Kenseth currently leads; race scheduled for 267 laps

Related: Race leaderboard

JOLIET, Ill. — Another rain delay has hit the Geico 400 at Chicagoland Speedway, bringing out the red flag on Lap 110 in Sunday’s first race in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.

Matt Kenseth currently holds the lead, followed by Brad Keselowski, Joey Logano, Jimmie Johnson and Kyle Busch in the top five.

The Geico 400 is slated for 267 laps. Cars were called onto pit road, and then covered, when heavy rain moved into the area.

The race began on ESPN, but will move to ESPN2 for coverage tonight, should cars get back on track.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

View all articles
View all videos
View all photos

Rain had already delayed the start of the race for nearly 90 minutes, with the green flag not dropping until 3:39 p.m. ET.

No Sprint Cup races have ever been shortened by rain at Chicagoland. The 2011 Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup opener was delayed a day by weather with eventual champion Tony Stewart winning the race.

Through 110 laps, rounding out the top 10 are Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Martin Truex Jr., Kasey Kahne and Clint Bowyer. Among the top-10 drivers, all but Keselowski and Truex Jr. are in the 13-driver Chase field.

The other Chase drivers’ positions: Greg Biffle is 12th, Kevin Harvick is 14th, Carl Edwards is 16th, Ryan Newman is 17th and Kurt Busch is 27th.

Logano, who started on the Coors Light Pole, led the first 32 laps of the race. Johnson has led the most laps (40) and Kenseth has led 28 laps.

Earlier Sunday, NASCAR officials announced rules changes affecting the double-file restart procedure in the pre-race driver’s meeting. The revisions got an early test, in a restart after a competition caution at Lap 30.

Johnson, the race leader at the time, restarted the race when the green flag was displayed to the field. But Kyle Busch got a great jump, outran Johnson’s No. 48 to the start/finish line and was credited with leading the 37th lap before Johnson went back in front.

MORE:

READ: Driver previews:
The Chase

READ: Fantasy preview:
The Chase

READ: Race breakdowns:
The Chase

READ: Top 10 Chase moments

Restarts at Richmond International Raceway lead to clarifications

JOLIET, Ill. — NASCAR officials outlined new rules in the pre-race driver’s meeting at Chicagoland Speedway, clarifying double-file restart procedures before the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup postseason begins and ruling that the second-place can is permitted to beat the first-place, or control, car to the start/finish line.

Race director David Hoots outlined those changes in the meeting, saying that the restart zone and the procedures around it remain the same. “The change is,” Hoots said, “that once we go green, we’re racing green. You can’t change your line or your lane until you reach the start/finish line. In essence, No. 2 can beat No. 1 to the line. The leader restarts the race in the zone and then we’re going green, to simplify the rules for you.”

Hoots then opened the meeting, as usual, up for questions. In most driver’s meetings, there are no questions regarding race procedure. Sunday, questions were asked by Jimmie Johnson and crew chief Chad Knaus, Jeff GordonMatt Kenseth, Ryan Newman and Martin Truex Jr.

Hoots answered Gordon’s request for clarification by saying, “The leader starts in the (restart) zone. No. 2 can beat No. 1 to the start/finish line; he just can’t be in front of him when the green (flag) comes out.”

Hoots answered Newman’s question by saying that the green flag will be unfurled when the race leader accelerates in the restart zone.

“It’ll take out one area of subjectivity on our part,” said Robin Pemberton, NASCAR vice president of competition. “And we know it’ll move it around to some other area. It’s just too competitive out there now and it needs to be in the hands of the drivers who decide these races for the most part, not the (control) tower when it comes down to those calls.”

“Basically the restart rules are the same. The thing that is changed is, once the lead car goes or the flag is thrown, you have to stay in line but the second-place car can beat the leader to the line.”

The changes came in the wake of two late-race judgment calls in last weekend’s races at Richmond International Speedway. In the Sprint Cup Series’ Federated Auto Parts 400 on Sept. 7, Carl Edwards beat race leader Paul Menard to the start/finish line on the final restart after Menard, who gained the position by staying out on much older tires, lost traction at the green flag.

Pemberton said Sunday that NASCAR’s no-call on that restart took Menard’s older tires into consideration. “We felt like they left as even as they could,” he said. “Paul spun his tires and therefore got passed.”

