iRacing Awards $30,000+ to World Championship Sim-Racers

Bedford MA (October 23, 2013) – Finland’s Greger Huttu captured his third iRacing.com World Championship Grand Prix Series crown this season in convincing fashion, scoring nine wins in 15 starts to outdistance Atze Kerkhof (The Netherlands) and 2011 champion Hugo Luis (Brasil) by a wide margin.   Huttu will receive a check from iRacing.com for $10,000 for the online racing championship, bringing his total iRacing.com World Championship Grand Prix Series winnings to more than $30,000.

“My season went probably a little better than I expected,” Huttu said.  “The competition with Hugo was really, really tight during the first half of the season but the races and results seemed to go my way and I was able to win six out of eight races which set me up well for the second half.  Really happy with my race pace this season and also the consistency, I think I got top-threes in every race.

“Thanks to iRacing and GlacierTV along with iRacing Brasil for the great broadcasts.  Thanks to my teamies and our great sponsors – Fanatec, Obutto and OK YO – for the support all season long!   Hoping to see most of you again next year.”

As series runner-up, Kerkhof earned $3,000 while third-placed Luis was awarded $1500.  Jake Stergios collected $1000 for finishing fourth in the series standings and Martin Krönke received $500 for his fifth place finish

The $16,000 in iRacing.com World Championship Grand Prix Series cash awards, coupled with a similar prize structure in the sister series for stock cars  — the NASCAR iRacing.com Series World Championship – brings the total cash payout in iRacing’s two world championships to $32,000 this year.   The closest championship battle in series history saw Tyler Hudson edge two-time champion Ray Alfalla by just nine points to claim the 2013 NASCAR iRacing.com Series World Championship title and the accompanying $10,000 prize.  Alfalla earned $3,000 for his runner-up finish – bringing his career earnings to $23,000 – with Nick Ottinger (third), Michael Conti (fourth) and Brian Schoenburg (fifth) earning $1500, $1,000 and $500 respectively.  

The green flags wave on the 2014 iRacing.com World Championship Grand Prix Series and NASCAR iRacing.com Series World Championship next February.  In the meantime, visit www.iracing.com to learn more about the world’s most popular online motorsports simulation service and enjoy the following:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LppUNwdCiug&feature=c4-overview-vl&list=PL55FD8A5F9F5FB3E2

NASCAR fan, ‘American Idol’ winner has deep Talladega roots

Taylor Hicks, an Alabama native and lifelong NASCAR fan, was on hand Sunday at Talladega Superspeedway to sing the national anthem ahead of the Camping World RV Sales 500. The singer, who won the fifth season of "American Idol" and is enjoying a residency at the Paris Hotel in Las Vegas, revealed that he’s been a big fan of Dale Earnhardt Jr. for years.

Hicks picked the right race to attend, as Earnhardt finished second to Jamie McMurray and remains entrenched in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup picture.

Read more about Hicks’ NASCAR roots and his thoughts on former Idol judge Simon Cowell.

Q: How excited are you sitting in front of all these fans here at Talladega?

A: You know, I was thinking when I was driving to the track, I think it’s a lot easier to sing in your home state than anywhere else. I’ve sung the anthem a lot and I love getting here early and I enjoy, you know, seeing all the folks from my home state. I like to tell people, ‘When you sing the national anthem, it’s always good to get to the track early and enjoy all of the ambiance and all of the pre-race festivities,’ and I’m looking forward to singing it because I believe in it and I live the American dream and I appreciate all of the service men and women that fight for our country to be able for all of us to live our own respective dreams.

Q: Being from Birmingham (Ala.), have you kept up with NASCAR over the years, from your childhood days up to now?

A: I played one of my first shows in the infield at Talladega about 20 years ago. We used to come to the infield and we used to play music and I just, obviously being from Alabama, it’s football and racing; it’s in your blood. I don’t think that ever leaves, so I have a very fond appreciation for race cars and obviously NASCAR, being from the state of Alabama.

Q: Can you, when you look back [at] where you were growing up, being in the infield at Talladega… sort of see how your career has taken off with "American Idol" success?

