Front Row Motorsports finishes 1-2; Kenseth leads 142 laps, finishes eighth

Related: Full results | Minute-by-Minute blog | Complete Talladega coverage | Wreck video

TALLADEGA, Ala. — In the type of stunning victory that has typified racing at Talladega Superspeedway since its inception, David Ragan led an extraordinary 1-2 finish for Front Row Motorsports, which had never won a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race before Sunday.
 
David Gilliland pushed Ragan, his teammate, to the lead on the final circuit in a green-white checkered-flag finish that took Sunday’s Aaron’s 499 four laps past its scheduled distance of 188 laps. Gilliland came home second, followed by pole sitter Carl Edwards, Michael Waltrip and series leader Jimmie Johnson.

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As Ragan put it, two Davids beat the Goliaths of NASCAR racing in one of the sport’s most unlikely finishes ever.
 
Ragan’s victory followed a massive wreck that took the race to overtime — and to near-darkness, in what truly was a Talladega night. In fact, NASCAR gave the drivers a chance to change their tinted visors for clear ones during the final caution.
 
Afterward, Ragan tried to put the win in perspective.
 
"I can only imagine what it felt like back in 1988 when Mark Martin got that first win for Jack Roush or when Geoff Bodine won that first race for Hendrick Motorsports," said Ragan, who scored his only Sprint Cup win at Daytona in July 2011, his last season with Jack Roush. "I’m sure it was just as special.
 
"A lot of these guys have been to Victory Lane in the Sprint Cup Series and late model racing, short tracks, ARCA — all kinds of series — but to do it here at Talladega in 2013, like I said, it’s a true David vs. Goliath story. I couldn’t be more proud to play my own role."
 
Ragan restarted 10th and Gilliland 11th for the final two-lap sprint. As the cars raced into Turn 1, they were barely visible from the frontstretch grandstand, but the teammates managed to find each other on the track. For the first time in NASCAR’s new Gen-6 car, Gilliland pushed another car through the corners — to the amazement of Edwards, whose jaw dropped in the post-race news conference as Gilliland described the final two laps.
 
"We got restarted there, and it was sprinkling, and it was dark and there was (speedy-dry) on the track so it got on the windshield where it was wet but I could see, and I could see David there and he came down," Gilliland said. "Michael Waltrip was behind me, giving me a good run and just carried a lot of momentum up through there and got hooked up with David and figured he’s got the best chance of anybody sticking together with him out there and just worked our way up there.
 
"It got real tight getting into (Turn) 3 and 4 with Carl there. I know David was sideways and out of the gas, and Carl was right up on his door, and could have gone a number of ways. But, thankfully I just stayed on his bumper. I pushed him all the way through the corners. It’s the first time I’ve ever done that with this car, with these style of cars, because with these type of cars in practice I’ve pushed people down the backstraight and it actually kind of gets underneath that little lip underneath the back bumper cover and I’ve always been kind of scared getting into the corner. As the front car compresses, the back part of the nose doesn’t have anywhere to go because the splitter is already on the racetrack.
 
"But I just pushed him all the way around there and Carl about stalled out a little bit, and we were just able to carry some good momentum and come home one‑two."
 
On Lap 183, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. tried a four-wide move to the outside, but contact with J.J. Yeley‘s car triggered a multicar melee that wiped out Kurt Busch, Ryan Newman, Danica Patrick and Clint Bowyer, among others.
 
That set up the two-lap dash in overtime with Matt Kenseth in the lead and Edwards beside him on the front row. Kenseth, who led 142 laps dropped to eighth at the finish.
 
Michael McDowell blew a tire and hit the wall on Lap 174 to cause the fourth caution of the race and bunch a field that had become segmented during a series of green-flag pit stops that ended on Lap 168. When NASCAR threw the yellow, Johnson led a six-car breakaway that included Kenseth, Kurt Busch, Edwards, Bowyer and Waltrip.
 
The caution, however, brought 19 other lead-lap cars back into play and the massive wreck at the end of the backstretch changed the game completely.
 
NASCAR slowed the race on Lap 122 and stopped it after Lap 125 when showers that had been forecast for race day arrived shortly after 3 p.m. ET. Edwards had nosed ahead of Stenhouse moments earlier and was ahead at the last scoring loop the cars crossed before the yellow.
 
That left the Fords of Edwards, Stenhouse, Joey Logano and Brad Keselowski at the front of the field when NASCAR red-flagged the race, forcing drivers and fans to wait and see whether the event would resume.
 
After a stoppage of 3 hours, 36 minutes, the race restarted after pit stops, and Kenseth quickly surged to the front.
 
As the cars approached Turn 1 on lap 43, a tap from Kyle Busch‘s No. 18 Toyota turned Kasey Kahne‘s No. 5 Chevrolet into the outside wall and triggered a wreck that damaged 16 cars, among them the Chevys of Tony Stewart and Kevin Harvick, the Toyota of Brian Vickers (after a driver change with Denny Hamlin) and the Ford of Greg Biffle.
 
"I know I got in the back of the 5 (Kahne), and I guess I was trying to go to the outside of him," Busch said. ‘But he just moved up in front of me, and I wasn’t expecting it, and I tried to go to the outside of him, and before I could get to the outside of him I got in the back of him.
 
"I just hate that I caused a hell of a melee for everybody. I hate that. A lot of cars got torn up, and it’s way too early in the race to be doing any of those sorts of moves, whether he made it or I made it. Just I hate it that we all got crashed in that deal."
 
Both Kahne and Busch visited the infield care center after the wreck, and both were released in short order.
 
"I just kind of got shot through the center (of the field) there, just a lot of momentum coming from behind," Kahne said of the action immediately before the crash. "Felt the No. 18 pushing me, and next thing I know, I was spinning.

"You just can’t push with these cars. We learned that at Daytona. He was pushing me and spun me in the wall, and then (it) happened again, so that is what it is."
 
Kahne said he and Busch didn’t speak in the care center.
 
"No, I didn’t talk to him," Kahne said. "I think we both probably understand what happened, and we’ll figure it out from there."
 