Edwards, who pulled away to his second win of the season, said in Thursday’s Chase Media Day in Chicago that he had a tenth of a second to decide whether to accelerate past Menard or allow him to regain control and lead the field at the restart.

“Sure enough, Paul spun the tires, he actually ran into my door a little trying to get his car straightened out,” Edwards said. “I thought, ‘Man, what am I supposed to do here?’ I didn’t know if I was supposed to lift or how much I would have to lift. Fortunately NASCAR saw that he spun his tires and Paul said he spun the tires, but I think that is something that is very difficult. What if he had 100 laps on the tires and no grip and the whole field had four. Are we all supposed to go at his pace? I don’t know the answer to that.”

The previous night at Richmond, race-long leader Brian Scott and Brad Keselowski came across the start/finish line in a virtual dead head, but Keselowski grabbed the position and drove to a NASCAR Nationwide Series victory. This led to a cautionary mention from NASCAR competition officials in Saturday’s drivers’ meeting.
 
Keselowski likened the call to a football referee having to decide a pass-interference penalty. “What you might call jumping a restart, another person might not,” he said.

Gamesmanship has long been a part of resuming the race, ever since double-file restarts were introduced midway through the 2009 season. But Hoots cautioned drivers about dragging their feet or laying back a certain distance before the green flag as a restart ploy.

“I’m not going to give you a measurement because that puts us in a box,” Hoots told the drivers. “Everybody knows how to do this. Stay closed up to the car in front of you, and we won’t have to micromanage your restarts. So everybody do this right and we’ll have a great afternoon.”

Said Pemberton: “I don’t think anything we do eliminates gamesmanship. It just shifts it to another area that we’ll have to police or look at later. These are the best guys in the world and when they see an area that they can gain positions on, that’s what they do. That’s what they’re paid to do; that’s what they’re supposed to do. We have to do what we have to do.”

MORE:

READ: Driver previews:
The Chase

READ: Fantasy preview:
The Chase

READ: Race breakdowns:
The Chase

READ: Top 10 Chase moments

Last two NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champions have won opening race of Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup

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

JOLIET, Ill – Today they are scheduled to race. Finally.

Overshadowed by events of the past week, NASCAR’s Chase For the NASCAR Sprint Cup officially gets under way with the running of the Geico 400 at Chicagoland Speedway.

Innuendo and investigations hopefully silenced by the familiar roar of engines.

It’s race No. 1 of 10, the first stop of a season-ending run that will see the series crisscross the country, compete on its largest track (2.66-mile Talladega) as well as it’s smallest (0.526-mile Martinsville), eventually to wind up some 1,200 miles from here in Homestead, Fla., where a champion will be crowned.

But today they race.

This will be the third consecutive year that Chicagoland, a 1.5-mile track located southwest of the Windy City, has hosted the opening Chase race.

On the two previous occasions, the winning driver also went on to win the Cup title – Brad Keselowski last year and Tony Stewart in ’11.

FULL SERIES COVERAGE

UPDATED CHASE FOR THE NASCAR SPRINT CUP STANDINGS

Pos. Driver Points Behind
1 Matt Kenseth 2015
2 Jimmie Johnson 2012 -3
3 Kyle Busch 2012 -3
4 Kevin Harvick 2006 -9
5 Carl Edwards 2006 -9
6 Joey Logano 2003 -12
7 Greg Biffle 2003 -12
8 Clint Bowyer 2000 -15
9 Dale Earnhardt Jr. 2000 -15
10 Kurt Busch 2000 -15
11 Kasey Kahne 2000 -15
12 Ryan Newman 2000 -15
13 Jeff Gordon 2000 -15

In the seven years prior to that, New Hampshire Motor Speedway served as the host venue and six different drivers kicked off the Chase with a victory. Only one – Kurt Busch in 2004 – managed to forge a championship trophy out of that early success.

Penske Racing teammates Joey Logano and Keselowski will line up 1-2 at Chicagoland, but this time it’s the 23-year-old Logano who has his eyes on the title. Keselowski, his time at the top winding down, appeared Chase worthy until devastating finishes in his last three outings painted his No. 2 Ford out of the playoff picture.

That five of the Chase stops, including this weekend’s, are contested on somewhat similar 1.5-mile tracks plays to his own team’s strength, according to Logano.

