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Nationwide Series, Camping World Truck Series will both crown new winners

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Oct. 9, 2013) — There’s one guarantee in this year’s voting for the NASCAR Nationwide Series and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Most Popular Driver Awards: Fans will crown a new winner. 

With Danica Patrick, last year’s NASCAR Nationwide Series winner, moving to the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and Nelson Piquet Jr., last year’s NASCAR Camping World Truck Series winner, racing in the Nationwide Series, this year’s vote — like the eventual winner’s driving style — is wide open.

For the sixth consecutive year, fans can vote online for the Most Popular Driver Award in the NASCAR Nationwide Series and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series (Twitter hashtags: #NNSMPD, #NCWTSMPD).

Each series has a dedicated site on NASCAR.com for voting. For the NASCAR Nationwide Series, fans can go to www.NASCAR.com/nnsmpd and for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series to www.NASCAR.com/ncwtsmpd. Fans are encouraged to vote once per day leading up to the deadline. 

Voting is open and runs through Friday, Nov. 15 for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and Saturday, Nov. 16 for the NASCAR Nationwide Series, prior to the respective season finale races at Homestead-Miami Speedway during Ford Championship Weekend.

To be eligible to receive votes, drivers must have selected either the NASCAR Nationwide Series or NASCAR Camping World Truck Series to receive 2013 championship driver points. Additionally, drivers must have attempted at least half of each series’ races this season.

The winners will be announced at the 2013 NASCAR Nationwide Series and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Awards. The combined postseason gala will once again take place in South Florida at the Loews Miami Beach Hotel on Monday, Nov. 18. 

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Driver’s entire focus on final six NASCAR races

RELATED: Full Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup coverage

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — Kurt Busch’s hopes of running an open-wheel race this year have taken a back seat to the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

The 2004 NASCAR champion said during a test at Martinsville Speedway that due to his Furniture Row Racing team’s playoff run, he won’t compete in the Oct. 19 IndyCar season finale at Fontana, Calif., as he had hoped. Busch is currently seventh in the Chase, 47 points behind leader Matt Kenseth, after a runner-up finish last weekend at Kansas Speedway.

In May, Busch easily passed an IndyCar rookie test by turning laps of over 218 mph in a vehicle provided by Andretti Autosport. That experience led the Las Vegas native to pursue a potential seat in next year’s Indianapolis 500, with an appearance at this month’s race at Auto Club Speedway as a tune-up.

His success in NASCAR this year has changed that plan. Busch has led the single-car No. 78 team into the Chase for the first time, an effort that helped him land a ride at Stewart-Haas Racing for next season.

"The Chase has gone off to a good start for us, but it hasn’t been the best. You have to be at a perfect level through the first five races, I think, to know how to position yourself for the last five in the Chase," Busch said. "So with all those thoughts, I’ve shelved the IndyCar thoughts. The reason I wanted to do Fontana this year is to get experience, and to do my homework and to be better prepared if I were going to run Indianapolis next year."

At the annual NASCAR event at the Brickyard earlier this year, Busch said a potential Indy 500 appearance next season was only a matter of sponsorship. Not running the Fontana race, he said, doesn’t necessarily preclude him from potentially still competing at Indianapolis in May of next season, although it would leave him at a disadvantage.

"The window closed for running Fontana this October. It’s not closing out the chance of going to Indianapolis, but I wanted to be better prepared — to have a better outing, to be more competitive if I was to show up at Indy next year," he said. "So now with that opportunity gone, next year there’s still a chance at running Indy, I just won’t be as prepared to race. It might just be more of a scenario where I’ve got to learn that much more in the month of May instead of being prepared for it."

Busch’s car owner next season, Tony Stewart, is a former IndyCar champion who knows all about running both the Indy 500 and NASCAR’s Coca-Cola 600 on the same day. To this point, though, Busch hasn’t had a chance to solicit his future teammate’s advice on potentially doing the double next year. Right now, the Chase takes precedence.

"I haven’t done much of my homework that I need to do," Busch said. "The preparation and the key pieces, we’re still trying to fit them all into the right place. When I know that’s going to come true, then we need to go and jump on it and prepare for our race, our exam, our big test, which would be Indianapolis."

