Mike Bliss will ride in the No. 51 entry from Phoenix Racing

Bobby Labonte will miss Sunday’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Atlanta Motor Speedway after suffering three broken ribs in a bicycle accident Wednesday morning near his home in Trinity, N.C.
 
Labonte, the 2000 series champion in his 21st season of racing at NASCAR’s highest level, suffered no other injuries in the accident, according to a release from his marketing agency. He was held in a local hospital overnight for observation but was released from the hospital on Thursday morning.

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Labonte will be replaced by Mike Bliss in the No. 51 Phoenix Racing Chevrolet this weekend at what has historically been the Texas native’s best track. Of Labonte’s 21 Sprint Cup wins, six have come on the 1.54-mile Georgia speedway.
 
Earlier this season, Labonte’s streak of consecutive Sprint Cup starts ended at 704 when he was replaced by AJ Allmendinger in the No. 47 JTG Daugherty Racing Toyota at Kentucky Speedway in June. Since then, he has missed one other race (Aug. 11 at Watkins Glen).
 
Sunday’s race was scheduled to be Labonte’s second start in the No. 51 Chevrolet. His only other start in the James Finch-owned car was a last-place finish at Michigan in June after an early crash with Jeff Gordon, the active driver with the longest current streak of consecutive Sprint Cup starts — 713.

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Get a sneak peek at the new looks for Atlanta, Canada

SPRINT CUP SERIES PAINT SCHEMES

Jamie McMurray will drive the No. 1 Bad Boy Buggies Chevrolet.

SHOP: Jamie McMurray die-casts

Austin Dillon will drive the No. 33 Advocare Chevrolet.

David Ragan will drive the No. 34 Racetrac Hot Boiled Peanuts by Peanut Patch Ford.

SHOP: David Ragan die-casts

AJ Allmendinger will drive the No. 47 Scott Products Toyota.

SHOP: AJ Allmendinger die-casts

Dale Earnhardt Jr. will drive the No. 88 National Guard "Race to Achieve" Chevrolet.

SHOP: Dale Earnhardt Jr. die-casts

NATIONWIDE SERIES PAINT SCHEMES

Austin Dillon will drive the No. 3 Advocare Cherry Spark Chevrolet.

SHOP: Austin Dillon die-casts

Trevor Bayne will drive the No. 6 Cargill/Sam’s Club Ford.

SHOP: Trevor Bayne die-casts

Chris Buescher will drive the No. 16 Roush Fenway Racing Ford.

Justin Allgaier will drive the No. 31 Wolfpack Energy Services Chevrolet.

Kevin Harvick will drive the No. 33 Bad Boy Buggies Chevrolet.

SHOP: Kevin Harvick die-casts

CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES PAINT SCHEMES

Ron Hornaday Jr. will drive the No. 9 NTS Motorsports Chevrolet.

Max Papis will drive the No. 14 Sport Clips Chevrolet.

Joey Coulter will drive the No. 18 Monster Energy Toyota.

Ross Chastain will driver the No. 19 Reese Towpower/Parts Source Ford. 

Brennan Newberry will drive the No. 24 Qore-24 Chevrolet.

James Buescher will drive the No. 31 Motomaster Eliminator Chevrolet.

Alex Guenette will drive the No. 39 MI IUIMITEES Motorsports Chevrolet.

German Quiroga will drive the No. 77 Otter Box Toyota.

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Vital stats for the AdvoCare 500

Track: Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Ga. is 1.54 miles, paved surface, 24 degree banking in all turns. Banking in the frontstretch and backstretch is 5 degrees. The frontstretch is 2,332 feet and the backstretch is 1,800 feet.

Time/TV: AdvoCare 500, 7:30 p.m. ET, Sunday, Sept. 1. TV: ESPN (coverage starts  at 7 p.m. ET), Radio: PRN; SiriusXM NASCAR Radio, Channel 90.

Trailblazers: The first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Atlanta was won by Fireball Roberts from the pole on July 31, 1960.

