Dirt-racing heritage combines with NASCAR rules for unique event

This summer’s Camping World Truck Series event at Eldora Speedway won’t just be a race on dirt — it will be a full-fledged testament to dirt-track racing, complete with qualifying races and a feature divided into three segments.

NASCAR on Tuesday announced the format for the July 24 event, the sport’s first national-series race on dirt in more than four decades. The sold-out Mudsummer Classic on the short track owned by Tony Stewart will consist of five qualifying races, one last-chance race and a 150-lap event split into segments of 60, 50 and 40 laps.

“We wanted to respect the long heritage that dirt racing has with its own format,” said Chad Little, director of the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series, “so we’re trying to follow that as much as we can and stay consistent to what those fans have grown to love in dirt racing.”

Action on the half-mile clay oval will open with practice on Tuesday, July 23, followed by qualifying and the race the next day. Although Truck Series officials considered several format options for the race, Little said the idea of qualifying races have been a constant since former series director Wayne Auton first began sketching out possibilities eight months ago.

The result is a format that includes the standard two laps of qualifying to determine starting position for five qualifying races, which will be eight laps apiece and in which only green-flag laps will count. The number of trucks in each qualifying race will depend on the total number of trucks entered for the event. Since the field will be limited to 30 vehicles, only 20 trucks will be locked in rather than the standard 25, and four locked-in trucks will be placed in each qualifying race.

Five trucks will qualify from each race, comprising the first 25 spots in the feature. The next four positions will be determined by a last-chance race, which will be 15 laps and again in which only green-flag laps will count. The final starting spot is reserved for a former series champion who has not already qualified; if there isn’t one, it will go to the next-highest finishing truck in the last chance event.

"This format sticks close to Eldora tradition while doing what NASCAR has to do with their current rules and in protecting their ownership."

— Roger Slack, Eldora general manager

Roger Slack, Eldora’s general manager, said that format stays as true as possible to what traditional dirt-track fans expect at the facility. Eldora’s major events typically involve heat races, a last chance race and two spots reserved for the fastest drivers in the qualifying races that don’t transfer over.

“It’s a great combination of what NASCAR has to do as a series and the tradition that Eldora has with our major events,” Slack said. “ … This format sticks close to Eldora tradition while doing what NASCAR has to do with their current rules and in protecting their ownership. Definitely, it’s pretty creative.”

To drivers, it also presents some challenges beyond the surface. With a starting field of 30 rather than the usual 36, and 20 trucks locked in rather than 25, Timothy Peters said it will be a priority for drivers to ensure they’re inside the top 20 in owners’ points before they arrive in Rossburg, Ohio. 

“You really want to make sure you’re inside that top 20 no problem being locked in going to that race,” said Peters, who drives for Red Horse Racing and stands 15th in owners’ points after two races. “… It can be a situation where you go there and you may have a high-profile team and driver that runs all the races that does not get in due to not being locked in. Now, you hope not. But you look through that Truck garage this year, and there are a lot of good trucks and a lot of good drivers.”

Slack said many dirt-race specialists have been waiting on the format to be finalized before committing to the event. With only the top 20 locked in and 10 spots available, “they’re going to start coming out of the woodwork,” he added. An entry list of around 50 trucks looms as a possibility given that dirt veterans Dave Blaney, Ken Schrader, Kenny Wallace, Scott Bloomquist, Tracy Hines and Jac Haudenschild have all committed to or expressed interest in the race.

“You know there are going to be some ringers there,” Peters said. “I feel like it’s an 80-20 split — 20 percent of the drivers in the race will have dirt experience, and the other 80 won’t. So it’s going to be a challenge. … But hopefully we can go out there and put on a good show, and show up these ringers that are going to try to make this race.”

The event itself will be 150 laps, with pit stops between the segments. Little said the Eldora infield will accommodate transporters, so teams will have all their equipment on site. But since the facility does not feature a traditional pit road, NASCAR will have teams perform pit stops in a more controlled environment, likely with the caution truck still circling the track.

