From Darrell Waltrip to Jimmie Johnson, NASCAR has seen some thrilling fuel mileage races

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They can leave a crew chief’s brain overloaded with calculations, a spectator’s fingernails chewed down to the nibs, and of course a driver’s hopes stalled out on the apron. For sheer drama, few things in racing beat a fuel mileage finish, when the overhanging questions — Will he make it? Will he run out? — linger in the air like the smell of burning rubber after a pit stop.

Charlotte Motor Speedway, where NASCAR’s premier series competes Saturday night in the fifth round of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, has certainly produced its share of memorable finishes determined by a few drops — or lack thereof — of gas left in the tank. Although many of those have occurred in the track’s springtime 600-miler, fuel mileage races can unfold just about anywhere and anytime, depending on pit cycles and circumstance.

Love them or loathe them, they’re as much a part of racing as beer cans or lug nuts or the smell of campfire smoke. And in NASCAR, some of the results they’ve produced range from shocking to heartbreaking to downright historic. Another one could well unfold Saturday night, when the Sprint Cup cars again take to the 1.5-mile layout in Concord. Until then, here are NASCAR’s 10 most memorable fuel mileage moments.

10. A Nation weeps: Charlotte, 2011

A winless streak of nearly three years was coming to an end, and the crowd could sense it. They rose to their feet as Dale Earnhardt Jr. took the white flag at Charlotte in the spring of 2011. They clamored as he charged through the final turns. And then Junior Nation sunk into heartbreak as the No. 88 car slowed off the final corner, allowing Kevin Harvick to zip by and win the race. Earnhardt knew he had no chance — he’d actually run dry on the backstretch. "What am I supposed to do? Get out and pedal this thing with my feet?" he told his spotter. Even the winner sympathized: "I feel like complete crap," Harvick said. Earnhardt’s winless skid reached 105 races that night, and it would be another year before it would finally come to an end.

9. No weaknesses: Dover 2012

As is so often the case at Dover, Jimmie Johnson was the driver to beat as the laps wound down on that fall afternoon in 2012. But he also struggled to manage his fuel down the stretch of an event that would prove critical in the championship race. As Johnson throttled back to try and make it to the end, Brad Keselowski managed the final 89 laps of the race on a single fuel run, propelling him to a victory that moved him to first place in the standings. "They don’t slow down a lot, and they save fuel a lot," Johnson lamented after finishing fourth. After his second win in three weeks, Keselowski put it more succinctly: "No weaknesses," he said of a team that would finish the season just as it did that day in Delaware — on top.

8. Second chance: Darlington, 1987

The Man in Black and the Lady in Black clearly had a thing for one another, as evidenced by Dale Earnhardt’s nine victories at Darlington. But he needed some help in the spring of 1987, despite leading 239 laps. With 11 to go the Intimidator gave up a 13-second lead to pit for fuel, and fell to third behind Ken Schrader and Bill Elliott. Schrader soon pitted as well, and Earnhardt set his sights on Elliott — but got too eager with four laps remaining, and banged off the first-turn wall. "I said, ‘Earnhardt, you big dummy.’ My heart was in my shoe," he said later. He was granted a reprieve when Elliott ran out of gas off the final corner, and the No. 3 car zipped around to win. "We did the only thing we could do," Elliott said. Against Earnhardt at Darlington, it wasn’t enough.

7. No Tiny feat: Daytona, 1963

It was perhaps the most unthinkable Daytona 500 victory ever, one that never should have even started much less ended the way it did. DeWayne "Tiny" Lund, a racer whose personality was every bit as large as his frame, had enjoyed only minor successes in NASCAR circles when he arrived at Daytona in 1963. But when Marvin Panch crashed in a sports-car race, it was the 270-pound Lund who helped pull him from the fiery wreckage. With Panch out, the Wood Brothers put Lund in their No. 21 car for the Great American Race. Working with a team already known for its innovation, Lund managed the race on one fewer pit stop than everyone else. When Ned Jarrett pitted with fewer than eight laps remaining, a most unlikely story found a victorious end.

