How are you watching the races at Richmond International Raceway? Find out how to get the latest from wherever you are.

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Even if you’re not at the track, you can keep up with all the live action on TV and at NASCAR.com. (All times Eastern, unless noted.)

Watch practices and races on TV:

SPRINT CUP SERIES:

Friday, April 26:

Practice, Noon on SPEED

Final practice, 2:30 p.m. on SPEED

Coors Light Pole qualifying on SPEED, 5:30 p.m.

Saturday, April 27:

Toyota Owners 400 on FOX, 7:30 p.m.

NATIONWIDE SERIES:

Friday, April 26:

Coors Light Pole qualifying on ESPN2, 4 p.m.

ToyotaCare 250 on ESPNEWS, 7:30 p.m.

Get inside the garage:

GarageCam will be streaming live from Richmond International Raceway on Friday, April 26 from the Sprint Cup garage at 11:30 a.m. ET.

Keep an eye on the media center:

Press Pass will have live news conferences throughout race weekend. (All times Eastern, unless noted.)

Thursday, April 25:

Matt Kenseth | 12:30 p.m.

Denny Hamlin | 12:45 p.m.

Jeffrey Earnhardt | 1:15 p.m.

Brad Keselowski | 1:30 p.m.

Friday, April 26:

Danica Patrick | 10:30 a.m.

David Ragan | 2:15 p.m.

Carl Edwards | 3:30 p.m.

Kasey Kahne | 4 p.m.

Saturday, April 27:

Juan Pablo Montoya and DeMarcus Ware | 5:45 p.m.

Want more?

Get lap-by-lap updates on NASCAR.com during practice laps, qualifying and races.

Re-live the race:

Watch race highlights from your favorite driver and top moments shortly after the race using Race RePlay.

Want to attend the races this weekend? Buy tickets to the Richmond Sprint Cup and Nationwide Series races here.

Know the track:

Check out our Richmond International Raceway track page to learn the history of the track and explore the best fan views.

Want to meet a driver?

Here is a list of appearances. (List subject to change, all times local.)

Saturday, April 27th:

Bobby Labonte | 3 p.m. at the Toyota Hospitality.

David Stremme | 3:30 p.m. at the Toyota Drive Center.

Jeff Burton, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Joey Logano, Bobby Labonte and Paul Menard autograph session | 3:30 p.m. in the ampitheater; Toyota Owners 400 ticket and wristband required.

Greg Biffle | 3:45 p.m. at the Sprint Unlimited Experience.

Jamie McMurray | 4 p.m. at the Chevy Fan Fest.

Danica Patrick | 4:15 p.m. at the Chevy Fan Fest.

Matt Kenseth | 4:15 p.m. at the Toyota Pit Pass.

David Ragan | 4:15 p.m. at the Sprint Unlimited Experience.

Kyle Busch Q-and-A | 4:20 p.m. at the 3-wide Hospitality, admission limited.

Martin Truex Jr. | 4:25 p.m. at the AAA Experience.

Clint Bowyer | 4:40 p.m. at the AAA Experience.

Michael Waltrip | 4:55 p.m. at the AAA Experience.

Ryan Newman | 4:30 p.m. at the Outback Steakhouse food vending location in the midway; wristbands required.

No. 42 Pit Crew autograph session | 5:15 p.m. at the Chevy Fan Fest.

Get packing:

The weather in Richmond is:

Click for Richmond, Virginia Forecast

Originally known as the Atlantic Rural Exposition Fairgrounds, Richmond International Raceway held its first race in 1946 as a half-mile dirt track.

Keep all eyes on the race:

With RaceView Premium and NASCAR RaceView Mobile ’13, you can watch live, virtual 3-D video with in-car audio as well as national radio broadcasts, telemetry data and real-time stats.

Follow from anywhere:

NASCAR Mobile ’13: This new app is free to download and has an in-app subscription for premium content including live driver audio, live advanced leaderboards and live alternate camera angles.