“The shorter tracks have been a little bit tougher for us,” he said. “So we know these races. We really have to capitalize; the other ones, we have to be under damage control and try to get our cars as fast as we can at them.”

Tied for sixth in points, Logano is one of a dozen in this year’s field of 13 that find themselves trailing leader Matt Kenseth having yet to turn the first lap.

Kenseth’s honeymoon with Joe Gibbs Racing has now stretched into the postseason, with the 2003 champion seeded No. 1 and enjoying a three-point advantage over second-place Jimmie Johnson. Kenseth joined JGR prior to 2013, and his five victories this season equal a career-best. To say that he and crew chief Jason Ratcliff have meshed would be an understatement.

The winner of this year’s first Chase race isn’t guaranteed a smooth path to the title, though, only a smooth start. Statistics, after all, aren’t guarantees.

“I used to just laugh at all you guys with your stats but I am starting to figure out that some of them work,” admitted Carl Edwards, the series’ most recent winner and tied for fourth in points as the Chase begins. “If I can lean on a stat I will. … There is some basic math involved. If (you) start well, you don’t want to give up any points ever throughout these 10 races. If you think of it that way, the perfect 10 races would be whatever it is, 48 points a race; the closer you can be to that every event the better.”

Chicagoland, he said, provides “a real measure of how the field will stack up.

“It is a track where you can do well on your own merit and you can pass here,” he said. “You aren’t going to get mired back because of a bad pit stop like you might at other places. It is a fast race track and it showcases what we do. We go fast and it is two or three-wide racing. It is a good venue for us.”

Edwards and his No. 99 Roush Fenway Racing team have rebounded nicely from a 2012 season that saw him finish 15th in points, just a year after battling Stewart down to the wire for the title.

Stewart, similar to Keselowski, won’t be chasing this year’s title down the stretch. The three-time champion and co-owner of Stewart-Haas Racing is sidelined until 2014, the result of a broken right leg suffered in a sprint car accident earlier this year. Likewise, 2012 participants Denny Hamlin and Martin Truex Jr. didn’t make a return appearance.

It is the 10th consecutive year that Johnson has shown up in the postseason, a mark unmatched since the format’s debut in ’04. He’s won half of them. Talk about your statistics.

But the Hendrick Motorsports team has been hobbled in recent weeks, with Johnson fairing no better than 28th in his previous four starts.

Where others might see concern, Johnson only sees opportunity.

“We all know that the last four or five weeks have been awfully hard on the 48 team,” Johnson said, “but when I look at Bristol, Richmond, you can look at our stats in general, those aren’t strong tracks for us, so I don’t read too much into those (results). …

“With the Chase having five mile-and-a-half style race tracks in it, I look at the speed that we’ve been able to have, even though the finishes aren’t there, and feel very comfortable about where we are.”

Only once has Johnson begun the Chase as the top seed (2007), and his remaining four titles came after starting no further back in the field than third.

Typically, it’s a time when Johnson, 37, and his team shine. Twenty-two of his 64 career wins have come in Chase races.

Recent results might suggest otherwise, but few expect the No. 48 team to be off its game today, or for the next 10 weeks, for that matter.

“I would love to have more momentum … coming into the Chase, no doubt, but we don’t,” he said. “I think we’re a strong enough team where that won’t prevent us, won’t hamper us from winning a championship.”

Others in this year’s Chase field include Kyle and Kurt Busch, Kevin Harvick, Greg Biffle, Clint Bowyer, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kasey Kahne, Ryan Newman and Jeff Gordon.

MORE:

READ: Driver previews:
The Chase

READ: Fantasy preview:
The Chase

READ: Race breakdowns:
The Chase

READ: Top 10 Chase moments

Follow or join the conversation

Social Drive: Get the latest news and join the conversation on Twitter

MORE:

READ: Driver previews:
The Chase

READ: Fantasy preview:
The Chase

READ: Race breakdowns:
The Chase

READ: Top 10 Chase moments

Get in-car views, live chat and more with RaceBuddy

Follow live here

MORE:

READ: Driver previews:
The Chase

READ: Fantasy preview:
The Chase

READ: Race breakdowns:
The Chase

READ: Top 10 Chase moments

Check out full coverage from this weekend’s races

Sprint Cup Series

Geico 400, Chicagoland Speedway, 2 p.m. ET, Sunday, ESPN on air at 1 p.m. ET. | RESULTS | WEEKEND SCHEDULE 

