Hudson (01) battles Daley (93) and Laughton (40) en route to his maiden NiSWC win.

After nearly four full seasons of trying, Tyler Hudson finally scored his first NASCAR iRacing Series World Championship win, holding-off Joey Brown and Byron Daley at Chicagoland Speedway. The victory came just one race after Hudson nearly won at Atlanta, coming-in second to Brown after a wild last lap.

This time around, Hudson turned the tables, with Brown finishing second and Daley, who tried a daring pass on the outside with a handful of laps remaining, taking third. Joshua Laughton was fourth and Ray Afalla finished fifth, notching his series-leading eleventh top five in fifteen online races.

“The last two weeks have been unbelievable. We’ve had such fast cars that it has been so much fun to race. After last weekend and being so close I thought maybe it would never happen, because in four years that’s the closest I’ve ever been.” Hudson explained. “Fortunately we brought another hot rod to the track this weekend and were able to FINALLY get that first win.”

"Fortunately we brought another hot rod to the track this weekend" – Tyler Hudson

“After last weekend and being so close I thought maybe it would never happen . . . Fortunately we brought another hot rod to the track this weekend.” — Tyler Hudson

The NiSWC veteran qualified mid-pack in twentieth, but took two tires under the first caution then drove up through the rest of the field, taking second position on Lap 74. With Brown in his sights, Hudson began slowly closing the gap and passed him for the lead on Lap 111. Hudson looked poised to run away with the race, but as green flag stops approached he decided to stay out a bit longer than the other leaders which put him back in traffic.

With his slightly newer tires, Hudson began slicing his way through the field yet again but, in the meantime, Laughton had built a comfortable lead. That lead was erased when the yellow flew with 34 laps remaining for Brian Schoenberg’s spin. Hudson and the rest of the leaders opted to pit for tires under the caution, but Hudson’s crew let him down and three cars beat him out of the pit lane. Daley tried two tires for track position and emerged as the leader with Laughton and Baldwin in second and third ahead of Hudson.

When the green dropped it only took six laps for Hudson to regain second and begin to hunt down Daley. Hudson passed Daley with 20 to go and once again it looked as if he had the race in the bag. However, Daley had other plans. Despite his worn left side rubber, Daley stayed right in Hudson’s tire tracks and slowly started reeling him in. With five laps remaining, he latched-on to the rear bumper of Hudson’s Ford Fusion. got a strong run off Turn Two and looked to the inside.  Hudson blocked his run and Daley chose to attempt the pass on the outside into Turn Three. Unfortunately for Daley, the second groove did not have the grip he needed, thus he was unable to complete the pass and lost second place to Brown in the bargain.

With his win, Hudson moved to second in the championship standings with only three races remaining. Alfalla leads Hudson by a comfortable 48 point margin and still appears to be in control. Schoenburg fell to third after finishing a distant 26th and is now 60 points back of the lead. Marcus Lindsey rebounded nicely after his blown engine at Atlanta to finish seventh at Chicagoland and move into fourth place in the standings. He sits 22 points back of Schoenburg, but just five markers in front of Michael Conti, who fell to fifth on the heels of a 17th place finish at Chicagoland. Nick Ottinger (sixth last night) remains sixth overall, 10 points out of the top five.

Next up on the schedule is the NiSWC’s first trip to Kansas Speedway. The 1.5 mile oval has a very fast top groove, which will likely make passing very difficult, so qualifying and pit strategy will be more important than normal. With only one week to prepare instead of the normal two, drivers who find a good baseline setup quickly will have an advantage, which should show come Tuesday evening. It is hard to bet against Hudson, Brown or Alfalla at this stage, but a new track and unique racing line may have a surprise in store. Could the NiSWC see first time winners in back-to-back weeks?

