Sponsor reviews partnership with Michael Waltrip Racing, decides to maintain relationship

Michael Waltrip Racing needed some good news after the Richmond scandal, and it got it in the form of 5-Hour Energy’s pledge to back Clint Bowyer’s No. 15 MWR Toyota for 2014.
 
The company announced its decision on its Facebook page early Friday, explaining that it decided to say something earlier than usual because of the number of people impacted by it, particularly hard-working MWR employees, the statement read.
 
5-Hour Energy’s decision to continue as Bowyer’s sponsor came a little more than a week after NAPA Auto Parts parted ways with MWR and the No. 56 Toyota of Martin Truex Jr. over the penalties at Richmond. NAPA’s statement said that it believed in fair play and did not condone the actions that led to the penalties after Richmond, the final race before the 2013 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup began.

 

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Logano to roll off last in qualifying, 3:10 p.m. ET, ESPN2

Track Qualifying Record: Jeremy Mayfield, 06/06/04, 22.288 seconds, 161.522 mph
Order Car Driver Team
1 98 Michael McDowell Phil Parsons Racing Ford
2 10 Danica Patrick # GoDaddy Chevrolet
3 30 Cole Whitt(i) Swan Energy Toyota
4 33 Landon Cassill(i) LittleJoesAutos.com Chevrolet
5 5 Kasey Kahne Farmers Insurance Chevrolet
6 15 Clint Bowyer Raspberry 5-hour Energy benefiting Living Beyond Breast Cancer Toyota
7 55 Brian Vickers(i) Aaron`s Dream Machine Toyota
8 78 Kurt Busch Furniture Row/Denver Mattress Chevrolet
9 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe`s/Kobalt Tools Chevrolet
10 40 Tony Raines(i) Hillman Racing Chevrolet
11 27 Paul Menard Menards/CertainTeed Chevrolet
12 24 Jeff Gordon Axalta Chevrolet
13 56 Martin Truex Jr. NAPA Shocks Toyota
14 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Freight Toyota
15 83 David Reutimann Burger King/Dr.Pepper Toyota
16 13 Casey Mears GEICO Ford
17 42 Juan Pablo Montoya Target Chevrolet
18 87 Joey Nemechek(i) NEMCO Motorsports Toyota
19 18 Kyle Busch Interstate Batteries Toyota
20 31 Jeff Burton Caterpillar Chevrolet
21 2 Brad Keselowski Miller Lite Ford
22 7 Dave Blaney Tommy Baldwin Racing Chevrolet
23 16 Greg Biffle Filtrete Ford
24 43 Aric Almirola Smithfield Ford
25 34 David Ragan Taco Bell Ford
26 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. National Guard Chevrolet
27 36 JJ Yeley Drive Sober Arrive Alive Chevrolet
28 14 Mark Martin Mobil1/Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet
29 38 David Gilliland Long John Silver`s Ford
30 35 Josh Wise(i) MDS Transport Ford
31 47 AJ Allmendinger House-Autry Toyota
32 29 Kevin Harvick Budweiser Chevrolet
33 39 Ryan Newman State Water Heaters Chevrolet
34 93 Travis Kvapil Burger King/Dr.Pepper Toyota
35 32 Timmy Hill # U.S. Chrome Ford
36 95 Reed Sorenson(i) Leavine Family Racing Ford
37 51 Ryan Truex(i) Shooters Sporting Center Chevrolet
38 20 Matt Kenseth Home Depot “Let`s Do This“ Toyota
39 9 Marcos Ambrose Stanley Ford
40 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. # Ford EcoBoost Ford
41 99 Carl Edwards Fastenal Ford
42 1 Jamie McMurray LiftMaster Chevrolet
43 22 Joey Logano Shell Pennzoil Ford

 

 


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Regan Smith to roll off last in Coors Light Pole Qualifying, Saturday at 12:05 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 2