MORE: Full Chase coverage

Featured Story

Kenseth wins rain-filled race at Chicagoland 

Matt Kenseth was leading when the red flag for rain came out at Lap 110, and at the end of a long race day and night, he was on top. The top seed in the Chase won his sixth race of the season and the first race of the 10-race playoff. Kyle Busch finished second, coming up just short in his bid to win all three Chicagoland races. | Read the full story | Watch: Final Laps | Victory Lane | Victory Lane: 1-on-1 | Kenseth discusses his victory

MORE NEWS
Race Rewind: Relive all the action
Engine failure halts Logano’s fast start to the Chase
Strange issues but familiar rally for Johnson 
Dale Jr’s night ends with engine failure
— Post-race reactions: Geico 400
NASCAR clarifies restart rules in driver meeting
Gordon added to Chase
Hendrick focuses on the future
Top 10 moments in Chase history
Chase for NASCAR Sprint Cup explained
Ten-round title fight: The Chase one race at a time

Nationwide Series

Dollar General 300 Powered by Coca-Cola, Chicagoland Speedway, 3:30 p.m. ET, Saturday, ESPN2. | RESULTS | WEEKEND SCHEDULE

Featured Story

Busch dominates for Nationwide win at Chicagoland

Kyle Busch led 195 of the 200 laps in a dominating performance at Chicagoland Speedway to win the Dollar General 300 powered by Coca-Cola. The victory is Busch’s 10th of the Nationwide season. | Read the full story

MORE NEWS:
Victory Lane: Kyle Busch
Post-Race Reactions: Dollar General 300
Flat tire sends Larson into the wall
Sadler rear-ended by Butler
Final Laps: Busch takes 2nd win of weekend
Contact sends Smith spinning
Hornish, Dillon separating from the pack
Busch starts on pole
— Dillon tops final Nationwide practice
A little help for Smith
Burton to make a Nationwide debut at Kentucky

Camping World Truck Series

EnjoyIllinois.com 225, Chicagoland Speedway, 8:30 p.m. ET, Friday, FOX Sports 1 on air at 8 p.m. ET | RESULTS | WEEKEND SCHEDULE

Featured Story

Busch holds off Keselowski for Truck win

Kyle Busch led 52 laps to Keselowski’s 50 in a thrilling Chicagoland Truck Series victory | Read the full story | Victory Lane | Final Laps | Busch celebrates 34th NCWTS win

MORE NEWS:
For Keselowski, Truck team efforts paying off
Hard hit for Peters
— Pit road mishap in Chicago
Jeb Burton on pole for Chicagoland Truck race
— A closer look into the 2014 Toyota Tundra

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

NASCAR Chairman and CEO marks 10th anniversary at Northwestern’s renowned school of management

EVANSTON, Ill. — Some people celebrate anniversaries with parties, but Brian France celebrated his 10th anniversary as NASCAR’s Chairman and CEO by doing what he does best, talking business.

But what made Friday’s anniversary unique is France talked business with nearly 600 of the world’s brightest minds and future business and corporate leaders at Northwestern University’s renowned Kellogg School of Management.

For the first time in his decade-long tenure, France spoke at length publicly and candidly about some of the initiatives that not only have seen NASCAR grow under his leadership, but also how the sanctioning body has managed to weather some rough storms, most notably the economic downturn with which the sport is still dealing.

(Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for NASCAR)

"Every part of our business where we thought we were not relevant or not going in the right direction, we worked very hard and did this when … there was tremendous uncertainty, but we needed to do it," France said. "We’re now much better off than we ever have been and it takes a real assertive plan to pull it off."

Northwestern’s business school is traditionally ranked among the top five in the U.S. for much of the same elements that France embodies, namely passion and vision. Plus, its geographic proximity to Sunday’s opening event of the 10-race NASCAR Chase for the Sprint Cup in Joliet, Ill., about 60 miles away, made for a natural tie-in, France said.

France downplayed the plaudits for which he’s credited, choosing instead to focus in on how NASCAR as an organization –and its hundreds of employees — have come together to form a stronger and tighter operational platform.

By doing so, and competing in an extremely competitive professional sports marketplace in the U.S., NASCAR has managed to reduce much of the damage that potentially could have been done by the global recession.

