Harvick faced a similiar situation in 2008 at MWR, but chose a different route 

Related: Junior not surprised | Logano looking ahead | Bowyer tries to focus

CHICAGO — Kevin Harvick sees the storm of controversy enveloping Michael Waltrip Racing, and the former team owner in him can relate.

MWR was hit with some of the harshest penalties in NASCAR history this week for what the sanctioning body deemed a manipulation of Saturday night’s regular-season finale at Richmond, which ended with Waltrip driver Martin Truex Jr. claiming the final Wild Card berth to the Chase for the Sprint Cup. The ensuing point deduction knocked Truex out of the playoff in favor of Ryan Newman, who seemed en route to securing a berth before the actions of MWR’s Clint Bowyer and Brian Vickers altered the outcome in the final laps.

What if Bowyer hadn’t spun suspiciously to bring out the final caution, and Vickers hadn’t pitted unexpectedly on the final restart to help Truex squeeze in through a tiebreaker? Harvick has an idea, given that he faced a similar situation as a Camping World Truck Series owner in 2008, when two of his entries dueled for the race victory when one of them had a title at stake.

That scenario also involved Newman, who beat Ron Hornaday Jr. at Atlanta in the 22nd of 25 events that season — a season where Hornaday would go on to lose the championship by seven points to Johnny Benson. Up on the pit box that day, Harvick was quizzed by people who wondered why he didn’t order Newman to let Hornaday win. Some of his employees were so incensed over the situation, they quit.

“Ryan passed Ron for the lead, and I stood on the pit box as an owner with employees and people saying, ‘What are you doing? We’re racing for a championship.’ And we wound up losing the championship by that amount of points. And I had a lot of the same media here today asking the same questions — why didn’t you do the right thing and let Ron win that race to win the championship?” Harvick said Thursday during a Chase media event at Navy Pier.

 “You want to do what’s right for your team. (Saturday) was handled very, very, very poorly by the MWR organization as far as management and spotters and all the things that they did. It was kind of, throw it in your face and say, ‘Here’s what we’re doing, people.’ But as a team owner, you have to do what’s right for your team. As a competitor, I can sit here and say I will do anything it takes to win. As owners and NASCAR, they have to protect us from ourselves.”

Welcome to the murky world of teamwork, the seediest side of which seemed to be exposed last weekend at Richmond. And yet, in the decades since multi-car teams have become common, drivers helping one another on the race track has become as routine as a pit stop. Hardly anyone bats an eye when one driver gives a teammate his lap back, or lets him lead a lap to pick up a bonus point. It’s when a much bigger picture becomes involved that people get uncomfortable, and teams make decisions that define where the boundaries of teamwork truly lie.

NASCAR surely helped to define that demarcation point this week, in the form of the historic penalties levied against MWR for race manipulation. And yet, it seems clear that the events of the past week won’t stem teamwork cooperation completely. When the Chase finally begins Sunday at Chicagoland Speedway in Joliet, there will certainly be drivers who will cut teammates breaks on the race track, just as they always have before. The difference is that now, everyone has been reminded of the limits.

“I think we kind of all understand how we’ve done it for years, and what helps and what doesn’t help,” Kasey Kahne said. “In the Chase, all that stuff calms down a little bit anyway. I remember last year trying to lead a lap somewhere, and Jimmie (Johnson) wouldn’t let me lead. I was in the Chase and one point would have helped, but when we get down to it, if we would have finished strong at Homestead, we would have been separated by one point. If you’re better than a teammate … they’re going to work with you. I would hope my teammates would. Other than that, you’ve got to get all the points and everything you can, and you’ve got to pretty much do it on your own.”

It’s nothing new. For years teams have held meetings to hash out plans for restrictor-place races, where help from other drivers can be critical in progressing through the draft. In more recent years, Trevor Bayne was told to dump Jeff Gordon as a drafting partner at Talladega because of a manufacturer conflict. Greg Biffle can remember his first season in NASCAR’s top division, and being lectured by veteran Sterling Marlin. “Listen, that damn car is 16 feet long,” he told the rookie. “All you have to do is give me 16 feet.”

“There are multiple layers to this thing,” Biffle said. “It isn’t like price fixing. In certain situations where you are coming down to the end of this thing … you are asking that lap car to cut you a break. Because some race tracks are really hard to pass. If you catch a car, let’s say Kasey Kahne, and he is running good but he is a lap down, I can’t pass him and I would be saying, ‘Hey, go down and ask Kasey if he will cut me a break and give me a lane so I can get by.’ Now, I am not going to do that if he is on the lead lap, OK? There is nothing wrong with that, and that happens in every form of motorsports.”