0 times has a driver swept the weekend at Atlanta across all three NASCAR national series.

0.006 is the closest margin of victory since the advent of electronic scoring in a Sprint Cup Series race at Atlanta. Kevin Harvick defeated Jeff Gordon by this margin in the March 11, 2001 race. It is the fifth closest finish scored by electronic scoring in the Sprint Cup Series. 

2 drivers posted their first career wins at Atlanta. Kevin Harvick (March 11, 2001) and Carl Edwards (March 20, 2005) were the two drivers to earn their first career victories at Atlanta.

3 female drivers have competed at Atlanta: Janet Guthrie, Shawna Robinson and Danica Patrick.

3 is also the number of times there has been a green-white-checkered finish at Atlanta, with the most recent coming in last year’s race.

5 times Sprint Cup Series qualifying at Atlanta has been cancelled due to weather conditions. The most recent occurance of this was in the fall of 2010. 

6 is the number of consecutive Coors Light poles that Ryan Newman won at Atlanta from the spring of 2003 through 2005.

6 is also the number of times Bobby Labonte has won at Atlanta, the most among active drivers. Jeff Gordon is second among active drivers with five wins at Atlanta.

7is the number of Coors Light poles that Buddy Baker and Ryan Newman have won at Atlanta. That total is tied for the most among Sprint Cup drivers.

7is also the number of times that the winner of a Sprint Cup Series race at Atlanta has come from a starting position outside the top 20.

7.100is the average starting position for Ryan Newman at Atlanta, the best among active drivers.

9 times Dale Earnhardt won at Atlanta, the most all-time among drivers.

11 drivers have posted consecutive wins at Atlanta with Jimmie Johnson being the most recent to accomplish the feat with a sweep in 2007.

11.095 is Jimmie Johnson’s average finishing position at Atlanta, the best among active drivers.

12 is the number of Sprint Cup Series wins that Wood Brothers Racing has at Atlanta, which is the most among teams.

14 times the winner of a Sprint Cup Series race in Atlanta has come from the pole position. Kasey Kahne was the last to do it in 2006.

15 times the winner of a Sprint Cup Series race in Atlanta has started in the fifth position. The most recent to win from this spot was Jeff Gordon in 2011.

22 is the age of the youngest Sprint Cup Series winner at Atlanta. Kyle Busch was 22 years, 10 months and 7 days old when he won at the track on March 9, 2008.

24 is the age of the youngest Coors Light pole winner at Atlanta. Terry Labonte was 24 years, 3 months and 27 days old when he won the pole on March 15, 1981.

26 times the winner of a Sprint Cup Series race in Atlanta has come from the front row.
39 was the starting position for Bobby Labonte when he won the fall race at Atlanta in 2001. This is the deepest starting position for any winner at Atlanta.

43 different Sprint Cup Series have won at Atlanta.

46 is the total number of drivers to win Coors Light poles at Atlanta.

51 is the age of the oldest winner at Atlanta. Morgan Shepherd was 51 years, 5 months and 8 days old when he won at Atlanta on March 20, 1993.

53 is the age of the oldest pole winner at Atlanta. Harry Gant was 53 years, 10 months and 4 days old when he won the pole on November 14, 1993.

55 is the number of starts at Atlanta for Terry Labonte. That total is the most among active drivers. Labonte has never visited Victory Lane in those 55 starts.

60 times the winner of a Sprint Cup Series race in Atlanta has come from a top-five starting position.
65 is the number of starts at Atlanta for Richard Petty, which is the most all-time among drivers.

105 Sprint Cup Series races have been held at Atlanta since 1960.  Up until the 2011 season, there had been two races per year except in 1961. This is the third straight season with just one race.

133.870 is the speed at which Fireball Roberts won the inaugural Coors Light pole at Atlanta in 1960.

164 Sprint Cup Series races have been held at 12 different tracks in Georgia. Augusta International Speedway, Lakewood Speedway and Savannah Speedway are the only tracks to host 10 or more races besides Atlanta.

