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.

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Nationwide title contender opens up on uncertainty, career goals

Talent, focus and adaptability have served Sam Hornish Jr. well during a racing career that includes three IndyCar titles, the 2006 Indianapolis 500 trophy and now the championship lead in the NASCAR Nationwide Series.

But it may be perseverance that Hornish needs most right now as he hopes to turn a potential championship season into the right opportunity in 2014.

In a wide-ranging and introspective interview with NASCAR.com this week, Hornish spoke of his persistence and will to overcome the latest obstacles in a hard-earned, hard-fought NASCAR tenure that is on the verge of paying dividends.

Hornish holds a 15-point edge in the Nationwide Series standings over Austin Dillon entering Saturday’s 5-Hour Energy 200 at Dover International Raceway. But even with the impressive title run — 21 top-10s in the No. 12 Alliance Truck Parts Ford — with only six races remaining in the 2013 season Hornish does not know where he will be racing in 2014 or for whom.

Although he said he’d prefer to stay with his longtime team, Penske Racing, many believe the team is planning to field the No. 12 car in 2014 for last week’s race winner and team development driver, 19-year old Ryan Blaney.

Hornish is rumored to be atop the list of candidates for some potential, if sparing, Sprint Cup Series rides and Penske President Tim Cindric has even publicly offered to help Hornish toward a Cup ride elsewhere if need be. But Hornish said he’d prefer to do another full season of Nationwide racing — specifically, competitive Nationwide racing.

"Roger (Penske) told me if they find the funding to do the things we want to do, I’m the guy," Hornish said. "It’s not that I’m not doing the things I’m supposed to do.

"We’ll see how everything plays out over next couple months. If they don’t find the funding necessary it’s not really through a fault of my own. It’s not that the sponsors on our car want to go somewhere else. It’s just economics."

Instead of the uncertainty distracting Hornish from the title run, he says it’s more motivation. It certainly may be the difference-maker in his immediate future.

"First and foremost is making sure we’re doing the best of our ability to win the championship and taking care of it on my end," Hornish said.

"In my opinion, if you’re looking for a job, at least you’re leading the championship, so that’s the upside to the whole story. The toughest part about it for me is not the act of going through all this, but of answering questions. I don’t know any more than you guys (in the media) know."

If push comes to shove, Hornish said he’d rather be in the right situation part-time, than the wrong situation full-time.

"Not that I want to sit out any part of a season, but 2011 was a good year for me because of all the things I did away from the track and also I learned a lot I was able to put to good use these last two years," Hornish said.

"I don’t want to do it again and if things don’t work out the way I want them to, I’m not going to give up. But I also don’t want to put myself in a bad situation so I’m more than willing to maybe have to watch more racing than I’d like to in order to give myself the right opportunities.

"Last year I wasn’t where I wanted to be at the beginning then I got to run a half-year in the Cup car [Penske’s No. 22.]

"I just have to be smart about it because the goal for me isn’t just to be around, but to have something I can be competitive in."

Hornish chuckles, anticipating the next question he so often gets. No, he still has no desire to return to the IndyCar Series he dominated in a six-year run between 2001-2007, when he collected 19 wins and 46 podiums in 108 starts.

Penske Racing recently announced it had hired another former open-wheel NASCAR convert, Juan Pablo Montoya, to its IndyCar program in 2014, something that Hornish insists wasn’t too surprising.

"A lot of people are like, ‘just come back to IndyCars’ but it’s not on my agenda," Hornish said. "Roger has given me that option before to go back but he knows my stance on it. It doesn’t help my end goal to go back. I did this because I want to be successful running stock cars.

"He knew what my answer was going to be therefore he didn’t ask the question. In the past, when we’ve talked about it, he hasn’t gotten the interest for me."

And so the perseverance, drive and focus that helped the former go-kart champ from small-town Defiance, Ohio get his first big break in professional racing is being summoned again.

It hasn’t been an easy road in stock cars for Hornish, who left numerous IndyCar Victory Lanes only to struggle at the Sprint Cup level before turning experience into results in the Nationwide Series the past two years.

It’s all taught Hornish to be philosophical and remain positive even as he acknowledges circumstances haven’t afforded him the chance to cherish this championship run as he might have imagined.

"But this is life and when things were going very good for me on the IndyCar side, I wanted to challenge myself again," Hornish said. "It seems like every time I overcome an obstacle over here, I’m faced with another challenge.