 

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More and more younger drivers breaking into the Sprint Cup Series

RELATED: Full Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup coverage

MARTINSVILLE, Va. — The rolling hills of southern Virginia, where the leaves are beginning to show more and more signs of their fall color, provided the perfect backdrop for an even larger change.

You could see it at Martinsville Speedway, the oldest track on NASCAR’s premier circuit, a cantankerous old place that’s frayed nerves and shortened tempers for longer than even its sanctioning body has been around. There was 21-year-old Kyle Larson, testing in preparation for one of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series starts that will precede his jump to the sport’s major league next season. There was 19-year-old Ryan Blaney, shaking down his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series entry, but already drawing interest from the sport’s highest level. There was a Richard Childress Racing contingent that will look very different when Austin Dillon, 23, steps up next year.

They are but the vanguards of a larger movement you can feel coming, just like that first bit of iciness in the autumn air. A sport first reshaped by the breakout success of a nascent Jeff Gordon in the middle 1990s, and then defined for a time by the young guns that took it by storm in the 2000s, is in the first stages of perhaps an even larger and more transformational shift.

The kids are coming. All those youngsters who started racing go-karts as soon as they could walk, who flooded the sport’s lower levels only to be stymied by older drivers who wouldn’t budge or sponsors who were too cash-strapped or hesitant — they’re starting to knock down the barrier, brick by brick by brick. Chip Ganassi’s choice of Larson to succeed the outgoing Juan Pablo Montoya in the No. 42 car may have raised some eyebrows in NASCAR circles, but it was also emblematic of the sea change just beginning to swell.

"I think we went a long time with no change, and the economy had a lot to do with that. When corporations aren’t readily spending money, young drivers aren’t getting shots," said veteran Jeff Burton, one of 11 Sprint Cup drivers testing at Martinsville this week in advance of the track’s Oct. 27 event. "Well, we went a long time with no change. Now we’re going to see a flood of it."

This from a 46-year-old who’s been around long enough to remember hearing Martinsville founder H. Clay Earles announce the track’s first late model event over Motor Racing Network, and officials needing to shoo away geese before they could drop the green flag. As a driver who hasn’t won since 2008, he’s also somewhat vulnerable — and indeed his No. 31 car will go to Ryan Newman next year, although Burton said Tuesday he’s close to a deal that will keep him in the Sprint Cup Series in 2014.

But he’s also a clear-eyed observer of the sport who realizes that his son Harrison — just now beginning to reach his teenage years — probably has already done as much racing as his old man. "Bizarre," the elder Burton called it. But it’s also an indisputable sign of the times.

"That’s just how it’s changed. There are so many more opportunities for young drivers today than there’s ever been, and that’s a good thing. We need youth involved in our sport, not only as spectators but also as participants. When we have more youth as participants, we have more youth as spectators. So there’s a whole new young group behind this young group already, that will supersede them someday. And that’s a great thing," Burton said.

"We have great, healthy feeder systems today to provide the talent. And honestly, four or five years ago, if you asked me — who’s the up-and-coming driver? I didn’t see him. I really didn’t see him. Over the last two years, they’ve emerged. … Now there are young drivers who have separated themselves, and they’ve started to emerge, and they’re going to come in packs."

They’ve been there ready to pounce, symbolized by a driver like Trevor Bayne, who has a Daytona 500 title to his name, but due to a shortage of available rides is still trying to break into the Sprint Cup ranks full-time. Last year, two-time Nationwide Series champion Ricky Stenhouse Jr. moved up. Next come Larson and Dillon. Truck Series drivers like Blaney, Ty Dillon and Burton’s nephew Jeb Burton are waiting in the wings. As importantly, teams like EGR, Furniture Row Racing, Phoenix Racing and Swan Racing seem open to putting young drivers behind the wheel.

In fairness, we’ve seen something like this before. "All it takes is one young driver to do well, and then every car owner wants a young driver," Burton said, and that was certainly the case after Gordon’s success left every team scrambling to find someone just like him — paving the way for the likes of Newman, Kurt Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Matt Kenseth, and eventually Jimmie Johnson. Now that wave is collectively growing a little gray at the temples, and the cycle is beginning to repeat itself once again.