176 drivers in NASCAR national series history have their home state recorded as Georgia.

197.478 is the track qualifying record set by Geoffrey Bodine on Nov. 15, 1997.
540 drivers have competed in at one least one Sprint Cup Series event race at Atlanta. 363 drivers have competed in more than one.

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Fellows will be trading his race helment for his "Mayor of Mosports" hat this weekend

Ron Fellows held the unofficial title of “Mayor of Mosport” as a hometown favorite among drivers well before he took the official title of track co-owner two years ago.

On the cusp of the 2.459-mile road course hosting its first NASCAR national series event, the Windsor, Ontario native now finds his mayoral duties to be much broader.

“Yeah, every once in a while I guess you’ve got to stop and smell the coffee,” Fellows said Wednesday during a NASCAR teleconference. “But yes, we’ve made a lot of improvements, but I think we’ll all rest a lot easier when we get to Sunday night and hopefully it’s a great weekend, we get great attendance, and I think that’s when we’ll relax. Yes, we’ve come a long way when you look at the facility, but we want to continue to grow and move forward.”

The big leap forward comes this weekend when Canadian Tire Motorsports Park — as Mosport is now known — hosts the first international event for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, Sunday’s Chevrolet Silverado 250 (2 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1). In breaking new ground at the Bowmanville, Ontario track, the series also marks its return to road course racing for the first time in 13 years.

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Fellows was in the field for the truck series’ most recent road-course event, finishing third behind race winner Greg Biffle and runner-up Kurt Busch at Watkins Glen International on June 24, 2000. In the years that have followed, he’s seen the level of competition among NASCAR regulars on road circuits dramatically improve.

“In the first Cup race I did in I believe it was ’98 in the Caterpillar car for Buz McCall, you could count on one hand pretty much who you were going to have to race against,” Fellows said. “Now you look at certainly in the Cup grid, I’ve been in that two-dozen group, and in Cup it’s easily 26, 28 guys capable. There’s just a lot more emphasis put on the racing in general, whether it’s a road course, a short track, superspeedway, or mile-and-a-half. It just doesn’t seem to matter. If you’re good, you’re going to be good at everything.

“I think that showed up a lot at the Nationwide race, as well, at Mid-Ohio. Yeah, we had a lot of practice; yes, the regulars got an opportunity to really do their thing; but it was painfully obvious that those guys are really good racers. And that’s the way it is now. There’s no weekends off, and a great racer is a great racer.”

When the green flag falls Sunday, Ron Hornaday Jr. will be the only driver in the field who has previously competed in a road-course event in the series. The 55-year-old veteran has done so with a modest dose of success, tying Joe Ruttman for the all-time series lead with three road-course wins.

Now nearly four years removed from the most recent of his record four truck championships and almost 14 years since his most recent road race in the series, Hornaday has his sights set on enjoying the moment, all while showing the road-race newbies a thing or two.

“The trucks haven’t seen it in a while, and it’s a lot of fun,” Hornaday said. “… Now going up to Canada is going to really make it special because we know the fans up therejust love racing. The trucks really put on a great show. When they run over the ripple strips, how heavy the trucks are, the tires come off the ground, just the sparks off the exhaust. It’s just exciting to go to a road course.”

Four Camping World Truck Series regulars — defending champion James Buescher, Jeb Burton, Ty Dillon and Chad Hackenbracht — will be entered in the Sunday preliminary NASCAR Canadian Tire Series event, all as a means to gain more track time. When they get there, they’ll find a circuit that resembles the fast, sweeping nature of Watkins Glen more than it does the intricate, technical Sonoma Raceway.

Series leader Matt Crafton, who carries a 49-point lead over Buescher into the weekend, also took the opportunity to test a Canadian Tire Series car at the track earlier this season. His report from the Great White North: A tough, fast course with little margin for error.

“That track is really, really cool,” Crafton said post-race at Bristol Motor Speedway. “Really look forward to going there. All we’ve got to do is keep all four tires on the black stuff, not on the green stuff — just stay on the blacktop and we’ll be all right.”