      Track Qualifying Record: Kyle Busch, 5/15/10, 22.752 sec / 158.228 mph
# Car Driver Team
1 70 Brad Teague ML Motorsports Toyota
2 79 TJ Duke Duke Masonry/Bryson’s Fuel Ford
3 46 * JJ Yeley(i) Curtis Key Plumbing Chevrolet
4 50 * Danny Efland Defiant Whisky Chevrolet
5 23 Donnie Neuenberger Cancun Cantina Ford
6 89 * Morgan Shepherd Shepherd Racing Ventures Chevrolet
7 24 Ryan Ellis P1-Group Toyota
8 00 * Blake Koch Support Military Toyota
9 52 * Joey Gase Jimmy Means Racing Chevrolet
10 42 * Josh Wise Curtis Key Plumbing Chevrolet
11 40 TJ Bell TheFireStore.com Chevrolet
12 74 * Carl Long Mike Harmon Racing Dodge
13 15 * Chase Miller Qolix Chevrolet
14 87 Joe Nemechek pelletgrillusa.com Toyota
15 14 Eric McClure Hefty/Reynolds Toyota
16 01 Mike Wallace Iron Source/Meding’s Seafood Chevrolet
17 51 Jeremy Clements ETS Chevrolet
18 4 Landon Cassill teamjdmotorsports.com Chevrolet
19 10 * Jeff Green TriStar Motorsports Toyota
20 32 Kyle Larson # LiftMaster Chevrolet
21 44 Cole Whitt Ferguson Toyota
22 30 Nelson Piquet Jr. # Cold Stone Creamery Chevrolet
23 6 Trevor Bayne Pillow Pets Ford
24 60 Travis Pastrana Roush Fenway Racing Ford
25 31 Justin Allgaier SEM Chevrolet
26 43 Michael Annett Pilot Travel Centers Ford
27 33 Kevin Harvick(i) Steak-EZE Chevrolet
28 11 Elliott Sadler OneMain Financial Toyota
29 19 Mike Bliss TriStar Motorsports Toyota
30 5 Brad Sweet Great Clips Chevrolet
31 20 Brian Vickers Dollar General Toyota
32 12 Sam Hornish Jr. Snap-On Ford
33 77 Parker Kligerman Toyota/Bandit Chippers Toyota
34 54 Kyle Busch(i) Monster Energy Toyota
35 99 Alex Bowman # ToyotaCare Toyota
36 3 Austin Dillon AdvoCare Chevrolet
37 22 Joey Logano(i) Hertz Ford
38 2 Brian Scott Shore Lodge Chevrolet
39 7 Regan Smith Drive Sober Arrive Alive Chevrolet

* Required to qualify on time, (i) Ineligible for driver points in this series

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Watch RaceView qualifying free, 3:10 p.m. ET, Friday, Sept. 27

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Follow Nationwide Series practice, Sept. 27, 12:40 p.m. ET

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Live from Dover, Nationwide Series GarageCam, 12:10 p.m. ET, Sept. 27

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WATCH: Sprint Cup Garage Cam, 10:30 a.m. ET

Spot your favorite drivers in the garage as they prepare for opening practice.

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Catch up with the contenders with our live stream of news conferences

Click here for our Press Pass live press conference stream

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Drivers are touched by the Walter Reed Military Medical Center servicemen and women

BETHESDA, Md. – The festivities were set for NASCAR’s Tribute to the Warriors at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on Thursday. 

Tables with blue tablecloths and white napkins were impeccably set for 300 guests. American Idol star Pia Toscano, flanked by two huge screens, had completed her warm-up and mike check and emcee, NASCAR pit reporter Jamie Little, had run through her script including the introduction of NASCAR President Mike Helton.

But Staff Sergeant Liam Dwyer, 32, a U.S. Marine from Southbury, Conn., wasn’t sticking around.  Fresh from his rehab work in the Military Advanced Training Center rehab room, Dwyer and his driving buddy, Bob Pielli Jr., were headed south to Virginia International Raceway to put his vintage 1962 Sprite through its paces.

Pretty incredible, considering Dwyer races cars despite the loss of his left leg above the knee and severe nerve and skeletal damage to his right leg and both arms, the result of stepping on an IED in Afghanistan.

"Bob came down from Connecticut. We’ve got the car loaded up and we’re headed out to VIR in about 45 minutes," Dwyer said. "I’m a driver and these guys are drivers – and being able to exchange driving stories with them is something special. We’ve run some of the same tracks. Other people don’t quite get  the ‘it’ factor like drivers do."

"Inspirational," said Kurt Busch, who exchanged phone numbers with Dwyer, who aspires to drive professionally in the GRAND-AM Rolex and American Le Mans Series. "We think we have it tough some days with sessions, maybe the heat during summer runs. For (Dwyer), he’s going against those obstacles of not having all his limbs or muscles toned and driving with a big smile on his face." 

"That’s incredible," said Brian Vickers, who spent considerable time with Dwyer. "He’s definitely the most passionate driver/fan I’ve ever met at an event like this." 

Although Dwyer’s story as a race driver was unique, his injuries were not atypical of those observed by the NASCAR visitors to Walter Reed.

Team owner Roger Penske was among those also making the trip to Walter Reed.

"I’m thrilled to be able to wrap my arms around these young men and women who really give their lives and much of their bodies for the safety of our country," Penske said. "One young man I talked to, who lost a leg, said he’s going back (into the service). Mentally, these kids are tough. That’s what makes our country so great."

