Danica Patrick to tour, award “Coke Zero Tailgate Champion” to best decorated campsite at ‘Dega

BE217895A1F14D4F8F17FD3443CF6E46Race fans! Have you heard the buzz? It’s time to get creative and dress up your campsite! Talladega Superspeedway is ready to start a new tradition and to show other tracks how to to party the right way!

After spending time on Talladega Boulevard last year during her first trip to the 2.66-mile track, Patrick saw it to be “party central” for fans that featured fun, music, dancing, food, beverages and the most unique display of colorful creativity when it came to the décor of each campsite.

Plans are for Danica to award the “Coke Zero Tailgate Champion” trophy Saturday afternoon, at some point following the conclusion of the Aaron’s 312 NASCAR Nationwide Series race.

FREE camping at Talladega Superspeedway. Photo by Sandi Goodall/Racingal.com

FREE camping at Talladega Superspeedway. Photo by Sandi Goodall/Racingal.com

The most notorious strip of real estate in NASCAR, Talladega Boulevard, is an innovative corridor like no other and has been a mainstay in NASCAR circles since the track was built in 1969. The Mardi Gras-type atmosphere of The Boulevard, complete with strings of beads and shenanigans, is a NASCAR tradition that separates Talladega from other venues. It truly is a sight to behold how tents, RVs, trucks and trailers, with an abundance of ingenuity and creativity, can liven up a large crowd of people.

Racing returns to Talladega Superspeedway for the May 3-5  Aaron’s Dream Weekend.  Secure your tickets at www.talladegasuperspeedway.com or by calling 877-Go2-DEGA.  This is more than a race…This is Talladega!

NASCAR announces Sprint Cup group qualifying for road courses

NASCAR 4C(PRT)

NASCAR announced today that the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series will implement the group-based road course qualifying procedure used in NASCAR Nationwide and NASCAR Touring Series competition during its road-course events at Sonoma Raceway and Watkins Glen International. Under the new procedure, cars will qualify in groups instead of the traditional single-car qualifying runs held on oval race tracks.

The new qualifying rules for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series at road courses are as follows:

·      Cars attempting to qualify will be divided into groups. The number of groups, and amount of cars in each, will depend on the number of cars that practice for the event.
·      Group assignments will be based on final practice times.
·      Each qualifying group will be on-track for a set period of time, determined by the Series Director.
·      A car’s best lap time during the group session will be the qualifying lap time of record.
·      A group’s time begins when the first car receives the green flag at the start/finish line.

The new format will debut with the Toyota Save-Mart 350 at Sonoma Raceway on June 23 and will return at Watkins Glen for the Cheez-ItTM 355 at the Glen on August 11.

NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver statistical advance: Kansas Speedway

11_stp_400_c
Kansas Speedway Data
Season Race #: 8 of 36
Track Size: 1.5-miles
Banking/Turns 1 & 2: 17-20 degrees
Banking/Turns 3 & 4: 17-20 degrees
Banking/Frontstretch: 10 degrees
Banking/Backstretch: 5 degrees
Frontstretch Length: 2,685 feet
Backstretch Length: 2,207 feet
Race Length: 267 laps / 400 miles

NASCAR Pre-Race: Fox – 12:30pm/et
Television Race Coverage: Fox, 1:00pm/et
Scheduled Green Flag (approx): 1:16pm/et

