Check out the new looks hitting the track this weekend

Related: Weekend schedule | Latest news from Watkins Glen | Bowyer shows off ‘Duck Dynasty’ paint scheme

NASCAR returns to a road course again this week at Watkins Glen International. The track has hosted 30 Sprint Cup Series races, six of which have been won by Hendrick Motorsports. Tony Stewart edges out Marcos Ambrose as the driver with the best driver rating at The Glen, but won’t be competing due to a broken leg suffered in a sprint car crash.

See this week’s schemes below and check back as we continue to update this page.

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Clint Bowyer will drive the No. 15 Peak ‘Duck Dynasty’ Toyota

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Greg Biffle will drive the No. 16 3M/811 Ford.

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David Stremme will drive the No. 30 Genny Light Toyota.

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Brian Vickers will drive the No. 55 Toyota 30th Anniversary Toyota.

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Tomy Drissi will drive the No. 87 The Counselor Toyota.

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Carl Edwards will drive the No. 99 Kelloggs Cheez-It Ford.

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Joey Logano will drive the No. 48 Discount Tire Ford.

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Papis, SHR competition director Zipadelli touch on Stewart injury

Related: Full Stewart coverage | Drivers react | Helton, Jarrett make mention

Greg Zipadelli, competition director for Stewart-Haas Racing, said the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series organization has made no driver decisions beyond this weekend’s race at Watkins Glen International while co-owner/driver Tony Stewart recovers from a broken right leg.

“I think Tony has one more surgery that needs to be addressed,” Zipadelli said during a national teleconference Wednesday. “I think at that time, in the next 24 to 48 hours, we will have a much better idea of exactly what the healing process will be and will be able to do a better job of  – is it six weeks or is it longer?  Honestly we really do not have an answer for that right now.”

Stewart, 42, broke the tibia and fibula in his right leg when he crashed while competing in an American Sprint Car Series feature race Aug. 5 in Iowa. The three-time Cup champion underwent surgery early Tuesday morning and a second surgery will be necessary, according to team officials.

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SHR officials have named Max Papis to drive the team’s No. 14 Chevrolet in this weekend’s Cheez-It 355 (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET, ESPN) Cup race. Papis tested the Watkins Glen car for SHR at Road Atlanta last month.

“We’ve got a few candidates and we’re talking to a few people,” Zipadelli, crew chief during Stewart’s 10-year stint at Joe Gibbs Racing, said. “We’ve got a lot of people that have obviously reached out. We’re not sure if we can put one person in until Tony gets back or we’re going to have to do multiple people.

“Our main priority was … to get Max in here yesterday, get the seat and all the things that we needed to change in this car and get this car headed to Watkins Glen this afternoon, take care of all the stuff that we’re doing now, and then we’ll get behind some closed doors and kind of really decide who will be the best candidate for the 14 car and SHR to try and maintain what we can in owner’s points.”

Stewart, a winner earlier this year at Dover (Del.) International Speedway, is 11th in points following a ninth-place finish at Pocono on Sunday. He currently holds the No. 1 position for those vying for one of two Wild Card spots in this year’s Chase for the Sprint Cup. The team is also 11th in owner points, which differ from driver points.

He had started 521 consecutive NASCAR Cup races, 10th-most all-time, since moving into the series in 1999. His only previous injury of note came in 2006 when he suffered a broken collarbone at Charlotte Motor Speedway. The following week, at Dover, Stewart started the race before turning the car over to relief driver Ricky Rudd.

Papis, 43, has 35 career starts at the Cup level, the last coming in 2010. He has two starts in the NASCAR Nationwide Series this year and has a varied racing background that includes starts in open-wheel and sports car series in addition to stock cars.

“I don’t look at this like a career‑changing something  … I look at this like an amazing opportunity in a terrible circumstances, and that’s it,” Papis said. “I’m just going to go out there and enjoy every lap I have, enjoy every second I have with the guys, and keep that seat warm for Smoke until he’s going to come back.

“And who knows, maybe in the future we’re going to have some laughs to share about what I did in this car or anything. You never know.

“I believe that sometimes if you push for opportunities, they don’t come, and sometimes things come because of reasons. And again, the thing that I’m the most proud of … is the fact that I’m even considered about this opportunity. There are hundreds of guys out there that can drive this car, but I guess that – I always say it’s not about the money you make, it’s not about anything that you do, but it’s about the story you write.

“And I guess that so far I’ve been writing a pretty decent story to get a call from Stewart‑Haas Racing.”