A: Well, I never thought in a million years that I would actually be performing the national anthem at Talladega and actually 15 years ago be performing in the infield, trying to make it as an artist. I’m very appreciative of the state of Alabama and obviously all the NASCAR fans that have supported me and supporting me as an Idol and voted for me it’s one of those special things that I’m very honored and blessed to be a part of NASCAR and to be singing the national anthem today.

Q: Is Simon Cowell mean?

A: Yes, Simon was mean.

Q: So if you were here 20 years ago singing in the infield, what were you singing?

A: A lot of my music is roots-oriented; I like to look at it as very roots-driven. Obviously growing up and being here from Alabama, the heart of Dixie, you pick up a lot of genres for music so a lot of roadhouse, a lot of country, a lot of blues and I just remember having the time of my life here and obviously being able to come back home it’s a blessing; it’s a dream come true.

Q: What’s your biggest memory of one of the races that you’ve seen, start to finish?

A: One great and bad thing about performing in the infield is if you come to the race, you’re going to have to stay for the race and luckily I was a big Dale Jr. fan and I was following his career. (David) Stremme and a lot of guys were on the Soul Patrol when I was going through Idol and I just appreciate the sport so much and being a part of it and being in the infield it might be just a little bit different than being in the grandstands but the camaraderie and obviously all the fans and I had a really great time. I try to stay for all of them, I do a lot of tours and obviously I’ve got the residency at the Paris Hotel in Las Vegas so I get out to Las Vegas Motor Speedway and I’m just a true fan of the sport, for sure.

Richard Petty discusses the decision to dismiss Aric Almirola’s crew chief, Todd Parrott

RELATED: Ebert to serve as interim crew chiefFull Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup coverage

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — As far as Richard Petty was concerned, there was no other choice.

"Circumstances beyond our control," the seven-time NASCAR champion said Tuesday, addressing the dismissal of Todd Parrott, former crew chief on the No. 43 car of Richard Petty Motorsports. "So it was just an automatic. When he did what he did, he’d done his own thing. All we did was say, this is the way it’s got to be."

Winner of the 1999 premier-series championship with driver Dale Jarrett, Parrott was suspended indefinitely by NASCAR on Thursday for an undisclosed violation of the sanctioning body’s substance abuse policy. Team operations director Sammy Johns worked as Aric Almirola‘s crew chief at Talladega Superspeedway, and RPM announced Tuesday that former car chief Greg Ebert will fill that role on an interim basis for the remainder of the season.

Dating back to the Petty Enterprises days, the Pettys have long been straight-arrow race team owners, even eschewing alcohol sponsorship on the organization’s flagship No. 43 car out of personal belief. In that light, Parrott’s dismissal came as no surprise, even though the crew chief was in his second stint with the team dating back to his first season there with Bobby Labonte in 2006.

"It’s definitely zero tolerance," said Petty, who co-owns RPM with New York entrepreneur Andrew Murstein. "These guys (in the car) are putting their lives on the line. These guys on pit road, they’re putting their life on the line. A hundred percent isn’t good enough. So if anybody sort of breaks the rule, there’s no room in our organization for that."

Almirola was the fastest in opening practice at Talladega, turning a speed of 202 mph in a car prepared by Parrott, and starting from the pole when time trials were canceled due to rain. He said he reached out to his former crew chief after the organization made the decision to let him go.

"I just reached out to him and told him I supported him, and I just wanted him to get better and get back on track," said Almirola, who finished 22nd on Sunday. "I don’t know what else to say to the guy. I’ve said it over and over, and I’ll still say it — this isn’t a character flaw or anything. He’s still a good person. He’s still a good crew chief. But he made a mistake, and now he’s got to bounce back from it."

Before they can be eligible for reinstatement, violators of NASCAR’s substance abuse policy must go through a Road to Recovery program specifically tailored to their offense. AJ Allmendinger did just that after his suspension and eventual release last year from Penske Racing for what the driver said was Adderall use. Allmendinger returned to win two NASCAR Nationwide Series races this year for Penske, and has signed to drive the No. 47 car of JTG Daugherty Racing at the Sprint Cup level next season.

