Will a successful year among different teams earn him a place as championship contender in 2014?

LEXINGTON, Ohio — The patchwork crazy quilt-of-a-season for AJ Allmendinger has afforded him the opportunity to drive a wide variety of cars on numerous race tracks.
 
Twelve NASCAR Sprint Cup Series starts. A win in his first NASCAR Nationwide Series effort. Five IndyCar races, including a stirring drive in the Indianapolis 500. Two GRAND-AM Rolex Sports Car Series starts, including a podium finish in the Rolex 24 at Daytona.
 
Not bad for someone who didn’t have anything firm lined up before the season. As a result, his phone is ringing, Allmendinger says, and for all the right reasons.
 
“As I kind of joke around with everybody, I say that people are still calling me and it’s not creditors wanting money, so it’s been a great year so far with just everything I’ve got to experience.”
 
Allmendinger will attempt to make it 2-for-2 this season in Nationwide competition Saturday, when he wheels the No. 22 Penske Racing Ford in the Nationwide Children’s Hospital 200 (Saturday at 2:30 p.m. ET, ESPN) at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course. He’s one of just three drivers with experience on the 2.4-mile road course, finishing third here in a Barber Pro Series race in 2002.

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“I remember what the race track looked like,” Allmendinger said Friday before two more rounds of practice. “I just didn’t remember any of the surroundings driving in, so I was lost trying to get in here yesterday.”
 
Allmendinger, 31, has found his way in a figurative sense as well this season, even though his impressive performances have forced him to be somewhat nomadic. Just 11 months removed from his reinstatement to the sport after a failed drug test in June 2012, Allmendinger has created opportunities for himself where, before, there were none.
 
“I feel like there’s potential for me next year for me to have something full time, but as of right now, it’s kind of like my life. I live it one day at a time,” he said. “When I get the opportunity, I try to make sure that I’m ready and do everything I can do to get the fullest and most out of that opportunity. If I can keep doing that this year, something will come aboard.
 
“Kind of when everything gets torn down from you and all the walls get torn down, you’ve got nothing except yourself. In a way, it’s great because I’ve got nothing to hide. I can joke around about the past. I can be who I am, and if people like that or they don’t, then it is what it is. It’s been good. I feel good about next year, but I don’t have anything solid yet. But I feel like I didn’t expect anything this year, and things keep happening.”
 
Allmendinger never doubted his own ability. The only difference is that now he has a few more believers in his corner, including car owners that he previously had no interactions with. After solid runs in the under-funded James Finch-owned Phoenix Racing No. 51, Allmendinger was recruited by JTG-Daugherty Racing in June to share driving duties with primary driver Bobby Labonte and offer advice on how to improve the No. 47 Toyota’s program.
 
Allmendinger has competed with JTG-Daugherty in three races (Michigan, Kentucky and Watkins Glen) already this season, and said he has three more (Atlanta, Kansas and Homestead-Miami) on his schedule.
 
“They’ve been a really good group to work with. It’s a good little team, and I feel like all I’ve done is just try to come in and give my best feedback of what I think,” Allmendinger said. “Maybe it’s the same as Bobby Labonte; maybe it’s different. I’m not saying that it’s better or worse. Hopefully they’ve enjoyed it and are getting something from it. I’m just trying to go out there and be at my best. We’ve got three more and hopefully we can just get better.”
 
Allmendinger, freewheeling in conversation but intense behind the wheel, remains his own biggest critic. He said he’s learned over the last year not to worry about what others think, except for those people he holds close. Among those is Roger Penske, who has given him a second chance with Nationwide and IndyCar opportunities. Allmendinger rewarded the legendary team owner earlier this season, scoring his first Nationwide Series win at Road America driving a Penske car.
 
While there’s a certain thrill in being involved in so many forms of motorsports, Allmendinger would rather have a full-time racing job in 2014, regardless of series. The motivation has less to do with job security, he says, and more to do with competing for a championship.
 
