There’s no competition between the two; Stenhouse Jr. focuses on future

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. insisted this week that contrary to what many might expect, the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Sunoco Rookie of the Year competition between he and girlfriend Danica Patrick is a low-profile reality in their otherwise high-wattage careers.

Despite the extra spotlight thrust upon the pair because they are dating, Stenhouse said this week the competition between the two for rookie honors is actually much less intense than people might imagine  — even considering their unique and close relationship.

No trash-talking here. Not even friendly side-wagers.

“We don’t really talk about it too much,’’ Stenhouse conceded this week. “We talk about how our races went, how our cars handled, things like that.

“But I don’t even know how many points I have in the Rookie of the Year standings.  I’m not even sure how much we’re leading it by.’’

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The answer is that Stenhouse holds a 10-point edge over Patrick in the rookie standings. And while those two aren’t counting, the numbers are 20-3 in Stenhouse’s favor when it comes to taking race top rookie honors. Patrick bettered him in the Daytona 500, at Martinsville Speedway and Texas Motor Speedway.

“We just each go out and do our job each and every week, try to capitalize on the good cars that we have, try to get good finishes out of a not‑so‑good weekend like we did at Watkins Glen,’’ Stenhouse explained. “We don’t keep up with it, don’t talk about the Rookie of the Year. We talk about how the race tracks have changed throughout the weekend, things like that.

“Away from the race track, we don’t really talk much about racing, period."

Fresh off back-to-back NASCAR Nationwide Series championships, Stenhouse moved up to Jack Roush’s No. 17 Ford with high expectations and big motivations in 2013.

Beyond the rookie contest, Stenhouse is ranked 21st in the standings and still looking for his first top-10. His best finish is 11th at Kansas Speedway in April.

He’s led laps in three races including a season best 26 laps at Kansas. And while Stenhouse doesn’t have a top-10 yet, he has only seven finishes worse than 20th through 23 races.

For Stenhouse, winning rookie honors would be a nice feather in the cap, but the experience he’s gaining to position himself for the future is what he uses as a gauge of progress.

“I think we’ve been really consistent this season,’’ Stenhouse said. “I haven’t put myself in many positions that are going to get us wrecked. We finished every single race this year. We blew a tire at Texas and that took us out of contention of running well. We got crashed at Pocono. We blew a tire this weekend.

“I think we’ve been really consistent throughout the year, not taking too many chances at pressing the issue and tearing our car up. That was something that took me a while to learn. It took me forever in the Nationwide car to figure that out.

“In 2011, 2012, running for those championships, every point matters. Ten races into this season, we were close to top 10 in points. We had a Wild Card spot for a little while. That was just running consistent. We weren’t very fast, we weren’t contending for wins or running top 10, but we were consistent and we were finishing races.

“I think we’ve gained a ton of experience this year just by finishing these races and being out on the race track, something that I feel like I jeopardized in 2010 racing for the Rookie of the Year in the Nationwide Series. I crashed a lot. I didn’t get the experience I needed.”

This week’s half-mile Bristol Motor Speedway bullring is a place that has suited Stenhouse historically. He finished 16th this spring in his first Cup race there but had better success in the Nationwide Series, particularly during championship runs. He won a Coors Light Pole in 2011 and finished runner-up in the 2012 fall race.

“I’m looking at the experience I’m gaining right now,’’ Stenhouse said. “Hopefully it will pay off for next year. Just the consistency that it takes to win a championship is what I brought over to the Cup Series to put us where we are now.

“. …The biggest thing, I think I didn’t realize this (in Nationwide), you have to be so perfect in the Sprint Cup Series. Every driver out there can go win a race if they have the right car, have a fast pit crew and things like that.

“The tolerance in getting that setup just right, that perfect setup, is very, very small. It seems like all those teams are so close together that just a little bit off can put you 25th or 20th.

“I think I could have a good car in Nationwide and run top five or you can have a great car and win. You can have a great car in the Sprint Cup Series and run 15th with it. It’s super competitive. These guys are just really good.”

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Richard Childress Racing cars jump a total of 11 spots after huge day at Michigan

                                   

1. Jimmie Johnson        

Outlook: Johnson’s bad luck at Michigan continued on Sunday, as even his backup car was susceptible to turmoil. His failed engine in the Pure Michigan 400 may have hurt his chances to hold onto the top spot in the standings, but the pain is the equivalent of banging your funny bone. It stings at first, but eventually you just laugh it off.
Standings: 1st, 813 points

2. Kevin Harvick        

Outlook: Harvick’s runner-up finish at Michigan — his second of the season — ended a string of three-straight finishes outside the top 10. He finished 14th at Bristol earlier in the season but you can bet he’ll be looking to firmly-establish himself in that upper-tier he finds himself in right now with a strong race for the second week in a row.
Related video: Harvick post-race reaction
Standings: 4th, 749 points

3. Clint Bowyer         

Outlook: While Joey Logano’s victory was a thing of beauty, Bowyer may have quietly driven the best race of the day. After spinning out on the first lap, the Michael Waltrip Racing driver had to fight his way back through the field and ended up with a top-five finish. Quite impressive.
Related video: Bowyer post-race reaction

Standings: 2nd, 772 points

4. Matt Kenseth         

Outlook: With a top-six finish at Michigan the first time around, the table was set for Kenseth to break out of his funk on Sunday, but he failed to do so. Perhaps he’ll be more determined to right the ship at Bristol, where he placed 35th after wrecking earlier in the year. Either way, he’s in no immediate danger of missing the Chase and could clinch a spot this weekend.
Standings: 6th, 688 points