6. Stalled out: Sonoma, 2010

It stemmed from the best of intentions — Marcos Ambrose trying to save enough fuel under caution to get to the finish at Sonoma Raceway, and deliver a Sprint Cup victory that would be a first for both the Australian driver and his JTG Daugherty race team. Ambrose was leading with 10 laps remaining when the caution flew, and in an effort to conserve fuel the driver flipped his engine on and off. But when the No. 47 stalled and cars began to pass it, NASCAR ruled Ambrose hadn’t maintained a reasonable speed, and he was forced to restart seventh. "I don’t agree with it, I don’t like it, and that’s only because I lost the race," he said after Johnson went on to win. Ambrose finished sixth, and would have to wait another year before his first victory at NASCAR’s top level.

5. Third to first: Michigan, 2009

Johnson had found himself in the middle of another fuel mileage race a year earlier, this one with less pleasant results, and on a Michigan track that continues to frustrate him to this day. In an event that was among the most riveting of the 2009 season, Johnson and Greg Biffle seemed poised to decide the outcome among themselves in the waning laps. But the one-on-one duel drained both drivers’ fuel tanks, and approaching the while flag Johnson — who had led 146 circuits — finally ran dry and faded to 22nd. Suddenly Biffle was all by himself, but because he had worked so hard to try and hold off Johnson, he too ran out, on the backstretch of the final lap. That left the race to third-place Mark Martin, who led just one lap. The last one.

4. Third time’s a charm: Daytona, 1986

Dale Earnhardt had beaten Geoffrey Bodine twice already that Speedweeks, both times by narrow margins, in a 125-mile qualifying race and in what is now the Nationwide Series. The Daytona 500, though, would prove a different story. Bodine and Earnhardt chased one another around the 2.5-mile track setting a torrid pace at the front of the pack, and helping Bodine build a five-second lead after the cars made their final stops with 40 to go. Earnhardt chased him down in 15 laps — but paid a price with three circuits remaining, when the No. 3 car ran out of fuel and faded to 14th. Bodine cruised to an 11-second victory over Terry Labonte, giving a young car owner named Rick Hendrick his biggest win yet.

3. Last man standing: Charlotte, 2007

It all felt so familiar, yet so strange at the same time. A Mears in Victory Lane, and a Petty in the mix at the end. Except it wasn’t Rick and Richard — it was Casey and Kyle, capping one of the most topsy-turvy nights in modern NASCAR history. Johnson led the most laps in the 600-miler, but fell back when his crew dropped a lug nut. Tony Stewart emerged as the favorite, but pitted late for fuel. When Denny Hamlin pitted with five laps left, the last man standing was Casey Mears, who stretched his tank all the way to the finish for his first career Sprint Cup win. Behind him came J.J. Yeley, Petty, and Reed Sorenson, all of them bumping aside the sport’s big guns on the longest night of the year.

2. Duel in the desert: Phoenix, 2010

Johnson’s run of consecutive titles seemed finished in the penultimate event of the 2010 season, when Denny Hamlin built a 78-point advantage over a four-time champion whose car was lumbering around the 1-mile Phoenix track. "Find us a little something," crew chief Chad Knaus exhorted, almost desperate. Their big break came in the form of a caution under which the No. 48 car began saving fuel. Johnson somehow stretched it for the final 77 laps, saving his season in the process. Hamlin pitted late for gas, falling from the race lead to 12th, while Johnson salvaged a top-five that trimmed the points gap to 15. Afterward Hamlin looked shaken, Johnson unstoppable. A week later, he’d look like a five-time champion.

