Future plans still unclear for 2000 Sprint Cup Series champion

AVONDALE, Ariz. — Bobby Labonte is one of only two drivers to own championships on NASCAR’s top two circuits. Should the right opportunity arise for next season in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, the veteran driver might be willing to make a run at the sport’s triple crown.

Sunday’s event at Phoenix International Raceway marks Labonte’s final race in the No. 47 car of JTG Daugherty Racing, which will put 2014 driver AJ Allmendinger behind the wheel for next weekend’s finale at Homestead-Miami Speedway. The 49-year-old Labonte hasn’t yet announced any plans for next season, and admitted this weekend his phone hasn’t rung as much as he’d hoped.

"It’s not like it used to be … where there’s a big shakeup in things. Nobody’s really shaking up things. It’s kind of a year where not a lot’s happening," Labonte said. "You’ve got to kind of wait a little bit longer and see what happens, and something might not happen. I’ve got my ears open, and my phone’s rang a little bit. But it’s not like some new team is coming or, or some big change thing is going on, or people are doing this or that. Not being in the rumor mill is good in one way, but you wish you were a little bit more in another way."

Labonte has been a fixture at NASCAR’s premier level since 1993, winning 21 races — the most recent a decade ago — as well as the 2000 championship. His preference, it seems, would be to remain in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series next season. But if an offer doesn’t materialize, Labonte said he wouldn’t dismiss a competitive ride in the Truck Series, which is the only title at NASCAR’s national level the Texas native hasn’t won.

"If an opportunity came here to race, I’d want to do that," he said, referring to the Sprint Cup Series. "If an opportunity came (in the Truck Series) to race for a championship, that would be awesome. Again, it’s not easy. I’m not saying you’re going to pop in and do it. But it would be great to have that opportunity. If that can happen, heck, I’d do it, I believe, just because of the fact that I’ve done this for 20 years."

Labonte won the Nationwide title in 1991, and is one of just two drivers — along with Brad Keselowski, who claimed a Nationwide title in 2010 to go along with last year’s Sprint Cup crown — to earn championships in the sport’s top two divisions. No one has swept all three, although former Truck Series and Nationwide Series champion Greg Biffle came closest when he finished as runner-up behind Tony Stewart at the sport’s premier level in 2005.

The opportunity to claim all three national series titles seems to appeal to Labonte, as does the reduced Truck Series schedule.

"It’s kind of one of those things where at this point in time, you know, a Truck Series deal would be really, really nice to run 22 races," he said. "That would be something that I might not have thought about three or four years ago, but today I’m like, you know, that’s probably not a bad thing. That would be exciting to see. But still have to wait a little bit on that as well."

Labonte has been in this situation before — he found out in November of 2008 he would not drive the No. 43 car of Petty Enterprises the following season, and didn’t ink a deal to drive the No. 96 of the defunct Hall of Fame Racing organization until mid-January of the following year. These days, though, he’s a little older, and coming off a sometimes trying three-year stint with a JTG Daugherty that’s struggled since separating itself from Michael Waltrip Racing prior to last season. Labonte came to Phoenix still seeking his first top-10 finish this year.

Labonte’s situation comes amid Friday’s revelation by another NASCAR veteran, Mark Martin, who said he likely won’t race anymore after next weekend, instead shifting into an advisory role with Stewart-Haas Racing in 2014. While Labonte’s Sprint Cup title might make him attractive to lesser-funded teams seeking to take advantage of his championship provisional, he said he wouldn’t pounce on any offer just to get behind the wheel of a car.

"Just depends on the time and place. I really don’t know," Labonte said. "That’s something I just have to think about hard. I’m pretty sure I’m not just going to jump up and down at every opportunity out there. At this point and time I think I can just sit back and relax and evaluate something. But heck, who knows. I also said I’d never own a race team, and I’ve been close a couple of times.

"You don’t say never. But it would be nice to be able to race, and it would be nice to be able to win. Obviously it’s kind of hard to do that these days. … If it’s an opportunity where you can make a difference for somebody else, I like that challenge. It just depends on what it is."

JTG Daugherty put Allmendinger in the No. 47 car for a handful of races earlier this season in what was originally intended as a comparative measure, but a stretch of top-15 finishes earned the Californian the full-time ride for next year. Earlier this season, Labonte sat out the Sprint Cup event at Kentucky and saw his streak of 704 consecutive starts — the third-longest ever behind Ricky Rudd and Jeff Gordon — come to an end.

