More powerful car among the biggest adjustments to make

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CONCORD, N.C. — It feels like being kicked back into your seat.

That’s how Kyle Larson best describes the biggest difference between the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series car he’s racing for the first time this weekend, and the NASCAR Nationwide Series vehicle he drives on a regular basis. The step up to NASCAR’s highest level — which Larson will make full-time next season — brings with it longer events and a deeper field of competition, but perhaps the most challenging aspect of the transition is its most fundamental — a more powerful race car.

Sprint Cup cars are propelled by engines that make 850 horsepower, 200 more than those inside Nationwide or NASCAR Camping World Truck Series entries. That extra power can make a huge difference in how the vehicles are driven, as Brian Scott discovered when he qualified Thursday night for the first time at the Sprint Cup level.

"It feels like you’re going about 50 mph faster going into the corners," Scott said. "The motor has a different sound. It gets you excited. I haven’t had to qualify at a big track and lift and use the brake for a long, long time. We don’t do it anywhere on the Nationwide Series or in the Truck Series. Still I’m trying to figure that out, how to have speed with a car that has all this motor, and getting out of the throttle and using the brake and how to do all that."

He’s not alone. Scott is one of three drivers making their Sprint Cup debut Saturday night at Charlotte Motor Speedway, along with Larson and Blake Koch. Larson and Austin Dillon are Nationwide drivers making the jump to Sprint Cup next season. And they’re doing it in an era of more open but still relatively limited testing, and where the Nationwide and Sprint Cup cars are different animals due to their stark differences in horsepower.

No wonder, then, only one Sprint Cup rookie — Joey Logano in 2009 — has won a race in the past six seasons, that coming after a golden era where first-year drivers such as Kyle Busch, Denny Hamlin, Ryan Newman and Jimmie Johnson all won straight out of the box. Next year brings a great chance to end the streak, with Larson and Dillon making the leap. But some point to rookie Ricky Stenhouse Jr., a two-time Nationwide champion currently 21st in Sprint Cup points, as a cautionary tale.

"The best young driver that’s kind of beat up on those guys the last few years is Ricky Stenhouse. And he’s had a little bit of a tough time adjusting to the Cup style of the cars," said Kevin Harvick, who won twice as a Sprint Cup rookie in 2001, and has won 20 more times since.

"It’s a lot harder for these guys coming up from those series to adapt to the Cup car, because they just have so much more power, less grip, from a downforce standpoint. … They’re 25 mph slower than we are at some places down the straightaway on entry. You overdrive the (Nationwide) car constantly compared to how you would drive a Cup car. There’s some potential in the young crop of drivers, but I think when you look at the success of the guys that have been around it, like myself and (Matt) Kenseth, and have driven these cars for a long time and evolved with the new generation of cars, they’re hard to drive. And to come in and just adapt to them immediately is going to be tough."

Compare that to the early 2000s, when the cars had more in common under the hood. Drivers of Harvick’s era also benefitted from a more liberal testing policy that allowed 12 two-day test sessions. "I got 24 test days to sort stuff out," Johnson said. Today, each organization is limited to four tests on sanctioned tracks — granted, an improvement from a few years ago when due to financial concerns the practice was outlawed altogether. But the learning curve remains a steep one for drivers trying to take the next step.

"Everything just happens so much faster — going down the straightaways, how you have to drive it into the corner," said Stenhouse, this season’s likely Sunoco Rookie of the Year in Sprint Cup. "It definitely catches you off guard a little bit, and you definitely have to kind of calm yourself back down when you go to the (Nationwide) garage and say, ‘Hey, this car is going to be a lot slower than the one I just got out of.’ It takes a while to get used to it. I’m still getting used to it."

Next season, Larson will take over the No. 42 car at Earnhardt Ganassi Racing currently piloted by Juan Pablo Montoya. For his debut at Charlotte, he’s driving a No. 51 car entered by Phoenix Racing, but essentially prepared by EGR. He may have another advantage as well — a sprint-car background that prepared him for high-horsepower vehicles. The sprint cars he came up on had about 850 horsepower, same as a Sprint Cup car, but carried about half the weight.