Notes: Johnson’s margin in the Cup standings over second-place Edwards shrank by two points to 41. Dale Earnhardt Jr. (17th Sunday) is third, 59 points behind his Hendrick Motorsports teammate… Paul Menard finished 26th with a sour engine but gained two spots to eighth in the standings because other drivers in Chase-eligible positions had bigger issues… Ragan and Gilliland won a combined $608,261 for their 1-2 finish, a welcome payday for a team run by owner Bob Jenkins predominantly out of his own pocket.

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Sprint Cup Series: Aaron’s 499 results 
Nationwide Series: Aaron’s 312 results

The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series and NASCAR Nationwide Series both put on quite a show at Talladega Superspeedway this week.

In both instances, a weather-delayed race came down to a green-white-checkered finish.

Check back for the latest coverage from NASCAR.com.

In the Rearview

NASCAR.com’s Holly Cain breaks down the biggest story lines from Talladega Superspeedway, including David Ragan’s win, Brad Keselowski’s comments and more. Get an in-depth look at a thrilling weekend that was full of records and wrecks. | Read the full story

Ragan weathers storm

David Ragan waited out a rain delay that caused Sunday’s Aaron’s 499 to be red-flagged for more than 3 hours and 30 minutes. Then the No. 34 Ford stunningly surged to the front of the field on a green-white-checkered restart to win at Talladega Superspeedway in a 1-2 finish for Front Row Motorsports. | Read the full story

Big Ones hit early, late

It didn’t take long for the Big One to happen at Talladega Superspeedway. On Lap 44, Kyle Busch nudged Kasey Kahne as the two entered Turn 1, setting off a massive chain reaction. Then late in the race, there was an 11-car incident that saw Kurt Busch‘s car flip onto Ryan Newman‘s hood. | Watch the final wreck here | Watch the first wreck here

Kenseth’s strong run for naught

A dominant day for Matt Kenseth didn’t quite end that way in the results column at Talladega. The Joe Gibbs Racing driver led a stunning 142 of the 192 laps, but was shuffled back to an eighth-place finish after a hectic overtime restart in the Aaron’s 499. | Read the full story

Stenhouse sinks in late chaos

Ricky Stenhouse Jr. was sitting a promising second during a lengthy rain delay at Talladega Superspeedway, but the resumption of the Aaron’s 499 didn’t help his chances at a top-five finish. The Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate slid from fifth to a 13th-place finish in the final restart. | Read the full story

Minute-by-Minute

Excited about Sunday’s race? Did you miss anything? To stay totally tuned in, read through NASCAR.com’s Minute-by-Minute blog for Talladega Superspeedway updates, videos and social media reaction as the Aaron’s 499 progressed. | Recap: Minute-by-Minute

According to plan

Denny Hamlin’s plan went off smoothly. On the first caution of the race, the driver exited his No. 11 Toyota through a roof hatch as Brian Vickers slid into the driver’s seat. Hamlin logged fewer than 25 laps, but expects to return full time next week at Darlington Raceway. | Read the full story

Nationwide wrecks

First, Sam Hornish Jr. and Eric McClure collided, triggering a multicar crash. Then on a thrilling final lap, seven cars wrecked to bring out a caution, delaying the announcement of a winner for a few minutes. Relive both incidents here. | Watch the Hornish Jr. wreck | Watch the final wreck

Smith wins thriller

In a delayed — and shortened — Aaron’s 312, Regan Smith emerged from a green-white-checkered shootout to win Saturday. The late restart produced plenty of drama, including a big wreck on the final lap. Smith was in the lead when the caution flew, NASCAR determined. | Read the full story

Danica sent spinning

In Saturday’s Nationwide race, Danica Patrick made an early exit after getting bumped from Turner Scott Motorsports teammate Kyle Larson. She later went to the garage, her No. 34 too damaged to continue. | Watch the video

Pastrana angry, not hurt

After winning the pole, Travis Pastrana had a strategy. He didn’t follow it once the race began and, as a result, was in position to be collected in a wreck that was not his fault. The former X Games star took the hit hard. | Read the full story

MWR targets Vickers

Michael Waltrip Racing’s No. 55 Toyota is currently split among three drivers. If Waltrip has his way, Brian Vickers will be the full-time driver in 2014 — with longtime sponsor Aaron’s still on the front of the vehicle. | Read the full story

Pastrana wins pole

Travis Pastrana’s full-time transition to NASCAR picked up even more steam Friday when the Roush Fenway Racing driver won his first career pole, which came at the largest track on the NASCAR circuit. | Read the full story

Junior changes tune

Dale Earnhardt Jr. was contemplative and forthcoming when he met with the media Friday. NASCAR.com’s Kenny Bruce details how the driver has let go of the anger that lingered following last year’s concussion. | Read the full story

McClure returns a changed man

Eric McClure was involved in a horrific wreck last year that left the NASCAR Nationwide Series driver with a concussion and doubts on his future. The driver is back at Talladega Superspeedway with a new perspective on racing — and life. | Read the full story | Watch the video

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Sprint Cup rookie survives chaos, but tumbles from Talladega top five

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Ricky Stenhouse Jr. appeared headed for what would have been a career-best second-place finish Sunday in a rain-shortened Aaron’s 499 at Talladega Superspeedway.
 
Until the rain stopped, the racing resumed, the cars crashed, the clean-up was completed and the skies darkened. The NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race went overtime, four laps beyond its scheduled 188-lap distance.
 
Stenhouse, a Sunoco Rookie of the Year candidate, didn’t benefit from the additional track time.

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“We got stuck starting on the inside and our car was never good on the bottom,” the Roush Fenway Racing driver said after falling from fifth to 13th during the green-white-checkered finish. “We were only good when we ran around the top. I felt like we had a strong car; it just didn’t fall the right way.”
 
On a day that saw 2003 series champion Matt Kenseth dominate only to finish eighth when he got shuffled out of the lead on the final restart, the 25-year-old Stenhouse led briefly — once for two laps. The two-time Nationwide Series champion hooked up with RFR teammate Carl Edwards to flash to the front of the field as rain began to move into the area.
 
Edwards had just muscled his way into the lead as the rain intensified, leading NASCAR to throw the caution flag, eventually completely stopping the race for more than three and a half hours.
 