Papis was originally scheduled to compete with R. Ferri/AIM Autosport Racing in this weekend’s GRAND-AM Rolex Series race at Elkhart Lake, Wis. The team, with Papis and Jeff Segal co-driving, won last month’s Brickyard Grand Prix at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Although plans were made for Papis to compete in both the GRAND-AM and Cup events, which are run on separate days, he said Remo Ferri “told me that he felt that it would have been a better thing for me to stay focused and help Stewart‑Haas Racing in this great opportunity for me and in this difficult circumstances.

“… So I’m sad I’m not going to be there, but I want to thank them for the opportunity and that they are going to let me stay focused on this.”

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‘Disney’s Planes’ voice actor, comedian flies by NASCAR and into theaters

Comedian/actor Dane Cook says he loved cartoons as a kid (“Tom & Jerry was my favorite.”) so it’s not surprising that his most recent on-screen effort was as much fun as it was work. Cook is the voice of the lead character Dusty in “Disney’s Planes," which opens in theaters nationally Aug. 9. A special paint scheme promoting the movie was featured on the No. 48 Chevrolet of five-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson during this year’s GoBowling.com 400 at Pocono (Pa.) Raceway. Cook served as grand marshal for the race and spent time atop the pit box of the Hendrick Motorsports team.

"Many of my fans through the years have been kind of pumping me up on it, saying ‘you should come to a race.’ Nothing beats the actual event. It’s like saying you watch the Super Bowl versus actually being at the Super Bowl."

Dane Cook on attending his first NASCAR race






Is this your first NASCAR event?

Yeah, it’s my first. Many of my fans through the years have been kind of pumping me up on it, saying ‘you should come to a race.’ Nothing beats the actual event. It’s like saying you watch the Super Bowl versus actually being at the Super Bowl. The amount of pure energy that is out there … as a comic, that’s what I like to feed off of, so I feel like I’m in my element.

You’ve been doing stand-up for a number of years now. What was that first experience like?

In 1990, I was scouting a local comedy club in Cambridge, Mass., called Catch A Rising Star. I was sitting there, just watching, trying to learn what … was happening behind the scenes. And I was sitting there, they were reading off the names of perspective open-mikers. That’s how they would do it at this club; you’d sign up and then two weeks later you would show up, sit in the crowd and they would read your name off. And then you’d come up (from the audience).

So I’m sitting there, first time, and the host says, ‘where’s Earnest Glenn?’ Obviously Ernest Glenn didn’t show up because there was about five seconds of silence. I knew this guy wasn’t in the room and the next thing I knew my hand was in the air.

The host looks down at me and says, ‘Are you Ernest Glenn?’ I said, ‘Yes I am.’ So my first five minutes of performing was 23 years ago as Ernest Glenn. I’d like to find him and thank him because he started my career by not showing up that night.

You’re the voice of the main character Dusty in “Disney’s Planes.” Had you ever done that type of work?

No, nothing of this caliber, nothing with the amount of magic that (goes on) behind the scenes when you work with a company like Disney with their lineage and Pixar and everything. Just a bevy of incredible family animated films. When they came calling, I was over the moon to be a part of it.

Were you allowed any input into the development of the character?

Well, initially your first reaction is ‘these people have been doing this a long time. I think they know exactly what gives and probably don’t need a lot of punch up.’

But, once I got in the room, I found there were several scenes where my director, Klay Hall, and our producer, John Lasseter, would say, ‘there is some room to play here. Let’s try to find something that really resonates in the moment.’ So there were a few places, especially during some of the big action sequences, where I could take off.

What about this particular project appealed to you?

It’s a challenge. As an actor and a performer, it was something outside my comfort zone. As a child, I was pie-eyed watching some of these great Disney cartoons that influenced me and excited me. Again, just to be behind the scenes … see how those things came together — which was even more vast a process than I had been introduced to. I think primarily for my fans who have said to me, ‘I’ve grown up with you. You’re of my generation, but I have a family of my own now.’ They may not be able to get out to see a comedy routine now like they used to, so it was like, OK, this will be really great for their entire family.

Did you ever think you’d be starring in a Disney movie?

I hoped. I guess you wouldn’t think so. But it’s kind of interesting. Because people have said ‘your stand-up is more adult.’ But … George Carlin was on “Shining Time Station,” which was a children’s show. And he was the ‘seven words you can’t say on television’ guy. Eddie Murphy in “Shrek,” Robin Williams in “Aladdin.” So I didn’t feel in any way overwhelmed when they called. I thought, ‘they know what they’re doing.’

 

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First race entitlement for sponsor of yellow-flag periods during races

Phoenix International Raceway officials have announced that ServiceMaster Clean and ServiceMaster Restore will be the title sponsor for the NASCAR Nationwide Series race scheduled for Nov. 9.