The challenges for Fellows will be different this time around at Mosport, just more than an hour northeast of his Toronto-area stomping grounds. Instead of searching for passing zones and getting the most out of a race car this weekend, he’ll be wearing his mayor/promoter hat — watching the weather, hoping for solid attendance and making sure everything goes smoothly.

“There were a few opportunities to race, but I just didn’t feel like it’s the right thing to do,” said Fellows, 53. “I’ve got more races behind me than in front of me, and it seemed like that inside the weekend I’d probably be thinking more about things relative to the promoter side of it rather than the racer side of it, so that was a relatively easy decision to make, and let’s see what some of these young guns can do.”

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"Zone tread" technology could be a game-changer down the line

It may not be as significant as the switch from bias-ply to radial tires, but Goodyear’s new “zone tread” technology is expected to have a huge impact in NASCAR.
 
How huge?
 
Goodyear officials aren’t claiming the technology will radically alter competition on the race track, but at least one spokesman for the supplier says it could be a game-changer “down the road.”
 
“I think we’re really just opening the door,” Greg Stucker, director of race tires sales for Goodyear, said on Aug. 18. “As we … learn a little bit more, learn how it behaves on the race track, get feedback from teams, I think it will give us some opportunities.”
 
The technology consists of combining two different compounds across the tire’s surface – a harder inside shoulder and softer outside area – to create a product that can withstand the tremendous stress of race conditions but also provide ample grip.
 
The new tire will debut this weekend when the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series travels to Atlanta Motor Speedway to compete in the Sept. 1 AdvoCare500.

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The inside of the right-side tires will feature the same compound used at Michigan International Speedway this year while the outside will consist of the compound used in recent Atlanta races.
 
Because of weight distribution and stress loads, the inside portion of a right-side tire endures the most abuse during a race. A tire that is too hard has far less grip and won’t wear as quickly as one that features a softer compound.
 
However, too soft of a compound can lead to excessive wear and blistering from the heat generated, or failures from the stress.
 
Having a more durable compound on the inside third of the tire, and a more tractive compound on the outside two-thirds, Stucker said,“enables us to keep a reasonable level of grip while still protecting the vulnerable part of the tire.”
 
AMS, at 1.54 miles, is one of the fastest tracks on which NASCAR competes. Geoffrey Bodine set the current track qualifying record of 197.478 mph in 1997. During a recent tire test at Atlanta, Dale Earnhardt Jr. posted an unofficial speed of 188.69 mph.
 
The track surface, which hasn’t been repaved since the late 1990s, is one of the most abrasive on the circuit.
 
The combination of speed and abrasiveness has made coming up with an adequate tire a daunting task for Goodyear officials in the past.
 
Stucker said there should not be any differences in wear across the surface of the new tire during the course of a run.
 
“We’re not talking about running Martinsville and Daytona (compounds) opposite one another,” he said. “We’re running two compounds that are pretty similar.”
 
The new tire has been tested twice at Atlanta, as well as at several other venues. Thirteen drivers participated in a recent confirmation test at AMS, including defending Sprint Cup champion Brad Keselowski.
 
“Unfortunately, it’s been brought in as a necessity rather than as an option,” Keselowski said of the tire, “because last year Atlanta’s tire with the car we ran was basically incompatible to the track and we had every kind of issue we could have. So that forced the Goodyear development cycle to be expedited, which is never ideal.”
 
It will be “trial by fire” he said of the tire’s Atlanta debut.
 
“The test was good and that’s great, but it’s very, very important that that tire succeeds because it’s the future of our sport, and it’s the solution to the lack of side-by-side racing that we have in the sense of what Goodyear is able to provide. It’s a really, really important weekend for our sport.”
 
Roush Fenway Racing’s Carl Edwards also participated in the test. While he said he feels a softer tire and less downforce “would be the better move,” he understands what Goodyear is trying to accomplish.
 