Race Festivities/Officials:
Grand Marshal: Richard Petty
Command to start engines: Richard Petty
Honorary Officials: Kansas City Chiefs Jeff Allen, Don Stephenson
National Anthem: Season Two X Factor winner Tate Stevens
Qualifying/Race Data
2012 pole winner: AJ Allmendinger, Dodge, 175.993 mph, 30.683 secs. 04-20-12
2012 race winner: Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 144.122 mph, (02:46:44), 04-22-12
Track qualifying record: Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 191.360 mph, 28.219 secs. 10-21-12
Track race record: Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 144.122 mph, (02:46:44), 04-22-12
Greg Biffle (No. 16 ACE Brand Ford)
·         Two wins, seven top fives, nine top 10s; one pole
·         Average finish of 9.5
·         Average Running Position of 7.6, second-best
·         Driver Rating of 113.0, second-best
·         202 Fastest Laps Run, second-most
·         650 Green Flag Passes, 13th-most
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 163.872 mph, second-fastest
·         Series-high 2,354 Laps in the Top 15 (89.9%)
·         435 Quality Passes (passes of cars in the top 15 under green), second-most
Clint Bowyer (No. 15 5-Hour Energy Toyota)
·         One top five, four top 10s
·         Average finish of 14.0
·         Driver Rating of 88.9, 13th-best
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 163.196 mph, 12th-fastest
Carl Edwards (No. 99 Aflac Ford)
·         Four top fives, eight top 10s
·         Average finish of 10.8
·         Average Running Position of 13.0, eighth-best
·         Driver Rating of 95.1, sixth-best
·         115 Fastest Laps Run, fifth-most
·         723 Green Flag Passes, fifth-most
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 163.343 mph, eighth-fastest
·         1,740 Laps in the Top 15 (66.5%), ninth-most
·         407 Quality Passes, fourth-most
Jeff Gordon (No. 24 Drive To End Hunger Chevrolet)
·         Two wins, eight top fives, 10 top 10s
·         Average finish of 11.0
·         Average Running Position of 8.9, third-best
·         Driver Rating of 101.5, fourth-best
·         99 Fastest Laps Run, ninth-most
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 163.720 mph, third-fastest
·         2,331 Laps in the Top 15 (89.0%), third-most
·         416 Quality Passes, third-most
Kevin Harvick (No. 29 Bad Boy Buggies Chevrolet)
·         One top five, six top 10s
·         Average finish of 12.9
·         Average Running Position of 13.2, ninth-best
·         Driver Rating of 90.6, eighth-best
·         79 Fastest Laps Run, 10th-most
·         Series-high 782 Green Flag Passes
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 163.199 mph, 11th-fastest
·         1,754 Laps in the Top 15 (67.0%), seventh-most
·         358 Quality Passes, eighth-most
Jimmie Johnson (No. 48 Lowe’s / KOBALT Tools Chevrolet)
·         Two wins, five top fives, 11 top 10s; three poles
·         Average finish of 8.0
·         Series-best Average Running Position of 7.2
·         Series-best Driver Rating of 119.5
·         Series-high 403 Fastest Laps Run
·         703 Green Flag Passes, ninth-most
·         Series-best Average Green Flag Speed of 164.270 mph
·         2,335 Laps in the Top 15 (89.2%), second-most
·         Series-high 453 Quality Passes
Kasey Kahne (No. 5 Farmers Insurance 85th Anniversary Chevrolet)
·         Two top fives, five top 10s; three poles
·         Average finish of 15.0
·         Average Running Position of 14.3, 12th-best
·         Driver Rating of 89.8, 11th-best
·         108 Fastest Laps Run, seventh-most
·         725 Green Flag Passes, fourth-most
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 163.230 mph, 10th-fastest
·         1,651 Laps in the Top 15 (63.1%), 10th-most
·         338 Quality Passes, 10th-most
Matt Kenseth (No. 20 The Home Depot / Husky Toyota)
·         One win, five top fives, eight top 10s; one pole
·         Average finish of 15.8
·         Average Running Position of 10.1, fourth-best
·         Driver Rating of 106.4, third-best
·         169 Fastest Laps Run, third-most
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 163.528 mph, fifth-fastest
·         2,104 Laps in the Top 15 (80.4%), fourth-most
·         353 Quality Passes, ninth-most
Brad Keselowski (No. 2 Miller Lite Ford)
·         One win, two top fives, three top 10s
·         Average finish of 9.8
·         Average Running Position of 12.8, seventh-best
·         Driver Rating of 90.1, 10th-best
Mark Martin (No. 55 Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota)
·         One win, two top fives, five top 10s; one pole
·         Average finish of 15.3
·         Average Running Position of 12.4, sixth-best
·         Driver Rating of 91.3, seventh-best
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 163.190 mph, 13th-fastest
·         1,777 Laps in the Top 15 (67.9%), sixth-most
·         289 Quality Passes, 13th-most
Tony Stewart (No. 14 Bass Pro Shops / Mobil 1 Chevrolet)
·         Two wins, six top fives, nine top 10s
·         Average finish of 11.7
·         Average Running Position of 10.4, fifth-best
·         Driver Rating of 100.8, fifth-best
·         137 Fastest Laps Run, fourth-most
·         668 Green Flag Passes, 11th-most
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 163.537 mph, fourth-fastest
·         1,951 Laps in the Top 15 (74.5%), fifth-most
·         390 Quality Passes, fifth-most
Martin Truex Jr. (No. 56 NAPA Auto Parts Toyota)
·         Two top fives, two top 10s
·         Average finish of 20.9
·         Average Running Position of 13.8, 10th-best
·         Driver Rating of 90.5, ninth-best
·         104 Fastest Laps Run, eighth-most
·         Average Green Flag Speed of 163.378 mph, sixth-fastest
·         1,464 Laps in the Top 15 (62.3%), 13th-most
Chase Contenders
The Top 12 Following Race 7 of 36                                                               
Driver Points Wins Poles Week Rating
1. Jimmie Johnson 269 2 1 1 115.5
2. Brad Keselowski 260 0 0 2 100.2
3. Kyle Busch 251 2 2 4 113.0
4. Greg Biffle 239 0 0 6 89.9
5. Carl Edwards 234 1 0 7 88.6
6. Dale Earnhardt Jr. 234 0 0 3 97.7
7. Kasey Kahne 232 1 0 5 103.3
8. Clint Bowyer 208 0 0 8 90.9
9. Joey Logano 207 0 0 11 89.6
10. Paul Menard 206 0 0 9 79.0
11. Matt Kenseth 204 1 0 10 109.7
12. Kevin Harvick 192 0 0 14 92.5
Did You Know?
  • There has been one NSCS race resulting with a green-white-checkered finish at Kansas Speedway: fall of 2011
  • Youngest Kansas winner: Ryan Newman (10/05/2003 – 25 years, 9 months, 27 days).
  • Oldest Kansas winner: Mark Martin (10/09/2005 – 46 years, 9 months, 0 days).
  • The deepest in the field that a race winner has started at Kansas Speedway was 25th, by Brad Keselowski in the spring of 2011
  • Eight of the 14 NASCAR Sprint Cup races at Kansas Speedway have been won from a top-10 starting position.