Buddy system:

Watch live enhanced coverage with 10 HD cameras, a live chat and live standings for this week’s Nationwide series races with RaceBuddy.

Play NASCAR FANTASY LIVE:

Don’t forget to do your research and set your lineup before the race kicks off at 7:30 p.m. ET.

Expert tip of the week:

Richmond is a short track that thinks it’s a superspeedway. This week, balance the best of the bullrings with speedway specialists — and specifically drivers who cross over like Kyle Busch or Kasey Kahne. Get more tips from Dan Beaver’s fantasy blog.

Keep up with the latest:

Use our weekly Driver Reports for a quick breakdown of how each driver is looking. Also each week, our writers vote on which drivers are making moves. Read the resulting driver Power Rankings to help power up your lineup.

Last year’s top five finishers at Richmond:

1. Kyle Busch

2. Dale Earnhardt Jr.

3. Tony Stewart

4. Denny Hamlin

5. Kasey Kahne

See the complete results from last year’s event here.

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READ: Kenseth penalized
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READ: Electronic
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Hamlin targets Talladega but could give way to relief driver there

RICHMOND, Va. — If medical matters were left up to Denny Hamlin, he wouldn’t have missed a race all year. So far, doctors haven’t left the NASCAR star to his own devices as he recovers from a back injury that threatens to derail his season.

Thursday at Richmond International Raceway — his home track — Hamlin described his healing process as being on pace, although the timetable for a full recovery, the possibility of midseason surgery and clearance for a full-time return to action remain in limbo.

What’s less murky is his desire to return to the cockpit of his No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota in hopes of salvaging his slim chance at claiming his first Sprint Cup title this season.

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"Honestly, I know everyone is trying to protect me from myself, but I would have raced at Martinsville weeks ago," Hamlin said. "Obviously, doctors are more well informed nowadays and I understand risks more than what they used to, but it used to be off driver feel and it’s not that any more with concussions and everything else. They try to protect you from yourself, so it’s tough."

Hamlin and Joe Gibbs Racing team officials reached the decision not to compete in Saturday night’s Toyota Owners 400 after consulting with doctors Wednesday afternoon. Brian Vickers will drive the No. 11 in Hamlin’s place for a third straight week.

Hamlin had hoped to return to competition Saturday night at Richmond, a track with special meaning to him for several reasons. The .75-mile oval, not far from his hometown of Chesterfield, Va., is not only the site of two of his 22 Sprint Cup wins, but is also the host to his annual Denny Hamlin Short Track Showdown, which benefits his charitable foundation.

As eager as Hamlin was to drive in a Richmond homecoming, a more cautious approach prevailed.

"Obviously, my injury is very, very hard because there is no exact science to the risk," Hamlin said. "No one knows what the risk will be if I race this week or if I race two weeks from now. Bone healing is completely subjective. It takes bone healing a year most times to be 100 percent, so how do you quantify how much more risk is there this week versus two weeks down the road or three weeks down the road or two months down the road, so that’s the tough part of it. Everyone is erring on the cautious side because no one ultimately wants to be responsible and have their name on the line of clearing a driver and then he goes out and gets hurt."

Hamlin has been sidelined since suffering a back injury March 24 in a last-lap crash at Auto Club Speedway. The wreck marked the second straight week of full-contact racing between Hamlin and former teammate Joey Logano, stoking what has become this season’s most tense rivalry.

Hamlin said doctors are happy with a plan to have him start the May 5 race at Talladega Superspeedway before giving way to a relief driver in the early going. Hamlin would be credited with points in the driver standings under that scenario. The same plan was considered at Richmond, but negotiating a driver change at .75-mile Richmond would likely cost a team several laps and a realistic shot at winning. At 2.66-mile Talladega, lap times — especially under caution — would allow the team to switch drivers with minimal penalty.

Hamlin, who will miss his fourth consecutive race Saturday, has slipped from 10th place to 26th in the Sprint Cup Series standings over that span. To qualify for the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup through a wild-card berth, Hamlin will need to collect wins and work his way back into the top 20 in points.