Newman recalls the five-car glory days of Biffle’s Roush Fenway team, when “they had the cars lined up that they could give and take, give and take, give and take,” he said. “That’s been a part of our sport for a long time. Manipulating the race to change the outcome by causing a caution or whatever else is an entirely different situation.”

And yet, Kyle Busch — who owns Nationwide and Truck Series teams in addition to his duties as a driver with Joe Gibbs Racing — can understand why the temptation was there. Getting into the Chase, he said, brings with it financial bonuses from both a team’s sponsor and manufacturer that can add up to an additional $3.5 million for the organization.

“That’s a huge, huge financial implication for a team, whether it for the remainder of this year or even for building cars into 2014, because as we know, money buys speed,” Busch said. “And you do anything you can to get yourself in the Chase. It’s not just being a Chase driver or being in the Chase. There are so many other things on the docket as well.”

The MWR example is unquestionably an extreme case. But Dale Earnhardt Jr. — running right behind Bowyer at the moment of his spin, and among the first to claim that it appeared intentional — believes it underscores just how close the bonds between race teams can be. Earnhardt and Johnson share the same shop at Hendrick Motorsports, and he said people would be surprised at how tightly the two units work together.

“People ask all the time whether we share information amongst the teams. You wouldn’t believe how open the books are. I guess people just assume that Chad Knaus is over there hiding everything in this little folder, that none of us can see what Jimmie’s got,” Earnhardt said, referring to Johnson’s crew chief.

“But the book’s wide open. And everything that’s happening between the teams is like flowing. Information is flowing like a damn river. I don’t know why that surprises people. … This (MWR situation) is similar to that. People didn’t think it was happening, or were so surprised that this went on. It definitely has a new twist when it comes to … several different drivers in one team sort of working in one direction, when in the past it’s been one guy with the flat tire that gets the caution, or that’s lost the draft at Talladega and is throwing roll bar padding out the window or something like that. We’ve all done that, or thought about doing it. It’s definitely a new twist on things.”

A twist NASCAR doesn’t want to see again — as evidenced as the penalties levied against MWR. Teamwork will go on, in Sunday’s race at Chicagoland just as it always has. But if anyone wondered where the limit was, a definitive line has now been drawn.

“I believe in this situation, NASCAR stepped in to protect the integrity of the sport,” Harvick said, “by saying, ‘Hey, you guys are out of bounds here. This is not how you handle this, and it’s not right.’”

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Last season’s runner-up looking forward to Sunday’s green flag in search of his first title

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CHICAGO — Where is the line between one teammate helping another? That’s the question asked over and over in the wake of this week’s race manipulation scandal involving Michael Waltrip Racing. Well, the man at the center of it all certainly found a line Thursday, and he drew it at a media event designed to kick off the first week of the Chase for the Sprint Cup.

“I love you guys, I appreciate all you guys and what you do for our sport,” Clint Bowyer told a group of reporters clustered around him at Navy Pier. “I’ve given my interviews. On national television. Over and over and over. I know you guys wrote about it. It’s time to write about the Chase. Sorry.”

A suspicious spin by Bowyer with seven laps remaining Saturday night at Richmond began a series of events that reached its apex earlier this week, when NASCAR levied perhaps the most severe penalty in its history — which knocked MWR’s Martin Truex Jr. out of the Chase in favor of Ryan Newman, the Stewart-Haas Racing driver who appeared en route to winning his way into the playoff until events involving two MWR cars intervened.

Bowyer’s spin and a surprise decision to pit by teammate Brian Vickers on the final restart helped craft a scenario under which Carl Edwards was able to win the race and Joey Logano was able to secure the final Chase spot awarded on the standings, allowing Truex to seize the second Wild Card in a tiebreaker with Newman. Although NASCAR was unable to determine if Bowyer’s spin was intentional, it used radio communications to conclude MWR had manipulated the outcome of the event, and imposed harsh penalties as a result.

Although Truex’s playoff hopes were scuttled, Bowyer’s Chase standing was left unaffected given that the point deduction came from the final regular-season standings. Bowyer went to ESPN headquarters on Tuesday in what was supposed to be part of a Chase promotional effort — and instead became an extended interrogation on the events at Richmond from Saturday.