1. "I won the Daytona 500!": Daytona, 1989

He had won everything else there was to win in NASCAR — a trio of premier-series championships, dozens of race victories — but the biggest event of them all somehow kept evading him. Sixteen times Darrell Waltrip had started the Daytona 500, and 16 times someone else went to Victory Lane. His 17th attempt seemed similarly fated. "I’m out!" he shouted over the radio to crew chief Jeff Hammond when his fuel pressure dropped to zero. "Shake it!" was the response, urging Waltrip to swerve the car to get the remaining fuel to the pickup. The driver did just that. He would have enough to get to the finish.

But not his closest pursuers. Running in seventh with 35 laps to go, Waltrip and Hammond had decided to try and stretch it to the end, which required some serious finessing of the gas pedal. As Waltrip feathered the throttle and worked the draft, leaders Schrader and Earnhardt pitted for gas with 10 laps remaining. That moved Alan Kulwicki to the front, but he cut a tire. Suddenly it was Waltrip in the lead by eight seconds, and by himself. He cruised home from there, driving his No. 17 car to victory in his 17th Daytona 500, a career capper punctuated by one of NASCAR’s most famous celebrations. "I won the Daytona 500!" he cried, as if needing to convince himself. "I won the Daytona 500!"

 

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NASCAR ‘disappointed’ by actions of Sprint Cup driver

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CONCORD, N.C. — An "embarrassed" Travis Kvapil returned to the race track on Thursday, and will compete this weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway despite a domestic assault charge stemming from his arrest earlier in the week.

The BK Racing driver was arrested Tuesday on domestic violence charges, according to the Mooresville Police Department, and released from custody Wednesday morning. Kvapil’s race team is allowing the former Camping World Truck Series champion to remain in the No. 93 car for Saturday night’s Sprint Cup Series event.

"Obviously there was a domestic situation Tuesday night with my wife, and regret that that happened," Kvapil said after his qualifying lap. "Because it is a family, personal matter, we ask for respect and privacy in this situation, and we’ll try to work it out together as a family. Obviously embarrassed about the situation. Don’t like the negative effects that is has brought on, so I apologize to NASCAR, my team, the owners of my team, my fans, and anyone else who was impacted by what happened Tuesday night."

Mooresville police Capt. Joseph Cooke said the department received an emergency call Tuesday evening that an assault was taking place. Responding officers arriving at the home found Kvapil and his wife Jennifer, and determined there was enough probable cause that a domestic assault had occurred. Kvapil was charged with one misdemeanor count of assault on a female, and one misdemeanor count of false imprisonment.

Kvapil was released from custody on bond Wednesday morning. He was back in his No. 93 car Thursday afternoon for initial practice for Saturday night’s Bank of America 500.

"BK Racing understands the severity of the situation and we don’t condone the actions that Travis has been accused of," BK Racing co-owner Ron Devine said in a statement. "We feel it’s important to let the system take its course. For that reason, we have elected to support Travis and his family and keep Travis in the car for this weekend’s race. Further comment will be available as additional information becomes available."

NASCAR said it was monitoring the issue, but did not prevent the driver from taking to the race track.

"NASCAR does not condone the actions with which Travis Kvapil has been charged and we are disappointed to learn of this incident," the sanctioning body said Thursday in a statement. "We have been in close communication with the race team and are in the process of gathering as much information as possible. NASCAR takes this matter very seriously and will continue to monitor the situation as it moves forward."

Kvapil said he was worried about whether he would be allowed to race.

"Definitely concerned about that," he said. "My first concern was my children, my family. Get that taken care of and make sure everything’s where it needs to be there. Secondary is whether I was going to be in the car or not, and trying to take NASCAR’s stand and the team’s stand and kind of where everybody stood and trying to figure it out."

A 37-year-old native of Janesville, Wis., Kvapil was the 2003 Truck Series champion, winning nine races in four seasons on that circuit. He has competed at the Sprint Cup level for the past two years with BK Racing, which was formed from the assets of the former Red Bull team. His best finish this season was 16th at Bristol Motor Speedway in August.