"That being said, this continues to live up to what I wanted it to be. Is it the exact way I wanted it to play out? No. But there’s a plan in store, whether it’s how things are supposed to be or continuing to mold me into the person I’m supposed to be.

"I’m not going to be Sam Hornish Jr., the race car driver for the rest of my life. I do believe a lot of the trials I’ve had have made me into a more well-rounded person and makes me appreciate my family all the more.

"As opposed to a couple years ago, even though I’m not able to enjoy this as I wished I could, I know in my heart I can do it if given the right opportunities, where I don’t know if I had that confidence two years ago.

And he added, "I have so many things to be positive about. I am a man of faith and think maybe there’s a reason why this particular thing didn’t work out or maybe it’s part of the test. You can ask for anything you want to, it doesn’t mean you’re going to get it.

"But I’ve been doing this too long to give up.

"There’s a lot of good things happening and we’ve still got a great opportunity, who knows, maybe the money will come around to stay at Penske, maybe it won’t. I’ve got so many things to be thankful for and that includes the people at Alliance Truck Parts, to give me the opportunity to believe in something and bring it into fruition and compete for a championship."

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Back-to-back runner-up finishes have Busch second in points

MORE: Full coverage of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup

CONCORD, N.C. — Kyle Busch was geared up for battle.

Outfitted in goggles and a mask, wearing a baseball cap turned backward and clutching a pink and green weapon, he took shots on a practice range that went plink-plink-pink against a makeshift target. Sufficiently prepared, the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series star took to a course of barrels and old school buses and prepared to hunt down one of his biggest adversaries.

The media.

"Paintball is the safest way to do it," Busch said with a smile.

It was all in good fun — kind of — as part of an event promoting next month’s NASCAR weekend at Charlotte Motor Speedway. But by now Busch should be used to people taking shots of the metaphorical variety at him, whether it’s the media for the occasional no-comment after a tough outing on the track, or fans who see all that talent and still no premier-series championship to show for it. Forget a title — Busch still has yet to win a race in a Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup in which he’s participated, and has only a single playoff race victory to his name, that at Phoenix in his rookie season of 2005.

So yes, the Las Vegas native is plenty accustomed to people leveling a finger or an accusation at him and firing away. In truth, though, Busch’s relationship with the media has come a long way, and post-race storm-offs are now relatively rare. And as for breaking through in the Chase — well, he’s working on it, as evidenced by back-to-back runner-up finishes at Chicagoland and New Hampshire in the opening two events of this playoff, which have him 14 points behind leader and Joe Gibbs Racing teammate Matt Kenseth.

Kenseth just happens to be the only guy who’s beaten him the last two weeks.

"I was mad after both races," Busch said. "I was mad after Chicago because I felt like I lost that one. But in reviewing the tape, there was nothing I could have done differently to win that one. It all came down to circumstances as to why we didn’t win Chicago. And Loudon, the only reason I was mad was, we finished second two straight weeks to the same guy, whether it’s Matt Kenseth my teammate, or whether it’s Jimmie Johnson, or whether it’s another Chase competitor. If it wasn’t a Chase competitor, I think it would have been fine. … But it was actually a better day than it could have been, and we didn’t lose as much ground as we would or should have."

The fact that Busch hasn’t won a Chase race when he has qualified for the 10-race playoff is mystifying. This is a driver who has qualified for the postseason six times, who has won 28 times at NASCAR’s top level, who has tallied 12 of those victories on tracks that are or have been part of the Chase. And yet, his postseasons have become better remembered for mechanical breakdowns and crashes that have prevented him from finishing higher than fifth.

Now, despite the frustration of coming close but still not winning in the first two weeks, Busch is off to his best Chase start ever. Coming up Sunday is Dover International Speedway, where he’s won twice and finished fourth in June.

Dale Jarrett believes the groundwork for this surge was laid a year ago, when Busch missed out on the final playoff spot to Jeff Gordon by three points at Richmond in the final regular-season event.

"As painful as it was for them last year to miss out on the Chase … I really believe it made them a better race team, and Kyle a better driver," said Jarrett, the 1999 NASCAR champion and 2014 Hall of Fame inductee, and now an analyst for ESPN. "Not in the sense of talent-wise, but in his mind and in his head. And that’s as important a lot of times as the physical abilities you have, that he’s ready to win this championship."