“I was kind of hoping it was going to go ahead and rain when we were second,” Stenhouse confessed. “I could have used a top-five.”
 
His 15th career start in Cup was a near miss, and Stenhouse said his car was “better than a 13th-place car.”
 
“But I felt really good about how strong the car ran,” he said. “How strong Carl ran. Both of us complained after Daytona (about horsepower). … At Daytona I didn’t feel like I had that power, I didn’t have the car so I could make some of those moves. I felt really good about that (today).”
 
Considering that he was around at all, perhaps a top-15 finish wasn’t anything to dismiss. He was a key participant in one of those nasty, multicar crashes that alter the face of the races at Talladega, somehow avoiding the disaster that engulfed others.
 
Shooting along the outside lane on the backstretch on lap 183, he and J.J. Yeley made contact. Yeley spun to the inside, collecting Kurt Busch, whose No. 78 Chevrolet proceeded to roll over and landed on the hood of Ryan Newman.
 
In all, 12 cars were involved. No drivers were injured despite the severity of the crash.
 
“I felt like the 36 was holding our line up pretty good and if I could get to the outside, I had a lot of cars that were going to come with me there,” Stenhouse said. “Just didn’t end up having enough room after we got to about his door.
 
“It was pretty dark so don’t know if his spotter couldn’t see or what. I felt like I got up to his door and just got pinched in the wall.”
 
Stenhouse had been running second earlier when a round of green-flag pit stops saw him penalized for speeding upon entering pit road. The subsequent drive-through penalty shuffled him back to 25th. Slowly, he began working his way back toward the front.
 
“Pretty mad at myself for that (penalty) but we worked our way back up to fifth without a problem,” he said. “The car was plenty fast in the draft and could lead very well on the outside; I felt like we could make some moves on the outside and make it work when we had to. So I felt good about that.
 
“It just was not as strong of a finish as we wanted.”

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Early caution helps injured Joe Gibbs Racing driver make easy swap with Vickers

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Denny Hamlin was in no hurry to climb out his No. 11 Toyota. But when the caution flag appeared for the first time on Lap 23 of Sunday’s Aaron’s 499, Hamlin knew his day’s work had come to an end.
 
Injured in a crash on the final lap of the March 24 Auto Club 400, Hamlin returned to the seat of his race car at Talladega Superspeedway after missing four consecutive races with a lower back injury. But the risk of compounding the injury at Talladega, where multicar crashes and high speeds are the norm, was too great to risk staying in the car any longer than necessary. Because he started the race, Hamlin would therefore receive whatever driver points his replacement driver, in this case Brian Vickers, would earn.

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Riding near the back of the 43-car pack (he was 38th and cruising after 15 laps of the scheduled 188-lap race), Hamlin made his way to pit road after Trevor Bayne’s engine issue brought out the yellow flag on lap 24.
 
Once in his pit box, crewmen focused solely on helping Hamlin exit the car and Vickers get in. Once the swap was complete, Vickers was told to “go ahead and roll” by crew chief Darian Grubb to make sure the team didn’t fall a lap down. He returned to pit road the following lap to allow the team to service the car.
 
When the race resumed under green, Vickers was 39th on the board.
 
“The (driver) exchange went great,” Hamlin said afterward. “That was about the quickest that I was able to get out so everything went well. I had a checklist in the car with things that I needed to do before I got out to switch over for the next driver. Everything really went seamless and painless.”
 
Hamlin spoke briefly with team owner Joe Gibbs after exiting the car.
 
Vickers’ stint didn’t last long before he found himself in the middle of a multicar accident. After marching through the field, and less than 15 laps after the swap, contact between Kyle Busch and Kasey Kahne at the front of the field occurred, sweeping up another 14 cars, including Vickers.
 
Hamlin had originally hoped to return a week earlier, at Richmond, until doctors failed to give him clearance to compete.
 
It was at Richmond, Hamlin said, that Tony Stewart approached him and mentioned working together at Talladega to allow Hamlin to stay in the draft but run in the back where he might avoid any problems.
 
“Me and Tony for whatever reason … we’ve been closer off the race track and on the race track now that he’s with Stewart-Haas than ever when we were with (Joe) Gibbs (Racing),” Hamlin said. “We’ve got a great relationship and he’s had my back really for the last three years.”
 
Hamlin said he expects to be in the car next weekend at Darlington.
 
Sixth before his crash at ACS, Hamlin entered Sunday’s race at Talladega 28th in the standings. His only chance at possibly qualifying for the 10-race Chase for the Sprint Cup would be to climb into the top 20 in points and also win enough races to qualify for one of the two wild-card spots available.
 
“This is going to be the start of everything, so anything that Brian gets us for points today is strictly a bonus,” Hamlin said, “and we’re going to start next week in Darlington with our hair on fire.”

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Not following team’s strategy hurts driver more than wreck

Related: Video: Watch the wreck | Aaron’s 312 results | Points standings | Full Talladega coverage

TALLADEGA, Ala. — The impact with the wall was nothing compared to the way Travis Pastrana beat himself up afterward.

One day after winning his first pole position in the NASCAR Nationwide Series, Pastrana’s hopes of a first race victory ended Saturday when he was caught up in an accident not of his own making on the giant 2.66-mile track at Talladega. Brian Scott and Reed Sorenson tangled, and Pastrana barreled into the No. 43 car hard enough to lift it off the ground. The former X Games star then rebounded into the outside wall before coming to rest in soggy infield grass.

On a track where cars compete in such close proximity to one another, there was virtually nothing the Roush Fenway Racing driver could do to avoid Sorenson’s car abruptly turning sideways in front of him. But that didn’t stop Pastrana from blaming himself, believing he should have been in a better position to stay clear of the accident. 

"Nowhere to go when the crash happened, but we shouldn’t have been there. … That’s entirely my fault."

Travis Pastrana

“We had a strategy — hey, let’s try to stay in the back after we try to lead a lap,” said Pastrana, who drafted with teammate Trevor Bayne for much of the race. “I don’t know what happened, but we were up there in the front and got tangled in somebody else’s mess, and we’ve got the two fastest cars on the track. For me to be out already is just stupid on my part.”