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The ServiceMaster 200 will be the penultimate stop for the series in 2013.

It is the first race entitlement for ServiceMaster, which has been involved in the sport since 2009. The Memphis, Tenn.-based company presently serves as the official sponsor of yellow flag periods during NASCAR races.

“The decision was based on a combination of things,” said Eric Eurich, vice president of marketing for ServiceMaster. “We’ve been in racing as you know the last five years or so and continue to look at ways to leverage our investment, look at ways to get our brand message out and connect with the NASCAR race community.”

Although sponsorship opportunities are limited this late in the season, Eurich said he doesn’t feel the company “took a ‘what’s left over’ approach.

“I think we (aligned) with a top quality event at a great venue,” he said.

“We have certainly known the people from Phoenix International Raceway for a number of years and see what kind of top-notch organization they are, what kind of quality events they put on, especially this one being towards the end of the season really was an attractive event for us to consider.

ServiceMaster’s current official sponsorship status runs through the end of the 2013 season. Its involvement beyond this season is something company officials are currently addressing.

“Really right now … we’re in planning process,” he said. “We’re looking at all the various things. We enjoyed our relationships … and we’re looking at the potential down the road.

“It’s been a great relationship; we get a lot of … value; the exposure both from a (business to business) perspective as well as getting very good exposure to the consumers out at the various race venues.

“It’s been something that we’ve been very happy with over the years.”

Last year’s race was sponsored by Great Clips and was won by Joey Logano.

Four NASCAR series will be competing at PIR the weekend of Nov. 8-10 as teams from the K&N Pro Series West, Camping World Truck Series, Nationwide and Sprint Cup Series descend on the 1-mile track located in Avondale, Ariz.

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Sprint car crash will likely force the Stewart-Haas Racing driver to miss the rest of the races leading up to the Chase

Related: Full Stewart coverage | Drivers react | Helton, Jarrett make mention

Tony Stewart may not play basketball and Kevin Ware may not drive a race car, but the three-time NASCAR champion and the University of Louisville guard have one thing in common — both suffered the same kind of fracture in the bones of their lower right leg.

Stewart’s injury in a sprint car crash Monday night may not have been as public or as grisly as Ware’s compound fracture in an NCAA tournament basketball game in March, but from a medical perspective both were breaks of the tibia and fibula in the right leg. The primary difference is that Stewart should be able to return to action much sooner — though not soon enough to maintain hopes of qualifying for this year’s Chase for the Sprint Cup.

An injury like Stewart’s could keep him out of the car for four to six weeks at a minimum, according to Dr. David Geier, an orthopedic surgeon and sports medicine specialist based in Charleston, S.C. “This is very similar to the Kevin Ware injury,” said Geier, who added that such fractures are typically repaired by surgically placing a metal rod down the center of the tibia, which acts as a brace while the bone heals. For an athlete like Ware in a sport that requires running and jumping, the recovery time can be up to a year.

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“For a driver, that may not be as bad, because you’re not having to jump. You’re not having to run and that kind of thing. So there’s the potential that it could be a lot faster,” Geier said. “You could even argue that it doesn’t have to be completely solid, because he’s not putting that much weight on it. But I would at least say it’s going to be a while, because they’ll want to make sure he’s out of the woods in terms of infection and little things like that. So I think it’s going to be a while before we see him, but his return to sports is going to be very different than a football or basketball or soccer player.”

Stewart will miss Sunday’s event at Watkins Glen International, ending a streak of 521 straight Sprint Cup starts dating back to his rookie season. Stewart-Haas Racing has announced that Max Papis will drive the No. 14 car at the upstate New York road course, while Stewart will require a second surgery and remain hospitalized for observation.

SHR did not give a timetable for Stewart’s return. “I can’t imagine it would be any faster than about a month, quite honestly,” said Geier, who has no direct involvement with Stewart’s case. “The pain issues, the stiffness in the knee, there’s a lot of knee discomfort that goes along with that early. … Four to six weeks, I’d be really surprised if he’s back sooner than that. Most athletes would be out a lot longer, but his I would think would more likely be four to six weeks.”

NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Jarrett, a one-time Sprint Cup champion now serving as an analyst on ESPN, can relate to Stewart’s pain. In June 1996, Jarrett crashed hard during a qualifying attempt at Pocono Raceway, breaking a bone in his left leg. He raced two days later, completing just 37 of the 200 laps before his car’s crankshaft failed.

In the case of an injured race car driver, the difference between right and left leg can be as striking as night and day, Jarrett said, placing a heavy emphasis on a driver’s ability to feather the gas pedal through the turns.