"In our case, clearly the economy disproportionately hurt our sport more than it did any other sport," France said. "I think a lot of people just said it’s the economy. We just didn’t buy that. It’s a big issue and remains a big issue. But the good news was since things were difficult, people were looking for something to believe in in our industry. … We used all that instability to be decisive, and that’s most important."

(Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for NASCAR)

Among innovations that NASCAR has undergone during France’s leadership are:

— Started NASCAR Green, the largest environmental platform in sports, which is centered around renewable energy, recycling programs and tree planting. "We’re a (for) profit organization and we have to resource things," France said. "We had to create an intellectual property around green space and convince people that we’re about technologies, new fuels, new energy sources, that we could be an unbelievable partner in recycling … and we’ve done that."

— With the burgeoning interest in the sport, as well as exploding consumption of platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Pinterest, recognized the need to bring all digital and social media initiatives in-house to increase engagement with fans. In so doing, NASCAR bought back all digital and social media rights to its top platform, NASCAR.com, from the former licensee two years early to serve as the linchpin for the sanctioning body’s unprecedented growth in outreach to its fans.

— Implementation of two cycles of state-of-the-art race cars, with the revolutionary Car of Tomorrow in 2007 and the innovative "Gen-6" car that debuted this season.

— Recently announced 10-year agreements with both NewsCorp and NBCUniversal worth $8.2 billion in broadcast rights fees, as reported by multiple media outlets.

— A complete overhaul of the sanctioning body’s marketing and communication divisions, opening up unprecedented access and engagement with the media and fans.

— A far-reaching diversity program to improve opportunities for minorities and females to advance in the sport as drivers, crew chiefs, officials and in business operations of teams, as well as the sanctioning body. "It was a challenge," he said. "We didn’t like what we saw and we’re going to figure out how to change that for obvious reasons."

— NASCAR counts nearly 25 percent of Fortune 500 companies as sponsors and partners, the greatest number of any professional sports league.

— Implemented the largest scale research, consumer studies and fan feedback programs that the sport has ever had in efforts to learn what things needed to be changed.

(Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for NASCAR)

Even before Brian France succeeded his father, Bill France Jr., as NASCAR Chairman and CEO in 2003, he played a pivotal part in moving the sport forward, particularly in the area of safety.

When NASCAR’s biggest star, Dale Earnhardt, was killed in the season-opening Daytona 500 in 2001, the younger France oversaw NASCAR’s development of the most far-reaching safety enhancement program in the sport’s history.

Included in that were mandating head-and-neck restraint devices for drivers, SAFER barriers (so-called "soft walls" that both absorbed significant more amounts of impact, as well as helped protect drivers), data collection recorders in race cars (which gather information to help further enhance the safety of vehicles), different positioning of drivers behind the wheel to maximize protection and more.

When Brian France formally took over for his father, he set in motion a series of changes to both modernize and enhance much of the sport’s policies and procedures. Those included the innovative Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup playoff system and the afore-mentioned Car of Tomorrow/Generation 6 style vehicles.

France also pointed to the sanctioning body’s efforts to increase its reach in Canada and, in particular, Mexico. To the latter, France said viewership of NASCAR races among Hispanics tuning into English-language telecasts is up 30 percent this season through the first 25 races.

(Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for NASCAR)

Steve Phelps, NASCAR’s Chief Marketing Officer, spoke of the significance of the sanctioning body’s Industry Action Plan drawn up during France’s tenure, a long-range plan that not only sets the direction for the sanctioning body, but which is designed to also make changes on the fly when necessary.

"Not surprisingly, it focused on our next-generation fans, focuses on digital and social (media), our drivers’ star power, our fan engagement and that fan experience on race day, and is our product on the race track, the format, is it going to be engaging for the existing fans as we move to the future and will it excite and engage the new fan," Phelps said. "We spent a lot of time working on it."

To accomplish that basically called for rewriting much of NASCAR’s marketing playbook.

"We had to do a better job of marketing ourselves," Phelps said. "This was an industry that was thirsty for us to lead and for Brian’s leadership to say, ‘Yes, we’re going to go in a different direction.’ … If we want this sport to grow, we have to make it grow."

Speaking of growth, France and NASCAR are not sitting on their laurels.