So when he arrived at Navy Pier on Thursday, Bowyer made it clear he’d had enough.

“I went to ESPN Tuesday and talked about all this, and gave interviews I think for like seven hours on national television,” he said. “The one thing I can tell you is that I’m tired of talking about it.”

Although team owner Michael Waltrip has denied that any conspiracy was afoot, Bowyer has yet to provide a definitive answer on whether he spun his car intentionally to help a teammate. There was no change on that subject Thursday, when Bowyer tried repeatedly to shift the topic to Sunday’s Chase opener at Chicagoland Speedway in Joliet.

“I’ve had a rough few days,” he said. “Probably rougher than I’ve ever had. But I spoke my peace. I did national interviews all day long. I could have just as easily ducked away from all of them and not given an interview … I think for me personally, I’ve got that behind me and I’m ready to race.”

Well, not quite. First there was the matter of an appearance at “Contenders Live,” a Q-and-A in a theatre full of fans who gave Bowyer a decidedly mixed reaction when he was introduced. “What about Gordon!” yelled some spectators who believed Jeff Gordon — also narrowly left on the outside looking in Saturday night — should be in the Chase ahead of the MWR driver at the center of the controversy.

“Be nice,” program host Nicole Briscoe chided the audience at one point. She then proceeded to ask Bowyer a question that included the phrase “a lot of people expected you to — ” and was cut off by a fan interjecting “spin out!” No wonder those who know Bowyer best believe strapping into his No. 15 car for practice Friday will be just what he needs.

“The best thing, I think, in this situation is to get in the race car and to drive the car. That’s going to be the best thing for him. Obviously, the rest of it is going to be something he’s got to deal with, and it’s not going to go away. That’s going to be the hard part,” said Kevin Harvick, Bowyer’s former teammate at Richard Childress Racing.

“I think he comes across as the guy who can’t make it through a cup of coffee without being distracted, but when it comes down to it, he’s got to do it. He can do it. He’s going to be the guy that probably handles it the best. … He’s going to have to be the guy to lead the charge and say the right things and do the right things, because he’s really the only one that’s going to be asked about it. He’s going to have to be the guy who steps up, and he can do it.”

Added Carl Edwards, who comes from the same region of the country as Bowyer: “Clint has always been a really good guy, a really good competitor,” he said. “I’ve raced him in Moberly, Mo., in modifieds 12 or 13 years ago. He’s just a racer. I have a feeling he’ll be fine no matter what happens.”

It can’t hurt that Bowyer has already begun patching things up with Newman, who seemed the most aggrieved party coming out of Saturday night — until NASCAR levied its penalties Monday night that put the SHR driver in the Chase. Newman said he received a phone call from Bowyer soon afterward, and the first thing the MWR driver said was that he was happy Newman was a part of the playoff.

“That’s what I needed to hear,” Newman said.

“I’m past the awkwardness already, and it’s not because of the change in the points or the change of us being in the Chase,” he added. “It’s about the conversation he and I had, and it will stay that way.”

Of course, that doesn’t mean he’s any less suspicious of the situation that originally prevented him from getting in. “To me it was as obvious as somebody walking into a convenience store with their facemask off, looking at the camera and pulling the gun out,” Newman said. “There was nothing hidden, really. … Not that we need to be robbing convenience stores, but in the end, that’s my best analogy.”

In NASCAR’s determination, it was an unforeseen command to Vickers to pit off the final restart that proved the most conclusive piece of evidence. All three MWR drivers were docked 50 points as a result, and the organization was fined a record $300,000. Ty Norris, MWR’s executive vice president as well as Vickers’ spotter, was also suspended indefinitely.

“Obviously, MWR stepped over that line. We were penalized for it,” Bowyer said. “I’ve given this interview on national television. I know all you guys (in the media) saw it, because you all wrote about it. The one thing I’m most looking forward to is getting this Chase started off right. We’ve had a great season. As far as that’s concerned … we know where the line is. The line was crossed, and there were penalties, the largest penalties we’ve ever seen in this sport. So, one more time. Again. We have found the line.”

And now, he can’t wait to find another one — the line drivers take around Chicagoland Speedway.
“I’m looking forward to the weekend,” Bowyer said. “I really am.”