"I just think being used to that extra horsepower, being able to have experience finessing the throttle, is a big help for the Cup Series," said the 21-year-old California native. Dillon can relate — he cut his racing teeth in an 830-horsepower dirt car, and already has a top finish of 11th in limited Sprint Cup activity leading up to his rookie campaign with Richard Childress Racing next year.

"I have a lot more power in my dirt car when I get in it than my Nationwide car," Dillon said. "I feel like you have to be able to be adaptive and be able to change your driving style to whatever kind of car it is. I do believe there are some guys who are better in high-horsepower than others, and some who are better in lower-horsepower cars than other. It’s something you have to be able to adapt to. … I want to be able to race anything I get in, so I just want to be able to adapt as much as I can."

Johnson is another driver who came up in higher-horsepower vehicles, in his case off-road trucks, and that experience left him needing more throttle to turn the car. He won just once at the Nationwide level, and has gone on to claim five championships on the Sprint Cup tour, proof that some drivers are better suited to more power under the hood. "Coming from high-horsepower cars, I think the Cup car is going to fit their style a little better," he said of Dillon and Larson, likely to battle one another for rookie honors next year.

Larson seems somewhat unfazed by it all, maintaining the same cool countenance he’s displayed throughout his first season in the Nationwide Series. "I lift and get back in the gas at the same points," he said of driving the two different cars at Charlotte. Stenhouse, also a product of the sprint-car ranks, believes Larson will adapt quickly to the Sprint Cup level, as he’s done everywhere else. The two drivers share the same management company, which sought Stenhouse’s opinion on Larson potentially making the step up.

"He might as well. It’s either, you learn while you’re doing it now, or you learn while you’re doing it later," Stenhouse said. "At some point, you have to do it. And I think he’s ready to do it."

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Chase leaders have shot to fix recent struggles at Charlotte

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CONCORD, N.C. — Matt Kenseth does not believe in mulligans.

"I don’t believe in ever wanting to give up points," the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup leader said. He’d have every reason to change his mind after the past two weeks, performances at Dover and Kansas that left something to be desired in the results column, but still allowed the Joe Gibbs Racing driver to maintain a slim advantage atop the standings.

Kenseth finished seventh two weekends ago at a Dover track where he’s a two-time winner, and muscled an ill-handling race car to an 11th-place result last Sunday on a Kansas facility where he had won the previous two events. The winner of the first two playoff races, Kenseth still departed Kansas City with a three-point edge over Jimmie Johnson, his closest pursuer.

"There and Dover, we certainly wanted to do better than we did," Kenseth said. "But we did the best that we could, and that’s over, so we just move on to the next one and do the best we can here at Charlotte."

Saturday night’s event at Charlotte Motor Speedway ends the opening half of the 10-race Chase, and presents an opportunity for Kenseth to return to form given his success on 1.5-mile venues this year. Of his personal record seven race victories this season, four of them have come on intermediate tracks the same size as a Charlotte facility where he’s won twice, most recently in 2011.

It all sets up a potential showdown with Johnson at a track where both drivers have weathered wild swings in fortune — Kenseth’s two wins at Charlotte spanned more than a decade, while Johnson has prevailed in just one of his last 15 after claiming five out of six races.

"We’re still trying to find that magic where we can separate ourselves each time we come back, but I still feel like we’re in that top-three, top-five group," Johnson said. "As long as Matt isn’t winning, then a top-three or a top-five wouldn’t be too bad this weekend."

Although the Chase has yet to distill itself down to a two-man duel — third-place Kevin Harvick is 25 points behind after his win last Sunday, and the wildest of wild cards looms next week at Talladega — Charlotte certainly offers the opportunity for the leaders to build some separation. Johnson’s six career victories are a record here, and he won the Sprint All-Star Race at the same facility in May. Kenseth has been the driver to beat on 1.5-milers all season, despite his 15th-place result here in the spring.