"In the last four, five years under Brian’s leadership and the amount of change we’re engaging, Brian has not let up on the throttle and we’re feeling it," NASCAR Vice President of Strategic Development Eric Nyquist said. "It’s exhilarating but at times a little bit terrifying because we have this large-scale commitment.

"But we also know that if we don’t make meaningful change, we’re not going to get to the next places we need to be."

MORE:

READ: Driver previews:
The Chase

READ: Fantasy preview:
The Chase

READ: Race breakdowns:
The Chase

READ: Top 10 Chase moments

Following week-long review of race at Richmond International Raceway

NASCAR has announced a set of officiating revisions to further reinforce its in-race rules and regulations following a week-long review of events that transpired during last Saturday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Richmond International Raceway.

NASCAR officials met with drivers, owners and crew chiefs this afternoon at Chicagoland Speedway to address these revisions that will take effect beginning with Sunday’s opening race of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. The revisions focus on assisting the competitors to understand what is acceptable and what is not acceptable in NASCAR’s sole determination when it comes to officiating teams’ racing during an event. NASCAR will issue a technical bulletin to the teams later this afternoon that outlines these revisions.

“Today’s technical bulletin addresses the subject of team(s) artificially altering the outcome of a race and the level of reaction that this will receive from NASCAR,” said Robin Pemberton, NASCAR Vice President of Competition. “We reinforced this issue to the teams in our meeting earlier today and conveyed what is considered unacceptable in our officiating of the event.”

Initial officiating revisions that were announced and will take effect Sunday are:

·Spotters only on spotters’ stand (one per team)

·Spotters’ stand limits: Two analog radios, scanners, Fan Views

·Video camera will be installed on spotters’ stand

MORE:

READ: Driver previews:
The Chase

READ: Fantasy preview:
The Chase

READ: Race breakdowns:
The Chase

READ: Top 10 Chase moments

As the season dwindles, Hornish and Dillon seem to be each other’s biggest competitor

JOLIET, Ill. — Following Saturday’s race at Chicagoland Speedway, Austin Dillon pulled onto pit road and parked his car right behind the vehicle of Sam Hornish Jr. The championship in the Nationwide Series may be coming down to the exact same arrangement.

Top-five runs by Hornish and Dillon, combined with more misfortune on the part of other title hopefuls, continued to distill the season-long Nationwide championship hunt down to a two-man race between a former Indianapolis 500 champion and the driver in the cowboy hat.

Although Kyle Busch dominated Saturday — he led 195 of 200 laps, most ever for the series on 1.5-mile track, breaking the record of 194 set by Dale Earnhardt at Charlotte in 1986 — Hornish came home third and Dillon fourth, continuing what’s quickly becoming a head-to-head battle both on the race track and in the standings. Hornish now leads by 17 points over Dillon, with their next-closest pursuer 19 points further behind.

“I think so,” Dillon said when asked if the title race was coming down to him and Hornish. “It’s going to take a mistake from one of us to switch it up. If he makes a mistake, we’ll be there.”

Hornish isn’t so sure. “There is still a long time to go. What, seven races? A lot can happen,” he said. “We have to be smart about how we run it, and all those things. One flat tire can lose you a bunch of points.”

The splintering of what was once a close five-man race for the title continued Saturday due to incidents that kept any other drivers from making up ground on the lead. Regan Smith entered Saturday in third, 26 points back, but Justin Allgaier bounced off the wall and into the No. 7 car, sending it spinning through the grass. The resulting 13th-place finish left Smith 36 behind Hornish.

Elliott Sadler fared worse — he came in 28 points behind Hornish in fourth place, but after getting hit from behind by Brett Butler suffered a 19th-place result that left him 44 points back. Brian Vickers finished sixth Saturday and jumped a spot in the standings to fifth, but remains 56 points behind.

For the moment, it’s Hornish and Dillon and everyone else.

“Definitely, I feel that way,” said Dillon’s crew chief, Danny Stockman Jr. “It’s about consistency theses days, right? You can’t be tearing race cars up. You have to be working on a steady program every week, and when you get to the race track, knowing what you’ve got. The 20 (car of Brian Vickers), the 11 (car of Sadler), the 7 (car of Smith), those guys are fast. They’ve had a lot of bad luck this year. I never look back, I’m always looking forward. Right now, I feel like the guy we have to beat is (Hornish), and we’re going to go after him next week at Kentucky.”