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Radio communication between teams at center of latest drama

CHICAGO — NASCAR has been alerted to another potential issue from Saturday night’s event at Richmond International Raceway, this time involving the teams of Joey Logano and David Gilliland — but hasn’t yet seen enough evidence to hand out any penalties.

On Thursday, NASCAR issued the following statement: "NASCAR is continuing to gather all the facts from last Saturday night’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series event at Richmond International Raceway. NASCAR will have no further comment until all the facts have been examined."

The Associated Press on Wednesday reported radio communications between the No. 38 and No. 22 teams that it alleges may have helped Logano get into the Chase for the Sprint Cup. The Penske Racing driver passed two cars in the waning laps to earn the 10th and final playoff position based on the standings, by one point over Jeff Gordon.

According to the AP, Gilliland slowed on the final lap so Logano could pass him and earn one more point. Logano would have earned the 10th Chase spot without that pass, since he has a race victory on the season and Gordon does not, giving the Penske driver the head-to-head tiebreaker.

NASCAR said in a statement Wednesday that is looking into the latest allegations involving Gilliland and Logano, but no immediate action was forthcoming.

“NASCAR is aware of reports about the No. 22 and No. 38 radio communications at Richmond International Raceway and is looking into it,” the sanctioning body said, “but has yet to see anything in full context that requires any action.”

The latest allegation comes two days after NASCAR hit Michael Waltrip Racing with one of the biggest penalties in the sport’s history for what the sanctioning body deemed a manipulation of the Richmond race to help MWR driver Martin Truex Jr. earn the final Wild Card spot. Those penalties knocked Truex out of the playoff and replaced him with Ryan Newman of Stewart-Haas Racing.

Gordon addressed the matter before an event Wednesday in Kannapolis, NC, to benefit the Jeff Gordon Children’s Foundation.

"I haven’t heard the audio; I heard about it," Gordon said. "So I really don’t want to speculate on it. All I can say is I feel our team deserves to be in this thing based on everything that went on on Saturday night, based on our performance and I’d love to see us in it and if we’re not, it brings on a whole other level of motivation for us to go race for these next 10 weeks."

Penalties to MWR included 50-point deductions in the pre-Chase point totals to drivers Truex, Clint Bowyer and Brian Vickers, a record fine of $300,000 to the organization, probation through the end of the year to all three crew chiefs, and the indefinite suspension of Ty Norris, MWR’s executive vice president as well as Vickers’ spotter.

It was an unexpected command to Vickers to pit in the final laps which convinced NASCAR that something was afoot. Bowyer also suspiciously spun by himself to bring out the final caution with seven laps remaining, which helped keep Newman from winning and clinching the second Wild Card on his own.

The 10-event playoff begins Sunday at Chicagoland Speedway with Matt Kenseth as the top seed.

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Camping World Truck Series rookie will drive the No. 34 Arrowhead Camaro

Jeb Burton will make his NASCAR Nationwide Series  debut in the No. 34 Arrowhead Camaro at Kentucky Speedway on Saturday, September 21. The driver of the No. 4 Arrowhead Chevrolet Silverado for Turner Scott Motorsports (TSM) is currently competing for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series championship.

A native of South Boston, Virginia, the 21-year-old Sunoco Rookie of the Year contender currently sits fourth highest in the NCWTS driver point standings. In just fifteen starts, Burton’s continued to prove himself on the track, earning one win and four Keystone Light Pole Awards so far this season.

"I’m really thankful for this opportunity," said Burton. "I can’t thank Arrowhead enough for their ongoing support. It’s all about the experience and the opportunity. At the beginning of the season, I set a couple of goals for myself and racing in a Nationwide Series race was one of them. My Turner Scott Motorsports team is the hardest working group of guys in the garage, so I’m confident we’ll give it all we’ve got at Kentucky Speedway."

Burton will bring along his current crew chief Mike Hillman Jr. as well as his regular NCWTS team for the NNS race at Kentucky.

"Jeb has shown an incredible amount of dedication this season," said TSM co-owner Harry Scott Jr. "His passion and skill for racing is evident in his performance on the track. Providing Jeb with extra on-track experience is crucial for his career, and I couldn’t be happier to give him an opportunity to race in the NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Kentucky. I’m grateful to have Jeb, along with Arrowhead, as members of our Turner Scott Motorsports family and look forward to growing together."