Now he’s left to wonder if the end of Sunday’s race at Phoenix will also mean the end of his Sprint Cup career.

"I’m not going to sit here and say, ‘Hey it was all good, don’t worry about it.’ Because you do worry about it," Labonte said. "You want to do it. You don’t want to say, ‘If that’s it, that’s OK.’ Because it’s not OK. But it’s also reality, too. You don’t know. I don’t know. I just don’t know. I don’t have a crystal ball, and I can’t tell. But obviously if it was (the end), you’d be disappointed for a while, and I’m sure like everybody else has told me, you’ll get over it. But we’ll have to wait and see. You just don’t know."

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Team owner continues to strengthen engineering

Richard Childress Racing announced Saturday the hiring of Mike Coughlan as technical director, a move that should bolster the engineering efforts of a Chevrolet team that already has made significant strides in that area.

Coughlan, from Surrey, England, has 15 years of experience in Formula One competition, serving as a chief designer with such marquee teams as Ferrari, McLaren, Williams, Benetton and Arrows. Coughlan also has experience in NASCAR competition, having worked with Michael Waltrip Racing in 2010 and 2011 before returning to F1.

Coughlan will report to Dr. Eric Warren, director of competition. RCR also added Mark McArdle as full-time director of racing operations in August.

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Dillon leads Hornish Jr. by eight points entering finale at Homestead

RELATED: Full race results | Standings

AVONDALE, Ariz. — Don’t bet against Kyle Busch when he races at Phoenix.

Don’t bet against him when he wins the pole for a NASCAR Nationwide Series race.

Kyle Busch did both on Saturday, and with that working for him, Busch blew away the opposition to win his sixth race at the one-mile flat track in the Sonoran Desert.

The driver of the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota finished the ServiceMaster 200 more than four seconds ahead of race runner-up Justin Allgaier, who passed series leader Austin Dillon for the second position on the final lap.

Dillon held third, followed by Regan Smith and Sam Hornish Jr., whose deficit to Dillon in the championship battle grew from six to eight points.

Busch led 169 laps en route to his 12th NASCAR Nationwide Series victory in 25 starts this season. Busch extended his series record for wins in the series to 63. The pole was Busch’s 10th of the season — on nine occasions this season, he has converted the top starting spot into a victory.

"It was certainly a great day for us," Busch said. "It’s a testament to (crew chief) Adam Stevens and the group of guys that he’s got around us that do such a great job for us and work real hard and give us some great equipment." 

With a bold move from the outside lane, Brad Keselowski powered past Busch into the lead after a restart on Lap 112, but the tenure of the No. 22 Ford at the front of the field was short-lived. 

Busch, who slipped to third on the restart lap, regained the second spot on Lap 117, overtaking Harvick for the position. Three laps later, Busch and Keselowski were side-by-side at the start/finish line, with Busch nosing ahead as the cars crossed the stripe. 

Busch began to inch away over the next 10 laps before Brad Sweet’s spin in Turn 3 brought out the third caution of the race on Lap 130. Diverging strategies scrambled the running order as five drivers — Trevor Bayne, Hornish, Allgaier, Smith and Scott — opted not to pit under the yellow, leaving Busch to take the green from the sixth spot on fresh right-side tires. 

Four more cautions followed in short order — in a race that had run under green for 100 laps between the first two yellows — and allowed Busch to pick off the cars running on old tires. Shortly after a restart on Lap 154, he passed Allgaier for the lead. 

"When we got back in traffic there, the restarts just worked out perfectly for me," Busch said. "We went green, I picked off a spot, we went yellow. We went green, I picked off one or two more spots, we went yellow.

"So every time I just kept picking off a car, and the caution would come out, so it would just re-bunch the field and give me another opportunity, instead of having it spread and take more to get back to the front. So it worked out real well for us in that situation."

Twelve laps before Busch made the winning pass, a tap from Brian Scott‘s Chevrolet had knocked Brad Keselowski‘s Ford into the Turn 3 wall in an accident that had serious implications for the owners’ championship. Entering the race, the No. 22 led the No. 54 Toyota driven by Busch by 26 points, but Keselowski’s wreck, coupled with Busch’s win, trimmed the margin to four points with one race left.

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Sprint Cup regular tops qualifying for 10th time this season

Kyle Busch, an 11-time winner in the NASCAR Nationwide Series this season, roared to the Coors Light Pole Award in qualifying for Saturday’s ServiceMaster 200 (4 p.m. ET, ESPN) at Phoenix International Raceway.