Speaking Tuesday at the NASCAR Hall of Fame at an unveiling of a No. 41 tribute car to brother and 2014 inductee Maurice Petty — a vehicle Almirola will drive this weekend at Martinsville Speedway — Richard Petty said his reaction to Parrott’s suspension was "really shock. I’d never been around him enough to see any changes or any of that kind of stuff. From the parts and stuff I’d seen him around the shop and around the race track, I didn’t see anything going on. But I’m not an expert on that kind of stuff, anyway."

Ebert has worked as car chief on the No. 43 the past two seasons, and has been a car chief at RPM since the organization was restructured under its current name in 2009. Prior to that he spent nine years at Roush Fenway Racing, the last five of those as car chief to Matt Kenseth.

"I think it’s going to be pretty seamless," Almirola said. "Greg’s been obviously around the car a lot. He’s been up to speed with a lot of our setup stuff that’s evolved throughout the year being the car chief. Besides the engineers, he’s the one guy that’s the most hands-on with the cars with all the setup stuff that’s going in the cars. All the guys on the team obviously respect him a lot. He’s obviously in a leadership role already, so I think it was natural to move him up to a crew chief."

Parrott is a 31-time race winner on NASCAR’s top level, including road course victories with RPM driver Marcos Ambrose at Watkins Glen in 2011 and 2012. Almirola is trying to return the No. 43 car to Victory Lane for the first time since John Andretti won at Martinsville in 1999. This weekend, he’ll try it with a different car number — and a different crew chief as well.

"It’s going to be tough, but things change. I figured that out real quick when I moved to North Carolina and joined this sport," he said. "Things change all the time, and you have to be willing to adapt and be ready to carry on. That’s what we’re going to do. We have a really good race team. We have a lot of people, and our race team is not defined by one person. There’s a lot of great people at our race team. It’s going to force everyone to step up for the time being, and we’re going to see what Greg Ebert can do on top of the box. It’s going to be fun. It’s going to be a challenge for all of us. But I think we’re up to it."

MORE:

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with late Talladega surge

WATCH: Final Laps:
McMurray wins; Dillon spins

READ: Points lead
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WATCH: Busch misses
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Maurice Petty will be inducted into the NASCAR Hall of Fame on Jan. 29

RELATED: Full Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup coverage

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — The reunion was completed in May, when the final member of a Petty Enterprises powerhouse not in the NASCAR Hall of Fame earned his place in the shrine. And it was reinforced on Tuesday, when within sight of a No. 42 car that Lee Petty drove to three titles, and a No. 43 car Richard Petty and Dale Inman rode to seven championships, a No. 41 car was unveiled with the image of Maurice Petty on the hood.

Richard Petty Motorsports on Tuesday showed off a Maurice Petty tribute car that Aric Almirola will drive this weekend at Martinsville Speedway, honoring the great engine builder’s forthcoming enshrinement as part of the 2014 class of the NASCAR Hall of Fame. No surprise it will take place at Martinsville, a track where the Petty team has won 19 times, 15 of them propelled by Maurice Petty power. The surprise was on the vehicle itself, where the famous No. 43 of Petty’s flagship vehicle was replaced by another number from the family tradition.

Almirola will pilot the No. 41, the car Maurice himself drove in a short career behind the wheel that spanned just 26 races. NASCAR has allowed RPM to make the change while still accruing points for the No. 43. That means if Almirola prevails Sunday in southern Virginia, it would still break the winless skid for the No. 43 car that dates back to John Andretti’s victory at Martinsville in 1999, even though the numeral on the side won’t be the same.

"I’m tickled to death to be in the NASCAR Hall of Fame," said Maurice, who will be inducted on Jan. 29. "That’s the icing on the cake, with this car."

Sunday’s race will be the first in the Sprint Cup Series without the iconic No. 43 in the starting field since Atlanta in October of 2003, when former Petty driver Jeff Green was one of six who failed to qualify. The number also skipped the 1993 season, the first after Richard Petty retired, when the Petty organization fielded a No. 44 instead. But it was returned to competition the following year, and has been in use ever since.