5. Kurt Busch           

Outlook: Biggest Kurt Busch news of the week? That blazing fastball he tossed for the first pitch at the Colorado Rockies game. Oh, right. There was also that other report of him being offered a ride at Stewart-Haas Racing next year. No big deal.
Standings: 9th, 665 points

6. Carl Edwards         

Outlook: After failing to notch a top-five from the pole in June’s Michigan race, the table was set for Edwards to drive with a vengeance this time around. He still finished a respectable 10th, but he led no laps and had to have walked away dissatisfied.
Standings: 3rd, 762 points

7. Kyle Busch           

Outlook: Busch managed to stave off major damage after spinning late in the race — actually, the whole race was mostly devoid of major damage; bravo, Michigan — but still finished a lousy 31st. Plus he now has to look up at his older brother ahead of him in these rankings. That said, Kyle still holds a pretty hefty lead over Kurt. A three-win advantage doesn’t hurt.
Standings: 5th, 706 points

8. Brad Keselowski       

Outlook: Keselowski wasn’t happy with the pit strategy crew chief Paul Wolfe elected to take on Sunday — at all — but clearly it worked out for the best. The No. 2 was on the same cycle as Mark Martin’s No. 55, and we all know what happened there. The reigning champ is safe for now, but he needs a win badly.
Related video: Keselowski post-race reaction
Standings: 8th, 667 points

9. Kasey Kahne          

Outlook: Props to Kahne for pulling out a seventh-place finish at Michigan. It couldn’t have been easy to drive after getting no sleep all week because he was too busy staking out the Joe Gibbs Racing shop to see if anyone would come outside that he could “talk to."
Standings: 11th, 659 points

10. Dale Earnhardt Jr.   

Outlook: Earnhardt missed out on a golden opportunity at Michigan, and he knows it. His blown tire and subsequent attempts to fix some other issues behind the wall left him with a second consecutive poor finish at the track where his last two wins — and ONLY wins since 2006 — have come from.
Related video: Earnhardt post-race reaction | Junior on burnout, fantasy football

Standings: 7th, 679 points

11. Joey Logano          

Outlook: Logano came into this past weekend’s race at Michigan International Speedway in dire need of a win and he completely delivered, placing himself into excellent position to make the Chase for the Sprint Cup for the first time in his young career. Currently in 13th and looking at Kasey Kahne and Martin Truex Jr. holding onto the two Wild Card spots, he certainly isn’t a lock, but he’s got all the momentum.
Related Video: Victory Lane 1-on-1 | Post-race comments

Standings: 11th, 623 points

12. Greg Biffle          

Outlook: Michigan has long been known as a track that Fords — in particular, Roush Fenway Racing Fords — typically run well at, as evidenced by Edwards’ pole and Biffle’s win in June. Both drivers finished top 10 in this race (with rookie teammate Ricky Stenhouse Jr. in 19th), but Biffle has to be especially sad to be leaving the Wolverine State. He’s averaged a finish of 3.75 over his past four races there, with two wins.
Standings: 10th, 663 points

13. Martin Truex Jr.     

Outlook: Truex doesn’t have a rich history of success at Bristol, but he may have no choice but to tough it out, stay out of trouble, and shoot for at least a top-10 this weekend — which would be just his third in 16 attempts at the track. Standing in 12th just seven points ahead of Joey Logano with just as many wins, he can’t afford to give this one away.
Standings: 12th, 653 points

14. Jeff Gordon          

Outlook: Gordon, in dire need of a win, has to be happy to see three tracks coming up that he has a combined 12 wins at. The only problem? Just one of those victories has come in the last decade (Atlanta, 2011).
Standings: 14th, 637 points

15. Ryan Newman        

Outlook: With Monday’s news that Tony Stewart would miss the remainder of 2013, Stewart-Haas Racing will be putting all of their efforts into getting Newman in the Chase. First up? Bristol, where he has one top-five in 20 attempts. They’ve got their work cut out for them.
Standings: 15th, 636 points

16. Jamie McMurray       

Outlook: McMurray has averaged a top-10 finish over his last four races at Bristol (9.75 to be exact), but a win may be out of the question. Still, the 16th-place driver — who stands just 31 points behind final Wild Card holder Martin Truex Jr. — winning a race and throwing his hat into the ring at this point in the season would be wildly entertaining.
Standings: 16th, 622 points

17. Paul Menard          

Outlook: Boy, what got into the Richard Childress Racing cars on Sunday? With Harvick and Menard’s top-fives and Burton’s eighth-place finish, things are looking up for a team that’ll have a lot of question marks heading into next season.
Related video: Menard post-race reaction

Standings: 17th, 599 points

18. Tony Stewart         

Outlook: Enjoy it, folks. Unless something goes freakishly right in Stewart’s rehab and he reverses his decision to spend time recovering from a broken leg for the remainder of the season, this’ll be the last time you see Smoke’s sparkling face in these Power Rankings. Here’s to 2014.
Standings: 18th, 594 points

19. Jeff Burton          

Outlook: Despite the momentum that Burton built with his solid day at Michigan, he likely won’t keep it up at Bristol. The driver has finished on the lead lap small oval just twice in his past six races there.
Standings: 20th, 561 points

20. Aric Almirola        

Outlook: Almirola has a brief history of just eight career Sprint Cup races at Bristol, and the results are scary. He’s exited the race early in three of his past four races, has just one top 10, and averages a finish of 27.8. Naturally, to keep in tune with the unpredictability of this season, he’s probably a lock to take home his first career victory.
Standings: 19th, 587 points

In the rearview

Note: These rankings have been determined by a poll that included writers Kenny BruceHolly Cain, David Caraviello and Zack Albert, and video host Alan Cavanna.