Even though Hamlin is antsy to get back on track, he has kept his chances in perspective — especially if the injury lingers and the odds grow longer.

"I think if this goes past Darlington (May 11), then I don’t know what the chances of us making the Chase are even if we were to race this weekend, race next weekend or the one after — I don’t know the chances," he said. "There’s a lot of good teams that you have to beat to guarantee you’re going to win the races. Obviously, if it goes past Darlington our chances are crushed even harder.

"Eventually you have to have a shutdown point of not going out there and racing for nothing at a point. I think a recovery on the kind of surgery that I would like to have is about a month-and-a-half or so — I could potentially come back maybe for the tail end of the year. I don’t think anything would be season-ending, I guess you could say. Eventually you have to know the point at which you’re looking at improbabilities of making the Chase and just being smart about it."

Hamlin said he is physically able to climb into a race car through the driver door window, but that the injury has had an effect on his day-to-day life. He said his ailing back prevents him from bending over to lift his 3-month-old daughter from her crib and that his everyday pain level — on a scale of one to 10 — is an aching seven.

"That is stuff that does affect your daily life and really other than my back I am physically able to do a lot of things outside of racing, but I can’t because I’m so limited on what I can do because of back issues," Hamlin said. "I just want to get that part over with. I’m willing to take the risk to get better and take the time off to get better because I feel like mentally it will put me in a better place. Other than that, it’s just everyday life and you deal with it."

READ MORE:

READ: Kenseth penalized
post-win

READ: Hamlin won’t
race Richmond

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Preview: Richmond

READ: Electronic
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Kenseth calls penalties grossly unfair, plans to appeal

Related: Video | Penalty story | Top NASCAR penaltiesInside engines | Fantasy take

RICHMOND, Va. — Matt Kenseth sounded off on penalties handed down Wednesday by NASCAR, saying that his team’s engine violations were an honest mistake and did not enhance the performance of the Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota that carried him to victory the previous weekend at Kansas Speedway.

"I think the penalties are grossly unfair," Kenseth said Thursday at Richmond International Raceway. "I think it’s borderline shameful."

Kenseth’s team received penalties Wednesday after NASCAR inspectors at the sanctioning body’s research and development center in Concord, N.C., discovered an unapproved connecting rod in the engine of the race-winning No. 20 JGR Toyota used at Kansas Speedway.

Kenseth was docked 50 points in the season-long NASCAR Sprint Cup Series points race. Crew chief Jason Ratcliff was suspended for six races and fined $200,000 for the infraction. Team owner Joe Gibbs was hit with a 50-point penalty in the owner standings, and his license was also suspended for six weeks, leaving him ineligible to accrue owner points during that span.

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"There’s no performance advantage, there was no intent. It was a mistake," Kenseth said of the engine, which was provided to the team from Toyota Racing Development. "JGR had no control over it. Certainly, to crush Joe Gibbs like that and say they can’t win an owner’s championship with the 20 (car) this year … I just can’t wrap my arms around that. It just blows me away. The same with Jason Ratcliff. I don’t feel bad for myself at all, but for Jason and Joe, I couldn’t feel any worse."

Kenseth said just one of the eight rods in the engine measured under the minimum weight, and that the part in question was 2.7 grams below the limit. He had no argument with the connecting rod being ruled illegal, but the severity of the penalty was what drew criticism from the former series champion.

"I just think that the penalty is way over the top," Kenseth said. "It wasn’t an advantage, it was a mistake and I think that should’ve been taken into account."

Ratcliff will remain on Kenseth’s pit box for this Saturday night’s Toyota Owners 400 while the penalties are under appeal. Kenseth would not speculate on how the appeals process should go, nor on what he considered a fair penalty to be.

"I think it’s business as usual," Kenseth said. "Hope the appeals process works, and we get some people in there to look at everything that are reasonable and hopefully get the penalties at least reduced. I think, other than that, we put it behind us."