"Sometimes you can’t just look at numbers," Kenseth said at an event where he and watch company Citizen donated $25,000 to the University of Wisconsin Alzheimer’s research facility in remembrance of the his mother Nicola, who died of the disease last year. "I think more times than not we’ve ran well here, we just don’t have the finishes. … I feel like our performance has been pretty good here. Especially the last two or three years, I think our performance has been really good here. We don’t always have the finishes."

That was certainly the case in May, where Kenseth led 112 laps before he and Johnson were both taken out of contention in the same crash with 65 to go. Johnson had a stranglehold on the place in the middle 2000s, before a resurfacing altered so many of the things — the bumps in the old asphalt, the tire fall-off, even the line the No. 48 car took around the facility — that helped feed his dominance, and brought the five-time champion back to the field.

"The overwhelming majority of it is the repave, I think," Johnson said, referring to the track’s 2006 resurfacing. "…. The old surface, the bumps, how tough it was to get around this place just worked really, really well for me, and we were able to find a little advantage, especially on long runs. And now with the surface like it is, it’s just far different."

That certainly would seem to level the scales between him and Kenseth, who has won every other race this season on a 1.5-mile track — with victories at Las Vegas, spring Kansas, Kentucky and Chicagoland. After falling short in Kansas City last weekend, that pattern would seem to portend a favorable outcome Saturday night in Charlotte.

"Good. That’s good," Kenseth said with a smile. "I just hope it keeps working like that. I still can’t believe the year that we’ve had. We’re certainly still in a really good spot after four weeks. We want to win a championship and that’s our goal, but I’ll say it again — no matter what happens at the end of the year, it’s been an incredible year. I just hope we can keep it going. Obviously this is an important six weeks, and it would be nice to be able to finish it off, that’s for sure."

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Kyle Busch Foundation holds fundraising dinner to aid North Carolina breast cancer patients

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Kyle Busch is in the middle of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, coming off an unfortunate performance at Kansas Speedway that left him two spots lower in the points than when he went west last week.

On Tuesday night, at 5Church Restaurant near uptown Charlotte, he had put all that away and focused instead on giving back to local families who need help every day.

Through his Kyle Busch Foundation — and with the direction and passion of his wife, Samantha — Kyle did the town up pink alongside the Pretty in Pink Foundation in an effort to raise money to aid breast cancer patients in North Carolina.

A corporate fundraising dinner at the Church Street eatery and bar drew interest from Sprint, Toyota, M&M’S, Interstate Batteries, Monster Energy, Joe Gibbs Racing, Dollar General, The NASCAR Foundation and others, with a silent auction as the centerpiece.

“This is the first time we’ve done something like this with the foundation,” said Kyle, sitting in the front room at 5Church alongside his wife. “This is the culmination of a year of planning, and it’s something that is very important to us in terms of an opportunity to help people in need. Throughout the year, our foundation helps a variety of children’s charities, and this is something different and very worthwhile.”

The Pretty in Pink Foundation was founded by Dr. Lisa Tolnitch, principal at Tolnitch Surgical Associates, and the current program with the KBF is called “Project Pink: Protect Your Pair.” Pretty in Pink’s mission is to provide financial assistance to uninsured and underinsured breast cancer patients for surgery, radiation therapy and chemotherapy administration.

They raise money for this funding through a variety of sponsorships, fundraising, donations and pledge drives, and this is the first NASCAR program the group has initiated, said Pretty in Pink’s Amanda Danchi, the marketing and communications coordinator for the group.

“We’re already thrilled with the partnership of Kyle and Samantha,” she said. “This is the first time we’ve been able to get with NASCAR, and we have a special paint scheme for Friday night’s NASCAR Nationwide Series event, and we’ll have 12 or 13 of our Champions on the track for the start of the race with Kyle and Samantha.”

The proceeds from Tuesday night’s dinner/auction will go toward paying medical bills for those Champions, which is what Pretty in Pink calls its recipients.

“We wanted to go a little beyond just awareness,” said Samantha Busch of the program. “NASCAR is very involved with the National Breast Cancer Awareness Month, with a lot of pink cars out there on the track. We wanted to take it one step further and help our local neighbors who are fighting cancer now.