“During the segments they’ll come in and be able to make a normal pit stop adjustment — add fuel, change tires. The only difference is, because there isn’t a true pit road, we don’t want live, competitive pit stops at this time,” Little said. “That’s how we’re twisting that. Instead of having live pit stops, we’re going to have a controlled pit stop environment. And we’re thinking maybe the pace truck will make a couple laps around the track for lead-lap trucks, couple of laps for lapped trucks, and a one-to-go type of deal. The whole thing would take five or six laps.”

The event will be NASCAR’s first national race on dirt since the premier series compered at the Raleigh (N.C.) Fairgrounds on Sept. 3, 1970. Anticipation is high, as evidenced by the fact that Eldora sold out of tickets in a matter of weeks.

“There’s been a lot of buzz around this race,” Little said. “It’s been exciting. It’s been 40 years since the national series has run on a dirt track, so that’s exciting. We’ve visited with all of the owners and drivers and gotten their input on the format and the rules, and it’s been exciting. I think it’s a good buildup. And the fact that it’s sold out Eldora in a short amount of time is a good testament to the excitement for the race. It’s a good deal all the way around. It’s exciting to find a venue like this that’s different from our traditional tracks.”

That difference, Little admitted, has made some teams uneasy about an event that presents a stark contrast from what they’re accustomed to. But count Peters among the majority excited about the historic implications of a return to dirt, as well as a change-up from the ordinary.

“I’m eager to get there,” he said. “I feel like from a driver’s perspective, I do my best when I have a challenge in front of me. … There are a lot of folks who are potentially on the fence there, but at the end of the day, I’m sure the Miami Heat aren’t going to miss a game in their winning streak just because they don’t like the court. I’m definitely going to be there with bells on, and have my memory bank full of knowledge, and try to put it to use and just do the best job I can.”

Fans have certainly embraced the event. The track sold out its 17,700 reserved grandstand seats less than a month after they went on sale. A few weeks later, general admission tickets were gone as well. Around 20,000 people will be expected at the half-mile track on the evening of July 24, with many more wishing they were there.

“People call every day,” Slack said. “They can’t believe we don’t have tickets left. I think we probably could have sold 50,000 tickets to it.”

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Earnhardt loses power rankings, points standings lead to Johnson

Driver                    Change            High/Low            Last race

         

1. Jimmie Johnson         

Outlook: We reported earlier this week that the Martinsville race was Johnson’s to lose, and he heard us. Johnson led for 346 of the 500 laps on the short track and won the race, giving him first place in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series points standings and our power rankings. With any luck and a lot of fantasy dollars, his car will be just as strong next week.
Standings:
1st, 231 points

2. Brad Keselowski       

Outlook: Keselowski wasn’t exactly pleased with his sixth-place finish at Martinsville, noting that he was stuck with sixth last year at the track. Unfortunately for the reigning Sprint Cup champ, he is stuck in second in our power rankings again, too.
Standings:
2nd, 225 points

3. Dale Earnhardt Jr.  

Outlook: Martinsville wasn’t too kind to Junior this week. He falls two spots after battling an ill-handling car that just wouldn’t get any better. Adding to his troubles, a nudge from Danica Patrick sent him spinning, and his teammate Jimmie Johnson chose not to wait for Earnhardt to right himself, putting Junior a lap down — and taking his spot atop our power rankings.
Standings:
3rd, 219 points

4. Clint Bowyer              

Outlook: Bowyer is this week’s biggest rankings winner, even though he couldn’t take that clock away from Jimmie Johnson. Bowyer’s second-place finish is his best this season and moves him back into our top five.
Standings:
8th, 179 points

 

5. Kyle Busch                

Outlook: Kyle Busch didn’t get a win this weekend, but he’s still in the top five — in our rankings, in the standings and in his Martinsville finish. He was also one of only five drivers to lead at least one lap at the Martinsville race. Take that, Five-Time.
Standings:
4th, 203 points