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With McClure hospitalized, Green tabbed to drive No. 14 Hefty/Reynolds Toyota at Bristol

It was announced today that Jeff Green, NASCAR Nationwide Series driver, will drive the No. 14 Hefty/Reynolds Toyota during Friday night’s Food City 250 at Bristol Motor Speedway in replacement of Eric McClure.

McClure, TriStar Motorsports’ regular driver, was admitted to a local hospital on Aug. 12 where he was diagnosed after a series of tests with acute renal failure. With his creatinine levels rising, this signaled improper kidney function.

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“This has been a very challenging week for me, both physically and emotionally," McClure said. “Having a newborn and four other little girls, among other things, has also presented a challenge to my family.”

While McClure is currently hospitalized, he is receiving treatment and has high hopes for a speedy recovery and release. His current status remains week-to-week.

“Recovery can be a slow and frustrating process,” McClure said. “But thankfully we are seeing signs of healing. I can’t thank everyone enough for all of the prayers, thoughts, and well-wishes during this difficult time, and I can’t wait to be back behind the wheel of the Hefty/Reynolds Camry.”

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Younger brother of Martin Truex Jr. will run in No. 51 Phoenix Racing ride

Richard Petty Motorsports (RPM) development driver Ryan Truex will make his NASCAR Sprint Cup Series debut at Bristol Motor Speedway during Saturday night’s 500-lap race. Truex will drive the No. 51 entry for Phoenix Racing. 

"I’m excited to make my NASCAR Sprint Cup Series debut at Bristol," said Truex.  "It has been tough waiting on the sidelines while I healed from my collarbone injury, but now I am ready to go… It’s pretty awesome that it’s coming at Bristol at the night race. This is a premier race on the Sprint Cup circuit.”

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The Mayetta, New Jersey native has two Nationwide Series starts at Bristol and most recently posted a top-10 finish in the spring event in 2012. In his career, Truex has made 35 Nationwide, three Camping World Truck Series and 22 K&N East starts, while winning the K&N Series East championship in back-to-back seasons in 2009 and 2010.

"To have Richard Petty Motorsports and Phoenix Racing support me in this endeavor really means a lot," continued Truex.  "I’m excited for the rest of this year and my future with RPM."  

"The King" Richard Petty is also anxious to see the 21-year-old make his Sprint Cup debut.

"It will be a big night for Ryan," said team owner Petty.  "He is a talented driver, and we look forward to his future with our team. We are working hard to find funding support to give him more opportunities behind the wheel."

Truex signed a multi-year development deal with RPM earlier this year and the team is currently working to secure sponsorship funding. 

Phoenix Racing has a long history of providing young drivers opportunities to race for their team. It was also Phoenix Racing that helped Ryan’s older brother, Martin, in the beginning stages of his career. 

Truex will make his first laps during Sprint Cup practice at noon Friday, August 23 and hit the track for final practice and qualifying that afternoon.

Saturday’s night race is scheduled to start at 7:30 p.m. ET with live coverage on ABC, PRN and SIRIUS NASCAR Radio.

 

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As Bristol nears, Hornish Jr. hopes to join his Penske Racing teammates at Victory Lane

In what was a banner weekend for Penske Racing, it would be easy to file away the third-place run by Sam Hornish Jr. in the NASCAR Nationwide Series’ first race at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course as an overshadowed moment.

Yet Hornish’s day may have a much longer-lasting impact.

On a weekend where Joey Logano (Sprint Cup Series) and AJ Allmendinger (Nationwide) hoisted trophies driving Roger Penske-owned cars, Hornish regained the Nationwide Series points lead heading into the final third of the season. He now carries a moderate 13-point lead over second-place Elliott Sadler in the series standings, but the oh-so-close margin from first to fifth place remains a cozy 18 points.

Hornish has been no lower than fourth place in the Nationwide hunt this season, and that drop came after a mechanically abbreviated 34th place at Indianapolis that matched his worst finish of the year. In the three races that followed, Hornish’s No. 12 Ford finished second twice (Iowa, Watkins Glen) and then third at Mid-Ohio to overtake Austin Dillon for the top spot in the season-long fight.

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“I feel like we’ve got a great opportunity,” Hornish said after the inaugural Nationwide Children’s Hospital 200. “What I feel like is our main objective right now is living up to our full potential and minimizing the bad days. We’ve had really good cars and the days that we haven’t had good races, we’ve pretty much been running in the top three when we’ve had all our problems, so the big thing that we do is when we have a bad day, figure out how to not make it worse.

“Each of the things that have caused us problems are all different, and we’ve only had one race where I think that we finished outside the top 10 where that’s just where we ended up at because we weren’t good enough. We’ve got a lot of speed, which is the first part about being successful. Now we just need a little bit of luck, and unfortunately we used up a little bit of that in the last lap today.”

Hornish was alluding to Saturday’s hectic green-white-checkered overtime finish, which sent tempers rising and points totals plummeting. He can likely expect more of the same at the close-quarters Bristol Motor Speedway, which hosts the series’ next round, Friday night’s Food City 250 (7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN).

Hornish lacks a history of steady results at Bristol, where he has just one top-five finish in 11 NASCAR national series starts. That one top-five, however, came in his most recent race there — a fourth-place afternoon in the Jeff Foxworthy’s Grit Chips 300 in March.

The Penske organization as a whole carries a head of steam into Bristol. Allmendinger’s triumph marked the third straight win for Penske’s No. 22 team, which has eight victories this season and currently leads the Nationwide Series’ owners points.

If success breeds success, Hornish certainly says he feels the benefit.