Source: NASCAR Media

Three NASCAR Sprint Cup Series teams penalized after Texas

NASCAR 4C(PRT)

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (April 17, 2013) – Penalties have been handed down to three NASCAR Sprint Cup Series teams following last Saturday’s race at Texas Motor Speedway.

The No. 56 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 20-12.8.1B (the car failed to meet the minimum front car heights during post-race inspection) of the 2013 rule book.

As a result of this violation, crew chief Chad Johnston has been fined $25,000 and placed on NASCAR probation until June 5. The team has also been docked six championship driver (Martin Truex Jr.) and six championship owner (Michael Waltrip) points.

The No. 2 and No. 22 cars have also been penalized. Both cars were found to be in violation of Sections 12-1; 12-4J and 20-12 (all suspension systems and components must be approved by NASCAR. Prior to being used in competition, all suspension systems and components must be submitted, in a completed form/assembly, to the office of the NASCAR Competition Administrator for consideration of approval and approved by NASCAR. Each such part may thereafter be used until NASCAR determines that such part is no longer eligible. All suspension fasteners and mounting hardware must be made of solid magnetic steel. All front end and rear end suspension mounts with mounting hardware assembled must have single round mounting holes that are the correct size for the fastener being used. All front end and rear end suspension mounts and mounting hardware must not allow movement or realignment of any suspension component beyond normal rotation or suspension travel.)

As a result of this violation and as it pertains to the No. 2 car the following penalties have been assessed:

·         Crew chief Paul Wolfe has been fined $100,000 and suspended from NASCAR until the completion of the next six NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship points events (including the non-points Sprint All-Star Race) and placed on probation until Dec. 31.
·         Car chief Jerry Kelley, team engineer Brian Wilson and team manager Travis Geisler (serves as team manager for both the No. 2 and No. 22 cars) have been suspended from NASCAR until the completion of the next six NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship points events (including the non-points Sprint All-Star Race) and placed on probation until Dec. 31.
·         The loss of 25 championship driver (Brad Keselowski) and 25 championship owner (Roger Penske) points.