Related Links:

Post-Martinsville Driver Reports

Video: Race Rewind — Martinsville

Entry list for the Texas Sprint Cup race

Keselowski wrestles with six-place finish

Gordon gets a needed boost

Video: Final Laps — Johnson captures second win of season

Video: Victory Lane — Jimmie Johnson

Video: Harvick, Vickers battle past finish line

 

 

6. Kasey Kahne                

Outlook: Kahne has certainly come back from his 36th-place finish at Daytona to start the season. He nabbed his third top-five of the year this week, earning himself the fifth spot in the Sprint Cup standings.
Standings:
5th, 199 points

7. Matt Kenseth                

Outlook: Kenseth can’t seem to keep himself moving in the right rankings direction. He’s back down to his low point after finishing a respectable but unextraordinary 14th at Martinsville this weekend.
Standings:
10th, 172 points

8. Jeff Gordon               

Outlook: Jeff Gordon knows how to race at Martinsville with seven wins there during his career. Unfortunately for Gordon, that’s one win less than Johnson, who got his eighth this past weekend as Gordon took third.
Standings: 12th, 164 points

9. Greg Biffle              

Outlook: Biffle rallied from a 22nd-place start to finish in the top 10 at Martinsville. But his comeback wasn’t enough to hold off Kasey Kahne, who took his fifth-place spot in the standings. 
Standings:
6th, 199 points

10. Tony Stewart           

Outlook: Despite his not-so-strong 17th-place finish at Martinsville (his mentee, rookie Danica Patrick, finished five spots ahead of him), Stewart was able to hold on to his 22nd-place spot in the standings. His average running position at Texas, 10th, is the second-best among current drivers.
Standings:
22nd, 135 points

11. Carl Edwards           

Outlook: Edwards has never had a strong record at Martinsville, and this year, the track got the better of him again. Despite a ninth-place starting position, Edwards finished 15th. His track record at Texas is a bit better, with three wins, five top-fives and seven top-10s.
Standings:
7th, 193 points

12. Joey Logano                 

Outlook: Danica Patrick wasn’t shocked to hear that Joey Logano was throwing some bumpers on the track at Martinsville, but there were no post-race punches directed his way this week. Apparently the lack of distractions didn’t help Logano — he qualified fourth and finished 23rd.
Standings:
11th, 167 points

13. Kevin Harvick          

Outlook: Harvick really wanted that 11th-place finish Brian Vickers earned at Martinsville. After battling Vickers and Patrick across the finish, Harvick sent Vickers spinning. Luckily for Harvick, we didn’t take any spots away from him.
Standings:
14th, 161 points

14. Martin Truex Jr.         

Outlook: He may not have finished the race on Sunday, but, hey, it wasn’t his fault. Truex Jr. ‘s 40th-place finish certainly didn’t help him bounce back from Auto Club, but we won’t hold it against him. What happens at Martinsville …
Standings: 25th, 126 points

15. Paul Menard             

Outlook: Menard has run 13 races at Texas, but so far has only finished twice in the top 10. He’s also not finished the race twice, so he’ll have to fight to hold on to his top-10 standings position.
Standings: 9th, 179 points

16. Ricky Stenhouse Jr.        

Outlook: Stenhouse saw his first finish of the season outside the top 20 this weekend, but his two top-10 finishes at Texas last year in the NASCAR Nationwide Series bode well for him this weekend.
Standings: 15th, 158 points

17. Jamie McMurray           

Outlook: With the exception of the Fontana race, McMurray has been steadily improving since the start of the season. If he continues the trend and betters his finish of seventh at Martinsville, he may also see his best week yet in our rankings.
Standings:
13th, 162 points

18. Marcos Ambrose              

Outlook: Ambrose may have finished in the top 10 at Martinsville, but if history is any indicator, he’ll struggle to repeat his position this week. Out of his nine starts at the Fort Worth track, he’s placed in the top 10 once and not finished the race twice.
Standings: 20th, 144 points