Busch is playing it week by week. "There’s still too much racing to go, and anything can happen," he said. He recalled 2010, when he stood third after the first two races, then suffered a crash at Kansas and engine failure at Fontana, and wound up eighth. He said he’s not even looking at the point standings, where he, Kenseth and Johnson have already shown signs of separating themselves from the rest of the playoff field.

"Definitely not that far down the road yet," he said. "I’m not going to be worried about points until the checkered flag flies at Homestead. I haven’t even looked at it. I know what it is because people tell me what it is … but I’d just much rather not know, and go on to the next race, and compete and try to beat the guys you have to beat."

And yet, history indicates that to do that, a driver has to win. Tony Stewart in 2005 remains the only Chase champion who went winless over the 10-race playoff, even though he still managed to lead the standings for nine weeks. Every other titlist has won at least one race, although in fairness it was four runner-up finishes in the 2006 Chase that powered a huge Johnson comeback and netted the driver the first of his five consecutive championships.

Even so, wins can loom large in the Chase, as they did for Stewart in 2011 when his five victories proved the difference in a tiebreaker with Carl Edwards. But as much as Busch would like to shake off his eight-year playoff victory drought, he’s not willing to do it at the expense of a much larger goal.

"To me, I feel like if I could finish second every single Chase race, then I could probably win the championship in doing that," he said. "Now, whether that’s realistic or not — so far, it might be. I finished second both times. So I would take winning a championship over winning a Chase race any day of the week, no doubt about it. So I’m not too worried about that yet. But obviously, it is pivotal to win races, because if you do tie coming down into Homestead, it does go to most wins. And Kenseth now has that. Maybe I’m just tallying up my second-place finishes so when I win my seven I’ll beat him on seconds. That’s it."

And with that, he strapped on his paintball mask and goggles and began to dispatch one set of detractors. Behind the steering wheel, he might just do the same to another over the final eight weeks of the season. In both instances, it all comes down to Kyle Busch taking his best shot.

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WATCH: Preview Show
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Monstrous moments

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Dale Jr. wins, Sept. 2011

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Preview; see Kenseth’s wrap

Popular actor a long-time NASCAR fan

Actor Kal Penn starred in a title role in the "Harold and Kumar" movie series, is a former co-star on the hugely popular television show "House" and a host on The Discovery Channel’s show "The Big Brain Theory."

This fall television season, he joins the cast of "We Are Men," which premieres Sept. 30 on CBS.

And beyond his acting profession, Penn held a position in President Obama’s White House Office of Public Engagement.

But ask the 36-year-old New Jersey native where he prefers to spend any valuable down time and he’ll tell you: A NASCAR race.

After attending several NASCAR races closer to his Los Angeles home the past few seasons, Penn showed up at the Sept. 7 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series regular-season finale at Richmond, excited to see his first night race.

In between touring the garage, visiting drivers and guest tweeting for NASCAR’s official Twitter account (@NASCAR), he sat down with NASCAR.com to talk about his fondness for the sport.

What are your initial impressions of the Richmond race being the last event to set the Chase field?

This is my first East Coast race, first night race. The tracks I’ve been to before have been Fontana and Phoenix so it’s awesome to actually get to come here. I’m from New Jersey, so anything East Coast, I’m biased.

But the vibe is totally different too from the West Coast races, which have been a lot of fun. Maybe it’s because … so much will be determined tonight. But it’s a whole lot less laid back, maybe because of the stakes, but it’s super interesting. This is not the race you grab one beer during the green flag and sit down 10 minutes later. This is the race you need to be in your seat ready to go.
 
How did NASCAR end up on your radar?

NASCAR, I got into about three years ago. I love engineering, I love the team sport aspect of NASCAR. Obviously, the drivers and the drivers’ personalities play into the teams, but the whole interaction of the teams, the engineering, the physics, both in real time as these men and women are racing but in the weeks in between; the analysis of data that goes into how the drivers will be briefed.

It’s just all so cool. The soap opera of any sport is super interesting and particularly in NASCAR. But it’s all the other stuff that goes into it.
 
You got to know Joey Logano and Carl Edwards, how did you meet them?

I’m a Joey Logano fan, yeah. That came about because at one of the first races I went to, a friend hooked us up with hot passes, which was incredible since I have that dorky side of me that wanted to learn about the engineering.