“The 22 and the 12 are working better together as teams,” Hornish said. “The thing that I think really stands out about why our teams are running as well as they have right now is that no matter who’s in the 22 car, we all work together very well. We’ve got good baseline setups and we’re able to improve upon them.”

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For Harvick and Edwards, their wins at Atlanta were the first of many

At the Atlanta Motor Speedway, two active NASCAR Sprint Cup Series drivers have posted their first career win: Kevin Harvick in 2001 and Carl Edwards in 2005. Perhaps Harvick or Edwards could take a trip to Victory Lane this week?

 

Owning the most Cup wins at Bristol, Gordon has had share of big moments on short track

Racing for over two decades, Jeff Gordon has not only become a fan favorite, but also a record holder. Fourty-one different drivers have won at Bristol Motor Speedway — Gordon, Darrell Waltrip, Kurt Busch and Kyle Busch carry the most wins with five apiece. 

 

Postseason picture hinges on final three races for these drivers

1. Jimmie Johnson (No. 48)

Hendrick Motorsports, Chevrolet

Where he stands: Johnson leads the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series standings with 813 points.
Last week: The good thing about building such a big points lead is that, when Jimmie Johnson’s backup car went kaput, there was no reason for the No. 48 crew to worry. Despite leading three laps and charging his way to the front of the field after starting in the rear, Johnson left Michigan after a five-point day. It was his worst showing of the season, and his first DNF since the 2012 finale. The result? He’s still first in the standings, and with a 41-point lead over Clint Bowyer.
What he said: “We had an issue there with the engine as I came out of the pits and got back up to speed dropped a couple of cylinders. We were trying to get it figured out and see what would happen. On my way into the pits it finally locked up and that’s the end of it. Unfortunate day, but I’m happy that we have had such a strong opening part of the season and we have points on our side and some wins on our side.”
This week: In 23 career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, Johnson has one win, seven top-fives, 13 nine top-10s and one pole. In the past eight years at Bristol, Johnson ranks fourth out of 54 drivers with an average place of 12.5. He finished 22nd at the first 2013 race at Bristol.
Last year: Johnson nearly charged all the way through the field for his second win at Bristol. As it was, Five-Time had to settle for a runner-up finish to Denny Hamlin after leaving the grid in 37th position to start. He led 52 laps on the night.

2. Clint Bowyer (No. 15)

Michael Waltrip Racing, Toyota 

Where he stands: Bowyer is second in the standings with 772 points.
Last week: Bowyer took a solo spin on Lap 1 after starting 11th. After pitting for a quick fix, he was 43rd. Day over, right? Not quite. The No. 15 team got into grind-it-out mode, and Bowyer wove through the field and gained ground on multiple restarts to come home with a fifth-place finish and keep second place in the standings over Carl Edwards. See video of Bowyer’s spin below.
What he said: “Man, what a long day. Spinning out on the first lap I’m like — I couldn’t figure out — a lot of times you just know that you’re hanging it out too much and trying to get too much out of it and you wreck on your own. I didn’t think that was the case. I was trying to get around the 2 (Brad Keselowski), felt good, wide open, good ‘ole girl stuck and all the sudden it wasn’t stuck and away I went. All these guys they just don’t give up. That’s what I love about this team, this organization. That’s why we’re where we’re at in the points. Obviously, we want to start winning races, but those days like that are what win championships.”
This week: In 15 career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, Bowyer has five top-fives and eight top-10s. In the past eight years at Bristol, Bowyer ranks 16th out of 54 drivers with an average place of 17.0. He finished fifth at the first 2013 race at Bristol.
Last year: Despite starting 23rd, Bowyer wheeled his No. 15 Toyota into the top 10 within 100 laps of the 500-miler. His goal then became quite obvious — keep it there. Bowyer was intent on making the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, and he knew a top-10 finish at Bristol would go a long way toward making that happen. So when he was seventh over the final 20 laps and right on Kyle Busch’s bumper, Bowyer elected not to push him out of the way or try an aggressive pass.

3. Carl Edwards (No. 99)

Roush Fenway Racing, Ford 

Where he stands: Edwards is third in the standings with 762 points.
Last week: Michigan is one of the best tracks for Roush Fenway Racing, and although the RFR team wasn’t in Victory Lane, it placed two cars in the top 10. Edwards was one of those cars, finishing 10th. He started 19th and never was in contention for the win, but he was one of just a few cars to pit on the final caution flag. He lost a lot of ground, but used his new tires for grip to make multiple passes before the checkered flag dropped.
What he said: Edwards was not available for comment.
This week: In 18 career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, Edwards has two wins, four top-fives, seven top-10s and two poles. In the past eight years at Bristol, Edwards ranks 12th out of 54 drivers with an average place of 15.3. He finished 18th at the first 2013 race at Bristol.
Last year: Desperate for a victory that would all but clinch a spot in the Chase, Edwards gambled at Bristol. He lost big-time. The driver kept his No. 99 Ford out during a caution on Lap 415 while the leaders pitted and took the lead. He took over first, but couldn’t maintain his hold on old tires. And with just a few laps remaining, he had to pit for fuel and eventually finished 22nd.