19. Ryan Newman               

Outlook: With the exception of this past week, when Newman’s car runs well, he runs well. If he can get a good ride this week, he may be able to ride back into the top 20 in the standings, too.
Standings: 23rd, 134 points

20. Jeff Burton         

Outlook: Burton won his debut Fort Worth race in a Sprint Cup car, and he’s taken eight other top-10s (including a win) since. With the last one in July 2011, he seems due for another.
Standings: 24th, 131 points

In the rearview

Note: These rankings have been determined by a poll that included writers Kenny BruceHolly Cain, David Caraviello and Zack Albert, and video host Alan Cavanna. Tell us what you think about the Power Rankings. Use the hashtag #NASCARPOWER.

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Voting begins for official June race weekend concession item

LONG POND, Pa. Pocono Raceway and Walmart announced today the new name for the June 9 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Pocono Raceway, as voted on by race fans, will be the “Party in the Poconos 400 Presented by Walmart.” Additionally, fan voting for the official June 7-9 race weekend concession item, from three fan-submitted pierogi recipes, begins Tuesday.

“Party in the Poconos 400” was chosen, following a four-week, fan-driven vote between three fan-submitted race names. Nearly half of the overall votes for the new race name were in favor of “Party in the Poconos 400.” The other race name submissions were the “Race More, Live Better 400” and the “Pocono for the People 400.”

Fans will continue to have their voices heard as they vote on the official race weekend concession item, to be sold at select Raceway vendor locations. Voting begins today and fans will vote on one of the following fan-submitted pierogi recipes: Hot Honey Buffalo Wing, Loaded Baked Potato or Sweet Cinnamon Sugar.

To vote, please visit walmarturl.com/fandriven400. Concession item voting ends on May 6.

Additionally, Pocono Raceway and Walmart are making the 400-mile June 9 race more affordable for fans by offering 16,000 Concourse Grandstand Tickets for $25 each. Tickets can be purchased by visiting www.poconoraceway.com or by calling 1-800-RACEWAY (1-800-722-3929).

Further fan involvement will include a vote on the Chevrolet Camaro SS Pace Car design, to be used throughout the June “Party in the Poconos 400 Presented by Walmart” race weekend. Voting for the pace car design will run from May 7-May 27. 

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Founder of FUBU discusses NASCAR, his ABC colleagues

Daymond John, founder of FUBU clothing line and star of the popular ABC show “Shark Tank” gave the starting command for the Nationwide Series race at Auto Club Speedway in March. John’s Shark Branding management company is working with Nationwide rookie Alex Bowman. He sat down with NASCAR.com to answer a few questions before the race.
 
Have you followed NASCAR?
This is my first race I’m physically at, but I’ve followed as a kid even. Growing up in New York I had the Matchbox cars.

Did you practice the starting command?
I practiced it a 100 times last night. Not really. But my voice is not always deep enough and I want to make sure I don’t sound like Chris Tucker, (in high pitch) “Gentlemen, start your engines.’’ (Laughs) So I had to practice some.
 
How did you meet Alex Bowman?
We me through mutual friends and I just started watching him, and became fascinated. I’ve worked with many, many celebrities in the past from the Kardashians to Lennox Lewis to Pitbull that have become very big and he (Bowman) has what it takes that I’ve seen in every single one of those people.

"People don’t understand how difficult it is to be a driver and they don’t know any better until you go into their living rooms in another way…"

Daymond John

You’re a marketing genius, how would you win over more NASCAR fans with all the entertainment options out there?
It’s challenging because there are so many options. But I think first of all, the easiest thing to sell is the truth and this is a huge sport — fan-friendly, it’s brand-friendly, everything is there. As you move NASCAR into more popular culture with social media and shows that depict it properly that’s what we’ll see. People don’t understand how difficult it is to be a driver and they don’t know any better until you go into their living rooms in another way they don’t expect you to. It’s kind of like Shark Tank. You’d think people don’t want to see some old business guys negotiating but now kids want to be a Shark as much as they want to be Lebron James because it came into someone’s living room another way.
 