“There’s no such thing as contracts in this sport,” Allemdinger said with an impish grin. “You’ve got to perform every week and if you’re not, you can easily be fired. The contract has nothing to do with it. It’s nice to have a home and this year’s been a lot of fun, but it’s to the point now that dragging my bag out of each hauler, taking it home and washing my clothes, taking my racing stuff out of it and throwing it back in and taking it to the next hauler, the next team, it’s a little difficult now. It’s tough every weekend, so of course I’d like to find a permanent home.
 
“It’s more about having a full-time ride in something that I have the opportunity to win in every weekend, have the most fun doing, enjoying the team that I’m on, and everything that kind of goes along with it. So there’s not one series that I have to be in to be happy. I think it’s just the right situation.”

 

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First race on close-quarters road course has potential for bumps, bruises

LEXINGTON, Ohio — The thought of a field of 40 cars barreling off toward a snug, 90-degree first turn for the first time is a daunting prospect. For Marcos Ambrose, it’s the finish of the NASCAR Nationwide Series’ inaugural event at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course that concerns him more than the start.

“The first lap may not be as intense as the last lap,” Ambrose said. “Our races tend to get in more of a frenzy by the end. It’s a bit like shark week: You throw a bit of bait in the water and it takes a while for the sharks to get excited, but by the end of it, it’s a real shark frenzy, a feeding frenzy, and that’s what it’s going to be on Saturday.”

The prospect of a rough-and-tumble race looms over Saturday’s Nationwide Children’s Hospital 200 (2:30 p.m. ET, ESPN), the first ever for the series on the tight, technical 2.258-mile road course. While the drivers will have had eight hours and 30 minutes of practice before the green flag falls, the predicted complexion of the race is still a subject of widespread conjecture.

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Interestingly, the last two IndyCar races at Mid-Ohio have gone without a caution period. According to an informal straw poll, Nationwide drivers don’t expect a similar show.

“I don’t think I can say zero because anything is possible,” Brian Vickers, fifth in series points, said, “but if there is such thing as a 0.1 percent chance that we’re going to go caution-free, that’s about what it’s going to be. These cars are very different, and I’m not really familiar with IndyCar races here, but these cars have a lot more power, a lot less downforce, a lot more cars, a lot less grip. So it’s a lot more to manage. It’s going to be wild.”

One aspect is the unusual quirk this season’s schedule will throw at the field with road races on back-to-back weekends. Yet drivers insist there’s little carry-over from last Saturday’s race at Watkins Glen International because the track’s nature is so different from Mid-Ohio’s.

While both tracks feature a certain amount of elevation change, Mid-Ohio makes more of a direct comparison to Sonoma Raceway’s tight, intricate layout than the much faster turns and straightaways of the Glen. The Ohio circuit also provides fewer opportunities for overtaking, meaning drivers may be putting their cars’ full fenders to use Saturday afternoon.

“I think there’s certainly the potential for a full-contact race, but any time we go to these road courses there’s always potential for it,” said Regan Smith, third in the Nationwide standings. “At the Glen last weekend, there was potential but it seemed like for whatever reason, guys were minding their P’s and Q’s and being a little more polite than the previous road courses. It’s a situation here where there’s a lot of areas on the race track where it’s not a passing zone, but you can claim that you had your nose in on a guy. It just depends on how guys want to race on Saturday.”

Austin Dillon, the leader in the Nationwide Series standings, said he felt like the potential for chaos also existed in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series’ inaugural event on Eldora Speedway’s dirt, but touted the field’s reputation as professionals for why that race had relatively few pitfalls.

Dillon won that ground-breaking race and has potential to make more history Saturday, but echoed Smith’s thoughts that the mood of the race may shake up the Nationwide Series title fight, where just 18 points separate the top five.

“It just matters how everybody wakes up that morning, I feel like,” Dillon said. “If they want to have a caution-free race, we can all give and take and have a good race like that, or we’ll have a wild one where you see 10 wrecks at the end of the race.”

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Driver wants to win, in NASCAR or elsewhere

Related: Is Kurt Busch a possibility for the 42?

BROOKLYN, Mich. — Juan Pablo Montoya said he realized his days were numbered at Earnhardt Ganassi Racing when the organization chose not to pick up its option with the former open-wheel star earlier this year.

Officials haven’t officially announced that Montoya would not return for 2014, but Montoya said that was indeed the case.