Kenseth, in his first year with the Gibbs team, already has two wins in the young season, but his success has been tempered by two early exits in eight races. The penalty slowed a potential momentum gain from the Kansas victory, knocking him from eighth place to 14th in the Sprint Cup standings.

"We’d just started to get back up in the points. It’s still early," Kenseth said. "Honestly, I feel like we have the strongest team in the garage, so if anybody can come back from it and get us in a spot to have a shot at winning a championship, it’s my group."

Denny Hamlin — Kenseth’s JGR teammate, currently sidelined by a back injury — said while the penalty did not affect his team directly, the impact stretched across the whole organization.

"It definitely hurts the team and the owners more than anyone," Hamlin said. "It’s a tough penalty to swallow."

Weeks ago, Kenseth confirmed his entry in Thursday night’s Denny Hamlin Short Track Showdown at Richmond, filling in for his injured teammate and event host. The events of the previous 24 hours, however, left Kenseth less than enthused.

"My excitement for tonight is at an all-time low," he said flatly. "It just is right now. By tomorrow, I’ll be ready to get on the track and race. I’ll try to have fun tonight. I’ll give it my all. … By tomorrow morning, I’m going to be ready. If it’s possible, I think we’re more motivated and determined than ever."

 

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READ: Kenseth penalized
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Crew chief Jason Ratcliff gives his take after NASCAR hands down penalties

Related: Penalty story | Top NASCAR penalties | Video | Inside engines | Fantasy take
Thursday from Richmond: Kenseth responds | Viewer’s guide

Jason Ratcliff said members of Joe Gibbs Racing expected NASCAR to come down hard on the team for an engine infraction discovered two days after Matt Kenseth’s NASCAR Sprint Cup Series victory in Kansas, but admitted that “some of those penalties were quite surprising, were quite shocking.”
 
Ratcliff, the crew chief for Kenseth, was hit with a $200,000 fine, suspended for six points races and placed on probation through Dec.31. The penalties, which also included a loss of points for Kenseth, car owner Joe Gibbs as well as auto manufacturer Toyota, were the result of a single connecting rod that failed to meet the required minimum weight of 525.0 grams.

"I respect (NASCAR’s) stance on it and they’ve got to have a go-to guy and that go-to guy is the crew chief."

–Jason Ratcliff

Ratcliff appeared on Sirius XM NASCAR Radio hours after Wednesday’s ruling.
 
“It’s been something we’ve discussed a little bit and obviously we will have to deal with it as an organization and that’s what we will do,” Ratcliff said.
 
Joe Gibbs Racing has competed with engines supplied by Toyota Racing Development (TRD) since 2012, and has no involvement in the building process.
 
“It’s pretty much a turn-key deal,” Ratcliff said. “They provide us with the engines and very knowledgeable people that can tune them at the race track and assist us with installing and removing from the car and then any post-race inspections we would have, they have people there to assist us as well.”
 
But, Ratcliff, who also won at Las Vegas earlier this year with Kenseth, said he understood why he was penalized even though he wasn’t involved in the engine-building process.
 
“I respect (NASCAR’s) stance on it and they’ve got to have a go-to guy and that go-to guy is the crew chief,” he said. “We raise our hand and say … we’re responsible for this race car from the time we get to the race track until the time we get through post-race inspection. … As a crew chief you accept that responsibility.
 
“Now the reality of it is no … these cars are so complex and the amount of detail that goes into them each and every week there’s no way one individual could put his finger on every part and piece. And even if he couldn’t put his finger on it, there’s no way he could oversee every part and piece. That’s why you have good people that support you.
 
“I’m 110 percent convinced this is nothing more than an oversight. I don’t think there’s any intent.”
 
Lee White, president of TRD, told Sirius XM NASCAR that there was no intent to circumvent the rules, and said the issue was “a total screw up on our part.”
 