Any possibility FUBU comes as a sponsor to NASCAR?
We license FUBU overseas, but we will have some of my other brands out there. I am going to my associates whom I’ve known the last 20 years and who didn’t understand the sport and I’m going to say, ‘This kid (Bowman) is it.’ I’ve been here and invested my time and energy. I’m going to bring some attention here that traditionally might not have come here.
 
If the cast of Shark Tank were to suit up and climb behind the wheels of race cars, who wins?
In order from worst to first would probably be Barbara (Corcoran). She’s a little dizzy so she would probably wreck the car immediately. Lori (Greiner) would be too busy arguing with her pit crew. Kevin O’Leary, unless he had a dollar in front of the car for him to chase, he wouldn’t be driving it. (Mark) Cuban’s too big to fit in a car. So it would be against Robert (Herjavec) and I, and because Robert already races in the Ferrari Series, I’d have to say he’d win because he has the cool hair and already looks like a race car driver.

 

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Historic Event To Offer Unique Qualifying, Race Procedures

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — NASCAR announced today the qualifying and race procedures for the inaugural “Mudsummer Classic” — the highly anticipated NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race at Eldora Speedway on Wednesday, July 24. Unlike asphalt tracks, dirt tracks have historically used a format much different than typical races and that will be the case for this event, the first NASCAR national series race held on dirt in more than 40 years.

The race will feature a traditional two-lap qualifying session, five qualifying races, one last-chance race and a champion’s provisional to determine the 30-truck starting field. The top-20 in owners’ points entering the race event will have a guaranteed starting position.

Here are additional details for each round of qualifying:

Qualifying

Two-lap qualifying determines starting position for the qualifying races 

"We look forward to putting on a great show at this unique venue."

— Chad Little, Camping World Truck Series director

Qualifying Races

·    Five qualifying races
     o   Eight laps each; only green flag laps count
     o   Five trucks transfer from each qualifying race

·    Lineup for the qualifying races will be based on qualifying speeds with four locked-in trucks (trucks in the top 20)

·    The top-five trucks in qualifying will start on the pole for their respective qualifying race

·    Highest finishing non-locked-in truck will transfer to race from each qualifying race

·    At the completion of the qualifying races, 25 trucks will have earned spots into the feature.


Last Chance Race

·    15 laps; only green flag laps count
·    The top-four finishers will transfer to the feature and start in positions 26-29
·    The lineup will be based on the finish from the qualifying races

Starting position No. 30 will go to the most recent past series champion who has not already qualified. If the 30th starting position is not filled by an eligible champion, it will be assigned to the next highest finishing truck in the Last Chance Race.

“NASCAR and Eldora Speedway have collectively worked together to come up with a format that embraces the history of dirt track racing while also ensuring that full-time competitors have an opportunity to be a part of this special event,” said Chad Little, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series director. “This will also add an exciting element for the fans and we look forward to putting on a great show at this unique venue.”

The race length and format are also new for the series. The race will be 150 laps divided into three segments. The segments will be 60, 50 and 40 laps.

There will be pit stops between each segment, with teams having the opportunity to change tires and work on their trucks.

More details on the event schedule will be released later this spring.

The “Mudsummer Classic” will be the first NASCAR national touring series event held on dirt since NASCAR’s premiere series competed on September 30, 1970 in Raleigh, N.C. Richard Petty won the Home State 200 at the one-mile State Fairgrounds Speedway.


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JGR teammate will drive No. 11 in race to benefit Denny Hamlin Cystic Fibrosis Research Lab

Denny Hamlin won’t compete in the charity race at Richmond International Raceway that bears his name, so he’s turning his seat over to a teammate at Joe Gibbs Racing.