Indeed, after winning the pole Friday, Pastrana said the plan was to lead early, drop to the back and then make a charge late. Pastrana led the first four circuits around NASCAR’s biggest track, and then dropped back in the field when he and Bayne became separated. He was running seventh just before Scott wobbled into Sorenson, who was struck broadside by the onrushing No. 60 car.

Pastrana took a hard hit into the outside wall, but afterward only his pride was aching.

“Nowhere to go when the crash happened, but we shouldn’t have been there,” he said. “There’s no reason we should have been there. That’s entirely my fault. I knew Trevor was going to be running up front, but we could be sitting a half-lap back and we still could have had a chance to go for the win. We had a great car and could have met up with him later. But I didn’t stick to the strategy, and that’s why I’m being hard on myself. There was a strategy that would have had us with a chance with a couple laps to go. And now I’m sitting in the pits.”

Standing outside the Talladega infield care center, this wasn’t the happy-go-lucky Pastrana people have seen so often since his transition from extreme sports to NASCAR. Teaming up with car owner Jack Roush came with the caveat that it was time to get serious, a mental shift that Pastrana — who earlier in his career thrived under no-nonsense motorcycle program manager Roger DeCoster — was more than willing to make.

All of which might explain why Pastrana was so hard on himself even in the aftermath of an accident that wasn’t his fault, and he couldn’t avoid. “It’s stupid,” he said. “I just feel like a complete idiot. I mean, the race is going on and I’ve got to watch the rest of this thing. Trevor’s got a great car, but it would have been awesome to put our two cars together.”

Bayne would join him in the garage soon enough, after the No. 6 car was caught up in an 11-vehicle accident that knocked out several contenders — including former series leader Sam Hornish Jr., who left down 27 points to race winner Regan Smith. As Pastrana was hurtling toward the wall, he wasn’t thinking about how much the impact was going to sting. He was thinking about how painful it was going to be to lose such a good car.

“At the meeting on Monday, Jack’s going to say, ‘You two guys had the two fastest cars and should have put them 1-2,’ ” Pastrana said. “And we doggone should have put them 1-2. Just devastated for the team.”

Talladega shaped up as Pastrana’s best chance to contend for a race victory since the season opener at Daytona, where he evaded the big wreck on the final lap that sent Kyle Larson’s car into the catchfence to finish 10th. He was coming off his best career finish in the series, ninth a week ago at Richmond, and was clearly elated after winning his first pole Friday.

Late Saturday afternoon, that accomplishment seemed very far away — a feeling only accentuated by gloomy skies and rain earlier in the day that delayed the start of the Nationwide race, which finished at dusk.

“You’re only as good as your last performance, and we put this one into the side of a backward 43 car,” Pastrana said. “Yeah, I’ll always have that I led the (field) to the green. It’s just a shame. You don’t get great cars every race. You’re lucky to get the two best cars on the track on your team at any event for the year. To have that at this event and to be watching the race is just devastating.”

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Harvick shrugs off Talladega talk; others remain leery

TALLADEGA, Ala. — So much goes into a successful run at Talladega Superspeedway. There’s the strategy of whether to stay at the front of the pack, or when to make the move to try and get there. There’s position and sheer good fortune in relation to the Big One. There’s recognition of the placement of the start/finish line, which is not at the top of the tri-oval, but pushed all the way over toward Turn 1.

And then there’s attitude — reaching a peace with a facility so many wrestle with, grabbing on with both hands and enjoying NASCAR’s wildest ride.

Kevin Harvick is able to do that, even on what is perhaps the most polarizing facility on the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series schedule. There are some who struggle to get past the somewhat capricious nature of Talladega, the fact that a driver can do everything right and still end up with a wadded hunk of metal. There are some who have endured more than their share of Big Ones here, and allowed it to color their perception of the place.

And there are some who simply give themselves over to the whims of speed and aerodynamics, who surf that roiling wave wherever it takes them, and who accept the randomness as a matter of course.

"It is just a race. It really is."

Kevin Harvick

“You see a lot of guys drive themselves crazy about having to come to Talladega and complaining about what they think is right, or what they think is wrong,” said Harvick, a 2010 winner at the track. “It is just a race. It really is.”

Harvick said his attitude stems from team owner Richard Childress, a former driver himself whose cars have been a force on restrictor-plate tracks since the glory days of Dale Earnhardt. Sometimes moves pay off, sometimes they don’t. Sometimes cars get wrecked, sometimes they finish the race with hardly a mark on them. You put feelings and rivalries and egos aside, get in the best position possible and go for it.

“My approach to these types of races has always been just, you don’t worry about the things you can’t control, which is a whole lot here,” Harvick said. “You go out, and go in with a mindset of that I enjoy restrictor-plate racing. … I know that a lot of people might think that you are crazy for thinking like it’s fun. But it is fun. I know that the end result doesn’t look like it is fun. It is a lot of work for the guys that fix the car. It’s dangerous. But … I’ve always just tried to approach it with that I-don’t-care attitude, and just do whatever you have to do to try to put yourself in position. And when you leave here, if you wreck, you can’t be mad. It’s part of the game.”

Mentally, that can be a difficult place to reach — the NASCAR garages are full of drivers who have a conflicted relationship with this facility, either because of their own personal experiences or philosophies on plate racing. Just ask Ryan Newman, a former Daytona 500 winner who’s had just one top-10 in his last seven starts here, and a few times has finished the race on his roof.

“I wouldn’t say I dread coming to Talladega,” he said. “It’s not my favorite race track, but I don’t say I dread it. I love doing what I do. I love driving a race car, even at Talladega. I think the difference is, there’s more potential to get involved in something not of your own making (here), and that’s frustrating to me. But that’s not just me.”

Understandably so, given how this track can play on a driver’s mind — before, during and after the race.

“There’s a lot of guys that come to this track worried, nervous and … scared that they’re going to lose points, they’re going to get caught up in a crash and it’s going to cost them and take them a month to overcome a bad race,” two-time Talladega winner Clint Bowyer said. “Looking at my Chase last year, this race right here cost me a shot at a championship. This was the one race that I felt like we lost enough points that we couldn’t make up for it racing against the caliber of teams that we were.”