“That’s your whole key to racing and being able to drive a race car and drive it fast,” Jarrett said. “You can almost get by without your left foot in these cars now, just simply because of the transmission and everything. Some drivers use that left foot to use on brakes, but you could get by and not have that. But the right one, it’s such a ‘feel’ sport and hopefully there was no kind of nerve damage because you need all of that as a driver to feel what you’re doing, modulate the throttle and get the most out of your race car.”

Geier, a former orthopedic consultant to the U.S. women’s soccer team, added that a return to even day-to-day driving can be tricky after undergoing a fracture of the tibia and fibula. With competitive driving, that issue is magnified.

“The problem with driving is that you’ve just got to be strong enough to slam on the brakes if you need to,” he said. “People are really surprised how weak their leg is initially. That immobilization for a few days, and the pain of surgery, really shuts your quads down for a while, so to be able to slam on the brakes the way you normally do at full strength, that actually takes a while. For you and me that may not be a big deal. For a NASCAR driver, that’s a huge problem.”

Athletes with a similar injury, Geier added, will typically undergo physical therapy three times a week — beginning with putting weight on the leg while on crutches, and eventually working on increasing knee movement and muscle strength. Through it all, Jarrett knows Stewart will be hungry to get back behind the wheel as soon as he is physically able, if not sooner.

“I know probably aside from the fact that he can’t be in the car that, what I know about Tony Stewart as my friend that a rehab situation is not going to make him happy,” Jarrett said. “I don’t mean to laugh at the situation but just thinking about the poor physical therapist that’s having to put Tony Stewart through something where he does not want to be. You can already prepare them for that.

“It’s going to be a difficult road back but I would think that, knowing Tony, he will be someone who’s will be ready to get back in the car well before they think that he is ready for that.”

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Camping World Truck Series stalwart overwhelmed by Eldora industry support

LONG POND, Pa. — Norm Benning didn’t have much time to enjoy the moment. He may have received the biggest cheers of his career by fighting his way into the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series event at Eldora Speedway, but the experience took a toll on his vehicle. The day after returning home from the Ohio dirt track, the veteran racer made a 25-hour round trip to Albany, N.Y., to pick up another truck to race at Pocono Raceway.

“Drove up, loaded it up, drove back,” Benning said. “No sleep.”

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That’s nothing unusual for Benning, who has just two full-time employees working at his shop outside of Pittsburgh, drives without any cooling equipment, and estimates that he does 75 percent of the work on his truck himself. It’s not an easy way to make a living, owning a Truck Series team that doesn’t have much sponsorship. But Benning, a 61-year-old native of Level Green, Pa., couldn’t imagine doing anything else.

“If I didn’t love driving these things, I wouldn’t do it. It’s that simple,” he said at Pocono. “I just love driving these (trucks). … People ask me all the time, and I don’t bother to tell people how far in debt I get sometimes. But nobody’s forcing me to do this. I love NASCAR. I grew up in NASCAR, since I was 6 years old. I remember sitting in Turn 4 at Daytona. It’s just been part of my genetics.”

A longtime ARCA racer, Benning has been a fixture at NASCAR’s national level since the late 1990s, but he’s never enjoyed a moment quite like the one he had July 24 in a last-chance qualifying race at Eldora. Once at the white flag, and again off Turn 4 before the checkered, Clay Greenfield tried slide-job passes to edge Benning for the fifth and final spot into the main event. Both times Benning held on, wedging his red No. 57 truck against the wall and sliding sideways across the finish line to the delight of both the garage area and the sellout crowd.

What Benning told a television interviewer afterward — “I never lifted” — has become his credo. What happened in the garage area, as crewmen from several different teams rallied to help prepare Benning’s banged-up truck for the main event, has become the stuff of Eldora legend.

“That’s one of the coolest things I’ve ever seen in NASCAR racing,” said track owner Tony Stewart. “And then no more than that truck stopped, and there were five teams that pushed it to Kenny Schrader’s trailer, and five teams that started working on it, and Norm is sitting there like a deer in the headlights. He has no clue what’s going on.

“To see how excited he was to make the race, and to see the spirit of the teams …. As big as all this is, to see five different teams pitching in at a dirt track and fixing one guy’s car to get ready for the feature, that’s why we all do what we do. That’s just proof that no matter how big it gets, the drivers, the teams, the root, the passion that started all this is still in everybody that’s here. … That made my whole event, was watching that.”

Norm Benning (No. 57) races eventual Eldora race winner Austin Dillon (No. 39).