Be sure to tune in on Saturday, September 21 as Burton makes his NNS debut at Kentucky Speedway. Live coverage begins at 7 p.m. ET on ESPNEWS, followed by the Kentucky 300 at 7:30 p.m. ET

 

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The alliance includes technology sharing, engineering, research and development provided to FRR’s No. 78 Chevrolet from RCR

Richard Childress Racing and Furniture Row Racing have agreed to continue their successful technical alliance in NASCAR Sprint Cup Series competition.

The alliance includes technology sharing, engineering, research and development provided to FRR’s No. 78 Chevrolet from RCR. The partnership, which started in 2010, also includes FRR utilizing the highly reliable and powerful engines of ECR Engines.

This season, the No. 78 Furniture Row Chevrolet driven by Kurt Busch qualified for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Championship on the strength of one pole, eight top-five and 13 top-10 finishes. Busch has eight front-row starts this season, which is the most he has earned in any year of his career.

"Barney Visser (FRR owner) is one of the finest and most committed men I have ever dealt with in this sport," said Richard Childress, president and CEO of Richard Childress Racing. "He has brought a lot to this sport and it’s great to renew this partnership.

"I’m looking forward to working with him and the strong team he has assembled out in Colorado. Seeing them make the Chase for the first time this year shows how successful this partnership has become. I believe we’ll have similar success in 2014 and beyond, and we’re going to do our best to make that happen."

Based in Denver, FRR started racing in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series in 2005.

"We are excited to continue our engineering and technical alliance with RCR, which has a storied history as one of the leading racing organizations in NASCAR," said Joe Garone, Furniture Row Racing general manager. "The foundation that we’ve built together over the past three years and the team camaraderie that has been established during this time have resulted in a unique and successful partnership.

"The FRR and RCR alliance is dedicated in continuing the pursuit of reaching new performance levels in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series."

 

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Ground-breaking five-year partnership solidifies future TUDOR United SportsCar Championship

The International Motor Sports Association (IMSA) announced today that TUDOR — an innovative and retro-chic brand — has been named entitlement partner for the next five years of what now will be known as the TUDOR United SportsCar Championship. The IMSA announcement this morning precedes TUDOR’s official U.S. launch this evening during New York Fashion Week.

“The 2014 season will feature the rebirth and revitalization of sports car racing in North America, and therefore it’s the ideal time to introduce a premium watch brand like TUDOR to our U.S. fans and partners, as well as further solidify our relationship with the international motorsports community,” said IMSA CEO Ed Bennett. “This is a natural progression of the fantastic relationship we’ve cherished for decades with our partners at Rolex.

“In TUDOR, we have an optimal match for the Championship, as its brand attributes align with ours, specifically its Grantour collection that was created for sports car aficionados.”

The TUDOR United SportsCar Championship extends ties of the prestigious Swiss watchmaking market to premier U.S. sports car racing dating back to 1959, when NASCAR Founder and IMSA Co-Founder Bill France Sr. and Rolex formed their initial relationship. Rolex will continue to serve as Title Sponsor of the annual Rolex 24 At Daytona, and Official Timepiece at Sebring International Raceway and the Mobil 1 Twelve Hours of Sebring Fueled by Fresh From Florida.

“For years TUDOR has been inspired by motorsports,” said TUDOR Brand Manager Russell Kelly. “This new partnership between TUDOR and IMSA allows us to elevate our commitment to sports car racing. This is the perfect alignment between partners dedicated to performance and precision.”

In 1926, Rolex founder Hans Wilsdorf registered “The Tudor” brand and established Montres Tudor SA in 1946. From 2009 to 2011, TUDOR had a partnership with Porsche Motorsports as Timing Partner, and two years later, it began its collaboration with Ducati as global Timing Partner. Its affiliation with the FIA World Endurance Championship — which includes a race in Austin, Texas, alongside the American Le Mans Series race later this month — commenced this year.

“Not only do TUDOR’s brand attributes of performance, prestige and elegance align with the nature and character of endurance sports car racing, but clearly, we are the only form of motorsport in which the race length is determined by time, not distance,” said IMSA President Scott Atherton. “Based on our mutual strengths, a watch and timing partner is a superb match for our series. We’re pleased that TUDOR recognizes that our passionate fans are absolutely the right clientele for them.”

The inaugural TUDOR United SportsCar Championship will debut next January with the 52nd Rolex 24 At Daytona. The complete 2014 schedule will be announced at a later date.