"It is kind of weird, but to me it goes back to same thing we did when we first started," Richard said of the No. 43’s absence this weekend. "Dad’s number was 42. We just took the two off and put a three on there. We just took the three off my car and put a one on the thing."

Indeed, Tuesday’s ceremony took place near the NASCAR Hall of Fame’s Glory Road, where the No. 42 car of Lee Petty and the No. 43 of Richard are on display along with those of a number of other NASCAR champions. Although best known for his work as an engine builder, Maurice Petty also served as crew chief and driver, posting a best finish of third at the old Piedmont Interstate Fairgrounds track in 1961. His final start behind the wheel came in 1964 at Occoneechee Speedway in Hillsboro, N.C., where he piloted the No. 41.

"I could have made more," he said, "but it was costing more to run me, and we were going broke pretty fast, so something had to be done."

Richard said the team wanted the tribute to be at Martinsville, long one of the Petty family’s best tracks. "We didn’t want to go to a race track where we’d never won," he said. "That wouldn’t look good." Maurice’s enshrinement will complete one of the sport’s best teams in the Hall of Fame, coming on the heels of Richard’s selection to the inaugural class in 2010, Lee’s in the second class in 2011, and crew chief Inman’s in the third class in 2012.

According to the King, none of it would have been possible without the man they call "Chief," who built engines that set the standard long before the modern tools of today.

"To look back and look at all the people who made it happen, it’s really something," Richard said. "Chief couldn’t do it by himself, I couldn’t do it by myself, Dale didn’t do it by himself. We did it as a group under Petty Enterprises. … This is kind of the crowning deal of all those years."

The old Petty Enterprises team has since been absorbed into the entity now known as RPM, which is co-owned by New York entrepreneur Andrew Murstein. But the Petty legacy is still a very real thing — especially to Almirola, who when he first came to North Carolina years ago looking for engines for his late model stock car, was pointed toward a Maurice Petty and Associates shop that at the time was still making engines in the original Petty Enterprises facility in Level Cross.

"He’s been around a bit," Maurice said of the current driver of the No. 43 car.

This weekend, make that the No. 41.

"I keep saying over and over I want to get that 43 car back to Victory Lane," said Almirola, who finished fourth at Martinsville last fall. "I guess I’m going to have to change my mindset on that this weekend. I want to get the 41 car back to Victory Lane."

MORE:

READ: McMurray rules
with late Talladega surge

WATCH: Final Laps:
McMurray wins; Dillon spins

READ: Points lead
changes hands

WATCH: Busch misses
pit stall

Front Row Motorsports duo finish sixth and seventh at Talladega

RELATED: Full Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup coverage

TALLADEGA, Ala. — For the drivers at Front Row Motorsports, it all went exactly to plan.

David Ragan and David Gilliland, teammates at the organization that shocked NASCAR’s traditional powers by winning the spring race at Talladega Superspeedway, were in position Sunday to record an even more stunning repeat on the big Alabama track. Their intention all along was to hang around until the final laps, and then make a run at it — which they did, until a late accident ended the race with Jamie McMurray out front.

"It was a crazy last lap," said Ragan, who won the May race here with Gilliland right behind him. "We set out what we wanted to do …. We had a chance to win the race, took the white flag in seventh or eighth and kind of had a good plan. But the caution came out. So, we got a top-10 finish and that’s a good thing for our Front Row Motorsports team."

Aiming to prove their 1-2 finish here five months ago was no fluke, Ragan and Gilliland did just that Sunday by finishing sixth and seventh, respectively. In the spring, the Front Row teammates jumped to the front of a middle lane that charged to the lead before anyone else could move in to block. Sunday, they were thwarted by two factors that made it difficult for Talladega to produce another of its famous underdog winners.

First, the cars all fell into a line along the top, frustrating those who had hoped to jump to the bottom and mount a charge to McMurray and eventual runner-up Dale Earnhardt Jr. And hopes of forming that low lane were further thwarted when Casey Mears and Austin Dillon crashed on the final lap, bringing the event to an end under caution because McMurray had already taken the while flag.