Days later, the memories of that night in Rossburg, Ohio, were still fresh. “I thought after they ran the Brickyard, this would all die down,” Benning said. “It’s stronger now than ever.” At Pocono, it was easy to spot Benning — he was the driver in the Truck Series garage wearing an Eldora cap, and shaking an outstretched hand almost everywhere he went. He said he’s selling die-cast trucks, printing up T-shirts with “I Never Lifted” on the front, and held an autograph signing at Pocono, at which everyone in line knew his name.

“That’s what I live for,” Benning said, “those moments in time when I’m competitive.”

Getting there, though, isn’t always easy. Once the spotlight from Eldora had faded, Benning was left with a truck in no shape to compete at Pocono. The right-front frame rail was bent. So was the rear-end housing. “Everything on the body was bent but the roof,” Benning said. So he struck a deal with dirt specialist J.R. Heffner, who agreed to sell Benning the sister truck to the one he drove at Eldora. Less than 24 hours after that race, Benning was on his way to Albany to pick up the new vehicle. He got home, slept four hours, and started transferring items like the seat, fuel cell, engine and transmission from old truck to new.

Over the next few days, he caught a few hours of sleep whenever he could. Although Benning has five crewmen at the track, they live in Florida or New Jersey and meet him at the race site. In the shop, it’s just him and two others. Benning said he finished preparing the truck at 1 a.m. Thursday, and then drove all night to get to Pocono.

“I haven’t paid for the truck yet,” he said, “but we’re here.”

Yet the difficulties didn’t end there. Because the truck’s ignition wires were on backward, Benning didn’t get to make one lap in practice. He had hoped to make some minor adjustments after qualifying, but that got rained out. “At this point, I don’t know if it will go left,” he said before the race. The plan was to soldier through at Pocono — which he did, finishing 28th and pocketing $6,985 for the effort — and focus on the next race Aug. 17 at Michigan International Speedway, where Benning hoped to be more competitive.

Such struggles are nothing new. “I’m just used to it at this point,” he said. “It’s just like, I don’t have any cooling equipment in my trucks. Never did. I’ll lose six to eight pounds. It doesn’t bother me. I’m used to it. All these guys could never put up with 140 degrees. But it doesn’t bother me, I’ve been doing it so long.”

All of which helped make his moment at Eldora so electric. There was something about the grit and determination Benning showed in denying Greenfield over the final laps of that last-chance qualifier that encapsulated his career. He knew the shot was coming — he just had to make sure he took it in the door, and not the left-front fender. So he drove up tight against the wall, bracing for the slide job. “I knew as long as I stayed on the mat, I was going to beat him to the start-finish line,” Benning recalled. “And that’s what I did.”

At first, Benning didn’t realize what was happening — it was a fifth-place finish in a last-chance race, after all. But then he began to hear the cheers of the crowd even through his helmet. The veteran racer has twice recorded a best result of 15th in the Truck Series, most recently last season at Talladega Superspeedway. But his career highlight might have been finishing on the lead lap at Charlotte Motor Speedway in the Sprint Showdown before the 2010 NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race, after which even Roger Penske shook his hand. Of course, that was until he pulled into the garage area at Eldora, and crewmen from several teams began flocking to his truck.

“I’ve never had that happen before,” Benning said. “I got out of the truck and said, ‘Guys, I need some help,’ and it was like flies. I can’t thank those people enough. I’ve tried on the radio shows I’ve done. I’m trying to go through the garage and help every one of them, let them know how much I appreciated it. But none of it’s really sunk in at this point. I just can’t wait until the next dirt race.”

Norm Benning: “I love NASCAR. I grew up in NASCAR, since I was 6 years old. I remember sitting in Turn 4 at Daytona. It’s just been part of my genetics.”

Benning said the first person at his truck that night was Stewart. “He stuck his head in there and said, ‘Norm, you just made this show a success. I don’t know how to thank you,’” he said. Schrader told him to enjoy the accolades, but that his truck needed some work. Kenny Wallace praised him for withstanding everything Greenfield threw at him. Far beyond Eldora, drivers across NASCAR’s national division reacted on social media, lending weight to a fan response that for a time had Benning’s name among the leading trends on Twitter.

Days later, reality had returned as Benning sat in the rainy Pocono garage with a new truck that he hadn’t paid for and was struggling to bring up to speed. But reminders of his moment of Eldora glory still lingered, in the form of the cap he wore bearing the dirt track’s logo, die-casts of his truck with muddy donut marks painted on the left side, and memories of how, for one night, even the sport’s greatest drivers looked up to Norm Benning.