“Goodyear is in a box and they’ve got to make a small contact patch not come apart with the extreme load in these cars and I think they’re doing a good job with that,” he said.
 
For now, the new zone tread technology will only be used for tires at Atlanta, although Kansas Speedway is a likely candidate for the application.
 
“Nothing for sure has been decided yet,” Stucker said. “But we’re looking at any place that we’d like to be more tractive but we’re kind of on the edge durability wise. This race car is definitely fast, particularly on the mile and a halves and on up. So I think any race track like that is a candidate for sure.”

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FOX, Turner and ESPN fully expected to be back next year

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. – “Despite recent reports to the contrary, nothing substantive has been presented to NASCAR regarding broadcast partners’ plans to alter our TV agreement in 2014. We’re very happy with our current broadcast partners and fully expect and are excited to be back with FOX, Turner and ESPN next year. These types of discussions happen regularly across the sports television landscape, very rarely resulting in changes to a media rights agreement.”

–Statement from NASCAR Vice President of Broadcasting and Production Steve Herbst on 2014 Broadcast Partners

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Chevrolet Silverado 250 (Sunday, 2 p.m. ET, FOX Sports 1)

Entry list for NASCAR Camping World Truck Series’ Chevrolet Silverado 250

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Putting his success with Furniture Row in the past, Busch now must make history with SHR

Related: Move brings Busch full circle | SHR’s passionate team | Busch’s move official

KANNAPOLIS, N.C. — In theory, it sounds like a heartwarming idea — stay with the smaller team you’ve helped to reach new heights, and build it into an organization capable of unseating the sport’s traditional powers. Kurt Busch’s run with Furniture Row Racing has been the kind of underdog story everyone loves, the tale of a program that might be at a disadvantage in terms of manpower and money, but has made up for it through chemistry and grit.

It’s understandable, then, why some might have thought he should stay. The reality is that it was never a choice to begin with.

That much became clear Tuesday, when Busch walked onto a stage at Stewart-Haas Racing wearing a golf shirt emblazoned with the insignia of the team which will employ him beginning next year. After tumbling down the career ladder following his nasty split with Penske Racing following the 2011 campaign, the 2004 champion of the Sprint Cup Series has worked his way back up. Next season SHR promises to feature a trio of serious title contenders in Tony Stewart, Kevin Harvick and Busch, all of them outfitted with engines and chassis obtained from Hendrick Motorsports.

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That’s a powerhouse if there ever was one, and we haven’t even mentioned Danica Patrick. SHR offered a championship pedigree, a team stocked with proven race-winners, and a direct pipeline to the best organization in NASCAR. Furniture Row offered promise. When we’re talking about a driver of Busch’s caliber, that’s simply no contest, regardless of what emotions might come into play.

No question, Busch certainly has a fondness for the guys at Furniture Row, just as he developed a fondness for the crewmen at Phoenix Racing the year before that. Those are the people who helped Busch reclaim his career, whose equipment allowed him to remind everyone just how spectacular he can be behind the wheel, whose programs made Tuesday possible. Busch has embraced his experience with the Denver-based No. 78 team, visiting Broncos training camp, throwing out the first pitch at a Rockies game, spearheading the organization’s first push for a bid to the Chase for the Sprint Cup.

But it would have been unrealistic to expect him to stay there long-term. That’s not a knock on Busch or Furniture Row, just as him leaving Phoenix Racing late last season wasn’t a knock on the No. 51 team. It’s the way of the sports world. Sure, the notion of him staying to help build something in Colorado is a charming one. It’s also fantastical. Competitors at the highest level want to win, and they want to be in an environment most conducive to winning, which is why they almost always make a jump like the one Busch is making to SHR in 2014.

Because it’s stratified much like auto racing, college sports offers an apt parallel. Brian Kelly builds a contending football program at Cincinnati, but leaves for Notre Dame. His successor, Butch Jones, keeps it going and moves on to Tennessee. Dave Doeren earns a Bowl Championship Series berth with Northern Illinois, and parlays that into a job at North Carolina State. Andy Enfield is the darling of the NCAA basketball tournament with Florida Gulf Coast, and then the head coach at Southern California. Brad Stevens seems set at Butler until the phone rings, and it’s the Boston Celtics on the other end.