            Average Lap Time Laps Completed Cautions Caution Laps Lead Changes         
            37.357 167 5 20 7         
Fin Pos Driver Start Pos Car # Status Interval Laps Led Average Lap Time Fastest Lap Time Fast Lap # Laps Comp Pts
1 Tyler D Hudson 20 1 0 Running 0 30 37.357 29.946 123 167 47
2 Joey Brown 3 12 0 Running -0.19 90 37.37 29.872 123 167 44
3 Byron Daley 1 93 0 Running -0.307 32 37.372 29.962 58 167 42
4 Joshua Laughton 8 40 0 Running -0.589 11 37.369 29.947 58 167 41
5 Ray Alfalla 6 2 0 Running -0.778 2 37.372 30.001 69 167 40
6 Nick Ottinger 2 5 0 Running -0.914 0 37.375 29.912 2 167 38
7 Marcus Lindsey 17 1 0 Running -1.655 0 37.37 29.933 120 167 37
8 Brad Davies 11 11 0 Running -1.657 0 37.373 30.047 17 167 36
9 Patrick Baldwin 7 52 0 Running -1.876 0 37.418 29.869 120 167 35
10 Matt Bussa 27 34 0 Running -2.962 0 37.369 29.984 17 167 34
11 Brian Day 18 4 0 Running -3.975 0 37.381 30.081 17 167 33
12 Thomas Lewandowski 32 16 0 Running -4.138 0 37.372 30.108 17 167 32
13 Brandon Schmidt 5 3 0 Running -4.378 0 37.394 29.957 58 167 31
14 Peter Bennett 10 69 0 Running -4.602 2 37.392 30.047 17 167 31
15 Kevin King 9 29 0 Running -6.526 0 37.404 29.979 121 167 29
16 Rob Ackley 29 22 0 Running -6.623 0 37.389 29.957 118 167 28
17 Michael Conti 4 5 0 Running -6.993 0 37.411 29.928 78 167 27
18 Carson McClelland 12 24 0 Running -7.345 0 37.406 30.162 3 167 26
19 Adam Gilliland 28 81 0 Running -7.517 0 37.395 30.016 17 167 25
20 Kevin Burris 19 45 0 Running -7.687 0 37.405 30.054 116 167 24
21 Alex Warren 26 82 0 Running -8.216 0 37.478 30.029 17 167 23
22 Josh Berry 41 91 0 Running -8.27 0 37.388 30.117 121 167 22
23 Benjamin Burmeister 30 25 0 Running -8.453 0 37.4 30.081 58 167 21
24 Justin Trombley 39 17 0 Running -8.64 0 36.98 30.147 2 167 20
25 Charlie Foster 22 13 0 Running -9.342 0 37.411 30.184 17 167 19
26 Brian Schoenburg 13 55 0 Running -9.87 0 37.422 29.916 2 167 18
27 Landon Harrison 38 89 0 Running -10.086 0 37.401 30.12 2 167 17
28 Tom Moustakas 40 10 0 Running -11.25 0 37.406 29.978 122 167 16
29 Michael J Johnson 31 39 0 Running -16.169 0 36.878 30.021 2 167 15
30 Chad Coleman 36 28 0 Running -17.78 0 37.041 30.02 122 167 14
31 Simon Crochart 21 48 0 Running -1 L 0 37.297 30.235 2 166 13
32 Nicholas Morse 35 9 0 Running -1 L 0 37.675 30.099 115 166 12
33 Bryan Blackford 33 33 0 Running -3 L 0 37.292 29.994 2 164 11
34 Brandon Buie 34 54 0 Running -8 L 0 36.68 30.121 17 159 10
35 Brandon Kettelle 15 80 0 Running -14 L 0 36.742 30.151 17 153 9
36 Sascha Wesler 23 31 0 Running -15 L 0 36.001 30.132 59 152 8
37 Jake Stergios 25 41 0 Running -34 L 0 38.103 30.105 17 133 7
38 Jared Crawford 14 83 32 Disconnected -40 L 0 38.098 30.019 2 127 6
39 Steven Gilbert 37 37 0 Running -76 L 0 40.162 30.056 17 91 5
40 Danny Hansen 16 20 0 Running -104 L 0 42.645 30.302 2 63 4
41 Chad J Laughton 24 26 32 Disconnected -163 L 0 30.502 30.27 3 4 3
42 Andrew Fayash III 42 157 32 Disconnected -165 L 0 31.315 30.915 2 2 2

Vital stats for the Sylvania 300

Track: New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Loudon, N.H., 1.058 miles, paved surface, 2- to 7-degree banking in all turns, 1-degree banking on the frontstretch and backstretch.

Time/TV: Sylvania 300, 2 p.m. ET, Sunday, Sept. 22. TV: ESPN (coverage starts at 1 p.m. ET). Radio: PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Channel 90.