As it pertains to the No. 22 car the following penalties have been assessed:

·         Crew chief Todd Gordon has been fined $100,000 and suspended from NASCAR until the completion of the next six NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship points events (including the non-points Sprint All-Star Race) and placed on probation until Dec. 31.
·         Car chief Raymond Fox and team engineer Samuel Stanley have been suspended from NASCAR until the completion of the next six NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship points events (including the non-points Sprint All-Star Race) and placed on probation until Dec. 31.
·         The loss of 25 championship driver (Joey Logano) and 25 championship owner (Walt Czarnecki) points.

——————-STATEMENT FROM MICHAEL WALTRIP RACING——————–

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Wednesday, April 17

The following statement is in response to Wednesday’s penalty issued by NASCAR to Michael Waltrip Racing.

“Michael Waltrip Racing is sensitive to working within the guidelines of NASCAR policy. This infraction clearly occurred as a result of a malfunction caused by race conditions. Therefore, we will not appeal. We thank NASCAR for providing a fair and equitable platform for all of its competitors and respect its decisions.”

——————-STATEMENT FROM PENSKE RACING——————–

“Penske Racing received communication today from NASCAR regarding penalties they have issued against the #2 and #22 teams. Penske Racing will appeal utilizing the appropriate NASCAR process. We have no further comment at this time.”

While earlier Saturday at Texas Motor Speedway, Brad Keselowski had a few choice of words after NASCAR confiscated rear-end housing parts and pieces from their cars during prerace inspection: “I have one good thing to say,” Keselowski said. “That’s my team and effort they put in today in fighting back with the absolute bull that’s been the last seven days in this garage area. The things I’ve seen over the last seven days have me questioning everything that I believe in, and I’m not happy about it. I don’t have anything positive to say and I probably should just leave it at that.” With major penalties stemming in the near future, the Keselowski remarked: “There’s so much stuff going on … you have no f—— idea what’s going on,” he said. “And that’s not your fault and that’s not a slam on you. I could tell you there’s nobody, no team in this garage with the integrity of the 2 team. And the way we’ve been treated over the last seven days is absolutely shameful. I feel like we’ve been targeted over the last seven days more than I’ve ever seen a team targeted. But my guys kept their heads on straight and they showcased why they are a winning team and championship team. We’re not going to take it. We’re not going to be treated this way.”

Logano started in the back, but finished fifth. Keselowski finished ninth.

NASCAR Chairman Brian France said Keselowski would not be fined for his comments Saturday night. France said he disagrees with everything Keselowski said, but understands that he was blowing off steam.

 

 

NASCAR Sprint Cup driver stats: MARTINSVILLE SPEEDWAY

STP Gas Booster 500 C
NASCAR Pre-Race: Fox – 12:30pm
TV Race Coverage: FoxSports, 1:00pm
Scheduled Green Flag (approx): 1:13pm
Practices: Friday, April 5, 12:00 – 1:30 pm on SPEED
Happy Hour ‘Final’ practice: Saturday, April 6, 11:45am – 12:45pm on SPEED at 11:30pm
Qualifying: Friday, April 5 at 3:40 pm on SPEED at 8:00pm

Martinsville Speedway Data
Season Race #: 6 of 36
Track Size: 0.526-mile
Banking/Turns 1 & 2: 12 degrees
Banking/Turns 3 & 4: 12 degrees
Banking/Frontstretch: 0 degrees
Banking/Backstretch: 0 degrees
Frontstretch Length: 800 feet
Backstretch Length: 800 feet
Race Length: 500 laps / 263 miles

Qualifying/Race Data
2012 pole winner: Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 97.128 mph, 19.496 secs. 3-30-12
2012 race winner: Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 78.823 mph, (3:26:12), 4-01-12
Track qualifying record: Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 98.083 mph, 19.306 secs. 10-21-05
Track race record: Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 82.223 mph, (3:11:55), 9-22-96