“The Pretty in Pink Foundation just touched my heart with the many ways they help their Champions throughout the process,” she continued. “I don’t want to have these brave women having to decide between putting food on the table, taking care of their children or paying for chemotherapy.”

Samantha Busch said the fact that Pretty in Pink serves patients inside the state of North Carolina was a major selling point for her.

“One main component of Pretty in Pink services is that they pay medical bills locally in the state,” she said. “As we were reading through the bios, we realized they are right here in our community — faces we can identify with — and that made us all realize this was the perfect fit for our campaign.” 

Kyle said that Samantha was the driving force behind the dinner/auction, and all the planning and coordination it took to present. Judging by the turnout, it was a smashing success, as more than 150 people crowded inside the restaurant for the proceedings.

In addition to the Tuesday activities, a program hat and T-shirt is on sale through Dec. 1 at KyleBuschFoundation.org and 100 percent of the proceeds will go toward fundraising. A Mobile Mammogram Screening Unit will be on hand at KBM’s race shop in Mooresville on Thursday, from 1-7 p.m., with appearances by both Kyle and Samantha.

Toyota Racing donated part of its footprint at Charlotte Motor Speedway to the program, which will allow Pretty in Pink ample space to distribute information and promote awareness.

Full coverage of all medical expenses for a single year can cost $12,000, six or seven radiation/oncology treatments cost $2,500 and a chemotherapy treatment costs $1,200. 

For more information on the Pretty in Pink Foundation, visit their web site at www.prettyinpinkfoundation.org, and to see what the Kyle Busch Foundation is up to, visit www.KyleBuschFoundation.org.

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Victory is the 11th for Rowdy in the Nationwide Series this season

MORE: Results | Standings

CONCORD, N.C.—Status quo.
 
Kyle Busch won from the Coors Light pole—as he almost always does—and the race for the NASCAR Nationwide Series championship remained excruciating tight.
 
Busch held off charging series leader Austin Dillon in Friday night’s Dollar General 300 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. Earlier in the day, Busch had won his ninth NNS pole of the season, and for the eighth time in nine tries this year, Busch won from the top starting spot.
 
The victory was the series-best 11th of the season for Busch, who won for the eighth time in the series at Charlotte and for the 62nd time in his career, extending his own series record. In Victory Lane, Busch announced that he and wife Samantha were donating all the race winnings to the Pretty in Pink Foundation to combat breast cancer.

"I didn’t think we were going to win the thing, but somehow I got to the top (of the track) and started making time and was able to get back up there (to the lead)," Busch said. "I certainly want to do this tomorrow night also (in the Sprint Cup race)."
 
Sam Hornish Jr. ran third and remained eight points behind Dillon in the battle for the Nationwide Series title. Hornish scored an extra point for leading most laps (76) and matched Dillon’s 43 points scored in the race.
 
"We had three guys fighting it out there till the end with everything we had," Dillon said. "It was a heck of a race. I told Sam it was the best race I felt like I was a part of all year, slicing and dicing out there.
 
"Man, it was so easy to miss your line out there. The track’s obviously getting some character, and it’s creating some better racing, I feel like. It was a good run for us. This isn’t one of our better tracks, and to come here and do that, I’m very happy."

Kevin Harvick came home fourth, followed by Matt Kenseth and Justin Allgaier.
 
Busch, the pole winner, was first off pit road under caution for a restart on Lap 163 and held the top spot until Hornish ran him down on Lap 180. Over the course of the run, however, Hornish’s Ford began to fade, and Busch regained the top spot with a pass to the outside of Turn 2 on lap 193.
 
Hornish said the handling of his car loosened up as the run progressed.
 
"Tonight we had it turning plenty good, and as the run went on, it got freer," Hornish said. "I’m just happy we came in here tonight, and we ran well. It’s very frustrating to be leading with 10 laps to go and pulling away from the 54 car (Busch), and to not be able to win.
 
"We could never get far enough ahead of the track to get our car right where we needed to be. I had to work hard just to keep the car underneath me there the last 10 laps."
 