"Since I’ve been in the sport, I view this as the third time we’ve had this youth explosion," Burton said. "… Go back and look at the picture of my Rookie of the Year class. There were about 12 of us in that picture. Compare that to the Rookie of the Year classes we’ve had the last several years. Then we had another time when a lot of young drivers came in, and (brother) Ward got caught up in that one. Ward got caught up in the ‘Oh, you’ve got to be 20, or you don’t want to do it anymore.’ And then he was part of the group that got moved out. And now it’s happening again. … It’s just part of it. it’s part of it, it’s necessary, it brings new excitement. It just happens."

Granted, the next generation has to perform, and the differences between the Nationwide and Sprint Cup cars can make that difficult — as evidenced by Stenhouse’s uneven first season at the sport’s highest level.

"If you get too confident in this sport, you can get knocked down pretty easy, and it’s hard to get back up," Larson said. But the odds are many of these up-and-coming drivers will make it, just as so many of their predecessors did, and again alter the face of NASCAR in the process.

There’s a trade-off here, of course. Mark Martin and Bobby Labonte, both veteran drivers highly regarded by traditional fans, have uncertain plans for next season. Burton’s years are certainly numbered, and even someone still as competitive as Gordon is much closer to the end of his career than the beginning — a fact that can make anyone who’s been around this sport suddenly feel the age in their bones. Change is hard, and NASCAR fans cling fast to their favorites, often desperate to prevent them from walking off into the sunset.

But that same change is also inevitable, like the leaves in southern Virginia turning from green to gold. And as is the case when the winter wind blows down from the Blue Ridge, the transformation will eventually be complete.

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NASCAR Nationwide Series regular will run in No. 33 car on Saturday night

RELATED: Full Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup coverage

For Brian Scott, it was all part of the plan.

The NASCAR Nationwide Series regular prepares to make his first career start in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series this weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway, a debut that’s been in the works since he started planning his move to Richard Childress Racing almost a year ago. Scott will drive the No. 33 car in Saturday night’s event.

"They knew all along and we knew all along — at least our intentions were — to not kind of be stuck in the Nationwide Series," said Scott, whose usual ride is RCR’s No. 2 Nationwide car. "When we made that move to Richard Childress, we wanted some type of light at the end of the tunnel, the ability to make some starts in the Sprint Cup Series. It’s something that’s we’ve talked about, and we knew it was going to be later in the year this year."

RCR driver Austin Dillon, the current championship leader in the Nationwide Series, has driven the No. 33 car four times this season, most recently last month at Atlanta, and has a best finish in the vehicle of 11th at Michigan. Dillon, who is ticketed for the Sprint Cup circuit full-time next season, will also compete next week at Talladega Superspeedway in the No. 14 car of Tony Stewart, who is out for the remainder of the season with a broken right leg suffered in a sprint car accident over the summer.

The No. 33 was available for Charlotte, helping to make Scott’s debut possible. The car will be sponsored by Shore Lodge, the family-owned company that is also the primary backer of Scott’s Nationwide Series entry. Scott Naset will work as crew chief.

"We knew they needed to have the car availability, the wherewithal basically to put it together," Scott said. "And when Austin started running, and he went through some of the deals and the transitions he’s going to be going though next year, I think that the inventory opened up. They have a more clear understanding and picture of what they need to do to run the No. 33 car, and they’re not running it every week, so that puts some opportunities in front of us to be able to do that for Charlotte, and hopefully maybe another race or two this year."

A 25-year-old from Boise, Idaho, Scott is currently seventh in Nationwide points with 12 top-10s this season. His best finish is second at Indianapolis — where Kyle Busch passed him in the final laps to win — and at Richmond, where Brad Keselowski beat him on a late restart. Although Scott tested Sprint Cup cars regularly during previous stints with Joe Gibbs Racing and Ray Evernham’s former team, he didn’t get behind the wheel of a Generation-6 vehicle until a test at Charlotte in the No. 33 car on Tuesday and Wednesday of last week.

That lack of experience tempers expectations. The best finish ever by a driver making his premier series debut at Charlotte is sixth, recorded by Bugs Stevens in the 1970 World 600. Nationwide driver Kyle Larson, who will take over Earnhardt Ganassi Racing’s No. 42 car next year, will also make his Sprint Cup debut in Saturday night’s event. 

"Expectations are a hard thing when you’re looking at an inaugural Sprint Cup Series start. Obviously the competitor inside each of us, and the competitor inside me, wants to go out there and have a good run, like a top-10 run. Yet I think everybody in this room including myself has enough knowledge of NASCAR to know the chances of that," Scott said.