So we were walking around different garages and I had been getting to know some of the drivers just from reading NASCAR.com and we were going from one to another. I was just watching Logano’s guys work on his car and he was in the back then he came out to say, ‘Hi’’ We struck up a conversation.

Carl Edwards has been awesome. I met him during our first race and we worked together on a TV show I did for the Discovery Channel, "The Big Brain Theory." He was a guest judge and it was a competition show for engineering.

He was awesome and the contestants all loved him because he came in and could talk your ear off about the engineering side. It was cool.

What was the NASCAR hook for you?

When I’m not at races and watching from home, I have so much respect for the fact these drivers are literally on pit road getting into their cars with cameras in their faces, photo opps … they’ve got to do this as they are getting in the car. I can barely concentrate when I’m by myself in my apartment preparing for an acting role and I don’t have to drive almost 200 mph and worry about a whole lot of other things.

To me, that’s soap opera right there. What do you have to do to mentally prepare for that, what goes through your mind, how do you just shake it off and focus.

And once you’re out there, you’ve got a beef with someone and they try to wreck you then they pretend they didn’t try and it was just, ‘sorry, I didn’t see you there.’
 
You’ve worked in Hollywood, then in Washington D.C. and now you’re at a NASCAR race. Which was the most interesting transition?

The NASCAR component is awesome, it’s a sport and it’s fun. It’s funny the transition from LA to DC was not all that awkward I think because there were a lot of people — and this goes whether you’re talking about an Obama administration or a Bush administration — there’s so many people in Washington that everybody doesn’t like, such as the politicians. But there’s also all the people that work on their staffs, who have taken leaves of absence from being a doctor or a teacher, or nurse or businessperson and serve a year or four years and I had the chance to be around those people so it wasn’t all that different. I just left the performing arts industry. It was less of a weird transition than I thought.
 
What do your friends in Hollywood think of your devotion to NASCAR?

When I’m in LA, I try to get as many people into NASCAR as possible, so I’ll have people over to my apartment to watch a random race. Let’s just grill, have a couple beverages and watch the race and I will explain it to you. I’ve converted people.

I’m on a new show called "We Are Men" and the cast had our media day yesterday in LA. As I was leaving, I told them, "I’m going to the Richmond NASCAR race and I expect us all to go to a race together at Fontana, Vegas or Phoenix … and you’re going to want to go to the Sonoma one for wine. We need to go a traditional race first."

I’m hoping to get them maybe to Phoenix later this year.

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Biffle surprises many with his outcome at New Hampshire, hopes success continues

Raise your hand if you picked Greg Biffle as a favorite to win the Sprint Cup Series championship.

Exactly.

Now, don’t get me wrong. I’m not saying that the Roush Fenway Racing driver is anything close to being the favorite to celebrate at Homestead on Nov. 17 — that spot is subject to change, but currently reserved for any of the trio of drivers that helm the Nos. 18, 20 and 48 cars. But Biffle is closer than you might think.

After the Chicagoland race saw him drop out of the top 10, things appeared to be falling into place with where most expected to see him, as he’d been wildly mediocre since his victory at Michigan in early June. Starting at Sonoma and stretching the 12-race span to Chicagoland, Biffle averaged a finish of 15.42, setting the hopes of a Roush title coming from the No. 16 car very low.

And then the series headed to New Hampshire.

While Biffle — and Roush cars, in general — typically haven’t performed well at the Magic Mile, he found himself addressing the media post-race as the third-place finisher in the Sylvania 300 after a risky late-restart dive bomb put him ahead of Jimmie Johnson.

"I was doing all I could do to try and gain spots, and I was three wide on the bottom and got that to work a couple times, and then the last bit of that, the outside really worked well for me," said Biffle, currently 38 points behind leader Matt Kenseth. "It’s so hard to get a run off the bottom. The 48 was underneath me, and he just couldn’t get the throttle down on the bottom."

Biffle held off Johnson the rest of the race, but it wasn’t easy. Perhaps out of frustration, perhaps to try to induce a mistake, the 48 was practically kissing the bumper of the 16 for a good portion of the remainder of the race, but Biffle prevailed.  