Trailblazers: Rusty Wallace won the first NASCAR Sprint Cup race at New Hampshire on July 11, 1993.

0.068 is the closest margin of victory (since the advent of electronic scoring) in a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at New Hampshire. This occurred when Denny Hamlin beat Jeff Gordon in the July 1, 2007 race.

1 female driver has competed at New Hamphire: Danica Patrick. Patrick finished 37th in this year’s July race at the track.

2 times drivers have completed a sweep of the New Hampshire Sprint Cup races. Jimmie Johnson did so in 2003 and Kurt Busch did the same in 2004. 

2 is also the number of times that the eventual Sprint Cup champion has won the Chase race at new Hampshire Motor Speedway. Kurt Busch (2004) and Tony Stewart (2011) both went on to win the Chase in those years.

2 is also the number of times that Clint Bowyer has won a Chase race at New Hampshire; he did this in 2007 and 2010.

2 is also the number of times that Sprint Cup races at New Hampshire have resulted in a green-white-checkered finish. This happened in 2006 and 2008.

3 drivers have made their first career Sprint Cup start at New Hampshire: Jeff Burton, Joe Nemechek and Joey Logano.

4 drivers have competed in all the Sprint Cup races at New Hampshire; they are Jeff Burton, Jeff Gordon, Bobby Labonte and Joe Nemechek.

4 is also the number of times Jeff Burton has won at New Hampshire, which is the most among all drivers. Burton is the only driver to win at New Hampshire three straight years (’97 to ’99).

5 is the number of times that Tony Stewart and Jeff Gordon have finished as runner-ups at New Hampshire. That is tied for the series lead. Gordon also have the most top-five finishes (16) and most top-10 finishes (22) at New Hampshire.

6 times Ryan Newman has won the Coors Light pole at New Hampshire.

6 Chase contenders have won at New Hampshire in the past: Kurt Busch, Kevin Harvick, Clint Bowyer, Greg Biffle, Jeff Gordon and Ryan Newman.

8.8 is the average finishing position at New Hampshire for Denny Hamlin, the best among active drivers.

10 (counting Sunday’s race) is the number of times a Chase race has been run at New Hampshire. NHMS has been one of the 10 tracks for the Chase for the Sprint Cup since the playoff’s inception in 2004. From 2004 to 2010, it was the first race of the Chase, but since 2011, NHMS has been the second race of the Chase.

15 of the 30 Sprint Cup races scored by electronic scoring have had a margin of victory of less than a second.

19  is the age of the youngest winner at New Hampshire, Joey Logano. Logano was 19 years, 1 month, and 4 days old when he won at Loudon on June 28, 2009. It was also Logano’s first Sprint Cup win.

21was the age of the youngest Coors Light pole winner at New Hampshire, Brian Vickers, who was 21 years, 8 months and 23 days old when he took the pole on July 17, 2005.

22 different drivers have won at New Hampshire.

37 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races have been held at New Hampshire Motor Speedway; one per year from 1993 to 1996 and two races per season since. These are the only Sprint Cup races to be run at NHMS.

39 is the worst finish by an eventual Chase champion at New Hampshire. Jimmie Johnson finished 39th in 2006, but still went on to win the Chase.

46 was the age of Bill Elliott, when he became the oldest Coors Light pole at New Hampshire. Elliott was 46 years, 9 months and 13 days old when he took the pole on July 21, 2002.

50 was the age of Mark Martin, when he became the oldest winner at New Hampshire. Martin was 50 years, 8 months and 11 days old when he won on September 20, 2009.

126.871was the speed at which Mark Martin won the inaugural Coors Light pole at New Hampshire in 1993.

148 drivers have competed in at least one Sprint Cup race at new Hampshire.

1,316 is the number of laps Jeff Gordon has led at New Hampshire, the most among active drivers.

MORE:

READ: Kenseth wins at rainy Chicagoland

READ: Engine failure halts Logano’s fast Chase start

WATCH: Post-Race Reactions GEICO 400

WATCH: Final Laps: Kenseth takes Chicagoland

Get a sneak peek at the new looks for this weekend

MORE: Full Chase coverage


SPRINT CUP SERIES PAINT SCHEMES

Jamie McMurray will drive the No. 1 Linksys Chevrolet.