Busch scored his 10th pole position of the year, the 36th of his Nationwide career and his sixth on the one-mile track in the desert. He turned a lap of 133.422 mph in the Joe Gibbs Racing No. 54 Toyota.

Austin Dillon, the Nationwide Series points leader with two races left, qualified second at 133.398 mph. Dillon, driving the No. 3 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet, nearly grazed the Turn 2 wall during his qualifying attempt but managed to escape contact.

Sam Hornish Jr., who trails Dillon by just six points in the series standings, will start sixth in the No. 12 Penske Racing Ford.

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series regulars Kevin Harvick and Brad Keselowski qualified third and fourth respectively. Brian Scott will start fifth in Saturday’s 200-lap race.

Former Daytona 500 winner Derrike Cope, the first driver to make a qualifying attempt, backed his No. 70 car hard into the Turn 1 wall after he lost control on his first lap. He is scheduled to start at the rear of the field in a reserve car.

Morgan Shepherd and Dexter Stacey were the only two drivers who failed to qualify for the 40-car field.

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Gordon right behind in second; Kenseth comes in ahead of Johnson

RELATED: Full practice results, race lineup

AVONDALE, Ariz. — Michael Waltrip Racing’s Clint Bowyer ended Saturday’s final practice atop the scoreboard as Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers were first through 10th in the 55-minute session.

Bowyer’s lap of 134.862 mph, recorded after just three laps on the 1-mile track, edged Hendrick Motorsports driver Jeff Gordon‘s best effort of 134.842.

Kurt Busch (Furniture Row Racing), fastest in the day’s morning session, was third while Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Matt Kenseth completed the top five.

Busch and Gordon were the only drivers who finished in the top five in both of Saturday’s sessions.

Kenseth trails Jimmie Johnson by seven points in the battle for this year’s championship. Johnson was 10th fastest when the session came to a close.

Sixth through ninth in the final session were Joey Logano (Penske Racing), Kyle Busch (Joe Gibbs Racing), Kevin Harvick (Richard Childress Racing) and Carl Edwards (Roush Fenway Racing).

Harvick had the best 10-lap average.

Harvick, Johnson, Earnhardt Jr., Kenseth and Edwards all finished in the top 10 in Saturday’s first session, as well.

Johnson will start on the pole for Sunday’s AdvoCare 500 (3 p.m. ET) while Kenseth will line up 14th in the 43-car field.

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Get a sneak peek at the looks for this weekend

MORE: Full Chase coverage

SPRINT CUP SERIES PAINT SCHEMES

Jamie McMurray will drive the No. 1 Lexar Chevrolet.

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Greg Biffle will drive the No. 16 Scotch Ford.

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Ricky Stenhouse Jr. will drive the No. 17 RFR Driven Ford.

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Ryan Newman will drive the No. 39 Quicken Loans – Salute to Veterans Day Chevrolet.

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Juan Pablo Montoya will drive the No. 42 Target Chevrolet.

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Bobby Labonte will drive the No. 47 Wounded Warrior Project – Clorox Toyota.

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David Reutimann will drive the No. 83 Horizon Toyota.

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NATIONWIDE SERIES PAINT SCHEMES

Matt Kenseth will drive the No. 18 Game Stop Toyota.

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Chad Hackenbracht will drive the No. 44 Tastee Chocolate Apples Toyota.

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Ryan Blaney will drive the No. 48 AutoZone Ford.

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Alex Bowman will drive the No. 99 Fuelxx by Innovative Green Technologies Toyota.

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CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES PAINT SCHEMES

Daniel Hemric will drive the No. 6 Jack Links Valvoline Chevrolet.

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Cale Gale will drive the No. 33 RUUD Chevrolet.

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Erik Jones will drive the No. 51 Wake Up Narcolepsy "Awake at the Wheel" Toyota.

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Johnny Sauter will drive the No. 98 Carolina Nut Co./Curb Records Toyota.

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Just eight points separate title contenders heading to Homestead

AVONDALE, Ariz. — Sam Hornish Jr. used a gutsy pit call — or maybe it was a no-call — to gain track position, then held off Matt Kenseth for a fifth-place finish Saturday at Phoenix International Raceway.

The move enabled the Penske Racing driver to keep pace with points leader Austin Dillon with one race remaining in the battle for the NASCAR Nationwide Series championship.

Dillon, who finished third to race winner Kyle Busch, will head to Homestead-Miami Speedway sporting an eight-point lead — up from six before Saturday’s ServiceMaster 200.