"The 48 was probably faster than me that first 15 laps. He was all over my rear bumper but couldn’t really do anything, and then I was able to‑‑ after his tires leveled off I was able to drive away from him," Biffle said. "I came from, I don’t know, 15th or something like that to 3rd. The car got really good as somebody mentioned when the sun went down and it cooled off. My car picked up a lot of speed, and it seemed like everybody else around me didn’t pick up as much speed as our car did, so it worked out." 

With a third-place finish in hand and another notch on his belt for having held off a furiously-charging five-time champion for the second time this season (the first coming at Michigan, the site of Biffle’s sole win this season — more on that in a bit) it’s not unreasonable to think that he could put together a mini-hot streak to keep his name afloat in the championship mix.

Having won the first two Chase races in 2008, only to finish third when all was said and done, Biffle and team owner Jack Roush know that the benefit Kenseth received from winning at Chicagoland and Loudon puts the Joe Gibbs Racing driver at a great advantage, but not an insurmountable one.

"You would have liked to have won the first two races that the 20 car has or run second in the first two races as the 18 car (of Kyle Busch) has, but we’re certainly better than the seven or eight guys that are behind us, depending on which car you’re looking at," said Roush. "I’m looking forward to being able to move up and be a factor in the championship before the season is over.

"But the Chase so far has generally been OK. The 18 and the 20 have jumped out there to a pretty good lead. The 48 is not too far behind, but our cars are fourth (Carl Edwards) and fifth and we’re standing by to have the strength of our program manifest itself on the mile-and-a-half race tracks."

While this weekend sees another fast one-mile track in Dover, it’s the same Dover that Biffle owns two wins at and once enjoyed a nine-race streak in which he averaged a finish of 4.7.  

With momentum on his side, a win at the Monster Mile to back up his solid day at New Hampshire is certainly within the realm of possibility — the road to Victory Lane will just likely have to go through the 48. Johnson all-but-owns the one-mile oval, winning seven times there with nearly 50% of his finishes resulting in top-fives.

But Biffle has proven twice now this season that he isn’t afraid to challenge the 48 and be aggressive in crunch time, as he showed this past weekend, but also when Johnson was trying to catch the 16 at Michigan before blowing a tire because he was racing so hard.

"I think we race really good together," Biffle said. "I’m sure he’s not happy right now, not being able to get by me and having what appeared to be a little faster car for maybe 15 laps, then he faded. You know, some guys’ cars run good at the beginning of the run, and some guys run a little stronger at the end, and my car seemed to do better at the end of the run. But we race well together. We race each other pretty hard and clean, and I enjoy that."

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

Ottinger (05) staved-off a late challenge from Hudson (01) to score his fifth win of the season

Nick Ottinger earned his fifth win of the 2013 NASCAR iRacing.com Series World Championship at Kansas Speedway, holding-off Tyler Hudson on a green-white-checker finish. Ottinger led 120 of 167 laps and was clearly the class of the field, masterfully working through traffic on a track which may be the toughest to pass on in the whole series. The championship also tightened-up as Hudson’s runner-up finish came after point leader Ray Alfalla sustained heavy damage in a crash on Lap 36.

Hudson finished second one week after scoring his first NiSWC victory. Byron Daley was third for the second straight week, Jake Stergios was fourth and Matt Bussa rounded-out the top five in a race slowed by 14 cautions for 55 laps.

Joey Brown started from pole, but quickly relinquished the lead to Ottinger eight laps into the race. From there, Ottinger pulled-out to a comfortable lead until the yellow flew for the first time of the evening at Lap 33. Ottinger kept the lead during the first round of pit stops of the race as every driver opted for four fresh tires.

On the ensuing restart, disaster struck for Alfalla when Brown got into Patrick Baldwin, sending Baldwin into the wall and spinning in front of the field. Alfalla, along with Chad Laughton and Brian Day, had nowhere to go and sustained heavy damage. Alfalla soldiered-on with his damaged car and finished three laps down in twenty-second place.

Ottinger gave-up the lead by pitting on Lap 49 under the third yellow flag of the contest, hoping fresh tires would trump track position even though passing had proven to be extremely difficult. Despite that fact, Ottinger quickly worked his way by Michael Conti and Brian Schoenburg to regain the lead just as the yellow flew once again for Danny Hansen’s spin on Lap 60.