Kvapil convinced his race team he could be focused on this car this weekend despite the cloud hanging over him.

"That was one of the team’s concerns," he said after qualifying 41st for Saturday’s race. "I had a lot of conversations with my owner Ron Devine. He’s been a huge supporter of mine, not only through this but for the last year and a half with this brand-new race team, BK Racing. He asked me if I thought I could get the job done, and I told him I think I can. When I strap in, when I step into this garage area, I’m focused on this race car and what it takes to do the best job we can throughout the weekend, in particular Saturday night."

News of Kvapil’s arrest was a surprise in a sport where competitor behavior is often heavily influenced by sponsors, and drivers rarely end up in the police blotter.

"I don’t think anybody knows all of the details yet, so to would be hard for me to comment exactly on what did or didn’t happen," Sprint Cup driver Kevin Harvick said at the 1.5-mile Charlotte track. "I think everybody wants the sport to be represented in the right way."

"I was shocked when I heard about it," five-time series champion Jimmie Johnson added. "But it’s not good for our sport for sure. I think that most realize it’s an individual situation, and had nothing to do with the team or the sponsor. … It’s not good press. It can’t be helpful by any means. And it is pretty rare, and I think that’s something we all kind of pride ourselves on, that we don’t have a lot of that drama in our sport. But I’m sure there is a negative impact to a small degree."

It’s certainly had a negative impact on Kvapil.

"It’s been tough," the driver said. "I guess you really find out your true friends, your supporters. It’s been quite an eye-opening experience. Definitely been through some things that I never would like to be a part of again. Definitely, it’s a serious situation. We are going to let it take its course, let it work itself out. Just kind of one day at a time.

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Sanctioning body ‘disapponted’ with actions of NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — "NASCAR does not condone the actions with which Travis Kvapil has been charged and we are disappointed to learn of this incident. We have been in close communication with the race team and are in the process of gathering as much information as possible. NASCAR takes this matter very seriously and will continue to monitor the situation as it moves forward."


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Harvick rides Kansas momentum into Charlotte; Johnson reflects on failed engine

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CONCORD, N.C. —  Kevin Harvick had all but forgotten how smooth an afternoon could be when you start from the pole position and pit in stall No. 1. 

But Harvick used his first pole in seven years to full advantage in winning last Sunday’s Hollywood Casino 400 at Kansas Speedway, the fourth race in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

“Running good and running up front, you’ll probably get more good breaks than you will running mid-pack, because you’ll just have more options,” Harvick said Thursday afternoon before practice at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

“I think that really opened our eyes to realizing, when you have a qualifying day like that, you had a lot more options when it came time to come down pit road — and not having to scramble all day to keep yourself in the game.”

Two things augur favorably for Harvick this week at Charlotte — his win at Kansas and his victory in May in the Coca-Cola 600.

“Obviously, last week went about as well as you could write it down on a piece of paper for us,” Harvick said. “Sitting on the pole and winning the race is a little bit out of character from what we’ve done in the past.

“But I think, for us, it gives us a lot of confidence in the things we can do and need to do to keep ourselves in position to continue to race for this championship over the next several weeks.”


Dodging a bullet

With two laps left in the Kansas race, Jimmie Johnson’s engine began to fail.

Johnson felt the telltale vibration in his No. 48 Chevrolet and began preparing mentally for the worst-case scenario — failing to complete the final lap and falling farther behind NASCAR Sprint Cup Series leader Matt Kenseth.

Almost miraculously, Johnson’s engine recovered enough on the last lap to keep him in sixth place. Instead of losing points to Kenseth, he gained five and comes to Charlotte just three points down to the leader.

“It really was bizarre,” Johnson said Thursday. “I was trying to manage how hard the car was shaking with my throttle inputs. Looking back on it, I just got lucky with the parts that were failing. They decided to work in harmony for another mile and a half, where I could use a lot more throttle and maintain that sixth position.” 