Kyle Larson restarted 10th on Lap 117 but, running the outside lane next to the wall, he diced his way through traffic and inherited the lead when Regan Smith came to pit road on Lap 141. At that point, Larson held a lead of more than four seconds, but Busch, running second, trimmed nearly three seconds off the advantage before Jeffrey Earnhardt’s blown engine caused the fifth caution on Lap 156.
 
Trouble with the right front tire cost Larson four spots during pit stops under yellow on Lap 157. Ultimately, the talented rookie scraped the wall in Turns 3 and 4 on lap 183 while chasing Dillon during an intense battle for third.
 
Despite finishing 13th, Larson nevertheless made a huge impression on the eve of his first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series start in Saturday night’s Bank of America 500.
 
Elliott Sadler, fourth in the standings before the race, started from the rear of the field after backup car after wrecking his primary No. 11 Toyota during qualifying. Sadler charged through the field and ran as high as 14th before a bizarre wreck in Turn 1 spoiled his night.
 
The incident started in the tri-oval, where Reed Sorenson clipped the edge of the infield grass with his left-side tires and shot up the track into the No. 14 Camry of Eric McClure. Brian Vickers, darting to the inside to avoid the wreck, clobbered Sadler, his Joe Gibbs Racing teammate, just as Sadler was exiting pit road.
 
Sadler returned to the track but crashed again. Sadler would end his race in 36th place, effectively ending his run at the series championship.

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Kansas Speedway to host night race for first time

RELATED: Full Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup coverage

While there is still a lot of buzz in anticipation of NASCAR’s formal 2014 Sprint Cup Series schedule release, an important and noteworthy change to a traditional race day was revealed Friday.

Saying it wants to diminish weather concerns and increase fan opportunity, Darlington Raceway announced it will change the date of the one of the sport’s most historic races, the Bojangles Southern 500, from Mother’s Day weekend to Saturday night, April 12, 2014.

Conversely, Kansas Speedway will race under the lights for the first time  Saturday, May 10 — taking the weekend previously held by Darlington — and featuring a double-header with the Camping World Truck Series racing May 9 under the lights. Kansas will also host the fourth event of the 10-race Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup on Oct. 5 — extending its Chase status to 11 years.

Both tracks are pleased with the swap and believe NASCAR fans are the true winners.

"We’ve always enjoyed the tradition of racing on Mother’s Day weekend, but sometimes a change like this is necessary," Darlington Raceway President Chip Wile said.

"We have the opportunity to get a fresh start and embrace a new date on the NASCAR calendar. This will give us a chance to implement many fun and exciting initiatives we’ll be rolling out to celebrate our 65th year of racing at the track Too Tough To Tame.

"With the hotter temperatures and humidity in South Carolina in May, weather has always played a factor for our events," Wile noted. "Traditionally, April is a great weather month in our state and will potentially bring slightly cooler temperatures for our fans to enjoy."

 And for Kansas Speedway, this is a prime opportunity to showcase its 1.5-miler in primetime.

"Fans continually ask me about a night race and I know that we will have tremendous support from our fans throughout the Midwest for our first Sprint Cup Series night race," Kansas Speedway President Patrick Warren said. "Frankly, I look forward to seeing NASCAR under the lights at Kansas Speedway as much as our fans do!"

Night races have traditionally been popular events with fans and competitors. As with Kansas, Darlington’s race weekend will be a NASCAR double feature with the Nationwide Series racing on Friday night, April 11.

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Burton, Peters, Wallace Jr. pitch in to help environment

NASCAR Camping World Truck Series drivers Jeb Burton, Darrell Wallace Jr. and Timothy Peters visited Avondale Park in Birmingham, Ala., on Thursday to conduct a ceremonial tree planting with city mayor William Bell. The ceremony, held in conjunction with the NASCAR Green initiative and the Arbor Day Foundation, anticipated Talladega Superspeedway‘s plan to plant 90 trees across Birmingham’s parks following the Oct 18-20 Camping World RV Sales 500 weekend, that will also feature the Fred’s 250 powered by Coca-Cola Truck Series race on Oct. 19.