MARTINSVILLE-SPECIFIC STATISTICS
Clint Bowyer (No. 15 RK Motors Toyota)
·         Two top fives, eight top 10s
·         Average finish of 14.0
Jeff Burton (No. 31 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet)
·         One win, 10 top fives, 16 top 10s
·         Average finish of 15.0
Kyle Busch (No. 18 M&M’s Toyota)
·         Seven top fives, eight top 10s
·         Average finish of 16.8
Dale Earnhardt Jr. (No. 88 Diet Mountain Dew Chevrolet)
·         10 top fives, 14 top 10s
·         Average finish of 13.0
Jeff Gordon (No. 24 Drive to End Hunger Chevrolet)
·         Seven wins, 25 top fives, 32 top 10s; seven poles
·         Average finish of 7.1
Kevin Harvick (No. 29 Budweiser Chevrolet)
·         One win, three top fives, 10 top 10s
·         Average finish of 16.7
Jimmie Johnson (No. 48 Lowe’s Chevrolet)
·         Seven wins, 15 top fives, 19 top 10s; two poles
·         Average finish of 5.5
Brad Keselowski (No. 2 Miller Lite Ford)
·         Three top 10s
·         Average finish of 12.2
Mark Martin (No. 11 FedEx Freight Toyota)
·         Two wins, 12 top fives, 25 top 10s; three poles
·         Average finish of 13.3
Jamie McMurray (No. 1 Novo Nordisk Chevrolet)
·         One top five, 10 top 10s; one pole
·         Average finish of 17.0
Ryan Newman (No. 39 Quicken Loans Chevrolet)
·         One win, seven top fives, 11 top 10s; three poles
·         Average finish of 13.6
Tony Stewart (No. 14 Rush Truck Centers/Mobil 1 Chevrolet)
·         Three wins, nine top fives, 15 top 10s; three poles
·         Average finish of 13.7
Chase Contenders
The Top 12 Following Race 5 of 36
Driver Points Wins Poles Week Rating
1. Dale Earnhardt Jr. 199 0 0 2 102.2
2. Brad Keselowski 187 0 0 1 103.5
3. Jimmie Johnson 183 1 0 3 110.2
4. Carl Edwards 164 1 0 8 89.8
5. Greg Biffle 164 0 0 5 90.8
6. Kyle Busch 163 1 1 10 105.7
7. Kasey Kahne 159 1 0 7 103.6
8. Paul Menard 154 0 0 9 82.5
9. Joey Logano 146 0 0 12 93.0
10. Denny Hamlin 145 0 1 6 99.5
11. Matt Kenseth 141 1 0 13 109.6
12. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 139 0 0 11 74.7
History
·         Opened in September 1947 by H. Clay Earles, Martinsville, originally a dirt track, is one of the oldest continuously-operating race tracks in the United States.
·         The first NASCAR-sanctioned race at Martinsville was on July 4, 1948.
·         The first NASCAR Sprint Cup race was Sept. 25, 1949.
·         The track was paved in 1955.
·         The first 500-lap event at Martinsville was in 1956.
·         Concrete corners were added atop asphalt in 1976.
Car By the Number – Drivers – (Years)

o    No. 43  – Richard Petty (1960, ’62, ’63, ’67 sweep, ’68, ’69 sweep, ’70, ’71, ’72 sweep, ’73, ’75 and ’79); John Andretti (1999)
o    No. 11 Cale Yarborough (1974, ’76, ’77 sweep, ‘78); Darrell Waltrip (1981, ’82, ’83, ’84); Geoff Bodine (1990 sweep); Denny Hamlin (2008, ’09, ’10 sweep)
o    No. 2 Dale Earnhardt (1980); Rusty Wallace (1993, ‘94 sweep, ’95, ’96 and ‘04)
o    No. 24 Jeff Gordon (1996, ’97, ’99, ’03 sweep and ’05 sweep)
o    No. 48 Jimmie Johnson (2004, ’06, ’07 sweep, ’08, ’09, ’12)
o    No. 3 Ricky Rudd (1983); Dale Earnhardt (1985, ’87, ’88, ’91, ’95)
Did You know?
  • This weekend will be Danica Patrick’s first attempt at Martinsville Speedway. If she makes the event, she will become the first female driver to compete at Martinsville in the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
  • Tony Stewart (4/18/1999) and Scott Riggs (4/10/2005) won their first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Coors Light poles at Martinsville Speedway.
  • Ryan Newman competed at Martinsville Speedway 20 times before winning in the spring of 2012; the longest span of any the 10 active NASCAR Sprint Cup Series winners.
  • Jeff Gordon has participated in the most NASCAR Sprint Cup races at Martinsville Speedway without a DNF (40).
  • Mike Bliss (09/27/1998), Travis Kvapil (10/24/2004), Michael McDowell (3/30/2008) and Scott Speed (10/19/2008) made their first NASCAR Sprint Cup Series career starts at Martinsville Speedway.
  • Youngest Martinsville pole winner: Ricky Rudd (4/26/1981 – 24 years, 7 months, 14 days).
  • Oldest Martinsville pole winner: Morgan Shepherd (4/26/1987 – 45 years, 6 months, 14 days).