With the pit window open to make it a one stop race, most of the field chose to pit for tires and fuel on Lap 61, but Ottinger opted to stay out, hoping for more cautions to help him stretch his fuel mileage. Once again, Ottinger looked to have made the right call as another crash unfolded just after the restart. This time, Brown and Nicolas Morse were the two who suffered the worst damage after Tyler Laughlin got turned around by Michael Johnson.

After another quick caution the race started to have a green flag look to it, which would have doomed Ottinger as he could not make it to the end on one stop. But a caution on Lap 99 saved him, as everyone would have to pit for tires after such a long green flag run. During the stops, Kevin King tried two tires and came out with the lead in front of Ottinger, but could not hold it as Ottinger quickly dispatched him to reassume the lead.

The rest of the race was full of short runs broken up by several cautions. Ottinger chose to keep fresh tires on the car, pitting on Lap 111 and again on Lap 128. On both occasions, Ottinger found himself back in traffic but he was not to be denied. After the Lap 128 stop, Ottinger was sixth on the restart but only took three laps to drive up to second place behind Hudson. On the following lap, Ottinger used a big run down the back straightaway to take the lead in Turns Three and Four.

Alfalla’s troubles coupled with Hudson’s strong run tightened-up the championship battle with just two races left in the season. Alfalla (557) had his lead cut to 27 points over Hudson (530) with Schoenburg still third after last night’s fifteenth place finish, 52 points behind. Ottinger closed-in on Schoenburg and now is only 19 points in arrears, but Ottinger needs to watch out for Marcus Lindsey, who is just nine points farther back despite a disappointing P20 at Kansas.

With another short break between online races, Alfalla will have to bounce back quickly if he hopes to take a comfortable margin in the standings going into the last race of the season. Luckily for Alfalla, Dover International Speedway is next up on the schedule, a track where he has done very well at the past two seasons. If he can stay out of trouble on the Monster Mile and keep Hudson in his mirrors, Homestead will be much less stressful. However, do not expect Hudson to roll over easily. He has been on fire the past month and a win at Dover combined with another unlucky break for Alfalla could put him within striking distance when the series rolls into South Florida.

With the championship on the line, be sure to catch the action from Dover next Tuesday on iRacing Live and MRN.com!

            Average Lap Time Laps Completed Cautions Caution Laps Lead Changes         
            46.129 167 14 55 8         
Fin Pos Driver Start Pos Car # Status Interval Laps Led Average Lap Time Fastest Lap Time Fast Lap# Laps Comp Pts
1 Nick Ottinger 3 5 Running 0 120 46.129 29.449 2 167 48
2 Tyler D Hudson 10 1 Running -0.636 10 46.129 29.578 42 167 43
3 Byron Daley 19 93 Running -0.773 0 46.123 29.717 2 167 41
4 Jake Stergios 20 41 Running -1.152 0 46.125 29.681 2 167 40
5 Matt Bussa 2 34 Running -1.223 0 46.136 29.535 42 167 39
6 Adam Gilliland 26 81 Running -1.227 0 45.485 29.747 2 167 38
7 Rob Ackley 23 22 Running -1.329 0 46.123 29.794 2 167 37
8 Kevin King 4 29 Running -1.437 4 46.137 29.63 2 167 37
9 Danny Hansen 11 20 Running -1.456 0 45.261 29.744 2 167 35
10 Michael J Johnson 22 39 Running -1.535 0 46.126 29.726 2 167 34
11 Landon Harrison 33 89 Running -1.803 0 46.116 29.825 2 167 33
12 Brandon Kettelle 12 80 Running -1.927 0 46.039 29.758 2 167 32
13 Thomas Lewandowski 21 16 Running -1.938 0 45.948 29.752 42 167 31
14 Brandon Schmidt 14 3 Running -2.043 14 46.135 29.683 71 167 31
15 Brian Schoenburg 15 55 Running -2.346 12 46.171 29.693 42 167 30
16 Tyler Laughlin 35 51 Running -2.394 0 46.118 29.817 42 167 28
17 Brandon Buie 27 54 Running -2.493 0 46.128 29.734 105 167 27
18 Peter Bennett 17 69 Running -3.556 0 46.141 29.644 42 167 26
19 Bryan Blackford 31 33 Running -5.916 0 46.17 29.854 42 167 25
20 Marcus Lindsey 7 1 Running -6.191 0 46.005 29.722 2 167 24
21 Carson McClelland 18 24 Running -7.321 0 46.095 29.806 43 167 23
22 Ray Alfalla 16 2 Running -3 L 0 46.681 29.746 2 164 22
23 Joshua Laughton 5 40 Running -3 L 0 46.741 29.703 2 164 21
24 Michael Conti 34 5 Running -10 L 0 44.986 29.735 2 157 20
25 Joey Brown 1 12 Disconnected -21 L 7 46.196 29.471 2 146 20
26 Nicholas Morse 24 9 Running -21 L 0 52.752 29.693 2 146 18
27 Ashley Miller 13 7 Running -40 L 0 43.204 29.705 105 127 17
28 Jon Adams 29 84 Disconnected -83 L 0 42.818 29.877 42 84 16
29 Brad Davies 25 11 Disconnected -106 L 0 44.489 29.777 58 61 15
30 Brian Day 8 4 Running -129 L 0 34.899 29.708 2 38 14
31 Patrick Baldwin 6 52 Running -130 L 0 34.167 29.655 2 37 13
32 Chad J Laughton 9 26 Disconnected -132 L 0 34.162 29.735 2 35 12
33 Richard Dusett 32 96 Running -132 L 0 34.1 29.792 3 35 11
34 Alex Warren 30 82 Disconnected -139 L 0 30.767 29.916 2 28 10
35 Steven Gilbert 28 37 Disconnected -167 L 0 0     0 9