SHOP: Jamie McMurray die-casts

Kasey Kahne will drive the No. 5 Great Clips Chevrolet.

SHOP: Kasey Kahne die-casts

Clint Bowyer will drive the No. 15 5-Hour Energy Toyota.

SHOP: Clint Bowyer die-casts

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. will drive the No. 17 Zest Ford.

SHOP: Ricky Stenhouse Jr. die-casts

Matt Kenseth will drive the No. 20 Home Depot Husky Toyota.

SHOP: Matt Kenseth die-casts

Jeff Burton will drive the No. 31 Cherrios Chevrolet.

SHOP: Jeff Burton die-casts

David Ragan will drive the No. 34 TACO BELL Ford.

SHOP: David Ragan die-casts

Michael McDowell will drive the No. 51 Brandt 51 Chevrolet SS Chevrolet.

SHOP: NASCAR die-casts

Brian Vickers will drive the No. 55 Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota.

SHOP: Brian Vickers die-casts

Carl Edwards will drive the No. 99 Aflac Ford.

SHOP: Carl Edwards die-casts

NATIONWIDE SERIES PAINT SCHEMES

Joey Coulter will drive the No. 18 Freightliner Toyota.

SHOP: NASCAR die-casts

Kyle Larson will drive the No. 32 Clear Men Chevrolet.

SHOP: NASCAR die-casts

Jeb Burton will drive the No. 34 Arrowhead Chevrolet.

SHOP: NASCAR die-casts

MORE:

READ: Kenseth wins at rainy Chicagoland

READ: Engine failure halts Logano’s fast Chase start

WATCH: Post-Race Reactions GEICO 400

WATCH: Final Laps: Kenseth takes Chicagoland

‘Chicago Fire’ star gets his feet wet with NASCAR

David Eigenberg, New York-born and Chicago area-raised, made a name for himself with the role of Steve Brady on the long-running show "Sex and the City." Now his acting pursuits have taken him to something much hotter, at least in a temperature-related sense.

Eigenberg currently plays firefighter Christopher Herrmann on the NBC drama "Chicago Fire," which premieres its second season Sept. 24. He took time out from the small screen with some of his fellow cast members to take in last weekend’s NASCAR activities at Chicagoland Speedway, where he caught up with NASCAR.com.

Is this your first NASCAR experience?

It’s my first time at a race. I follow some of it, and it’s been kind of exciting with the stuff that came up all last week, with Bowyer and Logano and with Jeff Gordon getting in with the 13th position. It’s pretty cool. It’s exciting. We do a TV show about controversy and people getting mixed up, so it’s nice to see that there’s some drama here. You just hope everybody stays safe, but it’s nice to see everybody mixing it up. We were down in the pits and saw all the stuff that goes on down there, with them weighing the vehicles, and the car gets off the scales and on the jacks, then there’s a problem. Guys are always looking to cut corners and making stuff work a little bit better. They’re talking about a tenth or three of a second makes the race.

Has anyone prepared you for what to expect as the grand marshals or what your duties might entail?

All we’ve been told is that we’ve got Danica, so it’s going to be "Drivers, start your engines." No more "gentlemen." As far as I know, that’s what we’re going to do.

Do people still come up to you and say, "Steve! Steve!"

All the time. Listen, I’m flattered that I got a chance to portray a character that’s kind of endured the test of time and touch people and warm people’s hearts. It’s nice to play the nice guy. If you’re an actor playing a bad guy, some people aren’t always the nicest to you. They’ll go, "you’re a dirtbag!" or something like that. It may be joking, but that stuff really starts wearing on you after a while. When people go, "We love you!" it doesn’t wear on you. It feels good.

Have you lobbied to drive in some capacity today?

They were going to take us in the pace car and the rain kind of washed us out. We were here at 7 o’clock and were going to go around the track. I’ve been saying, "C’mon, throw us in the car."

How close have you been to some of the action on the set? You know, with actual fire?