PHOENIX INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY: Starting Line-Up

10 subway fresh fit 500 dk

Starting
Position
Car# Driver Manu Qualifying
Speed
(mph)
1 55 Mark Martin Aaron’s Dream Machine Toyota 138.074
2 5 Kasey Kahne Quaker State Chevy 137.862
3 48 Jimmie Johnson Lowe’s Chevy 137.804
4 18 Kyle Busch M&M’s Toyota 137.673
5 24 Jeff Gordon Pepsi MAX Chevy 137.164
6 14 Tony Stewart Bass Pro Shops/Mobil 1 Chevy 137.143
7 29 Kevin Harvick Jimmy John’s Chevy 137.075
8 11 Denny Hamlin FedEx Ground Toyota 136.924
9 20 Matt Kenseth Husky Toyota 136.882
10 39 Ryan Newman Quicken Loans Chevy 136.861
11 2 Brad Keselowski Miller Lite Ford 136.835
12 17 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. # Best Buy Ford 136.731
13 15 Clint Bowyer 5-hour Energy Toyota 136.654
14 56 Martin Truex Jr. NAPA Filters Toyota 136.602
15 99 Carl Edwards Subway Ford 136.483
16 27 Paul Menard Menards/Serta Chevy 136.364
17 16 Greg Biffle 3M/Novec Ford 136.291
18 43 Aric Almirola Farmland Ford 136.266
19 1 Jamie McMurray McDonald’s Chevy 135.936
20 31 Jeff Burton Cheerios Chevy 135.890
21 88 Dale Earnhardt Jr. National Guard Chevy 135.870
22 9 Marcos Ambrose DeWalt Ford 135.440
23 51 AJ Allmendinger Guy Roofing Chevy 135.440
24 34 David Ragan Ford 135.267
25 78 Kurt Busch Furniture Row/Beautyrest Chevy 135.247
26 7 Dave Blaney Sany Chevy 135.100
27 36 JJ Yeley Accell Construction Chevy 135.064
28 95 Scott Speed Surrender the Sponsor Ford 134.917
29 42 Juan Pablo Montoya Target Chevy 134.821
30 93 Travis Kvapil Burger King/Dr.Pepper Toyota 134.705
31 38 David Gilliland Long John Silver’s Ford 134.695
32 22 Joey Logano Shell Pennzoil Ford 134.373
33 47 Bobby Labonte Glad Toyota 134.343
34 83 David Reutimann Burger King/Dr.Pepper Toyota 133.814
35 19 Mike Bliss(i) Plinker Tactical/Value Place Toyota 133.774
36 35 Josh Wise(i) Blockbuster.com Ford 133.591
37-OP 30 David Stremme Swan Racing Toyota 133.571
38-OP 33 Landon Cassill Little Joe’s Autos Chevy 133.383
39-OP 44 Scott Riggs(i) No Label Watches Ford 132.920
40-OP 10 Danica Patrick # GoDaddy.com Chevy 132.890
41-Op 87 Joe Nemechek(i) MaddiesPlaceRocks.com Toyota 132.023
42-OP 32 Ken Schrader Safe Skies Locks Ford 131.747
43-OP 13 Casey Mears GEICO Ford 131.286