While other contenders stumbled Saturday, Hornish and Dillon kept up the pace at the front. Hornish ran second behind Busch for a long stretch, but low tire pressure had the splitter of the No. 12 car nearly dragging the ground. Buy the time the Penske Racing crew corrected it, teammate Joey Logano had overtaken Hornish for second place.

Dillon was in the mix as well, and at one point tried to muscle past Busch on the high side, but to no avail. Still he showed plenty of speed, particularly at one point where he swooped low on track to pass Hornish and Logano for second. But his No. 3 car got tight as the race neared its end, and Dillon settled for fourth.

“Man, it’s just tough,” Stockman said. “It’s as simple as a quarter-inch of track bar or a round of wedge. That’s how close you’ve got to be in these races to beat these guys. We just need to be a little bit better at adjusting our cars at the end, and that’s where we’re getting beat, is making our car for that last stint. We just were too tight there. Am I happy with running fourth? I’m feeling a lot better than last week. But we need to be better as a team for the last stint.”

Trying to catch Busch, en route to his 10th Nationwide victory this season, only made it that much more difficult. “I don’t know what the 54’s got,” Dillon said, referring to Busch’s car number. “It’s unbelievable. He’s so fast. Just drives away. I mean, clean air is big, but I don’t understand. He can pull me 10 car lengths after that. It’s pretty impressive, and he’s a great driver, ands it was fun being up there racing with him at the end.”

As it was with Hornish, evident by the fact that Dillon walked over to the No. 12 car and stuck his head inside after the event was over. “Good race,” he told Hornish. He could have been talking about the championship battle at large, which the two drivers have waged while maintaining a mutual respect for one another.

“Austin and I continue to try to race each other clean, and I feel like we have a great battle going. At the same time, it is extremely clean. If he asks me a question about what I am doing, especially at a place like Watkins Glen where he asked me a couple questions about how to help him, I didn’t have any problem helping him out a little, and I probably still wouldn’t at this point in time,” Hornish said.

“The way we have raced each other is a good thing. I would like it to be settled as much by who is the fastest and most consistent, as opposed to one of us having their way with the other one. The way he has treated me in the past, we should be able to do that. We should race it out and see who wins this thing.”

MORE:

READ: Driver previews:
The Chase

READ: Fantasy preview:
The Chase

READ: Race breakdowns:
The Chase

READ: Top 10 Chase moments

Burton: Digital-radio ban is ‘a big deal,’ impacts crew chief, spotter communication

JOLIET, Ill. — When crew chief Brian Pattie and spotter Brett Griffin needed to discuss fuel strategy in the waning laps of a race at Charlotte last year, they didn’t do it over the open analog radio everyone could hear. They used a secondary digital channel, in part to keep high-strung driver Clint Bowyer from receiving too much information and potentially becoming agitated in the car.

Use of digital radio has become common on the No. 15 camp, as it has for many teams. But beginning Sunday at Chicagoland Speedway, it’s outlawed — one of many rule changes NASCAR announced Saturday in the wake of a race manipulation scandal that unfolded in last weekend’s regular-season finale.

“It’s a good thing it’s not our first year together,” Pattie said. Bowyer’s team is at the center of a controversy that’s twice changed the makeup of the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, and Saturday led NASCAR to call a mandatory meeting of all Sprint Cup Series drivers, owners and crew chiefs at the 1.5-mile track.

There, teams were informed of new rules that included the banishment of digital radios, a limit of one spotter per team on the spotter’s stand, a camera placed on the spotter’s stand, a yet unannounced tweak to restart procedures and potentially severe penalties for anyone involved with attempting to alter a race artificially. In a media briefing afterward, NASCAR President Mike Helton and NASCAR Chairman and CEO Brian France repeated one common theme — just give 100 percent.

“I think they want it to be like it’s always meant to be, and really always is,” said Matt Kenseth, the top seed in the Chase. “I think last weekend was a really — this whole week has been really weird. I honestly feel when they drop the green, it’s one against 42, and that’s what they want, and that’s what they should get, and that’s what the fans should get. That was the basis of the meeting.”

“There’s a lot of debate about this week and what went on and whether it’s right or wrong, but I think at the end of the day, the fans want to know and want to see that every team out there is racing the best they can,” added Jeff Burton. “I know I have to say that I’m an F1 fan, and when a guy leads the race and lets another guy win, that always bothered me a great deal. I don’t think it’s rampant as some appear to think it is, but I think it’s good for our sport just to sit everybody down and say, ‘Hey, look, we have to be credible. We have to put on great races and be credible in doing it.’”