"Everything would have to go perfect for a first start to have a top-10 finish. So instead, I want to say my expectations are, first and foremost, to stay on the lead lap. I think if you can stay on the lead lap, not go a lap down, that puts you in position for a lot of things. And second, I’d say a top 20 would be good, and a top 15 would be really, really great."

Scott said his plan for next year includes another full Nationwide season in the No. 2 car, with perhaps as many as five Sprint Cup events sprinkled in depending on sponsorship and car inventory. Although he’s yet to reach Victory Lane, Scott believes he’s taken a step forward in his first season with RCR.

"It’s really reinvigorated me," he said. "… We’ve established a consistency this year that I think a lot of people didn’t think I was capable of after a couple of hard seasons over at Joe Gibbs Racing. … I think our performance has shown this year, we’ve performed at a higher level."

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Colin Braun set new record for the fastest lap ever recorded at Daytona 

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Colin Braun blazed the fastest lap in Daytona International Speedway’s storied history on Wednesday afternoon turning a lap of 222.971 mph (40.364 seconds) in a Ford Eco-Boost-powered Daytona Prototype for Michael Shank Racing.

Braun’s lap around the 2.5-mile Daytona high-banks easily eclipsed the former record of 210.364 mph set by former NASCAR Sprint Cup champion Bill Elliott while qualifying for the 1987 Daytona 500.

"This is hallowed ground here at Daytona, so it’s really special to hold the record at this place," said Braun, a former NASCAR Nationwide and Camping World Truck Series competitor before running sports cars full time.

"To get to do it with a group of guys like Mike Shank and with the new EcoBoost Ford motor, it’s a special day, for sure."

The 25-year-old Texan also established new record marks — subject to homologation from the Federation Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA) — in 10 kilometers from a standing start (202.438 mph) and 10 miles from a standing start (210.018 mph).

The historic day comes just a week after the 2012 Rolex 24 winning Michael Shank Racing team announced it would field Ford’s new 3.5-liter, twin-turbo V6 EcoBoost engine in the inaugural 2014 TUDOR United SportsCar Championship — which is a much-anticipated merger between the GRAND-AM and American LeMans Series sports car circuits.

 "I can’t believe, in my whole racing career, that I’d have an opportunity to do something like this," Shank said. "I never thought we could. If you think about how fast we went around here in a Daytona Prototype car is a little bit surreal.

"This thing is extremely fast and I’m extremely proud of it. I think it bodes well for the future of sports car racing in the U.S.  

"Daytona Prototypes are not slow cars. They are very, very capable cars and I think we proved that here today."

Jim France, a founder of the GRAND-AM Series and chairman of the International Motor Sports Association (IMSA) which will sanction the United SportsCar Championship, was on hand for the historic achievement Tuesday.

The TUDOR United SportsCar Championship opens its inaugural season on these very high banks with the Jan. 25-26 Rolex 24 at Daytona.

(Left to right) Ford Racing Director and GRAND-AM founder Jim France, who spearheaded the use of Daytona Prototypes as the top category for the Rolex Sports Car Series since 2003 and through the completion of the series last month, and chairman of the new International Motor Sports Association (IMSA), shake hands in front of the Ford EcoBoost Daytona Prototype to set the Daytona International Speedway speed record. (Brian Cleary/Daytona International Speedway)

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Driver was released on bond Wednesday morning

The Mooresville (N.C.) Police Department has confirmed that NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Travis Kvapil, 37, was arrested Tuesday evening on domestic violence charges and was released from custody Wednesday morning.

MPD Capt. Joseph Cooke said the department received an emergency call Tuesday evening that an assault was taking place. Officers responded to a home where they found Kvapil and his wife, Jennifer, and determined there was enough probable cause that a domestic assault had occurred. Kvapil was arrested at 7:11 p.m. ET.

He has been charged with one misdemeanor count of Assault on a Female and one misdemeanor count of False Imprisonment.

According to the arrest report, Kvapil was released from custody on bond Wednesday morning.

Reached by phone, Kvapil’s race team, BK Racing, said “We have no comment at this time.” The team did not confirm the arrest or knowledge of the arrest.