Manufacturer logos on NASCAR’s Gen-6 Car windshield

2013_Chevy_Earnhardt_WS_Header 3 2013_Ford_Keselowski_WS_Header 2 2013_Toyota_Bowyer_WS_Header 3

During Autoweek’s Racing Conference held Tuesday in Detroit, NASCAR announced a further enhancement to the new Gen-6 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series (NSCS) cars that puts even more focus on manufacturer identity. In addition to displaying the names of the drivers on the Gen-6 car windshield, there will also be manufacturer identification present on either side of the driver’s name. The roundtable, town hall-style conference featured a panel that included NASCAR President Mike Helton, NASCAR VP of Competition Robin Pemberton and NASCAR VP of Brand, Consumer and Series Marketing Kim Brink, as well as executives from Chevrolet SS, Ford Fusion and Toyota Camry.

The Motor City was the kickoff of “NASCAR’s #Gen6 Road to Daytona Fueled by Sunoco,” a multi-city tour introducing the Gen-6 race cars and generating excitement for the 2013 NASCAR season. Gen-6 will make its on-track debut during the non-points The Sprint Unlimited at Daytona International Speedway on Saturday, Feb. 16 at 8 p.m. ET on FOX and culminates with the 55th running of the season-opening Daytona 500 on Sunday, Feb. 24 at 1 p.m. ET on FOX.

First time ever, fans have direct impact on The Sprint Unlimited at Daytona

NASCAR and Sprint confirmed that fans will have a direct impact on several competition elements of the newly titled The Sprint Unlimited At Daytona, the 75-lap non-points race that opens the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series season.

Fans will play an integral part in how the fan-favorite race unfolds on Saturday, February 16 (8 p.m. ET, FOX, FOX Deportes, Motor Racing Network Radio and SiriusXM Satellite Radio) at Daytona International Speedway. By casting their vote, fans are invited to design several competition aspects of the preseason event, including…

- The number of laps in each segment

- The type of pit stop a team makes after the first segment

- How many cars will be eliminated after the second segment

Votes can be cast on NASCAR’s new official mobile app – NASCAR Mobile ’13 – or at NASCAR.com/SprintUnlimited. All votes made through the NASCAR Mobile ’13 app will count twice.

The voting window for the race format will close on Wednesday, February 13 at 11:59 p.m. ET. The voting windows for the pit stop and elimination will close at various times throughout the race broadcast. Vote results will be relayed to teams during each segment and announced live on the FOX race broadcast.

Fan voting categories, include:

Length of each of the three race segments:
Choice A: 40 laps, 20 laps, 15 laps
Choice B: 35 laps, 30 laps, 10 laps
Choice C: 30 laps, 25 laps, 20 laps

* Race format voting ends at 11:59 p.m. EST on Wednesday, February 13.

Team pit stop after the first segment:
Choice A: No pit stop
Choice B: Two (2) tire change
Choice C: Four (4) tire change

*Pit stop voting concludes at the green flag of the first segment.

How many cars will be eliminated after the second segment:
Choice A: None (0)
Choice B: Two (2) cars eliminated
Choice C: Four (4) cars eliminated
Choice D: Six (6) cars eliminated

*Elimination voting concludes at the green flag of the first segment

Fans are encouraged to follow @NASCAR and @MissSprintCup on Twitter to engage in the #SprintUnlimited conversation throughout the voting window.

NASCAR PR

Event schedule, times for Budweiser Speedweeks 2013 at Daytona International Speedway

From Daytona International Speedway

For the fourth straight year, the 55th annual Daytona 500 on Sunday, Feb. 24 is scheduled for a 1 p.m. start time (TV – FOX Sports, Radio – MRN Radio).