4. Kevin Harvick (No. 29)

Richard Childress Racing, Chevrolet 

Where he stands: Harvick is fourth in the standings with 749 points.
Last week: Harvick may have had the best car on the track Sunday. At the very least, it was one of the best machines, so his second-place finish was earned. The No. 29 Chevrolet moved up through the field multiple times on restarts and had a fuel gamble pay off. Harvick was a bit short on fuel, but his team waited for a caution flag that arrived, allowing them to stay out on the track.
What he said: “You know, we never really got out in front by ourselves today, but our Rheem Chevrolet was really good. I just mistimed that last restart there. I was rolling pretty good on the No. 55 (Mark Martin) and going to beat him to the start/finish line, so I had to check up and that allowed the No. 22 (Joey Logano) to kind of make it three-wide and get under me and then we had to fight back from there.”
This week: In 25 career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, Harvick has one win, nine top-fives and 12 top-10s. In the past eight years at Bristol, Harvick ranks eighth out of 54 drivers with an average place of 13.6. He finished 14th at the first 2013 race at Bristol.
Last year: Harvick spent 384 of 500 laps running in the top 15, according to NASCAR Stastical Service’s Loop Data. It was a consistent effort, given that the driver started 13th and finished 15th. He had a chance for a top-five showing, but ended up pitting for fuel on Lap 415 once his team realized he would end the race short without a stop.

5. Kyle Busch (No. 18)

Joe Gibbs Racing, Toyota 

Where he stands: Busch is fifth in the standings with 706 points.
Last week: What went right for Kyle Busch at Michigan? The short answer is “nothing,” even though his No. 18 Toyota ran in the top 10 at various points of the race. Busch brought out two late cautions with two solo spins. One week after winning at Watkins Glen, Busch finished 31st at Michigan, but he didn’t lose any ground in the standings. You can watch video of his incident below.
What he said: “Well then … Rough day I’d say. Knew this was gonna be a tough day but I didn’t do my best to get thru it. Congrats to Joey Logano.” (Via Twitter)
This week: In 17 career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, Busch has five wins, eight top-fives, 12 top-10s and one pole. In the past eight years at Bristol, Busch ranks sixth out of 54 drivers with an average place of 12.7. He finished second at the first 2013 race at Bristol.
Last year: Busch called his night “decent,” which of course means he had a good car and finished well. The No. 18 Toyota finished sixth, and Busch took some of the blame for a finish he deemed lackluster. Changes to the track altered the racing groove, and the car’s setup — based in part on Busch’s advice – didn’t allow him to challenge the leaders.

6. Matt Kenseth (No. 20)

Joe Gibbs Racing, Toyota 

Where he stands: Kenseth is sixth in the standings with 688 points.
Last week: Kenseth didn’t have the best car in the field at Michigan, but he looked more like the Matt Kenseth who won four races this year rather than the Matt Kenseth who has three DNFs. Kenseth maneuvered his No. 20 Toyota into the top five late in the race before getting shuffled to the back on the ensuing late restarts and pit stops. He gained one spot in the standings, passing Dale Earnhardt Jr.
What he said: “Our biggest problem was we were way off on speed. We didn’t handle perfect either, but we had a couple runs that were pretty good and then it seemed like the time we took fuel only and didn’t put any tires on, we just got really loose and got to the back. We never could really overcome that.”
This week: In 27 career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, Kenseth has two wins, 10 top-fives, 17 top-10s and one pole. In the past eight years at Bristol, Kenseth ranks second out of 54 drivers with an average place of 10.7. He finished 35th at the first 2013 race at Bristol.
Last year: Kenseth tangled with Tony Stewart — the two were involved in a number of incidents last season — and got a helmet chucked at his car for good measure after Smoke emerged from his tattered vehicle. In Kenseth’s view, Stewart’s slide job sent the No. 14 against the wall after Kenseth lifted to give Stewart some room. The two cars banged into each other the next turn, spinning both out and relegating Kenseth to a 25th-place finish. Still, the effort was good enough to clinch a spot in the Chase.

7. Dale Earnhardt Jr. (No. 88)

Hendrick Motorsports, Chevrolet

Where he stands: Earnhardt Jr. is seventh in the standings with 679 points.
Last week: Earnhardt Jr.’s last two victories — which came in 2012 and 2008 — were both at Michigan. On Sunday, he had a fast No. 88 Chevrolet and led 20 of 200 laps. In the time it takes for a front tire to shred, however, his day was ruined. That busted tire sent Junior into the wall and essentially out of the race, although he came back on the track and finished 36th. Instead of challenging for his first win and strengthening his postseason positioning, Junior slipped to seventh in the standings and has no wins to fall back on with three races remaining. You can watch video of the incident below.
What he said: “There are guys in worst positions than us. We ain’t got to outrun just one guy; there’s a lot of guys. And all of them have got to have clean races, just like we do. I think we’ll be all right. We’re not an 11th-place team. We’re a top-five team. We’ve just got to shake this luck, whatever is going on; it’s something different every time.”
This week: In 27 career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, Earnhardt Jr. has one win, seven top-fives and 13 top-10s. In the past eight years at Bristol, Earnhardt Jr. ranks ninth out of 54 drivers with an average place of 14.0. He finished sixth at the first 2013 race at Bristol.
Last year: Junior’s no Bristol newbie. In fact, he’s a veteran of Thunder Valley with 27 career starts there. He finished 12th in the night race last year.

8. Brad Keselowski (No. 2)

Penske Racing, Ford 

Where he stands: Keselowski is eighth in the standings with 667 points.
Last week: Keselowski wanted the win so badly, his team considered not pitting under the final yellow. Keselowski was leading at the time, but such a move would have been foolish. Getting fuel and tires enabled Bad Brad to move up from 15th on the restart, and his 12th-place finish kept him in the top 10 in points.
What he said: “It is the same deal every week. The yellows fall exactly the wrong way to screw up our strategy. That can’t keep going that way. It’s like Black Jack, you aren’t going to keep turning 15 or 16 on every hand. Eventually you are going to turn a good hand. We just didn’t catch it today.”
This week: In seven career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, Keselowski has two wins, three top-fives and three top-10s. In the past eight years at Bristol, Keselowski ranks fifth out of 54 drivers with an average place of 12.6. He finished third at the first 2013 race at Bristol.
Last year: The defending race winner, Keselowski had dreams of a repeat, and winning his third consecutive race at the track (he won the 2012 spring race here, too). Qualifying second helped justify those visions of grandeur. But Keselowski’s car wasn’t the class of the field, and then he crunched Brian Vickers’ No. 55 Toyota and hit the wall. Fearing a problem with his car, Vickers had checked up, leaving a handful of drivers with nowhere to go. Keselowski finished 30th, logging 434 of 500 laps.

