a finish of 23rd or better at HMS; or 24th or better and at least one lap led; or 25th or better and the most laps led in Sunday’s Ford EcoBoost 400 (3 p.m. on ESPN, Motor Racing Network Radio and SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
 
Kevin Harvick, 34 points behind Johnson, remains the only other driver eligible for the 2013 championship.

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AVONDALE, Ariz. — Jimmie Johnson survived a close call and a succession of less-than-stellar restarts.
 
Matt Kenseth couldn’t overcome handling problems that kept his car mired in traffic.
 
And Kevin Harvick, meanwhile, took advantage of Carl Edwards‘ fuel shortage to win his fourth race of the season in Sunday’s AdvoCare 500 at Phoenix International Raceway, keeping alive his faint hopes of winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship in his final season with Richard Childress Racing.

The net result? Johnson, who finished third, widened his lead over the struggling Kenseth, who ran 23rd, and took a giant step toward his sixth series championship.
 
Johnson expanded his advantage in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup standings from seven to 28 points over Kenseth entering next Sunday’s season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Johnson can clinch the title with a finish of 23rd or better, 24th if he leads one lap and 25th if he leads the most laps.
 
By winning and leading the most laps on Sunday, Harvick, third in the standings, narrowed his deficit to Johnson from 40 to 34 points and is still within range of the title, should Johnson have issues at Homestead.
 
The victory was Harvick’s fourth at the one-mile track and the 23rd of his career. He led 70 of the 312 laps to clinch the 200th win for the Childress organization in NASCAR’s three national series. It came as a sudden surprise, as Edwards slowed on the final lap.
 
"Well, I think we were all pushing it on gas there to try to just put enough in it to get to the end, so that we could gain all the track position we could under green," Harvick said of his final pit stop on Lap 267. "I saw him slowing with about maybe a lap and a half, two laps to go. (Team owner) Richard (Childress) came across the radio and said he was slowing down. I’m like ‘Dang, we might still be in this thing.’ "
 
Kasey Kahne ran second, followed by Johnson, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Kurt Busch. Edwards, who ran out of gas while leading on the final lap, finished 21st. Edwards slid up into Johnson’s car on Lap 163, dropping Johnson back to 24th after Harvick took them three-wide entering Turn 1. Johnson made a spectacular save and spent the rest of the race working his way toward the front.
 
Johnson started from the pole but, thanks in part to Joey Logano’s dive to the inside, failed to launch at the green flag, a tendency that would plague him all afternoon. Trouble on restarts may have kept the five-time champion from winning the race, but they didn’t prevent him from recovering nicely when the incident with Edwards left him back in the pack.
 
"At two different points, as I saved it, the car pointed back at the fence, and I thought I was going to hit it," Johnson said. "Thankful that that didn’t happen, clearly. [It] certainly worried me, and then we were mired in traffic after that, and I didn’t know what that was going to mean for us."
 
Kenseth, on the other hand, could make little progress with a balky car whose handling deteriorated throughout the race, despite the best efforts of his crew to correct the problem. Worse, a miscommunication on a 164th-lap stop under caution resulted in a dramatically sluggish trip to pit lane that lasted nearly 26 seconds and dropped Kenseth from seventh to 29th in the running order.
 
"Obviously, it didn’t drive good or we would have been up there with the front group," Kenseth said. "I just did all I could with it, which wasn’t much."

Though Johnson enjoys a hefty advantage approaching the season finale, he was far from ready to lay claim to the title.
 
"Yeah, everybody is so eager to predict the champion, but you’ve got to play the game," said Johnson, who has finished 32nd and 36th in his last two races at Homestead. "You’ve got to run the race, and stuff happens. There’s so many variables in one of our races — I think more variables than any pro sport out there.
 
"We have all 43 teams playing, driving, racing, all the mechanical components on the race car, pit stops, other issues on other cars that can take you out … tires. There’s a lot of variables, so we don’t take any of these weekends lightly. Even with a nice points lead I’m not going to take any week any differently. There’s still a lot of pressure to get the job done, and it’s no lay‑up at all."
 
Johnson, Kenseth and Harvick are the only three drivers with a chance to win the championship. Kyle Busch (fourth in the standings) and Earnhardt (fifth) were among those eliminated at Phoenix.

Contributing: Staff reports

MORE:

READ: Harvick rallies
for win at Phoenix

WATCH: Final Laps:
Harvick wins late

WATCH: Kenseth:
‘still one week left’

WATCH: Johnson’s
close call

Moments that changed the course of the eighth race in the 2013 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup

HARVICK PASSES EDWARDS AS HE RUNS OUT OF FUEL

Kevin Harvick took advantage of Carl Edwards’ fuel shortage to win his fourth race of the season in Sunday’s AdvoCare 500 at Phoenix International Raceway, keeping alive his faint hopes of winning the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship in his final season with Richard Childress Racing.
 
By winning the race and leading the most laps, Harvick, who is third in the standings, narrowed his deficit to Johnson from 40 to 34 points and is still within range of the title, should Johnson have issues at Homestead.
 
The victory was Harvick’s fourth at the one-mile track and the 23rd of his career.

Edwards, who ran out of gas while leading, finished 21st.

UPS


JOHNSON FINISHES THIRD TO PAD POINTS LEAD

Jimmie Johnson survived a close call and a succession of less-than-stellar restarts.
 
Johnson, who finished third, widened his lead over the struggling Kenseth, who ran 23rd, and took a giant step toward his sixth series championship.
 
Johnson expanded his advantage in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup standings from seven to 28 points over Kenseth entering next Sunday’s season finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Johnson can clinch the title with a finish of 23rd or better, 24th if he leads one lap and 25th if he leads most laps.

Edwards slid up into Johnson’s car on Lap 163, dropping Johnson back to 24th after Harvick took them three-wide entering Turn 1. Johnson made a spectacular save and spent the rest of the race working his way toward the front.

KENSETH HAS TROUBLE ON AND OFF TRACK
Matt Kenseth couldn’t overcome handling problems that kept his car mired in traffic.
 
Kenseth’s adventures predominantly came on pit road. The former series champion got off cycle just before the halfway point and battled an ill-handling car through much of the day, reporting to crew chief Jason Ratcliff that his car was “undriveable.” Worse, a miscommunication on a 164th-lap stop under caution resulted in a dramatically sluggish trip to pit lane that lasted nearly 26 seconds and dropped Kenseth from seventh to 29th in the running order.

NASCAR Wire Service contributed to this report.