Nationwide Series, Camping World Truck Series join Sprint Cup Series in January testing

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Sept. 25, 2013) — Preseason Thunder, the annual test session held at Daytona International Speedway in preparation for the season-opening races at the 2.5-mile superspeedway, will expand in 2014 to include all three NASCAR national series — the NASCAR Sprint Cup, NASCAR Nationwide and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. 

Kicking off the “Road to Daytona” which culminates with the 56th running of the Daytona 500 on Feb. 23, 2014, Preseason Thunder testing begins Thursday and Friday, Jan. 9-10, with the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series participating in two days — and four sessions — of on-track activity. NASCAR Nationwide Series testing will follow on Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 11-12, with the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series testing on Monday and Tuesday, Jan. 13-14. All test sessions are scheduled to run from 9 a.m.-Noon ET, and again from 1-5 p.m. ET. 

“Preseason Thunder at Daytona offers teams an opportunity to prepare for one of the most important race weekends of the season,” said Robin Pemberton, NASCAR vice president of competition. “Races at Daytona International Speedway are unique to NASCAR competition, and Preseason Thunder will not only give all three of our national series an opportunity to test, but will allow us to settle upon a rules package that will benefit our teams and provide the best on-track action for our fans.”

“We’re looking forward to hosting all three of NASCAR’s national touring series for Preseason Thunder,” Daytona International Speedway President Joie Chitwood III said. “Having the Nationwide and Camping World Truck Series teams join the stars of the Sprint Cup Series in testing the high banks will ignite plenty of excitement for the start of the new NASCAR season.” 

In addition to the on-track action, NASCAR and Daytona International Speedway announced the return of Preseason Thunder Fan Fest, a fan-favorite event featuring driver question-and-answer opportunities, autograph sessions and more. The Preseason Thunder Fan Fests are scheduled on Thursday night, Jan. 9 for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and Saturday night, Jan. 11 for the NASCAR Nationwide Series.

The schedule of driver question-and-answer and autograph sessions will be finalized closer to the event. Tickets for Preseason Thunder, which include the autograph session wristbands, will be available for purchase on Monday, Nov. 18 by calling 1-800-PITSHOP. 

Fans can watch each day’s testing at no cost from a section of the Oldfield Grandstands on the Daytona International Speedway frontstretch.

MORE:

WATCH: Race
RePlay highlights

WATCH: Final laps
at New Hampshire

WATCH: Post-race
reactions at Loudon

WATCH: Kahne crashes
out in late stages

Get a sneak peek at the looks for this weekend

MORE: Full Chase coverage


SPRINT CUP SERIES PAINT SCHEMES

Jamie McMurray will drive the No. 1 LiftMaster Chevrolet.

SHOP: Jamie McMurray die-casts

Clint Bowyer will drive the No. 15 Raspberry 5-Hour Energy benefiting Living Beyond Breast Cancer Toyota.