Ninety-nine times out of a hundred, they go. They have to. Sports careers are relatively short, and windows of opportunity relatively narrow. Opportunities must be seized upon, because there are no guarantees they will present themselves again. Besides, building from the ground up with one of the little guys is a hard, a romanticized concept that obscures just how large the gap can be between the establishment and everyone else. Cincinnati football has improved by leaps and bounds over the past decade, but it’s still not Notre Dame. Furniture Row Racing has made great strides in just two years, but it’s still not Stewart-Haas.

That much was evident again this past Saturday night, when a bad wheel hub knocked Busch out of a race at Bristol Motor Speedway that he was leading when things began to go awry. Just as a slow pit stop kept him from a chance at winning the Sprint All-Star Race when he had the best car in the event. Just as a dead battery knocked him out of the contention the next week in the Coca-Cola 600, which he was also leading when it all went wrong. If Busch fails to make the Chase, it won’t be because the driver isn’t good enough, or because the cars aren’t fast enough. It will because Furniture Row is showing obvious growing pains trying to get to the next level, and in turn emphasizing just how difficult that leap is to make.

Now, that shouldn’t detract from the progress the No. 78 bunch has made, which is substantial. But this is also a program that started up its own pit crew only this season — prior to that, it used one obtained from Stewart-Haas. No question, big teams certainly aren’t immune from the dropped lug nuts or mechanical failures that can cost a driver a race. But what we’ve seen from Furniture Row this season gives the impression of a driver who can carry a program only so far. The rest has to catch up on its own, and there are no guarantees that would happen by next season should Busch have elected to stay.

Tuesday, it was clear that the moves which brought Busch to SHR were in motion well before this past Saturday night. Although Busch signed only Monday, getting there had been a month in the making. When it came to the final decision, he credited the opportunities before him rather than the shortcomings behind.

“Nothing that happened Saturday was the straw that broke the camel’s back,” he said. “We’re not going to look at one circumstance and say it affected a future plan to where you have a long‑term commitment and such an exciting opportunity that you can team up and drive cars with Tony Stewart, with Kevin Harvick. The 78 car is as good as anybody. The part that failed on Saturday night is something that you might see more in quality control if you are burning up four sets of hubs each week. Four times four would be 16. That’s what we’re going to have here next year. It’s something that slipped through the cracks. You have those part failures. Right now, since we haven’t built any cushion to have those pitfalls and still make the Chase, that’s why it makes it so significant.”

Which is exactly the point — at Furniture Row, his margin for error is smaller. Small mistakes, like a pit stop that’s a hair too long at Charlotte, loom much larger in scope. “We have to be perfect the next two weeks to make the Chase,” Busch said, while many of the teams around his simply just need to be solid. Such is the case for a team breathing such rarified air for the first time.

Of course, then you have a four-time champion in Jeff Gordon who needs to make a last stand this weekend at Atlanta, and a reigning champion in Brad Keselowski who at the moment is on the outside looking in. This isn’t easy for anyone. The difference is, we know those Hendrick and Penske programs will have next year. They’ve been there before, and will be there again. We don’t know that about Furniture Row, which won a race with Regan Smith in 2011, and then regressed. This is a better team now, no question. But in terms of contending for Chase berths, is this a one-year window that will close once Busch departs?

Those are the kind of unknowns that shouldn’t exist at SHR, where the expectations will be not to make the Chase, but to win it. Busch said he hopes he leaves the No. 78 team better than he found it, that they’ll be able to go to a track like Phoenix next season and look over setup notes they know worked the year before. Busch has likely raised standards at Furniture Row just by being there, given the expectations that race winners and champions carry with them. The team should be better for the experience, regardless of who is behind the wheel in 2014.