“I can’t even sit here and tell you that we’re being falsely accused or anything,” he said. “We screwed up.”
 
In addition to the loss of 50 driver points, the three points Kenseth would have earned for the win should he qualify for this year’s Chase For The Sprint Cup have been rescinded and the STP 400 win will not count toward his 2013 win total should he be in contention for one of two available Wild Card positions.
 
Gibbs’ owner’s license for the No. 20 team has been suspended for six points races, meaning the team will not accrue owner points for those events.
 
JGR officials said they intend to appeal the penalties. Until the appeal is heard, Ratcliff will be allowed to continue his at-track responsibilities.
 
“Unfortunately when you are in a competitive sport, things can happen,” Ratcliff said. “The way I view it right now, and the race team’s view, is fortunately we’ve been running really well. I think that 50 points is something … I feel strongly that we can overcome. You have to remember that as of Sunday afternoon we were eighth in points. Unfortunately we’ve had two DNFs this season. To be that high in points think shows how well we have competed. And I don’t think that will change.”
 
The loss of points, as it currently stands, dropped Kenseth from eighth to tied for 14th in the standings.

 

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READ: Kenseth penalized
post-win

READ: Hamlin won’t
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READ: Electronic
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READ: Kenseth penalized
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Scan rules out return at hometown track, but Hamlin still eyes early comeback

Related: Watch Hamlin speak 12:45 p.m. ET Thursday at Richmond

Denny Hamlin won’t be able to return to racing at his hometown track after all.

The Joe Gibbs Racing driver, who had hoped to rebound from a compression fracture in a lower back vertebra in time to compete this weekend at Richmond International Raceway, wrote Wednesday in a Twitter post that his comeback remains on hold.

“Unfortunately I won’t be racing this weekend at Richmond,” said the native of nearby Chesterfield, Va. “It kills me to not be in the car for my team and sponsors but after long discussions with the doctors we have decided to wait on my return back to racing. Thanks to all of my fans who have sent encouraging messages over the last month. I’ll be back in no time.”

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Hamlin was injured March 24 at Auto Club Speedway in Fontana, Calif., when his car crashed head-on into an inside wall that did not feature the SAFER barrier. NASCAR has since said it will consult with experts to recommend potential changes to the facility in that area. The accident stemmed from final-lap contact with Joey Logano, whom Hamlin was racing for the victory.

Doctors initially projected a six-week recovery period for Hamlin, which meant he would be out until the May 11 event at Darlington Raceway. In an interview with reporters shortly after the accident, Hamlin spoke of hoping to return two weeks early at Richmond, where in addition to his success on the .75-mile track he also hosts an annual charity event, the Denny Hamlin Short Track Showdown presented by FedEx.

“I haven’t even discussed it with them, because I don’t want to freak out the doctors, trying to rush them, because I know they’ve got my best interests in mind,” he said April 3. “But ultimately, every doctor I’ve spoken to has left it as a possibility that you could heal quicker than six weeks. It’s possible. It’s absolutely possible. They thought that six weeks was an aggressive comeback. But I think I’m going to be ready to go before that.”

A scan this week squashed hopes of a return at Richmond, although didn’t specify when he might come back. Last weekend at Kansas, he told reporters that he might start next weekend’s event at Talladega Superspeedway before turning the car over to another driver, which would give him the points for the event.

Hamlin will still be in Richmond, serving as grand marshal for his charity race, which begins at 8:30 p.m. Thursday. He will also speak in the track’s media center at 12:45 p.m., which will be streamed live at nascar.com/presspass. JGR teammate Matt Kenseth will pilot Hamlin’s entry in the late model race, while regular Gibbs Nationwide Series driver Brian Vickers will continue to wheel the No. 11 Sprint Cup Series car until Hamlin returns.

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Underweight connecting rod a mistake that harmed more than helped, company says

Related: NASCAR news release | Top NASCAR penalties | Video | Inside engines | Fantasy take

David Wilson of Toyota Racing Development was on the telephone with Joe Gibbs until late Tuesday night, reassuring the team owner of one thing: there was no intent.