Oh, yeah. There have been periods where guys have to step out and say it’s too freakin’ hot, and that’s like between two or three hundred degrees. I popped the hood on a car in a scene where we had an engine fire. It’s controlled, it’s propane, but I popped the hood and it jumped out at me. I turned my head and one of the real firefighters working with us said, "you know, if you open the hood a little slower, you won’t throw so much oxygen on it, you fool." He looked at me and said, "You know you singed your eyelashes." (laughs) We get in there. It’s nothing compared to what the real guys do, but we definitely have a danger element, and there’s an excitement that occurs on the set. It gets hot — 90 to 95 percent of the stuff that we do is all real. It’s a controlled fire, but the CGI (computer-generated images) is only sometimes to sweeten the edges of the frame. But 95 percent of it is real, controlled fire.

I guess where I’m going with that is, if we had an accident today and — heaven forbid — one of the cars caught on fire, would you be able to step in and help put it out?

You know, the men and women out there would be best served by the real professionals. We certainly look and maybe would want to, but we will hang back and let the professionals do it. Their training is more extensive and their familiarity with the real deal is much more. Our hats are off to them.

MORE:

READ: Kenseth wins at rainy Chicagoland

READ: Engine failure halts Logano’s fast Chase start

WATCH: Post-Race Reactions GEICO 400

WATCH: Final Laps: Kenseth takes Chicagoland

Points leader has been consistent all season long

JOLIET, Ill. — The stat sheet has been kind to Matt Crafton so far this season. In fact, it’s been perfect. 

But rattle off the numbers to him from that impressive ledger — lead-lap finishes in every race, with a perfect record of top-10 finishes — and the 37-year-old driver will cut you off.

"Don’t jinx us," Crafton said with a smile Friday night, shortly after adding a solid fourth-place finish to his 2013 portfolio and padding his NASCAR Camping World Truck Series points lead at Chicagoland Speedway.

"No, but at the end of the day, that’s about all these guys," Crafton added, motioning toward his ThorSport Racing crew on pit road. "I just get the great opportunity and fun to drive this truck."

So far this season, the fun’s been evident in person and on paper. In 16 starts, Crafton ranks as the only driver in the series to complete all 2,506 laps — only defending series champion James Buescher is close to that feat, just one lap shy of a perfect mark.

The consistency has allowed Crafton to build a commanding 41-point advantage over Buescher, almost enough that he could sit out a race and remain the truck series’ leader. But Carl “Junior” Joiner, crew chief for Crafton’s No. 88 Toyota, says the team is a long way from resting on laurels.

"We’ve got so far to go, man," Joiner said. "Honestly, everybody asks me every week — I don’t even watch the points. I know you hear that all the time, but I really don’t. I just show up every week and try to get as much speed and as much balance as I can give him and execute. Tonight, we executed."

Crafton’s run to fourth place Friday night was the result of mass adjustments to help the No. 88 contend in the EnjoyIllinois.com 225, won by Sprint Cup star Kyle Busch. Joiner admitted that at one point in the 150-lap race he was unsure he’d be able to cure the truck’s handling ills, but his persistence was rewarded with the right moves and some snappy pit work from the ThorSport crew in the late stages.

"At the end of the day, I can’t thank every one of these guys enough," Crafton said. "I mean, I had awesome pit stops. We were so, so wicked loose and that thing right there at the end … I mean, we changed so much stuff — air pressure, track bar,wedge — and just kept throwing stuff at it, and we hit it there at the end."

As reliable as Crafton’s record has been this season, Friday night’s race broke a frustrating streak of eight consecutive finishes in the sixth through 10th range. Crafton said he’s not satisfied with merely accumulating top-10s, a point Joiner was quick to second.

"Like I said, we’ve had speed," Joiner said. "These dang sevenths and eighths are kind of a fluke for our team because we don’t belong there. We’ve run better than that. Something always happens in the end like a pit-road penalty or a fuel deal, but we’re going to get back where we belong. We’ve got a good, good strong fleet for the end of the year.

"A couple months ago, we had to pull an audible and build a couple new trucks and these guys haveworked seven days a week, 12-hour days. Their wives probably hate me, but this is what it takes to win. We’re getting back to where we need to be, and I look to see us back in Victory Lane soon. We’re going to dig hard here at the end. We’re going to dig our heels in and go."

MORE:

READ: Kenseth wins at rainy Chicagoland

READ: Engine failure halts Logano’s fast Chase start

WATCH: Post-Race Reactions GEICO 400

WATCH: Final Laps: Kenseth takes Chicagoland

Examining the problems that took down Junior and Joey Logano in the Chase opener

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

Cooler temperatures, increased grip and faster speeds put heavier loads on engines this past weekend at Chicagoland Speedway, and before the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race had been completed, more than half a dozen drivers in the 43-car field had been sidelined due to engine-related issues.
 