Johnson doesn’t expect his engine problem to be a recurring issue. 

“We had a big meeting on Tuesday, and they walked all the drivers and crew chiefs through,” he said. “It’s amazing how thorough things are in out engine shop (at Hendrick Motorsports). We feel very comfortable and confident that they’ve got the issue sorted out — it was in the valve train — so we’re feeling good about it.”

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Hendrick driver will lead the field to green in Saturday’s Bank of America 500 (7:30 p.m. ET, ABC)

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CONCORD, N.C. — Jeff Gordon saved the best for last.

The final driver to make a qualifying run Thursday night at Charlotte Motor Speedway, Gordon edged Kevin Harvick for the top starting spot in Saturday night’s Bank of America 500, covering the 1.5-mile distance in 27.791 seconds (194.308 mph). 

Harvick, next-to-last in the qualifying order, had just posted a lap at 194.283 mph, but with a scintillating trip through Turns 3 and 4, Gordon claimed his ninth Coors Light pole award at Charlotte and his second of the season by .015 seconds.

Gordon’s run to his 74th career pole — third most all-time — denied Harvick his second straight top starting spot. After a seven-year hiatus, Harvick won the pole for last week’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup event at Kansas and went on to win the race.

Greg Biffle (193.959 mph) qualified third, followed by Jimmie Johnson (193.791 mph), Kasey Kahne (193.694 mph), Dale Earnhardt Jr. (193.535 mph) and Ryan Newman (193.458 mph), as Chase drivers captured the top seven starting spots. 

Kahne went out second and held the provisional pole until Biffle, the 38th qualifier, topped him. Kahne quickly became an afterthought, however, as four of the final six drivers on the track outran him. 

To Gordon, who is fourth in the Chase standings, 32 points behind leader Matt Kenseth, the pole was just another indication of his team’s growing confidence as the Chase progresses. 

“I can tell you, I’m feeling better every race,” Gordon said. “I thought that we really started making ground up the week prior to Richmond… Every week that we perform well and lead laps and run up front builds the confidence that we can win races and put together some great runs and get the points that we need. 

“At this point, we’re just going all-out, giving it everything we have. We’re not really thinking about points. We’re just trying to win races and get the best finishes that we can. Right now we’re just having fun.” 

Harvick was behind the wheel of the same car he drove to victory from the pole at Kansas. With the Bank of America 500 scheduled for Saturday night, that meant a quick turnaround for a chassis that spent Tuesday undergoing post-race inspection at NASCAR’s R&D Center in Concord. 

“Turning the car around couldn’t have come in a worse week,” Harvick said. “We tested in Martinsville for two days and had to split the guys up to go down to inspection Tuesday. Wednesday night, they basically rebuilt the whole car and put it back together.

“But everybody wants to win. We racing in the thick of a championship, and qualifying well was a huge benefit for us last week, with the first pit stall. Obviously, we wanted to be greedy and get that again tonight.” 

Eighth-place qualifier Juan Pablo Montoya was the only non-Chase driver to crack the top 10, with brothers Kyle Busch and Kurt Busch in ninth and 10th, respectively. Kenseth, who holds a three-point lead over Johnson, will start 20th.

Other Chase drivers qualified as follows: Joey Logano 12th, Clint Bowyer 14th and Carl Edwards 15th. 

Brian Scott, Kyle Larson and Blake Koch — all making their Cup debuts — earned the 19th, 21st and 43rd starting positions, respectively.

Looking to get back into Chase mix, Kahne starts weekend off right

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

CONCORD, N.C. — Kasey Kahne surged to the top of the leaderboard in opening NASCAR Sprint Cup Series practice Thursday afternoon at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
 
Kahne, a four-time winner on the 1.5-mile track, turned a fast lap of 193.805 mph in cool, overcast conditions in the No. 5 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet. His speed was a fair amount slower than the track-record lap of 195.624 mph that Denny Hamlin registered here earlier this season.