Joe Gibbs Racing driver Matt Kenseth was saddled Wednesday with one of the more severe penalties in recent memory, due to a connecting rod in the engine of his No. 20 car that was found to be lighter than allowed during tear-down at the NASCAR Research and Development Center. NASCAR has historically treated engine offenses very harshly, and this was no different — Kenseth was docked 50 points, his pole at Kansas Speedway was vacated and his race victory last weekend cannot be used toward Chase for the Sprint Cup eligibility.

Crew chief Jason Ratcliff was also fined $200,000 and suspended six weeks; Gibbs lost 50 owner points and won’t be allowed to accumulate any more from the No. 20 for six weeks; and Toyota was docked five points in the manufacturers’ standings. JGR plans to appeal the penalties, while TRD is zeroing in on what caused the infraction in the first place. But the company says it is sure of one thing — this was not an attempt to gain a competitive advantage.

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“There obviously was no intent,” said Wilson, senior vice president at TRD, which manufacturers engines for Toyota teams in NASCAR’s premier series. “… It was an oversight. Now, how can this happen? Obviously that’s our biggest concern and what we’re principally focused on today.”

According to the Sprint Cup Series Rule Book, connecting rods must be composed of solid magnetic steel with a minimum weight of 525 grams. Wilson said only one of the vehicle’s eight connecting rods was in question, and it measured 2.7 grams under the minimum weight. Its neighboring rod, he added was more than 4 grams over the minimum.

Wilson said NASCAR mandates the material and minimum weight of a connecting rod, because otherwise engine builders would try to construct them out of a lighter substance such as titanium. If there was an intent to gain a competitive advantage, he added, all the connecting rods would have been lighter, and not just one. Making one rod lighter than the others only unbalances the load on the bearings, and carries a higher risk of failure.

“The notion that you would reduce the weight of one rod, and by 2.3 grams, as an opportunity to enhance your performance is patently absurd. Because what you actually risk is placing an uneven bearing load on the crank shaft. What you strive for is every connecting rod to weigh the same … At 10,000 RPM, if you don’t have a balanced bearing load, you’re going to fail,” Wilson said.

“You’d never do that. If we were going to undertake this, it would absolutely be across all eight cylinders, or you’re running the risk of damaging a main bearing and failing an engine. … There’s zero motivation, zero incentive” to have one rod lighter than the others, he added.

So how did it happen? Like many engine builders, TRD outsources some components from vendors — including connecting rods. TRD has been using the same supplier for connecting rods since the fall of last year, and Wilson said the company is certified at the highest level by the International Organization for Standardization.

Since TRD can’t measure every part that comes to its facility from a vendor, it leans on that ISO certification as a safeguard. “We place a lot of the burden of that qualify control on them,” Wilson said. “Because that’s by definition what they do. What doesn’t correlate here is, how could that supplier have made that mistake? And what is our exposure level?”

Wilson said TRD checked the paperwork for all the engines in Toyota vehicles bound for this weekend’s event at Richmond International Raceway, to ensure none of the connecting rods were suspect. They weren’t. “So at that point we’re characterizing it as a fluke,” he added. “At this point, we’re not making any excuses. And whether it’s a fluke or not, it’s on us.”

How much of a role that might play in Gibbs’ planned appeal to the National Stock Car Racing Appeals Panel is yet to be seen. “We are going to support them in whatever manner we can,” Wilson said. “Certainly we think we have a responsibility therein. They’re running the show, though. It’s their appeal. We’re there to hopefully support them, and achieve a good result.”

It’s been a stressful season for TRD, which, despite its success on the race track, has endured some rough weeks early in the year due to valve problems. But Wilson said NASCAR has torn down 10 Toyota engines this season, and did the same to roughly 26 last year, and none of them revealed similar issues with connecting rods. At the end of their long telephone conversation into the wee hours Wednesday morning, Gibbs ensured Wilson there was no plan to change engine manufacturers.