Most notable among those hit were Joey Logano and Dale Earnhardt Jr., two of the 13 drivers that make up this year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup field.
 
In a race that was interrupted for more than five hours by rain, there was growing concern up and down pit road as teams attempted to anticipate how the delay and unexpected weather conditions would impact engine durability.
 
The expectation had been for a slower pace under much different conditions. Faster lap times over an extended period put much more stress on the parts and pieces under the hood — parts and pieces that had already gone through an unforeseen heating and cooling cycle brought on by the red-flag period.

"You aren’t kidding," said Alan Gustafson, crew chief for the No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet of Jeff Gordon. "When we were out there running 29.30s (lap times in seconds) leading the race, I’m like, ‘Holy moly, that’s crazy fast.’"
 
"When you practice at 120-degree track temperature and it’s sunny, and you’re out there running 30-ohs your fast lap and after five to 10 laps you’re running 31s, you didn’t think you were going to see any 29.30s," he said. "It’s amazing fast."
 
Gustafson and Gordon were among the more fortunate. Each manufacturer had at least one prominent failure.
 
Kevin Harvick, who finished third, said the pace of the race definitely picked up after the rain delay, and on more than one occasion he hit on the rev limiter.
 
"I hadn’t touched it all weekend," the Richard Childress Racing driver said.
 
Logano, who set a track record in winning the pole two days earlier, then led the first 32 laps, said he was "having to lift early in Turn 1 because I was up against the (rev limiter) chip."
 
Although some drivers are tougher on engines because of their driving style, engines aren’t tailor-made to individual competitors, according to Doug Yates, head of Roush Yates Engines.
 
Yates said his group builds engines based on the "worst-case scenario" with the hardest driver.
 
"If it passes that guy’s style, then it will work for everybody else," he said. "The base engine is based around that hardest guy who carries the most speed into the corner and has the most on-throttle time."
 
Whether or not steps could have been taken before the resumption of the race to lessen the chances of breaking an engine, winning crew chief Jason Ratcliff said a gear change, which would affect the RPM range, "would have made the most difference."
 
"I think the RPMs in the end was the culprit," he said.
 
"It’s extremely hard (on an engine) when you get hot … you’re turning 9,500-plus RPMs. You go through a rain delay … everything cools off. You get a lot of heating and shrinking. If you don’t heat the oil back up before you start them, it can be tough on them. You try to do the best you can, considering the circumstances.
 
"And … there’s so much grip … even before the rain delay, even before it cooled off another five or six degrees, these guys were out there running crazy lap times, a lot of sustained RPMs at the end of the straightaway."
 
Push it hard enough, Ratcliff said, and "something’s going to give."

MORE:

READ: Kenseth wins at rainy Chicagoland

READ: Engine failure halts Logano’s fast Chase start

WATCH: Post-Race Reactions GEICO 400

WATCH: Final Laps: Kenseth takes Chicagoland

Busch still looking to get into Victory Lane in 2013

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

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — On the night Kurt Busch became the first driver from a single-car team to qualify for the Chase to the NASCAR Sprint Cup, there was only one disappointment — that he hadn’t yet delivered on the promise he’d made to his girlfriend’s 8-year-old son, which was to take him to Victory Lane. So he engineered a compromise, pulling young Houston up onto the stage where all the playoff-bound drivers basked in fluttering confetti, and allowing him to experience the next best thing.

"Good enough for me," the youngster told him. As it has been for Busch, who may be still pursuing his first race win in almost two years, but is savoring what he calls the smaller victories enjoyed on the way to potentially a much bigger goal.

"I just texted a friend of mine that’s helped me in some of the spiritual things, and religion is where I met this guy. Met him at MRO. And he’s been happy to kind of carry me along through some of this," Busch said Tuesday during a visit to the NASCAR Hall of Fame. Motor Racing Outreach is a faith-based support organization that travels along with the series.