Kahne, who ranks last in the 13-driver Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoffs, has four consecutive top-10 finishes at Charlotte, including a runner-up effort in the Coca-Cola 600 here in May.
 
Kyle Busch, who dropped from third to fifth in the standings after a crash last weekend at Kansas Speedway, was second-fastest at 193.653 mph in the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota. Busch has a combined 12 victories in NASCAR Nationwide and Camping World Truck Series events at Charlotte, but is 0-for-19 in Sprint Cup competition here.
 
Kevin Harvick, third in the Sprint Cup standings, was also third on the speed chart at 193.548 mph in preparation for Saturday night’s Bank of America 500 (7:30 p.m ET, ABC), the fifth race in the 10-race Chase playoffs. Jeff Gordon, right behind Harvick in fifth place in points, was fourth-fastest in the 90-minute practice, just ahead of Penske Racing’s Joey Logano, fifth-best in the fastest Ford on the board.
 
Series points leader Matt Kenseth was eighth-fastest in the first practice in the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota. Five-time series champion Jimmie Johnson, just three points behind Kenseth in the standings, was 17th-fastest in the No. 48 Hendrick Motorsports Chevy.
 
Rookie Kyle Larson, driving the No. 51 Phoenix Racing Chevrolet, was a solid 12th-fastest in preparation for his NASCAR Sprint Cup Series debut.


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Hornish Jr. loses the lead at the end

CONCORD, N.C. – Alex Bowman, Trevor Bayne and Brad Sweet led the opening practice for NASCAR Nationwide Series drivers Thursday at Charlotte Motor Speedway as preparations for Friday night’s Dollar General 300 got under way.

Bowman (RAB Racing) ended the session atop the scoreboard with his lap of 182.469 mph on the 1.5-mile track.

Bayne (182.291), Sweet (182.223), Matt Kenseth (182.217) and Kevin Harvick (181.690) completed the top five. A final practice is scheduled to begin at 6:10 p.m. ET.

Series points leader Austin Dillon (Richard Childress Racing) was 13th overall.

Sam Hornish Jr., who trails Dillon by eight, was 10th.

Joey Logano, the defending race winner, was seventh.

In the day’s final practice, Dillon jumped to the top of the scoreboard as the practice came to a close, posting a lap of 182.395 mph to displace Hornish Jr. (182.328).

Sprint Cup Series regular Kyle Busch (Joe Gibbs Racing) was third, while Logano and Regan Smith (JR Motorsports completed the top five. 

RCR’s Brian Scott brushed wall on frontstretch in the final session, but the minor incident failed to halt the action on the track.

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Hendrick Motorsports driver thankful to be a part of sport for so long

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CONCORD, N.C. – So what did Dale Earnhardt Jr. do for his 39th birthday?
 
For starters, the Hendrick Motorsports driver qualified sixth for Saturday night’s Bank of America 500 at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
 
"It’s been great," Earnhardt Jr., who turned 39 Thursday, said when asked about turning another year older. "Getting older is not awesome, but it’s all how you feel, I suppose. I feel 20. I feel good."
 
Earnhardt Jr., the 37th of 43 drivers to take to the track during the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series qualifying session, briefly sat second after his lap of 195.535 mph, trailing only teammate Kasey Kahne.
 
But Greg Biffle, Jimmie Johnson, Kevin Harvick and eventually pole winner Jeff Gordon proved faster, leaving Earnhardt Jr. just outside the top five.
 
"The car was really driving well," he said, adding the No. 88 Chevrolet "is just right where we need to be.

"It’s been good all daylong. I think we’re going to have a good race car this weekend. That (run) gives us a great starting spot and a great pit selection."