A NASCAR spokesman said the sanctioning body has no comment at this time.

Kvapil is currently ranked 31st in the Sprint Cup Series standings — with a season best 16th-place finish coming Aug. 24 at Bristol — and is winless in 240 starts over the course of nine Cup seasons.

Kvapil, a native of Janesville, Wisc., is the 2003 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series champion and won nine races competing in that series full time from 2001-2004 and again in 2007.

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Vital stats for Bank of America 500 weekend at Charlotte

Related: Latest news from Charlotte

Track: Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, N.C. 1.5 miles, paved asphalt surface, 24-degree banking in all four turns. Five-degree banking in front and backstretches. Frontstretch is 1,980 feet and backstretch is 1,500 feet.
Time/TV: The Bank of America 500 (334 laps), 7:30 p.m. ET, Saturday, Oct. 12. TV: ABC (coverage starts at 7 p.m. ET), Radio: PRN

Trailblazers:  The track’s first Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup race was held on Oct. 16, 2004 (500 miles) and was won by Jimmie Johnson (130.214 mph).

0.027 seconds was the closest margin of victory since the advent of electronic scoring at Charlotte Motor Speedway, when Jimmie Johnson beat Bobby Labonte on May 29, 2005.

4  active drivers have posted their first career NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light Pole at Charlotte Motor Speedway: Jeff Gordon (10/10/93), Dale Earnhardt Jr. (5/28/00), Ryan Newman (5/27/01) and Aric Almirola (5/27/12). Almirola’s pole last season was the first time since May 22, 1966 that the No. 43 car had won the Coors Light pole at CMS.

5 of the 109 races at Charlotte Motor Speedway have been shortened due to weather conditions; the most recent was the 2009 Coca-Cola 600 won by David Reutimann and Michael Waltrip Racing. Four of the five races shortened were the 600-mile events (1968, 1997, 2003 and 2009).  

active NASCAR Sprint Cup drivers have posted their first career win at Charlotte Motor Speedway: Jeff Gordon (5/29/94), Bobby Labonte (5/28/95), Matt Kenseth (5/28/00), Jamie McMurray (10/13/02), Casey Mears (5/27/07) and David Reutimann (5/25/09).

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8  different manufacturers have won in the NSCS at Charlotte; led by Chevrolet with 41 victories; followed by Ford with 28.

drivers have posted consecutive wins at Charlotte Motor Speedway, including three consecutive by Fred Lorenzen (fall 1964 and both 1965) and four straight by Jimmie Johnson (both in 2004 and 2005).

12 drivers have won consecutive Coors Light poles at Charlotte. David Pearson holds the record for most consecutive poles at Charlotte with 11; from the fall of 1973 through 1978.

14  of the 109 (12.8 percent) NASCAR Sprint Cup races at Charlotte have been won from the Coors Light pole; the two most recent were Jimmie Johnson in 2004 and 2009.

17  wins at Charlotte Motor Speedway for Hendrick Motorsports, the most wins at Charlotte in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. The breakdown: Jimmie Johnson (six), Jeff Gordon (five), Darrell Waltrip (two), Ken Schrader (one), Terry Labonte (one), Casey Mears (one) and Kasey Kahne (one). 

22 was Jeff Gordon’s age when he became the youngest pole winner at Charlotte Motor Speedway in 1993. He was 22 years, 2 months, and 6 days.

31  of the 109 (28.4 percent) NASCAR Sprint Cup races at Charlotte have been won from the front row: 14 from the pole and 17 from second-place.

34  starts without a victory for Joe Nemechek, the most among active drivers. Dale Earnhardt Jr. follows him with 27.

36  attempts before his first win at Charlotte for Bobby Labonte, the most all-time among active drivers.
42 
drivers have Coors Light poles at Charlotte, led by David Pearson with 14. Ryan Newman leads all active drivers in poles, with nine, followed by Jeff Gordon with eight.

45 different drivers have won at Charlotte Motor Speedway, led by Darrell Waltrip, Bobby Allison and Jimmie Johnson with six wins each.

49  was the age of Bobby Allison when he  became the oldest pole winner at Charlotte Motor Speedway in 1987. He was 49 years, 10 months, and 8 days.

57 starts at Charlotte Motor Speedway by Terry Labonte and Mark Martin, the most among active drivers.