The NASCAR “Young Guns” and Bell were joined by Talladega Superspeedway chairman Grant Lynch to discuss the upcoming truck race on the high banks of Talladega, and NASCAR’s Green initiative that has grown into one of the most powerful environmental awareness platforms in the world.

The tree planting this year in Birmingham marks the second time the track has participated in NASCAR’s Green program. Last year the track planted 60 trees in Rosedale Park in Tuscaloosa, Ala. — a park that received damage from the tornadoes that ravaged the city in 2011.

Prior to the tree planting ceremony, the drivers visited nearby Avondale Elementary to give students a taste of NASCAR up close by showing off a pace car and handing out tickets to each student for the Oct. 19 race. Some students from Avondale Elementary came out to the tree planting to get photos with the drivers.

“(It) was so much fun getting to hang out with the kids at Avondale Elementary and then getting to plant a tree in Avondale Park,” said Darrell Wallace Jr., driver of the No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota. “We were out here for a purpose, to show all the wonderful things NASCAR is doing to stay the leader in green initiatives among all sports, but we ended up having a blast while we did it. I know the city can’t wait to get the 90 trees, and I can’t wait to see all these kids out at Talladega next weekend.”


Burton, Wallace Jr. and Peters are currently ranked fourth, ninth and sixth, respectively, in the points standings.

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Richard Childress Racing will offer technical insight as Germain shifts to Chevrolet in 2014

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Richard Childress Racing and Germain Racing have agreed to form a technical alliance in NASCAR Sprint Cup Series competition, beginning with the 2014 season.

The partnership includes technology sharing, engineering, research and development provided to Germain Racing as they switch their No. 13 GEICO Cup Series cars to Chevrolet next season. The partnership also includes Germain Racing utilizing the highly reliable and powerful engines of ECR Engines.

This will also be a homecoming of sorts for the team’s driver, Casey Mears, as he drove for RCR in 2009.

"We are very pleased to have a team like Germain Racing become our partner," said Richard Childress, president and CEO of Richard Childress Racing. "Bob (Germain) and his team have been very committed to this sport and worked hard to improve every year.

"We have worked with Casey before and he’s a very talented driver. We look forward to working with him and his crew chief Bootie Barker."

Located in Mooresville, N.C., Germain began competing in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series in 2004, and won championships in both 2006 and 2010. They entered the Nationwide Series in 2007, making 113 starts through the end of 2011. Their full-time Sprint Cup Series endeavors began in 2009.

"Richard Childress and RCR have an extremely competitive program with a long history of winning races and championships," said Bob Germain, Jr., team owner. "They have great people and tremendous resources which will allow us to continue to improve our GEICO team’s performance in 2014 and beyond."

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‘Rowdy’ wins his ninth pole of the Nationwide season

MORE: Lineup | Pit stall assignments

CONCORD, N.C. — A chaotic Nationwide Series qualifying session at Charlotte Motor Speedway ended with a familiar name at the top of the board.

Kyle Busch claimed another pole in NASCAR’s No. 2 series with a lap of 183.387 mph at the 1.5-mile track. Joey Logano was second, followed by Sam Hornish Jr. and Austin Dillon. Dillon is the series leader, entering the weekend with an eight-point lead over Hornish.

Regan Smith, Alex Bowman, Trevor Bayne, Kyle Larson, Brian Vickers and Kevin Harvick rounded out the top 10. Sprint Cup Series leader Matt Kenseth was 15th, while reigning Camping World Truck Series champion James Buescher was 30th.

Several drivers had trouble on the tricky Charlotte layout. Ken Butler scraped up the side of his car, while Elliott Sadler shot into the wall and damaged the rear end of his primary vehicle. Brad Sweet and Travis Pastrana both spun, but managed to keep their cars off the wall. Several other drivers had their cars bobble, but made saves to keep them straight.

It was the ninth Nationwide pole this season for Busch, who now has 35 for his career. The Joe Gibbs Racing driver has 10 wins on the circuit this year.