"We were in position, we had a plan where we could make a move together, but then the caution came out on the last lap," Gilliland said. "Thankfully, we weren’t a part of it and we were able to get a top-10 finish and a clean car to take home. I’m just really proud of my team. They’ve been working so hard, and days like this show that it pays off. I think we definitely could’ve had a chance (to) win. We were definitely in the mix for the last 50, 60 laps of the race. We weren’t hanging back anymore."

Indeed, Ragan and Gilliland remained near the rear of the pack for much of the race before moving to the front over the final 20 laps. Kyle Busch, who led nine laps and was at the point with 18 remaining before falling back, was ready to use the Front Row teammates as drafting partners in a late bid to go for the win.

"I think I had (Ragan) and (Gilliland) behind me, and (Martin Truex Jr.), and I think they were going to go with me," Busch said. "I (gave) Ragan a hand signal. Whether or not he understood it remains to be seen, but I told him ‘Turn 3, we’ll go.’ He pulled back in line like he understood, so that was good. I think he was going to help me, and of course his teammate was going to help him."

They never got the opportunity, not even at a track where restrictor plates close the gap between the sport’s top teams and everybody else. Talladega has produced a number of surprise winners ranging from Richard Brickhouse to Ron Bouchard to Brad Keselowski in his Phoenix Racing days to Ragan this spring, but Sunday was a tough one for underdogs trying to add their name to that list. The race saw only three caution periods, and there was no Big One to winnow the field.

Even so, a number of potential sleepers seemed in the mix as the race neared its end. But Dillon and Mears were involved in the last-lap crash, Danica Patrick sped on pit road, and Trevor Bayne fell back in the draft. The biggest surprise Sunday? It might have been Michael McDowell, who finished 15th for Phil Parsons Racing. It was McDowell’s best finish since the Daytona 500, where he placed ninth for Mike Curb’s team.

The Front Row duo, though, clearly had the best chance to pull a shocker at the end. But unlike the last race on this sprawling 2.66-mile layout, the right conditions just didn’t come together. As it was, the team still enjoyed a nice windfall of $339,946 in purse winnings, with the 30th-place finish of third driver Josh Wise added in.

After the last race here, though, they were after a little bit more.

"It just wasn’t meant to be this time," Gilliland said. "Next time."

MORE:

READ: McMurray rules
with late Talladega surge

WATCH: Final Laps:
McMurray wins; Dillon spins

READ: Points lead
changes hands

WATCH: Busch misses
pit stall

Twenty young racing prospects show off their skills on track at Drive for Diversity combine

HAMPTON, Va. – Twenty of North America’s top young racing prospects got to show their abilities on track during the NASCAR Drive for Diversity Combine at Langley Speedway on Tuesday.

Ten laps in the morning, another 15 circuits in the afternoon in front of a team of NASCAR series officials and talent scouts from Rev Racing, provided the opportunity  of a lifetime: a chance to be selected to participate in the full 2013 NASCAR Drive for Diversity program.

But for some, the magnitude of the opportunity registered before they took to the track. It resonated Monday night, when NASCAR Sprint Cup driver Kyle Larson, a graduate of the D4D program, stopped by after the group dinner in Hampton, Va.

“That’s the first time I really got to sit down and really hang out with him,” said Sam Wright, an 18-year-old D4D hopeful from Vancouver, Wash., who had previously met Larson in passing. “It was really cool to see him.  He’s easy to talk to and I’ve enjoyed watching him come up through the years. He’s just got an incredible amount of talent —  extremely level-headed and definitely someone to look up to.”

Larson (the first D4D driver to capture a touring series title in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East and currently racing full-time in the NASCAR Nationwide Series) and Darrell Wallace Jr. (running fulltime in the Camping World Truck Series) have become standard bearers for the 10-year-old Drive for Diversity program, which drew a record 90 applicants (64 percent female) this year. 

The program is designed to identify and train talented young female and minority drivers who have demonstrated promise at the grassroots level. The combine takes into account a combination of driving skills, physical fitness and off-track intangibles.