9. Kurt Busch (No. 78)

Furniture Row Racing, Chevrolet 

Where he stands: Busch is ninth in the standings with 665 points.
Last week: Busch had one of the strongest cars on track. He led 43 of 200 laps and, although he didn’t get his long-sought victory, finished third. That was a great points day and sent the veteran into the top 10 in the points standings, which is grounds for an automatic berth into the Chase — for now.
What he said: “A good day. At the end of the day, we have our weaknesses and pit road and restarts are one of them. It’s just like our Achilles’ heel, but to be in position to win at the end, we had it, we just didn’t have the speed. So we can’t blame those items as a result of our third-place. But here we are talking third place and that’s what’s awesome about our effort today to bounce back from where we were at the first Michigan and what we’ve learned since June to be where we are now.”
This week: In 25 career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, Busch has five wins, seven top-fives, 14 top-10s and one pole. In the past eight years at Bristol, Busch ranks seventh out of 54 drivers with an average place of 13.2. He finished fourth at the first 2013 race at Bristol.

Last year:
Busch logged 440 of 500 laps and finished 28th while driving the No. 51 for Phoenix Racing.

10. Greg Biffle (No. 16)

Roush Fenway Racing, Ford 

Where he stands: Biffle is 10th in the standings with 663 points.
Last week: Biffle was attempting to become the first driver since Bill Elliott (1985-86) to win three consecutive races at Michigan. It didn’t pan out, although the No. 16 did lead for 28 laps and finished ninth. It was Biffle’s fourth consecutive top-10 at the track. | Click here to read a roundup on the six members of the Coca-Cola Racing Family
What he said: “We bumped the 2 (of Brad Keselowski) coming out of the pits in that scramble at the end and hurt the left front fender. That might have been some of our problem. Our cars are way, way better out front than they are in traffic. That is really tough for us.”
This week: In 21 career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, Biffle has six top-fives, 11 top-10s and one pole. He is the defending race winner. In the past eight years at Bristol, Biffle ranks third out of 54 drivers with an average place of 12.3. He finished 11th at the first 2013 race at Bristol.
Last year: Biffle left Bristol with two things — the points lead intact, and a guaranteed berth in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. He achieved both of those things despite a 19th-place finish, a poor showing when you consider he qualified third in the No. 16 Ford.

11. Kasey Kahne (No. 5)

Hendrick Motorsports, Chevrolet

Where he stands: Kahne is 11th in the standings with 659 points.
Last week: On a pretty miserable day for Hendrick Motorsports, Kahne had the only top-10 in the group. Jimmie Johnson and Dale Earnhardt Jr. were out of the race early with car troubles, and Gordon’s machine struggled all day. Kahne, meanwhile, finished seventh after starting 31st on the grid.
What he said: Kahne was unavailable for comment.
This week: In 19 career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, Kahne has one win, four top-fives, eight top-10s and one pole. In the past eight years at Bristol, Kahne ranks 20th out of 54 drivers with an average place of 17.6. He won the first 2013 race at Bristol.
Last year: Before his Bristol breakthrough earlier in 2013, Kahne finished ninth in the 2012 night race.

12. Martin Truex Jr. (No. 56)

Michael Waltrip Racing, Toyota 

Where he stands: Truex Jr. is 12th in the standings with 653 points.
Last week: Truex Jr. fell out of the top 10 after his 16th-place showing at the wide 2-mile oval. He still owns a Wild Card spot, but Joey Logano and Ryan Newman are right on his heels.
What he said: “We started off pretty solid and I thought we were going to be OK. Then the handling on the NAPA Toyota went away. We tried a bunch of different strategies to regain track position from the start but the car just would not handle the way we needed it to. It was downright terrible there for a while. I wish we had more laps because it could have been a better day.”
This week: In 15 career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, Truex Jr. has two top-fives and two top-10s. In the past eight years at Bristol, Truex Jr. ranks 14th out of 54 drivers with an average place of 16.1. He finished 12th at the first 2013 race at Bristol.
Last year: Bristol wasn’t kind to Martin Truex Jr. early in the driver’s career, but that’s a trend he’s reversed over the past four races. In the 2012 night race, Truex steadily drove his No. 56 Toyota to an 11th-place showing. In fact, in the past four races at Thunder Valley, his average finish is 7.0. In his previous 11 races at the .533-mile circuit, his average finish was 22.3.

Five Chase hopefuls …

Joey Logano (No. 22)

Penske Racing, Ford 

Where he stands: Logano is 13th in the standings with 646 points.
Last week: Any questions? Logano’s end-of-season surge hit its crescendo Sunday was his gutsy win at Michigan. Logano handled his No. 22 Ford expertly on the final laps, passing Mark Martin (who ran out of fuel) with four to go and holding off Kevin Harvick. He’s now in Wild Card contention and could even sneak into the top 10 if he keeps running well. | Click here to read a roundup on the six members of the Coca-Cola Racing Family
This week: In nine career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, Logano has one top-10 and one pole. In the past eight years at Bristol, Logano ranks 23rd out of 54 drivers with an average place of 19.1. He finished 17th at the first 2013 race at Bristol.