#WHAT15NEEDS

SHOP: Clint Bowyer die-casts

Greg Biffle will drive the No. 16 Filtrete Ford.

#WHAT16NEEDS

SHOP: Greg Biffle die-casts

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. will drive the No. 17 Roush Fenway Racing Ford.

SHOP: Ricky Stenhouse Jr. die-casts

Matt Kenseth will drive the No. 20 Home Depot "Let’s Do This" Toyota.

#WHAT20NEEDS

SHOP: Matt Kenseth die-casts

Click here for info on Joe Gibbs Racing’s Chase app

Ryan Newman will drive the No. 39 State Water Heaters Chevrolet.

#WHAT39NEEDS

SHOP: Ryan Newman die-casts

Aric Almirola will drive the No. 43 Smithfield Stars and Stripes Ford.

SHOP: Aric Almirola die-casts

AJ Allmendinger will drive the No. 47 House-Autry Toyota.

SHOP: AJ Allmendinger die-casts

Ryan Truex will drive the No. 51 Shooters Sporting Center Chevrolet.

SHOP: NASCAR die-casts

Martin Truex Jr. will drive the No. 56 NAPA Shocks Toyota.

SHOP: Martin Truex Jr. die-casts

NATIONWIDE SERIES PAINT SCHEMES

Regan Smith will drive the No. 7 Drive Sober Chevrolet.
SHOP: Regan Smith die-casts

Nelson Piquet Jr. will drive the No. 30 Cold Stone Creamery Chevrolet.

SHOP: NASCAR die-casts

Justin Allgaier will drive the No. 31 SEM Chevrolet.

SHOP: NASCAR die-casts

Kyle Larson will drive the No. 32 LiftMaster Chevrolet.

SHOP: NASCAR die-casts

Kevin Harvick will drive the No. 33 Steak-EZE Chevrolet.

SHOP: Kevin Harvick die-casts

CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES PAINT SCHEMES

Jeb Burton will drive the No. 4 Arrowhead-Honcho Chevrolet.

SHOP: NASCAR die-casts

Justin Lofton will drive the No. 6 IV Full Plate/J.D. Heiskell Chevrolet.

SHOP: NASCAR die-casts

Johnny Sauter will drive the No. 98 Carolina Nut Co./Curb Records Toyota.

SHOP: NASCAR die-casts


Click here for info on Joe Gibbs Racing’s Chase app and more graphics like "Wrap Artists"

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

Online mortgage lender keeps relationship with driver intact

Quicken Loans will serve as the primary sponsor on Ryan Newman‘s No. 31 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet for 12 races in 2014, the team announced Wednesday.

Newman, who currently drives the No. 39 Chevrolet for Stewart-Haas Racing, will also get backing from Quicken Loans in the remaining 24 races as an associate sponsor.

"Quicken Loans has been an integral member of my team and I am very excited to have them join me at Richard Childress Racing, as we continue to build on what has been a fantastic partnership," Newman said. "My relationship with Quicken Loans goes beyond driving their car. I’ve gotten to know them and their business, becoming friends with them in the process. As they know, I will do my very best to perform on and off the track next year and well beyond."

Quicken Loans has sponsored the driver since 2012, and it was the primary sponsor at the regular-season finale in Richmond, where Newman was in position to win the race before a series of questionable events unfolded.

Sponsors were watching how Newman responded to missing out on the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup — which was later overturned by NASCAR — and appreciated how the veteran handled himself. Quicken Loans will continue to serve as the primary sponsor for Newman through the remainder of the 2013 season.

"Ryan has shown that he is not only an incredible race car driver, but also someone with great integrity and class," said Jay Farner, president and chief marketing officer of Quicken Loans. "The way Ryan has handled some very tough situations this year, while also continuing to ignore the noise and perform at a high-level, made our decision to stick with him a no-brainer. He embodies what we stand for each and every day."

Newman learned in July that he would no longer have a ride at Stewart-Haas, the team he has driven for since 2009.

The No. 31 ride at Richard Childress Racing came open when the team and Jeff Burton jointly announced that the driver would step out of the car at the end of this season.

Newman currently sits ninth in the standings with eight races remaining this season.

MORE:

WATCH: Race
RePlay highlights

WATCH: Final laps
at New Hampshire

WATCH: Post-race
reactions at Loudon

WATCH: Kahne crashes
out in late stages