“So I kind of knew it was going to be something different (for me) next year,” Montoya said Friday at Michigan International Speedway. “They confirmed it this week and that was it.”

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Montoya, who made his first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series start in the season-ending race at Homestead-Miami Speedway in 2006, began competing full-time for Ganassi in 2007. He has two victories in 239 career starts heading into Sunday’s Pure Michigan 400 at Michigan.

He is also 22nd in the points standings, and winless in his last 108 starts, dating back to the 2010 season.

“It was a fun seven years with the Target car and Chip and everything,” Montoya, 37, said. “We worked really hard and we had our ups, our downs, but at the end of the day I want to win races. He wants to win races and we want to try something different.”

Montoya’s two NASCAR Cup wins came on road courses – at Sonoma and Watkins. He has 23 career top-five finishes, including three this season (at Richmond, Watkins Glen and Dover), and 56 career top-10s. He also has nine career Coors Light Pole Awards.

Montoya qualified for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup in 2009, finishing eighth, the only time he finished better than 17th in the final standings.

His immersion into stock cars, he said, required “a lot of learning … but I thought I picked it up pretty well. … I made the Chase my third year.

“One of the hardest things … it’s the amount of changes,” he said. “There was never any consistency and I think that was one of the hardest things (to overcome). It wasn’t because they were doing it on purpose, they were just trying new things and trying to make things better. The problem is every time you make changes it makes it harder.”

Management moves made within the organization in recent years, however, have yet to result in improved performance on the track. During his seven-year stint at EGR, Montoya worked with four different crew chiefs — Donnie Wingo, Brian Pattie, Jim Pohlman and Chris Heroy.

Montoya said he has spoken with other teams inside NASCAR as well as IndyCar, but isn’t sure what the 2014 season will bring. Or where it might find him.

“The only thing … is I want to be in a winning car,” he said. “Whatever else I do, don’t know what I’m going to do, but I want to make sure I’m in a winning car.

“It could be with Chip (in IndyCar), it could be with somebody else. You know with Chip, something we said is … make sure we keep our friendship. We are really good friends. We have a good relationship and that was it. It’s not that bad.”

In addition to the No. 42 of Montoya, EGR also fields the No. 1 for teammate Jamie McMurray. McMurray’s fortunes haven’t been much better — while he won three times in 2010, he has failed to finish in the top 10 in points while with the organization.

“I had a great seven years,” said Montoya. “I learned a lot. Whether you believe it or not I became a better race car driver. … I think it’s been a good experience.”

Montoya won the Indianapolis 500 in 2000 while driving for team owner Chip Ganassi (one of 11 open-wheel victories he earned with the organization), and scored seven career wins (including the Grand Prix of Monaco) in Formula One.

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Hornish heads final group in home state

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Teammates Kyle Busch, Darrell Wallace Jr. roll off last

Track Qualifying Record: Joey Coulter 08/18/12 39.109 seconds / 184.101 mph
# Trk Driver Team
1 75 * Todd Peck Norm Benning Racing Chevrolet
2 57 Norm Benning Norm Benning Racing Chevrolet
3 10 * Jennifer Jo Cobb Koma Unwind Ford
4 0 * Chris Lafferty Koma Unwind RAM
5 93 * Chris Jones RSS Racing Chevrolet
6 84 Mike Harmon(i) Beaver Bail Bonds Chevrolet
7 50 * Danny Efland(i) Advanced Electronic Services Chevrolet
8 38 * Scott Riggs(i) RSS Racing Chevrolet
9 81 Jake Crum Chevrolet
10 07 JJ Yeley(i) Engine Parts Plus Chevrolet
11 39 Ryan Sieg RSS Racing Chevrolet
12 99 Bryan Silas Bell Trucks America Ford
13 17 Timothy Peters Spartan Toyota / Valvoline NextGen Toyota
14 8 Max Gresham AmWINS Chevrolet
15 60 Dakoda Armstrong Winfield Chevrolet
16 88 Matt Crafton Great Lakes Wood Floors / Menards Toyota
17 24 Brennan Newberry # Qore-24 Chevrolet
18 32 Miguel Paludo AccuDoc Solutions Chevrolet
19 77 German Quiroga # NET 10 Wireless Toyota
20 9 Ron Hornaday Jr. Smokey Mountain Herbal Snuff Chevrolet
21 4 Jeb Burton # Arrowhead Chevrolet
22 7 John Wes Townley Zaxby’s Toyota
23 16 * Brett Moffitt Goodyear / Tacti Toyota
24 31 James Buescher Rheem Chevrolet
25 29 Ryan Blaney # Cooper Standard Ford
26 3 Ty Dillon Bass Pro Shops / Tracker Boats Chevrolet
27 19 Joey Logano(i) DrawTite Ford
28 18 Joey Coulter FOX Sports 1 Toyota
29 62 Brendan Gaughan South Point Hotel & Casino Chevrolet
30 98 Johnny Sauter Carolina Nut / Curb Records Toyota
31 54 Darrell Wallace Jr. # Camping World / Good Sam Toyota
32 51 Kyle Busch(i) ToyotaCare Toyota