“The last thing he left me with last night was, ‘Hey, we signed up for this partnership, and we are going to get through this together as partners. We have no intention of laying you guys away. We take the good with the bad,’” Wilson said. “You remember last year through the crises with Kyle (Busch), that arguably could have stressed this partnership. But we stood firm behind the team just as we expect they’re going to stand firm behind us. We’ll get through this.”

 


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Crew chief, driver, owner all penalized over illegal connecting rod

Related: Toyota reaction | Top NASCAR penalties | Video | Inside engines | Fantasy take

Matt Kenseth’s race team was hit with a severe penalty from NASCAR on Wednesday, one the Joe Gibbs Racing driver will feel the sting of all the way into the Chase for the Sprint Cup.

Kenseth was docked 50 points, and lost the three Chase bonus points he would have received for winning last weekend’s event at Kansas Speedway, after a connecting rod in the engine of his No. 20 car failed to meet minimum weight. The violation was discovered Tuesday in post-race engine inspection at the NASCAR Research and Development Center in Concord, N.C.

In addition, crew chief Jason Ratcliff has been fined $200,000, suspended for the next six Sprint Cup events, including the non-points Sprint All-Star Race. Car owner Joe Gibbs was docked 50 owners’ points and had his license suspended for six races, during which he will be ineligible to receive owners’ points. Kenseth’s pole at Kansas will not be allowed for eligibility into the 2014 Sprint Unlimited at Daytona, and in a rare step Toyota was docked five points in the manufacturer standings.

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Kenseth’s victory at Kansas was his second of the season. As is customary, the race-winning engine was taken to the NASCAR R&D Center for inspection. Although Joe Gibbs Racing engines are provided by Toyota Racing Development, the team is ultimately held responsible for what it brings to the race track. Gibbs Racing said it plans to appeal through the National Stock Car Racing Appeals Panel.

According to NASCAR, the No. 20 team’s Kansas engine violated the sections of the 2013 Sprint Cup Series Rule Book that stipulate connecting rods must be made of solid magnetic steel and have a minimum weight of 525 grams. Each of the eight rods in a Sprint Cup engine is weighed with its connecting rod cap and cap fastener.

Joe Gibbs Racing said in a statement that one of the engine’s connecting rods was ruled too light. “We are working with our partners at TRD on this issue,” the team said. “In the meantime, we will plan to appeal the penalty.”

Toyota said in a statement that the connecting rod in question was three grams under the legal minimum weight, and none of the other seven were found to be at fault.

"We take full responsibility for this issue with the engine used by the No. 20 Joe Gibbs Racing (JGR) team this past Sunday in Kansas — JGR is not involved in the process of selecting parts or assembling the Cup Series engines," TRD president Lee White said. "It was a simple oversight on TRD’s  part and there was no intent to deceive, or to gain any type of competitive advantage. Toyota is a company that was built on integrity, and that remains one of the guiding principles of the company. The goal of TRD has always been — and will continue to be — to build high-performance engines that are reliable, durable and powerful, and within the guidelines established by NASCAR."

Kenseth stood eighth in the Sprint Cup standings following his victory at Kansas, but the loss of 50 points would drop him to 14th. His Kansas win will also not be credited toward Chase Wild Card eligibility.

NASCAR traditionally takes a very hard line on engines, which by rule cannot exceed 358 cubic inch displacement. One of the most severe penalties ever levied by the sanctioning body involved the engine of driver Carl Long, which was found to be too large during Sprint All-Star Race weekend in 2009. Long’s team was fined $200,000 while the driver was docked 200 points and suspended for 12 weeks, although that number was reduced to eight upon appeal.

Not even potential NASCAR Hall of Fame members are immune from the sport’s stringent engine guidelines. Maurice Petty, engine builder for brother Richard Petty and a nominee for next year’s Hall of Fame class, was fined $35,000 for an engine in the No. 43 car that was found to be too large following the 1983 fall race at Charlotte Motor Speedway. His brother was also docked 104 points.