64 starts at Charlotte Motor Speedway by NASCAR Hall of Hamer Richard Petty to lead the series.

83 of the 109 (76.1 percent) NASCAR Sprint Cup races at Charlotte have been won from a top-10 starting position.

109 points races have taken place at Charlotte Motor Speedway; two per year since the track opened in 1960.

133.904 is the winning pole speed of Fireball Roberts in the inaugural qualification at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

1,439 laps led at Charlotte for Jimmie Johnson to lead all active drivers.

 

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Harvick wins at Kansas

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WATCH: Kenseth, Logano
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Get a sneak peek at the looks for this weekend

MORE: Full Chase coverage

SPRINT CUP SERIES PAINT SCHEMES

Dave Blaney will drive the No. 7 Breast Cancer Awareness Chevrolet.

SHOP: Dave Blaney die-casts

Marcos Ambrose will drive the No. 9 BOSTITCH Ford.

SHOP: Marcos Ambrose die-casts

Danica Patrick will drive the No. 10 GoDaddy Breast Cancer Awareness Chevrolet.

SHOP: Danica Patrick die-casts

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. will drive the No. 17 My Best Buy Ford.

SHOP: Ricky Stenhouse Jr. die-casts

Matt Kenseth will drive the No. 20 Dollar General Toyota.

#WHAT20NEEDS

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Joey Logano will drive the No. 22 Shell Pennzoil/Hertz Ford.

#WHAT22NEEDS

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Brian Scott will drive the No. 33 Shore Lodge Chevrolet.

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JJ Yeley will drive the No. 36 United Mining Equipment Chevrolet.

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Kyle Larson will drive the No. 51 Target Chevrolet.

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Martin Truex Jr. will drive the No. 56 NAPA Auto Parts Toyota.

SHOP: Martin Truex Jr. die-casts

NATIONWIDE SERIES PAINT SCHEMES

Brian Scott will drive the No. 2 Charter Media Chevrolet.

SHOP: Brian Scott die-casts

Brad Sweet will drive the No. 5 Great Clips DIY Network Mancaves Chevrolet.

SHOP: Brad Sweet die-casts

Regan Smith will drive the No. 7 Goody’s Headache Relief Shot Chevrolet.

SHOP: Regan Smith die-casts

Elliott Sadler will drive the No. 11 OneMain Financial Toyota.

SHOP: Elliott Sadler die-casts

Sam Hornish Jr. will drive the No. 12 Detroit Genuine Parts Ford.

SHOP: Sam Hornish Jr. die-casts

Ryan Reed will drive the No. 16 Drive to Stop Diabetes Ford.

SHOP: NASCAR die-casts

Matt Kenseth will drive the No. 18 GameStop Toyota.

SHOP: Matt Kenseth die-casts

Brian Vickers will drive the No. 20 Dollar General Toyota.

SHOP: Brian Vickers die-casts

Nelson Piquet Jr. will drive the No. 30 WORX Chevrolet.

SHOP: NASCAR die-casts

Kyle Larson will drive the No. 32 Target Chevrolet.

SHOP:
Kyle Larson die-casts

Kevin Harvick will drive the No. 33 Fast Fixin’ Chevrolet.

SHOP: Kevin Harvick die-casts

James Buescher will drive the No. 34 The Fraternal Order of Eagles Chevrolet.

SHOP:
NASCAR die-casts

Kyle Busch will drive the No. 54 Monster Energy Toyota.

SHOP: Kyle Busch die-casts

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Two-time NASCAR Nationwide Series champion talks about his induction into the NASCAR Hall of Fame

Tickets for the 2014 NASCAR Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony went on sale Tuesday, Oct. 8. Tim Flock, Jack Ingram, Dale Jarrett, Maurice Petty and Fireball Roberts will be honored during this year’s ceremony set for Wednesday, Jan. 29, 2014. Individual tickets and ticket packages are available at ticketmaster.com, the NASCAR Hall of Fame Box Office or by calling 1-800-745-3000.

Drivers, celebrities and legends of the sport will take the stage during the induction of the fifth NASCAR Hall of Fame class, including Ingram, the first champion in the NASCAR Nationwide Series in 1982. He added a second title in 1985. Ingram, who turns 77 this December, spoke about his career on the occasion of the NASCAR Nationwide Series 1,000th race at Richmond International Raceway last month.