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Track record holder Ambrose rolls off last in Coors Light Pole Qualifying

Track Qualifying Record: Marcos Ambrose 06/17/12 35.4259 seconds / 203.241 mph
# Car Driver Team
1 47 Bobby Labonte KingsFord Charcoal Toyota
2 42 Juan Pablo Montoya Target Chevrolet
3 19 Scott Riggs Plinker Tactical Toyota
4 34 David Ragan Taco Bell Ford
5 15 Clint Bowyer 5-hour Energy Toyota
6 87 Joe Nemechek(i) Toyota
7 13 Casey Mears Valvoline NextGen Ford
8 2 Brad Keselowski Miller Lite / Luke Bryan Ford
9 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. # Fifth Third Ford
10 10 Danica Patrick # GoDaddy Chevrolet
11 21 Trevor Bayne(i) Motorcraft / Quick Lane Tire & Auto Center Ford
12 31 Jeff Burton Cheerios Chevrolet
13 55 Mark Martin Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota
14 36 JJ Yeley Tommy Baldwin Racing Chevrolet
15 78 Kurt Busch Furniture Row / Serta Chevrolet
16 22 Joey Logano Shell Pennzoil Ford
17 27 Paul Menard Nibco / Menards Chevrolet
18 7 Dave Blaney Tommy Baldwin Racing Chevrolet
19 18 Kyle Busch Interstate Batteries Toyota
20 5 Kasey Kahne Pepsi Max Chevrolet
21 1 Jamie McMurray Advil Chevrolet
22 35 Josh Wise(i) MDS Transport Ford
23 83 David Reutimann Burger King / Dr Pepper Toyota
24 30 David Stremme Lean1 Toyota
25 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Freight Toyota
26 29 Kevin Harvick Rheem Chevrolet
27 33 Landon Cassill(i) LittleJoesAutos.com Chevrolet
28 43 Aric Almirola Eckrich Ford
29 32 Timmy Hill # U.S. Chrome Ford
30 98 Johnny Sauter(i) Phil Parsons Racing Ford
31 39 Ryan Newman Quicken Loans / PTA Chevrolet
32 38 David Gilliland Long John Silver’s Ford
33 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. National Guard Youth Foundation Chevrolet
34 56 Martin Truex Jr. NAPA Auto Parts Toyota
35 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s Chevrolet
36 14 Austin Dillon(i) Mobil 1 / Bass Pro Shops Chevrolet
37 95 Scott Speed Leavine Family Racing Ford
38 20 Matt Kenseth Dollar General Toyota
39 93 Travis Kvapil Burger King / Dr Pepper Toyota
40 24 Jeff Gordon Standox Chevrolet
41 51 Brendan Gaughan(i) South Point Hotel & Casino Chevrolet
42 16 Greg Biffle First / 3M Ford
43 99 Carl Edwards Best Buy Geek Squad / Fastenal Ford
44 9 Marcos Ambrose DeWalt Ford

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UNOH 200 entry list for Wednesday, August 21

Click here for the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series entry list for the UNOH 200 at Bristol Motor Speedway

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Click here to watch the NASCAR Nationwide Series GarageCam at 1 p.m. ET.

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