The mental part side is the toughest part of the challenge says Stephanie Morris, 24-year-old Private First Class from Toledo, Ohio, recovering from a  fractured femur and broken foot suffered when two mortars exploded at a bus stop in Afghanistan.

"Sometimes it can get a bit depressing, so when someone like these drivers come by to take your mind off it, it really uplifts you," said Morris, after chatting with Justin Allgaier and Nelson Piquet Jr. "It helps, hearing people tell me to keep up the good work – you’re making progress.

"There are days that get me down because I can’t get up and walk and do the things I used to do, like go to the gym two times a day. There are days I question ‘why.’ But it could have been a lot worse. We had four KIA (killed in action) that day, so I thank God that I’m even here." 

Stories like that send chills up the spine of longtime owner Richard Childress. 

"These men and women have sacrificed so much in their lives, for us, this is the least we can do. We’re supposed to be here to make them feel better, but I’ve never left here without feeling better inside than they do."

Liam Dwyer was leaving Thursday with a pretty special feeling.

"I had the challenge in my mind that I wanted to race again and show other people that regardless of your limitations, you can still do what you want to," Dwyer said. "The generosity of the NASCAR community to come in … These guys wanted come in to speak to the patients. We appreciate that."

Other NASCAR celebrities making the visit to Walter Reed on Thursday included drivers Brad KeselowskiJoey Logano, Kyle Larson, Alex Bowman, Austin Dillon, Brian Scott, Sam Hornish Jr. and Miss Sprint Cup Kim Coon and Miss Sprint Cup Brooke Werner.

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A look back into Dover’s 10 wildest moments in track history

Forget the big statue of a monster that stands behind Dover International Speedway — the real beast is inside, in the form of a mile-long concrete oval that can be as punishing as any track on the NASCAR circuit.

Yes, they call it the "Monster Mile" for a good reason, one that will have the drivers in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup on high alert as the series again visits the Delaware capital this weekend. Dover is physical, Dover is unforgiving, Dover can take one car and toss it into the air or chew up a dozen of them at a time. The combination of high speeds, narrow straightaways, dizzying banking and a "self-cleaning" effect that sends everything to the bottom can result in absolute mayhem, as seen so many times since the facility first opened in 1969.

So be warned, Chase drivers — few tracks in the playoff are as capable of taking as big a bite out of a competitor’s championship aspirations. No question the nickname fits, as evidenced in the 10 most monstrous moments in the history of the Monster Mile.

10. Into the wall, fall 1993

"It’s a place where you never have a soft hit," Jeff Burton once said of Dover, and that was evident when Mark Martin blew a right-front tire there in 1993. It’s the huge, multi-car accidents that garner much of the attention, but even single-car crashes can be bone-jarring — as Martin experienced when his No. 6 car went straight into the wall in the days before the SAFER barrier, flattening the right-front corner and causing a fire to erupt from a broken fuel line. With no brakes, Martin had to wait for the car to roll to a stop, and dark smoke was billowing from the vehicle by the time he climbed out. "Got a little warm, but it’s OK," he told Glenn Jarrett of TNN. The same couldn’t be said of his car.

9. Newman vs. Gilliland, spring 2013

In a drama that would eventually become overshadowed by the jump-the-restart controversy that denied Jimmie Johnson a chance to win the race, Ryan Newman and David Gilliland ended up in a pile of crumpled race cars at the bottom of the track. Newman used his front bumper to send a series of not-so-subtle messages to Gilliland that he wanted to get around, and the last one was emphatic enough to wreck both vehicles. An angry Gilliland scrambled out and leaned into the window of the No. 39 car, and Newman tried to explain himself using a series of hand gestures. The two agreed to disagree, to say the least.

8. Trouble on the backstretch Part 1, spring 2008

If there’s going to be trouble at Dover, it’s usually found exiting Turn 2. The cars storm out of that corner at a very high rate of speed, and often don’t have enough time to react to something gone awry in front of them. Because of the track’s banking, accidents usually slide down to the bottom, which is what everyone expected in June of 2008 when Elliott Sadler got into Gilliland. Except this time the mess stayed high, and drivers one after another — Tony Stewart, Denny Hamlin, Scott Riggs, and others — plowed into it, creating a bottleneck that ultimately claimed 11 cars.

7. Trouble on the backstretch Part 2, spring 2012

Dover’s sunken trench of a backstretch was turned into a salvage yard again four years later, when Stewart got into Landon Cassill, Regan Smith got into Stewart, all three cars went sideways, and all heck broke loose behind them. In the rush to get slowed down behind the primary accident, Michael McDowell was turned, and suddenly two smaller crashes merged into one very large one. The result was a 12-car melee just nine laps into the race that required a red flag period of nearly 20 minutes to clean up.