‘I said, ‘There have been small victories all along the way. I just never realized that many things have happened and fallen into place.’ There just hasn’t been that big moment of champagne and big confetti and Victory Lane where you get your trophy and it’s for your team. It’s been a couple of years, but there have been so many chances to say, ‘This was a winning moment,’ and then embrace it and feel it. It’s just not literally in Victory Lane yet. But we’re in the Chase and we’re running strong. Ultimately, you’re not going to trade inconsistency for a couple of race wins."

Understandably so, given that he’s gotten this far without one. A solid run of top-10 finishes helped Busch carry Furniture Row Racing into the Chase two weeks ago for the first time, and he backed that up with a fourth-place run Sunday in the playoff opener. The No. 78 team has won just once in its history, with Regan Smith at Darlington in 2011. Busch’s last victory at NASCAR’s top level was at Dover in early October of that same season — almost two years ago with a Penske Racing team he would split with soon afterward.

The months since then have been a personal and professional journey, one that saw Busch start his comeback with the underfunded Phoenix Racing outfit, move to a Furniture Row squad that had more potential, and lay the groundwork for a return to the sport’s elite at Stewart-Haas Racing next season. The idea of winning with the No. 78 before he leaves is a "side note" to the larger goal of contending for the championship, Busch said — although history might indicate that in the Chase era, it takes one to do the other.

Busch has come close. He had a dominant car in the Coca-Cola 600 in May before his battery died, and led a race-best 102 laps at New Hampshire Motor Speedway before being involved in an accident. The Sprint Cup Series returns to the Granite State this weekend for the second round of the Chase. "I’ve got to think," Busch told fans during a question-and-answer session, "we can get over the hump this weekend."

In Tuesday’s team meeting he said, the topic was how to improve short-run speed that hurt him last time out at Loudon. And although a return to Charlotte looms in three weeks, Busch said his car’s setup will have to be different than it was in May. He once swept both May races there with Penske, returned with the same setup in October, and finished 30th. There’s also focus on less promising venues — Busch said his team’s one remaining test will be used at Martinsville, which statistically is one of his worst tracks.

Through it all, he feels a victory is close.

"It’s that last five percent," Busch said. "I don’t know what we’re missing, I don’t know why we haven’t driven into Victory Lane. If we had it, we would just push the button and do it. We’re close. You don’t just finish in the top five like we have these last few weeks without having strength in the team. We’re just missing that last five percent. Just something about it. I can’t define it, but we’re close."

Slower pit stops, occasionally an Achilles’ heel for smaller teams, have sometimes hampered that effort. Which may explain why Busch was penalized by NASCAR for speeding on pit road in the Chase opener at Chicagoland, which put him a lap down. He rallied to finish fourth, and although he picked up four positions in the standings, he lost eight points to Chase leader and race winner Matt Kenseth.

Busch said the lights on his tachometer — which are calibrated by race teams — were green, and added that in a perfect world he’d like to see NASCAR implement a push-button rev limiter system for pit road similar to those employed in many other racing series. For the time being, though, he’ll cut it close trying to make up for whatever time he might lose during the stop.

"I’m so busy trying to push it that close to the envelope, because my pit crew is good at 14 flats," Busch said, referring to seconds. "They’re not good at 12 flats. I’m trying to get all I can on pit road for them."

Particularly since this Chase marks the end of his run with a No. 78 team he’s lifted to new heights. The 2004 champion of NASCAR’s top division, Busch was handpicked by SHR co-owner Gene Haas to join an organization that will also feature Tony Stewart, Kevin Harvick, and Danica Patrick next year. What’s he looking forward to most in 2014? "Having a team owner who’s also a racer," he said in a Q-and-A, "… and seeing how Tony gets to debrief himself."

Busch doesn’t yet have a crew chief or a car number set for next year, but he may have provided an indication of the latter Tuesday when he chose from a Hall of Fame’s pin board a pin bearing the old No. 97 of Chad Little. Busch won his 2004 title in the No. 97, which he used during his stint at Roush Fenway Racing. "You see where my vote is," he told the crowd.

Busch is also hoping that Kenseth’s first campaign with Joe Gibbs Racing — a career year in which he leads the Chase and has accumulated six victories to date — stands as a model for what he might be capable in his debut season with SHR.