The Dollar General 300 is scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. ET.

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Brother Kurt Busch takes second in first of two sessions at Charlotte Motor Speedway

RELATED: Practice results | Full Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup coverage

CONCORD, N.C. — Kurt Busch wrapped up Saturday’s practices at Charlotte Motor Speedway with a second solid outing, ending the one-hour final session atop the scoreboard.

The Furniture Row Racing driver, one of 13 drivers competing for this year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, posted a top speed of 190.759 mph. He had been second fastest in Saturday’s opening practice.

Fellow Chase driver Kevin Harvick (Richard Childress Racing) was second in the nightcap, followed by NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Brad Keselowski (Penske Racing), and Chase drivers Clint Bowyer (Michael Waltrip Racing) and Kyle Busch (Joe Gibbs Racing).

Chase drivers dominated the opening practice, with seven of the top 10 speeds turned in by this year’s title hopefuls.

Kyle Busch was quickest in the opening 55-minute session, posting a fast lap of 189.447 mph. Fifth in points, he will start Saturday night’s Bank of America 500 from the No. 9 position.

Chase contender and Coors Light Pole winner Jeff Gordon (Hendrick Motorsports), was 10th in the final session after a top-five speed in the opener.

Keselowski and Juan Pablo Montoya (Earnhardt Ganassi Racing), neither among those in the Chase field, completed the top five.

Matt Kenseth (JGR), the series points leader, was eighth and 23rd in the two sessions, while Jimmie Johnson (Hendrick), who trails Kenseth by three points, was 10th and eighth.

Kevin Harvick, the No. 2 qualifier and last week’s race winner at Kansas, had been 12th fastest earlier in the day.

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Sadler, Vickers had been in the top six in the points standings

CONCORD, N.C. — The slim NASCAR Nationwide Series title hopes of Joe Gibbs Racing drivers Elliott Sadler and Brian Vickers took a major hit Friday night in an odd crash early on in the Dollar General 300 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

The result was a collision between teammates, two damaged Toyotas and a tumble further down the standings with just three races left in the season after Friday’s 300-miler.

Sadler, the championship runner-up the past two seasons, finished 36th in the 40-car field and dropped one position to fifth in the standings. Correspondingly, the deficit to series leader Austin Dillon ballooned from 43 to 78 points.

Vickers’ crash-marred 31st-place finish docked him two places in the standings to eighth, 97 points behind Dillon in the season’s homestretch.

The unusual chain reaction occurred in the 52nd of 200 laps when Reed Sorenson clipped the infield grass and spun down the front straightaway on the 1.5-mile track. Sorenson’s Ford smacked the outside wall near the entrance to Turn 1 and veered toward the bottom end of the track, into the path of Vickers.

Vickers’ swerving evasive action onto the track apron collected the No. 11 car of teammate Sadler, who was exiting pit road after making a green-flag pit stop. All three cars slid to a stop with significant damage.

"Holy cow, we had a rocket ship and were making our way up to the front — running really fast lap times," Sadler said. "Had no idea we were going to get hit on pit road like that and tear our car up. My spotter is telling me to go, that they’re wrecking behind me, which I thought I was just racing the leader to the line. I had no idea they were going to hit me on pit road. Man, it’s very frustrating. One of the most frustrating nights I’ve had in a long time, especially running the pink car here for breast cancer awareness."

Sadler and Vickers both drove away from the wreck site, but Sadler continued after some quick repairs on pit road. Just 13 laps later, however, Sadler’s car — at an aerodynamic disadvantage without a left-rear fender — was spinning again, forcing the team to go behind the wall for a more extensive fix.

"I shouldn’t have put you back out there without a quarter-panel," crew chief Chris Gayle told his driver over the team radio. "I was just trying to get to the next caution to where we could fix it. Didn’t know it’d be that bad."

Sadler, back in the garage while his crew went to work, was left to lament a hard hit in the championship battle.

"Man, just frustrating," Sadler said. "Just proud of my guys. Mainly we had a fast car, but that’s just weird luck that we had here tonight."

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