Jeff Gordon (No. 24)

Hendrick Motorsports, Chevrolet

Where he stands: Gordon is 14th in the standings with 637 points.
Last week: Gordon and his team missed it again at Michigan. Following a 17th-place finish, time is running out for the veteran. Then again, we said the same thing last year, and the No. 24 team clinched a spot in the Chase in the regular-season finale at Richmond.
This week: In 41 career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, Gordon has five wins, 16 top-fives, 22 top-10s and five poles. In the past eight years at Bristol, Gordon ranks first out of 54 drivers with an average place of 9.6. He finished 34th at the first 2013 race at Bristol.

Ryan Newman (No. 39)

Stewart-Haas Racing, Chevrolet

Where he stands: Newman is 15th in the standings with 636 points.
Last week: Newman finished 13th, which isn’t bad at all, but lost his Wild Card spot. Even worse, Joey Logano got the win and passed Newman in the standings. | Click here to read a roundup on the six members of the Coca-Cola Racing Family
This week: In 23 career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, Newman has one top-five, 13 top-10s and three poles. In the past eight years at Bristol, Newman ranks 13th out of 54 drivers with an average place of 15.3. He finished seventh at the first 2013 race at Bristol.

Jamie McMurray (No. 1)

Earnhardt Ganassi Racing, Chevrolet 

Where he stands: McMurray is 16th in the standings with 622 points.
Last week: McMurray’s engine blew up in practice, and it seemed like the No. 1 team couldn’t recover. He finished 22nd.
This week: In 21 career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, McMurray has three top-fives and nine top-10s. In the past eight years at Bristol, McMurray ranks 25th out of 54 drivers with an average place of 20.2. He finished 10th at the first 2013 race at Bristol.

Paul Menard (No. 27)

Richard Childress Racing, Chevrolet 

Where he stands: Menard is 17th in the standings with 599 points.
Last week: Hey, remember Paul Menard? The driver of the No. 27 Chevrolet finished fourth Sunday, his best showing of the year. It was his first top-10 since Kansas and his first top-five since October 2012.
This week: In 12 career starts at Bristol Motor Speedway, Menard has one top-five and four top-10s. In the past eight years at Bristol, Menard ranks 24th out of 54 drivers with an average place of 19.4.

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Full-time opportunity in No. 55 comes earlier than expected

Related: Entry list for Bristol race

Brian Vickers’ tenure as the regular driver of Michael Waltrip Racing’s No. 55 car will begin sooner than expected.

Mark Martin’s move to Stewart-Haas Racing as primary replacement for the injured Tony Stewart has led MWR to put Vickers in the seat for all but one remaining race this season, meaning the three-time winner in the Sprint Cup Series will get a head start on his first full-time campaign with MWR beginning next year.

MWR on Monday granted a release to Martin, who the past two seasons has shared the No. 55 car with Vickers and Waltrip. The NASCAR veteran will pilot Stewart’s car for all but one remaining race — that at Talladega, where Nationwide Series regular Austin Dillon will return to the No. 14 — while the three-time Sprint Cup champion misses the remainder of the season with a broken leg suffered in a sprint car crash Aug. 5.

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MWR announced last week that Vickers, who won earlier this season at New Hampshire despite his part-time status, would take over the No. 55 on his own beginning next season. Now he’ll finish the 2013 season in the vehicle, piloting every race save for Talladega, where his car owner will be behind the wheel.

“Obviously, Brian is poised to race for a championship,” Waltrip said. “The job he’s done in the 55 on a limited basis has been really impressive. To be able to be a part‑timer and grab a win like he did at Loudon, that’s just amazing in this day and age. But mostly it’ll just get him up to speed on the mile‑and‑a‑halfs. He hasn’t run any of those, and there’s a lot of those in the schedule, so it’ll just give him a chance to get familiar with what it’s going to take to run consistently and fast on all those tracks. It’s a really big deal for our organization to be able to get some more races in with Brian and the team as we prepare for 2014.”

Vickers hasn’t competed full time in NASCAR’s premier division since 2011, his final season with a Red Bull organization that is no longer in the sport.

 “No one wants to see Tony out of the 14, but I am appreciative of the opportunity to get more seat time in the 55 as a result,” he said. “I didn’t think things could get any better than last week’s announcement with Aaron’s, but having a chance to run the rest of the 2013 season creates a tremendous opportunity for our team, and we’re excited that all of this came together the way it did. … We’ve proven we can win races in a part time capacity so far in 2013 and I’m confident that spending more time working with the 55 crew will only to help improve our already strong performance to date, giving us the momentum needed to start the 2014 season off strong in Daytona.”

Sunday’s event at Michigan, where Martin gambled on a fuel run in the final laps that came up just short, proved his final run in the No. 55. “I guess everyone will understand now why we went for it,” crew chief Rodney Childers wrote Monday on Twitter. Although Martin never won in the car, Waltrip credits the 40-time race winner with helping to raise the competitive level of his organization.

“With Mark, we accomplished everything we hoped to when he came to this organization, which was bringing that winning confidence to the team, the experience to help elevate our program and ultimately find the full-time driver for the future who can race for a NASCAR Sprint Cup championship,” said Waltrip, a two-time Daytona 500 champion.

“Mark’s leadership the past two years has been so impactful that he has left a mark on this company that will be here as long as we race. This opportunity to help two Hall of Famers in Mark and Tony Stewart at the same time, while getting the opportunity to run the rest of the year with Brian makes sense for MWR. But nothing could happen without the support of Aaron’s, Toyota and the other MWR sponsors. Each of them saw the same benefits in such a move and helped make it happen. This is a truly win, win, win situation.”