"I’m hoping that my scenario next year is lighting in a bottle," Busch said. "We have zero people on the floor right now, zero cars, and yet, there’s a wealth of knowledge in the garage that can come out of the gate, running strong, and Gene Haas wants to go to Daytona as a winning car. We have the chance to strike it rich just like Matt did. But we have to put the right things in the right place."

For now, though, the focus remains on the No. 78, and continuing to debunk the naysayers by making a serious run on the big prize at the end of the season. The day after qualifying for the Chase, Busch said he woke up feeling awful, with fatigue and flu-like symptoms that laid him low for 36 hours, and reminded him of how he felt after he won the title in 2004. The level of intensity it had taken to get there, he said, had exacted that kind of toll.

In the midst of it, he picked up the phone and tried to give his team members a morale boost. There were other victories, the kind small and not so small, still to pursue.

"That made me call guys like (crew chief) Todd Berrier and a lot of the crew guys in Colorado to go, ‘I know we achieved something special, but we don’t need to stop now. Let’s keep going,’" Busch said. "Our battle to get into the Chase, it was a battle you’d put forward in the Chase. We had a good strong 10 weeks before, why not give another 10? And then we can all just die sometime around Thanksgiving."

MORE:

READ: Kenseth wins at rainy Chicagoland

READ: Engine failure halts Logano’s fast Chase start

WATCH: Post-Race Reactions GEICO 400

WATCH: Final Laps: Kenseth takes Chicagoland

Will co-host show with Trace Adkins

The American Country Awards show announced Tuesday that NASCAR driver Danica Patrick will co-host the nationally televised awards ceremony with country music superstar Trace Adkins.

The show will air live (8 p.m. ET on FOX) from Las Vegas’ Mandalay Bay resort on Dec. 10 — the Tuesday after NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series Awards Ceremony.

It turns out the cowboy hat and belt buckle that Patrick famously donned at the Texas Motor Speedway this spring may come in handy. This year’s Daytona 500 pole-winner and Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate has long been a country music fan and even appeared in music videos with country artists like Miranda Lambert and Colt Ford.

It will be the first time Patrick has co-hosted a full-length live television show and her co-star is already looking forward to the event.

"I can’t wait to see if I have what it takes to keep up with this racing superstar," the Grammy-nominated Adkins said.

Patrick who has starred in Super Bowl television commercials for her No. 10 Stewart-Haas Racing Chevy sponsor, GoDaddy and appeared in Sports Illustrated magazine’s famed "Swimsuit Issue" has long proven she’s comfortable in the spotlight.

And like the American Country Awards — whose winners are selected by fan vote — Patrick has a lot of experience with fan participation. She was voted into NASCAR’s Sprint All-Star race this year by NASCAR fans.

"I’m so excited to host the American Country Awards with Trace Adkins," Patrick said. "I have no doubt he’ll be able to keep up with me. I’ve become a huge fan of country music since I came to NASCAR. …This is going to be a really cool experience and I’m excited to be a part of it. It’s going to be a great show!"

MORE:

READ: Kenseth wins at rainy Chicagoland

READ: Engine failure halts Logano’s fast Chase start

WATCH: Post-Race Reactions GEICO 400

WATCH: Final Laps: Kenseth takes Chicagoland

Veteran driver will be back after missing three races due to a rib injury

After missing three races due to a bicycle accident that resulted in three broken ribs, Bobby Labonte will be back for Sunday’s Sylvania 300 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway.

Labonte will be behind the wheel of the No. 47 BUSH’s Beans Toyota Camry for JTG Daugherty Racing.

In a release from JTG Daugherty, Labonte said he is ready to get back to racing.

"Having a few weeks off was not what I planned on doing, but I have healed up well," Labonte said. "I am still sore in some places, but it could be a lot worse. I sat in the seat to feel comfortable. It seemed like everything went good."

Labonte, who is 36th in the Sprint Cup points standings, has run well at New Hampshire. In 37 starts there, he has five top-five finishes and 11 top-10 finishes.

Mike Bliss filled in for Labonte at Atlanta, while AJ Allmendinger filled in at Richmond and Chicagoland. Allmendinger will ride full time for JTG Daugherty next season.

MORE:

READ: Kenseth wins at rainy Chicagoland

READ: Engine failure halts Logano’s fast Chase start

WATCH: Post-Race Reactions GEICO 400

WATCH: Final Laps: Kenseth takes Chicagoland