“When people talk like that, it’s great. That makes it all worth it,” he said. “Jimmie Johnson, Mark Martin, I can’t remember all those guys who tweeted and said incredible things about me. I live for those moments. I don’t know when I’ll have another one. Maybe if we get some sponsorship, we can do it again.”

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No. 2 tire changer Fambrough: ‘I wouldn’t be where I am without this place’

MOORESVILLE, N.C. — Colin Fambrough spent much of Tuesday evening showing off the large championship ring he earned last year as part of Brad Keselowski’s pit crew.

Had it not been for the NASCAR Technical Institute, he probably wouldn’t have it.

“I wouldn’t be where I am without this place,” said the 2005 NTI graduate. “It offered really good options for me. I was able to tell my parents, ‘Look — if the NASCAR thing doesn’t work out, I’ve got all this training to go into a manufacturer program, and I can go to work for Ford or BMW or something like that.’ So it gave me a viable career path if racing didn’t work out. Fortunately for me, racing did work out.”

Fambrough is hardly alone there. The No. 2 team’s rear tire changer was one of several graduates gathered to celebrate the 10 years of the NASCAR Technical Institute, which has placed more than 5,000 of its former students in the automotive and motorsports industries since opening its doors a decade ago in a partnership between NASCAR and Universal Technical Institute.

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“It’s one of our best-kept secrets, almost, that people go up and down Interstate 77 and they see NTI on the side of the building,” said NASCAR President Mike Helton. “But until you get inside and really see what UTI has made out of NASCAR Technical Institute, and now the heritage that it’s built — it’s one of our best-kept secrets in some regard. The race shops, the race teams, the automotive peripheral businesses that complement NASCAR’s motorsports efforts, certainly have recognized NTI as a place to go for resources when it comes to employees and everything.”

NTI opened in 2002 as a joint effort between NASCAR and Arizona-based UTI, which operates 11 different technical campuses across the U.S. The 146,000-square-foot campus sits in the heart of racing country, in the same business park as race shops like JR Motorsports and Red Horse Racing. In August of 2003, it produced its first graduating class, and a week later had its first graduate find a job in the NASCAR industry, with the engine shop at Robert Yates Racing.

Tuesday brought together graduates, instructors, executives of UTI and NASCAR, and even drivers like Joey Logano and Sam Hornish Jr. to help celebrate the facility’s first 10 years. “We owe a debt of gratitude to NASCAR,” said John White, UTI’s chairman of the board, “for partnering with us in creating a first-class educational facility that provides a broad-based automotive background.”

Notable NTI alumni include Katy Renard, a 2005 graduate who now works as NASCAR’s chassis pre-certification manager; Daniel Smith, a 2004 graduate who is now the rear tire changer on Tony Stewart’s No. 14 car; and Fambrough, a native of Tyler, Texas, who became hooked on NASCAR after attending the summer 400-miler at Daytona International Speedway in 1999, and decided to attend NTI after seeing a commercial for the school on television.

Tuesday night at NTI, Fambrough was able to brandish a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship ring he won last year as part of Keselowski’s over-the-wall crew at Penske Racing. Would he have one without the other?

“No. Absolutely not. No way,” he said. “I absolutely would not have this opportunity. I know there are some people who have connections who can get in other ways. I came up here and didn’t know anybody. I hadn’t even met my roommate at the time — I met him on Craigslist or something …. I met him when I got up here, and then I knew the representative from the school I had spoken with. That was it.”

For Fambrough and many others, NTI has provided an entry point. Just as important, Helton said, is the base of skilled labor the institute provides the NASCAR and automotive industries. Long gone are the days when race teams scoured the likes of service stations and automobile dealerships looking for mechanics with the potential to work on race cars.

“Teams go looking for talent, and they didn’t know where to start at sometimes,” Helton said. “You’d go to an automotive service center or a dealership and look for mechanics, but then you had to teach them the difference between a street car and a race car. UTI put the race car element into the automotive technology business, and made a pipeline for both sides to benefit from.”

Fambrough broke in thanks to an instructor in his Fab 2 class who was a tire changer on Carl Edwards’ car at the time. That connection got Fambrough a tryout at Roush, which just happened to be on a day when a very young Logano was learning pit-stop practice in preparation for a Hooters ProCup campaign. Roush didn’t want to risk its Cup crew on the new kid, so the team tapped Fambrough and other over-the-wall prospects.

One thing led to another — Fambrough volunteered to work with Logano at a test, and then volunteered to work at the shop. “About four months later they realized they weren’t getting rid of me, so they started paying me,” he said with a laugh. When Logano went to Joe Gibbs Racing to drive on the NASCAR Nationwide Series, Fambrough went along. He worked on Jimmie Johnson’s crew in 2011 before signing with Penske and Keselowski’s team in 2012.