WHAT: NASCAR Hall of Fame Class of 2014
WHERE: Charlotte (N.C.) Convention Center
WHO VOTES: 21 members of Nominating Committee and 33 members of Voting Panel. In addition, one vote is generated by fan input.
WHO WAS CHOSEN: Tim Flock, Jack Ingram, Dale Jarrett, Maurice Petty and Fireball Roberts
WHEN THE 2014 INDUCTEES WILL BE INDUCTED: Wednesday, January 29, 2014 (Live television coverage provided by FOX Sports 1)

Q: What are your thoughts about the Nationwide Series?

A: [Before] the series started off, basically we were racing Late Model Sportsman cars all over the country, including Daytona International Speedway, and we maybe had 20 championship races a year. You had to run a lot of weekly events, and they counted (toward) the national championship also. In 1972 and ’73, I ran 85 or 86 points races [a year].

When they made it to where you only had to go to 30 race tracks, it was like a vacation for us. I really liked the idea … it worked out well for me, and it’s worked out well for everyone else to have another division of this caliber. I was delighted to be able to sign a deal with NASCAR in 1982 to run all of those races, and I did until I retired.

Q: In all your years of racing, what was the greatest race of your entire career?

A: I’ve answered that quite a few times, and I won’t mind doing it forever. In 1975, we took a car and went to Daytona and won the Permatex 300. It was on [ABC’s] Wide World of Sports. That was the greatest feeling that I’ve ever had in my whole life, probably of anything. I was coming down that pit road, and I’m thinking it was kind of warm that day. All of the sudden, everything got real cool and quiet, and Will Hunt was the owner and he said, “I know what it feels like to be in heaven.”

That was a fabulous thing. I got mail from all over the world, especially in Europe and South America. It might be addressed to Jack Ingram, Asheville USA. I’ve got a big cardboard box full of those letters still today.

Q: What was the key to winning that race?

A: I don’t think anybody could have ever done anything any better than what we did. I had Banjo (Matthews) and [NASCAR Hall of Famer] Junior Johnson as co-crew chiefs. We had no radios, and Banjo walked all the way out into the middle of the grass area at Daytona to hold up a big sign (that said) “Pit.” It seemed like every time I got to the front, they wanted me to pit. But they knew what they were doing.

I’ve got to thank Junior Johnson always. We got a big crack in the top of the windshield, a big hole. They were going to black flag me. Junior said he would fix it, and they believed Junior. Now he didn’t fix it, but he taped it up and they let me finish that race and we won and that was the best time of my whole racing career.

Q: When was the last race that you actually ran and competed in?

A: Last September at Greenville Pickens Speedway. I struggled to run fifth. I don’t think there were 10 cars that finished. Believe it or not, I had blisters on my hands. I was so tired, I couldn’t even hardly get out of that car. I said, “I think I’ll quit this.”

I don’t even know how I did it or anyone else [did it] back in the day when cars were hard to drive because they didn’t have power steering or nothing. This thing had power steering, full containment seat and the whole deal, and here I can hardly walk after 50 laps.

Q: Was Sam Ard, Nationwide Series champion in 1983 and 1984, your greatest rival?

A: No, not really. Sam did pretty well once that series started. He won a couple of those championships and did really well. But I raced against him for championships long before that, going back in the early ‘70s and I beat him a couple of times then.

Q: Then who was your greatest rival?

A: The best driver that I raced against in Late Model Sportsman and then [Nationwide] was Harry Gant. There was a magazine that came out some time in the middle ‘70s, and Butch Lindley had said he’d won 36 races, and I said, “Butch, I don’t believe that could happen.” He was at my shop, and I called Daytona about every Monday or Tuesday to find out what the points would be.

I called down there, and I asked, “Do you know how many races Butch Lindley had won?”

She said, “Yeah, 14.”

I asked, “How many have I won?”

She said, “21.”

I asked, “How many has Harry Gant won?”

She said, “25.”

This is toward the end of the season, but Harry never did tell people, inflate anything, and as a matter of fact, he’d probably tell you he didn’t even know how many he won.

I’ve got to say this about Harry Gant. We wound up being good friends, and he’s going to induct me into the NASCAR Hall of Fame. That’s quite an honor that he agreed to do that.