NASCAR has nullified Chase bonus points before — in 2008, Carl Edwards lost the 10 bonus points he would have garnered under the old scoring system after the cover of his vehicle’s oil reservoir tank was found to be missing in inspection following a victory at Las Vegas. Crew chief Bob Osborne was suspended six races, and the 10 bonus points Edwards would have carried into the Chase were withdrawn.

The penalty to Kenseth’s team comes in the wake of sanctions levied last week against Penske Racing. Brad Keselowski and Joey Logano each lost 25 points, while their respective crew chiefs, car chiefs and race engineers were all suspended six weeks for rear-end housing parts that were confiscated prior to the April 13 race at Texas. Penske is appealing the penalties, and the suspended crewmen have been allowed to work until that appeal is heard Wednesday morning.


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Driver loses 50 championship points; crew chief fined $200,000, suspended six races

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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Penalties have been handed down to the No. 20 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series team as a result of rule violations discovered in the post-race engine inspection April 23 at the NASCAR Research and Development Center.

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The No. 20 car was found to have violated Sections 12-1 (actions detrimental to stock car racing); 12-4J (any determination by NASCAR officials that the race equipment used in the event does not conform to NASCAR rules); and 20-5.5.3 (E) (Only magnetic steel connecting rods with a minimum weight of 525.0 grams will be permitted; connecting rod failed to meet the minimum connecting rod weight) of the 2013 rule book.

As a result of this violation, NASCAR has assessed the following penalties:

•    Crew chief Jason Ratcliff has been fined $200,000 and suspended from NASCAR until the completion of the next six NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship points events (a period of time that also includes the non-points NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race).

•    Car owner Joe Gibbs has lost 50 championship car owner points; the first-place finish from April 21 at Kansas Speedway will not earn bonus points toward the accumulated aggregate car owner points total after the completion of the first 26 events of the current season and will not be credited toward the eligibility for a car owner Wild Card position; has had the owner’s license for the No. 20 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series car suspended until the completion of the next six championship points events, therefore being ineligible to receive championship car owner points during that period of time.

•    Driver Matt Kenseth has lost 50 championship driver points; the Coors Light Pole award from April 19 at Kansas Speedway will not be allowed for eligibility into the 2014 Sprint Unlimited; the first-place finish from April 21 at Kansas Speedway will not earn bonus points toward the accumulated aggregate driver points total after the completion of the first 26 events of the current season and will not be credited toward the eligibility for a driver Wild Card position.

•    The loss of five NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Manufacturer Championship points.

Crew chief fined and suspended, team docked owner and driver points

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — NASCAR announced today penalties and fines to the No. 98 team that competes in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, as a result of rule infractions at Kansas Speedway.

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The No. 98 truck was found to have violated Sections 12-1 (actions detrimental to stock car racing); 12-4K (if in the judgment of NASCAR Officials, race equipment that has been previously verified or previously approved and/or sealed by NASCAR for use in an event, pursuant to sub-section 8-6 and/or 8-12, has been altered, modified, repaired, or changed in any manner); 20B-16 (once a fuel cell or fuel cell components have been certified, modifications of any kind will not be permitted to the fuel cell or fuel cell components); and 20B-16.1B (standard black, safety foam with minimum free-standing height of eight (8) inches, acceptable to NASCAR Officials, and used as provided by an approved fuel cell manufacturer, must be used: Fuel cell safety foam modification.) of the 2013 rule book.

As a result of this violation, crew chief Joel Shear has been fined $10,000 and suspended from NASCAR competition until the completion of the next four (4) NASCAR Camping World Truck Series events. He has been placed on NASCAR probation until December 31. The team has also been docked 25 championship driver (Johnny Sauter) and 25 championship owner (Mike Curb) points.

The violations involving the No. 98 truck occurred in opening day inspection.

 




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