While at NTI, Fambrough earned a broad-based automotive education that he intended to use in case working on a pit crew didn’t pan out. In that eventuality, his plan was to get into a BMW program and work for the manufacturer as a technician. While at NTI, he learned everything from engine construction to how to fabricate brake ducts and noses for race cars.

“You learn everything,” he said. “When you first start, you learn the basics of an engine and how it works and the parts and pieces. You move in to suspension. And then you move on to the oiling system. And then you move up to setups and aerodynamic and engine building, and everything. That’s just on the manufacturer side. A lot of that stuff still applies to the NASCAR side. Race cars are very different, but you can still transfer some of that knowledge over.”

NTI was designed to combine an automotive technology program with a NASCAR-specific motorsports program. Helton hears stories like Fambrough’s, and knows that 10 years later the facility is still doing its job.

“If there was somebody who wanted to get into motorsports, and this was a stepping stone to that opportunity, and we were part of all that,” Helton said, “…that’s a rewarding statement to hear.”

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Article intro

Related: Full Stewart coverage | Drivers react | Helton, Jarrett make mention

 

 

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Papis has road-course pedigree, experience at The Glen

Related: Updated entry list

Max Papis tested last week at Road Atlanta for Stewart-Haas Racing in preparation for this Sunday’s Sprint Cup Series race at Watkins Glen International. Now, he’ll put that information directly to use — by driving Tony Stewart’s No. 14 car in the road course event.

Stewart-Haas Racing announced Tuesday that Papis would replace Stewart for Sunday’s event on the 2.45-mile road course. A three-time champion of NASCAR’s premier series, Stewart broke both bones in his lower right leg Monday night in a sprint car event in Iowa, and is out indefinitely after having surgery to repair the damage.

Stewart will need a second surgery to repair the fracture and will remain hospitalized for observation, according to the team. In missing Watkins Glen, Stewart will also see a streak of 521 consecutive starts at the Sprint Cup level come to an end. The 41-year-old has not missed a race in his full-time career at NASCAR’s top level, which dates back to 1999.

A message from Stewart to his fans was posted on the driver’s Facebook page Tuesday afternoon, reading, "I told someone to go get my phone or else I was going to get up and get it myself. Finally got reconnected to the world and just want to say thank you for all the prayers and well wishes. My team will remain strong and I will be back."

Stewart has five career victories at Watkins Glen, a Sprint Cup record for the facility. A former Formula One and IndyCar driver who now competes primarily in the Grand-Am Sports Car Series, Papis scored his best career finish on NASCAR’s premier series at Watkins Glen in 2008, when he finished eighth. That result is his lone top-10 in 35 career Sprint Cup starts.

Stewart broke the tibia and fibula in his right leg Monday night in a sprint car crash at Southern Iowa Speedway, a half-mile dirt track in Oskaloosa. The Des Moines Register reported that Stewart was leading the Front Row Challenge winged sprint car event with five laps remaining when another car spun and collected the top three drivers. Stewart was transported from the facility via ambulance, the newspaper added.

Monday night’s accident was the latest in a string of spills Stewart has taken in sprint cars in recent weeks. On July 17, he was involved in a 15-car pileup at Canandaigua (N.Y.) Motorsports Park that sent a 19-year-old female driver to the hospital. Last Monday night at Ohsweken Speedway in Ontario, Canada, he was racing for the lead when his vehicle flipped five times. Stewart maintains close ties to his short-track roots by scheduling about 70 sprint car races per year.

Watkins Glen will mark Papis’ first start at the Sprint Cup level since he finished 41st at Michigan in the late summer of 2010. The 43-year-old native of Como, Italy, also has three top-five finishes on the Nationwide Series, all of them in road races at Montreal or Road America. The team posted the following photo on Instagram Tuesday afternoon with the caption "@MaxPapis gets fitted in #TonyStewart’s No. 14 Chevy in preparation for Watkins Glen. #NASCAR"

Stewart’s injury also led SHR to cancel a test planned for Tuesday at Atlanta Motor Speedway. It is not yet known how long he might be out of the car, or who might pilot the No. 14 beyond Watkins Glen.

 

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With his boss likely out of the Chase due to a broken leg, Newman is the only chance for Stewart-Haas Racing to win a championship

From lame-duck driver to Brickyard champion, to the man carrying all of Stewart-Haas Racing’s playoff hopes on his shoulders. It’s been an interesting past few weeks for Ryan Newman, to say the least.