RIR announced Tuesday that Matt Kenseth would drive the host’s car in the Denny Hamlin Short Track Showdown set for April 25 at the .75-mile track. The event serves as a fundraiser for the Denny Hamlin Cystic Fibrosis Research Lab at the Children’s Hospital of Richmond at VCU.

"… I know that it won’t be easy for (Hamlin) to sit out his own charity race."

Matt Kenseth

Hamlin is out six weeks with a compression fracture in a vertebra suffered in a final-lap crash at Auto Club Speedway on March 24. He’s not expected to return until May 11 at Darlington at the earliest, though he told reporters last week that he hoped to come back two weeks earlier to compete on his hometown track. While that’s still uncertain, his charity event is a definite no-go.

“Obviously, it kills me to not be able to race in the Short Track Showdown,” Hamlin said in a statement. “I grew up racing these cars against some of the best in the area, and it’s always fun to come back and do it again, but my injury won’t allow that this year. Matt has been a great teammate since coming to Joe Gibbs Racing, and I have to thank him for stepping in for me in this race. There’s a great list of drivers in this year’s field, and I know they’ll put on an awesome show for the fans at RIR.”

Kenseth, who moved from Roush Racing to JGR prior to this season, has been among the drivers most active in checking up on his injured teammate’s condition.

“I’m honored that Denny asked me to fill his seat at his annual Short Track Showdown,” Kenseth said. “It’s a good event for a great cause and I know that it won’t be easy for him to sit out his own charity race. We’ll have a good time raising some money for the Denny Hamlin Foundation. I just hope some of Denny’s magic at Richmond comes with the number on the side of the car.”

Kenseth will be joined by a number of NASCAR stars who will mix it up with area late model drivers. Kyle Busch, Tony Stewart, Michael Waltrip, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Trevor Bayne, Regan Smith, Darrell Wallace Jr. and Kyle Larson are all scheduled to compete — as is C.E. Falk, a late model driver and special invitee whom Larson turned on the final lap of a Battle at the Beach event at Daytona.

The event kicks off a weekend that includes a NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race on the same night, as well as a NASCAR Nationwide Series event on Friday, April 26, and the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race on Saturday, April 27.

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Driver makes announcement on Twitter

MORE: Johnson wins for eighth time at Martinsville

Five-Time is about to become a father for the second time.

Jimmie Johnson announced via Twitter on Tuesday morning that he and his wife Chandra are expecting a second daughter. The Johnsons have one daughter, Genevieve, who will turn 3 in July.

"We are so happy to share the news that we’re having another baby in September," the five-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion wrote in a post. "Genevieve is so excited to be a big sister!"

Johnson announced the family’s news two days after winning the STP Gas Booster 500 at Martinsville Speedway, his eighth career victory at the track.

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Goodyear officials will conduct a two-day tire test at Daytona International Speedway April 16-17

Goodyear officials will conduct a two-day tire test at Daytona International Speedway April 16-17, with 10 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series teams tentatively scheduled to attend. 

According to a release from track officials, Kasey Kahne and Regan Smith (Hendrick Motorsports), Danica Patrick (Stewart-Haas Racing), Greg Biffle, Carl Edwards and Ricky Stenhouse Jr. (Roush Fenway Racing), Jamie McMurray (Earnhardt Ganassi Racing), Trevor Bayne (Wood Brothers Racing), Austin Dillon (Circle Sport) will participate in the test. Joe Gibbs Racing is also expected to attend, although no driver was named to represent the organization.

Teams will test under the lights on April 16, taking to the track from 5-10 p.m. The following day, testing will be conducted from 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

Although NASCAR teams competed at the 2.5-mile track earlier this year with no issues, Goodyear’s Greg Stucker said at the time that the tire supplier is always looking ahead and seeking out ways to improve its on-track product.

“We had a couple of other things we wanted to try and implement, try and work into the recommendation (for Daytona),” he said prior to this year’s Daytona 500. “But we always like to do that with some racing under our belt before we come to the Daytona 500.