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Kyle Busch showcases the 2014 Toyota Tundra to NASCAR Contenders Live fans

CHICAGO –Toyota’s 2014 entry into the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series will have a new look next season.

Longtime Toyota driver Kyle Busch helped unveil the new model year Tundra that will hit the track next season, showing off a blunt, redesigned nose to fans and media Thursday at NASCAR Contenders Live, a fan-driven event at Chicago’s Navy Pier. The debut was another step in NASCAR’s push to achieve a more similar look to automakers’ road-going counterparts, but also a step toward greater brand identity.

The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series made that step this season with the advent of the sixth generation (Gen-6) stock car, which has broken speed records 14 times in Coors Light Pole Qualifying this year. Thursday, it was the tailgate tour’s turn.

“I’m really excited about it,” said Busch, who has 33 career truck wins and brought Toyota its first triumph in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series. “I think I’ve been a little bit of the face of Toyota because I’ve run so many races across all three divisions of NASCAR with the trucks, Nationwide and Sprint Cup series. For me, I love driving the trucks, they’re a lot of fun, we’re excited about bringing them to Chicago this weekend and being behind the wheel, but most importantly, Daytona 2014 driving this bad boy right here and seeing if we can get a win.”

Les Unger, the National Motorsports Manager for Toyota, said that the 2014 street model Tundra was not radically different from its production predecessor, but that new styling cues in the bumper and grille help distinguish it. The race truck, though, is a whole new beast.

Having the team’s winningest driver in NASCAR to help the new Toyota make its first appearance was a pleasant combination of circumstances.

“His team, Kyle Busch Motorsports, as well as two of our other teams, ThorSport and Red Horse Racing, they’ve all helped build the first prototype race truck and this is really the first opportunity we’ve had to put the vehicle on display,” Unger said. “In terms of having Kyle here with part of the Chase, what better spokesperson because obviously, he runs the truck series, runs Nationwide and runs Cup, so he’s pretty much a natural. It worked out pretty well for us.”

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Going into the Chase, Edwards focuses his efforts on staying ahead of the contenders 

CHICAGO — One of the more unlikely championship contenders for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup has been in this situation before. Yet he’s laid low and steered clear of the spotlight despite residing in the upper tier of the points race for the bulk of the season. 

After Saturday night’s regular-season finale at Richmond International Raceway, he emerged in first place in the Sprint Cup standings before the points were reset for the 10-race playoffs.

Few people were more surprised than Carl Edwards to see his No. 99 atop the heap.

“Yeah, I am under my own radar,” Edwards said Thursday during NASCAR Chase Media Day at Chicago’s Navy Pier. “We got done with the Richmond race and I told the guys on Monday that I looked up at the scoreboard and I didn’t understand what the order was. Someone told me that was the points. They said I won the points for the first 26 points. I thought that couldn’t be true, that we weren’t that fast. It turns out we are. 

“I would say that we are under the radar, and to say that is an understatement. I think we can do it. I feel really good about it.” 

Edwards’ triumph in last weekend’s Federated Auto Parts 400 was his second of 2013, but his first since the second race of the season, at Phoenix in March. With the win and dramatically improved performance over the last three weeks, Edwards was brimming with confidence on the eve of the first Chase race weekend at Chicagoland Speedway in nearby Joliet, Ill.

With all the hoopla and hubbub over team orders, manipulating race results and heavy penalties this week, it was easy to lose sight of Edwards’ return to title candidacy one year after missing the Chase and two years after finishing as the runner-up to eventual champion Tony Stewart on a tiebreaker. It also shifted the focus off the Richmond race’s final restart, where Edwards beat race leader Paul Menard to the start-finish line after Menard spun his much-older tires in an attempt to get going.

Edwards said since he lined up for the restart to Menard’s right, he could hear the leader’s throttle response through his header pipes through his driver door safety net. When Menard slipped after restarting the race, Edwards said he had a tenth of a second to decide whether to accelerate and cross the line first or slow to allow Menard to regain grip and risk stacking up the field.

Edwards chose the former.

“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,” said Edwards, who was not penalized. “What if he had 100 laps on the tires and not grip and the whole field had four? Are we all supposed to go at his pace? I don’t know the answer to that. I think that either, not just as the second-place guy, but as the leader it puts everyone in a tough position.”