“I think it was incredibly important that Kyle came by last night and hung out with the drivers,” says Marcus Jadotte, NASCAR vice president of public affairs and multicultural development. “It highlights the possible and really does speak to the quality of the development. Certainly, that’s true of Darrell Wallace, too. 

“We’re seeing, very consistently, that drivers from this program are competing for the (K&N) East championship and competing for Rookie of the Year, and those who have been elevated have an opportunity to advance up the national ladder. Four years ago, Sergio Pena and Darrell Wallace Jr. won half of the events in the K&N East Series. So, the combine continues to attract the very best young talent in the sport. That’s what was envisioned when NASCAR launched this initiative and it’s delivering on the promise NASCAR made 10 years ago." 

The combine can be the all-important first rung of the ladder. But even for those not moving on, just getting the chance to be evaluated with their peers can pay dividends.

“Most important,” Jadotte says, “is that all of the young people who attend and participate in the combine are going to walk away from here better-prepared to succeed in the sport – not only with the benefit of seat time, but from competing in the off-track evaluation and having a better understanding of what it takes to be a professional athlete – to be a professional driver in this sport.”

For some, it’s a matter of persistence.

Dylan Smith, 21, of Randolph, Vt., is participating in his fifth combine. In some ways, it’s already paid off when he was hired by Rev Racing and had the chance to work closely with Larson.

“I was more or less his interior guy in the K&N Series when he won his championship, moving his seats, making sure his belts and pedals were right,” said Smith, who was Rookie of the Year in Late Models at Thunder Bowl (Vt.) Speedway in 2009. “So, we have a pretty good relationship.” 

That led to Smith landing a job with Stewart-Haas Racing, working in the shop, performing post-race teardowns of cars for Tony Stewart, Danica Patrick and Ryan Newman.

Still, it’s the dream of getting back behind the wheel, full-time, that drives Smith. 

“It’s been gut-wrenching for my family and me to think we put everything together that we need and know it just didn’t work out,” Smith said. “Hopefully, this will be the year I break in as a driver. The last couple of years we’ve been at the top of the speeds, on average. I feel like I’ve done everything I’m supposed to have done, but there are a lot of aspects that go into being selected.” 

One is simply the matter of the competition. It’s that tough and getting tougher every year, according to Max Siegel, owner and CEO of Rev Racing.

“The depth of the talent pool continues to get better every single year,” Siegel says. “The drivers who are here are all very accomplished – winning races from various areas of the country. And, I think we get better at the evaluation criteria in selecting participants every year. 

“You definitely have to have the ability to get it done on the track. But frankly, we’re looking for the maximum potential to grow into a national series race car driver. It’s not just about age or speed on the track but really having our group of people upstairs (in the press box) assess whether someone is going to have the ability to grow beyond their ability that we see in them now.” 

Each driver brought his or her own credentials to Langley, a recently resurfaced and primarily flat .4-mile track. 

Jay Beasley, 21, recorded his eighth win of the season last weekend and wrapped up the Super Late Model championship at his home track, the high-banked Bull Ring at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. He welcomed the attention from the NASCAR and Rev Racing scouts.

“I really like being in that position – kind of having the pressure on me,” says Beasley, who began racing motorcycles at age 7 and also got his feet wet in the K&N Series this year. “I dig it. I really like being tested and compared to everyone on the same playing field. 

“I’ve learned a lot this year. I’m choosing to go through this particular door because it gets my name out there and I won’t have to (pay to) support the racing. The cars, the technology – that’s a ready-made opportunity in Late Models.” 

Ruben Garcia Jr., 17, from Mexico City, is being accompanied in Hampton by his grandfather and his father, Ruben Garcia, who made nine Sprint Cup starts and won two K&N races. The younger Garcia is making his own mark, currently sitting 19 points out of the lead with two races to go in the NASCAR Mexico Series.  Some say he’s following the progression of Daniel Suarez, a D4D graduate making his mark in the K&N East Series. 