In his final season with Richard Childress Racing, the veteran driver Burton added the usual practice of teammates helping one another on the race track would continue as it always has.

“What we have to be careful not to do as a sport and a group of fans — and I’m a fan, too — is, look at every situation and try to analyze it and say, ‘Oh my God, he didn’t try.’ You know what I mean? What this is is a general overview,” he said. “You’re here for you, your team and your sponsor, let’s try to keep it that way. We’re always going to help our teammates, that’s not going away. But the deal is, if you’re doing something to adjust the race, the way the finishing order of the race would change, don’t do that. So I think you have to be careful to not start nitpicking every little incident on the race track.”

On Monday, NASCAR levied some of the harshest penalties in its history against a Michael Waltrip Racing team it determined had manipulated the Richmond race to help MWR driver Martin Truex Jr. earn the final Wild Card in the Chase. A point deduction knocked Truex out in favor of Ryan Newman, who appeared poised to win the event and claim the final playoff spot until a suspicious spin by Bowyer and a surprise decision to pit by Brian Vickers helped change the course of the race.

That incident, as well as radio communication NASCAR later reviewed involving the Penske Racing team of Joey Logano and the Front Row Motorsports team of David Gilliland — which both field Fords — led France on Friday to take the unprecedented step of adding Jeff Gordon as the 13th driver in the Chase. Gordon lost out to Logano by one point for the final playoff spot determined by the standings, in part because the actions of the MWR drivers allowed Logano to pass two cars on the final lap.

The rule changes announced Saturday were an attempt to prevent a similar scenario from happening again. Although the prohibition on race manipulation gets the most attention — Helton cited as potential examples offering a position in exchange for favor or material benefit, directing a driver to give up a position to the benefit of another driver, intentionally causing a caution, intentionally wrecking a competitor, or intentionally pitting to gain advantage for another competitor — the ban on digital radios may have the most immediate impact on teams.

“We use digital a lot,” Burton said. “The spotter’s role has evolved throughout the years, and the spotter is in constant contact with the crew chief, giving a lot of information to the team that they otherwise did not have. It’s too much chatter on the analog for the driver to be hearing all the time. So it’s a big deal. Taking that away from us will affect us, although we raced for years without it. We can do it. I don’t think it’s a safety issue. But it certainly will change the way we pit. The notice given will be a little bit different, things like that. But we’ll adjust to that.”

NASCAR also discussed changes to its restart procedures that vice president for competition Robin Pemberton said would be detailed in the driver’s meeting prior to Sunday’s race. Questions about race winners potentially jumping final restarts lingered after both the Nationwide and Sprint Cup events last weekend at Richmond.

“It’s time to do something different. There’s too much in question,” Burton said. “We saw the restart last week, which looked like some other restarts we have seen — one restart was a penalty, the other restart wasn’t. They’re right, it’s balls and strikes. The more we can take the officials out of it, the better it’s going to be for everybody. That’s not a slam against anybody, that’s just the way it is. I’m a sports fan, and the least amount the refs are involved, the better it is. The rule they’ll announce Sunday will be, I think, a whole lot easier to watch without them having to get involved.”

The meeting early Saturday afternoon between NASCAR executives and teams afternoon lasted about 20 minutes, and security kept media well away from where it was taking place. Many competitors declined comment, and by all accounts, the tone was firm. “I think it got everyone’s attention,” said Paul Wolfe, crew chief for reigning Sprint Cup champion Brad Keselowski. Brad Daugherty, co-owner of JTG Daugherty Racing, said on the ESPN broadcast of Saturday’s Nationwide event that France was “clearly agitated” and “very stern.”

Understandable, given that France saw it as part of protecting the integrity of the sport.

“Anytime your sport’s credibility is put in question, it’s a hard thing,” Burton said. “I have a lifetime invested in this thing, and it’s been a difficult week for everybody. When people look at what we do and think it’s not fair or it’s not just, that’s a bad thing. And we can’t have that.”

MORE:

READ: Driver previews:
The Chase

READ: Fantasy preview:
The Chase

READ: Race breakdowns:
The Chase

READ: Top 10 Chase moments