Earnhardt Jr. will be making his 500th career start on Saturday night, ninth most among active Cup drivers and 33rd overall. He is a 19-time race winner, but is 0-for-27 in Cup starts at the 1.5-mile track. He does have one non-points win here, capturing the 2000 All-Star race during his rookie season.
 
Start No. 500 isn’t, he said, "that big of a milestone to me. I just hope I’m around for at least 250 or 500 more.
 
"I’ve really been blessed to have the opportunity to do what I do. I feel thankful every weekend to be able to get in some of the best cars in the series. I really mean that from my heart.
 
"It’s truly been a dream career for me and I never took it for granted that I would be driving race cars all my life and be able to make a living doing it. I’m real thankful and it makes me reflect on that kind of thing.”
 
One of 13 drivers in this year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup field, Earnhardt Jr. enters this weekend’s race eighth in points and 54 behind leader Matt Kenseth. After a horrendous 35th-place finish in the opening Chase race at Chicago, he has posted three consecutive top-10 finishes, including a runner-up effort at Dover two weeks ago.
 
The Charlotte race marks the halfway point of the 10-race Chase.
 
While teams had only one practice session prior to qualifying on Thursday, Earnhardt Jr. said his car had speed from the time it was unloaded. Small gains on Friday would help him keep pace with those who were also fast a day earlier.
 
"We ran a couple of (race) runs early and thought that we had a good handle," he said. "We were really in the ballpark and really happy with how the car came off the trailer."
 
And that, he said, "is a good sign for us.”

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Track schedules ‘major announcement’ for Monday with Virginia Tech athletic director in attendance

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The University of Tennessee and Virginia Tech football teams appear to be on a collision course, with a possible meeting on the field at a neutral site in 2016 — Bristol Motor Speedway.

Officials with BMS have scheduled a press conference for 11 a.m., Monday, Oct. 14 for "a major announcement."

Virginia Tech athletic director Jim Weaver confirmed to ESPN Wednesday night that "I’m going to be in Bristol on Monday from about 11 to 1."

BMS hosts two NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races each year — including the highly anticipated night race each August. The combined seating capacity (grandstands and suites) for the facility is approximately 160,000.

The current single-game attendance record for an NCAA college football game was set last month when Michigan officials announced a crowd of 115,109 for the Wolverines’ contest with Notre Dame in Ann Arbor.

It would not be the first time the track had hosted a football game in its infield — in 1961, BMS hosted a preseason game between the Washington Redskins and Philadelphia Eagles.

The track, less than 10 minutes from the Virginia/Tennessee border, is centrally located between the two schools. The University of Tennessee campus is in Knoxville, Tenn., while Blacksburg, Va., is home to Va. Tech.

Coaches from both institutions have been frequent visitors to NASCAR tracks during race weekends. UT head football coach Butch Jones was grand marshal for the spring Cup race at BMS earlier this year, and Virginia Tech head football coach Frank Beamer was the honorary pace car driver for the Sprint Cup race at Martinsville Speedway in April.

At least twice since the late 1990s, Bruton Smith, founder of Speedway Motorsports Inc., has floated the suggestion of a Tennessee-Virginia Tech game, but the idea never gained the necessary traction.

Now, it seems as if the idea might come to fruition, with a meeting of the two schools likely in early September.

Their last meeting occurred in the 2009 Chick-fil-A Bowl in the Georgia Dome. The Hokies won, 37-14.

SMI owns Bristol Motor Speedway, as well as seven other tracks that host NASCAR Sprint Cup events across the country.

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Send questions via Twitter; watch live stream at 7 p.m. ET

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Tony Stewart fans, we’ve got a new hashtag to add to #SmokeWillRise as the three-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion rehabilitates a broken leg after a sprint car accident on August 5.

Send questions to Stewart on Twitter by using #AskSmoke and then tune in to NASCAR.com on Tuesday, Oct. 15, to see if he answers your question during a Coke Live Chat hosted by veteran NASCAR reporter Matt Yocum.