6. Stewart vs. Busch, spring 2007

Sometimes events don’t have to be spectacular to have a lasting impact. That was certainly the case at Dover in 2007, when Tony Stewart spun Kurt Busch in a rain-delayed Monday race, and the then-Penske driver responded by pulling right up alongside Stewart on pit road to voice his displeasure. NASCAR wasn’t happy with how close Busch’s car came to Stewart’s jack man, and responded with a penalty that included a 100-point deduction. Busch later apologized, but only after Stewart called him one of the sport’s "bad apples." Oh yeah, and beginning next season, they’re teammates.

5. Last man standing, fall 1993

Martin’s fiery crash was only one snapshot from a calamitous race at Dover two decades ago, which exemplified just how unforgiving the track can be. Sixteen cautions stretched the event to nearly five hours, and left 18 cars with some kind of damage. Over 20 percent of the race was run under caution, dropping average speed to a languid 100 mph. No one was spared — when Hut Stricklin struggled to get up to speed on a restart, a number of contenders including Dale Earnhardt, Jeff Gordon, and Ricky Rudd were knocked out. "I still think the pace car has a good shot at it," Mike Joy deadpanned on the television broadcast. Rusty Wallace edged it out for the win.

4. Spencer vs. Dallenbach, fall 1996

Is this Dover, or Bristol? It certainly seemed like the latter after a yet another big crash in 1996, this one that bathed the fronstretch in smoke. Wally Dallenbach pinched Jimmy Spencer up into the wall, both cars rolled down to the apron, and then the action really began. "He’s got problems with Wally," TV announcer Eli Gold said as Spencer jumped from his vehicle and ran over to the No. 15 car, where he began reaching through the window net at Dallenbach. It took a few NASCAR officials (including current Nationwide Series director Wayne Auton) to pull Spencer away, though the two kept jawing at one another a while longer.

3. Sideways and stacked up, spring 1995

This one went wrong in a hurry, leading to one of the biggest crashes ever seen at Dover — or anywhere, for that matter. John Andretti started fourth, and was challenging Sterling Marlin for the lead at the end of the opening lap when his car suddenly broke loose off Turn 4. He spun around into Ricky Craven, who spun around into Joe Nemechek, and then there was smoke and wrecked cars everywhere as one vehicle piled into another. Eighteen cars were involved, many of them collecting in a mass at the pit wall, and Andretti was carried off with a cut ankle. "This looked like one of those Talladega crashes," Joy said on TV. But an even bigger one was yet to come.

2. The Little Big One, spring 2004

The leader restarting in the middle of the pack, cars going three-wide, that nefarious backstretch again — everything that could go wrong did, and the result was a pileup to rival anything on a restrictor-place track. Michael Waltrip barely nipped Dave Blaney as cars ran three abreast through the corner, but it was enough to send Blaney spinning up into the wall. He ricocheted down, and Jimmie Johnson had nowhere to go but into him. Johnson slammed into Blaney, Greg Biffle slammed into Johnson, and Ward Burton slammed into Biffle in what quickly became a chain-reaction accident on an epic scale. Vehicles went everywhere, like ants scurrying on an overturned hill. "Half the field, it looks like," TV analyst Larry McReynolds said. Close — it was 19 cars knocked out in a single blow.

1. Logano takes a tumble, spring 2009

And yet, the single most monstrous moment in Dover history wasn’t a huge pileup, but a hold-your-breath incident focused on a single car. A little bump from Stewart sent then-rookie Joey Logano up the banking in Turn 3, and physics did the rest. Going high to try and avoid the crash, Reed Sorenson hit Logano. Then Robby Gordon slammed into Sorenson, and the force was enough to send Logano’s vehicle tumbling down the 24-degree banking. The orange No. 20 rolled eight times, shredding pieces along the way, teetering on the driver’s side before landing on all four wheels with a thud.

"Oh my gosh. I’m OK," Logano told his relieved crew over the radio. The car was a complete loss, its front and back ends ripped to pieces, its hood and roof dented from a nearly three-story drop. But the driver walked away to robust cheers from the crowd, and would be back to battle the Monster Mile another day.

MORE:

WATCH: Preview Show
for Dover’s AAA 400

READ: Dover’s Top 10
Monstrous moments

WATCH: Throwback:
Dale Jr. wins, Sept. 2011

READ: Paint Scheme
Preview; see Kenseth’s wrap