Start times for the other remaining events of Budweiser Speedweeks 2013 at Daytona International Speedway are as follows:

• The 51st anniversary Rolex 24 At Daytona GRAND-AM Rolex Sports Car Series race, Jan. 26-27, 3:30 p.m. (SPEED)

• The Lucas Oil 200 ARCA Racing Series, Saturday, Feb. 16, 4:30 p.m. (SPEED)

• The Daytona Shootout non-points event, Saturday, Feb. 16, 8 p.m. (FOX)

• Daytona 500 Qualifying Presented By Kroger, Sunday, Feb. 17, 1 p.m. (FOX)

• Budweiser Duel At Daytona, Thursday, Feb. 21, 2 p.m. (SPEED)

• NextEra Energy Resources 250 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race, Friday, Feb. 22, 7:30 p.m. (SPEED)

• DRIVE4COPD 300 NASCAR Nationwide Series race, Saturday, Feb. 23, 1 p.m. (ESPN)

The season-opening 55th annual Daytona 500 will mark the debut of the new 2013 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series car. Dubbed “Gen 6,” the new-look sixth generation cars highlight greater brand identity for the manufacturers.

DAY 1: NASCAR’s test session of Sixth Generation car ends at Charlotte Motor Speedway

Credit: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images for NASCAR

Sixteen cars participated in the last open test session of the year at Charlotte Motor Speedway today. Fans and media were treated to all three manufacturers on the race track at once, including the fully unveiled Chevrolet SS which was debuted in Las Vegas during NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Champion’s Week. There was an air of excitement from the drivers and teams in the garage surrounding the looks and performance of the sixth generation car.

While fans were seeing the Chevrolet fully unwrapped without camouflage, several drivers were getting used to new fire suits, car manufacturers and teammates. For the first time in his career, former NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Champion Matt Kenseth was sporting a new number (20), team (Joe Gibbs Racing) and manufacturer (Toyota). Kenseth was happy with the car; however, his team was forced to make an engine change during today’s morning session.

Credit: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images for NASCAR

While Kenseth got to know his new team, current NASCAR Sprint Cup champion Brad Keselowski learned to work with new Penske Racing teammate Joey Logano.

“I feel like there are a lot of areas that I can improve and be better,” said Keselowski. “I think there are things Joey does right out of the gate that are better than what I do. I think he has the ability to unload at a place like this and just instantly be fast and that’s not my style.”

In addition to the off season testing sessions scheduled next month for Daytona and Charlotte, plans call for an extra day of testing before the events at Las Vegas and Texas to provide teams with an opportunity to learn more about the sixth-generation race car early in the season. Extra practice time will also be added to the schedule at Auto Club Speedway in March.

The test continues Wednesday at 9 a.m. at Charlotte Motor Speedway.

What are the drivers saying?

Credit: Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images for NASCAR
Dale Earnhardt Jr. (L), driver of the #88 National Guard Chevrolet, speaks with Regan Smith, driver of the Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet, in the garage area during testing at Charlotte Motor Speedway

Dale Earnhardt Jr.
“Our test is going pretty well so far. The cars drive really well. I know everybody is probably real curious about how we think the racing is going to go. It’s real early in the game, this is the first time I’ve driven the cars at all. I’m really impressed. I really like the balance of the car, the downforce seems to be relatively good. The car has driven well for us today. We will just move through the next couple of days here and keep tuning. Trying things and see what the car likes and doesn’t like. Hopefully, get some more testing in before the season starts so we can continue to understand. A lot of the rules and decisions that NASCAR is going to make on this car, some are finalized, some are not. It’s still a little bit of a moving target for the teams. I’m real encouraged so far.”

What exactly is different with the Sixth Generation car?

  • There is about 100 to 115 more horsepower under the hood
  • Distinct body lines that match street vehicles
  • The area comprised of the roof, windshields, windows, and decklid is known as the ‘greenhouse’. The “greenhouse” area is the same on every car.(Fans will notice different shapes and sizes of windows depending on the manufacturer represented.)
  • Longer nose and shorter tail to mimic street cars [longer nose (by 2 inches) and shorter tail (by 6 inches)]
  • Carbon fiber hood and decklid (Carbon fiber is very strong, which eliminates the opportunity for flexibility. This should remove the advantage some teams discovered and make it easier for NASCAR to police these parts. Carbon fiber is also light-weight which in turn lowers the center of gravity, helping cars find more mechanical grip and handle better.)
  • New decals on windshield and roof (To improve manufacturer branding, decals will no longer be permitted on the headlights and taillights.)

 

Source: NASCAR Media/Joe Gibbs Racing