On July 12 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway, it was announced that Newman would be the odd driver out in a restructuring that would bring Kevin Harvick to SHR beginning in 2014. Two weeks later at Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the free agent bolstered his case for a ride for next season by winning one of the biggest races in NASCAR. Now, he’s the lone driver at Stewart-Haas with a chance of making the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup — even though he won’t be working there after this year.

Such is the byproduct of Tony Stewart’s crash Monday night in a sprint car race in Iowa, which left the three-time champion of NASCAR’s premier series out indefinitely with two broken bones in his lower right leg. Stewart had surgery to repair a fractured tibia and fibula, and will miss at least Sunday’s event at Watkins Glen International.

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Sitting out that one event will likely be enough to derail Stewart’s playoff hopes in a tightly-bunched Chase race where just 27 points separate ninth through 15th place in the standings. Stewart maintained his hold on the first Wild Card position following Sunday’s ninth-place run at Pocono Raceway, with his 11th-place points standing and victory earlier this season at Dover combining to place him atop the list of hopefuls vying for the two at-large berths.

That is, until Sunday, when Stewart’s absence from the Watkins Glen starting field promises to alter the picture substantially. Remove Stewart from the equation, and Michael Waltrip Racing driver Martin Truex Jr. becomes the top Wild Card candidate. And right there behind him is Newman, who vaulted into playoff contention two weeks ago by virtue of his Brickyard triumph, and built on that momentum by finishing fourth at Pocono.

Newman is now 14th in the standings, 24 points behind Jeff Gordon in 10th. Although Brad Keselowski and Kurt Busch both rank higher, they don’t have a victory. Kasey Kahne’s victory Sunday at Pocono helped Newman’s cause, given that Gordon, Busch and Keselowski were all in contention at some point, and were all left still looking for that first race win.

“It’s a good run, (but) not as good as it could have been,” Newman said after the race. “We struggled in the pits today, but overall a good effort. We’re racing a lot of the guys around us, where it’s important to get the victory. Jeff was really close there and he’s fighting for his Wild Card spot. We have a win and we are fighting for a top-10 Wild Card spot, but nonetheless it was a good effort. Just a horrible day in the pits for us. We have to get that figured out.”

Overall, Pocono was another promising race for a Stewart-Haas team that has shaken off its poor start, and gained a great deal of traction when Newman and Stewart finished first and fourth, respectively, at Indianapolis. Add in the spectacularly successful Camping World Truck Series race at Eldora Speedway, a dirt track Stewart owns, and it had been a charmed stretch for the three-time champion — until Monday night.

“We’ve been running good. It’s just we still need to be a little bit better,” Stewart, who overcome a pit road speeding penalty Sunday, said at Pocono. “There are cars that are still a little bit better than us right now that we’re trying to get caught up to. So I think our focus is more on that than making the Chase. It’s one thing to make the Chase, but it’s another thing that once you get there, you’ve got to have something you can contend with. So, we’re staying focused on just taking it one week at a time and working on our program.”

Even Danica Patrick showed signs of progress at Pocono — until a her car suddenly broke loose and slid into Travis Kvapil, collecting Jeff Burton and Paul Menard in the process. Patrick was running 18th at the time of the crash, and seeking her fourth top-20 finish of the season.

“There was a car outside of me, and when there is a car outside of you going through fast corners, it takes the side force off of it and the car gets looser when someone is there. It hadn’t been a problem all day. I didn’t do anything different that time. I even kind of told myself going into the corner, ‘It’s fine, just run through the corner.’ I don’t know if (Kvapil) was closer than other cars had been to my outside or not,” said Patrick, who finished 35th.

“It would have been nice to finish in the top 20,” she added. “That is just my goal. It’s simple, it’s nothing crazy, but it’s been a challenge this year. It would have been nice to do that, and we were just having a steady race and a good race and it’s over. We were way better than we were last time. We were competitive and we were making good calls in the pits. Everything was going — it just happens.”

Even so, that crash did little to dim the afterglow of Indianapolis and Eldora, which seemed to buoy the SHR team in recent weeks. Stewart had walked away from a pair of previous spills in sprint cars, one a 15-vehicle pileup and another where his machine flipped five times. Monday night in Iowa, his luck finally ran out when he barreled into a lapped car that had spun while Stewart was leading the race.

Barring a miraculous recovery, the broken leg will almost certainly keep Stewart out of the title picture this year. Now it’s up to Newman to carry the banner for a Stewart-Haas program that’s made great improvements over the past few months — even if it’s not retaining him beyond this season.

“Everybody is working hard,” Stewart said at Pocono. “All of our partners are excited, especially after Ryan’s win at the Brickyard last weekend. We’re proud of him for that, and we’ve just got to keep plugging away.”

 

 

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