“So we would come (back) here, evaluate some of those things, see if some of those made sense on a superspeedway.”

If that’s the case, he said, the changes could be implemented for either the July race in Daytona or the fall stop at Talladega (Ala.) Superspeedway before returning to Daytona in February of 2014. 

The same tire package is used at the two tracks.

Officials have also tentatively scheduled tire tests for Indianapolis (April 30-May 1) as well as New Hampshire Motor Speedway (May 14-15).

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Pit stall selection expected to be determined by qualifying results

The annual pit crew competition that has served as one of the opening events for the NASCAR Sprint All-Star Race week activities will not be held this year.

“While we remain committed to the continuation of the unique competition that the pit crew challenge offers our teams and our fans, it will not be held this year,” NASCAR spokesperson Kerry Tharp said April 9.

Tharp said the sanctioning body is hopeful that a “more sustainable model” for the program can be found and that “due to the circumstances, the timing was too short to stage a successful event (for 2013).”

It is hoped, he said, that the event can return as soon as next season.

The Sprint Pit Crew Competition was held at Time Warner Cable Arena in Charlotte and sponsored by Sprint. It consisted of team and individual events, which included changing front and rear tires, fueling and jacking the car, as well as pushing the car forward in a race to the finish line.

The Hendrick Motorsports No. 48 team with driver Jimmie Johnson won last year’s competition.

The event also played an important role in the All-Star Race, with the winning pit crew earning the first choice of pit stalls for the upcoming race at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

"While we remain committed to the continuation of the unique competition that the pit crew challenge offers our teams and our fans, it will not be held this year."

Kerry Tharp, senior director, competition communications, NASCAR

It is expected that this year pit stall selection will be determined based on qualifying results.

In January, Sprint unveiled The Sprint Unlimited, taking over sponsorship of what had been the Budweiser Shootout at Daytona International Speedway. As a result, funding of the pit crew challenge would not continue.

“The pit crews are vital to the success of the sport and (event promoter) JHE has done a phenomenal job with the pit crew challenge,” Sprint’s Kimberly Meesters said at the time. “We are proud of the investment we made in the event in the past several years but it was time for us to explore (other) opportunities.”

The event has been around in different forms since 1967 when it was held at Rockingham (N.C) Speedway and consisted solely of a two-tire change.

Known as the Unocal 76 World Pit Crew Championship, it remained at Rockingham through the 2003 season.

There was no event in 2004; then two separate competitions in 2005.

The National Pit Crew Championship Powered by Tyson was held May 9, 2005 and won by the No. 97 Roush Racing team with driver Kurt Busch.

The Nextel Pit Crew Challenge, the forerunner of the Sprint event, was held May 19 at the Charlotte Coliseum. Evernham Motorsports’ No. 9 team and driver Kasey Kahne were the winners.

Former Cup crew chief Larry McReynolds, now a commentator for NASCAR coverage with FOX and SPEED, helped put together the National Pit Crew Championship, held in Mooresville, N.C.

“It was a big undertaking,” McReynolds said earlier this season. “At that point, there was two different groups doing the same thing and neither one of us knew the other was doing it.

“It was successful, but it didn’t make sense to do two. Had Sprint and NASCAR not gotten together and done one, we would have likely continued. But it was a huge project, a big undertaking and very expensive. Fortunately Tyson stepped in and supported us that one year.” 

McReynolds, crew chief of the winning team in 1998, understands how much the event means to those who go over the wall on a weekly basis.

“Even though to some degree the spotlight is on these guys every single time that car comes down pit road, normally … the spotlight’s only on them if they screw up,” he said. “This is the time it is on them and on them only.

“It’s not about the $70,000. Sure each of those guys getting $10,000 is huge, but you know what? It’s getting that (winner’s) ring, it’s getting that jacket, it’s walking into that race track the next week or the next day and people saying ‘congratulations.’ There are 36 races … but there is only one pit crew competition a year and it’s 100 percent non-driver related.”