But Busch’s greatest gift to Furniture Row Racing will be on display over the next 12 weeks, as he tries to crash the Chase with a single-car team based in the Mountain Time Zone. Because once Busch embarks for the proven commodity of Stewart-Haas Racing, no one knows when — or even if — the No. 78 team will be back in this position again.

“We still have the present that’s right in front of us,” Busch said. “The next two weeks are the post important weeks of the 78 car’s career. If we find ourselves racing somebody heads up going into Richmond, that’s what I want to be there for, to deliver them into the Chase, and at the same time it’s the goal achieved of being in that position. … There’s no sense in giving up, then. We’ll keep plugging away and pushing. Time is now with the 78 car.”

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Putting his success with Furniture Row in the past, Busch now must make history with SHR

KANNAPOLIS, N.C. — In theory, it sounds like a heartwarming idea — stay with the smaller team you’ve helped to reach new heights, and build it into an organization capable of unseating the sport’s traditional powers. Kurt Busch’s run with Furniture Row Racing has been the kind of underdog story everyone loves, the tale of a program that might be at a disadvantage in terms of manpower and money, but has made up for it through chemistry and grit.

It’s understandable, then, why some might have thought he should stay. The reality is that it was never a choice to begin with.

That much became clear Tuesday, when Busch walked onto a stage at Stewart-Haas Racing wearing a golf shirt emblazoned with the insignia of the team which will employ him beginning next year. After tumbling down the career ladder following his nasty split with Penske Racing following the 2011 campaign, the 2004 champion of the Sprint Cup Series has worked his way back up. Next season SHR promises to feature a trio of serious title contenders in Tony Stewart, Kevin Harvick and Busch, all of them outfitted with engines and chassis obtained from Hendrick Motorsports.

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That’s a powerhouse if there ever was one, and we haven’t even mentioned Danica Patrick. SHR offered a championship pedigree, a team stocked with proven race-winners, and a direct pipeline to the best organization in NASCAR. Furniture Row offered promise. When we’re talking about a driver of Busch’s caliber, that’s simply no contest, regardless of what emotions might come into play.

No question, Busch certainly has a fondness for the guys at Furniture Row, just as he developed a fondness for the crewmen at Phoenix Racing the year before that. Those are the people who helped Busch reclaim his career, whose equipment allowed him to remind everyone just how spectacular he can be behind the wheel, whose programs made Tuesday possible. Busch has embraced his experience with the Denver-based No. 78 team, visiting Broncos training camp, throwing out the first pitch at a Rockies game, spearheading the organization’s first push for a bid to the Chase for the Sprint Cup.

But it would have been unrealistic to expect him to stay there long-term. That’s not a knock on Busch or Furniture Row, just as him leaving Phoenix Racing late last season wasn’t a knock on the No. 51 team. It’s the way of the sports world. Sure, the notion of him staying to help build something in Colorado is a charming one. It’s also fantastical. Competitors at the highest level want to win, and they want to be in an environment most conducive to winning, which is why they almost always make a jump like the one Busch is making to SHR in 2014.

Because it’s stratified much like auto racing, college sports offers an apt parallel. Brian Kelly builds a contending football program at Cincinnati, but leaves for Notre Dame. His successor, Butch Jones, keeps it going and moves on to Tennessee. Dave Doeren earns a Bowl Championship Series berth with Northern Illinois, and parlays that into a job at North Carolina State. Andy Enfield is the darling of the NCAA basketball tournament with Florida Gulf Coast, and then the head coach at Southern California. Brad Stevens seems set at Butler until the phone rings, and it’s the Boston Celtics on the other end.

Ninety-nine times out of a hundred, they go. They have to. Sports careers are relatively short, and windows of opportunity relatively narrow. Opportunities must be seized upon, because there are no guarantees they will present themselves again. Besides, building from the ground up with one of the little guys is a hard, a romanticized concept that obscures just how large the gap can be between the establishment and everyone else. Cincinnati football has improved by leaps and bounds over the past decade, but it’s still not Notre Dame. Furniture Row Racing has made great strides in just two years, but it’s still not Stewart-Haas.