In the wake of the Michael Waltrip Racing penalties that grew from the Richmond finish, the controversy recalled a slightly similar issue regarding helping teammates involving Edwards earlier this season. As Roush Fenway Racing teammate Greg Biffle drove to his lone victory of the year at Michigan International Speedway in June, he opted not to fall back to assist Edwards in clearing a piece of debris from his grille in the late stages, prompting Edwards to say of Biffle, “He ain’t our teammate.”

While their Michigan flap certainly didn’t reach the scope or intent of MWR’s actions at Richmond, it did help to bring the longtime Roush stablemates closer together, thanks to a productive talk between Edwards and Biffle the following weekend at Sonoma Raceway.

“It has strengthened our organization,” Biffle said. “We understand each other and respect one another. We go out of our way to try to help one another. … I think that was a watershed moment in Roush Fenway that would make a difference long term. It is good it happened when it did, where it did and how it did.”

The turnaround didn’t happen in an instant after the Sonoma heart-to-heart as Edwards still lagged in performance. As he continued to accumulate consistent if not spectacular finishes to stay either second or third in points from April to September, Edwards still wasn’t contending for race wins, allowing frustration to mount during the midseason months. 

“That was not really a fun time because it is actually hard to complain about your performance when you are second in points but we knew we were not fast,” Edwards said. “There were guys way faster than us and we’ve turned that corner. It is better now. It is kind of hard to explain to people when they say, ‘Hey great, you are second in points.’ And you are like, ‘Yeah, but if the Chase started today we would be 10th.’ We aren’t in that position now, so that is good.”

Nothing typifies the shift in momentum for Edwards like the last three weeks. While engine failure derailed his shot at Bristol and a run-in with Jeff Gordon plus unfortunate pit timing stymied him at Atlanta, Edwards’ No. 99 Ford was running up front, leading laps and inserting its car number into the conversation for victories.

Despite the uptick in performance, Edwards couldn’t pinpoint any one factor in the improvement. He just hopes it continues.

“No, that is the interesting thing; it hasn’t been one thing,” Edwards said. “It is pretty interesting, when things start going bad, people can either split up and point fingers or rally together and work. (Roush Fenway general manager) Robbie Reiser, (owner) Jack Roush and all our guys, they are not guys that are going to jump up and down when they win and throw their hats when they lose. They will just keep working. We have hard-working guys, and that work is paying off. It seems like it is coming at the right time.”

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Says he felt bad for Truex Jr., other drivers, but NASCAR had to take action

Related: Harvick: Teamwork has its limits | Logano looking ahead | Bowyer tries to focus

CHICAGO — Dale Earnhardt Jr. took his name out of the running for head honcho of NASCAR Thursday, a decision he said was based in part on the collective fallout of this past weekend’s race at Richmond.
 
"I definitely don’t need to be running this sport," Earnhardt Jr., clad in his white and red driver’s uniform, said.
 
Such talk from the sport’s most popular driver — No. 1 at the box office and souvenir hauler — no doubt has them breathing a little easier in Daytona Beach.
 
His remark was only partly in jest. Earnhardt Jr. has been track president for a day (Daytona, circa 2004), but isn’t ready to give up his racing career.
 
It’s been an eventful week for NASCAR. Questions about the finish at Richmond, penalties against Michael Waltrip Racing that resulted in a change to the 12-team Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup field, and inquiries into possible collusion between Penske Racing and Front Row Motorsports have dominated headlines.

This weekend’s Geico 400 at Chicagoland Speedway kicks off the 10-race charge to the title. On Thursday, much of the focus was elsewhere.
 
"I wouldn’t want to be in that situation," the Hendrick Motorsports driver said of the ruling body. "I don’t think I could handle it as well as they did.
 
"As much as everybody’s got an … opinion on what they would have done … I don’t know that I could handle those types of situations because it’s not been a fun week for them."
 
Earnhardt Jr. was the only competitor sporting his workday clothing. All 12 drivers present at the Navy Pier for this year’s Chase media day were wearing their fire-retardant uniforms.
 
Anticipating a heated line of questioning from the media? Not quite.
 
Actually, it was for an updated photo of those in the Chase. Last Saturday’s Richmond photo — captured on stage following the race — no longer passed muster once Martin Truex Jr. got the boot and Ryan Newman was added to the lineup.
 
The fan response to the week’s proceedings, particularly what transpired at Richmond, caught Earnhardt Jr. by surprise.
 
"I’m surprised that this surprised so many people," he said. "People didn’t think it was happening or were so surprised that this went on."
 