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Hendrick, Childress among nine who could be up for consideration again

They have been a part of 23 championships and more than 450 victories as either a driver or team owner in NASCAR’s premier series. 

Their names have been among the 25 candidates for induction into the NASCAR Hall of Fame since the very beginning.

Nine men. A lot of hard work and a lot of hardware.

Each name, however, has yet to be called when the list of five has been announced for induction into the NASCAR shrine.

This year’s list of nominees will be announced Wednesday (SPEED, 6 p.m.). While there are no guarantees their names will appear once more, it’s likely that these nine will be among those announced, put forth once again for consideration:

"There’s Fireball (Roberts) and (Joe) Weatherly and Tim Flock, Red Byron and Raymond Parks. … That’s five really, really old-timers."

Glen Wood, 2012 NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee

Richard Childress and Rick Hendrick continue to push forward in the sport, successful team owners that field competitive teams and contend for championships.

Atlanta businessman Raymond Parks, credited with helping fund the fledgling NASCAR series in its infancy, was the sport’s first “Strictly Stock” championship-winning car owner.

Red Byron suffered a serious leg injury when the plane he was aboard was hit during World War II. Already a standout racer before the war, Byron returned, recovered and won the series’ first driving title while competing for Parks.

Tim Flock and Joe Weatherly are the only two eligible candidates with multiple championships not currently in the Hall of Fame. Flock won titles in 1952 and ’55; Weatherly in ’62-63. Each driver won more than two dozen races.

Driver Benny Parsons won the 1973 Cup championship and finished his career with 21 victories, including the 1975 Daytona 500. After retiring as a driver, Parsons became a well-known figure in the broadcast booth.

Glen “Fireball” Roberts and Curtis Turner were two of the sport’s early stars. Turner scored 17 career victories, dominating races on both dirt and asphalt, and counts the 1956 Southern 500 at Darlington among his wins. He was also instrumental in the building of Charlotte Motor Speedway. Roberts tasted victory 33 times. He won at Darlington, captured the 1962 Daytona 500 and finished fifth or higher in points on three occasions.

Glen Wood, founder of Wood Brothers Racing and a member of the 2012 Hall of Fame class, was drawn to racing by the likes of Turner.

“Anybody that ever saw him racing on the beach (at Daytona), and saw him coming down into the North Turn sideways for what seemed like a quarter of a mile down the track,” Wood said, “it was just like a wave coming in.

“He was just as good as they come. I never saw anybody do that as well as him on the sand and I saw a lot of races there.”

Wood says there are a lot of “old-timers” on the list and deserving of recognition. Whether they will eventually go in — or when they might — is difficult to determine, he said.

“There’s Fireball and Weatherly and Tim Flock, Red Byron and Raymond Parks. … That’s five really, really old-timers. All five of them should get in. But they may or may not.”

Wood said he was content just to be counted among those worthy of consideration. To actually be inducted wasn’t something he had considered.

“I told somebody when they first came out with the first 25 (nominees) and I was one of them, that I was happy if I never got inducted,” he said. “That was a great honor to be nominated, especially in the first bunch. I would have been satisfied with it.”

Richard Petty, NASCAR’s leading winner and one of only two drivers to capture seven championships as a driver, said he thinks it is important that those who helped build the sport aren’t forgotten.

Accomplishments on the track are crucial, he said, citing championships and particular victories as sufficient credentials for consideration, if not induction.

“Like Daytona, for instance,” Petty said. “Even if someone gets lucky there, it doesn’t make any difference. It’s such a big event.

“Winning a championship is a big deal. You beat everybody. No matter what the circumstances were.

“Guys like Weatherly and Tim Flock, they accomplished a lot in their time. At the same time, you had guys like Parks who was instrumental … I don’t know how you mix that up.”

The names of the five inductees for the Class of 2014 will be announced May 22.

Until then, it’s likely that those nine from the original roster will be left to wonder once again if this is the year their names will be called.

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