That much was evident again this past Saturday night, when a bad wheel hub knocked Busch out of a race at Bristol Motor Speedway that he was leading when things began to go awry. Just as a slow pit stop kept him from a chance at winning the Sprint All-Star Race when he had the best car in the event. Just as a dead battery knocked him out of the contention the next week in the Coca-Cola 600, which he was also leading when it all went wrong. If Busch fails to make the Chase, it won’t be because the driver isn’t good enough, or because the cars aren’t fast enough. It will because Furniture Row is showing obvious growing pains trying to get to the next level, and in turn emphasizing just how difficult that leap is to make.

Now, that shouldn’t detract from the progress the No. 78 bunch has made, which is substantial. But this is also a program that started up its own pit crew only this season — prior to that, it used one obtained from Stewart-Haas. No question, big teams certainly aren’t immune from the dropped lug nuts or mechanical failures that can cost a driver a race. But what we’ve seen from Furniture Row this season gives the impression of a driver who can carry a program only so far. The rest has to catch up on its own, and there are no guarantees that would happen by next season should Busch have elected to stay.

Tuesday, it was clear that the moves which brought Busch to SHR were in motion well before this past Saturday night. Although Busch signed only Monday, getting there had been a month in the making. When it came to the final decision, he credited the opportunities before him rather than the shortcomings behind.

“Nothing that happened Saturday was the straw that broke the camel’s back,” he said. “We’re not going to look at one circumstance and say it affected a future plan to where you have a long‑term commitment and such an exciting opportunity that you can team up and drive cars with Tony Stewart, with Kevin Harvick. The 78 car is as good as anybody. The part that failed on Saturday night is something that you might see more in quality control if you are burning up four sets of hubs each week. Four times four would be 16. That’s what we’re going to have here next year. It’s something that slipped through the cracks. You have those part failures. Right now, since we haven’t built any cushion to have those pitfalls and still make the Chase, that’s why it makes it so significant.”

Which is exactly the point — at Furniture Row, his margin for error is smaller. Small mistakes, like a pit stop that’s a hair too long at Charlotte, loom much larger in scope. “We have to be perfect the next two weeks to make the Chase,” Busch said, while many of the teams around his simply just need to be solid. Such is the case for a team breathing such rarified air for the first time.

Of course, then you have a four-time champion in Jeff Gordon who needs to make a last stand this weekend at Atlanta, and a reigning champion in Brad Keselowski who at the moment is on the outside looking in. This isn’t easy for anyone. The difference is, we know those Hendrick and Penske programs will have next year. They’ve been there before, and will be there again. We don’t know that about Furniture Row, which won a race with Regan Smith in 2011, and then regressed. This is a better team now, no question. But in terms of contending for Chase berths, is this a one-year window that will close once Busch departs?

Those are the kind of unknowns that shouldn’t exist at SHR, where the expectations will be not to make the Chase, but to win it. Busch said he hopes he leaves the No. 78 team better than he found it, that they’ll be able to go to a track like Phoenix next season and look over setup notes they know worked the year before. Busch has likely raised standards at Furniture Row just by being there, given the expectations that race winners and champions carry with them. The team should be better for the experience, regardless of who is behind the wheel in 2014.

But Busch’s greatest gift to Furniture Row Racing will be on display over the next 12 weeks, as he tries to crash the Chase with a single-car team based in the Mountain Time Zone. Because once Busch embarks for the proven commodity of Stewart-Haas Racing, no one knows when — or even if — the No. 78 team will be back in this position again.

“We still have the present that’s right in front of us,” Busch said. “The next two weeks are the post important weeks of the 78 car’s career. If we find ourselves racing somebody heads up going into Richmond, that’s what I want to be there for, to deliver them into the Chase, and at the same time it’s the goal achieved of being in that position. … There’s no sense in giving up, then. We’ll keep plugging away and pushing. Time is now with the 78 car.”

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