Last year’s big crash cost Bowyer 15 points in a championship race he would ultimately lose by 39 to Brad Keselowski. And yet, that episode hasn’t impacted his opinion of the place. “It’s a fun situation, but you better make sure that you’re having fun with it,” Bowyer added. “If you’re miserable the whole time you’re here, you’re not going to make the right decisions and probably not going to have the success.”

Of course, attitude can’t prevent another car from changing lanes at the wrong time, or keep a driver from getting sucked to the back of the pack if he falls out of the draft. There are forces at work at Talladega that seem to defy explanation. But clearly, there’s something to be said for embracing the experience of that impossibly wide pack of cars roaring through those impossibly high banks — even if it’s on the heels of a 25-car crash and a concussion.

That’s the case of Dale Earnhardt Jr., who unleashed some pointed comments on Talladega and restrictor-plate racing in general after being caught up in the 25-car melee that occurred on the final lap last fall. The aftermath found him angry and frustrated, sitting on the steps of his transporter with his head in his hands. Later it would be revealed that he had suffered his second concussion in six weeks, and he would have to sit out two races as a result.

“I don’t even want to go to Daytona and Talladega next year,” he said then. “But I ain’t got much choice.”

Looking back, he regrets those words. That was the frustration and the concussion talking, he said. Which explains why the five-time Talladega winner is back at the same track this weekend, and in good spirits as he chases his first victory here since 2004. After all, at Talladega, attitude can be everything.

“I always feel confident when we come here, that we are going to have a good car, going to know how to use it, and I think we feel that way coming in this weekend,” Earnhardt said. “… Hopefully, we get an opportunity to race on Sunday and go to Victory Lane. We really feel like we have a good shot at it, and feel like it is about that time for us to win one here at Talladega.”

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Team owner hopes to keep Martin’s fill-in in MWR fold

TALLADEGA, Ala. — If Michael Waltrip had his choice, Brian Vickers would drive his No. 55 car full-time on the Sprint Cup Series in 2014, with longtime sponsor Aaron’s on the front of the vehicle.

Waltrip, making a rare start this weekend at Talladega Superspeedway, said Saturday his hopes are to bring Vickers and Aaron’s together full-time at Michael Waltrip Racing in 2014, using one driver in a ride now split between Vickers, Waltrip, and Mark Martin, who is in his final season with the organization.

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Martin is running 24 of 36 points races this year in the No. 55 car, in addition to the exhibition Sprint Unlimited and Sprint All-Star Race. Waltrip, a two-time Daytona 500 champion, takes the wheel for restrictor-plate events like Sunday’s race at the 2.66-mile Talladega track. The remaining events are filled by Vickers, who also pilots a Nationwide Series car full-time at Toyota stablemate Joe Gibbs Racing.

Next year, Waltrip hopes to have Vickers in the vehicle full-time as teammates to current MWR drivers Clint Bowyer and Martin Truex Jr.

“We’ve raced with Aaron’s for 14 years, and we hope that we can sign something that will put that deal together for the near foreseeable future to come, three years or so,” Waltrip said. “We’re working hard with Aaron’s. We’ve targeted Brian Vickers as the guy we want to drive our car. We think Brian is a future champion in the Cup Series. We want Brian to drive it and we want Aaron’s to sponsor it. That’s the news, and that’s where it’s at.”

Waltrip, this weekend driving a No. 55 car with an Alabama Crimson Tide paint scheme to honor the reigning college football national champions, is optimistic the deal will come together.

“I think both Aaron’s and Brian are very into making that happen,” he said. “It would just be a matter of getting the details worked out in order to be able to announce it soon. So when it happens, it won’t be a surprise, because that’s what we’re after.”

Vickers, a two-time race winner in NASCAR’s premier series, has been without a full-time Sprint Cup ride since his former Red Bull team was sold. He competed in eight events in MWR’s No. 55 car last season, recording a top finish of fourth at Bristol and Sonoma. So far this year he’s made two starts, with a top result of eighth at Bristol. He’s also been substituting in JGR’s No. 11 car for Denny Hamlin, who has been recovering from a fractured vertebra, but will start Sunday’s event.

Martin, 54, is in the final season of a two-year deal with MWR. Although he has announced no plans for 2014, he is still expected to compete on a limited basis at NASCAR’s national level.

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One point separates driver from leader Sam Hornish Jr.

Related: Aaron’s 312 lineup, speeds

TALLADEGA, Ala. — Regan Smith had to stop and think. The last time he had led the points standings in a racing series? Not since his move into NASCAR, he knew. Perhaps more than a decade ago in his Hooters ProCup days. More likely, when he was a teenager in the Allison Legacy Series.

“It’s been a while,” he said. “It would be a cool deal, but it doesn’t pay anything to lead it right now. Our focus is further down the road.”

Even so, should Smith emerge as the NASCAR Nationwide Series points leader after Saturday’s event at Talladega Superspeedway, it would prove a notable first for both him and his race team. Despite a successful stint with future NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Brad Keselowski, JR Motorsports has never seen one of its drivers atop NASCAR’s No. 2 circuit. But that possibility exists this weekend, given that Smith trails leader Sam Hornish Jr. of Penske Racing by a single point.

"It would be a cool deal, but it doesn’t pay anything to lead it right now."

Regan Smith

Hornish and Smith have proven to be the class of the Nationwide field so far this season, with third-place driver Brian Scott 23 points off the lead. Being atop the standings is nothing new for Penske, which owns the most recent Sprint Cup title thanks to Keselowski, who also has a Nationwide crown to his credit. And although Hornish is chasing his first NASCAR title, he owns a trio of IndyCar championships — one of them for Penske — in addition to an Indianapolis 500 ring.

Then there’s JRM, which has competed at the Nationwide level since 2005, and restructured after last season to try and reclaim the form it showed a few years earlier. The changes have already borne fruit, given that Smith won last year’s Nationwide finale in his first start with the team, and has been a contender in almost every event since. Reaching the top of the standings — and taking a foothold toward a potential championship — remains the next step to take.