Martin’s release was a mutual decision between MWR, the driver and Aaron’s, which backs the car and will be sponsor for every race next season. Vickers was originally scheduled to finish his final part-time slate by driving three remaining Sprint Cup events in the No. 55, beginning Saturday night at Bristol. Vickers will drive the car for that race while Martin slides over to the No. 14.

“It’s been such an incredible experience,” Martin said of his tenure at MWR. “The working environment they have there is so great. It is the least uptight and least tense of anyplace I’ve ever been. Really, really have enjoyed being a part of it. I felt really warm and welcome there, and I really love the people in that organization. A lot of the people I’ve worked with at other places or I’ve known, and it was a very comfortable situation.”

Martin’s best chance of winning at MWR came last year at Pocono, when he finished second in an event claimed by Joey Logano. Sunday, he stayed out during the final two cautions and tried to stretch his fuel to the finish, running dry with four laps remaining and finishing 27th. In 39 races with MWR, he recorded five poles and as many top-five finishes. His tenure coincided with MWR putting two cars in the Chase for the Sprint Cup for the first time, something the owner does not see as a coincidence.

“Our competition meetings, back in 2012 when he showed up, he just brought a new level of intensity to them,” said Waltrip, whose drivers Clint Bowyer and Martin Truex Jr. are both poised for another run at the playoff. “People wanted to know what Mark thought and what Mark said. He definitely left his mark on Michael Waltrip Racing. We’re stronger, we’re better, we’re more confident, we’re more focused today than we were the day mark showed up.”

True to form, Martin takes no creditis .

“To be real honest with you, people can say what they want, but I have had very little to do with the progression of that organization,” he said. “I stepped in at a good time when the organization was on the upswing, and it was just starting to show on the race track before I arrived there. And when I stepped in, everything was just in place and clicking. … We all got along so well and worked really hard to achieve the performance that we achieved.”

With Vickers’ situation settled, Waltrip’s attention now turns to re-signing Childers. “We’re working still on Rodney, and that isn’t done yet,” he said. “But we’ll turn our focus to that now and see where we end up there.”

Vickers is also competing full-time this season on the Nationwide Series for Joe Gibbs Racing, which like MWR fields Toyotas. The 29-year-old is fifth in the standings, 18 points behind leader Sam Hornish Jr. The schedules of NASCAR’s top two series align the remainder of the season save one weekend in late September, when the Nationwide tour is in Kentucky while the Sprint Cup cars compete in New Hampshire.

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Hendrick’s disappointing day continues as Junior hits tire troubles

Related: Full results | Updated standings | Complete coverage from Michigan

BROOKLYN, Mich. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. has created many fond memories at Michigan International Speedway. Sunday, though, will not go down as one of them.

NASCAR’s most popular driver saw a promising effort disappear when he cut a tire and scraped the right side of his No. 88 car up against the outside wall. Earnhardt led 20 laps at the track where he’s claimed his two most recent victories in the Sprint Cup Series, but Sunday limped home 36th after spending an extensive amount of time in the garage while his vehicle underwent repairs.

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Although Earnhardt dropped only one spot to seventh in the standings as a result of the incident, his margin to make the Chase for the Sprint Cup has shrunk to 20 points over 11th-place Kasey Kahne. Earnhardt also does not have a race victory that would help his case for as Wild Card berth, should he need to rely on one to make the playoff.

“There are guys in worse positions than us,” he said. “We ain’t got to outrun just one guy. There’s a lot of guys. And all of them have got to have clean races, just like we do. I think we’ll be all right. We’re not an 11th-place team. We’re a top-five team. We’re consistent. We’re more consistent than most. We’ve just got to shake this luck, whatever is going on. It’s something different every time. We’ve got good speed, and we’ve just got to keep our head up and keep working hard, and things will be all right.”

It was the second consecutive Michigan disappointment for Earnhardt, who in June lost an engine while leading the race. It’s also been a tough couple of races for the Hendrick Motorsports driver, who finished 30th last week on the road course at Watkins Glen. After finishing fifth at Pocono, he was fifth in the standings and in the Chase by 62 points. After last Sunday, he was sixth and his margin was 47 points.

Now he’s seventh, and the margin is down to 20 with events at Bristol, Atlanta and Richmond looming before the championship field is set.

“It’s a competitive sport, and we’ve got some good teams behind us,” Earnhardt said. “We are not sitting here with everybody in the distance. It’s just a little closer than we would like it to be, but it’s still 20 points is 20 points. That is half a race, a little more than that, so we got three to go. We should be all right. If we keep having bad luck, we can’t do nothing about that.”

That’s how he classified Sunday, when Earnhardt said he had a slow leak in his right-front tire that he wasn’t aware of — until he applied the brake in Turn 2, and it blew with 65 laps remaining. A few other drivers also dealt with tire issues at Michigan, something Goodyear said was due to high temperatures.

Tire issues are nothing new at Hendrick, which has had more than its share this season. Jimmie Johnson and Kahne had tires go down at Michigan in June, Jeff Gordon and Johnson suffered failures at Bristol, and the No. 48 team also dealt with a blowout two weeks ago at Pocono. As far as tires are concerned, a big, high-speed track like Michigan can prove especially vexing.

“Our company had trouble last time with this tire at this race, and we paid close attention to it all weekend, and felt like we were extra careful,” Earnhardt said. “They want to put the responsibility on ourselves, but we did everything we thought we could do to ensure this kind of thing wouldn’t happen today. It’s just unfortunate that we’ve had this kind of bad luck. But we’ll be all right. We’ll keep running good. Three races to go, we keep running like we’re supposed to … we’ll be fine.”

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