It’s a new twist to a familiar occurrence. Playing fast and loose with the rules has typically been a one-driver endeavor.
 
"In the past it’s been one guy with the flat tire that gets the caution, or that’s lost the draft at Talladega and is throwing roll bar padding out the window or something like that," Earnhardt Jr. said. "We’ve all done that or thought about doing it. It’s definitely a new twist on things."
 
Did NASCAR do the right thing with its penalties to MWR? Earnhardt Jr. said he isn’t sure. What was important, he said, was that they took action, something he’d like see more of in the future.
 
"It’s important for them to govern," he said. "We need them to make themselves known and they need to be the boss. We need to know that they’re there."
 
What about those involved, implicated or impacted by what has transpired? He said he feels bad for all of them — MWR drivers Clint Bowyer, Truex Jr. and Brian Vickers. Hendrick Teammate Jeff Gordon, too.
 
Truex Jr., once a teammate when the two were paired at Dale Earnhardt Inc., "probably had no idea what was going on," Earnhardt Jr. said.
 
"You feel bad for Jeff (Gordon) because he had worked his way all night long to get into a (Chase) position.
 
"I feel bad for Clint. I know Clint and I know what kind of person he is. I feel bad for him because he was part of something that is not a good reflection of his personality. It’s unfortunate. But he’ll be fine.
 
"It’s a unique thing. It’s a very fascinating situation."
 
Fascinating, yes. But similar to other things that have transpired in the sport, it has a limited shelf life.
 
Chicagoland and the Chase beckon.

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Logano contends that his pass of David Gilliland didn’t affect outcome of Chase field

Related: Full Chase coverage | Chase driver previews

CHICAGO — Joey Logano said he isn’t concerned about NASCAR’s on-going review of last Saturday night’s Sprint Cup Series race at Richmond International Raceway. Instead, he said, he is “focused on trying to win Chicago right now. It’s not a distraction to me at all … I’m just here to race.”

It was reported Wednesday that NASCAR was investigating scanner conversation involving the No. 22 Penske Racing team of Logano and the No. 38 Front Row Motorsports team of David Gilliland.

In a statement issued Thursday morning, NASCAR officials said the sanctioning body is “continuing to gather all the facts” from the Sept. 7 event and “will have no further comment until all the facts have been examined.”

Logano passed Gilliland in the final stages of the race, a move that Logano contends was not the determining factor that allowed him to earn a position in this year’s Chase For The Sprint Cup.

“What I look at is if we didn’t pass 38 car, we’re still 10th in points and still got bonus points (for a previous win),” Logano said during the annual Chase media day at the Navy Pier. “So it has no (bearing) in the outcome of where we are right now. I don’t look at it as being a big deal at all.

“That stuff that happens week in and week out with spotters. They’re up there communicating back and forth, trying to make deals, ‘hey help me out here, I’ll help you out here, let’s work together.’ That happens all the time.”

According to an Associated Press report, Gilliland slowed on the white-flag lap, a move that allowed Logano to improve his finishing position from 23rd to 22nd. Radio scanner conversations from the No. 38 team referenced no conversations from Penske officials or its drivers in the AP report.

Penske Racing team president Tim Cindric, appearing on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio Wednesday evening, said team owner Roger Penske “is not involved in trying to manipulate the outcome of a race or what have you.

“In fact, the first time Roger heard any of this stuff was (Wed.) afternoon,” he said. “…What I’ve seen has been totally blown out of proportion by a radio conversation that Penske didn’t have anything to do with."

Penske “has spent his lifetime creating the integrity that he has and the organization has,” Cindric said. “It’s difficult to listen when people challenge that.  … The facts are there was no radio communication on our side.”

Logano did benefit from the actions of Michael Waltrip drivers Brian Vickers and Clint Bowyer at Richmond, but said what those drivers did or didn’t do doesn’t affect his feeling that his team deserves to be among this year’s 12 Chase participants.

“One win, eight top-fives and 13 or 14 top-10s,” Logano said of his team’s second-half record. “If you look at those numbers, that’s every bit of a top three or four (points position) this half of the season.

“I don’t feel bad being in the Chase at all; we deserve to be in if you look at those numbers.

“We’re in the Chase and we’re here to race. We’ll take the bonus points (earned by virtue of his win and finishing 10th or better in points through Richmond). We won the race (earlier this year at Michigan) so we deserve them.”

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