“I think it says a lot about the changes we made over the last several months to try to turn things around and get the program more competitive,” said Dale Earnhardt Jr., who owns the team along with Rick Hendrick and sister Kelley Earnhardt Miller. “I think it raises awareness to potential partners for us to help us afford to put a great competitive team on the race track. It says a lot about Regan. It says a lot about the employees that we have there and how competitive they are and how talented they are. It says a lot. I’m excited about that. I’m excited about their potential this year.”

Although JRM has never led the Nationwide standings, it’s come close — Keselowski stood second for nine weeks of the 2008 campaign. Keselowski was also third for much of 2009, and Aric Almirola was third for two weeks in 2011. The organization slipped after that, leading to a flurry of personnel moves last year that included the departures of crew chief Tony Eury Jr. and competition director Tony Eury Sr. — also Earnhardt’s cousin and uncle, respectively. Smith was brought in after subbing for Earnhardt when the Sprint Cup star missed two races due to a concussion.

His victory at Homestead was the organization’s first since Jamie McMurray prevailed in 2010. Smith would likely have the Nationwide Series lead already had he not been involved in the massive final-lap crash at Daytona that sent Kyle Larson’s car in the catchfence — an accident that began with Smith, going for the victory, tried to block Keselowski off the final corner. Since then Smith and crew chief Greg Ives have been almost flawless, their only finish outside the top-10 an 11th-place result at Phoenix.

“We can’t get those points back,” he said of Daytona, where he wound up 14th. “We’d love to have them back, and that certainly hurts our average this year. We’ve only had one race we felt like was just off, and that was Phoenix. We had a three-hour car ride to Vegas, and we all talked about it, and talked about things we’d do different going back, and I think if we raced that race the next day, we’d have had a top-five car. Outside of that, it’s just been a steady process of, how do we get a little bit better next time, and things like that.”

It shows — the last five races, the No. 7 car hasn’t finished worse than the number on its door. In a series featuring many younger drivers, Earnhardt believes a veteran like Smith has an advantage, if he can overcome the frustration he sometimes feels inside the vehicle.

“He has a bit of a temper sometimes,” Earnhardt said. “If he can just kind of keep that in check, he has a great chance. He has got a good team around him. They are going to get better, I think, because they just started working together at the start of this year. The potential there is through the roof for those guys, if they can just all work together, and stay on a good positive path mentally with each other, and work together well. They have to go to the race track every week and try to do the best they can, and stay out of trouble.”

Asked about his temper, Smith laughed and admitted sometimes he can vent over the radio. That’s when he’s helped by the presence of Ives, who won five Sprint Cup titles as lead engineer for Jimmie Johnson’s No. 48 team. “He’s very calm, he’s very collected, he’s been in a lot of situations I’ve never been in,” Smith said. “He understands — OK, can’t fix that right now, just shut up and do your job. That’s one of his strengths.”

Smith can also bend the ear of his car owner. He said he and Earnhardt will chat or text after races, with the 19-time winner on the Sprint Cup tour providing whatever insight he can. “He’ll give me a straight answer,” Smith said. He hopes to keep leaning on Earnhardt for advice all the way down to Homestead — when taking the series lead would really mean something.

“Yeah, we’d love to lead the points,” he said. “… It’s good for all of our partners. Anytime you can lead the points, that means they’re chasing you, and you’re not the one chasing. There are (39) guys chasing, there’s one guy being chased. I think more than anything, that would put us in the position we want to be in of being chased. I think that’s the main thing. But if we can get to Homestead and be leading the points after that one, then it would be symbolic.”

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JRM driver avoids two major wrecks to take photo finish

Related: Video: Watch the wreck | Aaron’s 312 results | Points standings | Full Talladega coverage

TALLADEGA, Ala.–The delicious irony of Regan Smith‘s victory in Saturday’s Aaron’s 312 NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Talladega Superspeedway wasn’t lost on the driver of the No. 7 JR Motorsports Chevrolet. 

With a push from teammate Kasey Kahne, Smith roared out of the pack during the final 400 yards of a green-white-checkered-flag finish and won a race decided when NASCAR called the seventh and final caution an instant before the four cars battling for the win crossed the finish line.

Smith was the leader as the field was frozen when NASCAR called the caution. Kahne was first across the stripe but was scored in third place behind Smith and Joey Logano, who were the two lead drivers when the caution lights came on. 

This was the same Regan Smith who was deprived of victory in a race he thought he had won at Talladega in 2008, when NASCAR demoted him to the 18th position for passing Tony Stewart below the yellow boundary line as the cars approached the checkered flag.

"I was having flashbacks, sitting on pit road–I’m not going to lie–when they were making the decision," Smith said. "I was like ‘Man, I hope we got it–I’m pretty sure we got it when the flag came out and I saw the lights come on… They only thing I didn’t know was if they took it all the way to the stripe.

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"I don’t know if it’s vindication or not. I think I’d gotten over that and gotten past that, but I definitely wanted to win here … but you want to win every week, and it definitely helps wipe that bad memory away of sitting on pit road and finding out you’re 18th instead. So, yeah, that was kind of cool."

Smith took over the series lead, by 27 points over Sam Hornish Jr. in a race whose start was delayed three hours because of rain. It’s the first time JR Motorsports has led the Nationwide Series standings. It was also the first victory as a crew chief for Greg Ives.

Kahne was surprised NASCAR called the final caution instead of letting the race play out to conclusion.

"I think there’s been plenty of times (when) there’ve been wrecks in (Turn) 4 or 3, and we’ve just raced to the line at the end," Kahne said. "As soon as they started wrecking, I saw the caution. I still raced to the line, and we had a good enough run to get there and be first there, but I was surprised the caution came out. 

"I knew I was third when the caution came out, and I knew I was first at the line… My spotter after the race was like, ‘I think we won,’ but I was thinking the whole time, ‘There’s no way. The caution was out.’" 

Busch was leading on Lap 93 when contact between Hornish’s Ford and Eric McClure‘s Toyota ignited a spectacular 12-car wreck that sidelined the series leader entering the race (Hornish), among others.  