Running outside the top 10 for much of the first half of the race, Hornish Jr. stayed out during the race’s third caution, a track-position move that allowed him to restart in second when the green reappeared on Lap 137.

Although he eventually fell back to fifth — the result of worn tires and re-starting in the outside lane, Hornish was able to maintain his position despite a rash of yellow flags during the second half of the race.

"We were talking too much on the radio and the call might have been different," Hornish Jr. said of the call to stay out. "We were back and forth and it was all going to be (based) on how many cars came (to pit road) ahead of us.

"By talking about it too much we just decided to stay (out). It really worked out well for us."

His said his car "wasn’t a fifth-place car. So to be able to get a fifth-place out of it was really good."

In a race that was dominated by Busch — the Joe Gibbs Racing driver led 169 laps — Hornish admitted his No. 12 team struggled.

"We ran real good here in 2011 (when we won) but with the exception of that we haven’t been able to figure it out," he said. "It was a lot better than yesterday (in practice), but still not as good as we needed."

Dillon, the 2011 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series champion, was fast in practice and fast once the race got underway. Only a late charge and last-lap pass by Justin Allgaier kept the Richard Childress Racing driver from finishing second.

"We had a good car all weekend long; that’s what you want to do — come out and run strong," Dillon said. "The guys did a good job on pit road; we made no mistakes and if we do that one more week, we have a championship."

Dillon said the numerous cautions in the second half of the race was an issue, but added that, "even though my car was pretty good and I finished third, it didn’t drive well. It doesn’t feel good out there."

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Veteran made 1,000th career NASCAR start on Sunday

RELATED: Full Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup coverage

AVONDALE, Ariz. — Jeff Burton says he plans on racing in 2014. He doesn’t say how much he plans to race or for whom. Only that he expects to be back behind the wheel. 

"I feel that I know what I am going to be doing," Burton said Friday at Phoenix International Raceway, laughing. "It’s just you all don’t know.

"Some things have taken a little longer than I thought they would take and some of that is because of me. Some of that is because I slowed some stuff down and wanted to really think about it. Some of it is because some situations have popped up that weren’t there a little bit ago.

"I feel very confident. I know exactly what I’m going to be doing part of next year and there is another part of it that I’m still working on, but really close on. I’m just not the kind of person that is going to talk about it until we need to be talking about it.”

Whatever his plans are, racing in NASCAR’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series is included.

"Yes, part of it," he said.

Burton made his 1,000th NASCAR start on Sunday. The South Boston, Va., native has 690 starts at the Cup level, 306 in the NASCAR Nationwide Series and four in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. He has 21 wins in Cup, 27 in Nationwide. 

The 46-year-old will have no seat at Richard Childress Racing for 2014, his place of employment since the second half of the 2004 season. Prior to joining RCR, he spent the 1996 through most of ’04 with Roush Racing, following a two-year stint driving for Bill and Mickey Stavola. 

He scored his first career Cup win in Texas (1997) and has won on a wide variety of tracks during his career — from the short tracks of Martinsville and Bristol to larger venues of Darlington, Charlotte and Daytona

"I’ve been really blessed to do it for as long as I’ve done it," said Burton. "When I was 7 years old I wanted to be a race car driver. I’m 46 and I’m a race car driver. I’ve just been really blessed. 

"The cool thing is I’ve met so many people and experienced so many things that I never would have been able to do. To have a chance to compete for a living is really is a cool thing. You know what your job is and go out and try to do it. Competing to me means something. To be able to do it this long has been really cool.” 

Burton has finished 10th or better in the points standings eight times, including a career-best third in 2000. A four-time participant in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, he is currently 19th in points.

Personable, articulate and respected in and out of the garage area, Burton has been mentioned as a potential candidate for the television booth, particularly with NBC Sports, which obtained the rights to air the final 20 Sprint Cup races annually beginning in 2015.

Burton said the forthcoming change from full-time competitor has provided the opportunity "step back a little bit and take myself out of the mental habit of being at the race track every single weekend and look at things from a broader view. 

"Kind of ‘hey what else is out there in the racing world’ so to speak," he said. "The last several months have been really interesting. I have been offered some things that were just crazy that I can’t talk about today, but there were some really interesting things that have come my way. 

"We will see. I will be involved in the sport. There is a place for me. I want to be here. I feel like I can contribute so I would be surprised if five years from now I wasn’t still involved in the sport.”

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Read the story here.

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