“As a Mexican, getting sponsors for a career in the U.S. is a bit difficult,” says the younger Garcia. “Working in this program and having this big chance would make it easier to start in a NASCAR series.” 

The same holds true for the Decker family from Eagle River, Wisconsin.  Paige, 20, a junior at UWisconsin-Stout, her sister, Claire, a freshman at UWisconsin-Oshkosh, and cousin Natalie, 16, a high school sophomore in Eagle River, got their start racing snowmobiles.  

“Everyone knows that funding is a huge aspect of it,” said Paige, the first female winner in the Tundra Late Model Series at Golden Sands (Wis.) Speedway this year. “That’s what the three of us are lacking right now. We’re trying to run on just the family and that’s putting a struggle on us. We know this is an avenue that can take us to the top because (Rev) has the resources.  We’re hoping  we can impress them – – get them (thinking) ‘maybe these girls can do something.’ 

“But just to be able to say, ‘I attended the Drive for Diversity (Combine)’ is huge. I’ve already had a lot of people texting me, saying ‘that’s so cool.’ I just know that we came here, did our best and got our name out there.” 

Others participating in the combine include: 

Devon Amos, 22, Rio Rancho, N.M., Annabeth Barnes, 18, Mooresville, N.C., Nicole Behar, 15, Otis Orchards, Wash., Ryan Bernal, 19, Hollister, Calif., Collin Cabre, 19, Thonotosassa, Fla., Meagan Creech, 20, Ashland, Va., Blake Kisner, 18, Chanute, Kan., Katlynn Leer, 14, St. Moulton, Iowa, Jack Madrid, 18, San Clemente, Calif., Hannah Newhouse, 16, Twin Falls, Idaho, Sergio Pena, 20, Catharpin, Va., Kenny Stewart II, 16, Carson, Calif., Cody Thompson, 20, Fremont, Calif.

On Wednesday, eight more young drivers, including 7-year-old Jaiden Reyna of Newport News, Va., will compete for the opportunity to drive for Rev Racing during the 2014 Summer Shootout Series in INEX Legends and Bandoleros cars.

MORE:

READ: McMurray rules
with late Talladega surge

WATCH: Final Laps:
McMurray wins; Dillon spins

READ: Points lead
changes hands

WATCH: Busch misses
pit stall

Ebert fills in on No. 43; Parrott will participate in Road to Recovery program

Richard Petty Motorsports announced Tuesday it has parted ways with veteran crew chief Todd Parrott. The move comes five days after Parrott was suspended indefinitely by NASCAR for violating its substance abuse policy.

Greg Ebert will serve as interim crew chief on driver Aric Almirola‘s No. 43 RPM Ford for the remainder of the season. He had been car chief on the No. 43 for the past two years.

"We are confident in Greg’s leadership abilities and we will give him the resources he needs to be successful," said RPM’s Vice President of Operations and Competition Sammy Johns. "He is very familiar with our race program and gives us a more seamless transition.  More importantly, he gives Aric the best opportunity to finish the season strong."

Johns filled in as crew chief for Parrott last weekend at Talladega Superspeedway, where Almirola started on the pole and finished 22nd. Almirola is 18th in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series standings.

Almirola said during the weekend that Parrott’s suspension was "definitely something that caught us all off-guard and something that we have had to just work on a day-to-day basis.”

A 19-year veteran in the Cup garage, Parrott led NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Jarrett to a 1996 Daytona 500 victory and the 1999 Cup championship.

Parrott will participate in the NASCAR Road to Recovery program.

"We have sat down and talked about it and tried to come up with the best solution for what is best for us,” Almirola said Saturday at Talladega. "I will reiterate and I said it on Twitter yesterday or Thursday, but Todd Parrott is a good person and a good crew chief and a good friend of mine. I think he has a lot of support and a lot of people rallying behind him to get through this difficult time. That being said, we have a job to do and have to go out and race and do what is best for us. We have to figure out a plan."

MORE:

READ: McMurray rules
with late Talladega surge

WATCH: Final Laps:
McMurray wins; Dillon spins

READ: Points lead
changes hands

WATCH: Busch misses
pit stall

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