NASCAR then opted to shorten the race by 10 laps because of impending darkness, but four laps after a restart on Lap 101, Joey Coulter‘s contact with the outside wall caused the sixth caution and set up the two-lap dash to the finish. 

On Lap 14, Danica Patrick spun off the bumper of series rookie Kyle Larson, her Turner Scott Motorsports teammate-for-a-day and slid though the waterlogged infield grass, damaging her No. 34 Chevrolet extensively. After losing a lap on pit road, Patrick brought the car to the garage and called it a day.

Patrick, hardly a grizzled veteran herself, attributed the wreck to Larson’s inexperience with the tandem racing that characterizes the Nationwide Series at restrictor-plate tracks. Larson, who was attempting to push Patrick’s car when the wreck occurred, found trouble of his own on Lap 35, when he blew a tire, spun and took Jeffrey Earnhardt‘s Ford with him.

The hardest hit of the race, however, came on Lap 71 when pole sitter Travis Pastrana nosed into the outside backstretch wall during a three-car incident that started when Brian Scott turned the Ford of Reed Sorenson.

Sorenson hit the outside wall and spun back across the track into Pastrana’s path. Pastrana blamed himself for being in harm’s way and for not reacting quickly enough when he saw Sorenson spin. 

"I just get an award for being stupid," Pastrana said after leaving the infield care center. "We had the two fastest cars on the track (with Roush Fenway Racing teammate Trevor Bayne). We could have been a half-lap down just pushing each other, not worrying about anything.

"We all said we were going to sit back the whole race, and then, all of sudden, we’re up there racing just like a bunch of fools up front… Everything kind of happened."

NASCAR Nationwide Series Race – Aaron’s 312
Talladega Superspeedway
Talladega, Alabama
Saturday, May 04, 2013

               1. (20) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 110, $53445.

               2. (12) Joey Logano(i), Ford, 110, $39725.

               3. (11) Kasey Kahne(i), Chevrolet, 110, $30500.

               4. (9) Kurt Busch(i), Chevrolet, 110, $29275.

               5. (5) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 110, $32550.

               6. (18) Parker Kligerman, Toyota, 110, $28100.

               7. (38) Mike Wallace, Chevrolet, 110, $26500.

               8. (31) Jason White, Toyota, 110, $25850.

               9. (37) Jeremy Clements, Chevrolet, 110, $25225.

               10. (2) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 110, $26825.

               11. (7) Elliott Sadler, Toyota, 110, $25975.

               12. (29) Jamie Dick, Chevrolet, 110, $18850.

               13. (14) Alex Bowman #, Toyota, 110, $25675.

               14. (24) Mike Bliss, Toyota, 110, $24500.

               15. (21) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 110, $25050.

               16. (27) Jeffrey Earnhardt #, Ford, 110, $24350.

               17. (22) Landon Cassill(i), Chevrolet, Accident, 109, $18525.

               18. (39) Josh Wise, Chevrolet, Accident, 109, $23975.

               19. (36) Donnie Neuenberger, Chevrolet, 108, $17850.

               20. (33) Robert Richardson Jr., Chevrolet, 107, $24400.

               21. (10) Joey Coulter(i), Toyota, Accident, 104, $23550.

               22. (15) Reed Sorenson, Ford, 103, $23400.

               23. (23) Eric McClure, Toyota, Accident, 94, $23250.

               24. (17) Ty Dillon(i), Chevrolet, Accident, 93, $23100.

               25. (6) Sam Hornish Jr., Ford, 93, $23275.

               26. (25) Johanna Long, Chevrolet, Accident, 92, $23000.

               27. (8) Brian Scott, Chevrolet, Accident, 92, $22800.

               28. (3) Trevor Bayne, Ford, Accident, 92, $22900.

               29. (16) Nelson Piquet Jr. #, Chevrolet, Accident, 92, $22400.

               30. (40) Tim Andrews, Ford, Accident, 91, $22475.

               31. (26) Bobby Gerhart, Chevrolet, Accident, 91, $16125.

               32. (28) Mike Harmon, Dodge, Accident, 91, $22050.

               33. (34) Blake Koch, Toyota, Accident, 87, $22015.

               34. (32) Hal Martin #, Toyota, 84, $21980.

               35. (35) Morgan Shepherd, Dodge, Fuel Pressure, 72, $15940.

               36. (1) Travis Pastrana, Ford, Accident, 71, $24580.

               37. (30) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, 64, $20695.

               38. (19) Kyle Larson #, Chevrolet, Accident, 52, $20661.

               39. (4) Danica Patrick(i), Chevrolet, Accident, 16, $14775.

               40. (13) Jeff Green, Toyota, Vibration, 3, $14425.

 

Average Speed of Race Winner:  133.269 mph.

Time of Race:  2 Hrs, 11 Mins, 44 Secs. Margin of Victory:  Caution.

Caution Flags:  7 for 29 laps.

Lead Changes:  47 among 16 drivers.

Lap Leaders:   T. Pastrana 1-4; T. Bayne 5; T. Dillon(i) 6; K. Busch(i) 7; K. Kahne(i) 8-12; E. Sadler 13; K. Kahne(i) 14; L. Cassill(i) 15; J. Logano(i) 16-18; J. Allgaier 19; J. Logano(i) 20-21; J. Allgaier 22-24; J. Logano(i) 25; B. Vickers 26; J. Logano(i) 27-33; K. Kahne(i) 34; J. Logano(i) 35-36; B. Scott 37; J. Logano(i) 38-41; E. Sadler 42-43; J. Logano(i) 44-54; E. Sadler 55-56; B. Scott 57; R. Sorenson 58; T. Bayne 59; K. Kahne(i) 60-62; R. Smith 63; K. Kahne(i) 64; R. Smith 65; K. Kahne(i) 66-67; R. Smith 68; K. Kahne(i) 69; R. Smith 70-71; K. Kahne(i) 72; J. Logano(i) 73-75; J. Coulter(i) 76-78; J. Logano(i) 79-80; P. Kligerman 81; K. Busch(i) 82; P. Kligerman 83; K. Busch(i) 84; P. Kligerman 85-86; K. Kahne(i) 87; K. Busch(i) 88-100; R. Smith 101; K. Busch(i) 102-104; A. Dillon 105-109; R. Smith 110;.

Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led):  J. Logano(i) 9 times for 35 laps; K. Busch(i) 5 times for 19 laps; K. Kahne(i) 9 times for 16 laps; R. Smith 6 times for 7 laps; E. Sadler 3 times for 5 laps; A. Dillon 1 time for 5 laps; J. Allgaier 2 times for 4 laps; P. Kligerman 3 times for 4 laps; T. Pastrana 1 time for 4 laps; J. Coulter(i) 1 time for 3 laps; T. Bayne 2 times for 2 laps; B. Scott 2 times for 2 laps; B. Vickers 1 time for 1 lap; T. Dillon(i) 1 time for 1 lap; L. Cassill(i) 1 time for 1 lap; R. Sorenson 1 time for 1 lap.

Top 10 in Points: R. Smith – 305; S. Hornish Jr. – 278; J. Allgaier – 265; P. Kligerman – 258; E. Sadler – 258; A. Dillon – 257; B. Scott – 254; B. Vickers – 252; A. Bowman # – 231; T. Bayne – 230.

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Edwards to start first after leading first Sprint Cup practice

Related: Aaron’s 499 lineup

Steady rain at Talladega Superspeedway washed out NASCAR Sprint Cup qualifying Saturday, meaning the starting lineup for Sunday’s race will be set according to the NASCAR rule book.

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Carl Edwards will start from first in the Aaron’s 499 (Sunday, 1 p.m. ET, FOX) by virtue of his fastest lap (199.675 mph) in Friday’s first practice session in the No. 99 Roush Fenway Racing Ford. Edwards — who has not won at the 2.66-mile track in 17 tries — does not win the Coors Light Pole Award, but will start first for the first time since the 2012 Daytona 500.

Because the probability of rain on Saturday was high, there was considerably more intrigue in practice than is typical at a restrictor-plate track.

"It was actually pretty exciting for all the teams, because we looked at this forecast, and we were all concerned that there wasn’t going to be single-car qualifying," Edwards said. "It was like a heat race out there. Everyone was doing everything they could to lag back and partner up and get the fastest lap times they could.

"It was pretty exciting. We got the fastest lap with about one minute to go. That was our whole mission (Friday), and I’m pretty proud of the fact that we ended up with the fastest time."

Martin Truex Jr., second-fastest in opening practice, will start alongside Edwards on the front row in Sunday’s race, the 10th of the season for the Sprint Cup tour. Marcos Ambrose, Joey Logano and Ryan Newman complete the top five starters.

Rain began falling in the area Friday night, and continued into Saturday. NASCAR cancelled qualifying after every car had passed technical inspection and shortly after the session was scheduled to begin at 12:10 p.m. ET, as rain continued to pelt the facility.

Denny Hamlin will start seventh in his first Sprint Cup effort since suffering injuries in a last-lap crash at Auto Club Speedway on March 24. Hamlin plans to start the race then give way to relief driver Brian Vickers; the two practiced making the driver change yesterday, with Hamlin exiting through a special roof hatch and Vickers entering through the driver’s door window.

Series points leader Jimmie Johnson will start eighth. Defending race winner and reigning Sprint Cup champion Brad Keselowski, fastest in the second practice, will start 11th.

Elliott Sadler, scheduled to enter a fourth car for Joe Gibbs Racing, was the only driver who failed to qualify for the 43-car field.

Saturday marked the second time this season that Sprint Cup qualifying has been rained out. The last time was prior to the March 10 event at Las Vegas. Keselowski started that race from the front because practice was washed out as well, leading NASCAR to set the field based on the previous season’s car owner points.

Contributing: Wire reports

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Starting Lineup – Aaron’s 499
Talladega Superspeedway
Talladega, Alabama
Friday, May 03, 2013

    1. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 2013 Owner Points 2nd.
    2. (56) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 2013 Owner Points 18th.
    3. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 2013 Owner Points 25th.
    4. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 2013 Owner Points 20th.
    5. (39) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 19th.
    6. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 2013 Owner Points 14th.
    7. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 2013 Owner Points 16th.
    8. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 1st.
    9. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 17th.
    10. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 3rd.
    11. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 2013 Owner Points 6th.
    12. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 4th.
    13. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 2013 Owner Points 7th.
    14. (55) Michael Waltrip, Toyota, 2013 Owner Points 13th.
    15. (21) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 2013 Owner Attempts 3.
    16. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 10th.
    17. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 2013 Owner Points 8th.
    18. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 2013 Owner Points 11th.
    19. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 2013 Owner Points 31st.
    20. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 2013 Owner Points 5th.
    21. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr. #, Ford, 2013 Owner Points 21st.
    22. (13) Casey Mears, Ford, 2013 Owner Points 27th.
    23. (10) Danica Patrick #, Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 28th.
    24. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 9th.
    25. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 24th.
    26. (35) Josh Wise(i), Ford, 2013 Owner Attempts 9.
    27. (30) David Stremme, Toyota, 2013 Owner Points 33rd.
    28. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 12th.
    29. (31) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 22nd.
    30. (42) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 26th.
    31. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, 2013 Owner Points 35th.
    32. (93) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 2013 Owner Attempts 9.
    33. (78) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 23rd.
    34. (51) Regan Smith(i), Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 15th.
    35. (83) David Reutimann, Toyota, 2013 Owner Points 32nd.
    36. (95) Scott Speed, Ford, 2013 Owner Attempts 6.
    37. (32) Terry Labonte, Ford, Series Champion.
    38. (98) Michael McDowell, Ford, 2013 Owner Attempts 8.
    39. (47) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 2013 Owner Points 29th.
    40. (7) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 30th.
    41. (87) Joe Nemechek(i), Toyota, 2013 Owner Attempts 9.
    42. (33) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 36th.
    43. (36) JJ Yeley, Chevrolet, 2013 Owner Points 34th.

    1 drivers failed to qualify.

    44. (81) Elliott Sadler(i), Toyota, 2013 Owner Attempts 1.

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